Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 15 October 1943 — Page 13

therstrip '12¢ reed hair asy to tack 0 Feet,

»

Tomorrow—Shop MILLER-WOHL'S

CHILDREN'S DEPARTMENT |

—For Warm Winter Apparel— Ten heq Shop here and savel

al RS Winter Coats Sg _ S79? o $1975

An outstanding grouping of good-looking, serviceable fabrics in the desirable styles and colors. Sizes 7 to 14.

Also Kiddies’ Coats and Snow Suits in Sizes 3 to 6;

ha Keep on Buying WAR BONDS

Beautiful New SCHOOL DRESSES

$119_$129_ $199

- $599 Large selection of lovely

materials in: clever styles and all colors. Sizes for Tots to "Teeners.

Girls’ Jumpers : $1.99 to $3.99

Also Children’s Slacks

Skirts and Blouses ut Low Budget Prices!

Clearance! EARLY FALL!

DRESSES ma

45 E. WASHINGTON ST.

Snow Suits and

| sagamore; | | great junior sagamore;

ll Crouch, Indianapolis, great prophet; ll Oscar E. Sherman,

Frick, Indianapolis, Ed Lawson,

“Here for Convention Tuesday.

A resolution pledging “loyal Amerjcanism and co-operation in helping

|| with this war” will be drafted and

gent to Washington at the Téth

| meeting of the great council of the

Improved Order of Red Men Tues-

il /day at the Claypool hotel. lll Approkimately 500 Red Men are ||| expected. The session will stress

bond buying and wartime relief

il work among Hoosier tribes. More il than 500 members are in the armed || forces.

James E. Emmert, state attorney

I general, a member of the order, will ll | give the welcoming address at9a. m.

Banguet to Be Given A banquet will be given with the

|| degree of Pocahontas at 6:30 p. m. |/in the Riley room of the hotel.

Presiding officers of the annual

} “pow-wow” are: Willard Anderson, | Martinsville,

great sachem; Fred | Schroeder, New Albany, great senior Ivan Craggs, Franklin, Thomas

Indianapolis, |great keeper of wampum, and Edward C. Harding, Indianapolis, great

| chief of records.

Mr. Schroeder will be advanced to

li the sachem post, and Mr. Craggs fli will become great senior sagamore.

Candidates for Chairs

Candidates for great.junior sagamore are J. Ott Barker, Greens-

1| burg, and Frank Starkey, Clairmont.

Willard -M.- Anderson, -Martinsville, will become great prophet, Mr.

li Harding will reassume the records {i post, and Mr. Sherman will con-

tinue as keeper of wampum. Clyde Van Hook, Bloomington, and Alfred

Dunkirk, and B. Adair Snedley,

li Salemi, will be grand representa-

WOMEN OF MOOSE INITIATE BIG CLASS

Women of the Moose initiated 23

David L Stoddard

MORMON HEAD TO SPEAK HERE

New Latter Day Saints President to Take Up Duties.

David I. Stoddard, nationallyknown lumberman and new president of the Mormon Northern States mission, will speak here Sunday. Mrs. Stoddard, who shares her husband's duties as president of the Northern States and of the reHef societies of the mission, both branches of the National Women's Relief societies, will also be introduced. The Stoddards, like all Mormons in similar positions, will serve for an indefinite period, perhaps for life, without salary. They succeed Elder Leo J. Muir and Mrs. Muir, who are returning to private life. President Stoddard and Mrs. Stoddard will be presented at the North Side Chapel of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints at 10 a. m. and at the South

‘|Side branch at 1:30 p. m. The “new president. is a traditional

Mormon, his family having helped to develop the West. He is “heavily engaged” in both agricultural and lumber interests in that part of the country, church officials .report.

AUBREY WILLIAMS HEADS FARM GROUP

WASHINGTON, Oct: 15 (U. P.) —

tional youth administration, today became director of organization of the national farmers union to head s big organizing drive in 22 East-

by James G. Patton, president of the farmers union, which describes

WITH A STANLEY DIAMOND I Pledge That the Standard of Value Will

NEVER BE LOWERED in This Store!

Now Is an Excellent Time to Begin Your Christmas Shopping

N

I will continue to sell qualitydiamonds, watches and >

itself as the representative of “working farmers” and is usually opposed in legislative matters to the “big

and regional farmers unions and affiliated co-operatives and help deservice and educational programs for small farmers which “must go along with legislation to defeat other legislation and administrative action aimed at the destruction of family type farming and rural democracy.”

‘SENATE MAY DELAY WORLD PEACE STUDY

WASHINGTON, Oct. 15 (U. PJ), —Sepate consideration of the pro posed resolution on post-war inter national collaboration may be post poned until the second week In November or later, Senate Demo« cratic Leader Alben W. Barkley of Kentucky revealed today.

[| Barkley plans to spend the last

K

week of ‘October and part of the first week of November in Ken« tucky campaigning for the Democratic ticket in the Nov, 2 guber natorial election. He doesn't want the resolution debated while he is away. :

GIRAUD REPORTED INJURED

BERN, Oct. 15 (U. P.).~Unconfirmed reports reached here today that Gen. Henri Honore Giraud, co-president of the French committee of national liberation, was

opposite ends of the 4.9-mile-long

Aubrey “Williams, recently. resigned | = head of the congress-aholished na

1

{After 76 Years of Waiting

ba —————————

Populace Can Ride Underground.

