Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 May 1940 — Page 20
"PAGE 18
3 GIRL MURDE
Police Press Hunt After Assault-Murder of Young Girl Motorist,
BELLEFONTE, Pa., May 6 P.).—Col. Lynn G. Adams, head of
RS NOW BLAMED ON PENNSY MANIAC
'Stratoliner’ Heads Here 4 MENT RN
(U. |
State Police, warned today that the
man who assaulted and muraered <i-year-old Faye Gates was
the! ©
sex-crazed maniac who killed ai
State College coed five weeks ago other girls)
since, and that until he was caught, | no girl in this neighborhood was]
and molested several
safe. | “This fellow has to be caught,” he said. “It’s not going to be easy, because he’s probably sane in every other respect. Hundreds of persons undoubtedly know him and consider him perfectly normal.” By police radio, Col. Adams summoned all available state troopers | here for the man hunt. Some were still investigating the| murder of Rachael Taylor, 17-year-| old coed, which occurred under similar circumstances only 22 miles from here March 28, when they! were summoned to hunt Miss Gates’ slayer, The body of Miss Gates was found at 2:30 a. m. Sunday beside her car on a lonely stretch of road in Spook Hoilow. She had driven| two girl friends home and apparently was driving alone when her! car was halted by the slayer Her skull was fractured in five places. Her body was in the road, most of the clothes torn off. The girl’s brassiere was stuffed in her mouth. Her body had not been mutilated, as Miss Taylor's was, or as was that of 19-year-old Margarct Martin who was Jured from her home at Kingston, Pa., Dec. 19, 1938, and was found tied in a sack on a creek bed, nude and disfigured. At the time of Miss Taylor's murder, State Police said she probably was slain by the same fiend who killed Miss Martin. The indications now were that all three girls were victims of one man.
+ v
SPEAKERS CHOSEN
Four speakers who will address the | 21st annual conference of the In- | diana Society for Mental Hygiene
i [in the Claypool Hotel May 17 and
| 18 were announced today by Thomas | G. Hutton, executive secretary of | the society. | They are Robert H. Haskell, med|ical superintendent of the Wayne {County Training School at North- | ville, Mich., who has won recogni(tion for his work with the feeble{minded; Dr. Franz Alexander, University of Chicago author, lecturer {and psychiatrist; Dr. Samuel W,
Tn |Hamilton, Washington, U. S. Pub-
The Boeing “Stratoliner” . . . Fifteen tons at 250 miles an hour.
Huge Plane to Visit City on
T. W. A. Shakedown Flight
A 4000-mile shakedown flight will bring the first of a fleet of giant Boeing “stratoliners™ here sometime this month over the skyways of Transcontinental and Western Air, Inc, inaugurating a new era in
commercial aviation.
Five of the massive 33-passenger four-motor ships are being deliv-
ered this week to T. & W. A. Dur-
ing the shakedown flights they must land and take off at every regular and emergency field on the company’s line. They are expected to be placed in services in June The stratoliners are the passen-ger-carrying counterpart of the famed “flying fortress” of the U.
|S. Army, rated as the most power-
ful aerial weapon in the world. Flying at altitudes of 16.000 to 20.000 feet at speeds up to 250 miles an hour, the “elongated teardrop” ships will mark five milestones in air transportatioh. The fleet will: 1. Place the first “over weather” pressurized cabin planes into passenger service anywhere in the world. 2. Mark the inauguration of the four-motor era in U. S. air travel.
Europe to the Far East in six days actual flying time. | - 4, Inaugurate 40-hour service between Los Angeles and Europe. | 5 Cut the cross-country flying time to 14'2 hcurs. The advantage of “over weather’ or high level fiying is that practically all rough and turbulent weather is avoided at the higher altitudes. Supercharging conditions the cabins so that passengers ride in normal air pressure at any altitude. In addition to passenger comfort and the increased range of vision which extends 150 miles on either side of the flying route in clear air, upper levels permit increased speed and almost perfect radio reception. The stratoliners will carry 33 passengers and a crew of five, as compared with 21 passengers and a crew of three in present transports. The ships are all-metal low-wing monoplanes weighing 30,000 pounds
empty and carrying a useful load |
of 15,000 pounds. High speed is 250 miles an hour. Cruising speed. with 691; per cent| power at 19,000 feet, is 222 miles! an hour. With maximum load and |
iic Health Service mental hospital
adviser, and Dr. David Slight, Uni- new faces that will be tied together |
{ versity of Chicago psychiatry professor and president of the Illinois Society for Mental Hygiene. | The conference theme will be “The | Community and the Individual.” Among the discussions on the program are “Mental Health of the | Child,” “Religion and Mental | Health,” (“Problems of Youth and Mental { Hygiene.”
