Indianapolis Times, Volume 41, Number 241, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 February 1930 — Page 3

FEB. 17, 1930

GREAT OPENS GIGANTIC TRADE EXHIBIT Fair Launched Formally; Dominions, Colonies Are Represented. Bl’ JOSEPH GORDON Cnltl Pres* Staff Correspondent LONDON, Feb. 17.—The biggest national trade exhibition ever held in this country—the British fairopened formally today and will continue simultaneously in London and Birmingham until Feb. 28. Every British dominion and colony is represented in the show. Perhaps the most remarkable feature of the exhibition is the British manufacturer’s renunciation of his age-old “take-it-or-leave-it” attitude toward the world of trade and his new determination to turn out products exactly suited to modern industrial purposes and to the pedal climatic conditions in their overseas markets. In Two Classes The exhibits are divided into two classes, the so-called “lighter” industries, including chemicals, clothing, pottery, glassware, plate, fancy goods, sports, glassware, plate, fancy goods, sports goods, toys, etc., and the “heavier” industries, including machinery, building materials, hardware, heating machinery and transport. The dominions and colonies have individual displays of their foodstuffs and other products in the empire marketing board section of the exhibition. In addition, Canada has 7.000 feet, for the exhibit of Canadian manufactures. Machinery Is Represented The clothing and textile “section shows that British manufacturers still can clothe everybody from the Palm Beach hathing girl to the Arctic explorer. Machinery, chemicals, trunks, luggage, everything manufactured in Great Britain, is well represented at both sections of the exhibition. Birmingham and Sheffield manufacturers provide all the jewelry. Musical instruments, pianos, violins and other articles made here were put, on disploy. but by far the strongest representation in the music section is that of the talking machine. Radio sets also are in syeat prominence.

ELKHART MAN ACCUSED IN SB,OOO GEM THEFT Diamond* Alleged Taken After Mailing to Fictitious Person. Ri, United Press SOUTH BEND. Ind., Fob. 17. Chester Jessup. 28, Elkhart watch repairman, was brought to South Bend today from Holland, Mich., jto fan* federal grand jury action in connection with an alleged scheme in which he is said to have swindled a Chicago jewelry house of SB,OOO in diamonds. It was said Jessup confessed to postal inspectors the method used to obtain jewels from the firm of Juevgens St Anderson, Chicago. He was arrested after an attempt to sell some of the gems. Thirty diamonds were found in the lining of his coat. Jessup, using the name, of a South Bend jeweler, placed an order with the Chicago company. He then notified the South Bend jeweler the diamonds had been shipped to them by mistake and ordered them mailed, addressed to a fictitious name, in careof general delivery at the La Porte postoffice, where Jessup claimed the diamonds. PASTOR IN ADDRESSES Missionary to India to Talk at Four City Churches. Tire Rev. George C. Schroedpr, a missionary in southern India, will make four addresses in Indianapolis t his week. He will speak Tuesday night at Grace Lutheran church. New York street and Holmes avenue; Wednesday at St. Paul's church, Wright and Weghorst streets; Friday at iSmmaus church, Orange and Laurel streets, and Sunday at St. John’s church at Five Points. The talks are sponsored by the Walther League. EXHIBIT DRAWS CROWDS Second annual exhibit of works by Irvington artists, under auspices of the Irvington Union of Clubs, at Carr's hall. 5436 East Washington street, attracted large crowds Sunday. It will be open through next Sunday. Thursday afternoon Mrs. Halih Drake Wheeler and Miss Dorothy Morlan, exhibitors, will speak at a:3O. Sunday afternoon. Wilbur Peat of the John Herron Art institute will speak. BANK OFFICES MOVED New banking quarters of the Indianapolis Morris Plan Company were opened today at 151 North Delaware street. Officers of the company are W. B. Harding, president; L. M. Wainwright. O. B. liles. Fred J. De Grief, Joe R. Beckett, vice-presidents, and Paul M. Akin, vice-president and treasurer. Quickest Relief For Colds | PLEASANT. NO QUININE~| The first dose of Laxa-Pirin gives real relief. Contains aspirin just as doctors use jt—combined with phenacetin, laxatives. caffeine, etc. Pleasant and safe, for adults and children 25c. J2vxa/Bi/iMV New Comfort for Those Who Wear FALSE TEETH No longer does any wearer of false teeth seed to be uncomfortable. Fasteeth. a new. gr.atly Improved powder, sprinkled on tipper or lew- r plates, holds i hern firm and comfortable. No gummy, gooey, pasty taste or feeling. Deodoriaes. Get Fasteetb today at Hook Drug Cos.. Liggett'* or any other good drug store.— Advertisement.

