Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 November 1940 — Page 15
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PLANS SHOWING FOR FORD FILMS
Warnock Co. Aid to Present & Movies Before Pupils And Clubs.
". Presentation of educational movies he automotive industry before
0ols and clubs will be begun here |
Rext week by. the C. ©. Warnock Co.,, rd-Mercury dealers,
. % Divided into child| and adult di-
Sisions, the film library last year Was shown to about 75,000 persons, sng according to T. . Ragsdale, ho has charge of the presentations. He is assisted by Maury Williams. Among the pictures is “Symphony in F?” a technicolor film dealing with the manufacture of a car. Others # E: picture the By Rouge Plant at » M. Ragsdale p.¢,0it Mich, Fhete the Ford fleet docks. Advertising is restricted, stress being Placed on the industry as a whole 8nd how the automobile is made.
« The films have been shown in the| *
ast to schools and such organizaons as thé Rotary land Kiwanis ubs. Groups wishing to see the Jovies can call Mr, | Ragsdale at warnock’s, 819 E. Washington St, : 2 on
2 % The B. F. Goodrich Co. has intro-
: jgieed a new ethylene glycol anti-
eeze, one filling of which is said to furnish protection all winter. arless, the new confpound will not evaporate nor boil away and will prevent rusting. It will not damage car finish, mixes readily with other ethylene glycol = anti-freezes, and can be tested with the standard
‘hydrometer.
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"FRIDAY, NOV.1,1000 |_— —
Auto News—-
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Meridian Pontiac Leases Warehouse
RE EL FL TL
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Meridian Pontiac, Inc., warehouse .. . equipped fo recondition used cars.
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CHRYSLER DEALERS TO ATTEND SCHOOL
A technical school for Dodge, Plymouth, dealers and their personnel will be held at the Hotel Wednesday, Thursday and Friday. The school will cover the changes and improvements in models and teach service specialists technical advances. A sound motion picture of Chrysler Corp.'s new engineering laboratory will be shown and a new type of animated slide film will give mechanical instruction to tired, sore, itching, sticky, burning or | Methods.
London is the center of the world trade in furs.
# ® #
Meridian Pontiac, Inc. 923 N. Meridian St., has leased the building at 1612 Pierson St. as a plant to recondition used cars and prepare new cars for delivery. O. A. Chillson, president of Meridian Pontiac, said that increased business made the new building necessary. Since it was founded in April, 1939, the firm has sold in Marion County more than 1000 new models” and more than 2500 used cars. J October was the best month the dealership has had, Mr. Chillson said. Up to Oct. 26, they had de-
DeSoto and Chrysler
Antlers next
the 1941
service men on latest
” » »
Pierson St. Building to Become Used Car Renovating Plant:
livered 106 new cars and 132 used cars. The Pierson St. building has 16,000 square feet of floor space, is fireproof, and has concrete floors and ramps. Meridian Pontiac has installed $5000 worth of new equipment with which it plans to recondition a used car within 48 hours after it has been received. The reconditioning will include renovation of upholstery, steam cleaning of chassis and restoration of the finish. Raymond Eubank is in charge of the plant and Shirley Schaeffer heads the used car reconditioning
crew.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES"
LOUIS LUDLOW
vr
—Mr. Ludlow is author of the amendment which appears first in the 1941 relief act giving widows of veterans and wives of disabled veterans preference in employment.
—He is the author of the provision in the new supplemental civil functions law prohibiting discrimination in .our military training program on account of sex, race
NE,
or color.
» BIR anh, Es BE,
generally.
ha PN
(Paid Political Advertisement)
LOUIS LUD
Candidate for
Re-election to Congress
| —Fourth in rank on Appropriations Committee of forty members, the most powerful 1 o Committee of Congress.
—Chairman of its largest subcommittee, the one making appropriations for the postal « service and Treasury Department.
3 —Member of the Deficiencies Subcommittee, the most important Committee in cono nection with national defense, through which all national defense estimates are routed for inclusion in appropriation bills. y
4 —Through his powerful committee connections and the friendship of congressional o leaders Mr. Ludlow has secured many benefits for Indianapolis, including—
a.—Establishment of Veterans’ Hospital at Riverside Park b.— Addition to that hospital providing 150 more beds. c.—Recreation hall at Veterans’ Hospital. d.—Construction of north wing of Indianapolis Federal Building. e.—Constructian of Postoffice building at Broad Ripple. f.—Naming of a first-class modern cruiser for the city of Indianapolis. g.—Rescinding of order to remove Schoen Air Field to Chicago. h.~—Rescinding of order to move headquarters of Bituminous Coal Commission from Indianapolis to Chicago. : i.—He has obtained assurance that he will later be able to secure appropriations for a new federal building to be constructed adjacent to the Union Station to house the parcel post and other federal activities and a new postoffice building al ‘West Indianapolis.
