Indianapolis Times, Volume 43, Number 207, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 January 1932 — Page 2
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TENNANT NAMED AS MEMBER OF SANITARYBOARD Succeeds B. T. Jeup; Also Holds Job as City Councilman. Maurice E. Tennant, city councilman, was appointed a member of the city sanitary board today by Circuit Judge Harry O. Chamberlin. Tennant, long active in city government affairs, will succeed B. T. Jeup, former city engineer, appointed to the sanitary board during the L. Ert Slack administration. Chamberlin made the appointment after city officials failed to break a deadlock. Two other members of the board are A. H. Moore, city engineer, and ex-officio member, and O .C. Ross, vice-president and Republican member. Tennant is expected to retain his post on the council while serving the four-year sanitary board appointment. City Attorney James E. Dcery today said that in his opinion there is no law against one man holding both positions, as courts have held that the S6OO a year council post is not a "lucrative” position. The sanitary board post, at present, pays $3,600 a year, but the 1932 budget provides that the pay be cut to S6OO a year, effective July 1. Under state law, sanitary board commissioners are entitled to draw $3,600 a year while the department has construction work in progress. Tennant’s appointment came as a surprise, his name not having been mentioned as a possible choice. Frank Lingenfelter, former city
"I swore off harsh irritants" I the longest name in I am on the LUCKY list. Last summer, while camp. mazoa lanei ing in the high Sierras, I hiked six miles to get my supply "Twelvetrees" is o tough noma on of LUCKY STRIKES. I swore off harsh irritants when change Ac talkies fit started-and I’ve smoked LUCKY STRIKES middie-aisied it. she s a Brooklyn ever since. And that improved Cellophane wrapper of I u"' iT* yours—with the little tab for easy opening—is a gem.” 1 new RKO-PATHE I 1 :j "PANAMA FLO" Helen’s smoked ijj l there was no price tag on her state- Your Throat Protection —against irritation against cough ment ... lucky strike is grateful! And Moisture-Proof Cellophane Keeps that “Toasted” Flavor Ever Fresh TUNE IN ON LUCK\ S TRIKE—6O modem minutes finest dance orchestras and Walter WinchelL, whose gossip of today becomes the newa of tomorrow', I||
Gets City Job
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Maurice E. Tennant
engineer, and Russell McFall, attorney, both Republicans, had been mentioned for the post. The board members were unable to agree on a successor to Jeup, Ross favoring Richard Lennox, son-in-law of Dr. William F. King, state health board secretary, and Moore and Mayor Reginald H. Sullivan sponsoring George T. O’Connor, present city plan commissioner. Sullivan, on learning of Tennant’s appointment, said he was pleased with the choice and saw no reason why Tennant should resign from the council. “I think Judge Chamberlin appointed an excellent man for the post,” Sullivan stated. Police Report Beer Seized in Raid Raiding the residence of Mrs. Barbara La Mar, 1509 East Thirtyeighth street, shortly before noon, police report that they confiscated 100 quarts of homebrew beer. Mrs. La Mar was charged with operating a blind tiger by Sergeant W jue Bear and squad.
STREET CAR CD. REORGANIZATION IS UNDER WAY Expect Bonds Foreclosure to Bring Firm Out of Receivership. Steps to re-organize the Indianapolis Street Railway Company and bring it out of receivership by March 1 are being taken today. Petitions for foreclosure of bonds an(i notes of the company are being prepared for presentation to Circuit Judge Harry O. Chamberlin to clear the v’ay for formation of a new company, Indianapolis Railways, Inc. Reorganization proposers declared they hoped to have the new company in operation on or before March 1. The company went into receivership in April, 1930. Heads of the various committees reported that 95 per cent of the outstanding bonds have been turned in, which is an unprecedented deposit record. It also was declared that Charles W. Chase, Gary, one of the outstanding street railway operators in the country, and an Insull aid, has been asked to accept the post of manager of the new concern and has indicated that he will accept. Chase led the Insull forces in the attempt to obtain anew franchise from the city last year. It is expected that $5,000j000 in new money will be raised by a S2O assesment to be levied against junior securities turned in and issuance of new car trust certificates which provide for physical rehabilitation of the line. The program contemplates rebuilding a considerable part of the
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Unionize Death By United Press CHICAGO, Jan. 7.—Mourners will not be permitted to drive their own autos to funerals if a rule put into force today by the Auto Livery Chauffeurs’ Union is enforced. The unioh ordered that all funeral processions must be "100 per cent union” in the future. Friends and relatives will not be allowed to join processions with their own cars. The union said the qjder was made to “help solve traffic problems and eliminate accidents."
railway tracks, conversion of certain lines to one-man cars and of others to trackless trolleys. It also calls for the purchase of 338 new high speed, light weight, one-man street cars, gas busses and trackless trolley coaches, and remodeling of sixty of the present cars. Included in the plan is the construction of anew coss-town loop line, new shops and a garage, and rebuilding of overhead lines. Improvements to substations and power lines also are planned. GANGSTER TAKES 'RIDE’ Victim Stood Against Wall; Firing Squad Makes Escape. By United Press NEW YORK, Jan. 7.—Gangsters hustled their captive out of an automobile, faced him against a brick building, and fired a volley into the back of his head early today. The victim was identified tentatively as John McEvilly, war veteran, by papers found in his pockets. He was dead and his assailants had fled in a dark colored sedan with yellow wheels when police reached the scene.
FOWLER IS RE-ELECTED * Engineers Choose Officers to Hold Posts Through 1932. Emmett G. Fowler was re-elected president of the Indianapolis Engineering Society at a directors meeting Wednesday in the Antlers. Other officers re-elected are: Wayne W. Templeton, vice-pres-ident; Daniel B. Luten, secretary; and H. F. Osier, treasurer. A change in the society’s weekly luncheon from Thursday to Saturday was voted.
HP ttUH v W Ws. \ MBgfrv AN OLD FRIEND IN A NEW BOX INDIGESTION Here’s good news for your stomach! Anew, handy pocket size of Pape’s Diapepsin. Eat what you want, and all you want, without one pang of indigestion. Just carry this harmless stomach stimulant. Take two or three tablets after eating. Then enjoy serene digestion. * Pape’s Diapepsin tablet* are as pleasantly eaten as candy. No sourness, no gas, no distress two hours after meals —no sensation but hunger for the next meal. Don’t diet; don’t deny yourself. Use Pape’s Diapepsin
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.JAN. ", 1932
yoo should h interested in your Blood Count (Left) Microscopic view W O% ¥1 of healthy red-hlood-cells. They carry nourishment and oxygen to every part of the body—they also remove impurities from the tissues. (Right) Weak red-blood-cells—only 60 per cent of normal strength. Such a condition is often respon- * o*l sible for body weakness, paleness, sallow complex- fIJS km, pimples end boils.
