Indianapolis Times, Volume 41, Number 147, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 October 1929 — Page 10
PAGE 10
VETERAN RAIL WORKER DIES ATAGE OF 77 Michael McMahon Retired From Big Four Post Seven Years Ago. Funeral services for Michael McMahon, 77. of 2734 North Illinois street, wno died Tuesday, after a long Illness, will be held at the home at 8:30 a. m. Thursday and at SS. Peter and Paul cathedral at 9. Burial will be in Holy Cross cemetery. Mr. McMahon retired as baggage master of the Big Four railroad seven years ago after forty-eight years’ continuous service. He was bom in Washington Cqurthou.se, O. He was a member of the Catholic Knights of Ohio and SS. Peter and Paul cathedral. Three sons, Robert McMahon of Indianapolis, Captain B. B. McMahon, head of the military department of De Pauw University, and Frank E. McMahon, survive. Long Illness Is Fatal Mrs. Lyman B. Holleman, 67, of 5139 North Capitol avenue, died at her home Tuesday after an illness rs several years. Funeral sendees and burial will be in New Harmony, Ind., Friday morning. Mrs. Holleman was born at Mt. Vernon and came to Indianapolis fourteen years ago. She was a member of the Order of the Eastern Star of Mt. Vernon and of the Episcopal church. Beside her husband, Lyman B. Holleman, of the Indiana department of banking, a son, Audley O. Holleman, survives.
Kentuckian Dies Here Governor Charles H. Keever today was to question Mr. and Mrs. Joe Johnson of Louisville, in connection with the sudden death of Earl Champion. 25, of Louisville at the city hospital Tuesday afteronon. Champion was driven from Cleveland with the Johnsons and became ill, dying shortly after being taken to the hospital. Physicians said death was due to a cerebral hemorrhage. WHY SUFFER WITH HEMORRHOIDS? There is no excuse nowadays for j the vast amount of distress, dis- : comfort, and frequently severe pain, caused by the malady known as Piles (hemorrhoids). Get 2 bottle of Pylbane Put 15 drops in water and drink. That s all. Do this and your trouble will probably end. No salves, suppositories, injections, or other troublesome applications. FyUiiine mis been used in thousand of eases with almost Infallible results Price refunded to anyone not entlrt Isatisfied with benefits from trial bottle In accordance with eertifirate in pack ■fro. Under these circumstances. If is Jour own fault ff you continue to suffer from this distressing ailment. Ask for Pylbane. Sold by ALL WALGREEN IIRt'O STORES —Advertisement.
WANT AD CONTEST This contest started yesterday and will run for five days. It is a brand new one and should furnish a lot of amusement. Be sure to read carefully all the details. When working on this contest, bear in mind there’s always something of interest in Times Want Ads. STARTS TODAY! You are not too late to start this contest. But you must get a copy of yesterday’s TIMES for the two pictures which started the contest appeared in yesterday’s editions. You can get a back number of the TIMES by applying at the TIMES office. Or your newsdealer may have one left. Ask him first! s 2s Cash and Circle Theater Tickets for Many Times Want Ad Readers! Rules for this contest are as follows: Altogether ten pictures will be published in the Want Ad section of folks connected with the production of “Broadway." Two are published today and two appeared yesterday. Starting yesterday “facts" about these Broadway personalities will be published daily among the Want Ads. You may have to hunt for these “facts" but you can find them. When you have all ten pictures and have found all the “facta" then tell who the pictures represent and what each had to do with the production of “Broadway." Prizes will be as follows and will be awarded to those who send in the proper identifications arranged In the neatest and most original manner. Send your answers to the “Broadway” editor, care of The Indianapolis Times Want Ad department. All replies must be at The Times office before 5 P. M. Monday. The names of the winners will be announced on The Times Want Ad Page, Tuesday, Nov. 0. Prize awards according to neatness, correctness and originality Contestants must abide by the ruling of Judges. Prizes in the Want Ad Contest Are as Follows: First Prize—sls.oo in Cash and Pair of Tickets to see "Broadway.” Second Pffee—slo.oo in Cash and Pair of Tickets to see “Broadway.” Third Prize—Family Ticket to see “Broa-dway.” And Two Tickets Each to the 17 Persons Whose Answers are Considered Next Best. A Good Habit Thousands of people have formed a habit of reading The Times Want Ads daily—not that they are looking for anything in particular, but because they have learned that the Want Ad section daily contains business opportunities that may come only once in a lifetime. Scarcely a day goes by that some unusual offer is not contained in “the Want Ads"—an offer that means money and success for some one—no one can tell surely when his or her big moment may come—and it may be in tomorrow's "Times Want Ads." It pays to search for opportunity, for only exceptional people have opportunity come searching foe them. Simplify YOUR search by getting the Want Ad habit. Check daily your “Broadway” Times star pictures C" with the original photos of these stars with names jgjptjk 'jjaßm shown in windows of L. STRAUSS & CO. W Read The Times Want Ads Daily! ——
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LEAGUEJMS FEES Anti-Saloon Attorneys Suffer in Ruling. Attorneys for the Anti-Saloon League no longer will receive SIOO fees for bringing injunction proceedings against persons accused of selling liquor at their residence, Superior Judge Linn D. Hay has ruled. The ruling was on a suit brought by the Anti-Saloon League against John and Mary Vidmar, 770 North Holmes avenue, to prevent the sale and manufacture of liquor at the Vidmar residence. The defendants were permanently enjoined by Hay from conducting the alleged “speakeasy.” In the action, Judge Hay said, it had been “apparently agreed on” by
On request, sent with stamped, addressed envelope, Mr. Ripley will furnish proof of anything depicted by him.
