Indianapolis Times, Volume 41, Number 298, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 April 1930 — Page 5

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HINTS AT FALL OF e. 0. P. IF LEAGUE LOSES Citizens’ Workers May Not Aid 'Boss* Nominees, Johnson Warns. Covort threat of reprisal in event the now deal element of the Republican party goes down to defeat in the primary, May . wan Hounded In the talks of Olt Irens Republican latgu* leaders Wednesday night in the Knights of Pythias building. ' Republicans of Marlon county will be willing to work in the fall and boost the ticket if we win our fight for reorganization,” declared Kmsley W. Johnson, "but if we don't win and the old clement remains in control, I don’t believe that many will work for the success of the ticket.” Pleading for a large vote In the primary wholly from a nonpartisan stand, Miss Florence Kirlln, secretary of the League of Women Voters, said: "Democracy Is being challenged by the large number of citizens who stay away from the polls because politics Is 'too dirty.'** "Bosslsm is responsible for protected bootleggers and cheating office holders,’’, declared Senator John Nlblack in an address In which he outlined the history of the fights that have been waged against "Coffinlsm.” The meeting attended by more than 500 adopted a resolution calling upon Martin M. Hugg, O. O. P. county chairman, to appoint members of the Citizens Republican League to election boards. PLAY SCRIPT CABLED TO U. S. BY AUTHOR Galsworthy, in England. Insists on Makinr Own Film Changes. April 24—John Galsworthy, famous English author, and George Arliss, noted British actor, are collaborating in writing for motion pictures, by cable. The suthor recently consented to let Warner Brothers make his famous play "Old English” into a talkie featuring Arliss. He stipulated, however, that Hollywood writers whould not be permitted to tamper with the lines. As some changes are necessary in adapting the play for the talking screen, Arliss cables the alterations dally and Galsworthy writes the new dialogue, in England, and cables It back to Hollywood—at regular rates.

Gone, but Not Forgotten

Automobtiss reported to police as stolen belo- to ner Weston. 738 East Twentv<|T, ,‘fft. Chevrolet urdnn. from 736 East Tv -flmt street M. tin Msrtln. 3358 Sheldon street. Essex fiK.ch, #4-587. from 3356 Sheldon street. American Security Company. 638 Bankers Trust building. Chevrolet coupe, from 4534 Washington boulevard. Rorcoe Collins. 2378 Pierson avenue. Plymouth sedan. United taxi cab No, 8. from Martlndato avenue and Twentieth street Oltbert Sohter. R R. 8. box 489. Chevrolet roadster. 755-048. from Pennsylvania and Court street*. Clyde Turner. 835 West Twenty-sixth street. Ford sedan. 759-518. from Market' atid Pennsylvania streets. William DHL 1801 Ludlow avenue. Chevrolet truck. T 11-115. from In front of 1 SOI Ludlow avenue.

PACK HOME AGAIN

Stolen automobile recovered by potlce belong to: Will,am HtrrU, 644 Bright street, Ford eeupe. found at 941 Indiana avenue. Walter Hinkle. 3740 Bellefontalne street. Ford coupe, found In alley near Tuxedo and Sixteenth street. S ’elite Slater. 3153 Stanley avenue. Ford an. found In front of 3146 South East street. Charles Hamer, R. R. 8. box US. Chevrolet coach, found at New Jersey and Market streets. Chevrolet emine. 78-453. found at Darnell and West streets.

Dlon't fool voursfcf I Sincr halitosss nevcr an * ■^U' *• fUUI9v 1 nounces itself to the victim, you simply cannot know when you have it. M ■ I TK§ f*

Make yourself attractive —end halitosis

Before meeting others you would like to impress agreeably, make sure that you are free of halitosis (unpleasant breath) which offends so many. Simply rinse the mouth with full-strength Listerine. It destroys odors, leaving the breath sweet and wholesome. Don't fool yourself that you never have halitosis because you simply cannot know when you are a victim. It doesn't announce itself to you. But it does to

LISTERtNE kill* 900,000,000 j*rms in 15 second*

8A Graduates of S chool 49

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Left to Klglit—Wrnle Jones, Dwane Cassidy, Harold Baker, Wallace Wycoff, Albert Breedlove and Frances Hass.

