Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 160, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 November 1932 — Page 5
NOV. 14, 1932_
111NJURED BY AUTOS; GIRL, 6, IS BADLY HURT Niece of Lieutenant Troutman Struck as She Runs Into Street. Among eleven persons Injured In week-end traffic accidents, the most seriously hurt Is 6-year-old Darlene Troutman of Martinsville, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Troutman and a niece of Lieutenant Leo Troutman of the Indianapolis police department. The child incurred broken hips, a possible skull fracture, cuts and Vruises when she was struck by an automobile near Twenty-fifth street and College avenue, when she attempted to place a toy piano in her parenta’ car. Driver of the automobile which strck her was C. H. Myers, 35, of 5282 Guilford avenue. Witnesses said Myers was blameless. Slight injuries were incurred by another child, Ruby Cohen, 12, of 3901 Camplin street, when she was knocked down by a street car at Illinois and Washington streets. Fire Truck Hits Auto Collision of a Are truck and an automobile tied up early Sunday evening traffic at Capitol avenue and Tenth street, but aside from shock and severe shaking, no one was hurt. The truck, from engine house No. 7, was driven by Irwin Fossatti, and the automobile by Sam Rayberger, 39, of 3208 East Michigan ‘ street. Riding with Rayberger were Miss Eva Kindred, 32, and Miss Faye Clark, 28, both of 607 South Pine street, and Roy Wise, 29, of 826 Harrison street. Crew of the truck was composed of Harry Van Pelt, Myron Fears and Charles Goens. Drivers disagreed on which haa the green light of a traffic signal. No arrests were made. Cooper Zaring, 6420 Central avenue, was arrested on charges of drunkenness and drunken driving, after his car collided at Fifty-ninth street and Keystone avenue, with one driven by C. C. Van Duyn, 3838 West Washington street. Driver Is Arrested Injury of three persons in a collision at 50 North Sheffield avenue resulted in arrest of W. C. Gill, 352 North Miley avenue, on charges of drunkenness and drunken driving. His car struck one owned by Edward Parham, 33, of 846 Fletcher avenue. The injured are: Mrs. J. G. Parham of the Fletcher avenue address, and Clarice Busenbark, 42, of 11 North Belmont avenue, and Barbara Hart, 6, of 19 South Harris avenue. Others injured, suffering from sprains, cuts or bruises, are as follows: Jesse Milner, 57. of 215 Hancock street; Samuel Longley. 65, Nelsonville, O.: Leslie Rivers, 72, of 1246 Compton street; Dayton Swickard, 16. and Marie Schuffler, 14, both of R. R. 6, Box 471, and John Smith, Detroit. RAIL AND TRUCKING INTERESTS TO CONFER Parley Will Attempt to Agree on Regulation of Highway Carriers. Conference of railroad and motor trucking officials to agree on regulation of the freight trucking business will be sought as result of suggestions made at the annual Motor Truck Association of Indiana convention Sunday at the Lincoln by Harry K. Cuthbertson, public service commission member. Cuthbertson offered his services in arranging the parley as a means of adjusting differences between the two business. Warning that the railroads were preparing to make a “desperate effort to get restrictive legislation of trucks at the next legislative session” was sounded by Thomas Snyder, Indianapolis. Snyder listed several points in a . trucking legislative program, including increase in gross length • and weight of trucks permitted on the highways, definition of the words “common carrier” and “contract carrier,” and elimination of railroad grade crossings. MRS. MARY ALLISON IS TAKEN BY DEATH Widow of Medical Furniture Firm Founder Was 77 Years Old. Cerebral hemorrhage caused the death Saturday of Mrs. Mary Rob- , bins Allison, 76, in her home, 3529 Central avenue. She was the widow of the late W. D. Allison, founder of a company making medical furniture. He died four years ago Sunday. Born in Charleston. 111., Mrs. Allison came to Indianapolis in 1884, two years after her marriage. The Rev. W. H. Kendall, pastor of Memorial Presbyterian church, of which she was a member, was to officiate at funeral services at 2 today in the home. Burial was to be in Crown Hill cemetery. LINDiERGHTAvTTO BE - USED IN INDIANA CASE Greenwood Resident Charged With $3,000 Extortion Attempt. Postal inspectors today said the new extortion legislation enacted as a direct result of the Lindbergh kidnaping case probably will be invoked in the case of Myrl Myers, Greenwood. under arrest on the charge of attempting to extort $3,000 from William Adcock, Greenwood bank cashier. Myers was arrested Friday night by Sheriff Strouther Vandiver, Johnson county sheriff, and a posse of citizens as Myers picked up a der foy package supposed to have contained the money. Myers iS alleged to have written a letter to Adcock, threatening the kidnaping of Adcock’s 10-year-old '•daughter. sj BUTLER WARNS G. 0. P. NEW YORK. Nov. 14.-Dr. Nicholas Murray Butler, president of Columbia university, today warned the Republican party that it must be reorganized under courageous and constructive leadership or pass out of existence. . The hope of the party lies in its youth, the militant educator declared.