attorneys for both sides to abandon padlock proceedings for the injunction action, which, Hay said, “did not accomplish the purpose for which it was intended.” CHANGE SPECIFICATIONS All Sign Companies Can Bid on City Street Markers. “Open” specifications for street signs, which will be bought with the $5,000 recently appropriated by city council, were sent to Purchasing Agent Joel A. Baker today by the board of safety. The board ordered specifications in conformity with the American Engineering Council, as provided tin the ordinance, to permit all sign companies to submit prices. The specifications in the original advertisement for bids prevented certain sign firms from bidding. Baker will receive bids on the new specifications.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
f-Cwr Registered 0. S. MJ V Patent Office RIPLEY
Summitville Husker Wins By Times Special ANDERSON, Ind., Oct. 30.—Clayton Edwards of Summitville is the 1929 champion corn husker of Madison county, an honor which he also won last year. In a contest with eight other men Edwards husked a little more than twenty-one bushels in eight minutes. A crowd of 1,500 saw the contest.
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BLAMES COFFIN FORTAXRAISE Machine Regime in County Attacked in Address. “Furnishing oil for the Coffin machine has more than doubled Marion county taxes,” said Paul G. Davis in an address on the present city mayoralty campaign at 5429 North Delaware street, today. “George Coffin, Republican city
HOSPITAL DOCTORS ADVISE QUICK WAY TO END COLDS
Many Here Use Pleasant Way at Home to End Head Colds, Coughs, Chest Colds By choosing a method that not only removes congestion but helps restore the breathing pavssages to a strong, healthy condition, P. C. Adams—like hundreds of Indianapolis people—has found the quickest and surest way to get rid of a disagreeable cold. Mr. Adams had neglected his cold, hoping each day it would “cure itself.” Instead it got worse, spreading down into his chest. Then he sought advice from the clinic, where doctors gave him double doses of Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral. In a few hours he felt greatly relieved, and that night he could breathe freely through both nostrils and coughed very little. The next morning he felt like a different person—rid of the feverish, grippy” feeling—and in another day or so, doctors report, he was completely free from the cold. Note* See other cases being; reported dally—all certified by the attending physician.
BUTLER VS. DE PAUW FOOTBALL Greencastle, Saturday, Nov. 2 $1.27 ROUND TRIP $1.27 Via SpHluW Terre Haute, Indianapolis & Eastern Traction Company Good going on all regular and special trains Saturday, Nov. 2. Return limit, all trains up to and including Sunday, Nov. 3. Trains leave Indianapolis as follows: 7:30, 9:30, 10:15, 11:20 a. m. Call Riley 4501.
chairman, and his machine regime has drained the pockets of Marion county taxpayers, while taxes in other political units of the United States have decreased. “It is foolhardy to say Coffin’s influence ends with the election. That is when his influence begins. This is not a fight between the Republicans and the Democrats, it is a fight for good government against machine rule. “The Republicans are just as ashamed of Coffin ass the Democrats are mad at him, and Reginald Sullivan will be elected not because he is a Democrat, but because he is an honest man, and offers the people the only way to destroy Coffinism in this community.”
Ayer's Pectoral was hospital certified ns the best of different widely used methods tested for bend colds, coughs and chest colds because it gave the quickest, surest relief—with absolute safety. It is now featured by Hook Drug and all leading druggists.
HIT STIGMA ON DEADJIY CHIEF W. C. T. U. Moves to Expunge Farm Term Record. Efforts will be made in the 1931 Indiana legislature to expunge from the penal institution’s books the record of Dr. Edward S. Shumaker's sixty-day term at the state farm. A resolution with this object in
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OCT. 30, 1529
view was adopted by directors of the Marion countv W. C. T. U. Tuesday in the Woodruff United Presbyterian church. The late chieftain of Indiana dry forces served sixty days in the state farm for contempt of the Indiana i supreme court. The resolution set out that Dr. ; Shumaker had been placed "in the j criminal class when In reality, he has contributed to the uplift of the state.” The county dry organization also adopted resolutions emphasizing law enforcement and plans for the celebration of the tenth anniversary 1 of prohibition.
