Indianapolis Times, Volume 41, Number 235, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 February 1930 — Page 5
FEB. 10, 1930
m V to m V gR Jes to jsjjjgf Hto at Ik Jv rij^^|7^ryj Vw’m* L 0 1 chiffons, georgettes and crepes. Hf t% tow £(lf """ S m 1 f" -- SSBiS coats ch,u,a j Sport^ Skirts f SfAI. UNLOADING OF WU7 flff WF ™™ fc ‘ ,, " ,,l^^“fl VEST MODELS IN JftClW ®JI&iS§ \M 808 &% WW jffifcL WA I r hats dresses mISHOESI KShMS a TPfBI ” ——, sjop) and-rayon prints. ' fejjl 4i-V l|sfpl I Y*'S* I A A rfsfpvt?. 3 J ' UU jfl intricate in de- d? 7 7 mHg r' um p,. . ( . p i n . oj and ( I Wmm l HlSsr*]!^^ ll ■ a <*•■<* sp< **"- g - jffll H 98 le Y “ sposit Will Reserve I $ A fiJHB H H ■ ' tide You Select! | I ./T lT>l " e *‘ , Ii I jII WOMEN! H E c °me To ! s5 S Xjk jppj zt With Values! }-£ I ; :\1 If .Sri™. IJL * 11/ ®'! KU Ad Carefully | A MM to, A ' 4 JB ’ fIM irz | wto& , -i3*rT H J llj I; 1 Represent* a g prf Our I fi LHfji Bona Fide ■ |§||| Window '* *1 / of Which Has S r ■ ?■? - mT iiiniiii.m§m| JHH 1/ Never Been Offered j GALOSHES d* |OQ HOUSE OQ-* j H ! WASHINGTON STREET fUT l!/ Before in This City! I J All Sizes til.dV SLIPPERS ji/C I jgft-. * -- - aBM L.l i Sf —————— ~ f— 7“ - r ,"" -n '
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Doggone Him!
——. ■• - jffra|B w Ij
“Doggone him!” Is what W. K. Henderson of “Hello, World” radio station KWKH at Shreveport, La. probably is saying about Joseph Uhalt, above, owner and operator of station WDSU at New Orleans, and leading contender for the place in the air now r occupied by the “cussing colonel.” Uhalt has asked the federal radio commission for KWKH’s wavelength in the event Hinderson is ruled off the air.
CARDINAL TAKES PAPAL POSITION Pope Receives Secretary After Installation. Bv United P,ress VATICAN CITY, Feb. 10.—Cardinal Eugenio Pacelli today was formally installed as secretary of state of the Holy See, succeeding Cardinal Gasparri. The new secretary of state conferred with various subordinate officials in his department. After which he was received in an audience of Pope Pius, to whom he reported for the first time, in his new capacity. It is understood Cardinal Gasparri will remain in his apartment at the Vatican for a few days, before taking up his residence at the villa given him as a place of retirement by the pope. The new secretary of state is 54, and was ordained a priest in Rome, in 1899. Much of his life work has been in the congregation of extraordinary ecclesiastical affairs, which deals with ■ state and diplomatic matters. In turn, he became undersecretary and prosecretary of the congregation. Damage to Liner Slight Bv United Press HAMBURG, Feb. 10.—Damage to the liner President Roosevelt from her collision with the steamer Philotis was slight, it was announced today, and the ship will leave on schedule, Wednesday, after minor repairs. Three Aviators Drowned, Belief Bv United Press MARSEILLES, Feb. 10.—Pilot Reynauld and the two members of his crew in a mail seaplane from Algiers to Marseilles are believed drowned in a storm off Perpignan. The plane is known to have gone down twelve miles from the French coast.
Once a Month As regularly as the months roll around, some women count their time to suffer. Declining invitations they long to accept, because of the time of month. And Midol could make those periods absolutely painless! Take a tiny tablet of Midol—and forget the time of month. There will be no interference with the normal, necessary process, but the pain will be gone. Taken beforehand, there will be no pain at all. If you are suffering, Midol brings complete ease in five to seven minutes. Midol is the work of specialists; effective no matter how hard a time you may always have had. All druggists, in trim aluminum pocket case, fifty cents.—Advertisement.
