Indianapolis Times, Volume 41, Number 45, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 July 1929 — Page 5

’iJTXT 3. 19:29.

PICNICS WILL FEATURE CITY'S FOURTH FROLICS Chief of Patriotic Events Will Be Ceremonies of Photoplay Indorsers. Flags werr fastened for raising. I firecracker fuses unraveled and | lunch boxes made ready today for the city's customary observance of * the Fourth of July with ‘ patriotism, § powder and picnic; Chief of the patriotic ceremonies | will bo that at the Palace theater under auspice; of the Indianapolis ' t>raneh. Indorser 1 of Photoplays. lAn organ concert of patriotic airs I’'ill be followed at 8:45 a. m, by I the rho n me of the pinure ‘ Amcri--Ira " to ehoo! children, war veteran* and members of patriotic or- • sanizationf. Thou and: of vi. itors are expected a' For’ Benjamin Harrison •' here ‘-visitors' da has been proflaiinea for relatives and friend, of the Citizen: Military Training Camp cadet and the public in general ty Lieutenant-Colonel T. C. Musgravc, commanding officer. Parks ‘Hake Preparations. A baseball game will be staged at 9:30 a. in and a polo game between Hie Eleventh Infantry tram and the Polling Ridge quartet in the afternoon. Regimental parade is ■ for .1 15 p. m . followed by inas'rd calesthenic at 4:15 and a brief addre to Citizens Military I raining Camp candidate- Governor Harr- G. Leslie, who was to have spoken, wa forced by official business to cancel the engagement. Foxing bouts are .ehcdulcd at 7 m Broad Ripple and Riverside amusement park have made preparations for handling the season’s large t rrov ri A double balloon a sen. on and parachute race back to earth by Loral Starkey and Ethel Prichctt will bo the holiday at!- a lion at Rivcr.'icie. At Broad Ripple a grave ha been dug where a magician -’ ill be buried alive and eirinterred a couple of hours later Scores of re. ei - aliens have been made lor picnic , and reunions in city parks rubii< beaches and pool' *v ill be |a\ed lo capacity, guards believe '■■pecial I cal m e Planned. eniertainment features have been prepared at. Avalon. Meridian Hill: Wood took. Broadmoor country club and the Highland Golf and Country Club. An all-day and all-evening program oi games contest-, band music and dancing will be held in Sarah T. Rnitnn Memorial pink under auspice; of the R'-cch Grove Chic league. Patriotic airs will be played at 4 p. nt. on the iv-" Scottish Rite Cathedral chime; b\ Anton Brcc r arilloneur. '1 here will be no mail delivery other than pscial delivery and perish ble mail < hilr) Sv. allows Metal pa Tin-- X,„ , ~,l ANDERSON. Tncl.. July ”. An operation may be necessary to remove a piece ol lawnmower blade • " allowed by Ned Short Jr.. 3, son of Mr. and Mr; Ned Short. The piece of metal had been chipped from a blade of the mover.

MONEY TO LOAN —ON Insurance Cos. IX3 M ATK 1.11 E BI.lHi.

LATIRT TK ss FITTING VI ri W. WASH. ST. STORE Abdominal Supports and Shoulder Braces HAAG’S CUT-PRICE DRUGS

t'j* lbr SAFE DEPOSIT DEPARTMENT us the CITY TRUST COMPANY JfS r. Washington St.

The Meycr-Kiser Bank izn r.. H ASHINCTON ST We Fay 4 1 z c c on Savings

RAG RUGS Popular Htl and Miss Tattcrns .... tLuC Each ECONOMY RUG CO ;i3 r.n*t " ndhlnstnn >tr*rt r

E VA N S ’ (W A I ALL GROCERS

Poor Teeth—Poor Health (si) You Afford to Uor*‘ Cood Work Modrrnt# Prlffi The People's Dentists otl ITeit tTaihluitOD S*trr# HOI K>— * a. m. to t? p. Sunday*—9 a. m. to 12 on

Saltan ON THF < IH( l. The Record Center ot Indianapolis

Trustees 0. K. Disciples $8,000,000 Pension Drive

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Above 'left to right* are I. J. Calul! of Cleveland: E. S. Jouett of Louisville. Ky.; C. M. Rodrmr of Bcllaire, 0.. and W. R. Warren of Indianapoli all trustees, and 'below* Samuel Ashby of Indianapolis, trustee and treasurer; George A. Huggins of Philadelphia, actuary, and F. E. Smith of Indianapolis secretary All are trustees of the Disciples of Christ pension fund.