What Street Is This?
PICTURE
TJIIS BLANK MAY BE USED FOR ANSWERS Name the Street Contest Editor. 15 The Indianapolis Times, 214-220 W. Maryland St. Indianapolis, Indiana. I consider the best name is My name is Address Town State Hold all answers until close of series.
Contract Bridge
BY W. E. M'KENNEY Secretcrv American Bridge League ONLY too often players will get themselves into hot water because they fail to distinguish between a constructive bid and a signoff bid. Take, for example, the following hand. The declarer was very fortunate in making his contract by the misplay of his opponents, but that is no excuse for the poor bidding.
AJ-8-5-2 VlO-5-2 - ♦ 5-4 AK-10-7-2 AA-10-4 AK-Q----VQ-J-6 S > 7-3 ♦ 7-2 © V 9-8-3 4.J-8-6- 5 - 1 K .Q. a o ih iilcr , Q A 9-6 VA-K-7-4 ♦ A-10-9-6-3 *A-9 14
The Bidding SOUTH bid one diamond— conservative bid. West passed and North bid one no trump—a signoff bid. East passed, and Sohth now showed a second suit with a bid of two hearts. This naming of two suits shows an exceptionally strong hand and asks partner to make a choice —it also shows five diamonds and four hearts. West again passed ' and now North, not having support in diamonds, or normal support in hearts, made a bid of two no trump that might look normal. But a bid of two no trump is a constructive bid, and partner has a perfect right to continue. With a hand containing only a king and a jack, you certainly want to sign off and the best sign-off bid is a pass. East passed, and it so happened that South, due to his weak doubleton, decided to give up trying for game. The Play THE play was interesting. East opened the king of diamonds and the declarer allowed it to hold the trick. East continued with the queen of diamonds, declarer winning with the ace and then immediately leading three rounds of hearts. The hearts broke West was in on the third round. West did not have a diamond to lead and decided to attempt to establish his weak club suit. He led the fourth best club, which the declarer allowed to ride to the dummy. East’s queen was knocked out, NATIONAL HEALTH WEEK BEING OBSERVED HERE Woman’s Athletic Association at Butler Joins in Program. Woman's Athletic Association of Butler university will observe National Health week, this week, with a program stressing hygiene and health and a talk Tuesday afternoon at 2:30 at the school by Dr. William F. King, state health commissioner. On Thursday afternoon, at 3, the department of physical education, under the direction of Miss Louise Schulemeyer, will give an exhibition of athletic games and sports for coeds in the university’s gymnasium. Refreshments will be served guests attending the Thursday exercises. PI C K CITY FOR PAR LEY County Commissioners Association Elects Tom Ellis President. Indianapolis was selected as the 1933 convention city of the County Commissioners Association (k Indiana at annual sessions which closed Saturday at South Bend. Thomas H. Ellis, member of the Marion county board of commissioners, was elected president and Bruce Short, Marion county surveyor, was‘ re-elected secretarytreasurer. The organization reiterated its demand that the legislature take steps immediately to revise poor relief laws to permit issuance of relief bonds in anticipation of purchase, enabling commissioners to pay cash for groceries, meat, coal and other relief supplies. This, it will reduce relief costs 25 per cent.. *
