Indianapolis Times, Volume 43, Number 160, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 November 1931 — Page 7

NOV. 13, 1931

Free Parking! Room for 200 machines in our free parking lot adjoining the store. For our patrons only—no time limit—no purchase—no obligation. A Sears * service. Park and shop at Sears fvithout worry.

ur Great “Super Value” Sale

youghout the Entire Store! bargains—Not Advertised!

This New Gas Range Is Equipped with Automatic Lighter and Heat Control and Is Ftilly Insulated with Mineral Wool. $59.50 Value ~ Super Sale Price Saturday ...... $4050 1 Cash Price Delivered , . i .Another fino new Sears’ Console "*• - " Range at a big savFully Insulated Automatic Heat | | I iJr ’Automatic Lighter 16-Inch Oven ■ t ' f m. Service Drawer Enameled Drip Pan J Beautifully ,1 Enameled Exterior ‘ Also Sold on Easy Payments $5 Cash—ss a Month—Guaranteed —Sears’ Basement.

For Saturday—The Last Day! Rogers & Bro. Silverware Guaranteed for 50 Years! Less Than Half! 26-Piece Set $12 75 —For Christmas Gifts! —For Wedding Gifts! —For Personal Use! Genuine Rogers <te Bro. A-l brand, from the oldest manufacturer of Rogers silver in the world. This sale Saturday * provides one of the most amazing opportunities for buying really fine silverware ever offered. Each set includes the following: R Hollow Handle Stainless Steel Knives, fi Forks, 6 Teaspoons, 6 Tablespoons, Butter Knife and Sugar Shell. In Gift Boxes! . ' —Sears’ First Floor.

Come Early for These —Saturday Only—While They Last! Twelve Electric Washers Demonstration Machines Our south walls are torn out—and the stairways are Sh•• closed that the builders may make connections between the main store and the new building being erected. This JHH| - |b L= Jr required considerable of our regular display and selling ■ CTMEBPir—- J—space. We just have to things to make more Greatly Reduced Prices! ■ 1 H Onl,naUy C s67.so—SaU Price I Sj|j One Copper Tub Kenmore, sQr*oo I “ l'~- 1 I Original Price $72.50 — Sale Price. •> vJ 1 1 I Two Copper Tub Water Witches, Originally $93.50 —Sale Price Os Three Porcelain Kenmores, 8^ Two De Luxe Kenmores, . | ,*,,)% Two De Luxe Water Witches, SOOSO I Originally $94.50 — Sale Price Ou These prices are cash —any of these washers may be purchased on our easy payment plan, plus a small carrying charge. All have been SrJE 'gzM reconditioned and tested and are in perfect mechanical shape and A7JJ r n, will give years of sendee. .vL / tLOSy 1 Qy me nt3 —Sears’ Basement.

Sears, Roe buck amd Cos ‘ 1 ' '•, ■ / ■ •

Saturday—Last Day of the “Super Value” Sale! f Men’s Horsehide Coats '^3 30 Inches Long—Wool Blanket Lining Check these against the best you D JHHMB wS®''' ■ jj|| can find elsewhere at $6.50 \ j§ O ,-V JBH|T| \ point for point, quality, workman- 4m || ship, roominess—then you’ll know " why they are such a great value. •• Soft chrome tanned black leather l|j| As nearly weather and wearproof as if fi PilPI V v JHSuMHBit it is possible to make them. Coat Vr M Men’s Warm cuffs, 2 pockets, knit waist band. ’Mm&SBR raflV GlfiVP? Tan and gray, fast colors. All sizes. WR/W VCa Boys’ Sheep-Lined Coats M Almost unbelievable isn't it? They’re J, A&fyk fT\ THHB ’ImSTw ® made of tough-wearing moleskin cloth, \ IJ faBMBi jMlf some of which were formerly up to if M fi 1 Fleece lined capess 00. Large, warm collars. Fine for M 4 skin. Black or school and every day. Sizes 12 to 18. Jmm l ——— Sjffl fastener Sl Si. P —Sears’ First Floor. to 10 Vi.

