Indianapolis Times, Volume 41, Number 95, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 August 1929 — Page 12

PAGE 12

DESIGN SEWER ON NORTH SIDE , FOR LONG USE City Consulting Engineer Savs Construction Will Last 25 Years. The proposed $398,000 Broad Ripple and Riverside interceptor sewer which has been ordered by the city aanitarv board is designed to serve the disricts for twenty-five years, according to Charles H. Hurd, conu!ting engineer. The sewer has a daily capacity of 13.000,000 gallons and will serve about 65.000 persons. Construction of the sewer will eliminate contamination of White River by the overflow from the Broad Ripple area. '-eepage of the present sewer sys*em amounts to about 4.500,000 gallon/. daily, greatly reducing the efficiency of the system,, Hurd said. As the load on the sewer is increased the board plans to eliminate 3.000,000 gallons of the infiltration, thereby Increasing the efficiency of the sewer. The plan, adopted Thursday by Hie board, calls for a route along White River from Westfield boulevcrd and Meridian street to Sixteenth street and Speedway avenue, crossing the river at Northwestern avenue and Rocky Ripple. The route is practically the same as adopted by the board last August, there being minor changes in specications to meet objections of B. J. T. Jeup. sanitary commissioner, and City Engineer A H. Moore. Hurd was employed to draw plans end estimates on the project in May, 1927. by the board, then composed of Frank Lingenfelter, city engineer, Otto C. Ross and Russell T. MacFall. Hurd will receive a total of 5' 2 per cent commission on the project, 3 per cent being for plans and the remainder for engineering- super vision. Needed improvements in the sewage disposal plant, which were contemplated to care for the increased sewage, will be delayed until another year, Moore said.

THE J STYLE and QUALITY of DRESSES Many times their price in this special selling Saturday — Royal AC Blue . . .3I Wood §1 Brown . . .HJ| n S t's^o 14-16-18-20 1 j||y 36-38-40 and .If Black . . . . BRENNER’S 26 E. Wash.

St. Anthony's Church to Be Rededicated Monday

An Altar View at St. Anthony’s

Rededication of St. Anthony's Catholic church, 378 North Warman avenue, also conferring of the sacrament of confirmation on a class of several hundred children and nearly fifty adults will be celebrated Labor day, Sept. 2, W’ith the Rt. Rev. Joseph Chartrand, D. D., bishop of the diocese, In charge. Extensive improvements at the church during the summer have brought about almost a complete change of the Interior. Anew marble altar, marble communion rail, hard surfaced flooring, new stations for the way of the cross, new lighting, altar lamps, statues, interior decorating and pews have been installed. This will occasion the reblessing of the church by the bishop. Festivities Monday will open with a solemn high mass (coram espiscopo) celebrated by Bishop Chartrand, assisted by the Rev. Albert H. Busald, pastor of the church, and the Rev. Albert Schad, assistant rector. Following the administration of the sacrament of confirmation, the bishop and visiting clergy will be guests of the Rev. Mr. Busald at a chicken dinner in the school hall given by the Altar Society of the church. Mrs. John Colins, is general chair.

man of the dinner and amusement arrangements and will be assisted by Mesdames Dennis Brosnan. Frank Fiest, Harry Smock, J. J. Dillon, P. J. Lenahan, Kate Connors, H. E. Weintraut, Mary Wohlheiter, T. D. Boyle, Edward Whittingham, William Mendenwald, George Usher, Carl Pretzinger, Edward F. Miller, Mary Sheridan, Frank Smock, Elizabeth O’Gara, Lena O’Connor, Gertrude Harris, Charles McCarthy, William Kauffman and Martin Dolan. Mr. J. J. Eilers is chairman of ticket committee.

I : J,L;i Indiana State Fair I | 8 BIG ! JAYS | Js August ill—September 1-2-3-4-5-6-7 M “Larger and Better Than Ever ” A 1 *|P m $172,000 in PRIZES and PURSES BHL § M NATIONAL SWINE SHOW S WILL BE HELD IN CONNECTION WITH STATE FAIR—ENTRIES FROM ALL PARTS OF COUNTRY / fyS Better Babies Contest Poultry Show Farm Bureau ... Wi jfy’ Outstanding Exhibits of Cattle, Horses, Swine, Sheep, Poultry and Produce. H HORSE SHOW NIGHTLY IN COLISEUM % Jjj§ Big Rodeo Show Nightly in Front of Grandstand |||f I RADIO SHOW -and- AUTO SHOW £ Sponsored by Indianapolis Radio Distributors. Will Be Held Daily In the Large Exposition iBBr All Latest Models Will Be on Display All Week. Bldg. See All the Latest Cars Under One Roof. Tmrj jp CHILDREN’S DAY, SATURDAY, August 31st Jjg?p3 ft ipf CHILDREN 12 YEARS AND UNDER WILL BE ADMITTED T O GROUNDS FREE V 11 § * D - D - murphy shows *flQyg|| H 1 -sIIKS grand circuit racing 1 SB THE FASTEST HORSES.... THE BEST DRIVERS ||| & I — "pFrui'i 1 $55,000 in PURSES E I LLjIAL. SPECIAL RATES ON ALL RAILROADS, BUSSES AND TRACTION m Sunday in Coliseum lines during the week P) Charles prandon Booth Bring the Family .... Spend Several Day s jgf WILL SPEAK —PLENTY OF PARKING SPACES plenty of seats. No Admisison Admission- Adults, 50c- Children, 25c £t 8 INDIANA BOARD OF AGRICULTURE M E. J. BARKER, Sec.-Treas. E. D. LOGSDON, President Room 212, State House, Indianapolis. Indianapolis