{ { {
ALABAMA INVITES GOVERNORS | MONTGOMERY, Ala., May 6 (U. P.).—The Southern governors’ con-
| ference has been invited to attend|been organized to survey downtown!
oy i owes ALHYGIENE Local Builders Map
To Modernize Downtown
| |
A campaign by members of the
| building industry to modernize {downtown Indianapolis will be launched May 16 at a Hotel Lincoln | luncheon. | Members of the Construction | League and the Chamber of Com- | merce will hear F. T. Brown, chair{man of the Better Housing Committee of the Missouri State Chamber
(of Commerce, speak on “Lifting the
| Face of Main Street.” | He will stress the need of down-
| town modernization along uniform
(architectural lines and the replace‘ment of outmoded structures with
in a more or less common design. | Downtown Indianapolis already is lundergoing a million-dollar facelifting.
| Some 12 to 15 new buildings are |
|being built. and others are being
modernized. Still more building jobs |
lare in the rumor stage.
and a symposium on the|galso are current that several large | downtown parking lots are to be!
{sites of new buildings.
Modernization programs have
(been launched by Mr. Brown in a] number of Midwest cities, where]
{voluntary planning committees have
| en masse the annual Alabama deep districts and make recommendations | sea rodeo at Mobile on July 29-31. [for needed improvements.
Reports |
Drive
| Programs are designed to provide {an active solution of the problem of replacement. This is, according to {Mr. Brown, one of the big obstacles lin preserving established business and residential districts and stopping [the waste that has accompanied the shifting of population in larger
600 WILL TAKE PART
ae
MONDAY, MAY 6, 1940" in the Horace Mann High School
auditorium. IN GARY FESTIVAL Band, vocal and instrumental soloists, string quartets and choral Times Special organizations are included in the GARY, Ind, May 6.—More than | program which is an outgrowth of a 600 persons will take part in Gary’s| movement started last October at a two-day music festival which will meeting of the Gary Association of be held Wednesday and Thursday | Music and Allied Arts.
a
cities. | Increasing employment, raising] realty values, speeding up trade, at-| |tracting tourists, and lifting the general standard of living are] among the specific results expected | from “lifting the face of Main Street,” he says.
COLLECTS COMPACTS
| KINGSTON, Mass., May § (U. P)). | —To most women a compact is a necessity, but to Mrs. Edward Ran[dall it is a hobby. She has about 200 vanity cases of all shapes and with and without handles ‘and with and without powder puffs.
| sizes,
For the Best
STEAM OIL f-} Permanent, $1 to $8 ot IS
Si 4 Guaranteed—Go to the Ls
SMILE BEAUTY SHOP
French Salon 622 Mass, Ave.
ELL ay
|
L1-0026
Soft Dry
Flat Work Ironed
(not starched). Minimum 8
charge Tle. Ib.
Shirts in this service IRONED for 9c ea. Telephone Llncoln 1327
TIFFANY
The Sunlight LAUNDRY
Everything Washed Thoroughly CLEAN. All bed, bath and table linen ironed. Wearing apparel soft dried
3. Enable passengers to travel by air ir faur-motor airliners from
only three engines operating they | can climb to more than 18,000 feet. |
‘ART APPRECIATION EXHIBIT AT HERRON
An exhibit designed te bring about a greater apreciation of art has been arranged for this month at the John Herron Art Museum by Wilbur D. Peat, director. Pictures selected for the display |are taken from the Herron's permanent collection. On one wall in the long west gallery are typical portraits, landscapes and figure studies, three of each. They were selected with a view to illustrating
THERE IS A CAUSE
for those creaky joints and achy muscles. Could be your teeth. Ever think of that? We X-Ray teeth very nicely.
Bangs’ Ballot Under Question
HUNTINGTON, Ind, May 6 | (U P.).—Election boards in | Huntington Township will decide today whether former Mayor C. W. H. Bangs and J. Clayton Brown will be allowed to vote in tomorrow's primary election by | absent voters’ ballots from the Allen County jail. They are being held in connection with secreting assets of the former city electric utility.
for the BOY or GIRL Graduate . .
Dashing new Bulovas. Choose from many styles— the three typical approaches to a some with 17 jewels—others with 15 jewels—all fully subject—imitative, decorative and | expressive, On the opposite wall is a picture broken down into its component elements—linear composition, tonal quality and color scheme. Mr. Peat! selected a marine scene by Paul Dougherty. Another May exhibit is a collection of Chinese “mustard seed | garden” wood block prints, most of | them dating back to the eighteenth i century. The prints are a loan from | a Japanese collector living in San Francisco. Each is labeled with the | name of the flower represented.
