Indianapolis Times, Volume 38, Number 243, Indianapolis, Marion County, 15 January 1927 — Page 3
JAN. 15, 192]
SPACE SOLD FOR > AUTO SHOW HERE Plan Novel Features for Exhibit Feb. 14-19. With practically all of the 60,000 square feet of space sold at the Auto Show Bldg., State fairground, plans for the sixteenth annual Auto Show, Feb. 14-19, are rapidly developing, according to John B. Orman, manager. Forty-one dealers have subscribed for space and will display the latest creations in the automotive field. Twenty-two accessory houses and seven truck firms have reservations. Many novel features, Including wider aisles, diffused light throughout the building .and a floor plan which will facilitate a larger crowd, are planned. The exhibit will draw leaders in motodrom from many of the larger cities. Records taken over thirty-six years Indicate that the greatest number of fatal Influenza cases occur about the ninth or tenth week of the year and the fewest about the thirty-fifth or thirty-sixth week.
SCRIPPS-HOWARD NEWSPAPERS
Legislative Calendar
/ SENATE Bills Introduces! ' 8. B. 24—Blackburn. Governs and defines building and loan associations. Judiciary B. S. B. 25—Blackburn. Creates a separate building and loan department. Judiciary B. S. B. 20—Bradford. Makes new cjrcult court for Marshall County, separating it from Fulton. Organization of Courts. S. B. 27 —Cann. Abolishes public service commission and reinstates railroad board. Public Rights and Franchises. S. B. 28—Doogs. Aids issuance of group insurance. Insurance. S. B. 21*—Gray. Abolishing pardon board and plating pardon and parole approval upon courts. Criminal code. . S. B. 30- —Gray. Removes power of State board of accounts to pass on puublio contracts upon petition of twenty-flvo voters. Judiciary A. S. B. 31—Locard. Puts dog taxes in county dog fund to be used for reimbursing stock losses inflicted by dogs. S. B. 32—Loehard. Standardizes legal notices and publication of same. S. B. 33—Markel. Raises assessments for establishment of playgrounds in third, fourth and fifth class cities. Cities and Towns. _ . S. B. 34—Nejdl. Old age pensions. Counties and Township. S. B. 35—Nejdl. Permits townships in I.ake County to accept a 200 acre park. Counties ana Townships. * S. B. 3d —Pell. Permits cooperative fire protection for towns. Insurance. 8. B. 37—Shake. Extends time of bond Eayments for levy districts. Swamps and rains. 8. B. 38 —Shank. Permits farmer boys to work on their parents' farms, without permits. Education. HOUSE Bills Introduced H. B. 30—Huffman. Barring practice of physicians, whose license has been revoked. Medicine. H. B. 40—Huffman. Provides for the transfer of funds with the transfer of schools from township to city of Elkhart. County and Township. H. B. 41—Greenawalt. Giving Arms
A BOTANIST was asked the question, “When does a tree stop growing?” His answer was, “When the sap no longer rises to the top.” A SUCCESSFUL newspaper must be rooted deep in the confidence of its readers. It gains its strength from the public. To continue to grow and widen fts sphere of usefulness, it must draw from this public the sap of editorial vigor, and that sap must rise to the very top of the editorial structure. News editors, managing editor, editor-in-chief, and publisher, all must be in intimate, living contact with the public served, or the newspaper will not grow and will begin to atrophy. IN RECOGNITION of this principle of nature and of newspaperdom, ScrippsHoward newspapers are edited not from distant offices, but from the very life of the communities in R which they are SCRIPTS - HOWARD
MEMBERS AUDIT BUREAU (j>F CIRCULATIONS
Cleveland (Ohio) • • • Prpas Baltimore (Md.) - • • - Post Pittsburgh (Pa.) .... Press San Francisco (Calif.) - • News Washington (D. C.) • • • News Cincinnati (Ohio) - • • • Post Indianapolis (Ind.) • • TIMES
compiling abstract a lien upon real estate affected. Judiciary A. fIT B. 42—Babopck. Providing for the collection and uoMient of cotta for transcripts prepared for change of vgnue. JuH. B. '43—Babcock. Authorizing counties and townships to buy stock and make donations to railroads. Affects abandoned, roads only. County and Townships. H. B. 44 —Thiel. Repealing section 447 referring to provocations. Judiciary A. H. B. 45—Grant. Providing additional salaries for judges In towns of not less than 150,000 population. Fees and Salaries. H. B. 40—Scott. Giving 'discretionary powers In issuance of search warrants. Public Morals. . .. . ~ . H. B. 47—Grant. Giving State highway commission authority to regulate "stop and go" signals along highways through small towns. Roads. _ . .. H. B. 48—Grant. Providing for the building and Improvement of highways by county commissioners and the issuance of serial bonds for payment thereof. Roads. H. B. 4-o—Sallwasser. Provides for the appropriation of money by towns for music in parks and other public places. Cities And towns. __ . H. B. 50—Harrison, Murden, Worley of Vigo. Weinke. Byers, Clements —Providing for the organization of an Indiana Naval Militia. Military Affairs. H. B. 51—lie Haven. Prohibiting signs along highways other than by the State highway commission, which is authorized to properly mark highways; provides for removal of commissioners by Governor in case signs are uot kept iu good order. Roads. H. B 52—Werner. Requiring license for drug stores, apothecary shops and pharmacy* to be issued by State board of pharmacy. Medicine. 11. B. 53 —Gardner. Provides election regulation with compulsory voting. Elections. H, B. 54—Worley of Vigo. Authorizing appointment of receivers for proi>erty bought on installment plan when payments ajv defaulted, for tenants refusing to pay rent. Judiciary A. Resolutions Joint resolution approving act of the Governor in appointing a committee known as the Indiana Lincoln Union.