Left to Right—Virginia Tapp, Margaret Hill, Pauline Karsnak, Mary Waif, Naomi Brown and Frances Totton.

Left to Right—Carl Darnell, Frederick Tucker. Michael Fay, Gilbert Whitt, George Newhaus and Richard Reid.

Left to Right—Lorene Morphcw, Georgia Stoner, Sylvia Dwinell, Waneta Wilson, Alma Dorns and Frances Moon. (

Left to Right—Florence George, Howard Krlck, Geo go Totton, Robert McDonald and Ethel StockwelL

Left to Right—Bertha Willoughby, Mildred Neavill, Catherine Twigg, leveese White, Edna Frazier and Helen Carson.

SKY PHOTOS STUDIED Harvard Checks Report of Planet Discovery. Hu United Press CAMBRIDGE, Mass., April 24. Photographic plates were studied at Harvard observatory today in an effort to confirm reports from the Dominion observatory at Ottawa Indicating the discovery of what may be another new planet. Professor Harlow Shapley, director, was convinced th*t the unknown object located by the Canadian astronomers was not planet X, whose discovery was reported recently from Lowel observatory in Flagstaff, Ariz. It was pointed out that plates on file at Dominion observatory showed the unknown object In various positions. proving conclusive’y that It was not a fixed star.

others —and is unforgivable. Being an active germicide capable of killing 200,000,000 germs in 15 seconds, fullstrength Listerine checks mouth fermentation and infection—both a cause of odors. Then it gets rid of the odors themselves; it is a powerful deodorant. Keep a bottle handy in home and office and use it often. It pays. Lambert Pharmacal Company, St. Louis, Mo., U. S. A.

Aged Mother Dies Bit Times Special BELLE UNION. Ind., April 24. Mrs. Mary McCammack, 81, died at her home here following & several

WHITE OAK New River Smokeless Coal has been heating homes in Indianapolis for twenty years. It is a product of the low volatile coal producing region of southern West Virginia, mined and shipped with greatest care to retail dealers who want you to have the ideal fuel for heating your home. The retail coal dealers of Indianapolis listed below always have a fresh supply of WHITE OAK COAL on hand in the size best suited to your heating plant

Atlas Fuel Company 429 West Morris Street Drexel 0883 Bischoff & Fisse 2051 North Rural Street Cherry 1292 Economy Fuel Supply Company 359 West Ray Street Drexel 1220 Gem Coal Company 1161 Roosevelt Avenue Cherry 1198 E. E. Heller & Company 3924 Fletcher Avenue Drexel 1540 Hoosier Brick and Coal Company 1302 E. 30th Street Hemlock 1331 A. B. Keeport Company, Inc. 620 North Senate Avenue Lincoln 5437 Local Coal Company 1405 Bates Street Drexel 1209

White Oak Coal Cos.

1515 Merchants Bank Bldg.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES .

weeks’ illness of heart disease. She leaves four children, Everett, Emery and Ernest. McCammack, and Mrs. Hessie Wallace, all residing near here.

YOUTH IN TEENS MAY COMMANO ARCTIGVESSEL Yale Student Asks Consent of Parents to Take MatMillan Trip. Bu United Pres * BOSTON. April 28. —A youth still in his teens, who first went into the Arctic as Commander Donald B. MacMillan’s cabin boy in 1925, npy return to the frozen north this year in. command of a ship which dwarfs MacMillan's veteran schooner Bowdoin, which it will accompany. The young man who has set himself this goal is Kennett Rawson, 19-ysar-old Yale freshman, and son of Frederick Holbrook Rawson, millionaire Chicago bank pres dent. He ha.3 requested and been promised MacMillan’s co-operation and awaits only parental approval to carry out his ambitious project. The vessel which young Rawson would use is the handsome twomasted schooner Gadfly, purchased for him by his wealthy father last year at a price of $150,000. Double timbered and double planked, with a belt of iron wood around its hull, the Gadfly was built for Arctic exploration work. Whether or not young Rawson takes his Gadfly into the far north this year. MacMillan will make his annual Journey beyond the Arctic circle. It will be his thirteenth expedition with Labrador, Greenland and Iceland on the 1930 itinerary. DAGGETT NAMED CHIEF OF BUILDING CONGRESS Need for Co-operation Is Stressed by Colvin in Speech. Need for organization and cooperation between architects, contractors and engineers was stressed by Lester Colvin, contractor, to the Indianapolis Building Congress at the Severin Wednesday night. A program of education to foster the award of construction contracts to home contractors was launched. Congress officers elected are: Robert Frost Daggett, president; G. M. Sanborn, S. P. Meadows and Leslie Colvin, vice-presidents; E. J. Wuensch, treasurer, and J. G. Brannum, secretary. Six Through One School BkV Times Special SOMERSET, Ind., April 24.—Six members of the graduating class of the Somerset high school who received diplomas this week, started in the first grade together and never attended any other school. They are Wendell and Basil Albaugh, Russell Minnick, Dorothy Foust, Paul Ogan and Dorothy Morris.

