Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 215, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 January 1933 — Page 14

PAGE 14

BILL SEEKS TO CUT COST OF APPORTIONING Vote for State Secretary Would Be Basis, Instead of Male Enumeration. Reduction of apportionment expenses is the aim of an amendment to the Indiana Constitution, introduced in the house of representatives today by Representatives Wilfred Jr sup fDrm , Centerville) and H. H. Evans 'Rep., Newcastle). The measure, a joint house resolution, would have the general assembly of 1939 fix the apportionment of state representatives and senators on the basis of the total vote cast for candidates for the office of secretary of state, instead of on enumeration. Apportionment would continue to come every sixth year, as the enumeration apportionment, is now. Authors of the measure, which 1 must be referred to the next general assembly, point out that by using the vole cast for secretary of state as a basis, the enumeration expense would be avoided. Vote for Income Tax The present section of the Con- j stitution reads that apportionment shall be based on the enumeration of male voters. Thus, by making the cast vote the basis, women voters would figure in the apportionment. The house voted 92-0 for passage of the Stein-Jessup-Asche-Fin-ney amendment to the Constitu- j tion which would permit a personal j income tax. The resolution, which | now goes to the senate, must be passed by two assemblies and then voted on at a general election. Efforts to help delinquent home owners were advanced when the j house voted favorably on second | reading of the bill to grant a tenyear moratorium, beginning in 1934, in which delinquencies paid be paid off at 2 per cent, interest. Motion to cut the moratorium from ten to five years was defeated. Reject Compensation Limit Fifty-one members of the house today voted against a proposal that the limit of awards under the workmen's compensation law be set at $5,000. Vote was amendment of a bill on second reading. Eight others were road for the second time at the morning session and six bills and a joint resolution were handed down for third reading. Among measures on second reading was one requiring that poll and I personal tax receipts be shown as a i condition to the granting of any j license. Tlie joint resolution handed down 1 for third reading provides for sub- j mission to voters of a constitutional j amendment to set up an income tax. Other new legislation introduced prohibited freight trains longer than seventy cars. There is no limit now. The house deferred until Wedcnsday action on a bill to j replace names of presidential and vice-presidential electors on the j ballot with names of the candidates. Sixteen new bills and three house | joint resolutions were introduced I today, running the total number of bills to 132. FUNERAL SERVICES" SET Jacob Schaefer to Be Buried at Crown Hill on Wednesday. Funeral services for Jacob Schaefer, 43, World war veteran, who died last Thursday in San Francisco will be held in the F. John Herrman funeral home. 701 North New Jersey | street at 2 Wednesday. Burial will j be in Crown Hill cemetery. Mr. Schaefer was born in Indianapolis and had lived here all his life,! with exception of eight months j served overseas during the war. He had been in San Francisco three months before death.

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Maxine Weaver, above, is going to sketch all the horses she wants to now. An art student, she went to Florida, heard there were nice horses to sketch at the John Ringling estate. There she met lUnry Ringling North, nephew of the circus king. Their elopement has just been revealed.

FIRST BAPTIST PASTOR NAMED Post to Be Taken March 5 by the Rev. C. W. Atwater of Anderson. Succeeding the late Dr. Frederick E. Taylor, pastor of the First Baptist church here for twenty-six years, the Rev. Carleton W. Atwater of Anderson will preach his first sermon in the church March 5. Dr. Taylor died last April. Mr. Atwater has been pastor of the First Baptist church in Anderson and on March 4 will have served four years in the pulpit. He went to Anderson from the First Baptist church of Cincinnati. In Anderson he served as chairman of the advisory board of the Family Welfare Society, vice-presi-dent of the Anderson council of social agencies, chairman of the education committee of the Kiwanis Club, dean of the Anderson school of religious education, and president of the Anderson council of religious education. He also served four years as a member of the board of managers of the Indiana Baptist convention and is chairman of the leadership training division. Dr. O. R. McKay has been acting pastor of the church since the death of Dr. Taylor. SOME WOMEN ALWAYS ATTRACT You want to be beautiful. You want the tireless energy, fresh complexion and pep of youth. Then let Dr. Edwards Olive Tablets help free your system of the poisons caused by clogged bowels and torpid liver. For 20 years, men and women suffering from stomach troubles, pimples, listlessness and headaches have taken Dr. Edwards Olive Tablets, a successful substitute for calomel, a compound of vegetable ingredients, known by their olive color. They act easily upon the bowels without griping. They help cleanse the system and tone up the liver. If you value youth and its many Kills, take I>r. Kdwards Olive Tablets nightly. How much hotter you will fee’ end look. 13c, Joc, tide. —Atlver-ti-em-nt

