Indianapolis Times, Volume 42, Number 43, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 June 1930 — Page 3
*JUINiL Ov, law.
816 MEASURES ARE SLATED INCONGRESS Session Is Expected to Close Tuesday or Wednesday. Eh Frrippt-Hoironl Srtcspaoer Alliance WASHINGTON, June 30.—Half a dozen of the most important measures before congress this session remain on the legislative calendar as congress prepares to adjourn. If present plans are carried out congress will adjourn Tuesday or Wednesday. There is little prospect that any of these major matters will be acted upon before then. The Wagner unemployment bills head the list. If no action is taken there will b- no opportune for government aid of unemployment before next winter. The Wagner bills have passed the senate and could pass the house if the powerful rules committee permitted them to be called up for debate. The house judiciary committee has changed the bills somewhat and they would have to go to conference and a compromise form agreed on by both houses before they would be ready for the President’s signature. Stalled in the house, also, are the Norris constitutional amendment to abolish lame duck sessions of congress, the Couzens resolution to halt railroad mergers, and the various measures designed to reduce Mexican immigration to this country. The Norris amendment has no chance of passage, but a similar one was reported from a house committee and probably could be passed without difficulty if it were allowed by the rules committee to come up for action. The Norris amendment has passed the senate in the last three congresses almost without debate or dissenting voice. There has been a tentative promise that the resolution on railroad consolidations would pass the house,
/fL \ Eddie Cantor can’t toll this ... ' : | 15' Phonograph RECiIRI) from 75? music Get one at your news-stand today by Eddie Cantor
I THOUGHT Flo Ziegfeld was handing me a great big Ha-Ha. He came back all steamed up after hearing this new record. For priced orchestras ... big musical hits! I had to laugh; For 15? you couldn’t buy even a piccolo solo! But then I heard the record played! I listened to six of these Hit-of-the-Week Records and if there’s any difference between them and the kind I plunk down i &<£ for, I must be wearing ear muffs. And they don’t break! I took one home. I ■at on it. I hit it with a hammer. We used it as a cocktail tray. Even my pre-war (that is ef pre” the next war) stuff couldn’t scar it. And then the cook fried an egg on it. It played just the some. There’s not a break in a boxful! They’re made of Dunum, folks and that’s the whole secret. Durium was invented by
Hit-of-the-Week Itecords A DURIUM PRODUCT e 1930, Darlan Products Corporation, <l6O West 34th Street, .New York City DEWOLF NEWS COMPANY 15 S. Senate Avenue, Indianapolis Phone Riley 9687
Pretty —Smart
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A representative beauty—and a beauty representative—of Georgia is fair A’ice Louise Garret son (above) of Decatur. She'll be the pulchritudinous envoy of her home state at several forthcoming beauty festivals. A graduate of Agnes Scott college this year, she has won a fellowship in chemistry and biology at Emory university.
but if it does it will pass in a modified form which probably would not be acceptable to the senate. The marked decline in Mexican immigration to this country in the last few months has made it improbable that a restriction bill will be passed. The administration opposes it. Most important of the measures stalled in the senate is the antiinjunction bill, which came from committee a few weeks ago, with an adverse report. Its friends have abandoned hope for passage before adjournment and are concentrating their efforts on assuring it first place on the program for the December session. It has not passed the house.
Dr. H. T. Beans professor of chemistry at Columbia University. He told me the technical name and it made me dizzy. With Durium, a machine can turn out 70,000 a day, instead of only 700. Now your money can buy music instead of expensive material! That’s why Hit-of-the-Week Records can sell for 15^! Only one record will be made each week, and that will be a hit that has proved itself on the stage, and over the radio, and on the dance floor. Flo Ziegfeld, Vincent Lopez and I will act as a music jury to pick out the most popular piece of music every week. Then it will be recorded by one of the best orchestras that money can hire. Every record a hit! No flops admitted here! So step up, folks and give yourself a treat. You can buy these records AT ANY NEWSSTAND as easily as buying a magazine. Get yours today.
DOLTS COAXED FROM BLUE TO AID EXPERIMENT Lightning Damage Will Be Learned in Tests by Scientists. Bu United Preen SCHENECTADY, N. Y., June 30. —While thousands of tourists dodge thunder storms this summer, two parties of outing enthusiasts in the middle west will be watching and waiting for them. In fact when nature does not provide lightning, they will make bolts themselves and dart them at objects to study their effects. One of these groups already is “on location” in Michigan at a spot where they believe lightning is most likely to strike. They will cover a fifty-mile stretch cf a high voltage feed wire. Another party soon will be out on a similar mission between Philo and Canton, Ohio, on another feed wire where lightning seems to have an affinity for playing. The groups have been sent out from the lightning research department of General Electric Company, Pittsfield, Mass. E. J. Wade, who worked with Dr. W. D. Coolidge, "the modern Thor” who first created artificial lightning, heads the Michigan group, and H. L. Rorden, a student in the high voltage laboratory, is in temporary charge of the Ohio party. Each of the parties is equipped with an impulse generator which will produce from 1,000,000 to 1,500,000 volts in one flash of lightning. All winter these bolts were darted at miniature villages and their actions recorded on a delicate instrument with the high sounding name of cathode ray oscillograph. Reason for these experiments, it is explained, is to study the relative damage by lightning to property protected by lightning arresters, and property which is not, and also to develop the old-fashioned lightning rod into a sure protection, if possible, from the bolts from the skies.
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Splash Day for Kids
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These days are “splash days” for kids who are lucky enough to live near a fire engine house. The above picture shows a crowd of children getting the benefit from a hose arranged by firemen at Engine House 9, 537 Belle Vieu place.
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THIS WEEK’S RIG HIT “Across the Breakfast Table* 7 from the talking picture "Mammy” played by Hit-of-the-Week Orchestra Hit-of-the-Week Music Jury
EDDIE CANTOK FLOREXZ ZIEGFELD VINCENT LOPEZ
BPBHk : :
KILLS SELF TO AyOIDCAPTURE City Man Feared He Was Marshal’s Slayer. Belief that he had murdered a constable was thought today to have caused the suicide of Clyde W. Jennings, paroled bank robber, who shot himself rather than surrender to a sheriff’s posse. He had been cornered with two
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companions four miles east of Goodland early Sunday, when he ended his life. Jennings, 25, of 528 South Edge RBI road, in company with Frank Reece, 27, Ooodland, and Wallace Malone. 25, of 1526 Hoyt avenue, previously had shot and critically wounded J. B. Owensby, Goodland marshal. Owensby was searching the automobile in which the trio slept Saturday night, when Jennings is said to have shot the marshal. In Jasper county jail at Renn.se - laer Malone and Reece confessed they planned to rob the bank of Benton county at Fowler, authori- . ties said, but were deterrred Satur-
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day because of large crowds in the bank all day. Jennings’ parents. Mr. and Mrs. Rufus V. Jennings. 528 South Edge Hill road, claimed their son’s body. He is said to have served a prison term for taking part in the robbery of the Live Stock Exchange bank, Indianapolis, three years ago. Jennings also has been convicted twice of vehicle taking. 400 NICKELS IN LOOT Four hunderd buffalo nickels were Included in 860 loot of a burglar from the home of Fred Mclntire, 113 Greeley street, Sunday night, Mclntire toid police.
