Indianapolis Times, Volume 41, Number 29, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 June 1929 — Page 22
PAGE 22
HOOVER GUESTS GET LESSON IN SOCIALETIQUET Blue Print of Dinner Table Shows Where Each Shall Sit. E WASHINGTON. June 14—Dinner guests at the White House do not have to worry about where they shall sit at the table under the Hoover regime. Guests on their arrival at- the executive mansion are given a course in .social oticjuet by attendants so that by the time the dinner hour arrives they may feel perfectly at home. The invitation for dinner gives the hour at which the guest is expected to arrive. He drives up to the front door to be met by a uniformed attendant, who takes charge of his hat and top-coat. Blu Print Aids Guests. The guest is ushered into the red room, a reception room of! the main entrance hall. When the dinner guests have all arrived another White House attendant comes in with a blueprint of the dinner table showing where each guest is expected to sit. The social procedure at the White House is explained in detail so that each guest may not feel ill at while awaiting the serving of the dinner. The President and his wife then come into the red room, welcome their guests and then all start for the dining room with President Herbert Hoover and Mrs. Hoover in the lead. Each guest not only knows where he must sit but what other guest must accompany him. Place cards are also upon the table for the benefit of any guest who hasn't learned his etiquet lesson thoroughly. Dinners Are Formal. The dinners are quite formal and conversation is usually confined to guests seated on either side and is conducted in low tones. The President and Mrs. Hoover do not attempt to carry’ on a general conversation. After dinner the guests move upstairs where the men have coflee with the President in one room while the women have coffee with Mr.-. Hoover in another. Afterward the President and his Wile circle among the guests, say a few words and then bid them good-night. President Hoover has made a custom of inviting a few guests each Sunday evening for dinner. For the benefit of those who may be invited a tuxedo is the proper dress for men while the women are expected to wear sleeveless but informal evening dress. $2,249 FOR PAPER Days News Comes High for One Honest Man, Bi United Fn *s WORCESTER. Mass.. June 14. When you buy a newspaper for 2 or 3 cents, consider yourself lucky. Joseph Muha paid $2,249.52 for one. Two men induced him to give them that amount of money to show he was an honest man. In exchange they intrusted him with a package supposed to contain SIO,OOO. When Muha opened the bundle later he found only a newspaper clipped to form sheets the size of bills.
OIL W> RANGES At Extremely Low Prices Look at These Prices $64 Models *19.75 , $92 Models *59.75 S7B Models *29.75 j SBS Models *69.75 Weekly Payments if Desired Oil and gasoline range provides same dependable and efficient service as the finest city gas range. Red Star burns either gasoline or kerosene with absolute safety. Turns off and on like gas. No wicks or rings. No waiting. Lights in less than a minute—cookincr begins at once. Since 1917 over 7.000 Red Stars have been sold in Marion county. This Sale Saves You Money UA AC TED company nUUIMEii\ FURNITURE East Washington and Alabama
Cowgirls Due With Circus
i
The Wild West contingent of the singling Bros, and Barnum & Bailey Circus, which exhibits here twice next Tuesday is comprised of some of the greatest ropers, trick riders and riders of bucking horses that have come out of the West in years. Cy Compton is the leader of the group of cowboys and cow-girls and is known all over the country a, a champion roper. His son, Cody Compton, and his pretty young daughter, Myrtle Compton, are famous as trick and fancy riders. Mrs. Lillian Compton
WESTERNERS HE AW’ EATERS, SAYS CHEF
Women Are More 'Choosey' About FpocJ. States Rail Man. r.n Tim'S Xferial MONTREAL. June 14—Westerners eat more than easterners and women eat with more discrimination than men, according to Y. Moody, superintendent of the sleeping and dining car department of the Cam dian National Railways, Montreal. With close to a hundred dining cars operating every day, and with each car accommodating from 30 to 150 passengers at a sitting, the Canadian National have found that, as a rule, heavier meals are eaten on the trains west of Winnipeg, Man., than on those in the east. The westerner likes meats and heavy food, says Mr. Moody. The average man will come into a dining car and probably eat the same thing he ate the day before, unless there is some special display on the menu to distract him. A Woman, on the other hand, perhaps because travel to her is still more of a novelty than to a man, will pick and choose with care before she makes her decision. Mr. Moody points our that, while Canadians may be considered to be heavier tea drinkers than the Americans, it was the latter who introduced into Canada the prevalent habit of drinking iced tea. in glasses. The Canadian National a. few years ago on any one train usually had but two or three “bar spoons” —a long handled spoon for stirring cold beA’erages served in tall glasses. It suddenly became apparent that the trains running into the United States to Niagara. Detroit and Chi-
is also an expert rider and appears with her husband and son and daughter at each performance. Among the company are a large number of daring and pretty girls who perform thrilling feats of horsemanship fully as daring as those executed by the male members of the company. Among the better known girl riders are Myrtle Compton, Mabel Klein, Peggy Murray, Georgia Sweet, Rose Nemo and Fannie Neilson. The Wild West show takes place in “the big top” immediately after each performance of "the big show.”