City Forester, Bicycle to Go Into Retirement

City Forester Elbert Moore and the sixth municipality owned bicycle, which he will turn over to his successor Feb. 26.

Democratic Ax Falls on Parks Employe of 20 Years Standing. For the last twenty years City Forester Elbert Moore, 60, of | 3126 Northwestern avenue, Repub- ■ lican, who will be dropped from the park board pay roll Feb. 26. has been a familiar figure on Indianapolis streets, pedaling his bicycle about in performance of his duties. Moore’s dismissal was ordered by the park board, George A. Featherstone, 55. of 1054 West Twenty - | ninth street; Democratic commitl teeman in the Twenty-seventh prej cinct. of the Fourth ward, being apj pointed to the sl,Boo-a-year post. With the dismissal of Moore, the ? question of “what shall become of :’the city’s only municipally owned bicycle’’ was raised, as Featherstone I hasn't decided whether he will use | the bicycle or not. “I haven’t cost the city much," I commented Moore when advised i that the Democratic ax was slated \ to fall upon him, ! “Twenty years ago when I started ; to work under the Bookwalter ad- ! ministration this job paid only $75 a ; month. I helped move the park | board offices from the Saks build-

SURVEY RESULT WILL BE TOLL Playground Expert to Talk on Leisure Problem. “Searching facts” uncovered in his recent recreational survey here for ate Council of Social Agencies will be disclosed by Eugene T. Lies, New York playground expert, lr Caleb Mills hall Feb. 25, he said today. To hear what he found in a study of poolrooms, playgrounds, schoolgrounds, and other recreational centers for children and adults in Indianapolis, Lies has invited the public to attend the meeting. He will address school officials and principals Tuesday on “The School in Relation to the Leisure Time Problem.” Wednesday the Woman’s Department Club will hear him speak on “The Problem of Leisure Time as Revealed in the Indianapolis Recreational Survey.” At Wheeler City Mission Feb. 21 he will address ministers on “Church’s Responsibility in Training for Wise Use of Leisure.” He will speak before Chamber of Commerce members Feb. 24 on “Increasing Leisure and Its Relation to Business and Industry.” The Kiwanis club, Feb. 26, will hear his address on “Is Indianapolis Alive to Its Problems of Leisure?” DISCUSS APPRAISAL Seven Days Left to Oppose Plaza Church Buying. With seven days remaining in which taxpayers may file remonstrances against the county’s purchase of two churches in the War Memorial plaza, commissioners today were discussing appointment of three appraisers to enter negotiations with church officials. Three remonstrances have been received by the board since the passing of a declaratory resolution three weeks ago, in which commissioners asserted intentions to effect immediate purchase. HART HEADS INSTITUTE Youth Must Clean Up Crime, Group Is Told by Speaker. Maintaining that the duty of cleaning up the crime afflicting every modern community rests with ihe young people, the Rev. George Cross Baner, pastor of the Akron tO.) Universalist church, addressed the fifth annual mid-west institute of young people in the Central Universalist church, Saturday night. At the afternoon session, Harold Hart of Peoria. 111., was elected president of the institute, succeeding Harold Ltjmsten, Stockton, HI.; Sidney Esten. 4112 Grace’and avenue. vice-president: Oscar Vogt, 809 Wert Thirty-first street, secretary, and Miss Vesta Keach. Table Grove, 111., treasurer. The sixth summer institute will be held at Turkey Run state park, July 20 to 27.

