Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 October 1940 — Page 5
| ed { i oe i
. "MONDAY, OCT. 7, 1940
GRAND JURORS T0 GET DATA IN HIT-RUN DEATHS
County Toll Goes to 103 as|
Cincinnati Youth Is Killed; i 11 Die jin State.
The alleged driver of the hit-and-run car which killed two men in Massachusetts Ave. Saturday was held by police today on vagrancy charges. - Facts in the [case will be presented to .the Grand Jury today, they said. While police pressed the investigation, the death of a Cincinnati youth in a crash on Road 52 increased the year’s traffic toll in Marlon County to 103. Week-end traffic in Indiana outside of Marion County claimed 11 other lives. ; The alleged driver of the car which killed William R. Cox, 41, of 359 Ww. Ray St., and Nicholas N. Santeiu, 39, of 1707 Lafayette Road, was arrested Saturday night at the home of a friend. He is held under $10,000 bond. : Police *said that when arrested, the alleged driver accused one of the passengers in the car of being the driver, but later made a statement admitting his guilt. Identity Revealed
His identity was revealed by one of his three passengers who returned to the death scene about an hour later in a taxi. The three were arrested then released on their own recognizance. Police said that the four men met in a tavern on E. Washington St. near Alabama and after considerable drinking got into the car. They said that one passenger has admitted that he got out of the car and walked back to the scene while the victims were still lying in the street. The alleged driver, a 32-year-old former fighter, parked his car near his home and [then went to the friend's home and remained there until his arrest, officers said. The car was impounded shortly after the accident.
Assumes New Job
Milo J. Warner . . . tegion must see that U. S. follows main road.
TIME IS TERMED DEFENSE RIDDLE
New Legion Head Says U. S. Is Doing Well, Will Do Better.
We are! doing pretty well in our national defense and we're ‘going to do better, Milo J. Warner, new na-
tional commander of the American
Legion, said today. Commander Warner, a Toledo, O., attorney, made his first official visit to national headquarters to assume
A ‘PUNY HITLER’ IN WILLKIE TALK
Nominee Assails One-Man Rule in First of Six Jersey Addresses.
(Continued from Page One)
said. “Why shouldn't the people listen to me courteously without having to be told by this man?
Lists Two Reasons
“There are two reasons. First, for seven and one-half years the doctrine of bitterness has been preached from the highest places. Secondly, men like this puny Hitler here have attempted to say who shall and who shall not speak, to decide who shall be treated cour-
teously.” Though the state is largely Republican it went to President Roosevelt in 1932 and 1936 because of the tremendous Democratic majorities in Hudson County turned in by the Hague machine. : Mayor Hague's is one of the three Democratic machines Mr. Willkie has mentioned most often in assailing the New Deal on the grounds of corruption. } The Jersey City speech was the first of six scheduled for Willkie in northern New Jersey today, concluding with a 7:30 p. m. (Indianapolis Time) nationally-broadcast speech from Newark Stadium, Other speeches are scheduled at Edgewater, Hackensack, Paterson and Kearney. : Mr. Willkie had a conference with Over Radio. President William Green of the A. F. of L. yesterday. Mr. Willkie] If James Whitcomb Riley had would not say more than that they lived, he'd be 91 today. had “a very pleasant conversation,” But his poems do live , . . the and Mr. Green left without com- characters are immortal to the ment. President William Hutche- children whe weren't even horn beson, head of the A. F. of L. car-| fore the Hoosier poet died. penters union, sat in on the meet-| So today the children observe ing. |Riley Day and pay tribute to him It was disclosed after the Green| who sang to them in “Little Orphant conference that Mr, Willkie talked Annie” and “Raggedy Ann” and the
SCHOOL PUPILS VISIT HIS HOME
Hospital Patients Tune in On Memorial Program
"HE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Riley Poems Bring Cheer to C
the job that will pay him*$10,000.in salary and [$16,000 traveling expenses for the year of his admin-
Cincinnati Man Killed Ole Haase, 21, Cincinnati, was
briefly with C. I. O. President John L. Lewis at the home of “a mutual friend” in New York 10 days ago, but Lem Jones, Willkie's press sec-
Lockerbie
other favorites. Pupils of School 9 near Riley's St. home where he penned many of his works, made a
killed instantly early today when his car crashed into a bridge over Grassy Creek on Road 52, southeast of Indianapolis. State Police who found his body said Mr, Haase apparently went to sleep at the wheel while en route home. Three Chicagoans were killed in! accidents 12 miles south of Michigan City on Road 6. re Ralph J. Ossman, 26, and George A. Bannon, 48, were killed when the] car in which they were riding failed | to negotiate a curve, left the high-| way and overturned. | Earl Marshall, 32, died in a similar "accident less than half a mile waay.
