Indianapolis Times, Volume 42, Number 248, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 February 1931 — Page 3

FEB. 24, 1631

GUNMEN ROB GARAGE; TAKE CAR IN FLIGHT Loot of Bandit Pair Is $195; Employe Is Hit With Gun. I'wo bandits who held up employes of the Plaza Motor Inn, 30 West Vermont street, early today, escaped in a stolen car after obtaining $195. R. L. Ewing, 438 North Meridian street, and P. E. Frissal, 3314 Graceland avenue, were in the office when the bandits entered. One bandit, failing to open the ash register, ordered Ewing to open it. When Ewing had difficulty, the bandit struck. Ewing on the head with a gun. Finally the register was opened and the gunipcn obtained $175. ! ’ They forced the two employes to ao in the washroom and lie dowm, aking S2O from Ewing. The bandits fled in a sedan owned by E. B. Asch, Indianapolis Athletic Club, which was stored in the garage. E. J. Milton, 812 South Meridian .street, Standard filling station attendant, at East street and Virginia, was robbed of sl7 Monday night by a bandit who forced him to drive to the Belt railroad and Southeastern avenue. WANTS CONGRESS TO SET LABOR’S HOURS ( . S. Regulation Only Permanent Method, Says Ohioan. flu Scnpps-ltoward Newspaper Alliance WASHINGTON, Feb. 24.—Congressional regulation of hours of labor v in industry as the only permanent method in which the unemployment problem may be solved was advocated today by Representative Robert C. Crosser of Ohio. Crosser has Just introduced a jomt resolution in the house to provide to add a twentieth amendment to the Constitution making this passible. City School Officials Speak Among speakers at the National Education Association convention in Detroit today were Paul C. Stetson, superintendent of Indianapolis schools, and Milo H. Stuart, assistant superintendent. SOME WOMEN ALWAYS ATTRACT You want to be beautiful. You want the tireless energy, fresh complexion and pep of youth. Then let Dr. Edwards Olive Tablets help free your system of the poisons caused by clogged bowels and torpid liver. For 20 years, men and women suftering from stomach troubles, pimples, listlessness and headaches have taken Dr. Edwards Olive Tablets, a successful substitute for calomel, a compound of vegetable ingredients, known by their olive color. They act easily upon the bowels without griping. They help cleanse the system and tone up the liver. [f you value youth and its many gifts, take Dr. Edwards Olive Tablets nightly. How much better you will feel —and look. 15c, 30c. 60c.—Advertisement.

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BY ARCH BTEINEL “Americans serve too much food. Serve a little of this, a little of that, and leave a little to the imagination. Leave a desire for some more.” So says Mme. Melane Reich >lt, Viennese cateress, who will serve tea Thursday, Friday and Saturday at 3 p. m. in L. S. Ayres & Cos. tei* room as she discusses pastries. "Sure, we have ham and eggs in Vienna. Good ham and eggs, too,” she assured as she forked a slid of Ischler Krapferl during the intriguing meal, served while she talked. Now Ischler Krapferl is a pastry that resembles remotely the chocolate cookie of grocery store fame. And the Mme. Reicholt tells one on this pastry as she recounted it at one time to travelers who visited her inn at Baden, Austria-Hungary. It seems the Ischler "gets its name from a resort in Austria where Emperor Franz Joseph spent his summers. “So whenever you came to the town they’d tell you of the Ischler Krapferl and say, ‘We have some freshly-baked just for the Emperor.’ Every bakery in the town said it

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and the late emperor would never have lived to be ninety had he eaten all that were baked for him,” she laughingly recounted. Mme. Recholt is a Thurston or Houdini of the kitchen for she turns out dumplings and cakes without using flour. But caterer that she is, she’s had her failures as any Sue of a subbasement apartment.' Although she depends on a "pinch of this and pinch ol that 1 " as American housewives when she’s demonstrating her art, she uses measures and thereby hangs the tale of the time she called on the Almighty to save her and a cake from embarrassment. “It happened shortly after I came here last year. I was showing my pastry before a group of women. They had provided measures for me. The measures were not as I use. I measure out the flour before I realize and it is too much. A crowd of women watch me. I am Afraid it is spoiled, that cake. I pray, just like all women pray, that the Almighty help my cake to turn out good ,’’ she hesitated. “Te would have nothing to do w'ith measuring flour for cakes,” she concluded as she lifted the last forkfull of Ischeler.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES*

BANDITS, DRUNK, SLAY ONE MAN j Pair in Jail, ‘Too Intoxicated to Talk.’ By United Press CHICAGO, Feb. 24.—Two men whom police described as “too intoxicated to talk” were captured today and charged with staging a “drunken bandit during which they killed one man, slugged one, and robbed two others. The men were identified as Frank Cichanski, 20, and Frank Blazek, 25. Clchanski accidentally shot himself in the hand before they were captured. a block from where an unidentified man was left dead in the street. Th bandits were staggering along Chicago avenue, near famous “Death

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Corner,” police said, when they met the unidentified victim, ’shot him when he resisted, and then robbed him. Half a block away, the police charged, the men met Frank Gawlinski. They accosted him and he ran, stopping when two shots were fired at him. Cichanski, he said, then knocked him down with the revolver. A hundred feet further on, it was charged, the men held up and robbed Jos Wneglarz. Then they robbed Walter Pieniazek. The loot was in their pockets when they were captured, police said. BUTLER LOSES DEBATE Butler university’s negative debating team lost to the affirmative from the College of the City of Detroit Monday night. The question was, “Resolved, That the several states shall enact compulsory unemployment insurance laws to which the employer should contribute.”

EDUCATORS IN ! WAR OVER RUM! Wets Back Resolution "for SlcT|rat Dry Laws. By United Press DETROIT, Feb. 24.—A resolution; demanding repeal of the prohibition amendment will be the subject of a heated debate Thursday before the men and women delegates to the

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annual convention of the National Education Association, now in session here. The resolution, introduced by Dr. Daniel S. Kealey of Hoboken. N. J., and seconded by Dr. James A. Nu-

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gent, superintendent of school, at Jersey City. N. J.. describes the eighteenth Amendment as the root of evils confronting America s childhood. and asks the delegates to declare that it should be eliminated.