ing, southwest corner of Washington and Pennsylvania streets, to the present quarters at city hall. The department was small then.” During the period of his employment by the. park board it is estimated he has supervised the removal of some 60,000 trees from city streets. The city forester orders dangerous trees removed and trimmed and -supervises all utility tree trimming. He also has made a study of plant and insect life and furnishes information to persons at the park board office. Moore is the only city official who continued to use a bicycle for transportation, the remainder having demanded the more speedy, motor-driven vehicles. Six bicycles have been bought for Moore, one having been stolen several years ago. “This old wheel is about done for. I had planned to ask for anew one this spring if I continued on the job.” Moore said. “I enjoy riding a bicycle and think it has benefited my health a great deal. The only disadvantage is that it’s pretty dangerous nowauays on Indianapolis streets.” In early life, Moore was a printerpublisher in several small Indiana towns and he has continued his membership in Indianapolis Typographical Union, No. 1.

NEGRO KILLED IN FIGHT Cops Seek Henry Rose for Murder of Rival Lover. Harold Dudley, 26, Negro, of 623 North Senate avenue, was wounded fatally In a fight Sunday with another Negro over a woman and police are seeking Henry Rose, 45 Negro, of the same address on murder charges. Dudley died at city hospital several hours after being shot in the abdomen, and police charge Rose fired the shotgun charge after a quarrel over Mrs. Mattie Prentice of the same address. F0 U R FOil N D FROZEN Barge Survivors’ Bodies in Open Life Boat. Bn United Press CAPE MAY, N. J., Feb. 17.—'The four survivors of the sunken barge, Merrill, of Baltimore, which foundered off the Delaware capes at noon Sunday, have been found frozen to death in an open lifeboat by the crew of the coast guard cutter No 218, according to radio advices received today. Finding of the bodies followed an all-night search by every available boat of the coast guard service in this district. The Merrill was one of three barges being towed by the tug Montrose, from Norfolk, Va., to New York. She went down in a fierce nor’wester, off the capes, after the tow lines were broken. SLAYING INVESTIGATED MEXICO, Mo., Feb. 17.—A body riddled with bullets and bearing signs of strangulation, the sixth found in central Missouri in recent months, occasioned today the starting of the second official inquiry of alleged rural racketeering. The body, found Sunday, was discovered near Sturgeon, within two miles of where the body of Albert Proctor, 19, was found last October. The man, identified as Red Kelley, was shot four times.

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WEEK-END AUTO ACCIDENTS SEND 8 TO HOSPITAL Mrs. Willian Bailey Suffers Crushed Chest, Cuts in Collision. Week-end auotmobile accidents in the city sent eight victims to hospitals and physicians’ offices, ac,cording to police records today. Mrs. Lillian Bailey, 44, of 1508 Broadway, suffered a crushed chest and other injuries when an auto driven by her brother-in-law, Harold Bailey, 25, of the same address, collided with a car operated by John Carr, 26, of 5222 Ellenberger avenue, and overturned on the sidewalk at Thirtieth street and Washington boulevard Sunday night. Kenneth Williams, 3709 Graceland avenue, was charged with drunken driving today, the result of an automobile accident in which his wife, Mrs. Grace Williams, was injured slightly Sunday night. Williams’ car collided with a machine driven by Raymond Haddle, R. R. 17 Box 4370, at White river and Thirtieth street. Others injured were: Miss Ruth Patterson, 38, Apt. 21, at 1040 North Delaware street, cuts and bruises; Mrs. Guy Rock, same address, cuts and bruises; Miss Marguerite O’Donnell, 18, of 329 North Irvington avenue, cuts on head and hands; Charles Commons, 21, of 812 East Twenty-first street, cuts on face and hands; John Russell, 61, Negro, 724 Charles street, cuts and bruises, and Wilbur Stephens, 1220 East Pratt street, cuts and bruises.

