The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 9 October 1933 — Page 4
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THE DAILY BANNER. GREENCASTLE, INDIANA. MQNDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1933.
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| sums allocated to secretary outlined
their stats the the number of
| highway projects approved in each ; and estimated that their total cost
I would be only fl35£0l,000.
He made it a point that of the 2.HJ0 pi ejects approved, construction had Lbeen started on onl> 7"i7. Contracts
TO LECTURE OCT. 13
Frances Perkin.-, Secretary of Faih 'r in President Roosevelt’s cab* inet, will o|>en the Indianapolis Town Hall Series will? a lecture next hViday e'ening, October 13, at the Murat Theatre This first address of the
been started on onl\ 7a7. < ontraets i neaut in. , l ii n u have been awarded. h« said, for I dr,!) series.of twenty which 1 own Hall has
i i i* . i • tI .u ii.i n t ri ^
| projects. "On the basis of these figures it would he possible throughout the nati .ii to have 1,000 more highway projects under construction,” Ickes asserted. In urging .the governors to expcilit,' the WMrk he reminded them of “the increasing lapse of lime” between the approval of projects and beginning of a tual construction.
THIS \t KKK'S \M V I HER
ASKS (GOVERNORS ID PI 'll KO \l> PKOJBt'TS ' WASHINOTON, Oit. 9. In . new effort to stimulate the spending of th<; 1400,000,000 fund alio Red to states for mad building Secretary Ickes, public works administrator, ha.
appealed to all governors to expedite actual constriction on their highway projects. The money was set a-i le from the |.'l,.'100,(1(10,000 public wi iks fund- a'id assigned to the states in dune. In reminding the governor- of the
Rain- Tuesday or Wednesday and again about Friday. Cool beginning of week, warmer Tuesday, colder Thursday, warmer end of week.
scheduled for this fall Mid winter has been arranged for the Murat in the evening, in place of the customary “plan of meeting at 11:30 o’clock in the morning, Usunse of the wide interest in Miss Perkin’s coming and the expectation that many hundreds , f |*>ople who cannot attend in the a iem on will wi-h ta hear her. The subject of her address will l>e | N, w Challenge to Industry.” Her talk therefore will undoubtedly |,e a discussion of the “new deal ’ in the government’s attitude toward industrial and economic problems, in the shaping and canning out of which die l.a - ha I a large part A she is
before her than any otlfbr member of the President’s Cabinet- Since her graduation from Mt Holyoke College a quarter of a century' ago.•she has beer, h student of and most of ..the time a leader in welfare.work and m the” solution of industrial proqblems with governmental aidShe began her career as a volunteer worker with Jane Adams at Hull House, in Chicago,* where she -pent six mol.(Its as an investigator in the stockyards diRrirt. Then for two years she wa- employed by a Philadelphia social agency working with
immigrants.
fYo;„ Philadelphia -he went to New York, where she became executive secretary of (he Consumers’ League In that capacity she spent many years fighting for social legislation, particularly improvement of the factory laws of New York state, and she met and mm '' friends with legislat-
the fir-t member of President Roo-e-velt’s Cabinet to -peak in Indianapolis ..in.e the new admini-tration went in-
Mr and Mrs. Win I H-'.vie l.a ‘ a- llim . er | a ,»t March what she has to
v, | ...i ^ v n ^ ^ inU'rest alike to
i employers and employes.
Frances B'erkin in private life she is Mrs- Paul C Wilson—has probably had nn re training and ext rienre leading din tly to the ta -k
their dinner guests .Sunday Mrs Sibyl Fox, Miss Mary Denny and Frank Ftoyee, Mrs. Fox will leave this week for (ilemlale, Calif, where -he will spend the winter wi’-h her son Robert
and daughter Mare ir'C
me
something.. wliat makes
a cigarette taste better
"VVyHAT makes anything taste
W i
better? It’s what is in it that makes a thing taste better. CHESTERFIELDS taste better be-
cause we buy ripe tobaccos. These ripe tobaccos arc aged two and a half years—thirty months. During this time the tobaccos improve— just like wine improves by ageing.
CHESTERFIELDS taste better be-
cause they have the right kind of home-grown tobaccos and Turkish
Tobaccos "welded together.” We hope this answers your
question.
