Indianapolis Times, Volume 36, Number 208, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 January 1925 — Page 11
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ROADS ENTERING INDIANAPOLIS IN CONDITION AGAIN Highway Force Clear Up Obstacles Caused by Bad Weather, Snow and ice in northern Indiana, with thaws in several southern Indiana counties, offered diversified maintenance problems during the past week, but reports from the six district eglneers show such obstacle* have been overcome and trafvc again is moving continuously and comfortably over the entire State system, John D. Williams, highway director, said in the commission’s traffic bulletin today, Williams called attention to removal of two more detours, at a bridge two and one-half miles west of the Ur coin highway on Road 2, and around a bridge two miles west of Tipton on Road 19. Road conditions 'week of Jan. 10-17: No. 1 (New Albany. Indianapolis, South Bend. Michigan line) —Pavement from Indianapolis to Peru. Detour seven miles north of Kokomo, account of reflooringr a bridge. South of Indianapolis detour via Chestnut Ridge, coming out on Road 1 at seven miles north of Crothersville. No. 0 (Madison, Greensburg. Indianapolis, Lafayette. Oxford) —Pavement between New Bethel and Shelbyrllie with two short detours marked around bridge construction. Northwest of Indianapolis use pavement to three and seven-tenths miles north of Lebanon, thence on short detour back to pavement. Detour six miles north of Lebanon to west through Thomtown returning to No. 6 at three miles north of Thorntown. Short detour to east four miles north of Thorntown. Advisable to use 44 and 29 or 33 and 32 from Lebanon to Lafayette. No. 12 (Vincennes. Spencer. Martinsville. Indianapolis)—Drive slowly because of grading new fill at Fish Creek four miles south of Freedom. No. 22 (English. Paoll. Mitchell. Bedford, Bloomington. Martinsville. Indianapolis)—Pavement between Indianapolis and Martinsville being used by traffic, using two detours and two run-arounds.
A REAL SALE OF DEPENDABLE jjfc clothes A Price Reductions of From 20% and on Some Garments to Less Than HALF PRICE nvntpnATC suits IllLllUtlH I w Fine wool, worsted and cassimeres. Splendidly taiThis season’s popular styles. lored. Values from $25 to $35. Big, warm, soft, woolly fab- Saturday rics. Full box or belt models. $4 Q. 50 jn || SOO.OO Regular values at our former ■ V" £am low prices up to $35. Saturday— One Lot of Good, SAJk AA Heavy, Wool "10.1)1) Overcoats ■— Mostly Jm small sizes. £■' Saturday, Y choice ...... | The Bennett-Swain Cos. Corner Massachusetts Ave. and Delaware St.
MnSlSIv m QDa II Bil A. / m X Iraßw 7 Hf J NOW . M i. ONLY Reduced From $1.25 m' All the latest Player Roll Hits JF hand-played by best pianists. Q. R.S. Player Rolls I BALDWIN’S Come In and Play Them Over They Are Only ONE DOLLAR Everything You Do Blue-Eyed Sally Old Pal Somebody Like You Some Other Day (Some Other Girl) Tea for Two Mean Cicero Blues Put Away a Little Ray 1 of Golden Sunshine On My Ukulele f Twilight Shadows - Haunting Melody f Hawaiian Daisies 1 TjMjflAPenn. Sd■ .JWr® J| 'if* ~ -• '
Weds Candler
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Homer Thompson, a poor man a few months ago, is now an executive of the CocaCola Company, at Charlotte, N. C. He recently married Miss Lucy Candler, granddaughter of Asa Q. Candler Sr., Coca-Cola king.
Between Paoll and English are seventeen miles of dirt road which is soft in wet weather. Avoid road south of Grantsburg account of construction. Run-around at bridge project south of Harrodsburg. No. 39 (Indianapolis, Ruthville. Brookville, Cincinnati)—Bridge run-around t foot of Bulltown Hill near Laurel. Fire at Tire Shop Damage by fire estimated at S6O was caused early today at the Quick Tire Service Inc., North and Meridian Sts. Police Lieutenant Schubert said firemen told him the fire probably was caused by spontaneous combustion in a pile of rubbish in the basement. HEADACHE Don’t Suffer! Get a 10c package of Dr. James Headache Powders tAny kind of t headache la relieved in two minu t e a. Distress and pain vanish, your head cleara and yon are again ready tor work or millions of “Dr. James Headache Powders" because they are safe.— Advertisement.