Saturday The Last Day of These Extraordinary “Super Sale” Values! Men’s Fine $4 to $5 s< ° r€ •Pure Wool Kj ▼¥ \7dlWl O Open Another shipment for the m 4%, §| Saturday final day, and Men, they’re ffrittl k j| good! Not in many months J H \gM are you offered such fine n ■H Tailored Pre-Shrunk Fine WmjW Broadcloth Shirts You’ll Have Difficulty m f*§ . . Finding Their Equal Else- MW ■! HUBi 'Mt, :£■ HI. V * v f: where Than $1.25! T j plain colors. Seven-button front. Each separately wrapped gBP ‘ ... *' | in cellophane, 14 to 17. ' K ' A New One If They Fadel |'7'' .;^gi —Sears’ First Floor. t—l —Wfim

. THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Saturday—Last Day of ft Super Value” Sale! Ready with More of Those Fine Nashua” Part-Wool Blankets at So Much Less Than Their Usual Cost 500 pairs to sell at this amaz - JL ingly low price. Beautiful J j plaids in new pastel shades. Tr Sizes 70x80 inches . These “Nashua” part-wool blankets MW “Super are nationally advertised at a much Sale” higher price. A supersale value Price at $2.19 the pair. er^air Fine All-Wool Blankets The Pair S>C9Q 70x80 Size—Beautiful Pastel Plaids Part-Wool Novelty Blankets Each SO4Q Heavy Quality—Size 66x80 inches ™ ** Golden Fleece Blankets The Pair $A 25 Fine, warm and fluffy, size 70x80 Part-Wool Indian Blankets Each $-I QQ Three Color Combinations, Size 64x78 X Other Special Blanket Values for Saturday SI.OO Holds Any Blanket for Later Delivery! —Sears* Second Floor

Free Bus Service! Sears * bus operates between the store and Circle and English theater terminals every fifteen minutes—day time and evening. No tickets required—no purchase required —no obligation—a Sears * service.

Fruit Trees Shrubbery FREE! Fine Ferns Rubber Plants Snake Cactus. Choice with each purchase of shrubbery amounting to $1 or more. Unttsual Values! ™ 49* 5 to 6 Feet High! Choice varieties of Apple, Apricot, Cherry, Peach, Plum and Pear. Shade Trees 89c to $1.49 Wier Cut Leaf Maple, Norway Maple, Catalpa Bungei, Mountain Ash, Flowering Crab, Purple Leaf Plum, Weeping Willow and Lombardy Popular. All very fine. Choice Shrubs 3 for SI.OO Spi: ea Van Houttei, Frobelia, Spirea Anthony Waterer, Forsythia, Hydrangea, Dogwood, Barberry, Bush Honeysuckle, Mock Orange, Snowberry, Snowball, Bush Cranberry and Lilac, All fine and hardy. Rose Bushes 29c—Four for $1 —Curb Service, Rear

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BY BEN STERN AN already scrambled Chinese puzzle was given another twirl today when the name of Meredith Nicholson, famous Indianapolis novelist and essayist, was tossed into the Democratic senatorial tangle by friends both here and over the state. Nicholson was noncommittal over the possibility that he may become a candidate for the post in the state convention next June. “I have nothing to say, nor will I discuss the matter,’’ he declared. Friends, however, eagerly proffered the information that he would not turn a deaf ear to ambition. If his name does go before the convention it will be the seventh in the rapidly growing list, which includes Evans Woollen, Albert Stump, Walter Myers, all of Indianapolis: Lew O’Bannon of Corydon, Samuel Clelland of Ft. Wayne, and John A. M. Adair of Portland. Indications are that Nicholson will make no contest for delegates, but that his name will be used in event of a deadlock, which looms at present. # # * It Is a matter of record that, although preoccupied with his literary labors, Nicholson has found time to take a prominent part in Democratic activities. In 1924, when the Republicans almost everywhere were swept into office by large majorities, he was Democratic nominee for state senator and led the legislative ticket, although also defeated. Then in 1927, when the members of the city administration either were ousted or indicted, Nicholson was appointed a member of the reform city council. At the Seventh district reorganization meeting in 1930 he was elected Seventh district Democratic chairman. Nicholson also .was offered an important diplomatic post by President Wilson. s n One of the outstanding liberals in Indiana, Nicholson will attract those with a similar bent who will be delegates to the convention, and his name, distinguished as it is, would no doubt prove a drawing card on the state ticket. There is a decided movement toward the liberal point of view, both in his party and over the state. Usual comment regarding many of the others mentioned is: ‘‘He is too conservative.” This, at least, never could be said of the Hoosier author. HALT ECUADOR REVOLT Troops Stamp Out Rebellion in Guayaquil Area. By United Press GUAYAQUIL, Ecuador, Nov. 13. The government of President Alfredo Basquerio Moreno concentrated troops in the Guayaquil area today to stamp out a serious revolt in southern Ecuador. The Chimborazo battalion at Riobamba, betwen Guayaquil and Quito, the capital, was reported to have joined the revolt but the report could not be confirmed. The government contended that all of the country was quiet except in Oro province. Just Misplaced Sympathy By United Press LONDON, Nov. 13.—The following appeared in the births and deaths column of a newspaper: ‘‘On July 15, 1931, at Silverwood, Leatherhead, to Mr. and Mrs. A. C. W. Kimpton —twins, a boy and a girl. Sympathy misplaced.”