No. 15
dummy winning the trick with the ace. The good seven of hearts then was cashed, every one discarding a spade. The nine of clubs was next played, the declarer letting it ride, taking the finesse. A small spade then was led, West played the ten, declarer the jack, and East won the trick with the queen. East then cashed his jack of diamonds, West dropping a club, and declarer a spade. East now was helpless—if he returns a spade, West will be forced to win and will have to lead a club through declarer’s ten-ace, while if a diamond is led, the two diamonds in dummy will be good. The play allowed the declarer to make his contract of two no trump. However, South would have been justified in taking his partner to a game contract which could not have been made. (Copyright. 1932. NEA Service. (Inc.) TURKEY PRICES LOW Thanksgiving Dinner Should Cost Less Than for Last 100 Years. Turkey dinner with, all the trimmings for Thanksgiving day this year should cost less than at any time since pioneer days. However, prices of turkey and other fowl and all the other “fillings” of a successful Thanksgiving day dinner are only slightly less than last year, when anew low was set. Orders are being taken for turkeys at from 25 to 27 cents a pound. Chickens are expected to bring from 20 to 25 cents a pound and ducks from 15 to 20 cents a pound, with rabbits 30 to 35 cents each. MARINE MAJOR KILLED Officer Struck Down by Drunken Autoist in Chicago. CHICAGO, Nov. 14.—Major Frederic Kensel, 52, former judge advocate of the United States marines, was struck down while on an errand of kindness here Sunday and died a short time later, the victim of an intoxicated motorist. Major Kensel just had helped a score of girls through traffic as they left a meeting of the Park Sunshine Club, when a car, driven by John Owens, Negro, struck a parked machine and hurled it against the major, pinning him against a truck. INSULL TO FACE COURT Son of Fallen Magnate to Get Long Examination. CHICAGO, Nov. 14.—Samuel Insull Jr. will appear in federal court Tuesday to face a two or three-day examination in the investigation of assets of Insull Utility Investments, Inc. He is expected to be the principal witness, though he has not been implicated in any of the gigantic irregularities charged to his father or his uncle. HITS MODERN PROGRESS ‘We Have Big Cities, but Little Men,’ State College President Says. Modern civilization has given us machines and big cities, 'but has left us with little men,” Dr. W. P. Dearing, president of Oakland City (Ind.) college, declared in an address Sunday to 1,200 persons at the first Y. M. C. A. Big Meeting in Keith’s theater. “My neck is tired of looking at tall buildings. I want instead to see the towering human characters we were accustomed to see in the early days of America,” he said. Next Sunday’s speaker will be Governor-Elect Paul V. McNutt. Woman's Suicide Effort Fails Giving as her reason, “She just wanted to die,” Ada Cooperider, 24, of 406 North Alabama street, attempted suicide late Sunday night by swallowing a quantity of poison. Her condition is not serious.
