Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 August 1940 — Page 6

PAGE 6

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

MARTIN TO SAY '| TAKE GREAT PLEASURE IN--

Fill Club Posts

National —— Chosen

To Introduce Willkie At Elwood.

ELWOOD, Ind, Aug. 9 (U. P.) —|

Rep. W. Joseph Mass), newly appointed Republican National Chairman, Wendell L. Willkie, Elwood’'s native son, to an anticipated 300,000 attending the Aug. 17 ceremonial here at which Mr. cepts the G. O. P. President, Homer Capehart, man of arrangements, said today. Mr. Capehart announced that Rep. Charles Halleck of Rensselaer, who presented Mr. Willkie to the

Martin Jr. (R.|

will introduce]

Willkie formally ac-| nomination for chair- |

Benjamin N. Bogue . . . heads

Columbia Club.

Republican Convention, would in- |

troduce Mr. Martin.

The invocation is to be given by | William Lowe Bryan, president em- |

eritus of Indiana University, Mr.

Willkie’s alma mater.

Thomas to Sing John Charles Thomas, former Metropolitan Opera baritone, and several bands and orchestras will offer a musical program before the speeches begin The Most: Rev. Bishop Francis Noll of Ft. Wavne has been asked to pronounce the benediction following Mr. Willkie's notification address. | A program of entertainment will be presented in Callaway Park, the scene of the ceremony, between 10 a.m. and 2 p. m. Mr. Thomas will | appearon the program about 1 o'clock. Friday evening before the cere-| monies a program from the steps of the new high school with Walter O'Keefe, famous radio comedian, serving as master of ceremonies, and Walter Bruce of Indianapolis directing community singing, will be presented 1913 Class Plans Reunion

A committee of the class of 1913 of Indiana University, of which Mr. Willkie was a member, completed arrangements yesterday for a reunion on the day of the ceremonies. The class will maintain headquarters at the park. Traffic officials said they believed they had solved most of the traffic problems of the celebration. They have arranged parking facilities to handle 40,000 automobiles on ground adjacent to the park where the ceremonies will be held.

3000 IDLE IN STRIKE OVER CLOSED SHOP

CANONSBURG, Pa. Aug. 9 (U.

John C. Ruckelshaus « + + DEW

vice president

The hoard of directors of the Columbia Club yesterday elected Benjamin N. Bogue to fill the unexpired term of Fred C. Gardner, who died recently. Mr. Bogue's position of vice president will be filled by John C. Ruckelshaus.

0. 1. 0. LEAGUE

Non-Partisan Group Takes Stand Against Naziism And Communism.

P.) —A strike over the closed shop and check-off of union dues today closed the Standard Tin Plate Co. plant here, Canonsburg’s largest industry, forcing approximately 3000 | employees into idleness. The walkout followed collapse of prolonged negotiations between the company and the Amalgamated

Association of Iron, Steel and Tin|St,

Workers Union.

NEW KENSINGTON, Pa, Aug. 9 (U. P.) .—An eight-hour stirke which | interrupted operations at the Arnold, Pa. plant of Aluminum Co. of | America was settled today when the! company agreed to re-employ a| discharged workman.

LOW-RENT HOMES NEEDED WASHINGTON, Aug. 9 (U. P).— |: A U. S. Housing Authority survey | of housing conditions in the vicinity | of defense industries today indicated | a need for 29,284 low-rent homes which would cost an estimated $128,849, 000. -

& |

|

The Marion County Committee | [of Labor’s Non-Partisan League (C. | 1. 0.) has gone on record as opposing the “alien ideologies of Com-=-

| munism, Fascism or Naziism.”

