Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 68, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 July 1932 — Page 6
PAGE 6
PAPER HANGER IN BATTLE FOR WENDELRICHES 'Uncanny Resemblance’ to Millionaire Cited by N. Y. Official. Bn United Press NEW YORK, July 29—The "uncanny resemblance" of Thomas Patrick Morris, Bronx paper-hanger, to John Gottlieb Wendel, whose son li#* claims to be, was attested today before Surrogate James A. Foley by John Hencken, a city engineer, who said he knew the late financier well lor many years. Morris seeks to have himself adjudged the son of Wendel, a decision which i ould place him in line for the bulk of the $30,000,000 estate left by the late Ella von Wendel sister of.John Wendel, Meanwhile, Morris found encouragement in the surrogate’s promise that ample time would be given for obtaining depositions and other evidence in the west and Scotland to support his story that Wendel married Mary Ellen Devine here in 1879 and that he is the issue of that union. After Hencken had finished his brief testimony, William L. Diaz testified for the estate. He was secretary to John Gottlieb Wendel and later to the Wendel sisters. He identified Wendel’s writing on four books of check stubs covering the years 1879 to Wendel’s death in 1914. This was in line with the executor’s attempt to show that Wendel was not in Dundee, Scoland, nor in Arizona, at the times Morris testified his "father" visited him.
— week-end specials .... WHITE HOUSE MlLKifp [“WHERE ECONOMY RULES"]k Tall m M W 1 ipßr O'” 4* Toilet Tissue Fruit Salad Del Monte 2 Si. 1 33c il A Crab Meat ■ESS*' -29 c | t|C Pears lona Brand 325 c 1 \ Butter piSe r u 6 rSf2lc Country Roll > 20s \IONA _ 0.. „ Pure Csne 25-Lh. Cloth AI IA OUR OUgar Granulated Bag Y t-u, Bag \ Ketchup £& 5c 39c \ Plums “ 3 &.* 25c \ w 7c\ Pa,molive Soa P 4 cite 25c \ Free £g£& Airy Fairy as 2 . 35c —\ Town Crier Flour 2 **>.. 25c \ D suced K \ P. & G.Soap VIS 10 b,„ 27c \ PINEAPPLE \ Del Monte Corn 3 Cans 29c \ 2 n o-33c \ 3 F Coffee navors in 23c \ Peats 2 39® \ . Serve Iced Coffee! ® O’Clock Coffee i*- |9q 1 "SSs Red Cl ' rcle Coffee Lb 23c c Bckar Coffee 21c \ Flat Tin C \ \ 1 GRANDMOTHER'S QUALITY €?s& \ bread \ 10_F^ 5 ’ V White—Sliced or Regular Pound A Loaf 4-Q Finest Quality Meats v Asparagus Del, Monte 2 1 Sq - 43c SMOKED HAMS Spinach Del Monte 2 29c Kingan s sugar cured—Whole or half. V *ced Peaches Del Monte 2 1 23c Lb. 15C ■*l Monte Peas 2 Si, 2 27c Beef Roast Lb. 15c r —— 7TT~ Choice yearling, tender chuck cut, Fresh Fruits and Vegetables Chickens, Fresh Dressed Fryers 23c Hens -20 c Ca nta IOUpeS A|l . n . _ Indiana Hales—Wonderful Flavor Sliced Bacon is. 19c Sugar Cured—No rind. p* Swiss Steak r. 19c wv Cut from shoulder. Fillet of Haddock -12!4c Tomatoes Firm white meat—No waste. W Baked Ham w H OI t f °* r t 29c Home Grown-Smooth ’ Delicious Sliced, lb. 35c. T M Y Pound "J Sweet sugar cured, deliciously spiced. I m r> eic T,of ■1 Garnished with I’ineapple and Cherries. ■ XSaSKei, Jfam Breakfast Bacon . |2y 2 c 4 Pounds tor ioc Potatoes Cobblers 1 15 Peck 19c Atlantic* Pacifica
Grocers’ Group to Ban .‘Bad’ Business Practices
Purposes of Organization Are Outlined by Secretary. Objectives of the Indianapolis Retail Meat and Grocers Association, Inc., of which Fred Steinberger is president, were outlined today by J. Eugne Hunsbarger, secretary. The association has opened an office at 221 East Maryland street. Banning injurious business practices is one of the aims of the organization. It proposes to maintain a credit information bureau to standardize credit practice. Through a Better Grocers Bureau it is proposed to give expert merchandising and advertising counsel, store planning service and training of grocery employes. In the public field the organization proposes to keep in touch with health and sanitation authorities and the department of weights and measures. It will be active in obtaining favorable legislation. Arbitration is favored for settlement of disputes among members and between members, wholesalers and manufacturers. It would co-operate with other organizations in fairs, cooking schools and other activities. Activities for the remainder of this year include a good will adSeek Finance Expert as Envoy Bn United Press PARIS, July 29. —Reports persisted today that Louis GermainMartin, finance minister, would be appointed ambassador to Washington as successor to Paul Claudel.
vertising campaign to open Aug. 15. In October, a cooking school and model store in the nature of a food show will be sponsored. A picnic is also on the autumn program.
