Indianapolis Times, Volume 37, Number 113, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 September 1925 — Page 7
THURSDAY, SEPT. 10, 1925
TYPOTHETAETO CONVENE FRIDAY Delegates From Four States to Be Present. Delegates from Ol 'o, Kentucky, West Virginia and In liana will attend the convention of Seventh District Typothetae Federation at the Lincoln Friday and Saturday, Julian Wetzel of Indianapolis, vice president, said today. B. B. Eisenberg, Cleveland, Ohio, president, will open the meeting Following a visit to the United Typothetae School of Printing at Technical H,gh School the delegates will attend a dinner at the Lincoln. Ernest F. Eilert of New York, vice 'president of the United Typothetae of America, will speak. FORD GIVES His AIRCRAFT IHEWS (Continued From Page One) Ford smiles dryly at the suggestion that this signifies complete success for commercial aviation is near. "I wish I could see it," he comments. From the Ford airport at Dearborn, all-metal "sky trucks” daily sail away to Cleveland and Chicago, carrying a thousand pounds of freight. Ford thinks' these are the best WANTS TO HELP OTHERS "I could not rest because of coughing all night” writes Mr. L. E. Davis, 651 E. 46th St., Chicago, 111. "Tried FOLEY’S HONEY & TAR and it is the best remedy for coughs and colds I ever took. I introduced FOLEY'S HONEY & TAR to several of my friends and they think it’s the best they ever used.” FOLEY S HONEY & TAR just naturally hits the spot and gives quick relief, from coughs, colds and hoarseness. Get a bottle from your neighborhood store today.—Advertisement. Free to Asthma and Hay Fever Sufferers Free Trial of Method That Anyone Can Use Without Discomfort or Loss of Time. We hare a method for the control of Asthma, and we want you to try It at our nxnenre No matter whether your eaee is of long standing: or recent development, whether it is present as Chronic Asthma or Hay Fever, you should send for a free Trial of our method. No matter in what climate you live, no matter what your age or occupation, if yoti are troubled with Asthma or Hay Fever, our method should rOievc you promptly. We especially want to send it to those apparently hopeless eases, where all .forms of inhalers, douches, opium preparations, fumes, patent smokes." etc., have failed. We want to show everyone at our exponas, tha tour method Is designed to end all difficult breathing, all wheezing, and all those terrible paroxysms. This free offer is too important to 1 regleet . single day. Write now and begin the method at once. Send no money. Pimply ma.li coupon below. Do It Today—you even do not pay postage.
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AMUSEMENTS
ARNOLD JOHNSON and His ORCHESTRA from Hollywood, Fla. Last appoarnr,re in Indianapolis for 2 years at BROAD RIPPLE DANCE GARDENS Satlirday and Sunday Evening September 12th and 13th ADMISSION 30c PKR PERSON
masEsssasn BURLESQUE Special Fair Week Attraction nAHRI (HELLO JAKE) FTELDS iff SUGAR BABIES Prancing on Illnmlnated Rnnway.
Where the Crowds Go! LYRIC Eli Hans Hanke THE MASTER PIANIST OTHER BIG NEW ACTS
PALACE PERCY PAMELA OAKES-DELOUR AND THEIR LA CHAPINO Marimba Orchestra OTHER BIG ACTS PHOTO FEATURE “THE GAIETY GIRL” WITH MARY PHILBIN
DANCE A Battle of Music Between Chubb Steinberg Recording Orchestra, of Cincinnati, and the Blue and White Dixieland Entertainers You'll Step to Their Rhythm. You’ll Enjoy Their Melodies. The management has spnred .no expense for the occasion in securing this celebrated aggregation of talented musicians. We can not impress on you too strongly to attend this affair If r >u Rre desirous of hearing the finest symphonic dance orchestra that ever played In car city. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 10th RIVERSIDE DANCE PALACE
Gas Tank Kills Horse Bu Time* B irci'il BELLEVILLE, 111., Sept. 10. —Expressmen at Columbia, near here, left a steel tank containing gas for use in charging carbonated water on the sidewalk in the sun. The gas expanded and blew out a safety valve in the end of the tank. In a moment the tank hurtled across the street, broke a telephone pole, knocked potatoes from a truck, killed a horse and did minor damage before all the gas escaped.
