Indianapolis Times, Volume 42, Number 105, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 September 1930 — Page 7
SEPT. 10, 1930.
jRESS/j ===== | EXTRA SPECIAL foT/M SP£CM27WiXTRASPECIAL !! WEXTRA SPECIAL! iffain and we are readv to HI Thursday and Friday starting at BiaSl Thursday and Friday morning BPS Thursday and Friday tto3r. m. banal Thursday and Friday 3to at*, m. , . B A p. M. EACH DAY WE WILD SELL r 2Egj 10 TO 11 A. M. ONLY, WE B WE WILL SELL EACH Wigm ONLY. EACH DAY, W K W ILL ore loaded with high-grade Jo 1,300 REOtLAR 10c bars bS will sell 600 cans bay eoo cans HB sell 500 packages prices that are incomparably j|g JPaillttOli V© CHOICE ||g VAN CAMP 'S mS WIESON’S MIEK. Ifll <Jwra( , JWW^W?p-sw* mWs demands for savings H Lifeb v m* 11 AND BEANS gl TALL CANS M ' a“flavors Cation of our policy to 1 UfettUOy M % M M com- Ca ” S % \ IT END-OF SEASON PRICES! P^Sg)! I I^^ 0 UNION Idresses I^sl^ yK*?llll suits If f “£""“ | IMfeJK f ** A thJSome Mussed—at 95c || Former S9c Values! |j| A ogf |j otl '' 1 BOYS’ STURDY 1 Ml tj I SALE or HOSIERY Men s Fancy Ladies’ I risTA * ilfWttr CRETONNES, * w mHkjj! Mettzs DRESS 1 Rayon Ryo„ snk Cmldren s JSspJ* WHITE outing Y and m*mm t Cvtad nc 1 HOSE hose Stockings ™ I " m ~ ,,nM ' ”° - If-fell PXff DKIla I Form,, 350 >-™* # Slippers t 36 Inche. Wide ,f mk<\\x I CURTAIN SCRIM ET* W- Jipiili feLt^Jwl 6 ® 2 ” ™ “ s; = /f \OfBTSSSU * /jl§J 23 tS'Jmi
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
CHURCH GROUP WARS ON ALIEN AND WET RULE •Protestant Alliance’ Takes Up Cudgel Against •Nation’s Foes.’ , Bt/ I'crinvs-lToward Xeirspnvrr Alliatuc WASHINGTON. Sept. 10—For 2 cents drj's can learn how to cut thirty wets from the congressional roster and for 4 cents they can get i a lot mere detail about that and the “stop alien representation” amendment. This offer of information is contained in a letter from the American Protestant Alliance, which is described as a “practical basis of union to promote militant Protestantism without raising any real religious issue.” The alliane’s chief effort this winter, apparently, will be to seek congressional approval of the proposed amendment, and this is seen as the “last hope l of preventing a staggering permanent loss in the dry strength in congress.” The amendment is described as the Sparks-Capper stop alien representation amendment resolution, which, “by cutting out representation of unnaturalized foreigners, will offset much of the automatic loss, under the new apportionment, of at least forty dry rural congressional districts.” The alliance will have in the field
43 SOUTH ILLINOIS ST. Belwevn Washington ami Maryland Streets
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You owe this - to the children , Don’t start them out with physical handicaps. Build their little bodies to win the race of life—give them all the Shredded Wheat they want with plenty of milk—a combination that builds good bones and sturdy bodies. And how they love it! You don’t have to coax them to eat. Delicious for any meal with fruits. SHREDDED fSjgWH EAT WITH ALL TrtE * RAN OF THE VMG(£ WHEAT
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the Rev. George M. Fowles, D. D, wuj M>r yeato was uic treasurer of the loretgn mission board of the Methodist Episcopal church. Fowles Will act as cnairman of the amendment campaign committee, which is asking for $200,000. A large part of this amount, the article says, will be used lor “intensive worn to arouse dry Protestant pastors of the entire nation to demand ‘ quick submission of the amendment in December. The amendment, the alliance says, has been given the approval ol Bishop Cannon. “The Constitution of the United States makes representation in congress depend not on citizenship, but on population,” says a statement by Yvunain n. Anderson, general secretary of the alliance. “Asa result, some 7,500,000 unnaturalized aliens have aoout tuirty congressmen, therefore thirty electoral votes, and aiso sixty delegates to the national convention of each party.” CIVIL SERVICE RULES WAIVED FOR WOMAN Hoover Signs Order Aiding Widow of Slain Prohibition Agent. Bu I nitnl I’r i sh WASHINGTON, Sept. 10.—CivU service rules have been suspended in tlie ease of Mrs. Frances Kearney, widow of a slain prohibition agent, President Hoover having signed an order permitting Mrs. Kearney to enter government service without civil service status. Kearney was murdered from ambush at Aguilar, Colo., last June. His widow, who has two children to support in Longmont, Colo., w f ill be placed as a stenographer, it is