cago were insufficiently supplied with this utensil. The reason was that the popularity of iced tea among Americans who used these lines the most was taxing the supply of bar spoons to the limit. The custom spread until now the Canadian National has f rom 20 to 30 bar spoons on every train. JUNKS CAR FOR LIBERTY Released on Promise to Abandon Ancient Auto. lit/ l nitrd Press HARTFORD, Conn., June 14— When an accused man, charged with operating an automobile with defective brakes told Judge John L. Bonee in police court here he had been “thinking of junking the old can,” his honor replied “that’s a great idea,” The court suspended sentence upon the promise that the car would be relegated to a “gravee'yard.” Fortune Teller Robs Woman. 81l I nitrd Press COLUMBUS. 0.. June 14—Mrs. Malinda Payton is through with fortune tellers. She complained to police today that an Indiana, fortune teller whom she permitted to hypnotize her robbed her while she was in the trance.
r Stanley Jewelry C0,—134 W. Wash, St,—-Indiana Theatre Bldg. cx c mim 1 V%*idlNE BRIDE f Jmk 1 % -FROM STANLEY’S \ M A Genuine Seth Thomas Clocks '•' '•* I |jj Will Candle Sticks to Match jjjj Unlimited Replaceinent Guarantee m\ Just think of it! A gen- £ ugM 36-riec. service (or sK. Stainless \Yg nine quarter hour 2-tone y pigi ||£ $9 ®/Q l'-™? b, ; ,dc a j)i\ chime Seth Thomas clock, ipi i"'t'ing ?m <£ h|l| QC complete with candle- W jjraU <l ( „ he g # M sticks to match. A lasting s P p <iai with I MB - <4l/* gift for the bride. Complete tray J'noo a week* Hap p ines S Why Experiment? Wrist Watches sjjL Stanley's for the 1,, 51.00 A WEEK / 34c Down ® jjjh Enner Set Given With Purchase of $15.00 or More .Vat'ch fighter, 134 W. Wash. St.—lndiana Theatre Btdg. I
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
WIDEN SEARCH FOR KIDNAPERS OF GOVERNOR Hunt for Second Highest Idaho Official Expanded to Three States. Bn United Press OROFINO. Idaho. June 14.—The hunt for four gunmen who kidnaped ' Lieutenant-Governor W. B. Kinne of Idaho near here Tuesday spread to a third state today, with hundreds of possemen in the search. Kinne and two men who stopped to aid him as he was struggling the bandits by the roadside, were kidnaped aftd bound to trees in the woods, after one of the men, Paul Kille, had been beaten and shot. The other man. W. L. Tribbey, who came to the aid of the state official, also was beaten on the head with the gunmen’s pistol butts. Tribbey was recovering in a hospital here. An area more than two hundred miles on each -idc is searched fey posses. The manhunt spread into eastern Oregon today as word came in that guards at a bridge near the state bordei* may have let the bandits, who stole Tribbey’s automobile, pass while searching the woods for them. A blue sedan, bearing the Idaho license plates of Tribbey’s car, was raid to have been seen heading north over the bridge. Airplanes, which were active on the first day of the search, were expected to resume the hunt today. The search now covers parts of Idaho, Washington and Oregon. TRUCK DRIVERS FINED FOR PICKING PEONIES Alleged Defendants Beat, Farmer When He Asks Pay. Two husky truck drivers who turned a picnic into a panic must pay the price. Municipal Judge Paul C. Wetter said. Testimony showed that when Marion H. Dearmore, farmer, backed up the demand of his mother-in-l%w, Mrs. Allie Bolen, a mile noi’th of Allisonville on the Noblesville road that the picnickers pay for peonies they had ruthlessly torn from her bushes, William Honeas j and Chester Becker, 412 East Market street, severely beat him. Faces Loss of Parole MARION. Ind, June 14.—William Bashore, Fairmount, who was fined $lO and costs and sentenced to sixty days on the penal farm when he pleaded guilty in the city court to a charge of assault and battery, will probably be returned to the state prison on the expiration of his term as a parole violator.
