Indianapolis Times, Volume 41, Number 44, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 July 1929 — Page 2
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HEEMENT ON DADS TO AIR FIELD SOUGHT v>T Suggests Closing of mond Street. Widening of Banner. k- and county officials today Ifrred on plans for roadways to J municipal airport, southwest of j en Davis, and improvement of JBveral highways near the city limit.'. Mayor L. Ert Slack outlined a pi for closing Raymond street at | north line of the new airport /bnds. Slack said the triancular Si on the north edee of the field /■be given over to industrial in'JrPtXs. ' which, we anticipate, will locate there. Dan 1000-Foot Entrance The city suegested a plan to open Benner avenue from the National j road to the airport as a 100-foot | roadway for a north entrance tc the field. City and county engineers and attorneys will discuss the plar and work out the solution. •Included in the airport road program is the proposal of the city tor extend West Morris street along tlie south side of the T. IT. I. <V E. Traction Company tracks from High School road, west withni a few blocks of the airport, entrance. County to Do Work The conference decided that the city will ' disannex' East Thirtyeighth street from Eastern avenue east to Emerson avenue and that the county will improve thisx section. The city will improve and Ditivide sewer and drainage facilities for the street from Sutherland •*nue to Eastern avenue. An agreement also will be worked But for paving College avenue from feixty-third to Seventy-first streets ?and Lafayette pike from the Spcedfway road pas t. the Municipal ■gardens, formerly Casino gardens. CONSIDER PARK SITE Mayor Says City Can Csr It. But Wonder s - About Price. I Mayor L. Ert Slack today oxyressed himself as not arbitrarily f'favoring" the purchase of the 'ietclirr estate for a municipal parlf Ji tc. I “While T expressed what were the Jtrong points in favor of buying the tract. I did not. mean to go on rccIrd as saying that, I favored its f‘ —quisition by the city. We can use , but whether we can afford to buy another question." § The proposition was to be brought fiefcre the board of public parks late for consideration on the buy--7 of the land for SBOO,OOO. securing ninety-nine-year lease, or indefi- • p postponement. ML! PUSHMOBILE KING h Side < rowns ( hanip of Tiny Car Course. fan Kennedy of the Del Prado |t monts. Washington boulevard | Forty-sixth street, was today */ed as the pushniobile champion fthe north side. Kennedy won jkce Monday afternoon sponsored 1 the merchants around Forty- . Jfi and Delaware streets. The car : Mch he pushed to victory is owned Gus Jackson. Second place was awarded Carl mrath of 208 South Audubon road. ' Alerehants in the neighborhood 11 award the prizes. !>NE RUM SALES AIRED •any Ships Sell Liquor in Canal Territory, Italians Charge. •Jfiu t Hit, i’ nr, BALEOA. Canal Zone. July 2. *Thc change that a number ot ships f have been accustomed to selling i liquor in the Panama Canal Zone | was made by M. Pincherli, agent for I an Italian shipping line, in a protest ! to Governor Harry Burgess against the arrest of a master employed by his line. The master was charged with selling liquor. NEWSPAPER MEN FETED Indianapolis newspaper men were guests of Broad Ripple Amusement Company at the annual "pencilpushers" dinner in the park dance pavilion Monday night. M. M. Mahoney. park manager: Frank A. Holmes, promotion sales manager, and William Lincoln, publicity director. were among park representatives at the event. SWALLOWS KEROSENE Floyd Hauk. 2-vear-old son of Mrs. Edith Hauk. 222 South Temple street, is recovering today in city hospital from effects of a small amount of kerosene he swallowed Monday. The mother said she used a part of a glassful of oil and placed the remainder in the glass on the floor where the child grasped it. A Good Business School •Strong business, stenographic, secre tarial and accounting course*: iudi vidual Instruction In major subjects large faculty of specialists. 1n theit respective lines: Free Employment Service. Fred W. Case. Erin. Central Business College Pencsylianlu nnd Vermont. First Poof North V. IV. C. A., Indianapolis, Ind
jk | NOW TRY _____ vitamont: ' Qualitr Canned Meat. *T3S-fi* W Prices Reduced to I\r a t an Hfin ' Cans SI.(H). Sd.On case of i 48 Cans. Feed Alone or With (hampion Miller's Oil Trusty, or I Serjeant's Doj Biscuit. I Ihs. .Vic: Id lbs.. SI.OO. Foods and Remedies for Pets and Poultrv. EVERITT'S sued 'TORI' ■’> V Al< -1 - lil 't.
