Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 220, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 January 1933 — Page 7

•TAX. 23, 1933

12 ARE INJURED, 2 CRITICALLY, IN AUTO SPILLS Machine Smashes Concrete Safety Standard: Pair Badly Hurt. Two prisons are In city hospital In critical condition and ten others Were Injured in week-end automobile accidents. , Morris Hadley. 38. of 2653 North Harding street, and Miss Alma Heckman, 26. of 1302 Madison avenue, were taken to the hospital Saturday night alter Hadley s automobile struck a concrete safety standard on Madison avenue at the Brit, railroad crossing. Mrs Heckman suffered fracture nf both lfg.s and severe head cuts. Hadley, who had several teeth knocked out and incurred head injuries, told police he was driving north on Madison avenue when another car pulled alongside, causing him to swerve into the abutment. He was arrested on a charge of reckless driving. Miss Nora Aichle, 35, of 1451 Central avenue. Apartment 21, and Miss Dorothy Sylcr, 34. of *2142' ; North Talbot street, received back and should r injuries Sunday afternoon when the car Miss Aichle was driving collided with the automobile of Paul V/ehr, 31, of 1202 West Thirty-first street, at Market and Noble streets. Both girls were sent to city hospital. Mother, Child Are Hurt Fracture of the left leg and head Injuries were incurred by Mrs Ruth Herdt, 34, of 5209 East Walnut street, when struck by the automobile of Carlos A. Morris, 41. of 1444 North Euclid avenue, at Tenth and La Salle streets, early Saturday night. Mrs. Herdt and her daughter Catherine, 11, were taken to city hospital. The child received slight bruises. Tom Sawyer, 19, and his brother, Lawrence 15, both of 826 South West, street, were injured Sunday afternoon when their automobile collided with the car of Otto Marschke, 19, of 2334 South Keystone avenue, at Raymond street and Capitol avenue. Lawrence received a broken left shoulder. His brother, who was bruised, was arrested for failure to have a driver’s license. Robert Frye, 7, of 1234 North Tacoma avenue, received a broken leg Sunday when he ran into the path of an automobile driven by Robert C. Maney, 16, .of 1834 Ludlow avenue, in the 1200 block North Keystone avenue. Held on Liquor Count Arrested on charge of drunkenness, John A. Brennan, 53, of 529 West Morris street, was sent to city hospital Sunday suffering from head laeeratons after being struck by the automobile of Alvin Bishop. 24, of 549 West Morris street, at West and Merrill streets. Cuts and bruises were incurred by Charles Crowder, 21, of 231 North Arsenal avenue, when he was struck by the automobile of I awn non A, Sage, 201 Park View place, Sunday at Washington and East streets. The same concrete safety zone guard at the southeast corner of Capitol avenue and Washington street was struck twice Sunday by automobiles. Charles Huddleston, 39, of 2905 Park avenue, received a cut near his right eye. Mrs. Helen Demaree. 24. wife of Raymond Demaree, 35. of 1715 East Sixty-seventh street, received an ankle injury when the car driven by her husband struck the safety guard. HARVEY TAYLOR DEAD Funeral Services to Re Held Tuesday; Built Water System. Funeral services for Harvey E. Taylor. 59, who died in his home, 4663 Sunset avenue, Saturday night will be held in the Flanner and Buchanan mortuary, 25 West Fall Creek boulevard at 2 Tuesday. Burial will be in Memorial Park cemetery. Mr. Taylor, designed and constructed the Huntingburg water and light system in 1914 and was made superintendent. During the war he served in a supervisory capacity in various projects. Since the war he had been connected with the Big Four railroad. He was a member of the Methodist Episcopal church. MRS. ALICE MEIER DIES Funeral Services for City Woman to Be Held on Wednesday. Funeral services for Mrs. Alice Gwinn Meier, 27. who died in her home, 6140 Primrose avenue. Sunday, will be held in the Hisev & Titus funeral home. 951 North Delaware street, at 10 Wednesday. Burial will be in Crown Hill cemetery.

TO BREAK UP 1 A COLD IN A JIFFY Feel Like a New Person In Just a Little While People have found out that newfangled ideas and notions don't break up colds. So millions have turned back to first principles and use what they know breaks one up in a jiffy. Get Hill's Caseara Quininp at any drug store. Take two tablets now. Then follow directions on box. Drink lots of water, too—that's all. Soon you'll start to feel like anew person. Things will loosen up. your head will clear; aching go—you'll be bark on the job with a wallop. Hill s is a si'i'iitilif formula uiatlr to il.i on>- lliiiii: u ell: to turn k i coltl ~ot to euro :t tliousni-1 ailments, tint yotir money liak it it doesn’t work With " I' e llie spn-.l of nnvthlnc yoti’Ve " ! -t t'>*' • Imv now Off f >0 Caseara Quinine HILL o r~~?r r _ Sviorat\ S|Ss§3^^\

