Indianapolis Times, Volume 39, Number 176, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 December 1927 — Page 2

PAGE 2

SANTA MOVIES SPEEDING HERE BY JHRPLANE Holly Berry’s Pictures to Be Shown Indianapolis Boys and Girls. Here Is another story from Holly BerryT special Times correspondent accompanying the Tlmes-Klelnschmidt Polar expedition to find the home oj Santa Claus and to take movies of the Explorer aS T* E*VeSm leading the expedition. The movies are on their way to Indianapolis by radio, to be shown to children here. BY HOLLY BEERY NORTH POLEVILLE, Eskimoland, Dec. I.—(By Radio)—While I am writing this story, in S*ta Claus’ palace, for Indianapolis children, the movies that we have taken of this remarkable trip are on their way to Indianapolis to be shown to boys and girls there. A huge Polar biplane, piloted by one of our best airmen, is bound for Alaska with the films where they will be picked up by another plane and taken to Indianapolis. As the films and this story are both flying to Indianapolis through the air—this story on radio waves—l wonder just where this story will pass our intrepid flyer who has instructions to fly at top speed all the way. Will Return Soon Captain Kleinschmidt, leader of our party, gave instructions to all of us to rest today, because we have had a strenuous time lately. We must soon be getting into condition for the long, c"ld trip back to civilization. Our most important work is done. We have found the home of Santa Claus and were cordially received. We have taken the movies we sought and in many other ways this trip has been more of a success than we dared hope—as all of you, who have been reading this series of stories, knowI spent practically the entire day inside Santa’s castle. Most of the day in that library of his I like so well, because in it are books containing the name and record of every boy and girl In the world. See More Names Here are the names of some Indianapolis and Indiana boys and girls I copied out of Santa’s books Lola Stegemoller, Mildred Walther, Lawrence Zook, Alois Derry, Dorothy Hungate, of Fountain town; Betty Jane Cobler, Buelah May Chapman, Walter Wissel, Margaret Washburn, Roberta Ann Jones (after. Roberta's name was drawn the picture of a little girl with a swelled face—in Eskimo language that means Roberta has the mumps), William Clinton Jones, Donald Stanfield, Johnnie Smith, John Black, Portia Carter, of Noblesville; William E. Howe, Margaret Scott, Marjorie Ann Norris, Adeline Virginia Miller, Daisy Lynch, John McMasters, Earl Lawrence, Harry F. Newton Jr., Joseph Whitsell, Mary Parsley, Paul Hem-

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Eskimo Children Pay Santa Visit

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This telephoto picture from Holly Berry, Times correspondent with the expedition in Eskimoland to find the home of Santa Claus, shows a group of fortunate Eskimo children, who visited the kindly old man, after breakfast yesterday morning. Holly Berry sent this message by radio with the picture: “Santa insisted on posing with Eskimo children. Said to tell Indianapolis boys and girls that he is sorry he cannot pose with them.”

mer, Marshall Hard, Clarence Hammel. Raymond Martin, Deotis Hardeman, Phyllis Fetta, Mary Alice Downey, Virginia Rusher, Violet Strub, Hannah Rosen, Doris Crowp, Joyce Johnson, Esther Skaggs. U. S. EXPERT TO SPEAK Commerce Bureau Director to Tell C. of C. of Europe Affairs. ‘‘Europe’s Business Recovery and What Is Means to Indiana,” will be the subject of Dr. Julius C. Klein, director of the bureau of foreign and domestic commerce, department of commerce, Friday at the Chamber of Commerce open forum luncheon. Dr. Klein is expectdfl to refer to the proposed new district bureau in Indianapolis, which he has recommended to Congress. HOLD FUNERAL FRIDAY Aged Watchmaker Was Resident Here for Sixty Years. Funeral services will be held at 2 p. m. Friday for Charles H. Mueller, 80, watchmaker, from his home, 1630 Woodlawn Ave. Mr. Mueller, who died Tuesday of apoplexy, had been a resident of Indianapolis sixty years. The Rev. R. H. Benting, pastor of St. Mark’s Lutheran Church, will officiate. Burial will be in Crown Hill. Mr. Mueller was bom in Bachnan, Wittenberg, Germany, Nov. 23, 1847, and came to Indianapolis in 1867. School Dedication Sunday Bu Timet Special . _ „ JEFFERSONVILLE, Ind., Dec. 1. —The new $60,000 Jeffersonville consolidated school building will be dedicated Sunday afternoon. Albert Stump, Indianapolis lawyer, will deliver the dedicatory address.