Death Chamber Provesilts.Power 5 Every Ely or Mosquito
In the Rex Research laboratory there is a small room, kept filled with flies at their most vigorous age—five days old. Each lot of Fly-Tox is tested here with a sprayer. Unless every fly dies, and quickly, that lot of Fly-Tox is rejected. That’s why Fly-Tox is so certain, so economical to you. Rightly sprayed in a room, it creates a perfumed mist, which no fly or mosquito can escape. That mist is harmless to people, stainless to anything. But these deadly pests all perish at its touch. Fly-Tox was developed at Mellon
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Use Fly-Tox only, for safety’s sake. Use it because it is the latest, most scientific product £or this purpose. Use it for economy’s sake—only 1 or 2 cents per room. Use it because this Japanese flower is the most efficient
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
THREE BILLS AWAITING LESLIE’S SIGNATURE AU Relatively Unimportant; None Provide Tax Relief. Three relatively unimportant bills, representing three weeks of accomplishment of the legislature today are in the hands of Governor Harry
Institute of Industrial Research by Rex Research Fellowship. We have spent ten years and over SIOO,OOO to perfect it. The toxic factor comes from flowers of Japan, which scientists found to be deadly to flies. Use Fly-Tox to protect your home. These insects carry disease germs of some 30 kinds. They contaminate all foods they touch. Their lytes inject disease germs in the blood. Thousands of children, every year, die from insect-borne diseases. Rid your home of these pests—keep it free—for the sake of all who live there.
factor that we know. It is easy, pleasant, sure. It is harmless, stainless, quick. Your home protection is too important to use a lesser method. Get Fly-Tox now. Sold everywhere. Made by the Makers of Moth-Tox.
POULTRY For Saturday Top Notch Fryers Plymouth Rocks, White Rocksee and Rhode Island Reds. 1933 / /() Fryers, 2% to 4 lbs. each. Lb. Leghorn Fryers, 1932 Stock, lb., 170 Plenty of all kinds poultry, high in quality, low In price. We sell them alive, then dress free. The GRANT CO. 123 N. New Jersey St. Phone Orders Filled. Riley 5624
L*] SHH IfCAI Roast lAa I Fork Sausage O Lbs. AC. I IfCAil Pocket 7c ■■ VE.HL Chops lUC | HAMBURGER • For j VCHL Steak ...... 15£ fyi Davlt Steak I Loin |A. || Roast ■■ rOlli Chops 15$ J BeefdftGaK Round .... lOG J 8.33110 Steak 15 411 ■■BETTER MEATS ■■BETTER SERVICE ■■ BETTER PRICEBI
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G. Leslie, awaiting executive action. None of the bills provide tax relief ,and only one remotely promises aid for the overburdened taxpayer. The latter repeals a 1929 statute requiring counties to construct roads to cemeteries upon petition of 300 or more voters. The second measure would reduce the amount of commission received by sheriffs on sale of property under
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TRY A WANT AD IN THE TIMES. THEY WILL BRING RESULTS.
judgment, and the third affects the school fund of Union townsliip in Elkhart county. With passage of the measures by both houses, the lower house apparently is ready to pass the $1.50 maximum property tax levy law, although warned by Leslie the bill will be vetoed. The senate already has passed the bill.
CHILD SEEKS $50,000 Charges Permanent Crippling as Result of Auto Injury. A 7-year-old girl, who alleges she was "crippled for life" in an automobile accident, today filed suit in superior court three, demanding $50,000 damages from the Griffin Machine Company. The suit, brought by Mrs. Bertha M. Jones of 312 North Grant ave-
M ama wants the can with that man's picture on it" Budweiser years of experience be- .|4 fp Big Red Can hind it. Alwaysdepend. LIGHT OR DARK BUDWEISER deliver the 7;.; B Bmdweiser pMEj ANHEUSER-BUSCH • STs LOUIS I
The standard of VALUE For 25 years, Kellogg’s Corn Flakes have been the leader simply because they have always been the best com flakes possible to make. Today, you get a delicious flavor ahd crispness in Kellogg’s that no other corn flakes can equal. And you always get oven-fresh corn flakes assured by the sealed inside WAXTITE bag, which is a patented Kellogg feature. Insist on genuine Kellogg’s when you buy com flakes* Substitutes are seldom offered in a true spirit of service. Kellogg’s are personally guaranteed by W. K. Kellogg i “I? you don’t think them the finest corn flakes you ever ate, return the empty red-and-green package and we will return your money.” Made by Kellogg in Battle Creek.
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-JDLY 29, 1932
nue, on behalf of her daughter Martha, charges the child will "suffer pain throughout her life." Charles O. Silcott, employe of the company, who drove the car that ran over Martha, Aug. 14, 1930, is charged in the suit with driving recklessly. North Carolina the twelfth state to join the Union, now is twelfth in population ranking.
