Indianapolis Times, Volume 43, Number 126, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 October 1931 — Page 2
PAGE 2
SUPREME COURT RECONVENES IN ‘LIBERAL MOOD' Nation’s 'lnterest Centered on Sentiment Swing of High Bench. Il !> I'nitr'l Prrss WASHINGTON, Oct. s.—Rcconvcning to begin its one hundred forty-second year of deliberations, the supreme court of the United States today was a center of perhaps greater public interest than on any similar occasion in recent years. Lawyers, statesmen, politicians and business men, are looking forward to a session which may cast further light on a seeming realignment of the court. This realignment became definnitely apparent late last session. Those who follow the administration of governmental affairs became aware at that time that a change had taken place in the court all unnoticed by them. Previously Justices Oliver Wendell Holmes and Louis D. Brandeis had achieved a reputation for writting vigorous dissenting “liberal” opinions. Now it wa% found that more frequently than not their views were the views of the majority.
Important Cases Pending The change was brought about by the addition to the court’s personnel of Chief Justices Charles Evans Hughes and later of Justice Owen D. Roberts. Both has ascended the bench late in the 1929 term. Joined with the votes of Holmes, “the grand old man” of the bench, Brandeis, and, almost always. Justice Harlan Fiske Stone, a majority was formed that wrote opinions decidedly “liberal” on many subjects. For the coming term, many cases have been brought i- p for review, which present thoroughly debatable questions of personal right and state powers. Cases of these types offer the greatest chance for dissension among the jurists. From Texas come cases under Which American citizens of Mexican extraction ask the court to stop racial discrimination in selections for jury servite and race segregation in the public schools. Negroes in the same state have asked to be heard on their right to vote in the Democratic primaries. Chain Store Taxes Up Tax laws imposing special assessments on chain stores in several states will be reviewed. One of last year's most sharply divided opinions was written about such a statute enacted in Indiana. The validity of laws enacted to control oil production in California and Oklahoma also will be submitted. The court has had presented to it 400 cases for review thus far. Before the term expires it will have passed on more than a thousand Cases in all probability. The court, after an hour’s session today devoted to admitting lawyers and receiving the cases filed during the summer, will adjourn and formally call on President Hoover to advise him it is ready to do business.
KIDNAPERS ARE FOILED AS BOYS SCREAM, RUN Men Order Brothers Into Auto; No Motive for Attack. Two small boys Saturday night thwarted a kidnaping attempt when they ran and screamed after two men attempted to force them into an automobile. The boys, Warren, 10. and Walter Graeber, 9. of 121 North Arsenal avenue, told police they were en route to a grocery when the kidnapers’ car stopped at Arsenal avenue and New York street. The boys nmd the men ordered them to get into the auto, but they ran. Their father, Joseph Graeber, told police he knew of no motive for the attempt. STAR STUDY ARRANGED Nature Club to Use Indiana University Telescope, Oct. 10. A study of the stars through the Indiana university telescope at Bloomington on Oct. 10, and a Halloween party at Camp Delight, will be the features of the October program of the Nature Study Club of Indiana, The club will hold an open house at its cabins on Nov, 1. October open house was held Sunday together with a bird study hike. Other events planned are a woodcutting and clean-up on Oct. 17, and an all-day bus trip to Spring Mill state park on Oct. 25.
Gone, but Mot Forgotten
Automobiles reported to police as stolen belone to: Lester Schlesineer, 260 Hampton drive, Pontiac coach. 57-146, from St. Clair and Illinois streets. Wallace Smith, 33 South Arsenal avenue. Ford coupe. 769-335. from 3155 East Tenth street. Albert Hochettler. 642 East Twentieth street. Chevrolet coupe, from 642 East Twentieth street. Lincoln Buchanan. 656 CofTev street, Chrysler roadster. 732-693. from Capitol avenue and Georgia street. Oliver Orundv. New Aeusta. Ford coach, from Indiana avenue and North street. John Gillespie. Mavwood. Chevrolet coupe, from Woodlawn avenue and Hunter street. Clinton Hall. Hotel Edwards. Dodge sedan. from parking space at Guarantee Rubber Company. Willie Bvers. Anderson. Essex coach, from Capitol avenue and Market street. Harold Schafhouscr. Cambv. Chevrolet sport coupe, from Senate avenue and Market street.
