Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 July 1940 — Page 2
PAGE 2.
At City Hall
"BIRTH CERTIFICATE
Sosa
a
BUSINESS AT PEAK |
Demand Increased by Persons Who Want Ready Proof
Of Their United States Citizenship: City Undergoing Wave of Good Health.
By RICHARD LEWIS
I'he City Health Department is doing a land-oftice business issuing birth certificates to persons who want ready
proof of United States citizenship.
Most of the demand comes from prospective travelers Canada or Mexico, but some come from young men and
to
women who believe citizenship evidence will help them get
10hs.
Up until five or six vears
ago, birth certificates were is
sued only on rare I'he demand began to grow with Social Security legisla tion. Now, it is much great
acco) di
Morean,
or than ever before, Dr,
ng
to Herman { 3
1
health officer.
While On the Subject
The City if In 8 wave ©
health, speaking collectively
contagions di
CASE Tate IS
monia is tom of 1s
nne
There are a few cases
annual eurve
nd whoop
Dr. Mo
ast year at tnis time weather of ing he
1 consistenth aol
and
Cit)
10 dave 1s
ahetting normait puis
> A Health Officer explained many health however, in health in the sumnier lhe y
lonee 1184
good
hazards to look out fo
= x 5°
hazards with the plant
wale
ferims are sunburn and Rhustoxicodend mace) rains more o anv other Dr. Morgan
fea Dolson vy
impure drinking
on DOLISON 1vV Ol
door vacations on I'he
eX
yan almost combinat
of mishans Sala
ree-lea plant an oily resin to whieh
vreies
people are alergic In varving ae grees I'he plant's menace
where IN this part of the «
itigated hv injections
the head on
small doses
hut sunburn
ording to Dn
ural areas, ™
Wateh wate) \ Morgan warned. In most states a in Indiana health department mark safe wate pplies with signs Virtually everv case of tvphoic vies eported in Indianapoli fo 0 five vearsz has heen contracted fron impure water outside e City on State, according to Dr. Mo A More About Health | yO bh Municip Ins al A Co of 250 <hion “efare Ci Wa he WV goes a Me 12 agitation for the EItal rAMEe 10 A nax when a x e Ren ¢ ative died « ma x while attending a session of the ! giclature Since that time. the City Hospita 18 hecome one { e most com piete medical institutions of its kind m ee ecountry I'o make more complete hospital authorities a nlanning spend $350 000 or im nrovemen R the improven an heen held up. pendi de on oO the desirability of digegi A e\ well for water or getting City watey
A decision is expected to be reached
within a month, so that the work oi revamping the water svstem with he hospital installing new elevators and expanding the surgery can get der way bye Jate cummes
Market Receipts Up
Annther of the Citys nldey
tinne is 1e Marke! Marketmaster Paul Lindemann wha KNnowe pvery square foot of the marketplace hv heart, will report gross receipts totaling £21000 foi the first six months of thi veal when he appears before the Safety Roard Tuesda This amount $1000 more tha he receipts fo he S half of 1939 I'he market pavs for itself out of revenue, even pavs for its own improvemen It ow ¢o ains 248 stands, with 10 vacancie In a few days, painters will be a work retonching Ne Marke ide with gre paint The Lid's On I'he nara welling \ ‘ he { vv Ha ‘ rack of fanm THe I'naiana Ave The | ¢ tment has heen Y er AVY ¢ ¢ ' Dp selling at mianie i W f © aq cording to « \ Mi¢ R e Avenues ni ) 11 is oiaing ip earlie neverihel A good deal © an ROOF on at City Hall g the summer when there is; much fe no oO the enmplovees od Favor ' ion r City emp © he nickel magueines viii o UL COVE
Sa BRR
-
oa Boa Se
BR
[a \,
SRS AE TERI
Ratlreadmen
FEDERAL SAVINGS RAD LOAN ASSN
«oo GARTEL GHANGE |
IS SUGGESTED
‘Hard-Boiled” Barter Trade With Latin America Proposed Instead. THOMAS 1. STOKES Times Special Writer WASHINGTON, versy over the Administration's pro
By
July 6. Contro posed North-South American cartel the Hitler America
