Indianapolis Times, Volume 42, Number 188, Indianapolis, Marion County, 16 December 1930 — Page 5

DEC. 16, 193 CL

P. T. A, GROUP PROGRAMS HAVE CHRISTMAS AIR _____ * Playlets, Recitations and Carols to Be Given for City Units., The Christmas atmosphere will pervade Parent-Teacher Associations’ meetings this week, playlets, recitations and yuletide carols featuring the programs. ..The mothers’ chorus and members ot “>5 T' T. A. of School 45. have been asked to repeat the Christmas proeram they gave for their local organization for the Federation of Mothers' Choruses and the Federation of Parent-Teachers' Associations at 1:30 Tuesday In the assembly hall of School 45 at Twenty-third street and Park avenue. At the night meeting of the P. T. A. of School 60 at 8 Wednesday night, Herman Kothe will sing, accompanied bv Mrs. Herman Wolfe. A short play. "Dust of the Road," bv Kenneth Bawver Goodman, will be nresented bv the Thespis Club of Butler university, directed by Mrs. Eugene Fife. Children's work will be displayed In all rooms. The building will be open at 7. The P. T. A. of School 38 will meet Wednesday at 1:30. A Christmas program entitled. "Dream of Bethlehem.” will be (riven by department children, directed by Miss Gertrude Insley. Groups dressed as carolers will sing carols of many nations, directed bv Mrs. Marion Carpenter and Mrs. Alexander Jameson of the Marlon County Tuberculosis Association will speak. A Christmas party will follow with exchange of gifts. School 57 wl! hold a P. T. A. meeting at 7:30 Wednesday night. The program will Include Christmas plays and carols by the puplis. School 29 will have a P. T. A. meeting at .3:15 Wednesday. Children of the senool will give a Christmas program. Entire program of the meeting of the P. T. A of School 76 will be presented by the pupils, conducted try Miss Marie Marls. The meeting will be held Wednesday at 2:30. The P. T. A. of Bchool 66 will meet Wednesday night at 8. Dr. Frank. C. Wicks will tell the Christmas story. A suite of Colprldge Taylor will be presented by the Turner trio, composed of Mrs. Carol Letber. cellist. Mrs. Norma Feltensteln. violinist, and Mrs. Carolyn Turner, pianist. On account of repairs being made at School 49. there will be no P. T. A. meeting in December. A Christmas party starting at 1:30 will be given by the P. T. A. of School 44 Wednesday. The children of rooms 16 and 19 will sing Christmas carols and the children of Room 22 will give a Christmas Play. In the program of the P. T. A. meeting of School 85 Wednesday at 3:15, will be a Christmas play by the pupils. In keeping with their usual Christmas custom, the pupils of School 72 will give the program for the December meeting of the P. T. A. Wednesday at 2:30. The P. T. A. of School 54 will not meet In December. A Christmas program by the children will be given for the P. T. A. meeting pf School 90 Wednesday at 2. A plav, "The Christmas Stocking.” will be given bv the pupils of School 81 at the P. T. A. meeting Wednesday at 3:15. Carols will be sung by the teachers, children of the upper chorus and the mothers' chorus. Therp will be a stunt by the mother*. Mrs. C. J. Buchanan will speak at School 27 Wednesday at 2:15 at the P. T. A. meeting. Her subject will be "Gifts for Everyone.” A Christmas play will be given bv pupils, the mothers' chorus providing music. A 10 cent gift exchange will be held. The P. T. A. of School 31 will meet at 2:30 Wednesday. “Christmas Spirit” will be discussed bv the Rev. M. E. Baker. There will be a Christmas carol play bv ih” HA grade and Christmas songs by the mothers' chorus. Mothers also will give a Christmas party for the children. Mrs. Louis Schmidt. P. T. A. president of School 3. will have charge of the meeting Wednesday at 3:15. A marionette show. "Christmas Party.” will be given by 7A pupils. A reading by Mrs. Wilbur Johnson and carols by the mothers’ chorus, under the direction of Mrs. Helen French, are on the program. The P T. A. of the Frances Willard School 80. will give a Christmas program Wednesday at 2. children nd mothers joining in the program. Milo H. Stuart will speak at School 12 Tuesday at 7:30 for the P. T. A. The program will consist of Christmas carols sung bv the 8A pupils, starlight dance bv 6A girls and four members of an orchestra composed of present and former pupils. The Henrietta Coffin School 10 will hold Its P. T. A. meeting Friday at 1:45. The program will be given bv the children. Parents are requested to bring donations for baskets to be given to the needy of the school. Program of the P. T. A. of School 70 at 1:30 Wednesday, will be given by the children of the school. The primary department of School 84 will give a Christmas program for the P. T. A. meeting of that school Wednesday at 2. A Christmas play will be staged at School 55 for the P. T. A. meeting at 2:15 Wednesday. Mrs. E. Collins' pupils will furnish entertainment. P. T. A. members of School 42 will meet at 3:30 Wednesday. A motion picture. Health." will be shown. The mothers’ chorus and children from Miss Artie German's and Miss Hazel Wolfolk's rooms will sing Christmas carols. Thursday night at 7:45 the P. T. A. of