Two Die at Ingalls
imain course and not be misled by side issues.
istration. He said that he had not yet | formulated specific views on many lof the issues for which he will be the voice of the Legion, but that {he does feel the vast majority of | American people have made up their minds about national defense along the right lines.
Outlines Legion’s Job
It is the Legion's job, he said, to see that the country follows the
I “We've got to think of the United | States in terms beyond ifs actual (territorial boundaries, too, when we think of national defense.”
pilgrimage to his home to read his poems and sing those set to music. At Riley Memorial Hospital for Children, named in his honor, the youthful patients were to hear a radio broadcast (WFBM at 2:15) of his poems during a party. It will be
retary, said that several other persons were present and that it did not approximate a “private conference.” Mr. Lewis backed Mr. Roose-
"‘No Third Term Day’
* Stricken; but smilin’ through at Riley Hospital.
hildren
an estimated 11 million men between 21 and 35 for training under the Selective Service Law. The Johnstown petitioners also said: “Twenty-three years ago another young man had an opportunity to serve his country. On the day war was declared against Germany by |the United States this young man land two brothers took themselves to (the nearest Army recruiting station and signed up for the duration. , ,. “This young men, Wendell Wilikie, asked no favors—in fact he has no one to go to for political preferment to smooth his way in Army service. He- enlisted in the American way, served in a combat unit in the American way, and earned promotion in the American way— under fire.” Rep. James E. Van Zandt (R. Pa.), three-time national commander of the Veterans of Foreign Wars,
'| Wanna Be a Captain, Too, Looms as Campaign Issue]
(Continued from Page One)
opie
presented the Johnstown veterans’ petition to the House. He took occasion tg say, “The country recalls with pride the record of the sons of Theodore Roosevelt—Quentin, who was killed in action in France and now lies there; Theodore Jr. and Kermit, who were
SEEK DONATI
$688,500 for First Tim: In Nine Years. (Continued from Page One). Community Fund. A person g because he wants to—not bec: he must, Be “We rallied a force of 3000 w¢ ers to serve as solicitors in the ¢ and we did not receive one tu down. Everybody is willing to cept a responsibility, every wants to see this—the 21st: an drive—a big success. : : “We must have increased gi on the part of those who i scribed a year ago and new from those who did not give a @go. Deaths of several of our 1 donors means that we will star with a loss of about $15,000. ° must be made up in increased |
¥
ing and new gifts. There were
PAGE 5
roximately 74,000 contributors a |year ago—we hope that we can in-
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wounded in actual military service.” Among other communications received here was a telegram to the Army Air Corps from a man of draft age in Kansas: “Please send me a commission by return mail.” : i Air Corps officers insisted there was “nothing unusual” in the RooseThe matter was
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velt appointment. “routine,” they said. Mr. Roosevelt is to report for duty Wednesday at Wright Field, in Ohio. Mr. Roosevelt will reside in the city of Dayton instead of in the officers’ quarters at Wright-Patter-son Fields because all of the quarters are occupied.
: f
f
Over the week-end, Mr. Willkie announced that he would participate in an Associated Willkie Clubs of America broadcast over the Red network of the National Broadcasting Co. at 9:30 p. m. tomorrow night, and would take part in another national broadcast Oct. 23, which he has designated as ‘“National No Third Term Day.”
under sponsorship of the Public Library and the Riley Hospital Cheer Guild. . After the broadcast the children will be entertained with recitations | and stories by Grover Brown, superlintendent of Brown County Schools. Arrangements for the party were directed by Mrs. E. H. Siufflot, presi-
Let Us Reset Your Diamond 4’
as | dent of the Cheer Guild, and Mrs. Herman C. Frommer. They were assisted by Mrs. Blanche McNew,
The anti-third term ceremony w set by Mr, Willkie after he had re-
ceived a telegram from approxi-
Mrs. Vernon Kniptash, Mrs. J. W.
’5
Others killed in State traffic were:| Gommander Warner said that the LOREN RALPH CURRY, 21, great problem now is whether time Muncie, and ALICE ARMSTRONG, |is our ally or our enemy. 19, Yorktown, killed in a crash at| «in economic, physical, moral and Ingalls. Lo | spiritual values our nation is on the MRS. FLOSSIE COMPARIOS, 55, strength side of the ledger,” he said. Washington, injured fatally when ‘What we can do to adjust our milistruck by an automobile near her tary program to match our great home. : ; strength, in the time available, is MRS. ETHEL TAYLOR, 55, the thing to be determined.
1 0gonspodt, killed in a collision] Aid in Registration
7 h : mae 50 persons Wha asserted at: price, Mrs. Paul Richardson, Mrs.