BACK HOME AGAIN
Stolen automobiles recovered bv police belong to: _ , _ Henrv Krauss. 309 Parkway. Ford roadster. found at Merrill street and Capitol When Skin Itches Don't give up or become discour-aged-others may fail—but when skin is fiery and itchy and eczema tortures your body. Peterson's Ointment is sure to give instant relief and quickly heal. It never disappoints. 35 cents* a big box at any drug store—Advertisement.
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Baby Gorillas Are Gift to Zoo
They screamed and fought until 250 natives overpowered them. And now the gorillas, Congo and Ingagi, natives of Africa, are in America bound for the San Diego zoo. These powerful, half-grown
Thuch Luck liy I nilrfl Press CHICAGO, Oct. s.—Donat Morrler, 34, entered a hospital puzzled and worried. “I thwallowed my teeth,” he explained, and I can’t talk right. I gueth I muth have thnored when I thlept.” A doctor removed the teeth. "Thanks,” said Morrier.
NEW DEVICE CREATES ARTIFICIAL BODY HEAT Invention Using Radio Waves Is Threat to Furnaces. Good news for unwilling furnace tenders was contained in an address by Dr. Carl Loeb, Chicago, Sunday at the Indiana Naturopathic state convention in the Scverin. Dr. Loeb described his invention of a radio-sending machine, named the pyro-therm, which creates heat in the body, making human beings oblivious to cold, and which threatens to abolish furnaces. The machine does not increase temperature in the home, he said, but the radio waves warm the body and a person would not know the house was cold unless he looked at a thermometer. The association's annual banquet Sunday night was attended by approximately 200 persons. The convention will close late today with election of officers. CHILI ELECTS MONTERO Conservative Is Elevated to the Presidency for Five Years. R’l lhi it rd I’rrsx SANTIAGO, Chile, Oct. s.—Juan Esteban Montero, former Chilean vice-president, today was elected to the presidency left 'vacant by the overthrow and exile of the former dictator General Carlos Ibanez, for a term of five years. Montero, conservative candidate, scored a personal triymph over Arturo Alessandri, former president and liberal candidate. Manual Hidalgo, Communist candidate who advocated socialistic legislation along the lines adopted in Soviet Russia, received only a few thousand votes. With a majority of the votes counted. Montero was given 183,533 against 100,008 for Alessandri. Other candidates were not close enough to influence the issue.
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MANY HURT IN MINOR CRASHES Week-End Traffic Accident Toll Increased. Minor traffic accidents reported to authorities in and near the city over the week-end were responsible for injuries to several persons, records showed today. Among those hurt in the crashes were: Mrs. C. B. Krieg. Elizabethtown, cut on face, in colision on 4800 block. Madison avenue. Sunday. John Tuttle, 69. Negro. Carthage. cut on
I t’s like this • When you GO to bcjy A pair of shoes, you examine the leather, the way the shoes are made, their shape. You try them to see if they fit—if they satisfy you. Why not follow the same method in purchasing your cigarettes? You want cigarettes that are made from the very best to-bacco-mild, ripe, sweet. You want them made right. You want them free from harshness and bite and “pinches.” In other words, you want cigarettes that satisfy you. When you go to buy fruit — oranges, grapefruit, apples—you want ripe fruit, fruit that has matured before being taken from the tree; fruit that has been handled right and packed right; fruit that’s the same throughout— not green on one side and ripe on the other. Why not apply the same test in purchasing your cigarettes? You