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THE INDIANAPOLIS’ TIMES
BOWERS LAUDS ! LIEBER’S WORK; UNVEH. BUST Ceremony at Turkey Run Park Is Held to Honor Conservation Chief. High tribute was paid Director Richard Lieber of the state conservation department at the unveiling of a memorial bust in his honor Sunday at Turkey Run state park. The Lieber bust was executed by i E. H. Daniel, Indianapolis sculptor. Arrangements for the bust being placed at Turkey Run were made by Howard M. Myers of the Indianapolis Izaak Walton League, supported by various civic and outdoor organizations interested in conservation. Bowers Praises Work It was placed in Turkey Run, because that is the first of the state parks launched by and the foundation of the present system that has grown under his generalship, it was explained. Claude G. Bowers, New York historian and former Hoosier, praised Indiana’s park progress. “Constructive and far-seeing | statesmanship foresees the increas- i ing need for providing now for the outdoor necessities of the future, not remote,” he said. ‘‘lt is impossible to calculate in terms of money the value of these parks that will minister to the pleasure and to the minds and souls of many generations yet unborn. Leslie Accepts Bust “The man we honor here today is the one who had the vision and the leadership to make it more substantial than a dream.” “Were it not for leadership like this Indiana would have been ‘barbarously indifferent’ to its historic shrines,” Bowers declared. • Tom Wallace, Louisville (Ky.) editor, presented the bust on behalf of the organizations, and Governor Harry G. Leslie accepted. Wallace pointed out the danger of halting such progress as has been made in Indiana state parks and conservation work thorugh “the poison of politics.” PAYMENT OF POLICE FINES IS ON UPGRADE Probation Department Sees Signs of Better Times. Marked improvement in payment of fines to the municipal court probation department is noted, according to Solon Q. Vial, chief probation officer. Vial said payments increased in August, gained slightly more in September, while in October the margin over July was SSOO. Three years ago the department received from $2,800 to $3,000 a month, but this dropped under SI,OOO as the depression progressed. However, payments rose during October to $1,500. During the month thirty persons completed payments. The department has about 2,800 accounts. Among persons making payments are some who state they are in the best situation financially in three I years. Among these is a man who is the father of eleven children. Others state they have obtained employment sufficient to permit buying canned goods and other food, which is being put aside for use during the winter. PRISON RECORD MAY DEBAR CONGRESSMAN Man Elected in Minnesota Has not Regained Civil Rights. By Scripps-Howard Newspaper Alliance WASHINGTON, Nov. 14.—F. H. Shoemaker, Farmer-Laborite, reported elected to congress in Minnesota, may not be '•able to take his seat, because he is an ex-convict who has not regained his civil rights. James A. Finch, pardon attorney for thq department of justice, today confirmed the report that Shoemaker had obtained the pardon necessary to restore his rights of citizenship, although Shoemaker served time in Leavenworth prison for alleged violation of the postal regulations. The Constitution of Minnesota provide? that one convicted of a crime against the government may not hold office, and authorities here agree that this provision would apply in the case of Shoemaker’s seat. LEGISLATURE WORRIES Illinois Assembly Faced With Fund and Job Problems. SPRINGFIELD, HI., Nov. 14.—The Illinois legislature will reconvene on Tuesday, acing the problem of raising more money for state needs and of meeting the unemployment situation. Twenty million dollars will be asked for the next three months and the sales tar. is being pushed'as the best way to raise the money. Is This Too Good for Your Cough? Creomulsion may be a better help than you need. It combines seven major helps in one—the best helps known to science. It is made for coughs or colds that hang on, for quick relief, for safety. Mild coughs often yield to lesser helps. No one can tell. No one knows which factor will do most for any certaincough. So careful people, more and more, are using Creomulsion for any cough that •tarts. Tb cost is a little mofe than a single help. But your druggist guarantees it, so it costs nothing if it fails to bring you quick relief. Coughs are danger signals. For safety’s sake, deal with them in the best way known, (adv.)