In the Ford Announcement * Are These Words: “No other manufacturer can possibly duplicate the new Ford car at the Ford price, because no other manufacturer does business the way we do.” These featured groups of overcoats are from a maker who has the Ford idea. He raises his own weaves his own cloth (and it’s the longest wearing fabric known to the clothing industry). And he tailors his own coats! v No other manufacturer can possibly duplicate these new overcoats at these low prices—because no other manufacturer has such a direct method of production! The result is a combination of Value, Style and Wear that, in our opinion, is not matched in the entire clothing field. NOW WILL YOU COMPARE! L.&TIMJSS &GO. S3 to 39 West Washington Street

Untangled! Bicknell Truck Driver Is Freed From Barbed Wire Trap.

Bu United Frets BICKNELL, Ind., Dec, I.—The vigorous application of several large pairs of snips and a couple of crowbars by nearby farmers probably saved the life of Pete Scott of this city after he had completed a heretofore unsuccessful maneuver and become entana’ed In a barbed wire cage. Roaring down a hill ing a railroad crossing near Edwardsport about a mile-a-minute, Scott suddenly lost control of the truck he was driving. He made a shoot to the right side of the road Into a farmer’s fence, knocked down the fence, uprooted five posts, rolled about twentyfive yards of the barbed wire fence in a nice big ball and stoppe within a few feet of a telegraph pole. Scott, working at a garage here, had taken the truck out to tow in another car which was stalled with a broken axle. Although he got in a hurry, Scott received only a few scratches and bruises. INJURED IN CROWD RUSH Woman Bruised When Pushed Down While Crossing Street. Mrs. Marie Wolff, 22, of 1007 S. Alabama St., was bruised about the legs Wednesday night when 6he was pushed to the street by a crowd while crossing Washingtoii and Illinois Sts. in the blinding rain. She was taken home in a police car.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

HOOK FIRM EXPANDING / Drag Company Plans Thirty-Five Stores in Indiana and Kentucky. Expansion of the Hook Drug Company to include thlrty.flve stores in Indiana and Kentucky was planned by officials today. Opening of anew store in the Lincoln Hotel is scheduled for Jan. 1. The company recently acquired $1,000,000 leases on three comers in Louisville. Several new stores are planned in Indiana. Business the last year totaled about $5,000,000 and the additional stores are expected to increase the annual value about $1,500,000.

IhL Why women 9H& have' changed §l||l to the new extra-long TFomfer Bread .. THERE are three outstanding reasons why more and more women are buying Wonder Bread—-this de-

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YOUTH DIES OF AUTO INJURIES; ARREST DRIVER - \ , Lawton C. Link Is Victim of Crash; Funeral to Be Saturday. Funeral services for Lawton C. Link, 19, of 1519 Lawrence St., who was injured fatally in an automobile accident Wednesday, will be held at 2p. m. Saturday. Arrangements are incomplete. Link died in the admitting room at city hospital shortly after he was injured in a collision between his automobile and a truck driven by Gray Wilson, 27, R. R. P, Box 188, at East and Ohio Sts. Driver Arrested Wilson, a driver for the Graham Box Lunch Company of Beech Grove, told police that he did not see Link’s car until the collision. Wilson was arrested on an involuntary manslaughter charge and released under bond. Bom at Harrisburg, 111., Link had lived here for sixteen years. He was a graduate of Manual Training High School. He was employed at the Staley & Crabb Outdoor Advertising Company. Link was a member of the University Heights U. B. Church. Surviving him are his parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Link; three brothers, Elmer, Lloyd and George Link, and a sister, Louise Link. Interurban, Car Collide Struck by an automobile driven by Charles Gross, 19, of 620 N. Oakland Ave., as he was about to For Colds, Grip or Influenza and as a Preventive, take Laxative BROMO QUININE Tablets. A Safe and Proven Remedy. Look for signa* ture of E. W. Grove on the box. 30c.— Advertisement.