At a meeting last night in the

{Rubber Workers’ Hall, 203 S. Noble

the following resolution was passed: “Whereas, Labor's Non-Partisan League is an organization founded lon truly American principles and designed as a means for the workling people of America to make their {voices heard in the halls of Congress. “And whereas, Labor's Non-Parti-san League has been falsely branded {in the press and over the radio a%| {being dominated and controlled by | {Communistic and other alien ele(ments, “And whereas, if this false charge 1s not boldly and publically refuted, the effectiveness of our thoroughly American organization will be in| Jeopardy. “Therefore, be it resolved that | {Labor's Non-Partisan League of Marion County {having no sympathy whatsoever with the alien ideologies of Communism, Fascism, or Naziism. “Be it further resolved, that no

{| between ew Deal

BARS BUNDSMEN

go on record as)

POLITICAL BOSS IS NEW TARGET OF TOM DEWEY

Aids Willkie in iy Erppladls on Machine Alliances With New Deal.

By THOMAS L. STOKES Times Special Writer COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo, Aug. XE Weddl L. Willkie's emphasis ¥ the idealists and

{| corrupt city machines may become,

| before it is all over, one of the de-

cisive influences in the presidential campaign.

issue, it is only necessary to name {the states where the machines ‘operate and add up their electoral | votes.

In a close race, and this one has|

|every promise of becoming that, any uprising against the machine | bosses who are working hand in | glove with the New Dealers might | decide the election. | To give color and abhorrent detail to the picture of boss rule, Mr | willkie now has called upon an ex- { pert, Tom Dewey. The New York | District Attorney sings a most per- | suasive bass on this issue; in fact it | made him a national figure almost | ov ernight and sent him into the Re- | publican convention with the largest | number of pledged delegates.

Knows His Machines

The mildest-mannered of secondrate bosses, who has only a com- | fortable paunch and a good disposi-

tion, loves his wife and children and

[under Mr. Dewey's scarifying snarl a black rogue who wears horns and steals pennies from the box of the blind woman at the curb. During the campaign the young man with the mustache will tell the story over and over, Though he failed of nomination for the presidency, he may become one of the chief reasons for a Willkie victory. He has a whole gallery of beauties upon which to draw. There's the Tammany machine and its allied rackets, Dewey knows as he knows the features of his own face. There's the machine of Frank Hague, Mayor of | Jersey City, which has gone beyond |the accepted confines of ordinary | corruption and has used its minions to make a mockery of civil liberties, | much to the discomfiture of New Dealers.

Pew Shaken Off

In Pennsylvania Democrats have built a machine under Senator Joe | Guffey which makes the Boies Pen- | rose Republican machine of old a tarnished .ghost. There is also a rather smelly Republican machine in Pennsylvania, of course, but Mr. Willkie shook it off—at least temporarily—when Joseph N. Pew, the lanky oil man, missed the Willkie bandwagon at Philadelphia. There's the expensive machine operated in Chicago by Mayor Ed Kelly. Like Boss Hague he was lone of the most noisy promoters of a third term. He furnished gallery echoes at the convention—hardly | enough at times to drown out the [booes—as well as that fog-horn voice of Tom Gerry, superintend|ent of sewers, who took in vain (the name of practically every state in the union in his microphoenic shouting for Mr. Roosevelt.

Indiana to Get Mention

Smaller machines will come in for | some unkind words by Mr. Dewey and other Republican speakers—the remnants of the Pendergast ma- | chine in Kansas City, which lost

its boss when Tom Pendergast went to jail, and the Indiana Democratic machine with { Club. | Then, in the South, there's the

{Communist or Bund member be {machine operated so long in Mem-

ris acinus (IN EVERY PACKAGE (3

{allowed to hold office or participate |

|in the deliberations of Labor's Non-

Partisan League of Marion Coun-| ty.”

In Beautiful Permanents for Saturday and Monday Only!!