airplanes that* engineering talent has yet developed. But he thinks the machines are still crude, costly, inefficient, measured by his vision of what the sky carrier of the future will be. "Aviation is in its infancy,” Ford puts it. "What’s the trouble with airplane?” he is asked. "The engine,” he replies. The Ford Motor Company built thousands of Liberty motors for the government during the war. Now it is buying back these same motors to install in its own planes. But whatever happens in aviation, Henry Ford has no desire to fly. He has never ridden in an airplane or airship, and never intends to, despite reports that he planned a trip in the ill-fated Shenandoah when it soared over Detrob on its return from the Middle W st. "I can imagine what flying is like to my perfect satisfaction,” says Ford. Win Ford Retire? Henry Ford may administer a knockout blow to the confidence of his Ford Motor Company business associates some of these days. Ford may retire. "You never can tell.” says Ford. “Henry Ford retire? Never!" sav
MOTION PICTURES
rhino'
THOMAS MEIGHAN —IN— The Man Who Found Himself
jOK I lip w THURS., FRI. AND SAT. Pete Morrison Seats “THE IOC GHOST * V_ W RIDER” AL ST. JOHN COMEDY “LOVEMANIA”
APOLLO Bebe Daniels RodLaßocque ‘Wild, Wild Susan’ A Faramonnt Picture e•e * • ■ Imperial Comedy, “On the Go"
Coming! Sunday ivotm t JtlH I. WWW m\ \ \ sfkusi 6 *
the men whose names top the Ford company a pay roll. Edsel Ford is president of the Ford Motor Company now. Relieved of many responsibilities, Henry Ford 'gives time and thought to such semiphilanthrophy ns the revlvar of oldtime dances. Will he desist altogether, in his later years, from direction of the Ford industrial affairs? “You never can tell,” Ford smiles. "But do you expect to retire?” "If I expected to, then I could tell. I don’t expect to, but you never can tell.” Talks on Reincarnation No retirement by Henry Ford, however—even the final one—will be for all time, Ford Molds. He is a believer in reincarnation. “You believe that Henry Ford will return to earth, reincarnated, after death?” he is asked. Ford gazes out a window, and drums his fingers on a table top. “Well, nothing is ever destroyqfi, is it?” he responds. "Do you believe in a Deity?” "The trouble about discussing those things is that nobody ever knows just what he is talking about.” At 62, with the Ford fortune measurable only in ten figures, Henry ForrLs chief ambition for the Ford Motor Company is—“To keep it going." A friend of Ford, he is reminded, quotes him as saying. “Our jib is to make work for more people at better wages. “It’s the same thing,” says Ford. There are no fine distinctions in the Ford reasoning. "Do you get more personal satisfaction out of making more jobs for people, or making more automobiles for them?" he is asked. "It’s all the same,” Is Ford’s answer.
