Indianapolis Times, Volume 43, Number 182, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 December 1931 — Page 16

PAGE 16

RUM TRIAL OF BOOZE SLEUTH DELAYED AGAIN Observers Declare Federal Dry Agent Never May Face Court. Patrick A. Currie, “two-gun" federal prohibition agent, has obtained another continuance of his trial on : charges of drunkenness and dis- J orderly conduct. Now he is scheduled to appear before Municipal Judge Clifton R. Cameron s court Dec. 30, more than two months after he is alleged to have shot up the Happy Hour barbe- I cue on Rockville road near the j county line. Phone inquiry at the federal prohibition office today brought the answer that Currie is “working every day and probably never will be tried.” Last week when Currie was to be tried after three previous continu- ; ances, he failed to appear in court. j The court answered this with the i issuance of an arrest warrant and the next step was the continuance i of the case. * Charles Britt, deputy prohibition administrator, insists the department is not trying to “run out from under" the charges made by deputy sheriffs. Currie fired shots at the barbecue I early Oct. 15 after an argument with an employe over the purchase ; of He is said to have admitted he had spent several hours I testing the wares of Hendricks and Putnam county bootleggers before his arrival at the barbecue. Several members of an American Legion post witnessed the argument and subsequent shooting fray. CARAVAN CLUB WILL GIVE DINNER-DANCE Women Will Be Guests at Event in Temple Tuesday Night. Annual holiday party of the Caravan Club in Murat temple Thursday night will be a dinner-dance and entertainment at which women will be guests. Reservations must be made by Tuesday night, Homer L. Cook, secretary, announced. Entertainment committee includes Stuart A. Tomlinson, chairman, Arthur Kimber and Guy Rutherford. They will be assisted by the cabinet of which the following men are members: Tracv Whitaker. A. B. Good. Rush R Harris. Ed Hart. W. T. Rose. John vV. Stokes. Clvde E Titus. Edwin R. Hisev. i 1-red Kortepeter. Dr. C. E. Cox. Hersch ! Tehav. Earl Kilter. Harrv Stormont. Crawrord Barker. Ezra Stewart. J. Allen Daw- l son. Audlev Dunham. Hal Howe. Charles Hauck. John T. Saulter. Ralph Elvin. Clifford Norman. E. S. Larrison. Paul Matthews. John Brenner and Vernon Sheller. Luncheons will be resumed Dec. 10, when a program of pupils of Manual Training high school will' be given under auspices of the Gun j Club. i

“HOW GOOD ARE THEY?” SMOKERS WANT TO KNOW

SMOKERS, nowadays, aren’t taking things for granted. They’re shopping around ... asking questions. Old man habit has been discarded . . . forgotten. “How good is it?” ... that’s what they want to know about any cigarette they smoke. • • • OW good is it?” Brother, you put your JIJL finger right on it! You want a cigarette that’s milder. You want a cigarette that tastes better. You want a pure cigarette. And above all, you want cigarettes that satisfy. Now when you say that, you’re talking Chesterfield’s language— none other! • • • IT STARTS with fine tobacco. Chesterfield buyers are experts in the art of judging quality leaf. They can spot the finest tobacco in any country... and they won’t take anything else. You’ll find the same painstaking care ... the same skillful handling ... in the curing, the blending, and the cross-blending. Blended and cross-blended . . . that’s Chesterfield! And what a difference it makes in the way it smokes and tastes! • • • FROM field to package, Chesterfields are protected by the strictest purity standards; the most modern sanitary manufacturing methods. They’re rolled in the finest, whitest paper... that burns without taste or odor. Wrapped in a clean, attractive package .. neat, fresh-looking; moisture-tight... but easy to open. And delivered as fast as they’re made... from 3 big factories... to every cigarette counter in the land. THAT’S the story of why Chesterfields satisfy. That’s the reason they’re milder ... that’s why they taste better. Light up ... and answer your own question!

A ‘Castaway’ Hy United Preis PEORIA, 111., Dec. 9.—Rex Collier, 25, was. cured today of turning handsprings and jumping out of hospital windows. When he turned a handspring in the county Jail where he was awaiting trial, he told a guard he thought he had dislocated a verterba. He was sent to the hospital and put in a fifty-pound plaster cast from neck to hips That night he dropped, casi and all, from a second floo: window and escaped. In the morning he was back teeth chattering with the cold “That cast was heavy,” hi said as he walked in volun tarily. “but it wasn’t warm at all.”

UNDERWOOD TO DETROIT City Chemical Engineer Will Attend Road Show. Appointment of C. H. Underwood, city chemical engineer, as contact man for Indianapolis city officials’ division of the American Road Builders’ Association, was announced today from the association’s headquarters, Washington, D. C. This division will serve as a central clearing house and fact-finding organization for information used by city engineers and other officials. Underwood is among delegates designated to attend the twentyninth annual road show and convention of the association at Detroit Jan. 11 to 15, 1932. r ____ work at mgsSgk PRICE $ M ALBERT STANLEY SSSSSf.,r RI-TlSl I 107 ODO rcuow a LOO Electric Toasters Only ... $2.79 A full size Toaster, nickel-plated. Hip-flop style. An excellent Gif! | suggestion. VONNEGUT’S Downtown. Irvington. Belmont. Fountain Square. ■-&==--=*. ■■■ ■ '36=' THE BEST-GRAND LAUNDRY | SEVERAL PHONES AVAILABLE : Through Riley 2555 Night and Sunday, j* Lincoln 7583 j —*e- w w

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The Chief Tire Changer Speaking

ART ROSE

DON’T be alarmed about that , sour taste in your mouth. According to medics the food we eat ] ferments and causes alcohol. Every j stomach- is really a still. However, we suggest that you keep it under cover. x x x BETTER catch up on your correspondence now as the Postmaster General recommends a postage increase. We wouldn’t mind ■ it if they improved the taste or gave j us an assortment of flavors to match j the mood in which the letter is j written. xxx WE observe a few American names on the All-American teams. x n x “W THAT is a Store?”—the quesW tion now confronting State Tax Commissioners has many business men also guessing. xxx THE race among newspapers to find new and highly lurid nom-de-plumes for the West Virginia murderer is waxing hot. So far we note the following: West Virginia Bluebeard, Pudgy Lothario and Correspondence Romeo. However, quite a few counties haven’t been heard from. XX X TELEPHOTO reproduced in local newspaper shows members of the 72nd Congress at prayer. They are probably praying for the public, but with the House under Democratic control, and the Senate under Republican control, the public is praying for itself. xxx * DEBT relief is all right, provided the plan for relief doesn’t get you still deeper in debt. xxx SIGHTS about town: Gentleman who took the spirit of Christmas too literally or liberally trying to give a direction to another gentleman of like spirit, but finally giving it up as a bad job. Last seen, both gentlemen, arm in arm, were weaving happily down the street. The Chief Tire Changer ROSE TIRE CO., Inc. 365 S. Meridian St. MILLER TIRE DISTRIBUTORS Tune in the Rose Tire Buddies Tonight at 6:45 over WKBF.

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

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DEC. 9, 1931