Indianapolis Times, Volume 42, Number 273, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 March 1931 — Page 3

r MARCH 26, 1931

‘TONY’ HEADED FOR JAIL CELL, SAYS 'BIG BILL' •Tax Dodger.’ Thompson’s Label on Cermak, His Foe for Mayor Job. By United Press CHICAGO, March 26.—Should all “th kings and diplomats,” who attend the Chicago world’s fair In 1933, call upon the mayor and And him in Jail, said Mayor William Hale Thompson today, it might be a little embarrassing. Thompson (Rep.), mentioned jail in the most heated of his fiery campaign speeches against Anton J. Cermak who is running against him for election- as mayor of the nation’s second largest city on April 7. “With a SIO,OOO salary as president of the county board, how could Tony Cermak ever save $6,000,000?” demanded Thompson of an audience at the Great Northern theater. The audience replied with hisses, whereupon Thompson continued: Says It’s Common Talk ‘lt is common talk that Tony will be indicted for income tax frauds as soon as the election is over. The government hopes to collect SBOO,OOO from him. “Republican influence at Washington is holding off the investigation. But I have a man at Washington investigating. I talked to him on the telephone just a few minutes ago and he swears the story is true. “There is a lot of talk about meeting a world's fair mayor. Kings and diplomats and potentates will be coming here. It will be rather embarrassing for them to have to so to jail to meet the mayor. “Not Idle Charges” I don’t make charges idly and I don’t care how- many Republicans protect him. it’ll be all up with Tony when the people get on to this bird.” Cermak, born in Bohemia and risen to the heights of local wealth and power as politician and real estate dealer, didn’t reply. But his friends did. They said the mere fact that Cermak was wealthy proved him a first-class business man, “the kind of man Chicago needs *or mayor.” SHOWROOM WILL OPEN Ice Company Wil Display Models, Sizes of Refrigerators. Anew downtown display room at 16 West Ohio street, where many models and sizes of modern ice refrigerators will be on view is to be opened Friday by the Capital Ice and Refrigerating Company, according to E. E. Colburn, manager. The company has extended an invitation to al women to visit the showroom Friday, when demonstrations will be held throughout the day.

It’S HOW • • • a real advance 2 Super - Shell Ethyl

'’\ -nU" |- ;i ; nUt '' ' ' * I' ,;

Visualizing a section of one of the multiple "bubble cap trays'* in ShelTs refining and " scrubbing ** towers. Here all the heaiy, lazy particles are uxislied out, producing the tvlatile, liieh gasoline base for Super-Shell Ethyl

snm PETROLEUM CORPORATION

Heads Club

'ijl . s>. -WL'■

Lawrence A. Wiles

Mercator Club today was headed by Lawrence A. Wiles, Fletcher Trust Company vice-president, following the annual election Tuesday in the Columbia Club. New officers will be installed at a dinner-dance of the club Monday evening at the Columbia Club. Judge Clarence R. Martin, Indiana supreme court, is the new vice-president; F. J. Hemerin, treasurer; Josiah Steipher, secretary, and Lewis Meier and Harry Woodbury, directors.

TARIFF TREATY TO FACE FIGHT Britain and France Oppose Austro-German Pact. By United Press BERLIN, March 26.—The “conclusive steps” of the Austro-German tariff union agreement will be delayed until after the project is discussed at the next league of nations council meeting in May. The governments of Germany and Austria reiterated today their intention of carrying out the agreement, but they emphasized that they “do not fear” consideration of the economic aspects of the plan by the council. It officially was emphasized, however, that the government considered the council could deal with the agreement only as an economic matter. Both Germany and Austria warned that they would object to league of nations discussion of the pact from the political viewpoint. In Paris it was understood that Sir Arthur Henderson, British foreign secretary, and Aristide Briand, French foreign minister, had agreed that the Austro-German project conflicted with the 1922 league protocol, whereby Austria engaged herself to maintain her sovereignty in return for a foreign loan. Oldest Teacher Dies FRANKLIN, Ind., March 26. Mrs. Hattie Mozingo Neal, 87, oldest teacher in Johnson county, is dead at her home here.