ADOLPH ZUKOR as* JESSE L LASKY>e a M*r R Cecil B.DeMLite's 3 E THE TEN 3 E(jOMMANDMENTS| |ki Dramatic Spectacle, IS* of dll the ClqeS/ (epummoan!) Coming Sunday Coming Sunday
OHIO Theatre
A Laugh a Minute in This Comedy Drama RICHARD BARTHELMESS In the Adventures of a Gob Ashore and Afloat “SHORE LEAVE” On the Stage Rita Mario & Cos. 10 misses 10 In a Charming All-Girl Revue ROSCOEITISTERS DESSA BYRD Sweet Southern Singers An Organ. Solo And Other Supplemental Features Starts ir-pi .if , \\T 111 Regular Sunday IHC LOSt W OnOl Prices Indianapolis Has Never Seen Anything Like It!! Modem Romance in a Strange World of Prehistoric Monsters Sir Arthur Con&n Doyle’s Stupendous Story WORLD'S WONDER PICTURE j\ J / BESSIE LOVE It w LEWIS STONE -B* WALLCE BEERY i LLOYD HUGHES A First National Picture By Arrangement With Watterson R. Rothacker The Greatest Romantic Adventure Ever Screened ! ! “The Lost World” STARTS SUN DA Y, REGULAR PRICES
LEMONS TAKE ANOTHER JUMP -Michigan Peaches Appear at City Market. Lemons took'another jump to 60 .centsva dozen and limes were higher (at 60 cents a dozen today at the icity market. Michigan peaches put dn an appearance and sold for three (pounds for 25 ceaijts. • Other prices included: Mushrooms, ’51.25 potawl; blue grapes, 45 cents a basket; Kentucky Wonder beans, 10 icents a pound; quinces, two pounds •for 25 cents; cucumbers, 45 cents a .dozen, and fresh,lima beans, 25 cents ia pound. Fish prices were about the same, •with salmon selling for 35 cents a pound; white flsih, 35 cents; trout, >35 cents; yellow flsh, 35 cents; and cat iish, 40 cents. California grapes were 10 censs a jpound; Tip Top melons, 5 and 10 .cents each; tomaloes, 3 pounds for 10 cents; head lettuce, 5 to 15 cents A head; sugar corn, 20 cents a dozen; •sweet potatoes,, 5 cents a pound; Tokay grapes, 2vpounds for 25 cents; Bartlett pears. pounds for 25 cents; and orange watermelons 10 ,and 20 cents each. POLICE/ PROBE FIRE A> police investigation of a Are at Fifty-Second St. and Boulevard PI. t hardest royefl a touring car revealed that it had probably been set on fire, reports show today. Officers say the license plates and other markka of Identification were removed and the gasoline tank cap taken off.
MOTION PICTURES
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
JOHN HOWARD MISSING Fafher of State Farm Head Sought by Son. John Howard. 81, father of Capt. Howard, head of the Indiana State Farm, is reported missing from his home in Knightstown, Ind. He has a gray moustache, is slightly bald, was wearing a dark suit and hat and walks slightly stooped. R. L. Bell, Monticello, Ky. p is offering police a SIOO reward for tho arrest of his daughter, Mrs. J. C. Powers. 21, of Zula, Ky., who is thought to have eloped with a man residing here.
Berlin Holds Klan Organizers Bu Timet Special BERLIN, Sept. 10. Two naturalized Americans of German extraction, both ministers, have been arrested lh Silesia on a charge of organizing a chapter of the Ku-Klux Klan in Berlin. A third organizer , escaped and is believed to be on his way to the United States. Gothard Schein and his son, Otto, of Chicago, are the arrested pair. Birton Gray Schein, another son who was born at Hillsboro, 111., escaped.
PETTIS DRY GOODS CO THE NEW YORK STORE \ , Delightful Styles and Effective Colors in These New Fall Dresses That Are Remarkably Low Priced at mm I Delightfully clever Dresses are these, at such an extremely l jy Women, Misses and High School Girls
Cool Home Frocks, 69c j Every garment crisp and fresh. A wide assortment of patterns and sizes. Sizes 36 to 44. Special at I 69c each. ’ Womens Union Suits, 35c Os fine quality yarn; loose knee style. 49c quality. Splendid values. All sizes. The suit, 35c. Women’s and | Girls’ Shoes, $2 > Low shoes in various styles and leathers. Many different ones from which to choose. The pair $2.00. Costume Slips, $1.15 - 1 300 slips of rayon and k satinay; in white and colors. All sizes. Regularly priced at $1.95. Special, each, $1.15.
jPettw Dry Goods Co.j
NAME DOCTORS FOR SCHOOLS Morgan Stresses Control of Contagious Diseases. Control of contagious diseases, with special attention to diphtheria and whooplngcough. was emphasized by Dr. Herman G. Morgan, city health officer, in assigning physicians for service as city school medical inspectors Wednesday. Following physicians were selected for school medical inspection: Drs. Martha Smith, William Wise, Thomas L. Sulllivan, J. L. Conley, F. J. Hudson, Ottto H. Bakemeier, W. H. Armistead and S. J. Miller. Instructions to the school nutrition staff also were issued by Dr. Morgan, who announced the following appointments: Drs. James H. Stygall, Freeman H. Hibben, Robert E. Conway, Oliver W. Greer, Cyrus J. Clark Jr. and Edward Haggard.
