Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 150, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 November 1932 — Page 16

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LABOR CHIEFS BRAND HOOVER ‘ARCHJENEMY’ Jim Watson Also Labeled Foe of Workers by Railway Head. (Continued From Page One) can coerce him to vote Republican by appealing to his fears Instead of his intelligence." He also attacked Hoover's appointment of Judge John J. Parker and James H. Wilkerson to high federal Judgeships. He branded them the “notorious injunction Judges.” Parker* virtually enslaved 100,000 miners in Virginia. “If Abraham Lincoln thought he abolished slavery in this country, it was because he lived in the days before Judges Wilkerson and Parker became federal judges,” Whitney said. “And Senator Jim Watson voted to put them on still higher benches. Slashes at Watson "Watson’s record is not one to recommend him to the laboring man. He always has been the friend of big business and an arch enemy of the liberal attitude. He favored the seating of Newberry, the fellow that Bob La Follette chased out of the senate.” “Watson has opposed the wishes of farmers in their efforts to obtain federal legislation. “Watson voted against permitting the veterans to loan upon their bonus certificates and his views on high wages were expressed by him in an address when he said: ‘The high cost of living is largely due to the fact *hat under Woodrow Wilson labor has been given too high a wage.’ ” Van Nuys Is Lauded Whitney contrasted with the record of Van Nuys, “who consistently voted for labor and progressive legislation while a member of the state senate.” Van Nuys also voted favorably on such matters as safety and health laws for workers, compensation laws, child labor laws and old age pensions. , Berry related amicable relations which were established between the American Federation of Labor and the Legion when McNutt was national commander. Berry recommended him as a “real progressive and no man possesses greater talents than McNutt.” “His background is such as to challenge admiration and I have known him for years,” Berry said. “I have heard that the Republicans do not know the identity of their candidates, but be assured of this— McNutt is the Democratic Governor nominee.” ‘OLD BILL,’ FAMOUS BELL, FOUND AGAIN Ear Splitting “Boomer” at U of California Quits Junk Heap. By t nited I're an BERKELEY, Col., Nov. 2.—“01d Bill—damn him,” ear-splitting, booming bell in North hall, University of California's oldest building, has been “found” again. "Old Bill,” which received the additional cognomen. “Damn him,” because for generations he thundered out the time in fifteen-minute intervals night and day, has been discovered this time in a junk pile in the old zoology building of the university. The old bell, brought around the Horn in 1859 and first used in the old College of California, predecessor of the University of California, has been "lost” repeatedly in recent years on student and faculty insistence. In 1910 it was taken from storage to be used in connection with the fiftieth anniversary of the university. Since then it has appeared and disappeared. In 1925 it was “retired” because its great weight was endangering the old building. TRAIL OF GLACIERS IS SOUGHT IN TEXAS Great Ice Sheets Once Carried Boulders, Scientist Believes. E.y Science Serrice AUSTIN. Texas. Nov. 2.—Glaciers great enough to transport heavy boulders may. have crunched their slow way across Texas landscapes millions of years ago, during the coal age. Evidence to this effect has been found in the western part of the state, in the Trans-Pecos region, by Charles Laurence Baker of the University of Texas, whose detailed report will be published in the forthcoming issue of the Journal of Geology. The evidem'e consists largely of ! boulders of the same general type as were transported by the vast continental glaciers of the pleistocene period, millions of years later—almost yesterday, as compared with the antiquity of the coal age Baker does not think his coal age boulders necessarily were carried by continental glaciers, however. There were mountains in West Texas then, he pointed out, and they easily could have been lofty enough to bear alpine glaciers of their own. JAIL ‘WINTER QUARTERS’ ‘Vacation’ Sign on Door of Michigan Speakeasy. JS y United Press lONA, Mich., Nov. 2.—Sentenced to eight months in the Detroit house of correction for violating the liquor laws, Robert Patterson, owner of a restaurant here, posted a sign on the front door of his establishment. It read: “Gone to winter quarters.”