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TUESDAY and WEDNESDAY Sim v. ot H W 11 J. E. Peterson, wS HHk I Rockfcrd. 111. ■ §f W 1 jj If JEX~I U ■ ON H:SO TO IJA M. KACH MORNING S ON HALE ITO2P. M. EACH AFTERNOON If SILK FLOSS I OCTAGON SOAP WHITE OUTING II Choice each— v T Avery high grade I.aundry Soap v a UXTa? v II mm J is II BARS V | 27 Inches wirle, heavy nap on hotli § Hi ' O A FOR JL Floor. Yd. £Efk Limit—Second Floor. <>> sale 2 to ; m. each afternoon Kjjßpfe. (Sefon<l Flnor) ON SALE 10 TO 11 A. M. EACH MORNING MdXWCII HOUS£ ntiTi*? MQtr—COFFEE 2Ce Men s 40k fs A |7C AH Vita Fresh Vacuum 0/BS and Boys vK JF VAH 3 "w packed. 1-Lb. can *3l** W Turtle Neck dhi FOR £ v mmmm—muma—mmm ■■ W A W p • „v SALE 3TO4r. M. EACH AFTERNOON 9 Sweaters 1 11 — O.N.T. Sewing Thread I Solid colors wine and navy, 1 ON SALE 11 A. M. 12 NOON EACH MORNING Black or White, slips 30. 40. 50 and 00. I ... OCTAGON SOAP J spools 4 JA. i powder le i§ for JLv c KaT, JK—JaRgL W Makes dish washing easy box / gEL Mkl|§ Limit-Second Floor. (First Floor) ON SALE 12 NOON TO 1 I*. M. EACH DAY ON SALE 4 TO 5 I*. M. EACH AFTERNOON PfflrfrrTii iiifflllfTTl New—Dß. WESTS M# 48-In. Curtain SsFw, toothpaste CL- £PS!S£L. ji >lc IT Chambray l " 1 ” 0 1 W u Work Shirts! EEEHHMMf to 4MWEHBEEBW W Full eut. well made, ■ I convenient pockets, sixes 14 I E L f n 1 Never Before Such Bargains i A9 e A I iSc mittens £c paper 4i *c Ml ABB BSS One piece style.... Values up to 25c *. Jlifb © J| ■P. , ... . ATm OHj Monday while it ftf Rftr I I©C gloves r c ■ Lined, all sixes ... * Hr,,wn, Heavy quality. SHADES I Byllhy Hi “■““lrregulars ~ WASHABLE Hg Children’s Waist MmV & Sib. Ip to We Women’s r character- 11 tmos sms collar and If 11 sixes . u " ns :.. a —— CUFF SETS ■ • 1 ft - p h P J | VuVL & Mi" l '- the?, la>-I f BafST.Tuty Cats C.owns. ]| Boys’ Knit £ II NBFRUf Pfi R %UC ‘U A V S'fi" “4% Ji I etc. Bright colors. While they 1 TotjOggattS Ag UNDERWEfiR HA YON Jg a & l ast _ J H AJI colorß W soiled, broken UNDIES I fIL P Ea. M f Hoy,' HIU. r=gt* IOC lafasits' m. PRINTS Hi / f. a*’ 4g WORK SHIRTS X%C HOSIERY (|C ew patterns and ■ FloorW Alt sUes Fink, blue only. Ir, 10 colors, yard m a ipfi VV ATC hediwUAA i9 t runt a, 1 -p L V* 'BB • and of Women’s and Laya way ;ond Floor. ian Smart new styles of splendid quality Felts. New trims. New ■ Ea ™"**® p TOM“®**“SSTsSK ! Ksvs’*;jiiMrraßra colors. All headsizes. IDV7GCVC (SECOND FLOOR) CHILDKEN'C BU K oolens. new knitted and D iHra ® i.™ PhinrhSll* 4? ■■ -dtl OC •s. Blaek and all the ~ UnillCllilia J) Os , JJ) ilxes 14 to 50 MrrJffßU&mm n _ _ IB| econd Floor) LOStS . HHMRHRMBBHnBnBMM Sixes 1 to 8... 00l I HOSI I-P,. Suode Cloth *- ■hose" 5c m SUITS /h if A n Boys’ 19c Fancy 1 I GOLF HOSE IAC ° —J' - "- Jg- I MenV Kayon |'| ffA ■ Jacket bAII hose "Ji/o c ®pSi I r last— Irregulars, all sixes, so match, pair solid rolors. Sixes to 6. Main Floor ■ Seeond Fluor ; Men’s Work u I “i 00 PANTS DRESS a Values SHIRTS •** tt 3>*7 c r t - ront HI m P“ 11 m^ teria L Fast colors, all sizes./ \U4 Tom bat- BN full cut, all sizes, 30 Fi t and irreru .'_>n\ H JSB tO4 -Main Floor. K-SSta lES’ mrnsemm v a OME^ R ®ps and malic; black or jSM >ken sizes. brow n cloth; fe Boys’ and tiirlv’ Rubbers ■s’ and Girls* Shoes n .;i i0 . U "#A BIX-fiY . m iT 2 SHOE t| SOeaiid POLISH (Main Floor) Tan or oxblood. While it jus psnt^C
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