Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 July 1941 — Page 7
Wo INDIANA FIRMS GET ARMY AWARDS
" WASHINGTON, July 22 (U. P.).— War Department contracts yesteray included two to ‘companies in Indiana. "The larger—$3,252,000—was to the
Continental Roll and Steel Foundry Co. at East Chicago, for castings. A $156,600 contract was given to the LaSalle Steel Co. at Hammond, for
Travel News—
CANADA SELLING GAS TO TOURISTS
Another Streamliner Goes
To Coast; Sylvan Lake
cold drawn steel. =
SLEEP LIKE A
- The PLEASURE
of a railway trip depends on comfort, friendly service, good meals and interwasting scenery. You'll enjoy them in * ‘he fullest of full measure if your
ROUTE TO
the east is via Chesapeake and Ohio. You'll find a genuine welcome on Chessie’s road. Try this enjoyable way when you go to—or through—
WASHINGTON
For information and reservations
F. I. OSBORN, Dist. Pass. Ag?. 1515 Merchants Bank Bldg. ¢
B33
Riley 8141 ey | Northwestern Passenger
FROM CHICAGO AND RETURN
*1 382d 8 days. § Standard PullCarlsbad Caverns; Santa Fé; rar Estes Park; Colorado Springs. *159 14 days. Tourist Pullmans. Carlsbad Caverns; Riverside; Los Angeles; Hollywood; San Francisco; Grand Canyon.
id | g322 14 days. Tourist Pull- : "= mans. Glacier Park; San Francisco; Yosemite; Los Angeles; Hollywood; Grand Canyon; Carlsbad Caverns. $188 14 days. Tourist Pullmans. Colorado Springs; Santa Fé; Grand Canyon; Los Angeles; Hollywood; San Francisco; Canadian Rockies. $175 14 days. Tourist Pullmans. Grand Canyon; Los Angeles; Hollywood; Catalina Island; Yosemite; San Francisco; Salt "Lake City. Carlsbad
Caverns optional. *181 14 days. Tourist Pullmans.Glenwood Springs; Salt Lake City; San Francisco; Los Angeles; Hollywood; Coronado Beach; Riverside; Grand Canyon; Carlsbad Cayerns. *185 14 days. Tourist Pullmans. Grand Canyon; Los Angeles; Hollywood; San Francisco; Canadian Rockies. Carlsbad Caverns optional. *188 14 days. Tourist Pullmans. Grand Canyon; Los Angeles; Hollywood; Catalina Island; San Francisco; CanaGa oe Rockies. Carlsbad Caverns
179 14 days. Tourist Pullmans. Colorado Springs; Santa Fé; Grand Canyon; Los Angeles; Hollywood; San Francisco; Glacier National Park. $183 14 days. Tourist Pullmans. Grand Canyon; Los Angeles; Hollywood; San Francisco; Canadian Rockies. Carlsbad Caverns optional.
*189 14 days. Tourist PullRa Sans. Grand | Canyon; es; HollyRiva Catalina Island; San Francisco; Glacier National Park. Carlsbad Caverns optional. $182%2 80 14 days. Tourist Pullmans. Salt Lake City; San Francisco; Yosemite; Los Angeles; Hollywood; Catalina Island; Grand Canyon. s99(s2 14 days. Standard Pullmans. San Francisco; Yosemite National Park; Los Angeles; Hollywood; Catalina Island; Grand Canyon.
d; 3 22 days. Standard Pullmans. Colorado Springs; ET A ES yw Santa bara: Del Monte; San Francisco: Rainier National Park; Canadian Rockies.
MAIL COUPON FOR FULL DETAILS
GE ES on ou WY Gn w= Eh FISHER, Sex n Als
811 Merchants IN DEAN APIS | INDY Phone: Riley 3077
‘Bend full details on Western Tours.
Visit Suggested.