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Oh, See the Pretty C’s

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Oh, look at the pretty Cs. In fact, there’s 1.20 G bunches of C’s in the above photo. Sure, they look like carrots, and they are carrots, if Mrs. Grace Scott, 203 Fairview avenue (left) and Miss Alma Franke, 1816 Woodlawn avenue (right), are to bebelieved. But besides being carrots, they are just crowded witn C’s—vita-

Woman Writer Will Seek Ancient Mayan Relics

Foolish to Spend All Time Caring for Husband, Says Edna Robb Webster. By United Preaa CLEVELAND, Nov. 2.—lt’s a foolish wife who devotes her time to taking care of her husband, according to Mrs. Edna Robb Webster, whose book “Occasional Wife” was recently released. “When a wife follows her husband around trying to make him happy, nine times out of ten she is making him miserable,” the novelist stated. And because she practices what she preaches, Mrs. Webster will leave her husband and children in February and sail to Yucatan on her second trip into the interior to seek relics of the ancient Mayan civilization. During most of its trip, the expedition will study the primitive life in the region, but Mrs. Webster plans to be in Merida, capital city of Yucatan, for the annual carnival in March. “vAi plan to study the contrast between primitive and cultural life in the region,” Mrs. Webster said “Hotels in Merida are veritable palaces with Moorish columns and colonnades. Contrary to general belief in other countries, the higher type citizens of Merida are w’ell educated, highly cultured people. “There were more millionaires in Merida in I§ls than in any other city of its size in the world,” she said. Mrs. Webster is recognized as one of the few good authorities on the subject of the ancient Mayans in the United States. When she isn’t in Yucatan or Gautemala, she constantly is doing further research wherever she can'find any material related to the subject. COURT NAMES RAILJECEIVER Frisco President Appointed to Post. By United Preaa ST. LOUIS, Nov. 2.—A receiver-, ship for the St. Louis-San Francisco Railway Company was granted by United States District Judge Charles B. Faris here today. The company consented to the action. J. M. Kurn, its president, was appointed receiver. The receivership was granted on the petition of the Hobbs Western Company, which claimed the Frisco owed it more than $17,000 for supplies. The petition estimated gross revenues of the company for 1932 was $43,500,000 as against $57,000,000 for 1931, and added the income was far below the cost of operation and fixed charges. “Its cash resources have been reduced,” the petition continued, “its borrowing power restricted and it has neither the money or the ability to borrow funds necessary to meet its requirements maturing in the immediate future.” FIGHT SCHOOL SPORTS Group Wants Basketball, Football Ousted to Cut Taxes. By United Press MILES CITY, Mont., Nov. 2. When members of the Custer County Taxpayers’ Association appeared before the county high school board, seeking tax reductions, they asked the group to eliminate football and basketball and all student activities in the high school. Activity fees and admissions paid by students would go far toward reducing school costs, the association maintained.

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min C—for those Indianapolis persons who count their “victuals” before they eat. This C minor overture was snapped by the photographer as he anemic-ally passed the commission house of George Hitz & Cos., 28 South Delaware street. They were shipped in by truck from Cleveland, 0., to provide Republican and Democratic voters with pep enough to vote Nov .8.

Tragic Bluff Exposure of Poverty Is Faced, So Girl Takes Poison.

By United Press /CHICAGO, Nov. 2 Life in Chicago, Diana Robelot wrote to the home folks at Cedar River, Mich., was a wonderful existence—riches, fine clothes, society. For ten years these letters told of the magic charms of the big city, and then Diana's younger sister, Francis, 18, wrote she was leaving the farm to -live with her more fortunate sister. Diana looked at the shabby surroundings of her rented room, so different from the life she had pictured—and felt she could not face her sister. , She went to a drug store, bought some sleeping tablets and swallowed them in an effort to end her life. Physicians today said she would recover.

FOUR DEAD IN CROSSING CRASH Members of Farm Family Killed by Train. By United Press SHERIDAN, Ind., Nov. 2.—Four members of a farm family, including two children, were killed by a Monon passenger train here Tuesday night as they started for home after listening to an address by Vice-President Charles Curtis. The victims were: George Wright, 56; his wife, Mrs. George Wright, 54; a daughter Marie, 15, and a son Donald, 12. Another son, Lawrence, was injured seriously. The father was driving the car, in which the victims were riding, witnesses said. He apparently failed to hear the warning bell at the crossing. All the victims died instantly. Besides Lawrence, three other sons survive.