Memories Saves Wife From Flames; Dies for Sake of Old Picture.

By United Press HARVEY, Ill., Feb. 17.—Of late years William Richardson complained often that he was feeling the hand of time, that the muscles he had hardened as a blacksmith were almost useless. “I’m 80 and the last weakness is upon me,” he would say. But when he awakened with flames engulfing the house and licking at the bed where he, and his invalid wife, Maria, 78, were lying, Richardson’s strength came back. He lifted his wife into his arms and carried her through the flames to safety. Then he remembered the picture they had taken on their wedding day and the aged man dashed back into the burning house. Minutes passed and he did not come out. His son-in-law, John Middleton, and neighbors found him on the bedroom floor, the picture clasped in his arms. They carried out. He was dead.

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The mother of six children, Mrs. Silvio Velez, shown here with her 4-months-old baby, is held in the Nassau County, Long Island, jail, charged with the fatal stabbing of her husband. She told police they had quarreled over her husband’s alleged attentions to another woman, and that “everything went black" when she attacked him with a knife, after he had beaten her. Queen Still Seriously Ill By United Press ROME, Feb. 17.—The general condition of Queen Victoria of Sweden, who is critically ill here, was reported unchanged Sunday night, although she has been passing more comfortable nights during the past week.

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Tuesday! A Sale WOMEN’S SAMPLE SILK DRESSES Women’s Sizes, 34-44 —Misses’ Sizes, 14-20 Most of them have been drastically reduced from our own regular stocks—and the lot includes charming evening frocks that were as Women's Winter Chinchilla COATS Tuesday! While They Last— $3.98 Women's New A Sensa- SPRING HATS of the events of Selling of the season. The newest 1930 style Hats Worth ideas ae presented in these Up to $3 felt and straw combina t i o n on Sale models. Lovely styles and colTuesday at ors! Second Floor NEW HANDBAGS Smart for Spring $1.00 The most popular leathers and desired colors are featured in numerous styles —many of them in line with the Spring fashions. Each bag is well made and

WOMEN’S HOOVERETTE AND APRON FROCKS Regular and Stout 49c Hundreds of new prints, guaranteed fast colors; also figured

VARE MAY STAY IN SENATE RAGE Expect G. O. P. Leader to Make Early Decision. By Scripps-Howard Newspaper Alliance WASHINGTON, Feb. 17.—Events of the next forty-eight hours are likely to determine definitely whether William S. Vare, Philadelphia Republican leader, will be an active or silent figure in the approaching Pennsylvania political campaign and whether Labor Secretary James J. Davis will leave the cabinet to be his running mate. Vare is expected, by tonight, either to accede to requests of his followers to withdraw from the race for the senate or to show he was not bluffing when he announced recently he was in the race to stay. Should Vare, who now is in Florida, attempting to regain his health, refuse to get out of the senate race, Davis probably will be his running mate as the candidate for Governor. Davis, however, probably will not be a candidate unless Vare makes the race. There is enough salt in Utah to supply the entire world for more, than five hundred years.

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Advertisement DOCTORS SHOW QUICK WAY TO END A COLD

COLD SOON DISAPPEARED WHEN TREATED BY QUICK, EASY METHOD DOCTORS NOW ADVISE

Many Here Find Home Use of Hospital Method Superior to Remedies That Cause Sweating and Risk Pneumonia By Opening Up Pores The same method used in hospitals—even in extreme cases that brought fear of pneumonia—is now relieving colds quickly in vast numbers of Indianapolis homes. For hospital doctors have certified Ayer’s Pectoral for home use as the quickest, safest and most dependable of different widely used methods tested for head colds, coughs and

