Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 April 1940 — Page 7
Pennies From Heaven IMUES TD BUY 40-60 ALIMONY ASKED $5 8 mon wn agks that she be OLD TRADE DOLLARS PRIZED “jade dollars” minted jn 1877 and
th of it for alim She 1818. One of the coins belonged to p2NTA ROSA, Cal, April 28 (U. ey fe $100" Sunn i ry LOCKHAVEN, Pa, April 23 (U.|\al%e ob nC Cho made 1t into ~—Mrs. Erma Carueso in her pe- iw wan €y lees and | p,).—Among the most prized posses-|q Docks! piece because the date
costs. k coincided with Mr. Keller's
DAL HE |
~ STARTS SUNDAY
All or Part of 15 States to. Move Clocks Ahead Until September.
NEW YORK, April 23 (U. P)— All or parts of 15 states will observe daylight saving time when the Summer standard becomes effective next Sunday, April 28. Virtually all of New York State, a large part of the Eastern Seaboard and a section of the Middle West will set the clocks an hour ahead next Sunday midnight, the Merchants Association of New York announced in its annual survey. . The summer standard will re-
main in effect through Sept. 29, with some exceptions where it is terminated earlier, Partial observance will take place in. several states, including Delaware, Georgia, Illinois, . Indiana, Pennsylvania and Michigan,
For the past year Mr. and Mrs. Jesse C. Everling, 4200 S. Emerson Ave.,, have been saving all their spare pennies for ‘a vacation.
Thursday Clarence Edwatd joined the family and the parents paid
Curiosity Adds 6 Years fo Age
DETROIT, April 23 (U. P)— Robert Lee Hamilton of Detroit
was forced to add six years to his age today but for recompense he had a brother and sister he had not known about. A letter to an East Prairie, Mo., newspaper asking for information about his birth brought a letter from an aunt who told Mr. Hamilton of his ‘brother, Joseph Gregory of Cairo, Ill, and sister, Mrs, Myrtle Brinkley of St. Louis, Mo. He also learned he was 48 instead of 42. Mr. Gregory came here over the week-end fog a reunion with his brother, -
EYE DEFECT
might be the cause of that
AUTOMOBILE ’ ACCIDENT,
: IHC Telrbick
4 5 Registered Optometrist—Office at
RAY AIA q))
31 W. Washington §t,
"Mrs. Jesse C. Everling and Clarence Edward .
bus win 3 wags
WHEN YOU ASK FOR TH
COPYRIGHT 1930 NATIONA! STILLERS PRODUCTS CORPORATION NEW YORK
*Of course you're a good cook, Joe— there isn't a better one on any railroad, but you've got to give our commissary some of the credit for those fine meals our passengers rave about,
[Doesn’t your mouth water when you look at those cuts of meat and that turkey they've sent us? Did you ever see such fish? And those vegetables look as if they were still growing this morning | s Yes, Joc! you owe a lot, of your reputation as a chef to the splendid food the Illinois Central givesyyou to work with,”
ET Illinois Central seryice is good because its workers take genuine pride in their
work and each is given the best pos- | - sible materials for his particular job.
Times Photo. « “all paid for.”
the doctor with the pennies— ‘more than 3000 of them neatly packed in a sack. There won't be: a vacation now. “But what's a vacation compared to a nice, lusty son?” smiles Mrs. Everling, “especially when he is all paid for.”
TWO MASONIC SESSIONS SET
Scottish Rite Council of Deliberation and Shrine Group to Convene.
State council meeting of two high Masonic groups* will be held in Indianapolis within the next month. * ‘George E. Bushnell, chief justice of the Michigan Supreme Court, will be the luncheon speaker Saturday preliminary to the afternoon meeting of the Scottish Rite Council of Deliberation for the Indiana district: That council will meet in the Scottish Rite Cathedral under the presidency of Dr. Gaylard M. Leslie of Ft. Wayne, Indiana deputy. Indianapolis committee chairmen who will report include Fred L. Willis, credentials; Charles L. Hutchinson, deceased members, and Frank G. Laird, new bodies. . Lloyd D. Claycombe of Indianapolis is president of the Indiana State Shrine Council, which will meet May 17 in the Murat Temple here.
Ft. Wayne, Hammond, Terre Haute
and Evansville temples are included.
t Judge Dewey E. Myers of Criminal}
Court is general chairman of the membership committee for the ceremonial and Granville A. Richey is chairman of the out-state committee. Fred B. McNeely is illustrious potentate of Murat Shrine.
