Indianapolis Times, Volume 38, Number 276, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 February 1927 — Page 3
FEB. 23, 1927
TRAFFIC CLUB TO HEARBIG4 MAN Many Reservations for Dinner Thursday Night. ■ * Several hundred reservations from outof-town railroad men have been received for the nineteenth annual dinner of the Indianapolis Traffic Club at the Columbia Club, Thursday night, it was announced today by Lawrence N. Helm, publicity chairman. Philip T. White, Big Four Railroad general superintendent, will speak on ‘‘What the Railroads Mean to Us.” State Senator Andrew E. Durham of Greencastle will act as toastmaster. Oliver R. Davies, Erie . Railroad general agent and 1927 president of the club, will preside. Committees: General arrangements, Herbert L. Smith (chairman!, M. Ora Parker, W. F. Bending, W. T. Peaeock, Frank C. Baldridge, Leonard P. Maddox. Fred A. Doebber, Frank C. Palmer, William Pasho. S. C. Farrington, B. C. Dudley and M. D. Colins: publicity. Helm (chairman), Frank 7,. Sims, Maddox. Fred L. Ackerman and Dudley; entertainment, Herbert A. Connor (chairman), Farrington, J. G. Thomas, C. J. Pearson, Earl P. Clark, Pasha, Baldridge, Guy Rutherford and William C. Clark: miitations. Palmer (chairman) C. H. Masterson and Walter F. Smith; reception, Doebber (chairman). Parker, Irving W. Lemaux, Frank A. Butler. Charles C. Off, Guy K. Jeffries, George H. Evans, J. K. Vance, B. C. Byers. W. F. Benning, James Grafield Thomas, William M. Young, C. E. Mallory, John H. Crall. Mike Wolf. Baldridge. Joseph G. Kraemer. L. E. Stone, E. A. Ehnes, L. L. Hyde, L. L. Fellows, A. D. Pendleton. E. M. Elliott, W C. Downing, J. A. Simmons. W. M. Holland J A MacGregor Lyon Liston, W T. Peacock, E. L. Nortlirup, V. B. Sharritts and V. A. Hampton.
Gilliom, Deplores State ‘Advertising’ P.u United Press WHITING, Inch, Feb. 23.—Need for a reassertion of true rep-
FORGOT HER STOMACH! How foolish to let your stomach dictate your diet. It is possible you could eat lots of things you now deny yourself—have you ever taken a Stuart tablet! Harmless, but the effect is there—distress from indigestion often ended in two minutes. Do try Stuart’s tablets! See how serene they make the stomach; how even one will sweeten the whole system and insure the breath. A sweet stomach for twenty-jive cents. Free BOX Now Gdt a pocket metal box of Stuart’s tablets for a quarter—keep it filled from the big 60c size. Sold in every drugstore, or full box free; write F. A. Stuart Cos.. Dep’t N 61, Marshall, Mich. STUART’S DYSPEPSIA TABLETS
— Carry no seconds. No factory rejects. Nothin* but qnality Men'. Wear at lowest prices. A Furniture Store Since 1893 317 E. Washington St. WHITE | -FsiMStSSI’S So. j Jake Wolf Tom Quinn j; “The Home of Real Furniture Values.” Buy UNITED STATES TIRES I ON Very —a rah. a mam No. In ii INDIANA TIRE SALES CO. I 302 300 N. Capitol Are. Riley 2391 j I Men, Take the Easy Way. Boy ! j Yonr Clothes on Traugott's 1 I 10-PAY PLAN Traugoft’s 215 W. Wash. St.
ORT MATNI VKOKO Mo|U A R ' ON J 1 / PORTLAND i tLwooo I finmmruj TIPTGNfliii II I 'THY VdNCHISTER I I I JhsfM CAST Li INDIANAPOLIS The UNION TRACTION operates complete, modern equipment over more than 400 miles of track north and east from Indianapolis. It gives service to more than (500 points at almost any hour of the day.
Boots and Her Buddies
resentative government in Indiana was stressed in an address by Arthur L. Gilliom, attorney general of Indiana, before the Knights of Columbus Washington birthday banquet here, Tuesday. Declaring Indiana had been advertised as a State where the bigot, the fanatic and the demagogue rule, Gilliom declared the State could not go forward, as it should, until the entire country learns that
Half Silk CREPES Higher priced fancy ray<> n s included ; pleasing colors. Regular iy 59e. 39c —Third floor.