Roosevelt's re-election would ; : “gravely menace . . . our democratic | Ray Retterer, Mrs. Dorsey King, » | Mrs. William G. Ennis, Mrs, Wallace system of Government. 3 ; ; Signers of the telegram included | 5 go XN So Lows Zoipy Yrs. B. > ’ | . 4 # m . Senator Edward R. Burke (D. Neb.); 00k ang irs. YTant Dorma Jefferson Hayes Davis, Colorado| a Riley Day program was given Shits, orange o Prgsidont at Washington High School by the Jefferson Davis of the Contederacy: | (.jo)5 Indiana History Club.
Former Governor Cary Hardee of] Taking part were Martha Stan-
Florida, Judge Samuel Seabury of |. ° : New York and former Democratic ley, Paul Paino, Nancy Meloy, Mary
Governor Charles H. Martin of Ore- | bascu, Dorothy Ellis, Robert Har-
ROBERT M. KELLY, 27, Muncie, | “This month, the nation's young killed when the car in which he men will register for military trainwas riding ‘struck a tree west of ing. Because of the age factor, the
Bloomington. : MRS. VIOLA LISTENFELT, 60, Pennville, struck and killed by a " motorcycle near her home. DON HULSE, Chicago truck driver, and his unidentified helper, killed when their truck skidded on a curve on Road 43 at Westville, overturned and caught fire.
KILLED BY ‘FRIEND’ "IN FIGHT OVER WIFE
CHICAGO, Oct. 7 (U. P.).—The Lindners and the Neimans had been friends seven years, the men were business partners... Today Albert Neiman, 39, was dead and Bernard Lindner was in jail because they had failed to reach an “understanding” concerning Neiman's alleged secret romance with Lindner's wife.
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| Legionnaire will not be called to | register. But the Legionnaire, in| thousands of communities, will be | working with the men called in the draft and with those who adminlister the provisions of compulsory military training legislation. It's a course we've always advocated.” Commander Warner said that the | Legion is now at the height of its] strength and, financially, is in an| enviably strong. position. The Commander said he will not | move his family here from Toledo land that he expects his administration to be a busy one.
7 TESTIFY AGAINST DR. HIEL E. CRUM
Seven “patients” testified in Cir-
{ Eugene Crum, who is appealing an
| cuit Court today against Dr. Hiel|
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UPSTATE DEFENSES
der the direction of Miss Etta (Continued from Page One)
toga Heights when colonial troops under Generals Horatio Gates and Benedict Arnold defeated the Brit-| ish regulars under General John | Burgoyne in 1777. The tour begins an active week in Mr. Roosevelt's third term drive. He returns to Washington tomorrow, but will leave Thursday night for a swing through pivotal Pennsylvania and Ohio. On Saturday night—Columbus Day—he will speak by radio from his private railroad car to the nation and the new world, on the progiess of the rearmament program. The address will be delivered from Dayton, O.
Ends Hyde Park Visit
order of the State Board of Medical Examination and Registration revoking his licenses to practice. Superior Court Judge Herbert Wilson heard them testify that Dr.
OULD you like to get a cash loan without having to ask friends or relatives for a favor? At Household Finance
Completing a week-end visit in
| his home here, Mr. Roosevelt went {to the Albany region shortly atter | noon.
TO
How you can borrow $20 to $300 on just your promise fo repay—without endorsers or guarantors—No credit questions asked of friends or relatives—Quick,
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Choose yourown payment plan See, in the table below, how you may repay your Honor Loan in convenient monthly installments
« little as $6.43 a month for 20
THE MAN WITHA JOB WHO NEEDS A LOAN
loan. You find this ampunt in the first column of the table. Then read across picking out the monthly payment which you wish to make. You will see, for -instance, that monthly installments of $9.77 each will-repay a $100 loan in full in 12 months. Or, if you wish smaller pa¥ments, as
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a good night's rest, if you choke Hiel Crum attempted to cure their and gasp for air, if this disease is ailments by an “etherator.”
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months will also repay a $100
| He will leave his train at nearby which fit your own income. You 1 oan.
you can borrow $20 to $300—
causing you untold misery and suf-| fering, send at once to D. J. Lane, 1413 Lane Bldg. St. Mary's, Kas, for a full-size bottle of his medicine. Mr. Lahe has been manufacturing this medicine for over 35 years and it has been used by thousands. He will send you a regular full-size bottle, . all charges prepaid. Use it, and if it brings [you relief, pay him| $1.25. If not, you owe nothing. Send your name and address today.!
| [4
Toner M. Overley, Indiana Better Shakers crossing road, and motor Business Bureau manager, Wwho|to Watervliet. From there ne wiil brought the charges before the motor through Troy and MechanicMedical Board, gave Judge Wilson ville to Saratoga battlefield, picka demonstration. of the fingernail ing up Veterans Administrator
rubbing system that Mr. Overley Frank T. Hines en route.
without endofsers or guarantors —if you can make small monthly payments on your loan. We require no security of any kind.
may repay in small installments spread over 20 months. Or you may repay sooner to reduce the charges. Suppose that you need a $100
said Dr. Hiel Crum had used in an attempt to diagnose an illness of Mr. Overley’s. About 30 witnesses are scheduled to testify during the current hear-
3
* He will motor througin Albany in the late evening and re-board the presidential special which will arrive at Washington early tomorrow. Before leaving here, Mr. Roosevelt made a final check on details of the new excess profits tax bill.
