Indianapolis Times, Volume 43, Number 100, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 September 1931 — Page 16

PAGE 16

BACKS MOVE TO AID POOR WITH GIFTS OF FROIT Parent-Teacher Plan Given Full Indorsement of Center Trustee. I Indorsement of a charitable move to collect fruit, which in mAny places is allowed to rot under the trees, and to distribute it to the county's poor, was announced today by Miss Hannah Noone, Center township trustee. The movement was started by the Parent-Teacher Association of Center township (outside Indianapolis). .Farmers are donating peaches, which members of the association are canning for poor families. - “I think this is a splendid way to help reduce poor relief costs,” Miss Noone said, "and I believe it should be adopted by other townships in the county.” No expense Is made on the town- . ship whatsoever in the movement, according to Miss Noone, who secured a donation of 420 large fruit jars from the American Can Company. Another company, LansingkampWhecler Brass Works, is furnishing a capping machine for the association. Peaches and tomatoes are being canned in quantities to supply all poor of Center township, outside of Indianapolis, Miss Noone said. "We will be glad for any donations of fruit that people may want to give us, and, if it is provided, we will distribute it to the thousands of poor within the city,” she announced. By providing a woodlot where men working for relief baskets can cut wood supplied free of charge by railroad companies, Miss Noone hopes to slash her coal bills this coming winter. TEACHER RESIGNS POST For the first time in its history Manual Training high school will be without the services this year „ of Miss Kate Wentz, who retired from her position as head of the mathematics department in June. She had taught at Manual for thirty-six years. Miss Elizabeth Roth has resigned, her place in the girls’ gymnasium being taken by Miss Eloise Hanson.

LABOR MT SPECIALS Canada Dry JufcjV Delicious Fresh Ginger Ale [JtlPj Marshmallows 2 Bottles 27c § Pounds fisc ■■ ■ H** WHERE ECONOMY RULES’’ )| W CIGARETTES Luckies, Gamels, Chesterfields, 1 /H All Popular Brands c "ton Lux Toilet Soap for Your Skin C3I(6S 20c I Milkyway Bars Box 69c Encore Stuffed Olives Pt., 35c White House Milk 3 S’" 17c | The A jfP Grandmother’s Bread 5c Post Bran Flakes rtE . 10c Qoffee Trio Soila Craclters 2 “ 1 Nutley Oleo 10c Wisconsin Cheese lb . 21c Pink Salmon . 10c B O'Clock sl9g Pancake Flour ItE 10c Sliced Bacon ,b - 25c Red Circle 5 25c Peanut Butter 2 & 29c New Pack Peas 3 c ,., 25c Bokar <* 29c Salada Tea 19c Dill Pickles Qt„ 15c Del Monte Peaches 33c —IN THE MEAT MARKETS— —IN THE PRODUCE SECTION— Umm.* Armour’s Whole | r I _ I Hams h„, Lb.,2lc 40 Chickens Each, 75c UHipeS 3T IOC Beef Roasts ss lb 17c In Cooking Apples 10 , b! 25c Rih Roasts 29c Head Lettuce S o"r,S' 10c Porterhouse Steak 39c Plums , 5 lb , 25c Sirloin Steak 31c * Plums’’.Sr 2 15c _ _ ‘Our Daily Food' Swiss or Round Steal) 31 C whas-wgn-wsai Beets or Carrots 3 BU nches 10c Quaker Maid Beans can 5c QUAKER MAID CATSUP Bottle 8c j£r Atlantic& Pacifica

NEW COLBERT MOVIE OPENS AT INDIANA “Secrets of a Secretary” With a Cast Which Includes Mary Boland Is a Mixture of Comedy and Drama. “OECRETS OF A SECRETARY.” the story of a girl who becomes dangerously involved in the intrigue and romance of the so-called “four-hundred," opens today at the Indiana as the main screen feature. Heading the star cast are Claudette Colbert, as the secretary; Herbert Marshall, the distinguished star of the New York stage play, “Tomorrow and Tomorrow"; Betty Lawford, Mary Boland, Hugh OConnell and Georges Metaxa. “Secrets of a Secretary" is an adaptation of the well known Charles Brackett story, “The Social Secretary.” It reveals the plight of a popular, good looking society girl who foliowing the untimely death of her father,