If you have planned a vacation in Canada you will be glad to know that gasoline rationing in the Dominion will in no way affect your trip. Apparently the word “rationing” is being misused so far as the new Canadian regulations concerning motor fuel are concerned. Local officials of Canadian transportation and travel agencies have assured Americans that the sale of gasoline will continue normally, except that the hours of sale have been restricted. The time regulations are designed to impress on Canadian motorists that gasoline is not to be wasted for idle driving. » ” ”
More Streamliners
‘The new “City of San Francisco,” to be inaugurated Saturday, will provide streamlined service every third day between Chicago and San Francisco on a 39%-hour schedule. On Aug. 3 the “City of Los Angeles” will make its debut. This will provide two 17-car trains between Chicago and Los Angeles. These trains will be operated by the Chicago & Northwestren, Union Pacific and Southern Pacific rail»oads. . First trips of both will be|y westbound out of the Chicago & Station, Chicago. 2 8 8 The latest trip suggested by the Hoosier Motor Club is one to Sylvan Lake in Noble County. - Sylvan is probably the oldest lake summer resort in Indiana. Here is the former summer home of Gene Stratton-Porter, author of “Limberlost” stories. ” ” 2
Try Huge Telescope
Visitors numbering in the thousands are expected to take their turn at gazing at the heavens through the second largest telescope in the world atop Mt. Wilson, Cal., this summer. The Carnegie Observatory is located high in the Sierra Nevada Mountain ' range, some 5769 feet above sea level. These vacationists who take part in the Rock Island Lines escorted trip to California, will also visit Los Angeles, Beverly Hills, Hollywood, San Francisco dnd Santa Catalina Island. ” E- ”
Latest reports indicate that, while the nation’s defense program has curtailed honeymoons to shorter periods this year, the rise in em-
ing number of newlyweds to Niagara Falls. Niagara. hotel registers confirm that more than 100 newly married couples arrive in the city each day. Today, as in the years past, couples saunter, hand in hand, to Prospect Point for their ‘first view of the Cataracts. . They stroll onto Whirlpool Rapids’ ‘bridge. and: ‘they stand to gaze with wonder at the illumination which floods the falls in many hued lights each night.
Ed 2 2
Riders Break Record
All past attendance records are expected to be broken Friday when 85 riders leave Banff Springs Hotel at Banff, Alberta, for a five-day ride to Mt. Assiniboine high in the Rockies. The Trail Riders have a worldwide membership and the popularity of their cross-country expeditions has grown steadily in the past several years. Mt. Assiniboine,
sea level.
FALL OFF BIKE IS FATAL LAGRANGE, Ind., July 22 (U.P.). —Carl Inman, 9, of Lagrange died (last night of injuries received when
‘he fell from his bicycle ini front of |H {his home earlier in the day. The|§ | boy is believed to have struck his |g
'head in the fall.
ployment is sending an ever increas-
the Riders’ goal, is 13, 000 feet above:
Plans Busy Day
Joe Riebeling
Joe Riebeling Is Chairman |®
Of Construction League
Picnic, Banquet. .
Not only does the Construction League of Indianapolis plan a picnic for Thursday noon but members mean to top if off with a banquet that evening. In between these two events will be a golf tournament, & horseshoe contest, a softball game, and, of course, swimming. C. O. Grathwohl is chairman of the golf committee, Louis Brandt is in charge of the horseshoe contest and softball will be played under rules set down by M. S. Churchman. Other chairmen in charge of entertainment include C. A. Jaqua, J. G. C. Sohn, G. B. Supple, J. W. Van Briggle, G. A. Reed, E, L. Heckathorn and M Carleton Smith. Joe Riebeling is general chairman. The Construction League is- composed of architects, engineers, contractors, material salesmen -and others allied in the building industry. Weekly meetings are held each Thursday noon at the Architects Building.