Money Loanee -ONDIAMONDS Überal (tellable Confidential SUSSM AN ‘S SfATE LOAN OFFICE Legal Rates— Bonded Brokers Established 2? Years 239-241 ff ITathlnrltis Bt.
Asks Millions
Georee Morgan is just an innkeeper in Meriden, Conn., now, but he may become one of the worlds richest men. Morgan claims to be a direct descendant of Sir Andrew Chadwicke and has started legal action to prove hi? right to Sir Andrew's $50,000,000 estate now held in the English chancery courts. Morgan points to his resemblance to Sir Andrew and claims he is a descendant in the sixth generation.
JUNE SUNNY MONTH Rainfall Heavy, Temperature Below Normal. Despite June's abnormally heavy rainfall, the month was brightened with an unusual amount of sunshine. the weather bureau's report for the month showed today. During the month, 5.36 inches of rain fell in Indianapolis, as compared with 3.62 inches normally. Percentage of sunshine was 78 as compared with the normal 66. Temperatures ranged from 40 degrees on the third to 90 on the eighteenth for an average of 69.6 as compared with the normal 71.6. Although heavy, the rainfall was below last June, forty-six-year high record 3.77 inches. C. M. T. C. INSPECTED BY CORPS OFFICERS General Nolan and Staff Review Ft. Harrison Companies. Major-General Pennis E. Nolan commanding the Fifth corps area: Colonel William H. Waldron, chief of staff: Captain Frank Allen Jr., aide, and a board of Tenth infantry officers trom Ft. Thomas, Ky.. who Monday inspected the cadet regiment of the Citizens’ Military Training Camp. Ft. Benjamin Harrison, returned to their posts today. Inspection of the regiment was delayed several hours because of a soggy parade ground. General Nolan visited Governor Harry Leslie and had lunch with Adjutant-Gen-eral William H. Kershner. Following inspection the cadet corps went through machine gun and pistol drills, and held a formal parade in the evening. Another parade was scheduled for this afternoon. Marriage Record Set MARION, Ind.. July 2.—A total of seventy-three marriage licenses were issued during June by the Grant county clerk, breaking a record of twenty-five years’ duration.
July SALE! O F— r^\ FOOTWEAR JOF? Values extraordinary—proving once J rs ® ! ' again that the July Sale is a style-and-value event of supreme impor- f ■ Styles tanee —and too, we demonstrate our WjP|jg||L Pictured supremacy in giving America *s great- Actually est shoe values. W in Stock CHOOSE FROM WHITES SANDALS / BLONDES PUMPS W AM \ REDS TIES )6~A BLUES OXFORDS \ A PATENTS STRAPS faj X > t/iT) / \ and Sconcma/Jfaet C/HARLEo JmfFl 4W. WASHINGTON STREET L. \ U J
SIX INJURED IN AUTO ACCIDENTS Two Pedestrians Run Down by Cars. Coming suddenly upon the scene of an automobile crash one mile north of Traders Point, on United States 52 highway early today, W. O. Camden, 45, of 930 Broadway, swerved his machine into a ditch at the side of the road and struck Mike Grimes, 33, New Augusta, Rural Route 1, throwing him into a barbed wire fence. Grimes sustained scratches, cuts and bruises which city hospital attendants say are not serious. Martin Wehinger, 77, of 916 South Delaware street, is recovering from injuries received when he was struck by an auto driven by Ralph Winkley, 28. of 834 West Twenty-Ninth street, as he stepped into the street from behind a pillar under the Pennsylvania railroad elevation at Madison avenue Monday night. Four persons were slightly injured when two automobiles collided at Eastern avenue and Washington street Monday night. They were: Mark L. Hale, 34, of 3720 East New York street, driver of one machine: his wife. Dorothy, 26: Mrs. Louise Hale, 79; and Miss Dora Hale 50. Five passengers in an Indianapolis Street Railway motor bus escaped injury when Carl Walters, 2500 North Rural street, driver, crashed it into a barbecue stand at Lyndhurst drive and National road Monday night to avoid a collision with an automobile. MISSING TWO MONTHS
More than two months after he is said to have disappeared, Mrs. Fern Minard, 536 East drive, Woodruff Place, today reported her husband. Gordon. 44. as missing. He walked away from his home April 29. and lias not returned, she said.