finds herself deserted by her worthless husband when it is learned she is penniless. Forced to earn a living the girl, Helen Blake, secures a position as a social secretary to a prominent matron and, for the first time, sees what really goes on among the people she had mingled with most of her life. The plot Is given added vigor when the secretary learns that the daughter of the woman who employs her, is madly in love with her fly-by-night husband. And Helen, herself, is faced with an equally dangerous problem when she discovers that she has fallen in love with the fiance of her own husband’s lover. The manner in which the plot is developed, the dramatic climax which is reached following the shocking death of Helen’s worthless husband, adds suspense to the picture. George Abbott, director of Claudette Colbert and Fredric March in “Manslaghter,” not only directed “Secrets of a Secretary,” but also wrote the adaptation from the original tale by Brackett. A variety supplementary program including two Paramount comedy shorts, an “African Adventure” featurette and a news reel add to the entertainment. tt tt u Other theaters today offer: “The Smiling Lieutenant” at the Ohio, “Daughter of the Dragon” at the Circle, “Waterloo Bridge” at the Lyric, “Guilty Hands” at the Palace, Guy Bates Post in “The Masquerader” at English’s, “Merely Mary Ann” at the Apollo, and burlesque at the Mutual. Aged Widow Dies 111/ Times Special MUNCIE, Ind., Sept. 4. Mrs. Effie Jane Hiatt, 65, widow of Thomas Hiatt, former Delaware county sheriff, is dead.

CORN IS TICKET TO EXPOSITION ✓ Industrial Show Directors Move to Aid Farmer. So the farmer may have every opportunity to view the latest modern machinery which will be on exhibition, the board of directors of the annual All-Indiana Industrial Exposition today voted to adopt the state fair idea of allowing admittance for a bushel of wheat and also added the adidtional proviso that one bushel of corn will admit two persons to the show. Comprised of Marshall T. Levey, chairman, W. F. Kruger, H. F. Fries, E. S. Harter and W. E. Williams, the board decided that in admitting persons it will allow for corn at the rate of $1 per bushel, the admittance fee being 50 cents per person. One half bushel of corn will admit one person. By previous action of the board, one-half the gate receipts of the entire seven days of the show from Sept, 28 to Oct. 4 will be given to the unemployed. “We don’t want the farmers to miss the opportunity, of seeing all the new machinery which will be on exhibition,” said W. A. McCurry, managing-director today. With that idea in mind we have decided to admit them for their products, realizing that many can easily come if they can get in for wheat or oats when they could not afford a cash outlay to see the show.” The cities of Sydney and Brisbane, in Australia, have been linked by plane service.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

GOAT GOLFERS RUSH TO ENTER TIMESTOURNEY Tempting Awards Offered Winners in Biggest 1931 Links Event. Forty daring golfers, out for blood and prizes, had listed their names in The Times Great Goat Golf tournament as The Times pressmen teed off this edition today and more links experts were clamoring at the portals. Announcement of the tempting awards, along with the glory that awaits the winners, spurred interest in this mammoth event, the most novel on city golf courses in history of the game here. It’s a tournament with no fuss or frills, open to the lowliest duffer and the artist who goes around under 80. All you have to do is to drop in at The Times office, at Spalding’s in the Circle Tower, corner your favorite golf pro, or apply at one of the public courses. There, for one lonely, single, solitary, unimportant buck, you get the best book of golf instructions printed; a 75-cent golf ball; and a set of goat tokens, and you’re off. Next, you challenge any friend, or he need not be a friend. The winner gets his opponent’s goat token and the player who collects the most tokens, as signs of victories, wins the right to represent his course in the city-wide finals, to be played early next month, after the eliminations are completed. Both men and women are eligible. There’ll be prizes for both. Get busy now and make out a list of those you think you can trim out on the links. Here are the prizes, offered by

BOILING i -I CHICKENS.. iIC Quantity Limited Strictly Fresh Eggs, Doz. 22p Roasting Chickens 16p 1931 Spring Fries 22c Hens 20<? FREE DRESSING Plenty of Parking: Spare Churches, Banquets and Large Parties—Get our prices before buying:. Our quantity and quality unlimited. H. Smith Poultry Cos. 337 W. New York LI. 5952

I^^SHOEITORIi

C SUCED e Bacon 5 Lbs. 50c Pure Lard i Hamburger I a *rw •£*“ Sausage KS M i%C Spare Ribs _■ © Agl Zm Boiling Bee! / W* b< *WF SUGAR ‘ig* Whole cured nasoti Zi Lb " *s® Stamlard Nut Margarine (Colored) lb. 25c Karl F. Wacker “3?