designed to meet
rage he
approach of
Latin iccentuated with
hreat in 1 Ing
the
the Pan-American Conference in Havana later this month cartel scheme calls to corporation to buy up Lain American surpluses and dispose of them wherever possible in order to forestall Nazi trade ae
I'he
huge
reements wit}
South and Central American cow tries It is feared that such Ge man agreements might lead to pe ical penetration While the necessity tor radi
protective measures is generally rec oghized, this particular approach questioned in some quarters oround that ft is a grandiose ficent enterprise, with Uncle San footing most of the bill al and the result dubious
Label t "WPA Plan’
ol 31
bene
grea
cost
Extremists among the eritics sal
it would be making a WPA project
out of South America They point
0 various accompanying proposals suggestion of one
including the
group of publicists that the food stamp plan now used in many citi in this country tor distribution of surpluses be extender to SN America Some cries proposed rating that the United States adopt A
broader and more realistic program emplovitig a mixture of methods 10 varving cireumsuances ang emphasizing the barter type ol agreement whereby he would ins upon South American countries ax ing specified products of ours in ex
meed
change for specified products of theirs Our attitude, in short, would be more hard-boiled than the cartel
proposal
Urges Trade Board
One advocate of this sort of av
Senator Vandenberg 'R
proach is
Mich). He has introduced a hil aunthorizing creation ol a foreign trade board, similar to the British Board of ‘Trade. which would have centralized awthority over all 1 elon trade agencies of the Govern ment Fven the aril Commissio would become a subordinate body
Due to the disruption of European
rade with Datin American nations bv the war. the United States has made great inroads in Central and
America, and those counties likewise have increased then o us, which provides an ex basge for a program of trade expan «jon and protection south of the Rio Grande
South SA {PS
ellent
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
5
Next Battle Scene? -
View of Fort-de-France on island of Martinique, 300 miles off Venezuela.
‘Gift Child" From Britain Cheers Bereaved Couple MOVING SOUTH
ALIQUIPPA, Pa july § (UJ. P
Lite 1s full and rich again today for Mr, and Mrs. Sam Turner folowing the arrival of their “gift child.” their T-vear-old niece, Ethel Mav Wilkes. from England I'ne Turners were left childless \ 20 whet their baby Rene died after they came to An yr from England In Febru ! 1938. Mt furner’'s sister, Florne Wi stricken ill in England nd she wrote the Turners [tf nyvithing happet to me, J} A} A ) ike littie Ethel She he mage « vour Renee After two years of legal red tape
and English courts, the
permission to
81 el Niece her 11 wal
KAMPE-ING OUT
Hitler's « Book Well Read, Like Road Map
MEIN KAMP.” by that cele trate exterioy adecoratom Adoll Hitler, in the last three weeks has
resumed its place in the best sell Indianapolis taken a
and at the
ing fiction in
non It likewise has purt in rental Public Ary Ahpgprer Iv people are buving tourist npuys a roaa map 0
a A
EUROPEAN SITUATION SERVIGE CLUB TOPIC
CF ( 18) on \ Wi A. H Fii I &: ( vision qairector ang orn Fan De nt manage! peak on I'he Fmopean Situation” at their luncet ©y Monday at the Clavpool Hotel Rect pamed club commitiee ( el Pa ( Denny at CC Ce (George ( Mize. bowin LHeoros | K \ \ t \ ( Allred Campbel NOK « fava Wi t ) | Vie \ ( 13. 1 e pun HH ( Is I BE. Mag | K. Ley Le bit jr H H Ma n \ aia) Paul RB. Matthew \ ( S A.B Op. Nava Stepl ( Nola public Ki eth R Bad esojution Charle W Arde : Ve activilae FE J) ( Dis visitation C. Harve B eifare., and Flovd R M 0 ogra Philip « Lew or of 1 arenaqe, « Hh Pub ol
Reading Newspapers for
Others Is
Downtown Clipping Service Wades Through Ton Each Month.