want cigarettes made from tobaccos handled right by the farmer—ripened, sweetened in the sun and cured right. You want cigarettes that taste the same, day in and day out. You want them pleasing in taste —mild and satisfying.. When you buy candy, you want to know, above all things, that it is pure. Is it real candy or are there a lot of other things mixed in with it? And you want it fresh. You want it freshly made and you want it so packed as to reach you just as it was when it was made. Why not apply the same test when you buy your cigarettes? You want a cigarette that’s pure ; for purity counts in ciga-
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
! face, collision. Roache street and Northwestern avenue. Sunday. Mrs. Genevieve Cummings. 45. West Lafayette. broken finger, car overturned down bank on State road 52. near Trader's Point. Sunday. | Miss Ruth Morgan. 22. of 1526 Cruft street, and Miss Louise Eaglen, 16. Acton. ] minor injuries, collision. Morris street and Lvndhurst drive. Sunday. An unidentified man. known only as ‘‘Nick’’, brain concussion, struck bv car in 1000 block West Washington street. Sunday. Mrs. S. C. Gedding. 60. of 822 East Eleventh street, skull fracture and body bruises, struck bv interurban at Beliefontaine street and Massachusetts avenue, Saturday. i Mrs. Carl Bryson. 37. of 755 Bolton avej nue, wrenched back and bruises, collision. I Forty-sixth street and Boulevard nlace. I Saturday. ! James Miller. 72. of 816 North Hamilton I avenue, head injuries, struck bv auto at i Tenth street and Jefferson avenue. Miss Margaret Brick. 551 South Central court, cut and bruised, collision, 900 block .East Made road. Sunday. It took fourteen men to land a ; huge ocean sunfish recently caught 1 off the coast of New Jersey. It ! weighed more than 1,900 pounds.
You purchase shoes, fruit and candy. You call for cigarettes.
DEPUTIES BEGIN REASSESSMENT OF CITY REALTY McCloskey and Aids Start Task of Correcting / Many ‘Errors.’ Complete reassessment of real j estate in Center township—the first since 1911—was started today by twenty-four deputies from the office of John C. McCloskey, Center township assessor. After receiving final instructions, the deputies set out to equalize assessments on real estate and, thus correct' many errors said to have been entered secretly in the assessor’s books. One of the abuses which McCloskey hopes to wipe off his books is the practice “by which men Os great wealth, who own large amounts of real estate, are paying taxes on exceedingly low assesments.” Dishonesty Is Bared McCloskey recently disclosed in- ! stances where the assessor's books, for years open to the public, have been tampered with and assessments lowered. When the reassessment is completed, McCloskey said he w'ill place one set of official books under lock and key “to prevent a recurrence of such dishonesty.” The assessor’s deputies were to be aided by several men from the Indianapolis Real Estate Board, which also offered to provide experienced apraisers to help McCloskey. Continue Checking Autos Buildings within the mile square w ;1 l be appraised by McCloskey and his chief deputy, Theodore Demmeyer. Deputies were ordered to make assesments based on property values in normal times and not on the present sale prices of the real estate. Clerks in the assessor’s office 'ntinued checking automobiles not listed for taxation, estimated as high as 75 per cent of all cars owned in the city.
Hoovers Son Is Mum
- - ■ - - T - -
Allan Hoover, right, son of President Hoover, arriving at San Francisco from Hawaii with James Winne, left, G. O. P. committeeman for the Hawaiian Islands, had nothing to say on the present political situation, nor on his plans for the future.
