Indianapolis Times, Volume 38, Number 339, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 May 1927 — Page 5
MAT 9, 1927
NOTED PASTORS - TO SPEAK AT BIG CHURCH SESSION 1 Three-Day Meeting of the Congregational Church Opens. Rev. Walter A. Morgan, D. D„ pastor of New First Congregational Church, Chicago, and Rev. Albert W. Palmer, D. D., Oak Park, 111., will preach at the sixty-ninth annual meeting of the Congregational Conference of Indiana, which opens today in the First Congregational Church, Gary, for three days. Dr. Palmer is pastor of First Church, Oak Park, and formerly for seven years was pastor in Honolulu, Hawaiian Islands. Visiting speakers from outside Indiana who will address the Conference will include Mrs. D. Foster Updike of New York City, and Rev. Howell E. Davies, D. D., .of Chicago, both associate secretaries of the Congregational Commission' on Missions; Mrs. A. E. Osbornson of Oak Park, 111., first assistant moderator of the National Congregational Council; Prof. Fred JSastman of Chicago Theological Seminary and Robert Chasman, business man-
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TWO WOMEN Fame help Tlvdr Sickness Banished by Lydia E. Finkham’s Vegetable Compound Mrs. Nina Mafteson, Box 206, Oxford. N. Y„ writes—“lf it had not
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Don’t be a Victim of “Spring Fever”
You Can Easily Avoid the Depressing Effects of the Changing Season. the Spring many people find themselves losing appetite, are over"ome by a lack of ener&y, and a run■"'Trn feeling takes possession of '-■eir whole body. Spring is a great renovating season, when Nature throws off the accumulated impurities and prepares (the system for the change it must undergo before merging into the coming Summer. At this time the energies relax, and an unspeakable languor pervades the entire system, giving that worn-out, good-for-nothing, feeling, so commonly called ‘‘spring fever.” The important thing therefore, is
Held Up Eight Times Without Losing
F. E. Davies
Bu YE.4 Service SAN DIEGO, Cal., May 9.—A lighting jaw does mean something. F. E. Davies, San Diego grocery store proprietor, proves that, with a record of eight hold-ups and not a nickel lost. Davies never has put his hands in the air or surrendered. He Relieves in outwitting the holddip man by reason. Probably someone else would call it sheer nerve.
ager of the seminary. President Axel E. Vestling of Olivet College, Michigan, and Rev. E. S. Shaw, D. D., of Piedmont College, Georgia; j Rev. E. L. Shaver of Boston, direcI tor of leadership training, CongregaI tional Education Society, Miss FranLces B. Patterson of Chicago, secretary of literature, Regional office, : commission on missions. | The completion of the merger of j the separate home and foreign wornI en’s missionary societies of Indiana | will take place at the conference ; meeting. The home society will hold its thirty-seventh auinual meeting ! and the foreign society #will hold its , fifty-second annual meeting. The ' societies will pneet together and organize a new_ Congregational Woman’s Society of Indiana. Similar i mergers of tlje Congregational worn-' - j en's home and foreign societies are j taking place in most States. An increase of $126 in Indiana, last in the average pastoral salary, was i made, the average being l'aised to | $2,208, it is revealed in the report prepared for the new denominational yearbook by Rev. John Humfreys, D, D., of Angola, conference superintendent. In addition to salary, half of the'pastors are provided with a parsonage. Rev. Robert Murray Pratt of East Chicago is moderator of the conference. The pastor of First Church, Gary, where conference will meet, is Rev| Willard Crosby Lyon. Delegates- will be elected by the conference to the biennial meting of tlie National Council of the Congregational Churches to be held in Omaha, Neb., May 23 to June 1. Marriage Licenses Brownie Weasel. 31. 773 Kctehnm St . eore maker: Mary Kos. 21. 70!) N. Holmes, beauty operator. Murrel Beaty 25. 237 W. Kansas, motorman; RoxYe Moles, 22. 237 W. Kansas. eand.v packer. frank Kissel. 45. 4073 Park, fireman: Clara Spotts. 