By TIM TIPPETT
Nine stories above N Pennsyl vania St. in the K. of P. Building HW. Dragoo directs the reading
and clipping of a ton of newspaper 1» month The 1ustie constant underiving fohte unsuccessiully noise in the street below rhirty vears ¢#go Mr, Dragoo he - gan clipping papers for his own inregarding trade new laff at the Central Press service virtually every paper published Hiinols, Michigan and and every conceivable story His because M1
A nd of fuarning pages ana
ghiears creates
of
the snip of an threac <onnd us the
Ww hiv W\
ormation Today his clipping reads i Indiana Kentucky clips ve ul
clippings purely commercial denving of his ol
clients orael Of some Iragog sald many
us pect that vanity ders News
prompts
construction, political campaigns, various advertising and similar subjects comthe bulk of my orders he
of
arives pose said A clipping service in the United States) demanding & mastery of detail a memory capable of containing thousands of names, places and interests,
are 45 husiness
and
there is a
Newspapers are first read b) readers’ whose duty it is to mark every story which one of the sen
jce's clients wants. The paper 1 then clipped by a “elipper” and pasted to a mounting slip contain ing the service's name and the date upon which the story appeared in print Clippings are (hen mailed to out
of -town customers, Local clients receive theirs by messenge: Aside from the huge piles of papers and stacked elippings on every desk and chair Mr, Dragoo office has filing folders in ster! drawers and overflow files piled neatly on the flom
This it a 30-year massing of co
Good Business
RX
a.
Mary Massachusetts the pages
Frances ve,
hacker, 223 reads all
1 Liane u t
naecnee whitch nx 1el= Whitcomb Riley hand I'he let 1914, requests a papel
gned in hi Noy
irom a
own 10 local and inclosed service covers 25 population of tates a while its mostly o states its from ail the Findin
for a
pet the news clients country [ike looking havstaeck,” Mh But we use our own own new read the papers
vd fom are nvey clients is
needle in A
tins tome! while we
for other people,
* Em
broke out and further delay plagued the Turners, On Wednesday, rived aboard the and the Turners Montreal, When thev came to their home here, the Turners were thankful laughed and fondled the child Mav's only reaction was to to the Turner's woodshed and
Ethel Duchess met
May arof Bedher at
ford
I'hey Ethel
point
that wuntie?
Ihe
vour air-raid shelter
arners said the war hasn't the child bevend her knowlof air-raid shelters, She has in a British orphanage in
Wolverhampton, near Birmingham imce her mother's death
DRUG CLERKS OF STATE TO MEET
Sales, Displays. Business And Manufacturing to Be Discussed.