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Jae

BEAUTE-ARTES

601 ROOSEVELT N. E. COR. WASH.

BLDG.—L1-0433 AND ILLINOIS ST.

| em:

phis by the ruddy-faced silver- | haired, elegant Ed Crump, looking like something out of “Gone With Lie Wind,” who should be sitting jon the front porch of a colonial {mansion against a backdrop of wis- | teria, sipping mint juleps and saying “by gad, suh!” but who instead is one of the cleverest city bosses left in the United States. The Democrats have just given Mr. Dewey another target by select|ing Boss Ed Flynn of the Bronx as | their national chairman. The District Attorney dug up some records of the '20¢ showing that Boss Flynn as Sheriff of the Brorx, had made the notorious Dutch Schultz a deputy sheriff. There's a large electoral prize = package in the states where these machines operate. New York has 47, Pennsylvania 36, Illinois 29, Iniiana 14, Missouri 15 and Tennessee 11, a total of 152. In a close = election, the vote of any one might be decisive.

LODGE TO FROLIC AT LILLY ORCHARD

Everything from horseshoe tourna‘ments to “heckling” of members = will feature the annual basket picnic

| Association tomorrow at the Lilly Orchard, 72d St. and College Ave. | Supper will be served at p. m. in the apple barn. Installation of officers to serve for the next six

months will follow. Those to be installed are Homer L. Wiseman, Millersville Lodge. president; Charles Wyatt, Evergreen Lodge, first vice president; Emery |S. Moran, West Newton Lodge, second vice president, and Walter P. Boemler, Logan Lodge, secretarytreasurer,

BRITISH FOREGO LUXURIES LONDON, Aug. 9 (U. P.).—There | is no demand today for luxury foods, ‘amented a West End hotel cater- | ing manager. People don’t seem to want caviar, fresh asparagus and out-of-season strawberries.

12¢ Ib. I roan | Oc Ib.

FREE DRESSING Plenty of Poultry of All Kinds

WEST STREET

ULTRY 11 N. West £

CHICKENS For SALADS

LI-2904.

x

FRIDAY, AUG. 9, 1940

15¢ to 25¢ MAGAZINES

Be 6 for

Current issues, popular magazines. Postal returns.

36-In. Wide Peet's White 3 Goods Naptha SOAP -10¢ 33¢ Yd. 5 Clea upl Ecru, cream and A favorite for laundry. Special Saturday only.

astels.

CANNED GOODS

2-5¢

Peas—Peas and Carrots. While limited quantity last.

Regular 49¢ and 69¢ CURTAINS

35¢

se. oo% age ® Tailored Pair

46-In. Table OILCLOTH

105.

1 and 1%-yard pieces. sorted patterns.

Sets Priseilla

unholy alliance!

To assess the importance of this]

iV

GURAANTEED 6 MONTHS “SUPPORTO” SHORTS

19

for $1.10 (Also ® oom Combed Elastic back, “X" taped crotch, full balloon seat, Sizes 30 to 44

{goes to church regularly, becomes j

which Mr. |

its Two Per Cent|}

BEAUTY THAT WILL WEAR-WEAR-WEAR Advance Sale FUR FABRIC

WINTER COAT

PERSIAN CURL FABRICS SEAL LIKE FABRICS

LGV] ¢|©95 10113

PAY ONLY :1%°DOWN

They look like fur, they feel like fur and they're famous for their warmth and durability. New yoke backs and shoulder treatments. Quilted linings and wool innerlinings.

Women’s Reg. $1.19 Up to $1.98

SUMMER SHEERS

Sale Priced for Clearance

SPUN RAYONS -and PRINT FROCKS INCLUDED

All sizes in the group, although many styles are one of a kind. Every one washable and Select. several tomorrow at this low price

fast color

Women’s and Growing Girls’ Reg. $2 to $3

NOVELTY SHOES

® SANDALS ®PUMPS OTIES ® STRAPS ® OXFORDS OWHITES OBLACKS ®TANS

Clever novelty styles for dressy occasions and play hours, all unrivaled in quality and value at this low price. Not all sizes in every style, some factory damaged.

We Expert a Sellout! Shop Early!

Men’s Reg. $2.00 WHITE OXFORDS

Regulars— Wing Tips— Barges

4 to 9 in the Lot.

All whites and white and brown

combina - tions.