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ALTERATION SPECIALISTS —WE KETAIR KEIINE REFIT ■ TAILORING L.tlV<lnl COMPiNY 131 East New York Street

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SHOOTING STARS TO BE WATCHED NEXT+NIGHTS Astronomers Ask Help of Amateurs in Checking Leonid Meteors. Ay Science Service PHILADELPHIA, Nov. 13. All during November, but especially starting Saturday and continuing through next Tuesday, astronomers everywhere with the assistance of thousands of volunteer observers will watch for a sight of the Leonid meteors or shooting stars. Though some of these meteors, which seem to emerge from the constellation of Leo, the lion, are seen every November, the display last year was better than for nearly a third of a century previously. Astronomers who make a specialty of meteor study are hoping that this may prove to have been the forerunner of a magnificent “shower” in the next few’ years, comparable with those of 1833 and 1866. In those years the entire sky was covered with shooting stars by the thousands. Earth to Cross Swarm Meteors are best seen in the early morning sky. because then the meteors hit us head on. In the evening hours they must catch up with us. The swarm of Leonids forms an elliptical ring nearly two billion miles long, but, though there are some meteors all around this ring, at one point they are particularly concentrated. Each meteor in the swarm moves around this ring once | in a little over thirty-three years. The earth crosses the swarm in November, so then some of the meteors are intercepted, and, as they are burned by friction with the earth’s atmosphere, the shooting stars are seen in the sky. In the years of the great showers the earth hit squarely the concentrated part of the stream. Believed “Kin” of Comets Though the origin of meteors is not accounted for fully, it seems certain that they are closely associated with comets. In many cases a swarm of meteors has appeared in the same path as a comet that hacj disappeared. The Leonid meteors, for instance, follow almost exactly the path of Temple’s comet. Probably both comets and meteors are some of the debris left over from the time when the planets were formed of material pulled from the sun by the gravitai tional attraction of a passing star. Dr. Charles P. Olivier of the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, is one of the leading authorities on meteors and heads the American Meteor Society, made up largely of amateurs who co-operate with the professionals in observing these wanderers. Number Is Desired He has asked for assistance from every one in securing data on the Leonids this month. Most important of the desired information is the number of meteors seen during half-hourly intervals. This can be obtained by simply counting those seen from midnight to 12:30, 12:30 to 1:00, and so on. The times of passing clouds or anything else that may hinder a sight of the meteors should be noted. Leo, the constellation from which they seem to radiate, is directly east in the early morning hours and is recognized by the familiar “sickle,” a group of stars shaped like that agricultural implement. M’GUFFEYITES TO MEET The Rev. Wm. H. Kindall Will Be Speaker Saturday. Indianapolis McGuffeyites will be addressed by the Rev. William If. Kendall, Memorial Presbyterian church pastor, Saturday in Cropsy hall, Indianapolis library. The address at 3 will follow a business session at 1:30. The program will include pupils of Mrs. Anna Duval, banjo duet by Paul Jones and James Highly; and music by Mrs. R. W. Lookabill, Mrs. L. B. Lookabill, Mrs. Ray Fleming and Mrs. W. G. McVay, of the Third Christian church ladies quartet. The program is open to the public. This is to# tune es year to travel —and Here is tbe way to save doll arson every trip. Go by Greyhound Dus. it is warm, restful, convenient —and you’ll enjoy the glory at /.atomn at first hand. Phone the agent for fares and information, nght now. Detroit $ 6.00 Chicago 4.00 Cincinnati 2.75 Lafayette 1.90 St. Louis 5.00 New York 18.00 Louisville 3.00 Dayton 3.00 Evansville 4.00 Columbus 4.50 Atlanta 13.00 Jacksonville 21.25 Miami 31 .25 New Orleans 19.50 Los Angeles 41.00 Traction Terminal Bus Depot Illinois and Market Sts. Phone: Lincoln *S3t or Blley 4MI Other Offices: Fletcher Marines * Trust Cos., und Banker* Trust Company.

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