Indianapolis Times, Volume 41, Number 87, Indianapolis, Marion County, 21 August 1929 — Page 18

PAGE 18

POLICE RADIO BACKERS PUSH FUNDJIAMPAIGN Citizens Commission Will Bring Experts Here for Counsel. First meeting of the citizens radio commission seeking to furnish the police department with radio equipment, probably will be held Tuesday light at the Chamber of Commerce, Andrew J Allen, promoter of the movement, declared today. Allen said the Associated Employers and the Chamber of Commerce will give a complimentary dinner, at which time the commission will be organized. Sub-com-mittees on finance, technical matters. publicity, equipment and operation will be named to study the needs. Mayor L. Ert Slack. Police Chief Claude Worley, Sheriff George Winkler, city councilmen and safety board members, have been invited. Folice Chief Rutledge of Detroit, or Police Commissioner Russell of Chicago, may be brought here to discuss the value of radio in police work. Lieutenant Kenneth R. Cox, Detroit policeman, has been named technical advisor of the committee. Contributions of S3OO from the Indianapolis Clearing House Association, SIOO from the State Auto Insurance Company, and SIOO from Best Laundry, boosted the total fund to buy police radio equipment to $1,075. Goal of $30,000 has been fixed for Oct. 1. Organizations which have appointed representative? on the missionA'sociated Employers of Indianapolis. Andrew J. Allen, secretary; Chamber of Commerce. Fred J. Denny, Best-Grand Laundry; Foremen's Club of Indianapolis. John C. Rademacher. Marmon Motor Car Company: Foundrymen's Association Guy E. Street. American Foundry Company; Indianapolis Clearing House Association, Irving W. Lemaux, Security Trust Company: Indian- ! apolis Radio Club of American Radio Relay League, R. B. Annis. Thomas- , Skinner Steel Products Company; j National Metal Trades Association, j Stanley C. Brooks, American Metal j Furniture Company; Rotary Club, i Howard T. Griffith, Udell Works: I Scientech Club, Donald J. Angus, ! Esterline-Angus Company: WFBM, Blyfhe Q. Hendricks: WKBF, Noble B. Watson; Marion County Bankers ! Association. L. A. Wiles, of Fletcher j Saving and Trust Company; Church Federation, Dr. E. N. Evans. MEXICAN TROOPS SENT TO PUT DOWN MAYANS Tncatan Peninsula Tribes Rebel in Quintana Roo. B;i Vnited Press VERA CRUZ, Mexico, Aug. 21. ; The Mexican cruiser Anahuac was j en route _to the state of Quintana j Roo today with three infantry battalions to suppress an uprising j among the Mayan tribes of the Yu- ] catan peninsula. Professor Moises Haenz. of the | federal dt .jartment of education, j also embarked for Quintana Roo to j investigate the cause of the uprising, j Rid of Rheumatism and Kidney Pains Says Relief Came So Suddenly it Surprised Him. After years of torture from rheumatism. back-ache, and kidney trouble, health has come to Karl F. Kasch. 834 No. Shwanee St., Freeport, 111. His letter gives the an- j swer. as follows: “I suffered agony for 8 years, with j rheumatism and kidney trouble. The I back-ache, and the pains in my J shoulders and legs were so intense j that at times I would have to stop i everything and lie down. I was continually taking laxatives for | constipation, but got no real relief, j I lost weight, had no pep at all. and got up every morning feeling tired and worn out. I had tried so many different remedies, I was terribly discouraged. But I finally found the right one. Viuna. The quick results amazed me. The tired feeling •vanished and my appetite came back. I began to get good sleep and cat hearty meals without constipation or other distress. The awful rheumatic pains and back-ache left me. and never came back. I have gained 16 pounds since I started ! taking Viuna. It has made anew ! man of me.” Thousands of hopeless sufferers j from kidney trouble, back-ache, stomach trouble and rheumatism, have been restored to perfect health by this wonder medicine. Why shouldn't It do as much for you? Try one bottle of Viuna under positive guaranty. $i at druggists or mailed postpaid by Iceland Medicine Cos.. Indianapolis. Ind.

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TUPPER SAW WAR FROM FRONT LINES Charles Farrell and Janet Gaynor Have the Leads ir? ‘Lucky Star,’ Due at the Apollo Saturday. Although Tristram Tupper went into the World war as a private and came out as a major, taking up the writing profession immediately after the armistice, he never included a war angle to any of his many stories until he wrote the story that marks Frank Borzagte’s tenth cinema production for Fox Films, “Lucky Star,” a Movietone taiker co-featuring Janet Gaynor and Charles Farrell. "Lucky Star,” which opens Saturday at the Apollo, is in no sense a war story, but sidelines of the great conflict represent one of the “episodes” in the life of Charles Farrell, who plays Timothy Osborn. This Tupper short story ran in one of the national weeklies under the name of "Three

