Indianapolis Times, Volume 41, Number 157, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 November 1929 — Page 7

NOV. 11, 1929.

SULLIVAN PARTY TALKS POSSIBLE APPOINTMENTS ‘Shakeup’ Rumored at City Hall When Jobs Are Handed Out. BY RES STERN Time* Staff Correspondent CORYDON, Ind.. Nov. 11.—Political speculation occupied members of the post-election vacation party of Mayor-elect Reginald H. Sullivan here today. It was the first time any discussion of probable municipal appointments has come up in the group during Sullivan’s Indiana-Kentuc-ky tour which began last week. Sullivan continued his policy of non-discus, ion and made no comment on appointments. The discussions were confined to his friends and newspapermen who are accompanying him. Armistice day exercises here was to go to French Lick, w r here it was believed he would be met by Indianapolis Democratic leaders. Sullivan purposely altered his itinerary plans so that he did not arrive in French Lick over the week-end. During the latter part of last week Fnliee Chief Claude M. Worley and Mayor L. Ert Slack were at French Lick, but they returned ..over the week-end. As Sullivan and his party left here it was reported reliably there will be a number of changes in city hall departments that will border on a “shake-up.” Return of the mayor-elect to Indiana followed visits to scenic and historic spots in Kentucky. Veteran, 83, Dies PRINCETON, Ind., Nov. 11.—A. D. Green, 83, Civil war veteran, pioneer resident of Princeton, died here Saturday.

AMUSEMENTS ———Mil ii am ■ iiiiibi l■l^■■l^llll■ll■l^TlT^■n■rr ENGLISH’S Tue.-w”d. e Mte S Lincoln 8273. Mat. Wed. THREE DAYS ONLY The N. Y. Theatre GuiM's Wings Over Europe By Robert Nichols and Maurice Brown. ORIGINAL NEW VORK PRODUCTION 3 NOV. 14 MAT. SAT. Fastest, E’nnniest, Most Tuneful Musicnl Kevue Ever Presented. SEATS NOW! Nights, J 3.00. s>.oo. $1.50. SI.OO, 80c, Hat. Mat.. $2,00. $1.50, SI.OO, 50e. 3 DAYS, BEG. MON., NOV. iT Matinee Wednesday Mai! Orders Now Seat Sale Thursday Gilbert Miller Ifr; Arrangement with Maurice Browne} presents WET'S faUC.Sherriff NUht^so^tos2^o^MaL^or^Ls<J THE activity of our nation is suspended for a moment today in remembrance of the lull that suddenly fell over the crimson chaos of France eleven years ago. Surrounded by the sweet joys of peace, we meditate on the devotion to duty that swept away youth’s right to live and broke the hearts of old age. May we humbly justify that devotion by a reverence for the ideals in which it originated. LYRIC and ATOLLO Theatres APOLLO Now Playing The Screen’s First Original ALL-TALKING. SINGING. DANCING Musical Comedy “SUNNY SIDE UP” with JANET GAYNOR CHARLES FARRELL El Brendel. Marjorie White Frank Richardson ESQ HE’S A RIOT ,- . ON OCR STAGE / jSL V j MuHairMSf IN PERSON Funnier than in the Movie# FOLLY and OZ—Fun and Song LUCAS and LlLLlAN—Unusual FORD, MARSHALL * JONES HIS GREATEST ALL-TALKING PICTURE with SONGS GEORGE JESSEL and LILA LEE hi ••LOVE. LIVE Hid LAUGH” Thrilling Romance of Youth

Air Show Poster Is A live

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This beautiful living poster of the “Spirit of Flight” was used at Los Angeles to announce the opening of the Western Aircraft exposition. The young lady who forms the central figure is Katherine Truett, one of California’s young women fliers.

EVERSON FLIES TO METALKS National Guard Head Will Visit Two Cities. After a lashing rerbal attack on pacifists Sunday at the Y. M. C. A. Big Meeting in the English theater, Major-General William G. Everson, chief of the United States militia bureau, left here today by plane to keep Armistice day engagements in two Indiana cities. General Everson was scheduled to review the Purdue university R. O. T. C. this noon, followed by an Armistice address at Anderson this afternoon. Army Douglas planes constituted the escort for the general to the two Indiana cities. At the “Y” meeting Sunday he said: ‘Tt is out of place to throw stones at the man who wears the uniform. Never has a war been started by a

MOTION PICTURES ENGLISH ’5 Evenings, 8:30 Lincoln 8273 Mat - Wed., 2:30 THREE DAYS ONLY THE N. Y. THEATRE GUILD'S Wings Over Europe hv Robert Nichols and Maurice Browne ORIGINAL NEW YORK PRODUCTION