FIRST BOONE COUNTY ~ OIL WELL IS STARTED
LEBANON, Ind., May 6 (U. P.) — Drilling in Boone County's first oil project began today on the H. A. Marshall farm northeast of Rosston on Road 29. N. N. Smith of Frankfort, manager of the operations, said he had leased 10,000 acres of land in Union, Worth and Marion townships and would drili nine more wells if ithe first test proves worthwhile.
Over 39 Years Here
DRS. EITELJORG
SOLTIS AND FRAY
DENTISTS
8% E. Washington St Ri-010 Four Doors East of Meridian
GET THIS ITEMIZED INVOICE WHEN YOU BUY AND
Know what you're paying; Know what you're getting; See the value in the car;
See all items in the IIR
/ 4 4 4
guaranteed.
items in our delivered prices—the charge for the car itself, the charge for transportation, based on rail rates, our charge for extra equipment or accessories you elect to buy.
OST people who buy automobiles these days have an old car to trade in. And many of them think they get the best “deal” when they buy where they get the biggest allowance for that car.
Other Splendid $ Wateh Values from $9.85 to $100.
2
In addition; we give you an itemized invoice when you buy. This provides the same detailed information, and-further shows how much we allow for your old ¢ar,.and clearly states the money difference to be paith-
But as you can easily see, what really matters in a trade 1s the money difference between the old-
29 on the Circle car allowance and the new-car delivered price.
2? Doors from Power & Licht Ce
—=18 N. Illinois St
Claypool Hotel Bldg.
For the new-car delivered price may be “packed” —an extra amount may be slipped in to provide for a bigger allowance on the old car.
You think you get a better deal—but you may find you are actually paying out more money in the end.
TRADE IN YOUR OLD WORNOUT WASHER
Thus we General Motors dealers provide a threefold protection against “packed”
new-cdar prices. s
They all help you buy on real value instead of used-car allowances alone. Come in and see for yourself how they help you get the most for your money. Ies easy to see the money difference vou pay when you buy from a General Motors dealer.
This is the standard price tag used by General Motors dealers to show what makes up the prices of new cars delivered to customers. “PRICE OF GAR” means the price we charge for the car itself, including reimbursement for Federal Tax and conditioning—"TRANSPORTATION CHARGE” means a charge for transportation from factory to vou, based
Big price charts on our walls and “plain- . ’" . on rail rates—“OPTIONAL EQUIPMENT AND ACCESSORIES’ means the VIEW price tags on our cars show all charge for any extra equipment or accessories you elect to buy.
NSE FORE YOU BUY, BE SURE THE FINANCE CHARGES SATISFY YOU
MONARCH MOTOR CO. 1040 N. Meridian St.
a) The!
1940 ALL-WHITE SN THOR WASHER AND 2 DE LUXE GELINA “ror TUBS
TOP
ALL FOR ONLY
Se ——————————————
i
Ww
GEORGE HALL OLDSMOBILE, INC. 2917 Central Ave.
HICKMAN OLDSMOBILE, INC. 13th and Meridian
HOWARD HOLCOMB, INC. 3209 East Washington St.
HOOSIER CADILLAC CO. INC. 2330 N. Meridian St.
JOHNSON CHEVROLET CO. 1037 N. Meridian St.
MERIDIAN PONTIAC, INC. 923 N. Meridian St.
M OT ORS
BL) CK
WM. CARSON 748 Virginia Ave. (Pontiac)
COBURN MOTOR CO., INC. 550 S. Meridian St. (Chevrolet)
COMMUNITY MOTORS, INC. 37-57 West 38th St. (Buick)
EAST SIDE CHEVROLET, INC. 5436 East Washington St.
E. W. ESSIG MOTOR SALES 2444-48 West 16th St. (Oldsmobile)
FOUTS CAR & TRUCK CO. 2030 West Washington St.
GENERAL
f
(Buick)
NORTH SIDE CHEVROLET, INC. "836 East 63d St.
(Pontiac) SUPERIOR CHEVROLET, INC.
552 East Washington St.
$1.50 Cover and Drain Hose
BOTH 59%¢
FOR
ASK FOR A FREE DEMONSTRATION
Lovell Cushion Roll Safety Wringer @ Tub, porcelain on all sides @ Pressed steel legs and Beep Skirt @ Enclosed gear case @ Rubber Sealed Cover @ Quiet, steel-cut gears @ Life.
ts Radio Inc
TOBEY MOTORS, INC.
3120 E. Washington St. (Oldsmobile)
WASHINGTON AUTO SALES CO. 402 N. Capitol Ave. (Chevrolet)
E ALERS
Pe
(Pontiac)
R PO ADIiLLAC
Ba