It’s Bum Swap Mrs. Maude Moudy, 4319 Park Ave., wouldn’t object to trading old tires for new. But she wasn’t satisfied, she reported to police, when thieves tok from the garage at her home: Two tires, rims and tubes, value S4O. * And left: , , _ A compact, a pair of glasses and a rear auto seat.

board a T. H., I. & E. i iterurban car at Belmont Ave. and Washington St., Wednesday night, Edward West, 54, living near the Tremont stop of the Danville division, is in a serious condition at city hospital. He suffered a fractured skull and internal injuries, hospital attaches said. Gross was arrested on a charge of assault and battery by Motorpolicemen Fleming and Kegris. Frank Carson, 66, Fowler, suffered a fractured left leg Wednesday night when struck by an automobile driven by George White. 34, R. R. G, Box 419-V, at the N. Meridian St. intersection on Monument Circle. Witnesses told police that Carson walked into the path of White’s car as he was turning into N. Meridian St. CANYON PARTY IS SAFE Expedition Believed *Lost 22 Days Reaches Desert Camp. Bu United Press LOS ANGELES, Dec. I.—Members of the Pathe-Bray Grand Canyon expedition, which had been believed lost for twenty-two days, arrived at Camp Pearson on the Painted Desert in Arizona, last night, according to a radio message received by the United States signal post here. The message, sent by the United States sigal post at Camp Pearson, said the thirteen members of the party were uninjured, although they had had a trying experience since they left Green River, Utah, Nov. 9, to photograph scenes of the Oolorado River.

3. Wonder Bread is made In the extra-long shape, designed to give more slices of the most practical and convenient size—without waste, thus more economical, Try Wonder Bread today! Look for the Wonder Bread wrapper—your guide for good bread.

BOY’S HAND CRUSHED Ax Used to Release Fingers From Wringer. William Lugent, 4, son of Mr.jand Mrs. Robert Lugent, 713 Park Ave., suffered a crushed left hand today when he caught it in the wringer

WAKE UPWITHCOLD GONE, SAY DOCTORS

Advise Hospital Tested Method That Brings Relief Overnight Is Ideal for Home Use! Head colds, coughs and chest colds may now be ended almost overnight by an economical home method approved by doctors at the health clinic. And druggists say that hundreds of Indianapolis people. like Mrs. Arthur Price, have been surprised to find how quickly it brings results, even in severe cases where all other remedies used had failed. Fearing pneumonia as her cold got worse, Mrs. Price called the clinic for advice. Her head and chest were congested; she felt “feverish” and the inflammation was spreading down into her bronchial tubes. The doctors then recommended Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral—a concentrated mixture of ingredients, which hospitals have found to be quickest, safest and surest to end colds. With the first pleasant spoonful she felt the comforting, healing warmth —from her nose passages deep down into her chest. It eased he*r cough almost instantly. In a few hours her feverish “grippy” feeling began to disappear. By morning her head had cleared up, and in a day or so all traces of the cold were gone.—Advertisement.

.DEC. 1, 1927

of his mother’s washing machine. Mrs. Lugent told police that William was watching her wringing out wet clothes. She stepped out of the kitchen for a minute and hurried back when she heard his scream. William’s father had to chop the wringer apart with an ax before the hand could be freed. The boy was treated at city hospital and taken home.

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Note: Other cases reported daily-* all certified to this paper by a membef of the hospital clinic. Doctors find that this hospital medicine does far more than stop coughing instantly. It goes straight to the seat of a stubborn bead cold or chest cold. Absorbed through and through the whole system, it quickly checks phlegm, heals irritation and drives out the cold from the nose passages, throat and chest. Just a few pleasant spoonfuls of Cherry Pectoral now and you’ll feel like a different person tomorrow. Hospital directions with each bottle. At all druggists. 60c; twice as much in SI.OO hospital size.

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