S tag H A R. O L O 11 iI i *] LLOYD m With BARBARA KENT I I rUuH 18,562 PEOPLE—- | <jJL-LaflWawffl* ■• • almost laughed their heads off at WwggßrNß at lhl, j n ’ rrT $ mlrth-fcst Saturday and ■ * 1 And they say It’s the funniest picture I Also “OVER THERE TODAY" J A Armistice Day Tribute / Moran & Mack—All-Talking! / the TWO BLACK CROWS fi] IBfl 1 ( Ho'ida* in "WHY BRING THAT UP” lfl I 1 \ \ Today origin or “st. ixjuis blues” a I presents— Marion Davies! \ HER FIRST TALKING PICTURE? L\\\/ / or — u u g L

soldier. A soldier hates to see a war start.” He compared the soldier’s job to that of a policeman and declared communities could not live without police and fire protection. CITY MAN TO ATTEND FIRE LOSS DISCUSSION Water Company Secretary to Preside at Washington Meeting. Curtailment of fire losses in agricultural and industrial circles will be discussed in a joint conference of the United States department of agriculture and the National Fire Protection Association Thursday and Friday in Washington. Frank C. Jordan, secretary of the Indianapolis Water Company and president of the fire protection association, will preside at the meetings. A feature of the conference will be radio addresses by Jordan and Dr. H. G. Knight, chief of the bureau of chemistry and soils of the agriculture department, to be broadcast at 1:30 Thursday afternoon.

MOTION PICTURES gB ‘ 1045 VIRGINIA AVE. gl SJj Nancy Carroll—Buddy Rogers M H “ILLUSION" R

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

BEER BARON'S ASSETS FOUND IN POORSHAPE Dwindle Almost to Nothing When Uncle Sam Calls Back Taxes. P.n T'pitrfJ I*rex* CHICAGO, Nov. 11.—Terry Druggan’s fairy godmother has played a trick on him, he told Mrs. Myrtle Tanner Blackidge and her staff of United States revenue collectors. Terry neglected paying $300,000 in back taxes on the income he collected a few years ago when he was the leading beer baron. But Terry was sure he could “produce.” There was his $500,000 brewery. There was his palatial farm home. There were fifty-one head of blooded Guernsey cattle, to say nothing of his race horses and pigs and Leghorn hens. It would be an easy matter, he said, to pay Uncle Sam $300,000. But the clock must have struck 12, for as Mrs. Blacklidge checked over Terry’s assets she found they had suffered a metamorphosis. The cows now. They had dwindled from fifty-one to fifteen and were becoming decidedly mangy. Moreover, they had gone dry. The brewery? No longer the cen-

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ter of Chicago's bootlegging industry, it had become a haven for bats, worth, at the most, SIO,OOO. The race horses? A reward has been offered J,o r their return. Evidently someone left a gate open. Only the chickens remain unchanged. The farmhouse and the farm also look the same as ever, but they j are in Mrs. Druggan s name. Determined to snatch something from the debacle, Mrs. Blackidge has announced she will sell the brewery at auction within a few days before it vanishes into thin air. Urges Large Hospital Bv Ti’-r * & nprint BLOOMINGTON, Ind.. Nov. 11.— A resolution adopted by the Monroe County Medical Society urges enlargement of the Bloomington hospital and pledges support to a movement to carry out an expansion program.

King's Gigantic UNLOADING SALE! I—Larje Group of Egg “T, , ■ 19 Ladies' leS&f fPNSir 'sßßl Ladies’ Stunning Silk fe TU£Sd2y SpSCISI p a i Fgpp ; PRESSES 1 I COATS m JMSUiSzs: m BROOMS | Vl*ninsr styles, wanted eolorn. ~ Marvelously beautiful Wen, g j- „ J r b’ for MONEY DOWN! I i.i.iP *'“ r ' [ no MONEY DOWN! U "1° E.WASHIN6TON ST | IT \2L tr p 95 | Between Alabama and New Jersey Streets $ | \\

FLOWER EXHIBIT OPENSJTUESDAY Three-Day Chrysanthemum Display Arranged. Preparations for the chrysanthemum exhibit at the Claypool Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday were i completed today by the State Florj ists' Association of Indiana and the i Chrysanthemum Society of America. The show will open Tuesday noon and remain open until 8 p. m. and on Wednesday and Thursday from 10 a. m. to 10 p. m. The annual convention of the Chrysanthemum Society will bo

held Wednesday morning at tb\ < Claypool. More than 500 persons attended the special showing of chrysanthe- ! mums at the Garfield park conservatory Sunday. The exhibit will continue until Thursday. ARRANGE CONVENTION Indiana Hotel Men Will Meet in City, Dec. 13 and 14. Meeting at the Claypool Sunday directors of the Indiana Hotels Association laid plans for the annual meeting at the Severin, Friday and Saturday, Dec. and 14. A dinner-dance 'will be held at the Claypool Friday night and the association’s annual banquet will be held Saturday night in the Severin. Speakers for the convention will be chosen later, directors said.

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CHURCHES TO OBSERVE PENSION PLAN DAY Disciples of Christ Request to All Congregations. Christian churches throughout the United States and Canada will observe pension plan day next Sunday, In accordance with the request | of trustees of the Disciples of Christ j pension fund sent out today from | Indianapolis headquarters. Principal provisions of the pension ! plan include an age annuity at 65. I with beefits for prior disability. | Widows and minor children also are i provided for. Trustees of the fund meet Tuesday and Wednesday in St. Louis. Mo., where they expect to complete enrollment of congregations in the new system