Piumbing Installed Furnaces Installed Cash or Payments CHARLES KOEHRING 882 Virginia. Ave. DRexel 1417
Quits Church
'£.s /? V“.' : /
In order to marry, Albert Negahnquet (above), who is said to be the only full-blood American Indian ever to become a Catholic priest, renounced his priesthood vows. He then married Mrs. Edith Duncan, 31, a widow (shown below) at Ft. Worth. Tex. Negahnquet’s father struck oil near Shawnee a number of years ago and he is very wealthy. He and his bride live at Oklahoma City. The first central station for the commercial distribution of electricity was set going on September 4, 1882, by Thomas Edison in New York City.
Mantis 1 person out ot every 6 in Indianapolis keeps money on deposit here,
Headquarters for BUESCHER Band Instruments Pearson Piano Cos. 128-30 X. Pennsylvania
TARGET! —a dependable fuel at an economical price.
FINDS INDICATE GIANTS LIVED IN CALIFORNIA Bones Show Ancient Race Was Twice Size of Present Men. Bn United Press ( .STOCKTON, Cal, June 14—The theory that a race of giant men once inhabited the San Joaquin valley, advanced by Dr. J. Kroeck, professor of biology at the College of the Pacific, now is supported by new evidence. Two railway employes. Frank Fesrrara and Earl Cusilidge, have revealed the discovery of a cavern in Calaveras county littered with the remains of more than 200 skeletons, the bones *of which are of unusual size, Fesrrara and Cusilidge said that skulls found in the cavern were much larger than those of the present day race. They said that jaw bones were twice the size of a normal man’s and that rib formations were nearly the size of a steer’s. The men noted one peculiar thing —that leg bones were much smaller than those of the man of today. Dr. Kroeck believes that bones of the "giants” and those of a “race of diminutives” have become mixed. That the ancient people, no matter what their stature was, were accomplished artisans, is proven by a stone bowl disevovered in the cavern. The bowl is of granite, five inches in depth and fourteen inches in diameter, and is said to be far superior in workmanship to any of the known Indian tribes. Dr. Kroeck can not explain how
THINK TWICE before you buy—and you’ll buy tires half as often. Millions more people ride on Goodyears because Goodyears outlast any other kind and cost no more. good/I'eAr ALL-WEATHERS 30x3 Vz Oversize * 7.95 31x4 12.15 32x4 12.95 29.4.40 Balloons 8.95 30x4.50 Balloons ...... 9.25 30x5.00 Balloons ...... 11.45 31x5.25 Balloons 19.75 31x6.00 Balloons 15.65 IMPROVED PATHFINDERS 30x3 1 2 Regular 5.25 30x31 2 Oversize .... 5.75 31x4 9.70 32x4 10.45 29x4.40 Balloons ...... 6.45 30x4.50 Balloons 7.25 30x5.00 Balloons 9.20 31x5.25 Balloons 11.10 31x6.00 Balloons 12.55 All other sizes at same low prices. GOODYEAR SPEEDWAYS Tire Tube 30x31" *4.05 90* 1 31x4 ........ 7.60 1.19 32x4 7.95 1.24 29x4.40 Bal. .. 5.10 1.05 30x4.50 Bal. .. 5.90 1.14 Free Service and Mounting by Experts Airship Ornaments Most attractive oritament made. Propel- am ler is mounted on <P S 1 Q ball hearings. Heav-*p ■ JL JJ By nickeled. Mounts B on radiator cap or B ~~ through radiator core. Delta Electric Hand Lantern Pp fc J $2.45 v V Mi Complete With Batteries jfep Golf Sets mid-iron and putMl $4.95 MB 1 }|7 Replacement Ia mi Ml Parts for fill if All Cars lIL J' 1 j ml —Fan Belts /4| —Piston Kings |j —Battery Cables {JcQSjflLr —Head I.umps —Head t.askets