Metropolitan Coal Company 945 N. Davidson Street Lincoln 5488 Muesing-Merrick Coal Company 1144 E. 22nd Street Hemlock 1361 Peoples Coal and Cement Company 1109 E. 15th Street Cherry 4890 Pittman-Rice Coal Company 120 South La Salle Street Cherry 5100 Polar Ice and Fuel Company 2000 Northwestern Avenue * Talbot 0689 Southern Coal Company 1937 Madison Avenue Drexel 0300 Speedway Coal Company Speedway City, Indiana Belmont 0189 Stuckmeyer & Company 2134 Lexington Avenue Drexel 0502 Union Ice and Coal Company 1910 Bluff Road Drexel 4627

Indianapolis

‘Gate Crashers’ Special Badges Ordered for Members of Fire Department.

Fire chief harry e. vo6HELL has carried a police badge three years without occasion to use it. But—"Some of the boys use them to get into prize fights,” he told board of safety as it ruled that city firemen can not be policemen at the same time and wear a regulation police badge. The board learned that several firemen wear regular police badges, some of whom bought gold-plated lieutenant’s badges, paying the cost themselves. "Let’s make this police department distinctive,” Frank C. Daily, board member said. "I’d like for policemen to feel that they have a profession which can not be imitated by every one. I’m opposed to firemen wearing regular badges, although some may have need for special police authority in investigating arson cases.” Beer has a slight but transient food value for the worker, according to Sir George Newman, chief medical officer to the English ministry of health.

Where Cushion and SconomyJfeet dT***# Charles 4 West Wash. St. FRIDAY AN EXTRAORDINARY DRESS SALE Purchased at after-Easter prices now —they arrive just in time for your selection tomorrow — NEWEST DRESSES Silks AI All Prints 4* Newest Crepes WB Colors HUNDREDS OF DRESSES TO CHOOSE FROM You never saw the equal of these dresses at so low a price, because we don’t believe we ever had such values before. There are hundreds of dresses in the newest prints, smartest styles and gayest colors. Every popular style for every occasion. There are sizes for women and misses.

TWO HURT IN CRASH Internal Injuries, Cuts and Braises Toll in ColLsion. F. H. Smock, 32, %f Shadeland avenue and Fourteenth street, suffered internal injuries and cuts on the head, and R. W. Heaton, 29, of Anderson, was cut and suffered injury to an eye, when cars driven by

AUTO TRUNKS r „ - From Factory ”* *' wt r 1 ' Without Cnie I. ■ •••.•-y? ■ . ..v, Cases 97.50 Each Enter Your Drawing Now for a Prize We waDt anew signature cut. We are offering three prizes In I merchandise to the amateur artist submitting the best design before I April 30. Send drawings to Gausepohl Editor, The Times. An ides I and a little effort may win a prize for you. |

CHARLES^

PAGE 5

the men collided at Shadeland avenue and the Pendleton pike Wednesday night. Aged Woman Die* By Times Special LADOGA. Ind., April 34.—Mrs. Anna H. Watkins. 76, is dead at the home of her da- ghter, Mrs. Floyd Dickerson, follot ing a short Illness. Burial will be at Crawfordsville. __