Stubborn Coughs Ended by Recipe, Mixed at Home
■ .1 - ■ ■ ■ —■'■■■ ■ ■l,l—millions of housewives have found to be the most dependable means of breaking up a stubborn, lingering cough. It takes but a moment to prepare and costs little, but it gives real relief even for those dreaded coughs that follow severe cold epidemics. From any druggist, get 2% ounces of Pinex, pour it into a pint bottle and fill the bottle with plain granulated sugar syrup or strained honey. Thus you make a full pint of better remedy than yon could buy ready-made for three times the cost. It never spoils and tastes so good that even children like it. Not only does this simple mixture soothe ana heal the inflamed throat membranes with surprising ease, but also it is absorbed into the blood, and acts directly npon the bronchial tabes, thus aiding the whole system in throwing off the cough. It loosens the germladen phlegm and eases chest soreness in a way that is really astonishing. Pinex is a highly concentrated compound of genuine Norway Pine, containing the active agent of creosote, in a refined, palatable form. Nothing known in medicine is more helpful in cases of distressing coughs, chest colds, sad bronchial troubles. Do not accept a substitute for Pinex. It is guaranteed to fire prompt relief w money refunded. a iA (lysrtlflcmriti
PAGE 5
FRANCE VIEWED KEY IN SUCCESS OF SEAPARLEY Three-Power Agreement Seems Inevitable at Present Time. BY WILLIAM PHILIP SIMMS Scripps-Honard Fortlgn Editor LONDON,, Feb. 10.—With the United States and Great Britain in accord on fundamental issues, and Japan in a mood to compromise on such outstanding differences as still persist, the London naval parley now is on the verge of actual results. Hot on the heels of Secretary Stimson 5 memorandum describing Americas position, Premier MacDonald made public Great Britain’s stand. Certainly, so far as Great Britain, America and Japan are concerned, an agreement seems assured. Certainly there will be parity between the British and American fleets. Almost certainly America will scrap three battleships within the next three months, Britain five and Japan one. Size and Caliber There will be another naval conference in 1935 and then, doubtless, if battleships are not abolished, they will be materially reduced In sire and in caliber of guns. For the present, the question is, what will France do here and now? While it may be safely predicted that no matter what happens now, a three-power understanding virtually is assured, the problem Is how can It be made into a five-pow-er agreement which everybody here is heroically struggling to achieve. France is still the key to this riddle. Obviously, if France remains outside of an agreement, and Insists on a big navy, Italy would find it difficult not to follow suit. Britain must gauge fer naval requirements somewhat according to the FrancoItalian strength, and America must have regard to the strength of Britain and Japan. Security Vital France’s main argument is that security in Europe makes it vital that she maintain her communications across the Mediterranean so that in event of war, she could bring additional man-power from her African empire, which is larger than the United States. Manifestly, if a way can be found to Increase her sense of security both at home and in the Mediterranean area sufficiently, she could afford to reduce her naval establishment to a minimum. As French public opinion feels deeply on this question, Premier Tardieu would hardly dare return to Paris without some sort of guarantee for reducing tonnage here.
Gone, but Not Forgotten
Automobiles reported to police rs stolen belong to: Forrest Wheeler, R. R. S, Be . J9O-E, Ford tudor, 37-250, from 33: . North Pennsylvania strict. Harry Williams, 1419 Ashland av nue. Plymouth sedan, 739-649, fro.’r Twelfth street and Capitol avenue. Gus Matracia, Connersville, Did. Auburn sedan, from rear of Indian,theater. Albert D. Aebker, 2185 Madison avenue, Marmon sport coupe, from Market and Delaware streets. Ray Oliver, 1602 Fletcher avem Ford roadster, 32-197, from In fre of 119 North East street. t Ernest L. Hadley, 2340 Colle e avenue, Ford coupe, 19-233, from Delaware and Market streets. Pitman Carter, 532 Cable street, Chevrolet coach, 18-156, from Capitol avenue and Georgia street.
BACK HOME AGAIN
Stolen automobiles recovered by police belong to: Chevrolet coach, M-933, found at 900 Muskingum street. Ford coach, 18-428, found at Tenth and Lock streets. gales” delay liners Terrific Storms Sweep Southern, Eastern Coasts of Newfoundland. Bu United Pre9 ST. JOHNS, Newfoundland, Feb. 10.—Gales, at time reaching hurricane force, swept the south and east coasts of Newfoundland Sunday, delaying departure of the Red Cross and Furness liners Rosalind and Nova Bcotia. Several buildings were unroofed in the storm, windows broken, trees uprooted and many farm buildings demolished. fascist Fare arrested Attempt to Stage Parade In Defiance of Berlin Police. Bn United Pres BERLIN, Feb. 10.—Twenty-eight members of the Fascist “steel helmet” organization were arrested as the climax of a demonstration here Sunday when they attempted to stage a parade in defiance of police orders. Teh police used their truncheons on the crowd and dispersed them. Storm Disrupts Wire Systems Bu United Press SOFIA, Bulgaria, Feb. 10.—Telegraph and Telephone systems throughout the country were disrupted and many roofs were blown away Sunday in a storm sweeping in from the Black sea. German Leader Takes life ! Bu United Pre BERLIN, Feb. 10.—Believed de* lirious, during an attack of influenza, Paul Levi, lawyer and prominent Socialist member of the Reichstag, committed suicide Sunday by leaping from a window oa the sixth floor of his home. Twenty Hurt in Street Fight BELFORT, France, Feb. 10.—Police and strikers engaged in a street battle here Sunday, which resulted in injuries to twenty person, in* blurting COdCiWliSt Mb