i—atwwa.ailj. 11 ii ..'la Open Evenings and Sundays k /Cervice station^; / WF X Cor. Madilon, DelawareandßayStsJ/^ G -
the bones were preserved, for they apparently date back to the time when this section of California was the coast line, judging from shell fish remains found with them. Fesrrara and Cusilidge were hunting when they discovered the cavern. They came across a small hole in the side of a hill. Dropping a pebble in the opening, they found it took eight seconds to hit the bottom. Later they returned to the hole,
SPECIALS ALL WEEK! G^AlSgjSg Pay On/> Pay Only a Week Week * I SIMiI.K VISION LK.NSLS IN I . Tl I STYLISH ALL S II E L L ' r !|vk ni h, ’ I FRAME. W ‘ ' ~r'-^4t- 95 "HY ; $|1.95 | ne'dl t 0 J ' OU r " SPEf’I A I j * Dr. R. M. Reams—Specialist in Charge! gAUBBKs" JEWELERS 42 West Washington Street
Scat FOR ALL CARS tßyl and u P c!ic ' T ° ict< p wiippr> L ; |AU other -pn cn er Coupes. j | j | Roadsters *5.95 \ ! *?SSH \uN££r£ MJhftsx .* Chevrolet. Pontiac, Whippet, 1 ==s Essex and Hudson Coach, 4 V, Chevrolet Sedan *8.75 * v Ponliar, Whippet. Hudson and Essex Sedan *9.75 All other 5-passenger coaches or sedans *11.95 Back Cushion and Seat Slipovers for AH Cars Coupes *2.15 Sedans and coaches *9.95 AWNINGS Keeps out sun, rain, wind and. draft. Choice of colors yj q Up and stripes C LUGGAGE CARRIERS™ Easy to attach. Foicls un compact, when not in use. j-Q_ Very durable and strong UUC "FORD TIMERS WESTCLOX ; ; And Rollers Allto Clocks " ' 3Qr ' 7 3 Dog OUL Mount on $2.00 Milwau- C*l CQ | | upper windkee * • J 11|| shield frame $3.50 Turner (J*9 Q C Mi or on instru--2-in-l iJfatOd t?|| ment board. Smer F !l??. B ™! h .... 51.35 $2.48 and $3.48 Jfmr 7- : MOTOR OIL Emm" Genuine MehllfH nnd \ ■ f'dol. fiM-tffillotl mmu, JBm b.v. .| .-111.-. MoWl-.il i;. Ar.-f(•! Boyce : . . Moto- 1 s '- 7 ” y3B? meters SPARK PLUGS mm ' ' sac $7.50 Universal MOQ ti'i" ~'i. . 64c Model vJOJ rhanipion \. o SIO.OO Standard £Q Q for f''-rd> 40C Model OpDhQa/ me, n, SIO.OO Dash Board Or on AUTO POLISHES Mounting Type pD*Oa/ ■'l'D f' int cart 59c TOP DRESSING uiZ >" l 7.'''!“ 59c SI.OO Pint Can MSI 59c ■*”: High Luhtre or 60c Half Pint Can 999 990 Finish JOG SI.OO Pint Can Duco No. 7...59C r, °' iz-; Cl-taner OQ 73c Pint Can Brocies 99c and Polish Jt/C — S-a I c n METAL POLISHES Duco No. 7 29c MeAleer? I4C 29c POLISHING CLOTHS T Pint Can Permatex QQ Smith'. t;|, 'airally OQ Cream Metal Poli-h Jm C Treated lsn-: C .: it A.77C .Tie Blue Ribbon Cream on Mr- . - Clum ■■all.' on Metal Polish £I?C 'JTeated Dust Ci-itl CuC
Jl INE 11, 1929
bringing with them a long length of rope. They widened the opening and lowered themselves tb a point approximately 60 feet underground. There they found a great chamber. 400 feet in length and nearly 200 feet in width. Using flashlights the men explored the cavern and discovered numerous ot the bones. They found another cavern. 156 feet below the first one. This they also explored and there again they found evidence of a race of giants.