23. OX4 E. Forty Seventh. Sylvest.r Lindenmaier. 34. 2748 Shelby, dairy work: Flora, Sippel. 34. fiatesville, Ind . sewiiiF. Eugene Edwards. 21. 4117 Cornelius, delivery man: Georgia Allen. 22. 829 W. Twenty-Sixth, mnbi. Births Girls I 1.0 Hoy and Mary Bain. 1 CMS N*. Dear--1,0 Charles Olive Brown. 1225 S. Persh"”.h,hn and Levia Marshall, 718 N. Haufth. Chester and Stella Ceeil. 537 N. Rural. Dtis and Mildred Kmbrie. 1223 Harlan. Roy and Martha Lewis, Christian Hosj l>l Lewis and Mabel Sielaff Methodist HosI 1 ' Morris and Augusta Lee, Methodist Hos--1 "ponald and Myrtle Dickover. 800 Vi 1 Southern. _ , „„„ August and Rosa Spiccuzza. 020 i Stevens. / John and Edna Gaines. 946 W. TwentySixth. Boys James and Helen Allen. 1620 N Arsenal 'ueorge and Marie Hardesty, 823 S. Warren. _ Clarenee and Eva Biddle. 308 Beceher. - Clarence and Iva Scherer, Christian Hospital. _ Omer and Belle Lunsford, Methooist Hospital. \ James and Sarah Scoot 541 Grande. William and Cecelia Partridge, Christian Hospital. . * Deaths I Charles Arnold, 62. Central Indiana , Hospital broncho pneumonia. Ovid Wilfred Layton. 21, Methodist Hos pital. pneumonia. Earler Doyal. 36. 2031 Boulevard PL, j lobar pneumonia. Laura Luckey Henderson. 53. St. Vincent Hospital, lobar pneumonia. Stella L. Cooper. 46. 110 S. Butler, carcinoma. Luoy E. Bowers, 68. Christian Hospital, clironio interstitial nephritis. John Shackelford, 65, Christian Hospital. accidental. George Jerome Smith, 60. 142 E. Ohio, chronic myocarditis. ! Lizzie Lewis. 55, 956 Camp, cerebral ! hemorrhage. Bessie Clive Reid, 46. 1129 Oliver, septicaemia. Edward Woods, 68, 938 Paca, acute myocarditis. Georgia Walker. 55, 2109 Arsenal, cerebral hemorrhage. Robert H. Hall. 55. 429 W. Twelfth, mitral insufficiency. Letha Fields, 44, 903 N. Senate.' carcinoma. Doris Marie Itoney. 1. 3741 Graceland. broncho pneumoina. i Mary Elizabeth Roetker, 11, 2350 N. Gale, scarlet fever. Louis Timmons. 7 hours. 3124 Phipps, premature birth. Elizabeth Jcksephine Dugan, 1, 2171 Station, lobar (meumonin. Mary Caroline Reno. 71, 4719 Winthrop, hypostatic pneumonia.
to put your system in tip-top condition, so as to be able to resist the common ailments so prevalent in Summer. You must build up the tissue and repair the .wear that the system has undergone. Now is the time to take S. S. S. It is unequalled for restoring strength, vitality and a keen appetite. t You owe it to yourself and family to give S. S. S. a trial. It helps Nature build up red blood corpuscles; it imiroves the processes by which the body is nourished, and it is time' tried and reliable. S. S. S. is made from the roots of fresh herbs and plants, and is prepared in a scientific way in a modern laboratory. Get your S. S. S. at any good drug store. It is sold in two sizes. The larger size is more economical. —Advertisement.
DIRECTOR DOUBTS RENTROAO PLAN Firm Would Build 4,000Mile Highways. State Highway Director John D. Williams is somewhat skeptical of the plan to have a holding company build roads and rent them to the State until paid for. Indiana Highway Aid Association Inc., which registered Friday with the Secretary of State, has this project for its purpose. The corporation is capitalized with 1,000 shares of stock of value not less than $lO. Arthur Hymmes, Linton, is prime mover in the matter. He conferred with Williams and set forth his plan to build 4,000 miles of roads by the holding company at a cost of SIOO,000,000 and then rent them to the State. This would speed up road construction and at a rental of $7,000,000 per year the State would own the roads in twenty-five yeaTs, he said. . Williams today declared that no doubted whether such procedure would be permitted the State Highway Department under present laws. Andersonian to London I.iiss Florence B. Wells* Anderson, Ind., will sail May 25 for London as one of two representatives of the United States Labor Department to be stationed at the consulate there. She will be connected with the immigration service. Miss Wells has been Tn Washington several years and for the last three years has served as private secretary to Secretary of Labor James J. Davis.