Leather and Compo Soles

Boys’ and Girls’ 99¢ Summer

WHERE WASHINGTON

ry,

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MID-SEASON FROCKS

Important Blacks With White Accents

Spun Rayons French Crepes Sizes 12 to 46

Brand new styles at a price you like to pay. You'll rave about the lovely styles and the unusually fine details of finishing. See them Saturday.

STRAPS & SANDALS

59¢

Plenty of whites, patents and browns. Comfortable lasts. Lots of good service.

‘of the Actual Masters and Wardens |

6:30,

e Run of the Mill!

SEAMLESS BED SHEETS

81x90 81x108 72x90 Size

55¢ 79¢ 2 for 1.00 2 for 1.50 2 for 1%c 2 for 27c

Full white bleach, hemmed ready Mill run, bought by the und, for use. Save money in our White and ah with Clared August White Sale. borders, thick, trsty weight.

“TURKISH TOWELS

17x35 20x40 18x36 22x44

3 15°

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18x36 Hit and Miss RAG RUGS.. I5¢ 42x36 Hemmed PILLOWCASES ...8¢

saving

Double Thread WASH CLOTHS ... 3c 39-In. Unbleached MUSLIN .. Yd. 6ic 80x105 Crinkled BEDSPREADS ..59¢ IRONING BOARD PAD and COVER 39¢

Pay Only 25¢ Down—Reg. $2.00

66x80 Part Wool DOUBLE

BLANKETS

Sateen Bound Block Plaid Colors rose, blue, green, gold and orchid. Not less than §% wool

Sizes 36 to 46.

vA IE]

Men’s Reg. $6.98 Cape Leather

CKETS

TO: i Ee AL |

Black, brown. Full lined. Zipper breast pocket, =ipper front. Knit waist, collar and cufts.

bi LL

Just 300 Men's 69¢ Broadcloth

SHIRTS

.

Stand up non-wilt col

“ldeal” Blue Chambray

SHIRTS

340! eal me

DELAWARE

{0c and 15¢ ANKLETS

8lc 2 Plain colors and fane

cies, pastels and dark colors. Sizes 5!2 to 10,

CHINAWARE ¢

Ea. Cups and saucers, dese sert dishes, oatmeal) dishes.

Men’s WORK or DRESS HOSE

7:¢ Pr.

Plains and fancies, Mostly all first quals ity. All sizes. IST QUALITY RAYON UNDIES

Ge

Women’s sizes, lored

CROSSES

and misses’

Women’s Full-Fashioned

CHIFFON HOSE

39¢

twist Pirst irregulars of

, Semi-service weights fhcluded.

Ringless crepe

Regular $1.00 Summer

HANDBAGS

59¢

Plentv of whites for summer, also blacks and navy for fall.

Regular 79¢ to 98¢c

Lastex GIRDLES

39¢

Strong two-way stretch lastex. Plain and novelty weaves. 8. M., L. Extra sizes, Soc.

Rayon Crepe and

SATIN SLIPS

69<

4-Gores, Camisoles, Rhythm Cut. Lace jtms and tailored. Sizes 32 to 4

Girls’ New Fall

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June Preston Styles Included

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WINTER COATS

Pay Only 50¢c Down

Fur-Trimmed Styles, «

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50¢ Will Lay-away 2 Dresses

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Sizes 6 to 18 Large wool plaid pate tern, double breasted, sports back and full belt, Large zipper book pocke et as pictured. Sizes 6

Boys’ Fast Color Polo SHIRTS

colors and striped patterna, Crew

19s and button neck. Sizes 4 to 16.

Boys’ $1.00 WASH SLACKS oys’ $ ASH § $. Lhe

Sanforized shrunk, wide bottoms. and dark. Bizes 8 to 18.

Boys’ 98¢ WASH SUITS

y and sailor styles. Short and long A49Q¢c Broken sizes.

SANFORIZED WASH SHORTS a Ake

Boys ols PLAY SUITS