Two Christmas Gifts for the Price of One! Marbeloid Top Smoker Regular Price, $4.95 Automatic Dish Washer Regular Price, $5.50 REMOTAL SALE tßoth for Only a few more days of the great removal sale. The oppor- / '*L\ */% tunity of a lifetime to save on /■ ’\n> fine quality furniture. Many ’ ?|i A. y][ijgfe items less than half price for '"T‘ rW 'KYi^M the final T®S OPEN TILL 9 P. M. SATURDAY

BELIEVE IT or NOT

f— WEY JOF FRE weyi ler, fre Inch" • MAOEgZ First DOWNS ALABAMA NOME Iv in jl ? ’ ScLl-yr But we score v/as a Tie - o-o ant GeRntHME Muza AGE YEARS 81 MONTHS MOOS^Bird —of San Francisco . An insecticide or CLIMBED MT SHASTA (unaided) 14,380 ft: HIGH- pdHjg?" j OF VARIOUS INSECTS That annoy him *© IVJg lUb* ln>— SyAiriM. Inc. Gnw Bnuta nchti reserved ” ‘

Following is the explanation of Ripley’s “Believe It or Not” which appeared in Monday’s Times: Yogi Ramakrishna Cried for Forty-one Years—The Hindu Yoghin believe that their religious goal of concentrated self-contem-plation can be attained best by some unusual means of the mor-

School 43 will meet. The hour will be given over to the children of the school for the Christmas music. The P. T. A. of School 68 will meet Thursday nißht at 8. A Christmas proKram will be given bv the children and a bazar will follow. Meetinß of the P. T. A. of Shortridße high school Tuesday nißht will observe "Music Nißht.” J. w. Wainrißht of the Shortridße music department will have charße of the program. The P. T. A. of School 75 will meet Wednesday. The Rev. Lenn A. Latham will tell the Christmas story. A short playlet, “Pull Back.” will be given. School 22 P. T. A., will hold a Christmas party Wednesday at 2:45. Gifts will be exchanged. At 2:15 Wednesday the P. T. A. of School 13 will meet. The program will include a play. "On Christmas Hill,” given by the children of the intermediate grades. Fail to Settle Rail- Row MOSCOW, Dec. 16.—Hopes of settling the Chinese Eastern railway dispute were dashed again today as the Chinese delegation prepared to leave forjhome after their conference with Soviet representatives was abandoned.

Headachy An Nt NATURE’S REMEDY •Tablet—will promptly start the ff SgV ifja Beeded bowel action, clear & waste and poiron from your M | system, and bring welcome relief at once. The mild, /sO'ivllCjtll safe, all-vegetable laxa- * TO-MOHRpty Uve. Try it 25c. ALRIGHT The All •Vegetable Laxative 1 —►burn.

On request, sent with stamped addressed envelope, Mr. Ripley will furnish proof of anything "depicted by him.

tification of the body. Yoghi Ramakrishna attained his purpose by crying incessantly for forty-one years. Ramakrishna was the teacher of the Yoghi Haridas, who demonstrated his ability before the authorities to suspend his own life for forty days. The story is told in Professor Max-Muller’s “Theosophy.”