KIDNEY INFECTION Your swollen eyelids may surely indicate Bright’a Disease. A urine analysis may perhaps show casts and albumen —your inflamed kidneys are not doing their work properly. There is no time to trifle —begin immediately to restore normal conditions. Put your faith in Mountain Valley Water from Hot Springs, Ark. Mrs. E. S. Crull Says: (Indiana poll*) “I found Mountain Valley Water fine, and just as represented. I certainly shall get it again if I need it.” ASK YOIR DRUGGIST OR GROCER OR PHONE I S FOR MOUNTAIN VALLEY WATER Frdm Hot Springs, Arkansas JLoral Distributors, 911-915 Massachusetts Are. I'lione, MA In 12*9
m /mL (T\ /-v A BIG LEAGUE I A ■ if 1/ 1 BALL, BAT and i l iSjM 'm m GLOVE 6 NEW juj ij SUBSCRIBERS I play at I ' Please have The Indianapolis TIMES delivered do m Y rcsi-1 Six Ball, Bat and apoli# jTown Apartment | GENUINE HORSEHIDE GLOVE * ”•"“ B *" J C9V cl,: Bos'. If you could Just put your hand tn this glove we know what I Addreaa I //'pilßt PARA you would say. “Say, boy, that’s a peach,” “Sting 'er in” apd “Let me T own . Apartment _ A\ _. ,q ß cd see it,” are a few of the expressions we heard when showing It to a group I 10 _ I 11/It RUD of boys at the office. It’s a real professional glove, boys, no kidding; | !;fj 'll' CENTER genuine tanned horsehide padded with high-grade felt, tfextra large size, Ilf - arid laced between thumb and finger and at butt with leather thongs. This I Signed . . ••••••• •* ■* *** ** * I iOOy.PURE glove retails at around $2.00 and would be a good value at that. It s | . üb.crlber Must . ign WOOL father lined inside, too. No chancfe for disappointment here. Address •• • I HICKORY BAT Boys’ League BALL °Town Apartment j RUBBER Since these outfits have arrived at Just as It Is pictured here. Regu- I , _ CEMENT our office everybody wants to play lation nine-inch size and five-ounce I Signed I ball. All the big boys (the men. I weight, stitched in red and blue ■ Subscriber Must Sign Hera I mean, grown-up boys), are constantly swinging the bats and saying waxed special cerd. You won’t lose | A k | “Here’s a peach,” “Feel the swing jn this one.” and “How can yom-offer the cover off this one for a good 1 Address * I this outfit for only six new subscribers?” They’re not the same bat many innings. The genuine leath- I Town Apartment* * used by big league players, because they would be too heavy for boys, er cover and the live rubber and 1 f ■ but they are made of well-grained seasoned hickory and you can just feel yarn inside make It an ideal boys’ ——————— - . yourself knocking a three-bagger with a bat like this. This bat will last league ball. And it just fits the J§j„ ne< j ' ' * for many a home run. # hand. | iubcrlber Must Sign ner Clip Subscription Blank and | Town * Apartmentj Start Working Today! | Subscribers Must Sign Blank Themselves Not You jj SEE OUTFIT ON DISPLAY NOW AT I N *™' ° f w ° rk ~ • • •*• | - r - : - -| ‘ g oQtfjts w „j not be g)ven to wor k e r until orders are verified. You can play I e, Trk ye., - T . m/Nsi r\nn A * with them much sooner if you are careful to take orders only from persons | CIRyLI aA I lON Dtil AK i IVILIN i I whom you know will fulfill their contract and pay for the paper. Read the 214 W. Maryland St. Indianapolis, Ind.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Hoosier Briefs
Herrod Carr, Greensburg prosecutor, will not. be depentlent on Ills fees for his food next year. He has planted two city lots as a garden. Auto business is on the boom at Anderson. A total of 12,400 licenses have been, issued by Miss Lillie Linville. Fred Flauding is the first Portland man to be the victim of the season fishing. He swallowed a fish bone. A physician had to be called to extract it. Clinton County lied Cross chapter was among the first of the ten counties of the State to reach its original quota for Mississippi flood relief, accoi'ding to Mrs. Carrie Hawkins, executive secretary at Frankfort. Roy Metcalf, 14, of. Windfall stumbled while he was carrying an ax on his shoulder. The ax cut a gash in his shoulder that took several stitches. Police Chief W. A. Misch of Seynour is glad he donned a slicker when he and officers destroyed a quantity of home brew beer. Several of the bottles shot foam in geysers when the caps were removed. -V _ Snider Improved George Snider, county commissioner, was improving today from injuries received Saturday when he fell while putting up screens at his home, 317 N. Summit St.' His right wrist was broken and several ribs fractured. He was taken to the Indiana Christian Hospital Saturday night, hut returned home Sunday.