INVITE TOM MIX ! TO SHRINE RITE AT TEMPLE HERE Several Hundred Expected to Attend Spring Ceremonial. Among guests invited to the ; annual spring Shrine ceremonial of Murat temple Friday afternoon and | night Is Tom Mix, motion picture j star, who is a member of Malaikah Temple of the Shrine, Los Angeles, Cal., and now’ is with a circus in Peru, Ind. Several hundred Shriners from all parts of the state are expected to attend the. Initiation to be given by a cast of 200 members. Paul Richey, dramatic director, and Fred B. McNeely, chief ceremonial director, have devised anew style initiatory work for the occasion. A pre-ceremonial event will be a luncheon for Shriners by the Murat Caravan club at noon. Entertainment to include the Moslem feat at 4 o’clock and a program introducing the Murat band, patrol, gun squad and chanters has been arranged. Andrew A. Fendrick is banquet chairman and Clarence R. Green heads the reception committee.

HOOVER RETURNING President Ends Visits to Caribbean Islands. By United Press ABOARD U. S. S. ARIZONA, At Sea, March 26.—President Hoover is en route back to Washington today after visits to Porto Rico and the Virgin islands. The President is scheduled to arrive at Norfolk Sunday night and reach Washington Monday. He will devote himself entirely to rest on the return trip after a strenuous three days on the islands. Lloyd George Aids MacDonald By United Press LONDON, March 26. David Lloyd George, Liberal party leader, announced in the course of a speech at Caxton hall today that he favored “giving the Labor government another chance” with the understanding that Prime Minister J. Ramsay MacDonald’s cabinet will be ousted if it fails “to retrieve the situation.” ITCHING SKIN BANISHED BY ANTISEPTIC ZEMO If itching, burning skin makes life unbearable, quickly apply Zemo, the soothing, cooling, invisible family antiseptic. Thousands find that Zemo brings swift relief from Itching, helps to draw out local infection and restore the skin to normal. For 20 years Zemo has beenclearing up skin, relieving pimples, rash and other skin irritations. Never be without it. Sold everywhere—3sc, 60c and sl.oo.—Advertisement.

Livelier, quicker anti-knock gasoline . . . because science has found a way to REMOVE Every Slow-Vaporizing, Lazy Particle

]N"oW . . . science’s new, perfected anti-knock fuel! Super-Shell Ethyl is different. It contains Ethyl fluid, of course —a generous charge that assures positive anti-knock value. But with this is now blended a special gasoline. Shell engineers developed it. They knew that inferior gasoline —no matter what was added — doesn’t deliver best performance in your car. They set out to make anti-knock fuel utterly free of slow-firing, harmful, "heavy” gasoline particles. Months of experiment.. . then they succeeded! It is a matter of "washing” the gasoline in a series of huge refining towers where the gasoline vapors travel over Shell’s

Dynamic Race By United Press NEW YORK. March 26. Ordinary human beings, flowers, mountains and stars all are made of basically the same material—electrical particles— Dr. Arthur H. Compton says. Dr. Compton, professor of physics at University of Chicago and Nobel prize winner, told an audience of 2,000 that man is composed of the same fundamental elements thatcompose light and the rest of the physical universe. The three fundamental elements of all matter, he said, are protons, electrons and photons.

CITY FIRM GETS FORT CONTRACT 15 Will Be Employed in Building Clubhouse. Construction of an enlisted men’s service club at a cost of $33,890 will begin April 1 at Ft. Benjamin Harrison. The contract has been awarded the American Construction Company of Indianapolis by the war department in Washington, Plans call for completion in fifty days. Fif*en men will be employed, according to E. E. Davenport, in charge of construction. The clubhouse will be of red brick and will harmonize with other buildings at the fort." Chaplain F. J. Miller will have charge of the club. The American Construction Company also was low bidder on two double houses for noncommissioned officers at the fort. Contracts have not yet been awarded by the w r ar department ’because the total cost, $28,000 is slightly above the appropriation. The fishmonger who sold bad fish in the Middle Ages had to stand in public with his maladorous wares suspended beneath his own nose. DOES YOUR HEART EVER PALPITATE? In many cases palpitation is caused by the pressure of a gasdistended stomach upon the heart, the gas being generated ’ ’ the action of excess acid on tne food in the stomach. This acidity interrupts digestion, causes food to ferment and attacks the delicate stomach lining, paving the way for gastritis and even dangerous stomach ulcers. One safe way to stop the trouble and avoid possible serious consequences is to neutralize this excess acid. To do this quickly safely and surely, take a little “Bisurated” Magnesia after meals or whenever pain is felt. “Bisurated” Magnesia instantly stops the painful fermentation, dispels the gas and relieves dangerous pressure on the heart. You feel better right away, and in a few minutes you feel fine. Get a trial package—either powder or handy tablets—at Hook Drug Cos., or the nearest drug store, and forget all about the trouble your acid-filled stomach used to make.—Advertisement.

amazing system of "bubble cap trays.” Here all the harmful, heavy "fractions” so often left in gasoline are "scrubbed” out. Into a special pipe flows only the volatile, lively gasoline t:hich Shell blends ivith Ethyl fluid! Thus Super-Shell Ethyl gives you finest engine operation. Quick starting. Smooth, even power. High anti-knock value. Now . . . see what really fine performance your motor is capable of giving. Try this new Super-Shell Ethyl today. One test will convince you.