Special Underpriced Purchase of Women’s New Spring Suits |L Sample Groups From l&Si HHtf I W New York Makers j||| ’ Who Specialize in f BH f $25.00 Suits I 9 || Sale Price — JHL%Jr coau Beautifully tailored of fine all-wool novelty fabrics and for fashionable twills. Both style and quality will please Cg.. I v k arg ® you. Price, as always, means splendid savings. &J || omen —Second Floor. ill sio Winter Coats-Final Clearance sls , s 5 -’lO *ls rti 5 For Coats For Coats For Coats Lj\\ Formerly up to*sl2 Formerly up to $25 Formerly up to S3O ▼ Floor
THURSDAY! 15 Attractive A Regular $5.95 Bridge u LAMPS Hi x Complete With Shade and Cord } sSQJI I Only Similar in style to the illustration. j Handsomely finished polychrome f base and standard with gracefully curved arm. Choice of pretty shades in gold, blue or taupe. Complete with i cord and socket. ! $5.95 Table Lamp, $3.95 Beautifully decorated base in Japanese design. Choice of shades in JSL blue, rose or gold with silk cord and fftfflilfcjl socket. — Third Floor,
Snappy New Spring t Topcoats For the boys of 3 to 8. A special purchase at a remarkably low price. GREAT VALUES AT Mighty good looking. Soft grays, tans and other light shades. The new double 1 breasted models for early spring. —Street Floor.
“traditional Hoosier conservatism and common sense are reigning in Indiana through genuine representative government.” UPHOLDS 44-HOUR WEEK Bu United Press SYDNEY, Australia, Feb. 23.—Declaring that modern workers need more leisure, the federal arbitration court today decided that a forty-
The Store of Greater Values THE FAIR West Washington St.
four-hour week of five and one-half working days was practicable and for all practical purposes the forty-four-hour week henceforth will be the standard in Australia except in the state of Victoria. Bears In Wyoming, Colorado and New Mexico are causing trouble on electrio transmission lines by climbing the poles in search of honey.
$1.95 Full Fashioned glfM Pure Silk Chiffon m HOSE With black high aa ’■bit spliced heels. Sh A First quality, H b eauti fully ■ sheer. A special YR feature. At the —Street Floor. . ■■—~' l ■ - r ' Silk Georgette Special Thursday 40 Inches Wide This is really a much finer qual- Q ffj m ity than you usually find at this jnl . ■ . price or near it. Avery lovely T ■ silk in a good range of wanted •; colors. ■;?§' —Third Floor. ■■■■
Here They Are, Men! Spring\j JIL Shirts Jk (3 for $4) —Street Floor. Plain, printed and fancy broadcloths and madras and novelty fabrics. Collars Attached. And Neckband Styles. to Match. Sizes 14 to 17
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
—By Martin
$1.39 Jersey TUBING 52 inches wide; silky texture for bloomers and slips; peach, pink, orchid; $1.39 quality; yard—--95c Third floor.
Hoosier Briefs
When a Shropshire ewe, owned by John R. Travis of La Porte, gave birth to four lambs last year, farmers were surprised for more than two lambs are a rarity. When the same ewe repeated this year with four more, farmers were duinfounded. James Hammond of Evansville claims he has 50,000 friends. He’s a credit manager for a big' clothing store. What to wear was a problem for the Earlham basketball team. They lost suitcases containing basketball suits of the team from a bus between Richmond and Huntington, where they played Huntington college. Vincennes city firemen, William Woods and Albert Sinnett, used a hook and ladder wagon to rescue James Funk, 5, when the lad locked himself in the bathroom of his home. John Zoellner, Jr., Greensburg baker, baked a wedding cake weigh-
KEEP COUGHS OUT OF “DANGER ZONE”
Coughing Irritates the throat .md makes you cough more. The more 'you cough, the harder it is to stop. And a cough threatens serious trouble if you let inflammation get into the bronchial tubes. It may spread into the "danger zone”—for these tubes lead directly into your lungs. Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral stops ;oughs quickly—almost Instantly in spasmodic attacks. And it does far more; it brings lasting relief is its soothing, healing powers are absorbed deep down in the bron:hlal tubes, penetrating thru and thru the Irritated membranes.