12 OPERAS INCLUDED IN MUSIC CAMPAIGN
The list of the 12 recorded operas to be distributed in the music appreciation campaign starting next Monday night was announced today. The records will be condensed versions of Carmen, Faust, Aida, Traviata, Lohengrin, Tristan and Isolde, Rigoletto, Madam Butterfly, La Boheme, Pagliacci, Tannhauser and the Marriage of Figaro. The distribution program, sponsored by the Indiana chapter of the National Committee for Music Appreciation, will be opened with a banquet in the Claypool Hotel. Record companies co-operated in the arrangement whereby the artists, conductors and operatic organizations gave up their royalties so the records could be distributed at a minimum costs
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COMPARE OUR RATES AND PAYMENTS WITH THOSE OFFERED ELSEWHERE
AMOUNT YOU PAY BACK EACH MONTH
CASH Including All Charges
LOAN You GET $20 25 30 40 50
20 months loan
- 16 months loan
12 months loan
10 months loan
8 months loan
months loan
4 months loan
2 months loan
$10.38 12.98 15.57 20.76
25.95
$5.32 6.65 7.98 10.64 13.30
2.79 3.49 4.19 5.59 6.98
$2.29 2.86 3.43 4.58 5.72
$1.95 2.44 2.93 391 4.88
$ 3.64 4.54 5.45 7.27 9.09
$20 to $50 loaned only for 12 months or less
$ 3.86 4.50 4.83 5.15 5.79
6.87 8.01 8.58 9.16 10.30
5.86 ~ 6.84 7.33 7.81 8.79
$ 4.61 5.38 5.76 6.14 6.91
= 31.15 36.34 38.93 41.53 46.72
15.96 18.62 19.95 21.28 23.94
10.91 12.72 13.63 14.54 16.36
8.38 9.78 10.48 11.17 12.57
60 70 75 80 90
6.43 8.04 9.65 11.22
7.68 9.60 11.52 13.40
9.77 12.21 14.65 17.06
11.45 14.31 17.17 19.99
26.60 33.25 39.91 46.49
51.91 64.89 77.86 90.71
18.18 22.72 27.26
31.76
13.97 17.46 20.95 24.40
100 125 150 175
12.76 14.28 15.78 17.28
15.25 17.09 18.91 20.71
36.23 40.69 45.12 49.55
27.82 31.23 34.62 38.00
22.79 25.56 28.32 31.07
19.43 21.79 24.13 26.46
103.56 116.41 129.26 142.11
53.07 59.61 66.15 72.68
200 225 250 275
300 | 154.95] 79.21 | 53.98 | 41.37 | 33.82 | 28.79 | 22.51 | 18.77
WE GUARANTEE the total amount figured by using this table to be the full amount you will pay, when payments are made on schedule. You will pay less if you pay your loan ahead of time since you pay charges only for the actual time you have the money. Payments include charges at Household’s rate of 214% per month on that part of a balance = not exceeding $150, and 114% per month on IA that part of a balance in excess of $150. y IND,
B.E.HENDERSON.PRESIDENT
Personal Loans $20 te $300
HOUSEHOLD FINANCE
3rd F1., Illinois Bldg., 17 W. Market St., Cor. Illinois St., H. S. Meeker, Mgr., Phone: RIley 5404 - 6th Fl, Merchants Bank Bldg., Washington & Meridian, M. J.
LOCALLY MANAGE
~
_ information. You will be under
Same rate to everyone Installments in the table cover everything. They include charges at Households rate of 2}49, per month on that part of a balance not exceeding $150, land 1%, per month on that part of a balance in excess of $150. Household has only this one rate—the same for everyone—whether new customer or former borrower.
No one else need know When you borrow at Household, there is no need to ask friends or fellow-workers to sign the loan papers with you. So that your loan may remain your private affair, we do not ask friends or relatives about your credit. If you should be faced | with sickness or unemployment while paying on an Honor Loan, Household will show you every consideration. Last year legal action against assets was resorted to on only one out of each 20,000 loans —an action taken then only as protection against fraud. If a loan will help you, you are urged to look at the table again. Then phone or visit ug for further
no obligation to borrow. ¢ Copyright, Hounehol¢| Finance Corp., 1940
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