touche edge
Deen
LAFAYETTE, Ind, July 6 -—-The
annual Conference for Drug
Clerks will be held on the Purdue University campus Monday through Friday ie displays, business manus clung methods drug cot pounds, and other subjects will be Iseussed by leaders wn pharmaceu-
ical work
Among the speakers will be J W Sturmer, Philadelphia College of Pharmacy and Seience, who left the
Purdue staff in 1912; H. 8. Noel, of Eli Lilly and Co. and Fred A. Rusell of the University of Illinois ” » » I EC Elliott, Purdue Univer ty president, will make the open-
ng address at the Indiana Nursery-
mex Association state meeting here Wednesday More than 100 are expected to attend Prof. Frank Hail and Dr. G. D. Scarseth, membel of the Purdue laealty, will ( I uv n n Hoosier farmer alte holding to ber hagh evel ol hog production vot withh neighboring states, according to the report of M. MM. Jus (agricultural statistician I'he report states that the num er of sows fairowing auring the past six months was five per cent
hove last vear, totaling 536.000, but number of pigs per Litter was For the fall pig crop of 129 000 sows are expected This Iwo per cent fall figures for 1939
me smaller 1940
10
oni farrow the
18 Helton » » ”
Dammon Catron, vocational agri-
cultural teacher at New Castle has been appointed assistant in 4-H Club work in the department ot Aoricuitnral Extension He will ve sthiaction in pig. lamb and coll club project work
STATE MAY BUY TOLL BRIDGE OVER WABASH
Action that eventually the privately owned toll bridge over New Harmon
ix
many
the Wabash River at
heing cone Toll Bridge to William Commission
Ina a free bhridee the State according
of Cannelton
ddered In Commission, G. Minor chairman Mr. Minor said the Commission will meet next Thursday at the Claypool Hotel to consider purchase of the span, which has been offered
o the State by the Harmony Way Bridee Co. tor about $950 000 Bridee tolls bring an annual reve
enue of about $£125000. If the State Hould purchase the span, it would be ree of tolls as soon as the bonds were reured
ARMY CAPTAIN. SON BURNED TO DEATH
MT. VICTORIA, Md. July § (U PO Capt. George W. Lermond, 35 and his gon, George Jr, 7. were burned to death here today when fire destroved the home of his father-in-law, Ma) William H Llovd, retired Mrs, Bdith Lermond and two ther children, William Henry, 4,
and Edith, 18 months, escaped from the second floor porch where they vere sleeping. Cant. Lermond, who attended Boston College and West
Point, had heen stationed at Fi Lewis, Wash, and was en route to It. Benning, Ga.
GOLFER OUT-FOXED
GREAT BARRINGTON, Mass, July 8 (U. Po) —William Morgan
solved the mystery of the disappearing golf balls at Wyantuek County Club, Mr. Morgan was walking down the fairway of the second hole when
out of the nearby woods crept a young red fox, which grabbed his ball and fied,
make
, S, WARSHIPS Forgets Personal
Believed Dispatched to
Martinique Area as Observers.
WASHINGTON, July 6 (U. P) The United States was believed today to have dispatched a number of neutrality patrol warships to the general of French Marti-
nique in the Carribbean to investi-
vicinity
gate veports that a French naval detachment there is awaiting a British ultimatum
The American vessels five de stroyers were said to have heen dispatched trom the Virgin Islands
lo observe the Martinique situation at first-hand Reports from St 'homas, Virgin Islands, said that the ships left vesterdayv for an unknown destination. 8t. Thomas is about a day's run from Martinique
While most officials declined to compent on the movement of the aestrovers, one authoritative source said they “are not bound for the Panama Canal” He added. however, that if the ships actually reach the Martiniaue area they will act strictly as observers Would Warn U. 8. Ships One of their functions would be to wart American shipping in the vicinity iH hostilities developed be ween the French and Bry Lhe batueships New York and l'exas which sailed out of «Si homas with the destrovers Wert sald to be headed in another direc tion The two ships are carrving U. 8 Naval Academy midshipmen on their annual cruise and, it wa beiieved, would not enter anv po. tential danger areas Among the French ships at May
tinique are a number of submarines smail eraft and possibly the 22.146
ton aireralt carrier Bearn Rritish authorities in London have denied that British cruisers are blockading the island, but declined [furthe: comment Report Blockade Information reaching French circles in Washington was that a British blockade had cut ofl {hie stand Sed communication: Hid that British ships could be expected LO move jn to insist that the French saurrender or scuttle their ships on fight State Department officials professed to have no knowledge of the purported blockade Presence of the Bearn at Martinique was not officially confirmed
A usuallv-authoritative sional reported that the Bearn carried as freight 100 Amen can planes. Another source placed
Congres
souree