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

G. 0. P. FEARS AROUSED BY GLASS BLAST ‘Strutting Trumpeter’ Is Label on Hurley; Denies Gold Standard Peril. (Continued From Page One) ing the first six months of 1932. the period Hoover alleges the gold standard was in danger, $3,709,213,450 of treasury notes, redeemable in gold, were sold to American investors. War Secretary Patrick Hurley, who asserted in recent speeches that the United States will go off the gold standard if Roosevelt is elected, Glass described as a “strutting trumpeter” totally unfit for official responsibility. Because Secretary Henry L. Stimson permitted the state department to sanction directly the issuance of sixteen billions of foreign securities, and then made a “manifestly puerile and untrue” denial, Glass suggested he should be “impeached.” “The state department at Washington has not yet learned there are few things worse in life than a stupid lie,” Glass said. Under the guidance of ex-Secre-tary Andrew Mellon, he charged, the federal reserve system was made a medium for speculative investment activities. Glass belittled Hoover’s allegations that the depression came from abroad, and asserted “the reverse is true.” “The improvidence, if not the direct profligacy of incompetent Republican administrations in Washington is measurably, if not predominantly responsible for the deplorable situation in which we find ourselves today,” he asserted. The Hawley-Smoot tariff law, he said, has occasioned bread lines and closed factories. Hoover’s original draft of the R. F. C. law, which Glass recalled was modelled after the war-time War Finance Corporation law, he said, “was saturated with unsound and dangerous provisions,” and the existing safeguards “few as they are” were written either by Democrats or progressive Republicans. PARADER BURNS BOY G. O. P. Follower Shoves Torch to Lad’s Face; Aided by Firemen. Slight burns on the face were incurred Tuesday night by Genis Callier, 9, of 1224 West Eighteenth street when a torch carried in a Republican parade was shoved close to his face by the occupant of an automobile at Twenty-first street and Dexter avenue. Firemen at engine house 24 gave first aid treatment and later police took the boy to city hospital.

Mothers, Mix This At Home for a Bad Cough Saves $2. So Easy! No Cooking!

You’ll be pleasantly surprised when you make up this simple home mixture and try it for a distressing cough. It’s no trouble to mix, and costs but a trifle, yet it can be depended upon to give quick and lasting relief. Make a syrup by stirring 2 cups of granulated sugar and one cup of water for a few moments until dissolved. No cooking needed. Get 2% ounces of Pinex from any druggist, put it into a pint bottle, and fill up with your sugar syrup. The pint thus made costs no more than a small bottle of ready-made medicine, yet it is the most effective remedy that money can buy. Keeps perfectly and tastes fine. This simple remedy has a remarkable three-fold action. It soothes and heals the inflamed membranes, looftns the germ-laden phlegm, and clears the air.passages. Tims it makes breathing easy, and lets you get restful sleep. Pinex is a compound of Norway Pine, in concentrated form, famous as a healing agent for throat membranes. It is guaranteed to give prompt relief or money refunded. —Advertisement.

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Mfts Phyllis 'Pratt, above, youngest daughter of Representative Ruth Baker Pratt, soon will marry Paul H. Nitze, son of a University of Chicago professor. Mrs. Pratt, a* New York City representative in congress, announced the engagement.

SALMON PACK BOOSTED Output Well Ahead of 1931, but Below 1930 Record. By Times Special VANCOUVER, B. C„ Nov. 2.—The salmon pack in British Columbia is running well ahead of last year and will compare favorably with other years, although it will fall behind the 1930 pack, according to the natural resources department of the Canadian National Railways. Up to the first week of October, the pack totaled 974,529 cases, as compared s with 658,320 cases during the corresponding period of 1931. The sockeye pack, the most valuable, has amounted to 274,104 cases. The record pack of 1930 amounted to 1,911,748 cases.