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ESKIMO BIBLE IS COMPLETED BY CITY WOMAN Daughter of Pioneer Settler in Far North Finishes Translation. (Continued From Page One) proved of great interest to Mrs. Blackmore. Mrs. Blackmore was married in Baffin Land and two of her daughters, Dorothy and Harriet, were born there. One of the costumes which she wore has the native bag-like arrangement at the shoulders for carrying children and both of the ' daughters many times were carried in that fashion. Harriett now is a junior in But- | ler university, and is taking a pub- | lie speaking course, preparatory to : assuming her mother’s work of leci turing on customs of ihe Eskimo people. She goes with her mother lon lecture trips, singing native Eskimo songs, while Mrs. Blackmore I accompanies her on an accordian. Shortly after her husband's death | by drowning, Mrs. Blackmore, with ; her two children, went to NewI foundland and then came to Indianapolis. She remarried and her third child, Mary, who now is 6, was born in the J United States. Her brother took a position as in- | terpreter for the Northwest Mountj ed police. Letters from her Eskimo friends | still come to Mrs. Blackmore. They are written in the Eskimo dialect, and are on pieces of animal skin, rolled with the hair side out. She also has a wooden tray, which is the only dish an Eskimo family possesses. 449,886 Miles Are Patrolled Indiana state police covered 449,386 miles of highway with their 1 state-wide patrol system during the j last quarter, it was reported today j from the office of Chief Grover C. Garrott.

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

hilho Ti.d. M.'k Re,. V U. S. P.t Os T ET’S try the letter C, HI-HQ ■*- i puzzlers. Cut out the seven puzzle pieces, darken their backs with pencil or crayon, and then rearrange them to form the letter. You may turn the pieces over if you wish. That pet raccoon ivas full of tricks from head to tail! Here’s the way the silhouette is formed. ;f!|^

DR. FISHER ELECTED Named President of Optometrists at Convention Here. Indiana Association of Optometrists, at the annual convention in the Severin' Monday, elected Dr. C. E. Fisher of Sullivan, president, and Dr. N. A. Bixler, first vice-president. Principal speaker at the dinner in the evening was Dr. James L. Wolf of Logansport.

MOVIE CENSOR BILL IS PLACED BEFORE HOUSE Measure Calls for Board of Three to Rule Picture Shows. No more will gangster guns bark their message of death to rival beer runners or cowboys gallop madly to rescue wagon trains from the clutches of Indian hordes, if the motion picture censorship bill introduced today in the house of representatives is enacted. The measure, sponsored by Representative Fabius Gwin 'Dem., Shoals), calls for appointment by the Governor of an Indiana motion picture board of censors of three persons to serve at $3,500 annual salaries. Members of the board, according to provisions of the bill, would comprise two men of different political faiths, and one woman member. Terms would be for three years. In addition to prohibiting the depiction of gunplay, except in warfare, the bill bars any picture of "a sacreligious or immoral nature tendA Real Bargain I RADIOLA—7 TIKES. <M J QC I Complete 1 ‘I.ID KEMPLER RADIO CO. 36 Virginia Avenue (cold^ j l Put Mentholatum in \\\ 1 nostrils to open them, J rub on chest to VA ' reduce congestion. \\ . aHuB-fkiia W "rli ft.* I y He

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I6d^\ Jr \ i|||||L for Heavy Paper jffl&M " \ n n o u n c in g tile I 9 .1 *1 WORLD ALMANAC Within a few days the 1933 World Almanac tip?. It is a condensation of a thousand and Book of Facts will be on sale at news- volumes, an indispensable aid at home, in stands and bookstores. This year's edition your office or at school. will he limited to one printing. To he sure Its value cannot he measured in dollars of a copy, place your order with your dealer and cents, yet the cost is so low anyone can afford it. . s oon on sale at newsstands and A cursory inspection of a few index pages bookstores .. . only 60c per copy for heavy will prove its value to you, give you some paper cover, SI.OO per copy for cloth hindidea of the enormous amount of information ing. Or it may he ordered hv mail direct. 1 packed into this handy-size Mck reference Send 10c additional for wrapping and postvolume. Jor 48 years the World Almanac age. Address the World Almanac, 125 Bar* has been the standard. It puts facts on almost clay Street, New York City. Published by every form of human activity at your finger- the New York World-Telegram. The Indianapolis Times A Scripps-Howard Newspaper

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See Europe in 1933 Do you know that you may see the incomparable sights of Europe for an amazingly reasonable amount of money? Perhaps less than you have spent on previous vacations. Nowhere else may so much beauty and interest be seen as in Europe. Before you plan your vacation may we show you how really little such a trip costs? Sailing lists for 1533 are now available. Write, phone or call for one. i Richard A. Kurtz, Manager Travel Bureau The Leading Travel Bureau of Indianapolis 6UNION TRUSTS 120 E. Market St. Riley 5341

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.JAN. 17, 1983