Denver (Colo.) • • - Express Toledo (Ohio) - - News-Bee Colujnbus (Ohio) - - Citizen Akron (Ohio) - - Times-Press Birmingham (Ala.) • - - Post Memphis (Tenn.) • • - PRESS
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Auto Knocked From Ferry, Man Drow.is Bu Time* Special JEFFERSONVILLE, Ind., Jan. 16. ---Police dragged the‘Ohio River today to recover the body of W. A. Crawford, 38, of Louisville, drowned Friday, when his closed auto was knocked off a ferry into the river. Crawford was being ferried across and was sitting in his car when a truck on the boat .was cranked in gear. The truck plunged into Crawford’s car, knocking it off the boat. Crawford was unable to release himself in time to save his life. RECITAL HERE SUNDAY Williard MacGregor, Pianist, to Be Heard at Institute. > Willard MacGregor, pianist, will appear in recital at the John Herron Art Institute Sunday at 3:30 p. m. By special request, Hugh MeGibney, violinist, will assist MacGregor in the sonata for piano and violin by Cesar Franck. The concert is public. MacGregor has appeared in concert 'in both Europe and the United States and has won high praise for his e#traordinary musicianship. He has selected a program ranging from classic compositions to the most modern of piano literature.
As long as the sap keeps rising
published. Further, these newspapers are edited by young men —men who are drawn from the Scripps-Howard organization. THAT is one of the chief reasons why these newspapers have been growing steadily since their founding in 1879. Not only are they
Allied Newspapers, Inc. National Representatives 250 Park Avenue, New York, N. Y. Chicago Seattle Cleveland San FrtncUoe Detroit Loo Angeles
Hoosier Briefs
Construction of a lethal gas chamber for the execution of stray dogs in a more humane manner has been asked of the Muncie Humane Society by Mrs. Zula M. Valentine. Clarence Wagner, student at Terre Haute Normal, holds the transcontinental bicycle record. He pedaled Uhlted States in 1922. Montpelier youths who broke the fire siren in a New Year's eve celebration will have to pay S7O for their fun. That’s what the repairs will cost. Miss Ella Wyrick of Warsaw believes it pays to advertise. .She advertised in a newspaper for a bus- ■ band and got one—Ernest R. Corbin of Lansing, Mich. Charging her husband refused to attend the funeral of their child, Mrs. j Sarah Ross of Peru has sued for divorce. O. B. Crider and son Delbert of Greenfield report they saw farmers i near Covington threshing ogts last week. Central Christian Church of Hunt 1 ington will have a "paid up service"
tomorrow. A note, the last indebtedness, will be burned. STREETS REPAIR URGED Citing the bad condition of E. Washington St. betVeen Audubon Rd. and Sheridan Ave., the Irvington Commercial and Welfare Association Thursday urged east side street improvements. F. C. Sims, 5450 E. Washington St., scored the mayor, city council and board of works for failure to improve the streets. They promised relief last year, Sims said. UNION BANK ELECTS At the annual meeting of stockholders of the United Labor Bank and Trust Company, the following were elected members of the board of directors: John L. Lewis, Floyd C. Bell, William Dobson, Jacob Fischer, Adolph Fritz, W. T. Brown, Earl E. Houck, J. W. Hays, E. E. James, Charles W. Kearh and Edward Berndt.
X a deeply rooted in the confidence of the public, but they are also continually revitalized by the vigor of young men. CONSEQUENTLY, the Scripps-Howard newspapers command the respect and confidence of more than a million and a half families, which constitute their Leaders.
MEMBERS OF THE UNITED PRESS
_ • I Houston (Texas) - • • Press El Paso (Texas) - • • - Post Youngstown (Ohio) - Telegram San Diego (Calif.) - • - - Sun Ft. Worth (Texas) - - - Press Terre Haute (Ind.) ... Post Oklahoma City (Okla.) - News Covington (Ky.) Kentucky Post* Evansville (Ind.) - - - - Press Albuquerque (N. Mex.) Knoxville (Tenn.) J • • News State- Tribunb •Kentucky edltlo • of tko Cincinnati Pott.
STORE NOT A MEMBER Firm Which Seized Hiatt Goods Outside Association. A statement that the furniture company which took S6OO worth of household goods from Orville Hiatt, 327 E. Tenth St., after S4OO had been paid upon it, leaving the family without even a bed, was not a member of the Furniture Association of Indianapolis, was made today Mrs. N. M. Frltsch, secretary of the associa-
Make 1927 Your Best Year Begin now while the New Year is still young; plan to save something each week and add it to your savings account with thiS\Strong Company—the oldest in Indiana. Your account welcomed. 4% Paid on Savings T , l V 1 • T 1 a Company Ihe Indiana 1 rust f r saving, s“ p^$2, 000,000.00 Join one of Our Special Christmas Savings Plans, weekly pay- , ments 25c and upward. OPEN SATURDAYS, 8 TO 8
PAGE 3
tlon. The organization include® seventeen Indianapolis furniturl stores. About 5,000,000 trees are cut ever;® year to be used as telephone poles. J
DRESS-UP ON Liberal Credit THE HUB - ;V yj Was hi n