FOR GOOD SHADE CLEANING Call Indiana’s Leading “Blind Men” — R.W. DURHAM CO. alley 1133 134 N. Alabama St. MA in 5829
Every Summer Dress Greatly Reduced in Price 16 Dresses, small sizes only. ££ Formerly $2.95 to $4.95. Now LDt) 66 Dresses, all sizes. 1 Qf Formerly $4.95 to $8.95 32 Dresses, assorted silks. (£ 4 A|* Formerly $9.00 to $15.00. Now. .. . vt.DJ 60 Dresses, assorted Silks. Af Formerly $ll.OO to $16.95. Now. . . 12 Coats, variety of styles. d*A A A Choice
Men’s Hosiery, 29c Os rayon and fancy lisle. Irregulars of 50c and 85c qualities. An attractive assortment of colors. The pair, 29c. 600 Pieces of Lingerie, 39c Including step-ins and bloomers in all colors. Each, 39c.
PRISONER MAKES ESCAPE Colored Fugitive Ik*aps From Train While Handcuffed. Hick Glass, 24, colored, who was being returned here to face a vehicle charge, escaped from a train at Franklin, Ind., while in custpdy of Detective H. W .Brooks. Glass leaped with handcuffs on both wrists, Brooks said. He had been arrested as a fugitive in Nashville, Tenn. The sheriff at Franklin, Ind., wired police here to watch lor three young men in a small make auto hearing a Michigan license. They are alleged to have stolen threstored there. WOMAN GIVES BAD CHECK The Hatfield Paint and Color Company, 104 S. Meridian St., fell victim to a woman check worker on Wednesday. The woman purchased paint valued at $8 and presented a fraudulent S3O check and received the difference in cash, police say. When the paint was delivered at tho address given it was discovered she did not live there.
Large Sized Waists, 55c About 50 in the lot. Sizes 42, 44 and 46. Regular $1.19 and $1.95 qualities. Reduced to 55c each. Boys’ Knee Pants, $1.09 For school wear. In fine stripes or corduroy. Sizes 4 to 16 years. The pair. $1.09.
—On Sale Only in the Pettis Thrift Basement.
iPettis Dry Goods Co.|
LIBRARY CONTRACT GIVEN General contract fop constructor of an addition to the llhrnry at In diana University has rieen awarded Leslie Colvin, Contlt Fntnl Rank Bldg. Colvin’s bid was sl/6i>.427. The addition will be buflt of Bo ford stone. Dr. T. R. /Rice 1 elected professor of nn( sanitary science at a meet! 0| trustees here Wednesd vy•
BERM UPA Ideal Sijmmer Vacations l Dayjf ,oiv Nev/Yorkwj j Wf 8-Day Tot m *9O Includi.ia All £ ' Steamer, Hotel * Sjj e Jrlp Bermuda Cfr ’I in Summer £ AvaraiaSumm , r Temperature 7f Sailing. *’ at („ weekly via S. S. "FOR - P VICTORIA” and %L S. S. "FO ST. GEORGE " J nsrltlust *,ted Bnokleia Write A PURNES * BERMUDA LINE bfc344WhuV 41 Street- New York City J
Children’s '< Stockings, 19c , iSeven-eighths and.full 1 length mercerized or ribbed. Irregulars of 35c ' and 50c qualities. In | black. Splendid for school wear. The pr. 19c. 4 —i Women’s and Girls’ White / Shoes, 79c A small lot of white cloth shoes. This season’s patterns, many good styles. Priced to dear quickly. While they last, Pj the pair, 79c.
Women’s Tweed Knickers, $1.89 For hiking and sport wear. Gray or tan mixtures. Well tailored and finished. Sizes 14 to 20. The pair, $1.89.
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