V V J CORPORATION I

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

SOUTHWEST IS TOUCH PUZZLE FORJRY CHIEF Mobile Army of Federal Agents Needed, Says Woodcock. By United Press KANSAS CITY, Mo., March 26 The southwest—Missouri, Kansas, Oklahoma, Arkansas and Texas—presents a perplexing problem in prohibition law enforcement and can be purged of violators only by maintenance of a mobile army of federal agents, Colonel Amos W. Woodcock, the country’s dry chief, said here. “Outside of the large cities such as Kansas City, Wichita, Oklahoma City, Tulsa, Ft. Smith, Ark., and Dallas, prohibition administrAtors and agents report active rural rings,” the colonel, here on an inspection trip, said. “Marcus Georges’ ring in southwestern Kansas is a striking example. “That gang has stills operating on large farms; a highly organized crew of distillers, a gang of truckers, even a group to circulate among city and county officials to learn of planned raids. But we broke them up.” Wookcock will visit the southwest’s key cities the latter part of this week to meet personally enforcement officials and discuss their work in this section. “Both Oklahoma and Arkansas have moonshiners, and most of the liquor consumed in the cities of

NOW—JUST IN TIME FOR EASTER—A SUPER SELECTION OF m OUTSTANDING STYLES—jr AND PURPOSE $ iOL Really the most sensational spring “ f c ° a t buy of the year. Coats that are exact duplicates of high price styles. c r wjti ' Style after style of real beauty, in the Sport Coats—newest tweeds and woolen fabrics. r* r f You should see these wonderful coats eSS ° a 8 pF before you go and spend double this Coats With price for your coat. p ~ 1 Coats Without i No Reason to Delay Fur — df Ml Buying Your New Coat ViED WN. - You Can Never Get Scarf Coats Smarter Styles or Bet- and lyr l. I Utility GhU At i„ Lit the New Colors

those states comes from plants hidden away in the country,” he said. "Only by a most diligent and persistent campaign can we stamp out these whisky sources. But we’ll do it. “Texas, because of Its size, presents a difficult problem of law enforcement. The old fields also lend themselves to liquor traffic. Action of Texas Rangers in stamping out lawlessness in east Texas the other

PETTIS DRY GOODS CO. The New York Store Est. 1853 (Friday Only! I French Crepe | | Lingerie | I- 5 1 ,43 1 a* Chemise, costume slips and dance sets. Fine quality French crepe. Lace trimmed and tailored styles. , RTea rose, peach, white, Lido, Nile and flesh color. /AJt LINGERIE, second floor f/ Vi

Where and Sconomg Mget Bp 4 West Washington Street

week, howeve spells the end of the old time oil boom with its open saloons and free-flowing liquor.” Deny Wilbur Will Retire WASHINGTON, March 26.—Rumors that Lyman T. Wilbur, interior secretary, would retire from the cabinet and that William V. Hodges of Denver, former treasurer of the Republican national committee, would succeed him, unofficially have been denied.

PAGE 3

There Is no more reason why| one should pay exorbitantly for| a funeral than for any other: service. We conduct our busl- j ness on a business basis, and be- j lieve firmly In the idea that a! satisfied family is the best rec-1 ommendation. Vkdd, j gjTwf home or THOuoHTruL siwviet j Funeral Directors ! 1619 North 1222 Illinois Street Union Street j TAlbot 1876 DRexel 2551 1

. UNREDEEMED Ladies’ sad Gents' J*Woßdiamoiid rings IS-Kt White Geld gF'SAIjM Mountings |Bi/ Btfßgn To be sold for loan fS WW charges. Only— B W $5.95 [\ W WOLF SUSSMAN P Established 30 Tears 239-41 W. Wash. St. yr Opposite Statehonse

TRY A WANT AD IN THE TIMES