the number at 500. The shipment reportedly includes a number ol Curtiss “Hell-Diver” bombers which the U. 8. Navv had released for resale to France and Great Britain It also was reported that other American planes shipped from California for trans-shipment to
Lrance. al tored al Martinique
BRITAIN SEEKS WAR FUND OF 4 BILLIONS
LONDON. Julv 6 «U. P A sup plemental v estimate issued by the I'reasury yesterday requested that
give the Government an grant of 1.000.000.000 pounds £4 000.000 000 [x tion of the wa
Parliament blanket Mm asec -
Sir Kingsley Wood. chancellor of the Exchequer, is expected to introduce the new grant in Commons
Tuesday, and probably will give his
listeners some clue as to what further sacrifices Britishers will be called upon to make later in the yea)
Two huge war grants already have been made since outbreak of the war, oue tor 500,000 000 pounds, and a second of 100.000.0000 pound
|
one
TO
TELEPRONER FREE PARKING OF INDIANAPOLIS LL. 8881 Alabama at Vermont St. FREE hUS a comms TTT ve - wom — ne per — bini———— . apm i iy ~
Gain for Party |
I'he National Greenback Party's Anna sup-
nominee for President, Mrs Milburn, obtains part of hel from Iiamoneys, wholesup=
port terest but she heartedly ports the pars tYs program for abolishing Interest Mrs F well Seattle
Milburn, do Wash, widow, was {fol by
{10 =
nominated President the party at its Mrs. Milburn convention here Thursday John Zahnd, Indianapolis, the party's usual presidential nominee, again was named chairman, a post he has I'he National has for its goal and banking re-
national held 18 years Greenback Party certain monetary forms
RED CROSS WAR FUND
NOW TOTALS $63,939
I'he Marion County Red Cross wai
relief fund reached $63,939.30 today.
Among contributions received to- could have placed the bomb in the
day were $25 from the W. T. Grant Co.. $20 [rom the McCrory Stores Corp. apd $10 cad from Frank E Bt Catherine Ker ahd | 1, Livi Ciil received rai Hiclhuded $HU [rom Mi Bowman Elder, $10 trom M and Mi red A. Sim and $81.20 from employee of the Marion Coutity Wellare Depart - nent Women workei Jroups reported: Mrs. Paul J. Howey and assistants, £110.85: Mrs. Wallace Heller and sistants, £53.80 Nis Harry R Coole nm iskistants, $38.25 Miss Bi Fpstein and assistants, 857.20, Myre Patrick O'Connor and asstant £20 50 and Mar: Merritt I'hompson, $39.15
SAMUEL B. WALKER CENTURY PRESIDENT
SATURDAY, JULY 6, 1940
FAIR EMPLOYEE YOUNG LOVE
THREATENED IN BOMBING PROBE
‘I'll Kill Her,” Phone Voice Says to Worker's Husband; Bundsman Held.
NEW YORK, July 6 (U, P).—A| telephone caller threatened the life | of an employee of the British Pa-| vilion at the World's Fair early to-| day while police pressed their search | the or persons Wwho| planted the July 4 bomb there which | Killed two detectives, The phone rang in the apartment | of Mrs. Marjorie Rosser, the pa-| vilion’s telephone operator, at 2| a. m. and her husband answered. | He told the caller he was speaking | for his wife. The caller then said, in a flat, even voice: “I'll kill her.” | | |
|
lor person
Mrs. Rosser had received a tele-| phone call at the pavilion on Tuesday in which a man told her to clear | the building before it blew up. | Thursday afternoon the bomb was! discovered. The detectives carried it to a clear space of the grounds! where it exploded. | Apartment Guarded
Police said, as they placed a heavy | guard around the Rosser apartment, | that they believed the call was made
by the same man, Mrs, Rosser was not at home. Her husband and police would not reveal her where-
abouts, | The new development came as the
police began questioning the pa-| vilion's employees. Police turned to these 110 men
and women after a round-up of 100 persons identified with extremist groups had yielded no clues. All were released except an alien Ger-| man, an ardent Nazi, who was held | for illegally possessing firearms. Mayor F. H. La Guardia said the city would offer a reward of $25.000 or information leading fo the arrest and conviction of the bombers The Detectives’ Benevolent Association announced a $1000 reward and the Patrolmen's Benevolent Association and the Association of Sergeants, Lieutenants, Captains and Inspectors were expected to of-
Youth Vows He'll See
Deanna Despite Police HOLLYWOOD, June 6 (U. P.),
-—Robert Smith, 21, has never been any closer to Deanna Durbin
than her front gate—and that got him in —— trouble with
the police—but he was determined today to see her, come what may. James bin, father of the singing star, called police last night and reported that a youth was loitering in front of his home, Police picked young Smith up while he was sitting in Miss Durbin’'s automobile, “Well,” he was quoted as saving, “I guess vou boys are looking for me. I'm in love with Deanna ana I want to marry her.” Police asked him whether Miss Durbin, 17, who recently received her first kiss in a movie, felt the same way about him. The youth couldn't be certain about that, but asserted: “She's going to fall in love with somebody and it might as well he nie.” He was questioned and released,
nas dtibinitl
Dur-
Miss Durbin
CLAIMS GUARD READY TO SERVE
Gen. Williams Reports That Officers Are ‘Eager’ For Action.