CHICAGO, Oct. 15 (U, P.).—After 76 years of waiting, Chicago's straphangers will begin riding in a subway next week. The subway will be dedicated tomorrow, and the first regular trains will begin rumbling through the tube at 12:01 a, m, Sunday. For the dedication, trains from

tube will meet in the center underheath State st, where Mayor Edward. J. Kelly will cut a ribbon and make a speech, ‘Thus the subway which Chicago has been seeking since the first plans were laid in 1867 will become a reality. Philip Harrington, commissioner of the department of subways and per highways, estimated the subwould carry 70,000,000 passengers a year, an increase of 20 per| cent over the number using the elevated trains this year.

Estimates Differ

|RESCU

JE HOF OR WOMAN | (U. P)~Coast guardsmen and

day. Little hope remains of finding the widow alive in her rowboat. Seamen believe high winds on the lake had capsized her boat, and

members of the civil air patrol re-|

IN Boat||”

. GLASSES on

~Have your oye

she could not have exposure. A woman told police Mrs. Allen dropped an oar while pushing oft shore to inspect her fishing nets, and was unable to paddle back to a pler, The boat was swept away.

tered optometrist with offices at

MILLER JEWELRY CO., tc.

29 on the CIRCLE

nd Door from Power & Light O86

survived the

Schricker to Be Speaker At Banquet Monday; 200 to Attend.

The Indiana Sheriffs’ assoolation will convene for a war-time conference Monday and Tuesday in the Lincoln hotel. Governor Schricker will be the]

Other officials believed the estiportion of the subway to be put

isting industrial centers. The cost of the spur, which has been under construction since Dec. 18, 1938, was $57,200,000, with $18,000,000 coming from federal grants. In comparison, New York's subway, which covers 133 miles, cost more than $1,100,000,000; Philadelphia’s, $150,000,000, “and Boston's, When completed after the war, the Chicago subway will have cost $217,000,000. New features of the Chicago tube

ing. Trains from the existing elevated lines will use the tubes, diving underground at 14th st, a mile south of the loop, and coming up again a mile and a half north of the loop. Only passengers going north and south will be able to use the subway. 10-Cent Fare The 10-cent fare will be the same as on the elevated lines, and passengers will be able to transfer from existing streetcar and bus lines to the subway. The subway will be far from the answér to all the city's transportation problems as it will be only a small portion of the planned tube project of 46.47 miles to be completed after the war, But it will provide some. relief for the millions of Chicago straphang=

portation have been unanswered for decades when the city fathers disagreed over financing and operation

CANADA FINDS OIL

NEW YORK, Act, 15. (U, P.).— W. R. Gallagher, president of the Standard Oil Co., (N. J.), disclosed last night. that oll from wells located 100 miles from the Arctic Circle is ready for delivery to the Alaskan war front, "The wells are situated at Pt. Norman, Canada, and actual de-

Horse, near the Alaskan border, The oil fields, Gallagher said, were

and Ceril 8. Ober is program chair-

ATHLETE'S FOOT

- HANDICAPPED

WITHOUT | TEETH?

Wear. New Plates

mate might be too high because the |

into operation will not touch ex. dall; Stephen Molnar Jr, sheriff of |

are escalators and fluorescent light-

ers-whose -hopes- {or speedier -trans+ |} of all previous subway proposals. ||

NEAR ARCTIC CIRCLE

the Claypool hotel. Samuel B.| Huffman, president, will preside, |

principal speaker at the association {banquet Monday night. Other | speakers will include Mayor Tyn-|

| St. Joseph county and president of the association, and Clifton Small, | Kokomo, association secretary. | J. Walter McCarty, managing edi- | tor of the Indianapolis News, will be toastmaster and invocation will} be by the Rev, Fr. Joseph V. Somes, | pastor of Christ the King church, Indianapolis, More than 200 sheriffs and deputy | sheriffs from throughout the state will- attend. Speakers at business | sessions Monday and Tuesday will include Capt. George T. Stewart, | director of intelligence and internal | |security, Ft. Harrison; Donald E.| | Bowen, assistant to James J. Robin. | |son, director of the institute of| criminal law administration, Indi-| ana university; Dr. Norman Beatty, director of the venereal control program in Indianapolis, and Donald 8. Hostetter, F. B, I. agent in charge of | the Indiana division,

|

BOGOTA, Columbia, Oct, 18 (U.| P.)~Foreign ministry sources said tonight that the governments of | all Latin American nations had | appealed in a “fglendly and cour-

URGE ARGENTINE SHUN AXIS |,

teous” manner to Argentina to sever| relations with the axis,

———— A — thd At

|

MEN'S SERVICE SOLES

Buy the best Soles in town on these Sturdy Oxfords. We have them!

$39

Non-Rationed OXFORDS

Made of Tough Cloth, Sizes 7 to 12, At a Special Low Price of $2.48

FACTORY store

STORES 418. 318.332 | 362-354 ILLINOIS ST. | MASS. AVE. | W. WASH. ST.

Open Sat., 7 A. M. to 9 P. M., Mon,, 12:15 to 8:45 P. M.

Rizes 6 to

12 Widths B to D

$34.95

You will enjoy a warm winter this year in a "Cortney" Suit or Topcoat, Select from our wide range of colors, styles and materials.

WEEKS TO PAY

sah. estas