LECTURESJO START Medical Series to Be Given by I. U. Extension. Stressing education for enjoy- j ment, the Indiana university ex- \ tension division will start a series j of popular lectures on medicine on | Tuesday night. Attendance at all extension courses is greater than it was last year, according to registration officers. Student registrations passed the 1,000 mark last week, and sti’l are coming in at a rate of 100 a day. First speaker in the medical series ; will be Dean B. D. Myers, who will talk on “The Social Responsibility*, of the Medical Profession.” Other lectures in the series are: "Foods and Vitamins” by Dr. J. O. ! Ritchey. Oct. 13; ‘‘General Aspects of Can- I cer.” bv Dr. E. V. Hahn. Oct. 20: ’’Re- j search in Cancer” bv Dr. Hahn. Oct. 27: "Anaemia” bv Dr. L. G. Zerfas. Nov. 3; "Light. Heat and Exercise.” bv Dr. E. N. Kine. Nov. 10: "Endrocrine Disease.” bv Dr. J. A. Greene. Nov. 17: "Respiratory Diseases.” bv Dr Alfred Henrv. Nov. 24: "Poisons and Poisoners.” bv Dr. R. N. Harger. Dec. 1: "Recent Bacteriology.” by Dr. T. B. Rice. Dec. 8. and "The Heart." bv Dr. G. S. Bond. Dec. 15. The clases are open to the public upon payment of a small tuition.
rettes just as it does in candy. Then again, you want a cigarette that’s just as fresh as when it was made. Now, if you apply to cigarettes all the tests that you apply in buying shoes and fruit and candy you will purchase Chesterfield like millions of other smokers. First, because tobacco men will tell you that in Turkey, Kentucky, Georgia, the Carolinas, Virginia, and Maryland, only the mildest, ripest tobacco is bought for Chesterfield—tobacco cured by the sun’s pure rays, by the farmers’ slow-burn-ing ovens, and finally by great high-pressure steam drying machines. In the tobacco regions where they grow tobacco and know tobacco, Chesterfield is usually the leading seller. • Second, because the carefully selected Chesterfield tobacco leaves are blended and cross-blended. This exclusive Chesterfield blending method is not just mixing together different tobaccos—it is mixing them in such a way as to bring out the finer qualities of each. It’s like producing a new and better type of tobacco—tobacco with greater mildness, more smoothness, much better taste. Third, because the cigarette paper is selected with the same care. Chesterfield paper is the purest, the best that money can buy. Then the cigarettes are made and packed by machinery in clean, sanitary factories. And the moisture-proof, attractive package—free from heavy inks or inky odor—comes to you just as if you passed the factory in the morning and took your Chesterfields from the machine. Good . . . they’ve got to be good.
~ , your Chesterfields ir ttes r | • f :iga- | Good .. . they’ve got i ji V
FOOTBALL GAME Notre Dame vs. Northwestern October 10 SOLDIERS’ FIELD —CHICAGO Aft October a o 9 and 10 $0.04 Round Trip Round Trip Good in Coaches Only Good in Pullman Cars Good on all trains from 12:00 Good on all trains from 12:00 noon Friday until 12:10 a. m. train noon Friday until SPECIAL Sunday. Return limit Monday TRAIN S :00 a. in. Saturday. Reo'ght. turn limit Mojiday night. Special Train October 10 Lv. Indianapolis 8:00 a. m. Ar. Chicago 12:00 noon Parlor Cars and Coaches Regular Trains Lr. Indianapolis 12:10 a. m. 1:55 a. m. 12:00 noon 2:15 p. m. 5:00 p. m. Ar. Chicago .... 5:40 a. m. 7:35 a. m. 4:30 p. m. 7:25 p. m. 9:25 p. m. Football tickets on sale at City Ticket Office. Tickets and reservations at City Ticket Office. 112 Monument Circle, Phone Riley 3322, and Union Station, Phone Riley 3355. BIG FOUR ROUTE
OCT. 5, 1931
fiHURCH GIVES FOOD FOR POOR r Cumberland Donations Go to Wheeler Mission. Gift of more than two truckloads of foodstuffs, farm products and clothing were presented today to the Wheeler City Rescue Mission by St. John’s Evangelical church of Cumberland for distribution to the city’s poor. Congregation of the church donated baskets of apples, potatoes, turnips, fruit and other products from their gardens and farms. “When we have plenty in our fields and gardens, it is fitting ancl right that we should give to those who are in need,” the Rev. F. Pulmann. pastor, stated in his sermon. A large part of the collection is canned fruit, which may be distributed to needy families during the winter months.
