Indianapolis Times, Volume 41, Number 71, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 August 1929 — Page 9
'AL'G. 2, 1020
gHH I Open Until QS£ j ' Ojfflj I Only once a year do we have a sale—a sale that is a sale both in merchandise iwj jj>..; : | values and credit terms. Our slogan, “The Chain Store Offers More,” is jjj UIUUIV 1 already well known and appreciated by Indianapolis furniture buyers, and ifejf I I ,** r | I now for the next eight days is the one time of the year that we go to the very I baiuruay I bottom with both prices and terms. 1 I I Night! I SATURDAY and MONDAY! | t 4 9l Bedroom ITT" ,I j In Your ° utMt Complete JSiSt] I flMlitlll l 6 See This Outfit Assembled in Our Bedroom Dept. 1 | . Exactly as shown. Beautiful walnut veneer over the choicest of American hardwoods. That | i>3 ▼ describes the suite itself. And the other pieces have been selected to make the entire outfit O'* Irr one of which you can well be proud. *“* * fvt nil make a very liberal al- $7 DELIVERS THIS OUTFIT COMPLETE! B 8 |J iliiture in exchange for new. aVSf bpw jt|W and have it delivered HERE IS WHAT YOU GET: j — 3-Wing Vanity —2 Pillows —Bedspread —Vanity Bench SSO 9x 1 2 ft. Axmsnst©r |L y —Full Size Bed —Springs —Lamp Base — 3-Pc. Drapery Set 'i|| 4%. sis f 4 tJIG HOO —Roomy Chest of Drawers—Mattress —Lamp Shade \ * Plenty of Credit—Make Your Own Terms! mi' * |S ■ PATTII RftflnM’ 11 Saturday Special Kitchen Specials lIS I Walnut Finish •" KittlltlstMls •■ ■■ • j| pHOME OUTFIT Metal Bed sm irufet sets. $15.50 1 H L je. mb I $9.85 value 530.0 Q Gas Stoves. ... $19.00 ’5 I A\ ■lk .AO 551.110 Kitchen Cabinet. sl9-50 || Jj W /pOfPj I V Complete Line of Florence g| |B BP | & Oil Stoves Greatly Reduced! |g| j The living room consists of Davenport. Arm Chair and Wing Chair In Jacquard Velour; I „ . jnetal Floor Lamp. Library Table. Smoker. End Taole and Table Lamp. These pieces will fl theatre pWIT^jUS. I The Bed Room Suite consists of bed. chest and large dresser In selected walnut veneers I I I |g| u A Small Deposit Will Hold Your I k*&) If | Selection for Future Delivery g ' ' VAS:u: ~ Ngaply |j j ct WTrurar
THE INDIANAPOLIS TOILS
PENSION FOR FEDERAL OFFICERS ADVOCATED Officers Killed on Duty Prompts Texas Judge's Observation. Bu Serippe-Howard Xeu'*i>ai>er Alliance EL PASO. Tex., Aug. 2.—County Judge E. B. McClintock today advocated a law to provide pensions for the families of federal officers killed in enforcing federal laws. “I think every officer killed or wounded in line of duty, whether he be federal, state, county or city officer ought to be treated just as are soldiers in the matter of pensions.” he said. The judge's observation was prompted bv the death of Evan Scotten, killed in enforcing prohibition. HOOVER PARDONS 7 Restores Civil Rights to 35 More. Bu Scripptt-Howard Xetcf paper AUianct WASHINGTON, Aug. 2.—President Hoover has granted seven full pardons to federal convicts during his first five months in the White House, according to justice department records. In addition Hoover has restored civil rights to former prisoners in thirty-five cases and has granted a | dozen commutations of sentences. New cases are being subrriitted every day and there is no record yet where the chief executive has refused clemency. Pardons are usually Initiated through the justice department and are not acted upon at the White House until a recommendation has been made by the attorney-general. Real gold dust is one of the materials used by an artist who specializes in miniature paintings, some of which measures only half an inch across. He uses a magnifying glass in his painting.
Excursions 16 Day Limit Aug. 6 — Aug. 20 Niagara Falls, N. Y. $1779 Virginia Beach, Va. s2B§§ TicJtch, resercations and detailed information at: City Ticket Office, 112 Monument Circle,Phone Riley 3322; and Union Station, Phone Riley 3355. J. P. Corcoran, Div. Pass. Agent, 112 Monument Circle. BIG FOUR ROUTE
f.v—..L..... ,n rr „ of VI fMV ,TtV: 9“ U,te be . auty - mounting. 1Tou must see kt. ollrt white 11 • K r,id. FAY ONLY SI.OO A WEEK! <Sotf)ir JarprooP Slatches M. udi„...525 SL....s3sfef . It. J,r-proof ron.trijollon m.lo, ,h| ~,. IiIPIIHII, Solid White Gold dwrahii .. Use\bur Cr^—trust You WINDSOR JEWELS,.COiAPANYj] 135 N. Illinois Si Theatre Bldg. f
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HEAT EXPERTS CLAIM WEATHER SAFE AND SANE U. S. Bureau Remembers Hotter and Colder Days in Long Ago. Bu Scriops-H ourird .\nr*papcr Alliance WASHINGTON, Aug. 2.—01* man weather has been having more fun than usual with suffering humanity the last six months, but scientists of the United States weather bureau, mopping their steaming brows insist that nothing abnormal has happened. Perhaps the widest variation in temperature has been at Bismarck, N. D., which had a United States low of 43 below zero last Feb. 19, followed by 100 degrees on July 21 —a range of 143 degrees. And if you are dissatisfied with the brand of heat in your old home town, you might try Phoenix, Ariz. which for a whole week had maximums of from 102 to 108. ‘'But nothing general or alarming has happened to the weather. We have had better summers and colder winters,” said Dr. Preston C. Day, meteorological expert of the weather bureau. The bureau's reports show that January and February were unusually cold west of the Alleghenies, March and April so generally warm that unwary fruits burst into bloom as far north as Michigan, followed by a spell of cool and rainy weather in May. Nor was the whole country sweltered under a continued heat blanket this summer. Killing frosts were reported from the upper peninsula of Michigan and in central Wisconsin the week of July 23—the same week that Bismarck had 100 degrees of heat and Oklahoma City reported 104. Temperatures that week were "rather too low” for corn in the eastern corn belt. "As to our own cold weather in the mid-west,” he said, "cold polar air is always flowing down. One snow storm having blanketed the mid-continent, the snow acted like a mirrror and reflected away the sun’s heat into space. You might almost say it made the sun colder, since its heat was greatly lessened. "But we haven’t had anything really remarkable. 11 has been 91 in Washington, but I remember 107. And speaking of cold winters, do you remember 1918?” MONK T 0 BE HONORED COLD SPRING HARBOR, N. Y., Aug. 2. —Gregor Mendel, the Austrian monk who founded the moder science of genetics, is to be remembered with a monument erected in his native village of Neu-Tit-schein, Czecho-Slovakia. A group of scientists in Czechoslovakia have undertaken to raise $3,000, of which they have now collected $1,500.