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SUED, EXECUTOR .SAYS ESTATE IS IN DEBTTO HIM Schuyler Haas Tells Court He Is Owed $2,64*0 in Case. Called into court to answer a suit alleging $5,145 is missing from an estate of w’hich he served as executor eighteen years, Schuyler A. Haas, Indianapolis attorney and Republican politician, today offered the defense the estate owes him $2,640. Haas, nine months ago, was removed as trustee of the estate of Christian Wishmier, Marion county farmer, who died in 1913. On evidence the “estate had been mismanaged,” Probate Judge Smiley Chambers removed Haas, ordering him, after a later accounting, to pay approximately $7,000 back into one portion of the $60,000 estate. The superior court action is for an accounting of funds received from Mt. Jackson sanitarium, on West Washington street, threefourths interest in which was left to thirteen heirs. Against Haas’ contention that he collected only $11,868 frem sale of lands and rentals on the property, the heirs allege that audits show he collected $22,800. They charge Haas sold eleven acres of sanitarium property but failed to report it to probate court. In the opening statement, Emsley Johnson, Haas’ attorney, declared the estate owes Haas $2,640 because expenditures on the sanitarium exceeded the income. MAGICIAN RAISES DUCKS Blackstone Takes Troupe of 20 Assistants Yearly to Island. By United Press COLON, Mich., Nov. 2.—Now it is known where the ducks Harry Blackstone, magician, pulls from empty kegs come from—an island in Sturgeon lake. Blackstone and his troupe of twenty assistants spend part of their summer vacations on the 200-acre island raising ducks.

WAR VETERAN IS DEAD Charles J. Bobb Is Victim of Chronic Heart Disease. Charles J. Bobb. 37, of 5360 Winthrop avenue, died Tuesday in the United States Veterans hospital, after suffering from chronic heart disease for several years. He had been in the hospital several months. Mr. Bobb was born at Huron, 0., and came to Indianapolis eight years ago. He was a member of the College Avenue Baptist church and

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Don’t Deceive Yourself about a COLD ! A C old is Nothing to Take Lightly and Nothing to Treat Lightly! A Cold is an Internal Infection Calling for Specific Internal Medication I

A cold is nothing to trifle with. You can’t tell where it will end. Be serious in your treatment of* a cold —and —be intelligent! Don’t fall for half-way measures. They leave you with a halfcured cold —and there’s nothing more dangerous. A cold calls for a COLD remedy. Preparations good for a number of other things besides colds won't do. They only allay temporarily the symptoms of the cold while the cold itself goes on taking deeper and deeper root in your system. Several of the remedies which people commonly take for colds actually make the relief of a cold more difficult because these remedies are constipating and also make the system acid. A cold also calls for internal medication. For a cold is an internal infection. Local or surface treatments can’t reach the seat of the trouble and can't stop the infection spreading within your system. Pay Safe! As soon as you catch a cold, take Grove’s Laxative Bromo Quinine. There is nothing wiser you can do, as your own doctor will probably tell you. Grove’s Laxative Bromo Quinine

-NOV. 2, 1932

the American Legion. During the World war he was stationed at the Edgewood (Md.) arsenal. The Rev. R. m. Dodrill, pastor of College avenue church, will conduct private funeral services at 2 Thursday In the home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. o. Bobb, 5376 Guilford avenue. Burial will be In Crown Hill cemetery. Cellophane bags, described a* moisture-proof, grease-proof and odor-proof, are being made for foods placed in refrigerators

does the four things necessary to rout a cold decisively and thoroughly. First of all, it opens the bowels, gently but thoroughly—the first step necessary in knocking a cold. Second, it kills the cold germs in the system, drives out the poisonous infection and reduces the fever. Third, it relieves the headache and that grippy feeling. Fourth, it tones the entire system and fortifies against further attack. Thus it is the complete treatment you need. Swift, Positive, Harmless! Effective as it is, Grove’s Laxative Bromo Quinine is absolutely safe for oil and young to take. It contains no narcotics, does not upset the stomach or nauseate or cause ringing in the head. In the form of dainty tablets, Grove’s Laxative Bromo < Quinine* is convenient and pleasant to take. Comes in handy, pocket size boxes, cellophane-wrapped. All druggists in America sell Grove’s Bromo Quinine aad few will 'offer a substitute because they know Its merit, famous for years. Keep it handy all winter and you will be In a position to stop a cold before it really gets started. Get a box today.—Advertisement.