CLERK HEARING MAY 16 Attempt to Forte Certification of Manager Petition. Bth-Time* Special EVANSVILLE, Ind., May 9. Hearing of mandamus complaint, to force City Clerk Louis Sars to certify the city manager petition has been set tentatively for May 16. Sars’ attorneys demand the case be heard by jury, contending that burden of proof rests with the mam ager forces, to prove allegations in their complaint. Plaintiffs, however, insist that upon Sarlls rests burden of proof. FARB RITES ARE HELD Bondsman's Widow Dead of Plural Pneumonia. • Mrs. Samuel Farb. '57, 1236 E. Ohio St., widow of Samuel Farb, who was a professional bondsman, died Sunday at Methodist Hospital following a two-" weeks illness of
A wonderful new product
U Named after a Maine logging camp I I cu&om of baking beans in an out-of H fl door ground oven called the*bean hole witH tKat wonderful‘woods flavor*
plural pneumonia, four months from the date of her husband's death. Fuijgral services were held at the home this afternoon, with tourial at the South Side Jewish cemetery and Rabbi Morris Feuerlicht in charge. ‘Nine children, Nate, Laskey, Joseph, David, Max, Albert, Abe, Fanny and slelma, all at home survive. PITTSBURGH CLEANS UP One Hundred Officials Marked for Arrest—City Now Dry. Bu United Frees PITTSBURGH, May 9—More than 100 policemen, including inspectors, lieutenants and high officials, have been marked for arrest in Pittsburgh’s clean-up campaign, William L. King, attorney, executive head of the Citizens League, said toclay. Federal agents -and State police made wholesale raids on alleged sfieakeasies ant vice establishments yesterday,, and King said the city was bone dry for the first time in years.
TRAIN RUNS OVER BOY Bu Times Special * RICHMOND. Ind., May 9.—Maynard Spalding, 13, son of George P. Spalding, saved himself from death beneath a Pennsylvania freight train by lying flat on ,the lies while the train moved over his body. He suffered only a hip bruise and an ear wound. - The train, which blocked a r/oss-
“—and two years ago we had nothing!” ikk-pWO short years ago we were struggling along, A barely making both ends meet, and it seemed impossible to put anything aside. Now I pick up our Morris Plan passbook and I feel that we have accomplished more in these two years than in our whole lives. Tell me, how did you happen to save the Morris Plan way?” “Well, Joe Hodges started me. Joe once borrowed from the Morris Plan, and he repaid the loan weekly. He hardly missed the weekly payments. But regular saving became a sort of a habit with him, and after the loan was repaid he kept on saving every week, and now Joe receives Six Per Cent. He told me about it and regular saving seemed to be the solution of our problem. So I started putting a small sum aside every week, and this nest egg is the result.” “It’s the wisest thing you’ve ever done, dear. For the first time we are financially independent. When you find an institution like the Morris Plan, with it’s safety and soundness, which pays 6% on your money, that’s the company to tie to.” v $ The Indianapolis Morris Plan Cos. Southeast Comer of Delaware and Ohio Streets
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ing, started while the youth, hurrying home, crawled under a box car. Schortemeier Talks Bu Times Special ANDERSON, Ind., May ing on his mother's constant advice to him, “Be good, son; stay close to God,” Frederick E. Schortemeier, secretary of Slate, paid tribute to all mothers in an address Sunday before the Methodist Men's Bible class.