BURIED AUTO LICENSE PLATES MURDER CLUE
SULLIVAN, Ind. July 22 (U, P.). —License plates issued to Louie Lenzburg, Ill, farmer whose charred body was found in the ruins of . his automobile last week, were found yesterday by Sullivan County Prosecutor Paul Boyle and Claude Dozier of the State Arson Bureau. The plates were found buried under a bridge three miles northeast of Carlisle a few miles from the spot where the burned body and car were found. Mrs. Clem Willis, who lives in the vicinity of the bridge, said she saw - Fultz’'s car pass her home about an hour and a half before it was found smoldering. Blood stains found near the car and under the bridge indicated 8 struggle, police said. §
STATE MAN IS HELD IN NARCOTIC CASE
PLYMOUTH, Ind. July 22 (U. P.).—Edward Weiseman, 34, alias Paul Hoffman of Michigan City, was held today in- the Marshall County jail on charges of forging prescriptions to obtain narcotics. Weiseman, the father of two small children, was arrested at Chesterton, Ind., on the complaint of Federal agents who learned he had stolen a pad of prescription blanks from a physician’s office. Police claimed Weiseman wrote the prescriptions and had them filled in Plymouth drug stores.
RECKON YOU'LL °
LIKE OUR 3 GREYHOUND
\/2 fron fp 7 “City folks sure seem to l/ , take a lot of pleasure in ‘comin’ ‘round these | mountains. They tell me | those Greyhounds are the way to go down.”
For extra savings, take Greyhound Expense- |
a Paid Tour.
MAY WOMEN 60 BEHIND A BAR?
ABC Rules on Provisions Of New State Liquor Laws.
Can a woman even so much as walk behind a bar without violating the new State liquor law? This question has bobbed up so frequently since the new law went] into effect May 1, that the Alcoholic Beverages Commission yesterday sent letters to liquor dealers throughout the State which members hoped would clear up the matter “Yes,” the Commission ruled, * woman can go behind the bar for any purpose except to handle alcoholic beverages.” And she is not stopped by the law, the Commission added, from handling alcoholic beverages in any other part of the premises. The question of whether a woman could even walk behind a bar arose from the wording of the new liquor law which states that no woman “shall at any time serve as a bartender or go behind any bar.” Some persons thought this provision of the law should be construed literally—that a woman should not walk behind the bar—but the A. B. C. decided that it was the intent of the Legislature merely to keep women from serving as bartenders. “A bar,” the A B. C. said, “means any counter, fixture cabinet or other confrivance used in connection with the drawing of alcoholic malt beverages for consumption by the drink or used in connection with the mixing of alcoholic beverages for consumption by the drink. Excluded from the provisions of the law are women who themselves hold liquor permits or are the wives of the permitees.
State Prepares . . * o_o To Teach Religion Dr. Clement T. Malan, State Superintendent of Public Instruction, hopes to have plans formulated within the next few weeks for the teaching of religion in the public schools of Indiana. The advisory committee he has named to help him work out details_of the plan will meet for: the first time at the State House on Aug. 1. Members of the committee represent all denominations and
both public and parochial school educators.
GOING SATURDAY CLEVELAND ... $550
Leave 10:00 p. m. or 10:50 p. m.
TOLEDO ...... $425
DETROIT ..... 525 Leave 10:00 p. m.
GOING SUNDAY
SHELBYVILLE .$.75
BATESVILLE . . 1.50 Leave 7:40 a. m.
GREENSBURG . . $1.25 CINCINNATI . . 250
Leave 4:20 a. m. or 7:40 a. m.
For complete information consult Ticket Agent
Enjoy the Life of Riley ON WHEELS!
NEW FASTER SERVICE ON THE ,
Ful Between CINCINNATI, ( INDIANAPOLIS, CHICAGO
Long in pleasure; short in schedule, this colorful dayliner combines every travel comfort at only 2c a mile— big easy chairs, solarium observation with smart cafe ... meals that melt in your Schedule Daily Except Sunday
(Standard Time) 8:15 AM Lv. Cincinnati Ar. 10:55 PM@®ET)
9:05 AM Lv. Indianapolis Lv. 8:10 PM ©T)
10:05 AM Ar. LaFayette Ar. 7:04 PM 11:20 AM Ar. Kankakee Lv. 5:45 PM 12:30 PM Ar. Chicago Lv. 4:40 PM (Central Station) (Michigan Ave. and Roosevelt Rd.)
mouth. You'll like the life on the ‘Riley: — the new fast schedule timed to your travel convenience. Air conditioned. Reclining seats reserved. Spacious smoking and power rooms. Low- cost meals.