AID IS ASKED FOR STRIKERS Thomas Appeals for Public Help in Virginia. By Scripps-Hoteard Newspaper Alliance WASHINGTON, Dec. 16.—Unless public help is given to Danville and West Virginia strikers, there is danger that the present depression and unemployment will be used to break existing wage levels and labor organizations, Norman Thomas warned here today. Thomas was in Washington as one of a group who petitioned cpngressional leaders for immediate steps toward unemployment insur-

‘Pay Cash—Save Half * DIAMONDS Watches and Jewelry Buy Now for Xmas DAVID KLOR A Phone Call to Either Number TAlbot 6442—HArrisoii 1127 Will Open My Jewelry Case in Your Home

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

1-i \7 Keglslered D. 8. MJ j I’atsot Office RIPLEY

Cast Iron Grows—Cast iron is very high in carbon. It has high absorbent qualities. When exposed to intermittent heat, it will combine chemically with gases and increase the volume of the metal. Wednesday: “The Longest Name.”

ance and larger unemployment relief* appropriations. His appeal for the strikers, however, was an appeal for donations from the public to meet situations where no other relief is possible. At Danville, Thomas pointed out, 4,000 workers are in the twelfth week of a strike “provoked by a wage cut not ratified by the spurious type of industrial democracy in the Dan river cotton mills, but imposed by the employer who then discharged his workers as fast as they joined the United Textile Workers Union.” “Men of good will in and out of the labor movement can not afford to let this strike be defeated by tear gas. hunger and eviction,” Thomas declared. The English channel is more salty in summer than in winter.

ILLNESS ENDED IN SHORT TIME “Has Never Returned,” Says Indianapolis Lady In Praise of Konjola, The New Medicine. Konjola is not designed to afford mere temporary relief. It is not that kind of a medicine. Its 32 ingredients, 22 of them the juices of medicinal roots and herbs, attack the source of the ailment.

MRS. ANNA BROWNING

j The record made by this famous compound might often challenge belief were the actual facts not known and verified. Men and w r omen of all ages have felt its power. Read the experience of Mrs. Anna Browning, 2243 South Meridian street, Indian- ’ apolis. It is not unlike thousands ' of others with which the Konjola ; Man at the Hook Dependable Drug Store, Illinois and Washington streets, this city, is familiar. See him today, but right now read the experience of Mrs. Browming: “I suffered for a number of years with a complication of ailments. I ate but little and even this food caused bloating and gas pain. My kidneys were weak and I suffered terribly from liver trouble. Dizzy spells, headaches, and spots before the eyes occurred daily. Constipation bothered me and I was finally attacked by rheumatism and neuritis. “I tried many medicines and treatments for relief, but not until, at the urgent request of a friend, I tried Konjola, did I find health. Eight bottles of this great medicine completely banished all by ailments, and, although it has been nearly ; three years since I stopped taking Konjola, none of my ailments has ever returned.” This great medicine has become the most widely discussed compound in America in a few* short years simply by making good. The Konjola Man is at the Hook Dependable Drug Store, Illinois and Washington streets, Indianapolis, where he is meetmg the public daily FREE SAMPLES GfVEX —Advmiaement.

\ HUNDREDS of Eager Women Are Storming Our Counters to Take Advantage of These New Low Prices on — Full-Fashioned Chiffon (Stibstandards) REAL SILK HOSE Now Priced at to 2 A Less Than First Quality Hose of Equal Grade! Now there’s no reason why every woman in Indianapolis can’t have dozens and dozens of pairs of these exquisitely beautiful stockings. Come in tomorrow! Join the enthusiastic throngs who are reaping a harvest of savings caused by this NEW REDUCED PRICE. Give a dozen pairs for Christmas! Choose a dozen for yourself! We sincerely believe this to be the finest hosiery value obtainable for so little money! Plenty of extra salespeople to help you! m Choice of Our Two Most Popular Numbers a *69°~ a, Bo° (Or Three Pairs for $2) And our very finest hose—genuine grenadine At this new low reduced price you can choose 45-gauge chiffon hose—are reduced to 80c pair! either (1) full-fashioned dull chiffon hose with The dullness woven right into them—a patpicot edge, very fine, sheer and evenly woven, ented twist of the thread making them practi • silk to the tops, or (2) 42-gauge grenadine chis- cally snagproof, dull and extra sheer. Pure silk son with a ravel-stop top. Sizes B Vi to 10 y 2 * to the tops! Sizes BV2 to 10'/z. These Fashionable Colors in Substandards of (< Real Silk” Both Numbers Are Fully GU ARA yj 1 EED s “REAL SILK” substandards are so nearly per—SUEDETTE — BROWNLEAF feet that we, without hesitation, fully GUARANPRrtMP'XT Anr ivi ATTVIT ■RF'Tr'l7' TEE them to give complete satisfaction. They —I KUiVIEjJN AJJEi —MAUVE BEIUL have NO runs NQ men ded places, NO holes, NO —PETER PAN —NIGHTINGALE serious defects in weave. Buy them with confirvtriJ tjt *rif /'’TTTvnvrPT' A Y dcnce—and if you find a pair that displeases you— Or I -BLACK. GUNMLIAL please bring them back!