Chesterfield
© )f tiucrrr 4t Mm* Toixcto Co.
the cigarette that’s mij.dkr the cigarette that TASTES BETTER
or.-, employers, labor leaders and political boss"-. Rig Tim Sullivan, then boss in New York City, was one of her close friends for years. In 1923 A1 Smith, then Governor of New York, appointed her a inembei of the .state industrial commission Six years later, Franklin Delano Roo.-evelt, then Governor, made her Commissioner of this Commission, and for nearly four years, until Governor Roo-evelt began his campaign for the Presidency, they worked closely together on the great problems imposed on New York State by the eco nomic depression. When he was choosing his Cabinet, he selected her for Secretary of Labor over the vigorous protest of party leaders and labor leaders alike
FIND SIOI.KN KL< I RII IKSWERK M AKKLTKD THKot f.H CHICAGO IN SEVKN STATES
Barr Extent Of
Bond Theft Hinir
CHICAGO, Oct. 9. Evidence indicating that a huge clearing house for stolen securities had its operating headquarter- here ha beer, uncovered federal agents investigating the $250.00(1 Chicago mail r hbery for which 20 persons h ue been arrested nd several indicted. W alter Johnson, chief postal inspector, made the disclosure today as an aftermath of toe suicide of Ed'ard R. I.ehenslvrger, prominent night dub owner, which threw the investigations into hold relief. L niteil States Vttoiney Dwight H. Green disclosed that I.ehensherger was one of those named in -ecret indictments charging possession of stolen ecurities and conspira y. (ireen said thq investigation puritan! to the robbery last December revealed an a maxing underworld syndicate that dealt solely in disposal of stolen seruritie .. The syndicate, h** said, apparently operated through gambling houses anl nig it club figure.- and spiead its tentacles throughout at least seven states. “It had not developed how large
the operations of the group w*re," Green said, "until investigators began finding stolen securitiijs in banks.”
The securities were traced and apparently were placed in banks and other institutions through machinations of the same group, he added. Stolen securities found their way into brokerage houses in some instances and investigation carried on quietly by the federal government .ammassed evidence against leaders of the ring.
investigators contacted scores of witnesses who testified before the federal grand jury and indictment were obtained.
It was ‘not howevtjr, until the death of Lebensberger Friday that announcement was made by Green md Johnson that the government was ybout to “blow the lid off” the workings of the syndicate.
Six hours after the night club owner's pajama-rlad body was found in his fashionable home a former state legislator was arrested atid jailed along with the (relit manager of Lebensberger’s “225” club.
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Then from scattered cities over the nation came report- from government prosecutors and postal inspectors thiit 18 others had been arrested and that others were sought. An indication that those arrested in connection with the government's investigation in various parts of the •ountry would be brought to Chicago was made by District Attorney Green. “No formal action has as yet been taken,” Green said, “but eventually •emnval proceedings will probably be held.” .
Slim SUMMERVHU 1 „ ^ZASUPITTsj HER FIRSTi MATE
WitMJn. Merkel |J3 Henry Armetta /71 Berton Churchill Warren Hymer
W VNTS MORE LAI GH I KK IN WELFARE WORK
HARTFORD, Conn., (UP) — The teed of humor in welfare work has heen overlooked. William W. Squire, secretary of the state department of public welfare, believes. “There is medicine in a good laugh," Squires said, “and workers should seek to stir up the hum irons side when working with the poor, the needy, and the old. “It is safe to say that old people don’t get much enjoyment out of laughter,” he added. “For that pait, only children are really merry. But lumor has its part. It did much to keep up the morale during the World war. There has been little humor
V ^ EXTRA ADDED
Hal LeRoy - Mitzi Mayfii| IN
Reunion at Legion Convention
r—4. ^ 1 Count Adalbert de Ohambrun. of the French Army, his c ‘' u . ntry „ , i„jj$ I to the American Legion convention at Ctlieag ' I of World War days. Lieutenant General Milton J. V' ■ an Vu ..rri# when they met at the opening of the Veterans’ pow vow fit* formed a fnandshio back in the days of tho "Big Parade.
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Here is the -rone at Hampton Roads, Va eon I
S W,omin, X—t befoi.
The'endange IJ of A ? * w * lf developments in Cuba. h Ammc ? n liv l* >" recent street fightimr in '
Hgi an. inM lt r.,rthe' aaiom'^u^VcMpUir"' ZV? k'FL*? 1 ** J" •f Ihe Hyom.ng, great. Lieutenant Colonel ,|„h n Pott,!’ Marine'c*,-
8 mander, aa he arrives on board.
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