— Every person who writes to Representative Ludlow gets a prompt reply and the very best attention and service it is possible for him to render.
—He has served efficiently and devotedly both business and labor. The business organizations of Indianapolis have found in him a real friend and collaborator. He has been indorsed by the twenty-one railroad brotherhoods and organized labor
—His experience of twenty-eight years in the Press Gallery and twelve years in Congress has given him an intimate acquaintanceship with all governmental activities which he is capable of translating into terms of service for the Twelfth district.
—He is an ardent advocate and supporter of appropriations to build up our national defense to the highest point of perfection but no one has been more determined and insistent than he that America shall not be dragged into the horrible war now raging in Europe and the Far East. On this point he says:
™
“The Atlantic seaboard is today rocking with war hysteria, and I anticipate that before long interventionists and warmongers will try to force us into war, but there is no need of our country getting into the World War and it will not, if we keep
bur heads and steer clear of foreign entanglements.
“I will work untiringly, as I always have done, to build up our defense to the highest point of perfection, so that we will be safe from attack by any foreign nation or any combination of foreign nations. In the future, as in the
the billions that are needed for defense, so that no dictator would ever dare to interfere with us.
“But I want it understood that I‘will not vote to send our American boys into the shambles and slaughter pens of foreign wars. - On the contrary, I will do everything I can to keep America out of war and to build up our economic sufficiency at
home, to enable us to battle successfully the ghastly evils of unemployment and poverty.
“I make this statement now so that no one can say later that I did not make my position crystal clear before the ballots In order that every citizen of the Twelfth District may know exactly where I stand before he casts his vote, I repeat that I will do anything and everything I can to defend America and to protect and perpetuate our precious institutions .of freedom, but I will not be a party to sending one American boy into foreign wars unless America is attacked. A vote for me
were cast.
will be a vote to maintain the peace, the independencé, and the non-involvement of America.”
A vote for Mr. Ludlow will be a vote to maintain the vast prestige which the Indianapolis district how has in the halls of
Congress. Itiwill also be a vote for a sound national policy and the American way of life.”
J {
LOW
7 /
f
past, I will vote all
SEVEN DETOURS LIFTED IN STATE
None Added During Week To Halt Final Rush "Of Sightseers.
No official detours were established by the State Highway Commission this week to halt the last minute rush to see fall foliage before winter moves in. The commission removed seven official detours, including & nine-
mile run-around on Road 431 north of Indianapolis. Other detours were lifted from Road 2, near New Carlisle; Road 3, from Mt. Summit to Muncie; Road 31, from Scottsburg to Austin; Road 42, east of Road 43; Road 61, south of Vincennes, and Road 203, between Road 3 and Road 56. : Detours in effect are: Ind. 3—From Charlestown to Ind. 203, 22 miles over Roads 62 and 362. From Zanesville to Ft. Wayne: passenger cars 4 miles over county gravel and Ind. 1: trucks from Ind. 118 to Ft. Wayne, 24 miles over Roads 118 and 1. Ow §~Bast of Gary, 4 miles over on, Prom ‘Columbia City north, 7 miles over Ind. 109 and county gravel. In 3—From Point Isabel north, 8 nd. 14—From Ind. 17 to Rochester, 13%; Piles over Ind. 17, county gravel and Ind.
Closed North of Wabash
"Ind. 15—From Wabash north, 13 miles aver Roads 13 and 16. U. S. 20—Closed from east of Michigan Ind. 2: passenger cars 15 2; trucks 29
a , . 26—From 2 mile west to 2 mile east of Sedalia, 3 miles over county gravel. t of Fairmount, 3 miles over county
8—From Ind. 1 to Ridgeville, 9 Ind. 67 and county gravel. m e From North Madison to Versailles, 43 miles over Roads 107. 7 and 50. See detour on U . 8. 31—Near county gravel. north, 4% miles over Ind. 28 and trucks may use Ind. 29 from Indianapolis to_Middlefork. U. 8. 35 (Ind. 29)—Closed from Burlington north: passenger cars miles over U.S 3. ¢ : I 18:
miles over R
nd. 2 miles over Ind. 29—
1 mile over
Logansport may use Roads, 431, 31 24, Southeast of Michigan ity: trucks 18 Roads 43 and 2. nd. om Ind. 59 to Spencer, 44 miles over Roads 59. 42 an 3 U. 8. 51—From S. 6 to East Gary, 4 miles over county oil mat. Ind. 53—From 4 miles north of Rensselaer north 4 miles over county gravel. Ind. 60—From Ind. southeast of Mitchell, and countv stone road maintained for traffic from Ind. 37 t Soring Mill State Park. From junction . 5 to Bennettsville, 30 miles over Roads 335, 150 and 11.