WASHINGTON, July 8 (U., P.).--Maj. Gen. John F. Williams, chief of the Guard, informed the War Department today that his
National
organization of 235,000 men is ready
for active service at any time that the President may issue a call.
fer rew aras, 100. Gen. Williams said in a report to Detectives Ferdinand A. Socha! ’ ‘ and Joseph J. Lynch were killed Gen, George C. Marshall, reguiar when the bomb, which they had Army Chief of Staff, that he had carried from the pavilion to a vacant canvassed the commanding generals area, exploded. Six other persons ©f the militia's 22 divisions and injured, jother ranking officers regarding
Jundsman Held
Police Commissioner Lewis J. Valentine said he believed that only a person familiar with the pavilion fan
upstairs where
found
room, it was
their readiness for service
“Without. exception, these com-
munications voiced the ‘willingness, the eager Guard as a whole to enter the service of
desire of the National the United States and thus fulfill the fundamental purposes of
the Guard under the laws and trae
Caesar Kroeger, apartment house ditions of this country,” Gen. Wil= superintendent, a former Bunds- liams said. mun, was held. Police found large| President Roosevelt recently ree maps of the United States on the quested Congress to grant him full wills of his howe, pricked hy pins, authority Lo order the guard to ac Large world maps were found on tive service as part of the national which had been outlined the prog- defense program. The bill, which
ress ol the Russian-Finnish war and the United States neutrality zone. Several groups of South Sea islands
were ringed. ‘There were also two automatic pistols hidden in a drawer, each under a copy of Adolf Hit-
ler's “Mein Kampf.”
The British, French and Italian | buildings at the Fair were heing| closely guarded
RING IS RECOVERED FROM HIPPO TANK
aroused among the legislators, is still pend-
considerable controversy
ing in Congress,
SURVEYOR APPOINTS NEW CHIEF DEPUTY
Leonard Dorman, 2124 English Ave, has been appointed chief deputy county survevor tn succeed
Paul T. Schaeffer, 5825 F. New York
St., who resigned to accept a po-
| sition with the State Highway De-
DETROIT, July (U. P.).—The partment, mail to Springfield, Ill, should re-| Mr. Dorman will superintend all turn today to Mrs, Catherine Bay-| designing and engineering work sle the diamond ring which tell into | 85signed to the surveyor's office,
Swmpel BO Walker, controller of the hippopotamus tank at the pDe-! John Ryan, county surveyor, made the William H. Block Co. was troit Zoo on the Fourth the appointment Mis. Baysle visite / Jo IQ “Tia lected president of (h Century Club! Ny iy . Hig io win; FAMOUS MAKE iw Ha aaughier, elly e 0 V At § ecel vod annual outing at hild 1 18 ar 2 NEW HAND child, who was wearing the ring, | CLEANER the couniry home of Coll and Mrs. dropped it into the hippo