Episodes in the Life of Timothy Osborn.” Tupper waited until he could get the right perspective of the titan struggle before he delved into the knowledge gained by many months in the thick of things at the front and put this knowledge into a story. Although he has been following literary pursuits for a decade, he has found many other interesting things of which to write. His first novel was “Terwiliger,” which gained such popularity that it was translated into several languages, and, strangely, Frank Borzage, who directed Mr. Tupper’s latest brain-child, also directed Tupper’s first literary' effort, which reached the screen as “Children of the Dust.” This is the third Tupper story to be put into celluloid under Borzage’s craftsmanship, the other being “The River,” co-featuring Charles Farrell and Mary Duncan. Besides Miss Gaynor and Farrell in "Lucky Star,” the cast includes Hedwiga Reicher, Guinn Williams and a number of other able players. Miss Gaynor is cast as Mary Tucker, a capricious farm girl, daughter of a struggling down east hillside widow. Farrell as Tim Osborn. a paralyzed war veteran, has an interesting role Sonya Levien. who is responsible for some or the ablest adaptations in the film field, wrote the scenario, while John Hunter Booth of many Broadway successes did the dialog. Indianapolis theaters today offer: William Desmond at the Lyric, "Smiling Irish Eyes” at the Circle, “Hard to Get” at the Indiana, “On With the Show" at the Apollo, “The Single Standard” at the Palace, “Noah's Ark at the Ohio, and movies at the Colonial. France Damaged by Forest , Fires By l nited Prrttp 9 BORDEAUX, France, Aug. 21. Fierce forest fires in the departments of Gironde and Landes have destroyed a large area covered by pine trees. Especial damage was done in the region of Lugos. Army airplanes aided in directing the firefighters.

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INDIANA LAW SCHOOL University of Indianapolis School-year 1929-1930 opens Sept. 18. Three veers’ course of stud 7. leading to degree of Bachelor of Laws. Graduation qualifies for Bar Examinations and admission to practice. For information, address JAMES A. BOHBACH. Dean Indiana Law School. Phone Ri. 3433. Indianapolis.

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MAKES MILK TEST Doctor Measures Toughness of Curd§. Bu Science Service BOSTON, Aug. 21.—New hope for bottle babies was held out today by Dr. Reumen L. Hill, nutrition expert of Logan, Utah, at the Thirteenth international physiological congress in session here this week. Dr. Hill has developed a test at the Utah state experiment station by which the toughness of the curd formed the normal coagulation of milk can be measured. There is reason to believe, he declared, that this quality of toughness in milk curds is a more important factor in choosing baby’s milk than the fat content, previously the item most stressed in picking out suitable infants’ food. Not more than 10 per cent of cows, according to the tests made by the Utah doctor, give milk with curds soft enough for delicate babies to digest. By the use of the new curd test it is possible to find cow’s milk that closely approximates mother’s mlik, an invaluable asset for young and sickly babies that have to be fed by a bottle. Such milk, he added, when fed to infants, requires little if any modification or dilution, a condition that does away with the troublesome mixing of the complicated formula on which many modern babies get their start in life.

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MYSTERY HOLE IN CEMETERY PUZZLES COPS Police Suspect Fraternity Prank on ‘Storage for Bootleggers/ Discovery of a hole five feet long and a foot deep, in an unfrequented part of the Anderson cemetery, 6500 East Tenth street, today puzzled deputy sheriffs and police Clarence Britton, caretaker discovered the hole Tuesday morning after he had seen eight men in three autos drive into the cemetery and spend some time searching with flashlights. 'They reappeared Tuesday night, Britton said, but he did not go into the cemetery either night while the men were there. Deputy Sheriff Fred Fox, who investigated, found that the hole had been dug, not over a grave, but next to one which is said to hold the body of a woman who died in 1879. The theory that ghouls were at work was abandoned by Fox at the start of the investigation. “From the appearance of this hole, which has recently been dug,

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I’d say it looked like those fellows were trying to bury someone or something rather than dig up anything.” Britton said drivers of each of the autos stood guard by the cars Monday night while the other men went into the graveyard. He said one of the men said: “I wonder if anybody saw us” as they left the vicinity. Neighbors discredited Britton’s story, but the hole was there to prove someone had been digging. Britton and Fox found that the hole was not much more than a foot deep, but that there was a second layer of sod at the base of it and another loose layer at the top. Theories that the digging might have been a fraternity prank or that bootleggers had placed some of thenwares in “storage” were given more credence by investigators than one that grave robbers were active.

Pimply Faces Had Complexions. Moles. Warts, superfluoas Hair. Wrinkles. A g* Lines, etc., corrected. Send for booklet. —Established Here 25 Years— C. R. Per Due, M .D. Institute of Dermatology 411 State Life Bldg.

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FAIR GUARDS NAMED; Fire and Police Chiefs Select Details. Preparations for the annual state fair detail of police and firemen were begun today by Police Chief Claude M. Worley and Fire Chief Harry E. Voshell. Voshell said Company No. 20 prob- | ably will be assigned to the fair- j ground under Battalion Chief John J. O’Brien. J

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Worley is contemplating a detail of about eighty-flve under Major Louis Johnson to handle traffic and guard the fairground property. A

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special squad will be assigned to handle the state fair traffic and eliminate congestion along the Maple Road boulevard at the entrance.