Walter Hagen plays Bill Heinlein at French Lick 3P. M. SATURDAY, P* Walter Hagen, world-renowned star of golfdom, meets Bill Heinlein, 1931 winner of the Indiana State Amateur Championship, in a special exhibition match at French Lick, next Saturday afternoon at 3 o’clock. Run down to French Lick for Labor Day week-end and see these golf stars play. The two 18-hole courses were never in better form. And the glories of autumn are already beginning to show in the Cumberland foothills. Admission to Match, $1 Special Summer Week-End Rates Will Be Continued Over Labor Day. Music, Dancing, Sunday Concerts Golf, ride or hike in the beautiful Cumberland foothills. Or let Nature restore tired nerves with the spai'kling mineral waters from the famous Pluto, Bowles or Prosperine Springs. French Lick Springs Hotel Company French Lick, Indiana “Home of Plato Water’’

Barbers’ Joy By United Press MT. VERNON, Ind., Sept. 4. —The Rev. and Mrs. Chester P. Karrick believe their son, Chester Jr„ 11 months, holds the record for haircuts for infants of his age. Chester Jr. has seven haircuts to his credit. “He doesn’t seem to mind it,” his father commented. “He sits up in the chair and takes it like a man.”

the Smith-Nelson Golf academy, second floor Board of Trade building: First in the men's division, a beautiful set of six matched and registered irons. Second prize for men, a full sls book of practice sessions at the Smith-Nelson academy. The indoor school will open Nov. 15 and the nets will be available at that time. First prize for women, a full book of lessons at the academy, private instructions to be given by Nelson and Smith during the winter at the convenience of the winner. Second prize to women, a sls practice session book.

Buehler mothers, Inc. 42 N. Penn. RI. 6045_ Fresh ~ _ HAM ROAST 12^ Fresh • HAM SLICES 21 PORK SAUSAGE 100 Fean . , PORK ROAST l‘*<* nest Cuts Chuck BEEF 1 ROAST * " ROUND BOAST 13£ HAMBURGER lOC 818 BOILING BEEF 7C Boneless Rolled Prime , 818 ROAST ABC SIRLOIN OR jAq ROUND STEAK Astb& Boneless Smoked roulettes 18c BACON SQUARES 11C Iluehler’s Best Sides + BACON ISC Boneless Rolled HAMS 21<) Buehler’s Best Sliced Bacon Lbs. 4fc VEAL STEW ROAST CHOPS 7c 14c 15 c —BP Creamery Fresh Butter Eggs Lb. 28c 17c

U. S* No* 1 Grade Jackson's Finest Potatoes I C **£*“* Y II BUTTER 23 e || 3[a I flakes | Peaches 45 c JMfcson Brand I HEAP LETTUCE CATSUP 2 S Ke 1 Large _ Heds __ I <& w* New Lima Beans u. 19c I——————— Grapes 4 - q r— Basket 18c PEANUT Prune Plums Freestone' 325 c I BUTTER j Tomatoes hi p 3 Lbs. 10c I 8 Fresh Made Tokay Grapes d?:£. u>< iOc I I $Hs rfc Green Beans “• 5c I jH Jit * Sweet Potatoes 4 Lbs - 15c j" van camp's " Bartlett Pears aa, 15c w®*- CANTALOUPES BEANS Sweet Indiana £* a Each 5* Can MELONS 9 Jr?... ality Meats in the 75 Meat its of Standard Food Stores id Hams m f, Sugar Cured, Lb Slices *• 3>S© | Veal Steaks Lb. lie Veal Chops 25c Veal Stew Breast or Neck Lb. 12c I Chuck Roast Young Tender Beef Lb. 15 Margarine *s£°££ , “ 10° Bread sI S rJ a. S c r & 7 c j® dc G or and | Butter Crust Pie Co's. wSlp Deli o™ q.2€. PUMPKIN ** 3 I PIES O. K. Soap I

SEPT. 4, 1931