NEW YORK GENE REY ——
Convenient connections with Western and Southern trains. For reservations phone Main 3540
NEW YORK CENTRAL
BIG FOUR ROUTE
HIT-RUNNER KILLS BOY CRAWFORDSVILLE, Ind. July {22 (U. P.).—William Collins, 18- -yearlold Wallace farm hand, was injured | fatally yesterday when he was {struck by a hit-and-run driver on State Road 234.
weg ool
OF WISCONSIN-MINNESOTA-UPPER MICHIGAN
INVITE YOU
This vacation paradise of sparklinglakesandrivers and fragrant forests is ideal for all the family; Fish, golf, swim, sail, hike, saddle, canoe —o¢ just loaf. Only an after noon’sridefrom Chicago on “North Western's” air. conditioned “Flam. beau” and “Arrowhead. Indian Head Special.” Also fast overnight serve ice. Low Summer rail fares.Hundreds of resorts.
Ride the Streamliiner “400” between Chicago - St. PaulMinneapolis (via Milwaukee), *
GET THIS BIG NORTH WOODS MAP—FREE|
V. A. Hampton . General 1A t C. and N. W. Line § 308 Merchants BL. Bldg. a) Indianapolis Phone pert
Please send me “Summer Outings,” also information about a trip to :
Name
AGHISIS nue srsosrssosavsnmnsrs
CHICAGO and
Scales of Justice—and Wages
There is bound to be a good deal of discussion of the demands for increased pay that have been made upon the ralsvads, Here are some
facts and comments: - The railroad labor unions have demanded wage increases averaging about 41 per cent. In the case of the Illinois Central, these wage mcreases would mean added costs of approximately $23,500,000 a year. Such demands are naturally of interest to everybody—to those whe use the railroad and foot the bill. to those who work for it, to those who have put their money in it. These wage increase demands are so tremendous they bear
20 relation to profits, either that have been earned or that can be expected. There never have been and are never likely to be such profits in the business. The Illinois Central has fortunately been able to keep up all payments on its interest-bearing obligations. However, the stockholders have not received anything for the last ten years—since 1931. If increased pay should make it necessary to increase freight and passenger rates, that would certainly lead to further increases in price. which is something we all want to avoid. It ‘should be unnecessary to. say that labor is worthy of its hire. However, the pay of those whose labor runs the railroads must be
within reason,
NORTH WESTERN
and a wide pattern selection.
= WASHINGTON AND DELAWARE STS
CRASH GO
Hundreds of Unadvertised
CASH PAY LESS
A Clearance of Women’s Washable
DRESSES UNIFORMS
Two-piece fitted and swagger suits with colored trim; dresses in printed sheers and percales; uniforms in assorted colors.
12,52
; Just 25! $7.95 to $10.95 SUMMER HATS WOMEN’S COATS
19¢ by
Straws and fabrics; large and | Spring and early fall; mostly small shapes. Priced to clear. | black and navy. Broken sizes All head sizes. 12 to 52.
Broken Size Assortment .......
CLEARANCE
SAVE MONEY on Women’s and Misses’ Summer FOOTWEAR
All Formerly Priced Much Higher
PUMPS—STRAPS SANDALS—TIES NOVELTIES
Broken sizes but all sizes in the lot—counter soiled and odds and ends but good values at
only 59c. Children’s Sandals and Play Shoes Whites—Black—Brown—Red tion soles in stitch down construction; wide, easy lasts for growing feet. RUMMAGE TABLE—CHOICE Rayon Napkins Fly Swatters Lace Doilies Jell-Seal Pot Holders Scrub Brushes Cc Dish Cloths Picnic Plates, doz. Soap Dishes Steel Wool Ea. Reg. 15¢ to 29¢ Summer Plain Colors
All leather and composi- i$ Sizes 4 to 8; 814 to 2. 6 Wash Cloths Shelf Paper Pot Scratchers Polish and Wax and Prints
Sheers, broadcloths, percales, muslins, ete. in 2 to 10 yard pieces. Large choice of patterns and colors.