WT\ Men’s Fast Color Shirts _ tr-/ r There's no need to pay a high price for dad’s gift shirts, when shirts AKspiaSb .fax j such as these can bp had at such a very low price! These collar-attached I \ \ sr shirts are cut full and comfortable and are well made, with medium collar, Lj I t ’ JL P oc kct, an d neatly finished button cuffs. In a big assortment of smart pat- M | terns and colors. Sizes 14 to 17. dm 1 \ Gloves — 1 Fine Neckties — I t. 1 Lined capcskin or imitation suede, 8 1.25. Fine assortment at 50C. Hand-made ties I \/Jl Fine unlined capeskin and deerskin gloves, and Hand-tailored, silk-lined ties, 95<S I v* lined capeskin, $1.95. _ Sweaters — HA Scarfs — Wool or part wool sports coats, fine jersey I /V" x" W^fiTX\A „ A „ ... rib, $2.69. All-wool slipover sweaters, $1.95 SW 7 x>: fiSvA Rayon crepe squares at 79c. Fine silk ant j $3 45 S [IS v ' 'mi N I squares at $1.59. Fine full length Ascot HH reefers ’ at * 1,95 ' Pajamas — Iw&3a \ Pla,n and fan(, y pajamas, sl. Fast color ''eUhe / Lounging Ixooes broadcloth pajamas, $1.39. Elastic waistflAflgS wffiy Jacquard rayon robes. $4.95. Plain and band pajamas in mercerized cotton pongee or striped flannel robes, $7.95. | Mello Glo sateen, $1.95. ;L|| Sale! Men’s Socks I /AOCy Outstanding Values From One of £s■ \> the World’s Greatest Makers! /0/&& Because these socks are slightly substandard we arc not \ s\ /!/ I r permitted to mention the name of their famous maker. How- / MM/ mM ever, they sell regularly at one-third to one-half more than ’ if / /“r Jr j this very special sale price! Take advantage of this oppor- .*/ /xv / 39e purc thrcad si,k socks in Group 2 consists of extra J plain black, brown, gray, fine plain color thread silk /at navy, etc. Also very fine rocks, in black, tan, gray, rayon socks in a host of etc. Plain colors with clocks smart, fancy patterns. Sizes J and superb quality fancy Boys’ Slipover Sweaters /msT - Extra good values are these attractive novelt. slipover sweaters. There are both all-wool and part wool sweaters in the group—in iH Mam IhJB Q7vX n • vfX/V a wide variety of patterns and colorings that boys like. V neck JBB styles. In sizes 30 to 36. XCA V Boys * Horsehide Coats Boys * Chinchilla Coats $7.95 $2.95 Genuine front-quarter horsehide coats Attractive navy blue chinchilla overcoats with warm wool lining. Sizes 8 to 18. with plaid lining. Sizes 3 to 8. - ■ Boys’ Collegiate Corduroy Pants $2.95 Boys’ Bow Tie Gift Sets 35c Boys’Knickers, wool or fancy corduroy, $1.95 Four-in-Hand Tie Gift Sets 50c Boys’ Fast-Color Shirts $1 Boys’ Lined Gloves of imported capeskin. $1 Boys’ Gift Ties 50c Gloves with leather palm and velour back. $1 IIP Boys’ Pajamas, outing or broadcloth $1 Boys’ Leather Helmets 59C Boys’ Two-Knicker Suits at only $5.95 and Boys’ Golf Socks in smart new patterns. 25< *l Boys’ Gay Scarfs, both reefers and squares, Tle and Kerchief Sets 50c and sl. —Downstairs at Ayres.

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