Indianapolis Times, Volume 41, Number 261, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 March 1930 — Page 5

MARCH 12, 1930

■N \ : ORE 1 stock, together with £ onr own stock marked i ig. We’re prepared to 1 ory, ICfe te Drops 1| . n ■ JPH 1 Thursday. Frida} EggS fi 1 1to2 P. M. §|j v' 15-Day Sale II SLIPS E W W WJP 2nd Floor. One lie‘right to limit quantities to bet serve S j&KG I? Wms lS Sll M ]sLb Jok H pl>U " <! "nl i Friday's News ||sF^i?,£ £ | DRESSES! 1 H nd Saturday 3 M ‘ ll —^* I SCHOOL 1 ($5 to $lO VALUES) I J * <l ' , 11 Ijr Advertised Footwear 9 tablets | lig ®BIS Included arc silks, prints, flat crepes in wanted m 2n<i _jßAh |E -Poll Parrot—Bostonian—Weather Bird 9 ” * j| styles and shades. Extreme values at these bankrupi g£ F i oo r. * * jR HR 1 flany Other High-Grade Makes at |p p,in>- Limit, JH :supt prices: I BHb Pwrass ZH Women’s Novelty 1 Pil *™ ase I and —3 J j Pumps, Straps, Ijx Eto||| £l, y s , dark-, o. " " "Tw Ties, Oxfords 1 Only, i2IBa ...jgr " i Sewing Thread ®|| SHlffl. Blond*, pntfnt. **tln, hid. *nd*. entf tfother*. Hj FonP („ a Cn,lomr. 11l MCmM New SILHOUETTE fr tkam OO /?"dh OC &A V,, 'll) 40, 50, 60. Colors Mg fi'UTStC MS SILK DRESSES . a -Za and white. Limit. Ac || ON BARGAIN TABLES I wcM-nwh^stort. mot.| Sgffilft gain'd Floor. srooi. l|j ed OJI j® FLANNEL P {UiHhSbi _ m-tm k 2,000 Women’s Mercerised , $ J-46 $ J-S6 I |Q C I 1111 m J®**s£fiL • Mk I Knit Union Suits II VhSs. ■gj 91 eluded are silk* and rayons. iH Hw JffjfßSWmm l2i „w nl ,i,ier Bodice straps. Tight Un<‘ |gg JVt Very fine quality. Per |g SS | .Soma slightly soiled. ■;* Sg Built up shoulder, bo If |J **wr High-Grade Arch Support* Included yard— gg ffjg SSftMvßßt a „d 1 Lot of *' r gSi*£3 $1 and loose knee Jg|pF X9C ® Jjj Men’s $5 to $4 7Z ""I SlaffiM ChU * fe “’* * oals - 15* AOC 11 ißress OxtopdSddSpßHl Wash gc 1 flffr* 2KS^?t.S^.^ ,M,,r *'-fip M '1 3° 177 Spring COATS I [rAINCO ATS lEI MOTIONS 11 - i•- t ® 99 9 —Ci 11— Assortment of colors. 4 / / kasha cloth. In tdA 45 l nes - BUghtly | JR n„ A * t dc aflC. , fc Idlrnlt—Second Floor. M / plain colors.* MF.Hz I soUed, guaran- gjfo SDC i M -J Aa RiCRDC Drn® ** gs jtt ly Are! T- | r / / Some fur trim- cffiV I teed water-F * V ® TMens Moccasin Too I! i |4| / mod. sr> value* | proof. t fi X£ordS Wnalr ShO€S Gtl©St gi / L ni.ck .mi tan „ ft Ivoty Soap Hji (A FOUMS S Hats A 77® Ci|J& R Buy JOB capply ® w - 2nd A ' —composition* JBVHfr 1 _ rV\ Included are new spring shades Mrmt mRf ant J V | , liVl T,M rinr 1 H n soles. Sires 6$ M 4X&Z2&? | f\ / K nd patterns In chic styles of M%O \ / git IOOr. 'Ag •ci A A *■“’• I 3 Bars 1|| C S KL * sl>4S \\ | v \ second floor 11 1 t Women’s Bungalow ®|j iEnd. a y 200 Pairs Men's ja a APRONS 81 hoes 26 c dress shoes fifc m ™ Q fw ± a/e 4 r *D S m Followin S fft ginghams. Pf Assort- JCf c ■ 1 11 Black and taa. All Goodyear Welts with §MbS M, MzS JX? JL W 9SV ißßment sizes. Limit, S3 A I—Lot Women's H f:® 00 Pieces loUet Goods-i 9e tosTvTJ — „„„ — "lh S6 low shoes... 9 H A ii2 T,ON •• A [ a! . Odds and Eads. All .Ues in the lot. HB9 If AXff SA£#XS Mm? 111 Sr A ™~*)nis 111 'ill II .HWL—M B 0n... nnß CblMr.n*. O*SjEP Us A ,|l|||h A. |f 9 190 VoIUO mi Felt and Leather 4 AjL Sj r'gm#n c. 4; EmmSik leftist Quality. Good elastic. I smg -fours house slippers MO c B '“IMPACTS .. . Hi® and „. m SATURDAY _ ■ DEPILATOrv* * ll Curtain Panels | 9-30 P M $1 to $2.50 Ladies’a j UKY • • i| s££jS£*m *0 1 .-, pocketbooks... qy g n*SiiZns~r—~k i!'"~£l5 c **’ lj PK9 ba fc~9 face powder 1 #rl r H —' J maßßHhi B „ >n Flesh— white w and l, Jb M**B Hfk 1,200 Women’s i SB Jh||l ||| KNIT VESTS 9I JIC NTS WmM IdMHMBHmi fi