“BIG YANK” OVERALLS
1 ® Broken size lot. Guaranteed
not to shrink or fade. Heavy weight denim for long wear.
Men’s Reg. 50¢c SUMMER TIES
29¢
Hand made construction that hold their shape. All colors
Inner-Outer Styles All Sizes
A sale of better quality leisure shirts—for men and young men —for every sport occasion. Spun rayons, 'slub weaves, sacking cloths, broadcloths, gabardines, novelties. 3
ALL STRAW HATS REDUCED
nT Bes]
Soft bodies and sailors. ‘Good choice of braids
PRICES
A Clean - Up of SPRING and SUMMER MERCHANDISE
®SMALL LOTS ® BROKEN SIZES ® Counter SOILED ®*ODDS and ENDS ®*RUMMAGE LOTS
Prices have been slashed to rock bottom, costs have been forgot. ten, to clear our stocks and make way for fall merchandise . . . arriving daily.
DON’T MISS IT! SAVE MONEY!
FULL-FASHIONED Ist QUALITY HOSE 25¢
Kneehi style dn wanted colors. Mostly
large sizes. 39¢
Summer HANDBAGS Gabardines and simulated leather grains, Whites, black, brown and navy. j Women’s and Girls’ ¢ Bathing Suits Lastex knits in assorted colors. Priced to clear, while they last,
!
One Lot! Women’s PLAY TOGS
Slacks, Farm erettes, blouses, Cc sweaters. Samples. Broken sizes and counter soiled. All sizes in the lot. 2 for 95¢ Women's SLIPS c and GOWNS Good quality muslin gowns broadcloth slips. Regular sizes. Women’s and Misses’ 10¢
SATIN PANTIES Stock up on these better quality pane
ties at this low price. 25¢
Girls’ Summer Broken
DRESSES Organdies in pastel colors. sizes to 14. Some prints in the lot. Girls’ Fleece eo TOPPERS
Ideal for cool evenings and fall. Sizes 7 to 14.
Clearance! Boys’ WASH PANTS
All woven materials
in light and dark 49¢ shades: slack model, separate waistband. Sizes 8 to 18. Boys’ Broadcloth
SHIRTS 25¢
Fast colors in plain and fancy pate terns. Yoke back. Sizes 5 8 to 14.
Boys’ Sanf Sanforized KIDDY-ALLS 9Qc
Overall style with bib and suspende ers. Green, blue and brown. Sizes
2 to 8. Infants’ Knit 1 is GOWNS White combed
Regular 59c¢ value. yarn. Tie sleeve, neck and bottom.
Rubber Pants 3 be 10¢
and Sheets
White and pink rubber pants in all sizes. Sheet size 17x24.
Cotton Plaid BLANKET ENDS
1 to 1% yard pieces, 29 66 inches long. As- Cc sorted colorful plaid Ea. patterns. SILK and ACETATE ¢ REMNANTS—Ea. Plain colors and prints. Romaines and alpacas included. 1 Yd. to 1%
Yd. pieces. 19¢
81-In. Unbleached SHEETING—Yd. Remnant pieces in usable lengths + Extra nice quality. 2%.Lb. Unbleached 2 ¢ COTTON BATTS Opens up full comfort size. Specially sale priced. 23¢
inlaid Linoleum Remnants, Sq. Yd. Assorted ‘patterns and colors. A bare gain if you can use these remnants, IRONING BOARDS
GARD TABLES ELECTRIC IRONS
59°
a tvos Troning pocard ahi ¥ Fiero) eons or
UNION SUITS 3 ¢ Combed cotton porous nits 3 for athletic style, Sizes 34 to Ist Quality - 4 MEN'S SOCKS | Whites, blue, black od brown. Ideal work. Sizes 10 bi