DOCTOR’S ADVICE ON COLD AVOIDS PNEUMONIA RISK Cold Made Worse By Remedies Which Open Pores--Then Doctor Gave Quick Relief Pleasant Way An entirely new method that ends colds quickly—often in just a few hours—is now prescribed by doctors in numerous hospital cases and is also being used with remarkable success in numbers of Indianapolis homes. E. H. Young, for example, attempted to sweat out his cold by taking hot drinks and other home remedies. But his work made it necessary for him to go out the next morning while the pores of his skin were still open. Asa result, he caught fresh cold and by early afternoon he had developed such a high fever that pneumonia was feared. Acting on the advice of bis doctor, then, he started taking a pleasant spoonful of Ayer’s Pectoral every 15 minutes. Instead of opening up the pores and risking pneumonia, this hospital certified medication acted upon an entirely different principle. Before night the medication hail been absorbed by his system, thus checking the cold wherever congestion had settled. By morning his fever was gone and congestion was clearing up rapidly. He returned to work and in just a day or so the cold was entirely gone. BACK IN SCHOOLSOON ENDED COLD WAY BOYS ENJOY A hospital remedy for colds— so pleasant children enjoy taking it—is now being recommended as a result of its outstanding rec-

ord in extreme hospital cases, in the private practice of physicians and in home use a m o n g numbers of Indianapolis people. Mrs. E. L. Jenkins, for e x a m p l e, was

awakened by the severe coughing of her son. Edward. Jr. She immediately got in touch with her doctor who advised double strength doses of Ayer’s Pectoral to relieve the coughing and break up the cold before more serious illness had a chance to develop. The coughing spell was checked almost immediately. In a few minutes the child was sleeping quietly again and by the next morning congestion had cleared up surprisingly. The doctor's examination the next day showed that the cold and congestion were completely gone and the child was able to return to school without unnecessary loss of time.

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Miss Vivian Stoddart’s experience is typical. Examination by her doctor showed that she was running a. high temperature and that congestion in her air passages caused thoracic pain when she attempted to take a deep breath. Almost immediately after her doctor gave her double, strength doses of Ayer’s Pectoral she noticed quick relief. Breathing soon became easier, the thoracic pain disappeared, and in a few hours her fever was reduced from 101 degrees to normal. The next morning she woke up feeling greatly relieved. Medical examination the next day showed her temperature, pulse and respiration were normal again. A few pleasant doses of Ayer’s Pectoral, the doctor reports, had completely cleared up her cold. Ayer’s Pectoral is superior to remedies which give temporary relief but open up the pores and thus risk pneumonia. Ayer's Pectoral does not open the pores. It can he taken with abnnlute safety—even if one has to be out doors.

END COLD CAUSED BY WETTING FEET ON WAY TO DANCE Indianapolis people no longer feel miserable and needlessly risk pneumonia by neglecting colds. For hospital doctors have made it tempting to end colds promptly by a pleasant corrective which has been certified as the quickest and surest of different methods tested for head colds, coughs and chest colds. Miss Alice Palmer, for example, started to a recent dance without her overshoes. While crossing the street to the car she got her feet soaking wet and felt a cold coming on before the dance was over. Next day her breathing passages were inflamed and congested with cold. At the suggestion of her brother, a physician, she started clearing up the cold immediately with small doses of Ayer’s Pectoral every 15 minutes for the first two or three hours, then once every hour. When she retired early that night, congestion had started clearing up and by morning she felt a great deal better. At her brother’s office the next day, a thorough stethoscopic examination showed that her breathing passages were clear again and that the few pleasant doses of Ayer's Pectoral had entirely cleared up the cold. Ayers Perioral is safer than hot drinks and remedies which cause one to perspire freely. They are dangerous to use unless one stays in bed while the sweat pores are open. Ayer’s Pectoral does not cause sweating and can be used with absolute safety—even if one has to be out doors. INDORSED BY HOOK DRUG AND ALL LEADING DRUGGISTS.