2.500 Ministers to Benefit Under New Christian Church Fund. Truster of the Disciples of Christ pension fund today approved plans or an $8,000,090 pension fund drive at the Columbia Club. ihe fund is sought to establish the ministerial pension system on a legal reserve basis and to provide for the accrued liabilities the fund will a umc v. hen it becomes effective. The Disciple of Christ will be the third Protestant religious body in the United Slates to place ministerial pensions on an actuarial basis whereby each minister and church, by paying a small percentage on the mini ter's salary, will provide annuitir for old age and disability with benefits for widows and minor children Nearly 3.500 ministers have enrobed under t lie new pen--ion system. which is administered from offices in the Chamber of Commerce building. Plans for the international convention of Christian churches at. Seattle. Wash., next month also " r re discussed today. ‘RED BOOK’ GROUP SOLD TO M'CALL'S X.',, 000.000 Magazine firm Sohl to New York Company. NEW YORK. July 3.—-In a transaction said to involve between $2,500,008 and $3,000,000. the owners of McCalls Mazaginc bought, the Consolidated Magazines Corporation. which publishes The Red Bool: Magazine and The Blue Book Magazine. according to an announcement here by William B. Warner, president of McCall’s. The combined circulation of the acquired publications is approximately 1.260.000. It is a hundred years since Louis Braille invented a system of six clots by which blind could read. This yztem is still in use by the blind.

CHICAGO Cincinnati s 2- . „ | Shclbyvillc .75 '■ * |■ _ Greensburg $1.25 JULY 7 l-'M'* Tndianspolis II:"'. j., m •>ulr •> r 1J:1 ,t. n>. July 7. I<" Ind J.nap'.li - 7 .'1 n in. i>„. iimtin; lim'i < ■ r II 11' )>. m. .Inly 7. Stops mail' . intrtti 7 Jill p. m. I 1 J'l p in . i' i'hi'.i;-n Suburl.au - tjay. Tickets cood j„ coaches only. Half fare for children. I 1 fid Sill pari ii ulars at * 'ity Ti.-kd • *tTj• •-. 1 ; M'.n im >.t Cirri'-. I'hi.ii" TANARUS llf y and Inion Sl.iliuii. pln.m- llll.y .'J'.-Vi.

SAVE FOR SECURITY ST VnsTlCb >iiow that about "•' people tnii of oai.'b 100 are dependent in old age been use they overlook the importance of small amounts and of *y>trniatio saving. Put aside regularly sonm portion of "ir plus i<r earnings and let it nnnpound and grow. fMake every payday a “saveday” hape at The (feltie. For 55 V ears /?% Dividends Wc Have, Cowponnded Paid W 3 Semi-Annually Serving Savers Since 1874 $ 1 3,000,000 Celtic Svg. & Loan Assn. 23 West Ohio St.

16 NEW INTERNES JOIN METHODIST HOSPITAL !>r. William E. King Succeeds Dr. L. B. Robrock as Chief, Sixteen new internes at the Methodist hospital were on duty today. Eleven arc graduates of the 1929 class of the Indiana university school of medicine. The internes will also have anew; chief. Dr. William E. King, who succeeds Dr. L. B. Robrock, who has resigned to specialize in otolaryngology at the James Whitcomb Riley Hospital for Children. Dr. King, who graduated from Indiana university medical school, served a interne at the Methodist hospital in 1927*28 and last year enrolled in the postgraduate medical school of the University of Pennsylvania. The internes arc: Drs. Abraham Wainston. Carl .J. Schneider. Irvin Wilkins, Frederic M. Applegate. T. A. Dvkhuizen, Norman S. Loomis, Wayne Brown, Wiliam Dugan. Leroy B. Chambers, William W. Jones, Albert F. Stclhorn. Ralph Wilson, Thomas Rogers. William Vincent Woods. John M. Tindal and G. T. Bowers.

Way to Build ill s y;. *soo** 9 2,000 TjfSF the “Honor Ril*“ Sysfem at burnt which 'hips all material* aradr ct?f direct from ritr facfrp. Pa'-r Pa*. „1 |o*r *2O per rnfinih —a Itxan nf an JC much a 7 KI 7r am all exJr- plained in mrr new ''" f Grt it FREE. "The Fcrndirlr” Monthlr SJC r% *Kmwr>'and Bath Pavrrr-*? SEARS, ROEBUCK and CO, Roosnolt I’.ltig. I.lnroln* 815? INDIANA POLIS Tli* cot|jMn entitle* xmi to I*onK of farts and fiunroN. .No obligation. Nh m r \ fjf]r p ** ,

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES!