Indiana 62 Affected
Ind. 62—From Evansville to Boonville, 20 miles over county pavement and Roads 66_and 261. Ind. 64—West of Princeton, 6 miles over county gravel, concrete and U, S. 41, s From Owensville to Princeton. 15_ miles over Roads 1 and 41. Ind.. 109—From 2'2 miles south of Wolf Lake to 1'2 mile south. 1% mile over county road. Ind. 114—From Ind. 15 to North Manchester. 11 miles over Ind. 15, county gravel and city streets. nd. 1 osed from junction Roads 24 and 15 to Ind. 15: detour 15 miles over
miles over Ind
Roads 24. 13 and 16
vad, 135=From Junction 13% jouth of allonla to Brownstown. miles over Roads 235 and 50. Ind. From Vevav to 3 miles south of Rising Sun. 21'2 miles over 56. Ind. 218—From Camden to U. S. 35, 11 miles over countv gravel and oil mat. U8 From Markle to Ind. 1, 17 miles over Roads 116 and 1. nd. From Ind. 43 to Jamestown. 27_miles over Roads 43 and 34. Ind. om Ind. 303 to Ind. 1, 84 miles over Ind. 303, county gravel an
Ind. 427—From Ft. Wayne to Auburn, 24 miles over U. S. 27. Ind. 403—From Speed east 2'2 miles over county stone.
FLYNN SAYS WILLKIE BLOG CONTROLS POLL
NEW YORK, Nov. 1 (U. P), — President Roosevelt's campaign phrase, “Martin, Barton and Fish,” appears to have “gotten under the skin” of Wendell L. Willkie, Chairman Edward J. Flynn of the Democratic National Committee said today. “If the Republican Party and what its members did in Congress are not issues in this campaign,” Mr. Flynn said at a press confereence, “I would like to know what is.” Rep. Joseph W. Martin Jr, National Republican Chairman, said yesterday he believed that his voting record in Congress was not an issue in a Presidential campaign. Commenting on the newest Gallup. Poll‘ report, which adds Missouri, New York and Connecticut to the Willkie column, Mr. Flynn said he believed that the poll was controlled by “pro-Willkie people.” " “It is very apparent that the Gallup Poll. is attempting to do what it did at Philadelphia during the convention, where, however, it was dealing with delegates and not with voters,” he said. “It is attempting to bolster up the false idea that there is a swing to Wendell Willkie~ It is very careful, however, to stress the undecided ‘vote— in some cases as high as 10 per cent —to cover up.”
Stand on News Stand Is News
THIS MAY prove to be the prize pre-election “fast one.” The man came to the Works Board office, said he was a precinct committeeman and would like the assistant in the office to write him a permit to operate a news stand downtown.
The assistant said the Board itself would have to grant the
permit and it would probably help
if the applicant had the written sanction of the Ward chairman. The man left and returned with a note from Judge Herbert Spencer, 11th Ward Democratic chair= man stating—*“Okay by me.” With no further inquiry the Board granted the permit. The man, it now turns out, is a precinct committeeman—Republican. Said the Board: “Shucks, he would have got the permit anyway.”
Indiana’s Largest Retail A :
Ducks or Geese
FRYERS
18¢ Lh.
Stewing Boiling HENS CHICKENS
15¢ 13¢ 4.
MARION POULTRY CO. 1022 S. MERIDIAN
25¢ Doz.
Boy Rings Bell— It's Well He Did
THE DOOR RELL rang last night at 3006 Broadway, as a lot of door bells did last night. But Mrs. E. E. Whtie went to the door and there stood a little boy, unidentified. “Lady, do you know your house is on fire?” the boy asked. “No, I don’t,” replied Mrs. White. “Well, it is.” The boy left. Mrs. Whtie looked in the living room . and found the boy knew what he was talking about. A, jack-o’-lantern in the front window had set the curtains afire and the | curtains likewise the daven-
Twenty-five dollars was lost in this deal.
SALESMAN DIES OF TRAFFIC INJURIES
Joseph J. Bauer, 80, of 2217 N. Alabama St., died last night in St. Vincent's Hospital -of injuries received when he was struck hy a car Oct. 22 at Alabama St. and Massa~ chusetts Ave.
Mr. Bauer was born in Newport,
Ky., and came to Indianapolis 78 years ago. He was a salesman for the Ohio Salt Co. for 17 vears. He was the oldest living member ot St. Mary’s Catholic Church, a member of the Elks Lodge, Knights of Columbus and St. Joseph's Cemetery ‘board. iit
PAGE 15 His survivors include a sister, Mrs. Elizabeth MicHaelis, Indianapolis; two nephews and a niece. Funeral services will be at Grinsteiner’s Funeral Home at 8:30 8. m. Mon=day and at St. Mary’s Church at 9
a. m. Burial will be in St Joseph's '' ©
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