tank. Mrs. | § Full Cash ; Robert L. Moorhead Baysle couldn't wait while attend- | y Price . $4.95 Fhomas A. Daily, Jesse C, Moore ants drained 2500 gallons of water | BN ae Wins co your and Charles F. Remy were elected from the tank but after they had! UNION VACUUM vice presidents. Edward J. Hecker done so, they found the ring and |i STORES, Int ( Rer | : - . ’ Re 41 FE. Wash, St. Jr. was elected secretary and Wil- forthwith mailed it to Mrs. Baysle. |i. MA-2374
liam P. Snethen, treasurer I'he Re Fr. Joseph H. Somes president of the Indiana Society Sons of the American Revolution, spoke on the life of Father Gibault, patriot priest of Vincennes,
HOUSE WILL TAKE UP ~ HATCH BILL TUESDAY -
WASHINGTON House
COlSsidael
P.) aureed Hatch
{lool
July 6 (U
leaders today had lo
tht
politi bill
Senatt
approved
clean oll the
Iu I'he House by D. NM emplovees
eral Nn
aa)
in the Dempsey, state Fed - pohitiexists for
imneasure Pep would who are paid the same ban Ivy that NOW
sponsored Joun J extend to with IN on cal Federal employees hv the which WA:
Irom
It was House J reversea It undertaken to Committee
cdhisapproved once
idiciary Committee pilter Aa
the
“Cll move
hill
force
by petition
JOINS FEDERAL RESERVE CHICAGO, July 6 (U, P,),—President George J Schaller of the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago announced that the First Bank Decatur, Ind, has been admitted to membership in the
Federal Reserve Svsten
Loaay
Stale ol
SHOP IN COMFORT, ENTIRE STORE AIR-CONDITIONED
ENTIRE STORE
PEN NIGHT
Ill UNTIL 9 O'CLOCK LEP T
BUSINESS DIRECTOR
Merchandise and Service:
ol -
tewart’s ;
OFFICE SUPPLIEN—
10 K. Wash, 43d & College ih & Penn, 65489 FE. Wash,
Passenger Cars 3 iw FOR |
DRIVE IT YOURSELF, Ine, | Phone Riley 7788
PHOTO—LI'THO and PLANOGRAPH Prints
Indianapolis Blue Print
SAXOPHONE
Instruction 1
INDIANA MUSIC co.
115 E. Ohio St. L1. 4088
Per Lesson
LEARN TO PLAX IN 60 pAYS
Guaranteed course of lescone given away
ith v { = —. _ Slate, J I n
A
ITT ATE ROE
+ [20 EAST OHIO ST. wi
ELINED Men's EPAIRED Ww ane EATTED | Women's LEQN tions co 235 MASS. E.
& Lithograph Co.
SALE
New In progress. Sense: tional values in every
FRACTURE BEDS Can Be Rented at the New HAAG'S ALL-NIGHT DRUG STORE
22nd and Meridian
Department. Easy Terms STORES IN INDIANAPOLIS
OUTFITTERS TO MEN, WOMEN and CHILDREN
Our Famous First Quality Number 3
HOSIERY
Gennine Ringlesa Reinforced Heel and Ine
MILLER-WOHL CO.
45 E. Wash, R1.-2230
C
Civingstons
Hi THE MODERN CREDIT STORE | | Indiana heater 1129 Ww. Wash. Ie ononsite ur
ICE AND FUEL CO. EVERY KIND
EVERY SIZE C 0 A L
Phone TAlbot, DRexel, BEImont 1334
|
Say It With
FLOWERS
ALLIED FLORISTS ASSN,
A SAFE DEPOSIT BOX IS LOW COS1
INSURANCE 9 Different Sizes
$3 to $100 a Year
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corp
Security Trust Co.
130 E. Washington
For WATCH REPAIRING
Between lllinota St. and Uirele ___ |