STAKES MAYOR RACE HOPE ON DRUNKS' VOTES Jimmy Walker's Opponent Promises to Prevent Falling Off Island. BY HARRY FERGUSON. I nitrri rrrec Staff Correspond- U NEW YORK, July 3.—Axel TFrcdlund, A. M., B. S-. and sonic time street car conductor, came out To- mayor today and staked his hopes for election on a plan he has devised to keep intoxicated gentlemen from falling off Manhattan island. Frcdlund's plan is so simple he professed to be astonished that other candidates had not thought of it—he merely proposes to put a high fence at the points where imbibers arc most likely to walk into the rivers or ocean. Although Mr. Frcdlund 'lndependent Democrat * is not a drinking man himself lie explained he would become knight errant to every New Yorker who raises his voice to 'Sweet Adeline’’ and proposes to “have just one more and then go home.” ‘ There is at present.” said Frcdlund. "no adequate system for caring for the large class of our citizens who occasionally or habitually drink too much. “As soon as I am elected T shall establish recuperation places at convenient points throughout the city. “Policemen will be under strict orders to take charge of all intoxicated men and convey them to these places where they may rest and receive any medical attention necessary.” Speakeasies, according to Fredlund’s platform, arc a menace to the American home and he plans to cope with that evil by licensing the

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Heads Veterans

William J. Murphy, above., of Santa Ana. Cal., is the newly elected commander of American war veterans. He was chosen at the annual convention at Detroit. Murphy was a second lieutenant in the Three hundred and first engineers of the Seventy-seventh division during the World war.

sale of liquor at soda fountains, and seeing to it that the fountains undersell the speakeasies and drive them out of business. Then Frcdlund took up liis transportation proposals, and, as a former street, car conductor, spoke with a certain degree of authority. Street cars, it developed, will be abolished by Mayor Frcdlund. “I have twice lost my job as a street car conductor,” he said, "because I agitated for my contention that street cars should be done away with. They will be replaced by dou-ble-deck motor bus speedsters.” Man Hurt in Fall ANDERSON, Ind., July 3—lsaac La whom, 54, fell from the roof of a barn here, suffering serious injury to his spine and four broken ribs.

U. S. HIGHWAY CHIEF AGAINST HIGH GAS TAXES Twenty * One Legislatures This Year Boosted Levy on Motorists. £/ ,v riup •*'-// oicard Xcic*V f JVcr Alli'iiicc WASHINGTON, July 3.—A note of warning against the tendency of state legislatures to increase gasoline taxes was sounded today by Thomas H. MacDonald, chief of the United States bureau of public roads. Bureau records disclose that twenty-one legislatures this year boosted the existing rate as a means of shearing additional funds for refad improvement. Os this number seventeen states give most of the increase to the improvement of country roads as distinguished from the state system. The gasoline tax rate, in many states now has reached 5 cents and one legislature, that of South Carolina. raised it to 6 cents this year. MacDonald's warning is directed not only to the danger of imposing such a high rate, but to the action of many states in not giving their highway departments sole control of the expenditure of the gasoline revenue. “The motoring public has a right to demand the application of funds to the completion and improvement of roads which form a part of the state highway system and not for

—JULY SPECIALS ON PERMANENTS dga, ART-NOR LE MUR $3.50 bea™op $5.00 fPJi l our months resets . -eTi W 345 Mass. Ave. siven it "O sluin'- LI. X*,

purely local roads." MacDonald says. He pointed out that unless state highway departments control the expenditures not only will proper correlation of through routes be made difficult, but that costs of construction and maintenance will br unreasonably high.

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EAT VARIED, BALANCED FOODS Use a Dash of Sugar to Make Many Foods Delightful Modern science emphasizes that a limited diet is monotonous and that it is had for us. For enjoyment and for health, cat varied, balanced foods. The greatest ally of the balanced diet is flavor. Good cooking is the foundation of healthful eating. The woman in the home is the guardian of our diet, and thus of our health. Learn the secret of a dash of sugar in making cereals, fruits and milk dc-scrt.- delicious. Try also the old secret of delicious cookery just rediscovered by four women, rooking experts working a New York skyscraper. Add a tablrrpoon of sugar to vegetable; while they are cooking in a small amount of water. Note how the vegetables improve, in color, in freshness and in flavor. The dash of sugar does not make the vegetables taste sweet. It makes them more delightfully tbeir own natural vegetable selves than ever. Slimness ha gone out of date. The angular figure is no longer fashionable. Don't gorge and don't limit your family's diet to a few foods.* Most foods are. more delicious and nourishing with sugar. Good food promotes good health. The Sugar Institute. V.I - . i t ix-meiit.

PHILCO RADIOS Cash or Payments Telephone l . Charles Koehring sect Virginia lKexel 1411