SURVEY REVEALS COSTS STILL HIGH Printers and Hoover Agree on Value of Dollar, Figures on living cost gathered by the International Typographical •Union’s bureau of statistics in an exhaustive survey produced the same result as that reached by Herbert Hoover, Secretary of Commerce, in a recent survey, it was said at headquarters of the union here today. The dollar of today is worth 68 cents, taking the 1913 dollar as standard, according to Thomas K. Lewis, director of the union's bureau. Secretary Hoover found the cost of liv-
OPEN SATURDAY NIGfeTS Repeated By Request —For One More Day! the entire city by storm! it has proven < so popular as to be repeated unanimously i eMBS&VrrW request. This all goes to prove the I SffmmiW famous value-giving element of this great "Jpsßraiffly event. Come In tomorrow —take advan- . P|J|r tgge of this wonderful opportunity! Rogers' greatest Diamond valuel Beautiful ladles’ mountings of green i ' and white gold. Hand oarved design*— In the regular way, these Wrtet Watches said for ae high aa $£2.50. Your choice of Towns an Octagon—or , Cushion shape. Fancy diale—sapphire set crowns angraved whits gold filled oases—guaranteed movement—without a doubt the greatest values. Rogers have aver oSTvred. None .old foe caah—-2An DOWN—SOc WEEKLY. |j quoted | Positively N#n * ot T^* and F#f ca#h *
THJbJ' .LN DiAJS APOLifcJ
ing about 72 per cent above the prewar level, which would make the dollar worth 58 cents. “The value of the dollar Is a popular theme for statisticians,’’ said Lewis, "but opinions vary widely. This is due to different bases of computation. Recently an authority gave a 67-cent value, but undoubtedly that was based on broader financial transactions than those affecting the ordinary citizen. We feel our survey, covering various conditions In different cities and regions, must be about accurate, since the result /agrees with Secretary Hoover’s conclusions.” Tire Station to Cost $20,000 Work on the new tire station of the General Tire Sales Company at the southwest comer of Pratt and Delaware Sts., will be started within two weeks, it was announced today. The company has taken a nin|ty-nine-year lease on the property. The building ill cost, about $20,000 arid will be erected by Mothershead & Fitton, Ina
THIRD YOUTH ARRESTED Boys Charged With Robberies—Revealed by Shooting. Detectives Gollnlsch and Sheridan today arrested Harold Fortune, 19, of 746 Luett Ave., as the third youth in the alleged robberies of a drugstore of Alva Stevenson, 3401 W. Michigan St., the residences of Clyde Freeman. 718 Somerset Ave., and
FUR JACQUETTES White fur Jacquetteo. While only 6 last, $76 CO 9J values, ft V < / price t# ■
Our Anniversary Sale Brings Further Reductions Saturday, in this COAT and DRESS SALE
New Beautiful DRESSES 4|| Here’s an event that should prove a record - /Mtk Jjgk Lay-Awav • breaker . Dresses made to sell at much higher k prices • All new spring models . ***** Fabric. A Style, £311% Deposit Will C "jL C mJ rt ’ ..-I*2. “•"£* ▼■[ ■ MJdf A, A mJEiaanbl, l'| £ EJ I 1 Poiret Twills, BMgHK, "*XT, t Bengalees and Cranberry IS | V , j . Green, Rose, y Musts, 14 to 20 aa Titian Red, jMLJiIi Women s, 36 to 46 W f/atmsd. Cray. 1 UHBfl Stylish Stoats, ■ /Vau> Brown % Women’s Fur Trimmed . \Hf COATS I Seldom have you ever been able to buy such values in coats at sl3. Fortunately one of New dSA York’s better manufacturers sacrificed these JBWH||Bi| coats to raise cash quickly. All newest styles wBBI pi Sizes—Misses and Women, 14 to 44. Larger GIRL’S FUR- EXTRA SIZE COATS fl TRIM’D COATS For lArier Women I OHM s6*oo FFR AND SELF-TRIMMED Siae* to 14 Year* SIZES—*2% to 66% KhKl
t Special Value*—Just for Saturday—ln Beautiful NEW SPRING HATS Jflft Surftjs: m nc- x- ..... -i.. T~mMW Hat. tor mli.N, for SK VJ '*% touch*, of straw) in all V matron., for bobbed hair the popular high .hade*. { u l^y-taedium“ ,t .W New taffeta, in dlfforeut V N hat* everythin* smart shapes. And remember [
MKE ° n rZL 343-245-247- 349 WEST WASHINGTON STREET f"^, Main 1101 Main 1101 \ P ( This beautiful eight-piece dining room suite consists of table, buffet, one hoss chair and t S §i five diners. It is fashioned in the popular Queen Anne style and comes in mahogany fin- qLM ***" ' ", ish. We believe it to be an unsurpassed bargain. A $119.50 dining room suite for
Winfield Smith, 983 Somerset Ave., and School 67, at 8616 W. Walnut St. Roy Mackey, 17, of 914 Somerset A.ve., and William Fariss, 17, of Bridgeport, Ind., were arrested Thursday when Mackey is alleged to have shot Harold Tanner, 14, of 1160 N. Warman Ave., when he caught him looking in a shed in which police said he had stored loot from the robberies. All "three youths are charged with grand larceny.
Quality Values That Save |
Southwest Corner Alabama and Washington
KILLING HELD JUSTIFIED Coroner Exonerates Sergeant Dean in Shooting of Youth. A verdict of justifiable homicide was returned by Coroner Paul F. Robinson today in the fatal shooting of George Clark, 22, of Danville, Ind., by Police Sergeant Ralph Dean Decs. 28 at 652 W. Washington St. Seven witnesses upheld Dean’s re-
port that he shot Clark when he resisted arrest after Clark an£ Raymond Bowyer, 19, also of Danville, were alleged to have held up four colored men at 613 Chesapeake St. “Pleased with the Bargain,” was the way one lady expressed her satisfaction at the saving she had made in buying a used but to her extremely useful bedroom suite offered in a Times Want Ad.
LONG FUR COATS Black Cooney fiftyinch coats. While only C€\ 3 last, Vi *P < price %3 JL
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