Prescription He Wrote in 1892 is the World’s Most Popular Laxative
| When Dr. Caldwell started to | practice medicine, back in 1875, the | needs for a laxative were not as great as they are today. People lived normal, quiet lives, ate plain, wholesome food, and got plenty of fresh air and sunshine. But even that early there were drastic physics and purges for the relief of constipation which Dr. Caldwell did not believe were good for human beings to put into their system. So he wrote a prescription for a laxative to be used by his patients. The prescription for constipation that he used early in his practice, and which he put in drug stores in 1892 under the name of Dr. Caldj well's Syrup Pepsin, is a liquid vegeI table remedy, intended for women, children and elderly people, and they need just such a mild, safe, gentle bowel stimulant as Syrup Pepsin. Under successful management j this prescription has proven its I worth and is now the largest selling j liquid laxative in the world. The j fact that millions of bottles are used a year proves that it has won ! the confidence of people who needed ! it to get relief from headaches, bili iousness, flatulence, indigestion, loss of appetite and sleep, bad breath, j dyspepsia, colds and fevers. Millions of families are now never
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
QUOTA FOR MEXICAN IMMIGRANTS OPPOSED Senator David Reed Says Law Might Cause “Complications.” Bit T'nitrd VrtHX WASHINGTON, July 2.—Senator David Reed ‘Rep., Pa.), chief senate defender of the national origins clause of the immigration act. announced today his opposition to placing Mexican immigration on the quota basis at this time. In a letter to Captain John B. Trevor, chairman of the American Coalition of Patriotic Organizations, Reed said that to place Mexican immigration on a quota might have “serious international implications and result in diplomatic and legislative difficulties.” BOY RULES IN FATHER'S FAVOR Judge Heeds Child’s Wish, Decides Against Mother, George Reiss, 9. was back in Kokomo today with his father Michael Reiss, with whom he chose to live Monday afternoon when Superior Judge James M. Leathers let him make a selection between his father and his mother. Mrs. Anna Martin. 3618 Creston drive. The boy’s statement that “I want to be with my father” settled a search and court litigation of seven years. Reiss and the lad's mother w’ere divorced in 1322 and. on one of his Sunday visits with the boy, Reiss took him out of the city. Mrs. Martin did not see her son again until last week when Reiss was brought before Leathers on a bench warrant charging him with violating the court's order. Leathers instructed Reiss to pay Mrs. Martin $750 in support money. Frank Reiss, president of the Reiss Manufacturing Company, Kokomo, brother of the boy's father, said he is interested in the youngster and that he wnuld aid in financing a college education for the boy.
AT AGE 83
without Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin. and if you will once start using it you will also always have a bottle handy for emeregneies. It is particularly pleasing to know that the most of it is bought by mothers for themselves and the children, though Syrup Pepsin is just as valuable for elderly people. All drug stores have the generous bottles.—Advertisement,
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