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

FRANCE LEADS ALL EUROPE IN HOARDOF GOLD Money Markets Amazed by Sudden Acquisition of Wealth. BY MILTON BRONNER NEA Service Writer LONDON, Aug. 30.—While all Europe has been moaning that the United States, “enriched by the great war,” has all the gold in the world, the money markets of the world suddenly have realized France has the greatest hoard of gold jn Europe and daily is pulline more from England into its coffere. In fact, since mid-June, Fiance has drained from the Bank of England nearly $100,000,000 in gold. Almost every day an airplane laden with gold bullion, has flown from Croydon to Paris. It has been the reigning sensation of London's financial district and has had its repercussions in Wall Street. Indeed, it has been hinted, but denied, that Montague Norman, Governor of the Bank of England, arranged for joint action between Wall Street and London’s “City” to resist any militant intention the government of France and the Bank of France might have In the international financial and political field. For America, too, has felt the gold drain. In the year ended June

MODERN NEWSPAPER IS CALLED ‘MENACE’ Columbus, 0., Pastor Blames Press for Moral Deficiencies. Bu United Press COLUMBUS, 0., Aug. 30.—The amount of crime and sex news in the press today makes the newspaper “a grave menace to civilization,” according to the Rev. J. A. Toy, United Brethren church pastor. Toy, in a sermon titled “Sex, Crime, Piffle and the Newspapers,’ charged the press with prostituting its high function. “Much of the present disregard for law must be laid on the shoulders of the newspapers,” he declared. “They are doing nothing to stem the tide.” He criticised the Columbus papers for printing intimate details of the Snook trial. 1, 1928, about half a billion dollars worth of gold was exported from the United States and most of this went to swell the coffers of the Bank of France. The financial papers of France offer these reasons for the acquisition of so much gold: That French banks have taken advantage of the fall in the value of the pound to buy gold from the Bank of England. That there is the regular summer seasonal demand for gold to meet payments and the further fact that with renewed confidence in the stabilized franc, the French peasants are once more beginning to hoard money. That French investors are taking their profits on British investments because of a lack of confidence in what the British Labor government may do.

DEMOCRATS TO DECIDE FATE OF TARIFF BILL Dissension Among Republican Majority May Lead to Defeat. Bu Scriups-Haward \euspaper Alliance WASHINGTON. Aug. 30.—The fate of the Republican tariff bill in the senate may rest, not among the Republicans, but with a half dozen democratic senators who hertofore have bolted their party's traditional stand to vote for high tariffs. The present senate lineup is fiftysix Republicans and thirty-nine Democrats, counting among the latter the sure-to-be Democratic successor of the late Senator Lawrence Tyson of Tennessee. But dissension among this huge Republican majority has already shot it full of holes so far as the tariff is concerned. Thirteen Republicans, mostly from agricultural states, followed Senator Borah’s lead last June in voting to restrict the tariff raises entirely to farm products. In fact, Borah would have won had not seven Democrats voted against such a resolution of the tariff bill. The vote on the Borah resolution was 38 to 39. In senate consideration of the completed bill, Borah is expected to keep fairly intact his farm-radical bloc, and to add such senators as Blaine of Wisconsin and McMaster

of South Dakota, who did not vote on the resolution last June. Senator Shipstead of Minnesita, Farmer-Laborite, also is expected to vote against higher tariffs. Defection of the Borah bloc would cut the Republicans who advocate

CoMmC 15 Fltrid Sracte ■J ipm. When Babies IfllSllsl f |)Y I fc)| JL V JL yj Babies will cry, often for no ■ apparent reason. You may not jUI know what’s wrong, but you can j'V iMMQgMSCSSH always give Castoria. This soon [jijjij has your little one comforted; if ZJ not, you should call a doctor. Don’t experiment with medicines the thing to give. It is almost intended for the stronger systems certain to clear up any minor of adults! Most of those little ailment, and could by no possiupsets are soon soothed away by bility do the youngest child the a little of this pleasant-tasting, slightest harm. So it’s the first gentle-acting children’s remedy thing to think of when a child has that children like. a coated tongue; won’t play, can’t It may he the stomach, or may sleep, is fretful or out of sorts, be the little bowels. Or in the case Get the genuine; it always has of older children, a sluggish, con- Chas. H. Fletcher’s signature on stipated condition. Castoria is still the package.

-AUG. 30, 1929

higher tariffs to about forty. This is eight Jess than a majority of the. senate, and the Democrats and Progressives might be able to write the kind of tariff bill they want, if it were not that the Democrats, too. have defections.