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Takes Reno Cure

Mrs. Elizabeth Cobb Chapman tiv Prr* RENO, Nev., March 12.—Prepared 10 leave Reno, Mrs. Elizabeth Cobb Chapman, daughter of Irvin Cobb, has a decree of divorce from Frank W. Chapman Jr., opera singer, on grounds of mental cruelty. Mrs. Chapman took the “cure” Monday when she testified in divorce court that her husband found fault with her and nagged her. They were married at New York on Feb. 12, 1924. Custody and maintenance of a daughter. Patricia, 3, were arranged out of court. HOUSE TO REGULATE BUS LINES TRAFFIC Legislation Scheduled This Week on Interstate Projects. Bu Scripps-I/oicard Newspaper Alliance WASHINGTON, March 12.—Legislation for regulation of interstate bus lines probably will be adopted by the house this week.

Certificates of convenience must be obtained before any new interstate bus lines are established, though those now in operation will be allowed to continue. These certificates? are transferable. Bus lines carrying freight only do not come under the provisions of the act, and “free lance” bus lines, not operating on regular schedule, are treated somewhat differently. Instead of granting perpetual franchises, as was provided in the first bill, the commission is? authorized to recall its certificates as it sees fit. It is given authority, also, to pass upon mergers of bus corporations?.

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Gets the 3 Best Things in Life When all a girl needs is a clear, imooth skin, plenty of energy and a stomach which does not deprive her of the cake, candy and good food she wants, just keep down the excessive stomach acids, like pretty Lillian Utley, 921 ISastwood Ave., Chicago, does. “I got the surprise of my life when I started taking Acidine,” says Miss Utley. “Whenever I ate anything rich my stomach got so acid I’d have headaches and get sick. That’s all over now. Acidine sweetens my stomach so easily I never have to worry. It tastes fine. I like it.” Sick, sour stomach, burning sensation in the throat, excessive thirst, skin rash, come from too much acid when the stomach doesn’t digest the starchy food and sweets you eat. Get a package of Acidine at any drug store and see how quick, pleasant and inexpensive it is.