Democracy in Business
4557
ing 100 pounds for the KramerNavarre wedding at Indianapolis. Williamsport is chivalrous. It lias offered the use of its gymnasium to the West Lebanon basketball team to practice for the coming tournament. The hall used by the West Lebanon team was condemned last week. The bucket brigade may be old fashioned, but it is still effective. It saved the home of Fred Pahmeier, Sanborn merchant, when It caught fire. Fathers and Sons don’t get all the glory at Winchester. More than 150 attended a mothers and daughters’ banquet there. A two-day corn show opened at Richmond today. Poseyville dedicated its new $20,000 Masonic Temple Tuesday afternoon. The band from Had! Temple at Evansville led the parade.
With the*first swallow of Cherry Pectoral you feel its comforting as it loosens up the tightness of congestion. It stimulates expectoration Nature’s helpful plan for getting rid of phlegm and germs. Absorbed into the membranes themselves, this concentrated, hospital-proved medicine not only stops your cough promptly, but it also corrects the cause. And that is why relief is immediate and lasting. Cherry Pectoral is pleasant, safe and dependable—for children and grown people. At all druggists—60c; twice as much, SI.OO. tbits —Advertisement
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Pack up and go: Bat FIRST— Let the Union Trust Travel Bureau help plan your trip. Years of experience and intimate personal knowledge of the customs of many lands, enable us to offer helpful travel suggestions, and to care for the details that often arise to irk the traveler. Experienced travelers know that only in this way may they realize the utmost in comfort and enjoyment from any trip. This service is, of course, yours for the asking—WITHOUT COST. May we not be of assistance to YOU? Richard A. Kurtz, Manager Travel Bureau, “The Leading Travel Bureau of Indianapolis” jjU’UNION TRUST* 120 E. Market Street. Main 1576.
TRY A WANT AD IN THE TIMES. THEY WILL HR INO RESULTS.
Democracy in the Standard Oil Company (Indiana) is a fact—not a theory. This Company is organized on democratic principles and it is governed by a democratic spirit. The Standard Oil Company (Indiana) is a corporation in no way related to any other company of like name. It is owned by 50,667 people. No one of the 50,667 owns as much as of the business. The Standard Oil Company (Indiana) is truly a Company—a company of individuals of varied capacity and varied interests, bound together by a common loyalty. The* thousands of stockholders who own the Standard Oil Company (Indiana) belong to no particular place or creed or station in life. You will find them in every state, in every county, in every city, in rural sections and in small towns throughout the Middle West. The records of our stock books show among the stockholders of the Standard Oil Company (Indiana)* are men and women of various races and religions and professions. Every income group is represented. Wage-earners, store-owners, salaried women, farmers, individuals of moderate means, own the Standard Oil Company (Indiana). The widow who must provide for the future of her children finds Standard Oil Company (In-j diana) stock a safe and secure investment. The working man who is industriously building up his small fortune invests his money in Standard Oil Company (Indiana) stock, confident that his investment will earn for him a reasonable return. 15,325 of the 29,573 employes of the Standard Oil Company (Indiana) are also owners of the Company, acquiring their stock by the generous terms of the Employes* Stock Purchasing Plans. A substantial part of the capital behind the vast business of the Standard Oil Company (Indiana) represents the hard-earned savings of thousands of individuals. The “capitalists” who furnish it are a large and democratic group. A democratic spirit prevails throughout the organization of the Standard Oil Company (Indiana). Opportunity for advancement is limited only by the ability and industrious effort of the individual. Men holding the highest positions in the Standard Oil Company (Indiana) have worked their way up from such humble jobs as office boy and machinist’s helper. All men have equal chances in the' Standard Oil Company (Indiana) and this democratic spirit acts as an incentive to sustained effort and efficiency. r Finally, and most important, the Standard Oil Company (Indiana) is democratic in its purpose. To serve faithfully and well the poor and the rich, the inhabitants of great cities and those who live in far-off country places—to serve all the thirty million people of the Middle West with the very highest efficiency and skill is the unwavering purpose of the Standard Oil Company ( Indiana) General Office: Standard Oil Building 910 So. Michigan Ave., Chicago, lIL
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