JURY INVESTIGATES . TEACHER’S SLAYING
LAFAYETTE, Ind, April 23 (U. P.).—The Tippecanoe Grand Jury met in special session today to investigate the slaying of Miss Georgia Miller, 62, wealthy retired school teacher. A 25-year-old farm hand, Clair Mitchell, employed by Miss Miller, has confessed, police said. / Sheriff F. Earl Staley and Detective Harvey Hire of the State Police said ‘Mitchell declared he killed his employer because she opposed his marriage to Mrs. Isabell Oilar, 19, Veedersburg, with whom he was picked up Saturday.
JHE for divorce from her husband, She charged sions of John 8S. Keller of Fleming-|m; a WPA worker, states that he earns] cruelty. : ton are two large stiver ot i i Gs 5
BUY ON THE 10-PAY PLAN s./~ Boys’ Polo
Lockheed. “Hottest Plane ‘Powered With Two Allison Engines. (Copyright, 1040, by Science Service) BURBANK, Cal, April 23.—The Lockheed Aircraft Corp.'s famous 450-mile-an hour P-38 twin-engined pursuit, hottest military airplane in the world past the experimental stage, was identified by airmen as the subject of the third large Allied aircraft order in the United States. Upwards of 1000 of a two-seater modification of the P-38 will be ordered shortly by the AngloFrench Purchasing Board, it has been lehrned. Arthur B. Purvis, erties British member of the rd, had announced in Washington that large contracts for Curtiss P-40 pursuits and Douglas B-20 attack -bombers had been signed and that a third would be
let shortly, but he did not specify the plane meant. The P-38 is the ship in which Ben
Kelsey loafed across the continent |}
at-an average speed of 356 miles an hour on 60 per cent trottle a year ago in- January. Powered with two Allison 1000-horse power in-line engines, it has done more than 425 miles an hour in tests, but has never been let out to full speed. Kelsey, through an accident having nothing to do with the characteristics : of: the plane, crashed the prototype at Mitchell Field at the end of his history-making coast-to-coast hop. Lockheed has just completed a new factory a mile away from its main Burbank plant to turn out P-38s, of which the Army Air Corps has ordered 800. Cost of the planes, including engines, is in the neighborhood of $90,000 each. The Army’s P-38s are to be single-seaters, as was the original, but the Allies apparently feel it is too much airplane for one man to fly and fight. Pilots receive considerably less training in wartime than in peacetime. A mock-up or wooden dummy of the fuselage of the P-38, an unorthodox craft whose tail is carried on twin booms running back from engine. mounts instead of on the fuselage, has just’ been completed for the Allies at the Lockheed plant. It has been lengthened slightly to allow space for two men. Other changes in design will also be necessary as the fixed guns of a single-seater are not altogether practical in a multi-seater.
OLD KENTUCKY HOME T0 BE BUSY MAY 3
Times Special BARDSTOWN, Ky. April 23.— Postmaster General James A. Farley, Bing Crosby and Al Jolson are to take part in the celebration here May 3 in connection with the first day’s sale of the Stephen Collins Foster postage stamp. This town was selected for opening day sale because it was here that Foster wrote “My Old Kentucky: Home.” Preparations haye been made for the cancellation of 300,000 stamps on the one day. Ceremonies will . be broadcast by the Mutual Broadcasting System.
‘MESSAGE TO GARCIA’ ‘BEARER IS 83 TODAY
SAN FRANCISCO, April 23 (U. P.).—Col. Andrew S. Rowan, who carried ‘the “Message to Garcia,” was 83 years old today. He has been in Letterman General Hospital at the San Francisco Presidio for more than two years. He was a lieutenant when he carried the message of a promise of U. S. support to Jokm Garcia, leader of the Cuhan Rebels, before this country went to war with Spain. Col. Rowan’s venture inspired Elbert Hubbard to write one of his best known essays, “A Message to
| Garcia.”
Boys’ Broadcloth o SHIRTS
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C.
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COATS
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SLIPS
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be worn with other garments. Sizes 12
‘New Spring
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Tearose panties for girls 2 to I years old, well nade, I full cut.
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27-Inches Wide
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RR Ra tn aX nia aio nh ea.
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Every housewife knows the old genuine Hope Muslin” —a quality.
“good~
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Oe pS
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pe a coo, ox lustration). In SE die to 8.
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Ruffled and Tailored ’ 1 @ } Curtains
97:
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Pretty dots or all-over marquisettes, deep ruffles or tailored styles, 72 inches wide, 2% and 2% yards long, :
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bain