Has No Gas Now! Once a woman of her age had to be careful. Today she eats anything she wants! Takes a Stuart Dyspepsia Tablet—and after-eating distress vanishes Chew a Stuart Tablet after the heartiest meal, and you, too, can smile at indigestion. Stops gas and belching. Ends sour risings. A modern combina tion of Calcium Carbonate, Magnesium and other soothing, healing ingredients is the safe anti-acid, (2Va times as effective as soda) offered in these tablets. "A sveeet stomach for twentyfive cents " MAKE THIS TEST! Purchase a 25c, handy pocket tin of Stuart’s Dyspepsia Tablets at your druggists’, use them after meals and avoid the pains, discomforts and distresses due to indigestion. One Stuart’s Tablet will neutralize several times its weight of acid material in the stomach. At All Drug Store*: 25c and 60c Tha Quickest Relief for Gastric Disord* STUART'S DYSPEPSIA TABLETS

PAGE 5

CIVIL LIBERTY STILL ISSUE IN COURTSOF U. S. Strike Prosecutions Increase in 1929, Survey by Union Shows. By Scripps-Hoiranl Newspaper AlUane - WASHINGTON, March 12.—Civil liberty in the United States continues to be an issue which constantly must be fought for In the courts, according to a survey of 1929. just completed by the American civil liberties union. While there were fewer prosecutions last year Involving free speech, the number of strike prosecutions increased. Criminal syndicalism and sedition laws were invoked in four states last year, instead of one as in 1928. The four were Pennsylvania, California, Illinois and Ohio. The union finds the chief centers of repression in this country are North Carolina textile towns, the Pennsylvania coal and steel towns. Ohio mining towns, and southern California. Boston, Philadelphia and New York are the cities In which police mast frequently have Interfered with public meetings. Specialists Not Involved Charges involved in last year’s civil liberty cases range from criminal syndicalism to “failure to treat the American flag with respect.” None of the cases involved the Socialist party or the I. W. W. Most of the charges were directed against strikers and Communists. During the year the supreme court handed down one decision adversely affecting civil liberties, that by which Rosika Schwimmer was refused citizenship. Lower courts followed this with similar rulings. Other federal courts handled two cases, one Involving the right of a Communist to retain citizenship; the other Mrs. Mary Ware Dennett’s conviction for distributing a pamphlet alleged to be obscene. This last conviction has been reversed since. Civil Liberties Affected Four state supreme court decisions affected civil liberties. The Pennsylvania court upheld the state sedition act, the South Dakota court knocked out the law permitting the reading of the Bible in the schools, the Massachusetts court sustained conviction of a man charged with criminal libel, in connection with a Sacco-Vanzetti protest, and the Minnesota court upheld the right of judges to enjoin “defamatory” newspapers. Among gains for civil liberty in the year, the union cites the state department’s reversal of its order refusing to admit Count Michael Karolyi into this country, defeat in congress of a bill which would have registered all aliens in the country, and the breakdown of the system of police control of meetings in private halls in Pennsylvania. WAR OATH BAN BILL POSTPONED BY HOUSE .Amendment to Act Would Admit Objectors to Citizenship. By Bcrlpps-Uaward Newspaper Alllano WASHINGTON. March 12.—The house immigration committee has postponed indefinitely hearings on a bill introduced by Representative Anthony J. Griffin, New York to amend the naturalization act so that opposition to war shall not make a person ineligible for citizenship. Representative Griffin introduced his bill last May. It was an outgrowth of the case of Rosika Schwimmer, who was held Ineligible for citizenship because she opposed war. Since that time Griffin has asked for hearings and at one time Representative Albert Johnson, Washington, promised that a date would be set. Monday, however, the immigration committee met in executive session and agreed to a motion which indefinitely would postpone the hearings. HEAR CANCER EXPERTS Discoverers of Serum to Appear at Senate Session. By Rcripps-Howard Newspaper Alliance WASHINGTON, March 12.—The senate commerce committee will hear Dr. W. B. Coffey and Dr. J. D. Humber of San Francisco tell the story of their discovery of an anti-cancer serum. The two doctors are on their way to Washington, but probably will not arrive until the latter part of the week. Senator W. B. Harris of Georgia has a resolution pending before the committee, directing an inquiry into the prevention and cure of cancer. The two California doctors have attracted wide attention by their treatment of cance cases with the new f^rum.

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GARDEN TOOLS Hoes, Rakes, Trowels, Spades, Shovels, Pruning Shears, Hedge Shears Cultivators. VONNEGUT’S 120-124 E. Washington

The Meyer-Kiser Bank Its E. WASHINGTON ST. We Pay 4%% Savings

Headquarter fee BUESCHER Band Instruments Pearson Piano Cos. ns- so i. rtMyina .