BLACK CROW’ FIANCEE

Mamin Harrison, above, Dallas <Tcx.) girl, soon is to be Mrs. Black Crow. More specifically, she’s to be the bride of John P. Hearne, who is better known as the “Moran" of the famous blackface team of Moran and Mack. Mack will be best man, and his wife matron of honor at the wedding. The ceremony is to be held in Mexico, and directly afterward all four will go to Hollywood to begin work on their next movie. ORDERS R. F. C. LOANS BE USED FOR WORK Wages Must Be Paid, Is McNutt’s Decree to Communities. “All R. F. C. loans from the federal government to local communities for poor relief must be used for work and paid in wages.” This was the rule laid down by Governor Paul V. McNutt today in announced approval of a $200,000 loan for the city of Washington, to be used to finance sewer construction. Before local communities can obtain loans, their plan of expenditure must receive approval from McNutt.

ant/twet/./i/e to']//// wit/you aoout if. .. All races of people since the beginning of time, so far as we have been able to read, have had some kind of a pipe and have smoked something —whether they called it tobacco or what-not

A ND since smoking a pipe is so different from smoking a cigar or a cigarette, we made a most painstaking, scientific study in an effort to make, if we could, a tobacco which was suited to pipes. We found out, first, that there was a kind of tobacco that grew in the Blue Grass section of Kentucky called White Burley”, and that there was a certain kind of this tobacco which was between the tobacco used for cigarettes and the tobacco used for chewing tobacco. It is

* The Granger pouch the tobacco * IS, Ag 4k

FLOOD DANGER IS FACED BY STATE AREAS Traffic in Southern Indiana Is Slowed by Rivers and Creeks Out of Banks. Traffic n southern Indiana moved cautiously mday through low areas as rivers and creeks overflowed their banks and flood conditions prevailed *n many sections. With waters rising constantly because of neavv rainfall Saturday night and Sunday, peak of the high waters has rot yet oeen reached today at seveial larger towns along both branenes of White river. The lower Wabash river climbed above its flood stage, pouring water into bottom lands and making travel hazardous because of inundated roads. At Seymour, White river rose 8.8. feet since Saturday night, to 12 feet, which is two feet above the flood stage, still .urther'rise was expected today. Road No. 46 is closed between Bloomington and Nashville as is Road 31 north of Seymour. Eart slides ffrom a downpour j caused temporary closing Sunday of i Road 45 four miles south of Loo- ! gooiee, until state 'highway department trucks cleared away enough ; earth to permit passage of one-way traffic. State trucks were being utilized to rescue stranded motorists on Road 69 at Solitude, where more than I two feet of water covered the road. | At Shoals, White river early today stood .9 of a foot above the flood stage after rising 13.8 feet since Saturday night. Additional rise of two feet is expected. J. H. Armington United States meteorologist, said clear and colder weather is expected tonight and j Tuesday. White river near Elliston rose 6.4 | feet to .7 of a foot above flood stage of 19 feet. Girl Dies ill Auto Mishap By 1 uiUrl Vrcsx NEW ALBANY, Ind., Jan. 23. Violet Siegwald, 17, New Albany, was killed instantly late Monday when a car in which she was riding overturned twice after a tire blowout.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

David Harum in Ecstasy, and All Over Swap Ads But The Times’ Boys Slap Him Back in Place to Make Thing’s Safe for ‘Tradeocracy.’ David Harum, from his novel height atop the bookshelf, was looking over our paper. David was that fictional character who could out-trade and outswap a horse thief. He could take Santa Claus’ whiskers away from him for shaving cream and turn them into a brush to leather his fgee And as David glanced at the Swap column of The Indianapolis Times he went into overwhelming raptures and with pointing finger said: “There’s one after my own heart.” A Colt automatic ’.25-calber to trade for a portable typewriter. That’s the very way to end a depression. “The guy with the portable writes *

his last note, trades the typewriter for the automatic, ends it all, and his estate gets the gun and the other guy gets the portable. It s a game of progression. And it makes it open season on husbands and wives. “Here, don’t skip in that Swap column. Look at that one. Wants to give a $52 course in piano playing for fence posts, and this one here,” said the avid David as he pointed to a Times swap that offered a hydraulic two-chair barber shop for a good car. “What a Depression!” “And that one there," pointed David’s finger to: “Lady’s wrist watch for kitchen linoleum, coal or cash." “Oh, if I had only really lived. What swapping! What a depression! Look down there at that one. Some one’s tired of ping-pong and wants to trade a game’ table for an extension table. And the one below it, that wants to swap a baby buggy for an electric cleaner. Are you listtening, Father Stork?” shouted David. He was becoming over-enthusias-tic from his book shelf and had to be put in his place. “You keep that up. David, and we’ll move you out, for here’s a fellow in The Times’ swap ads that wants to move things for furniture or clothing," he was told. Into Shelf He Goes “Move me and around Easter time this fellow here—” David's finger pointed rudely to another ad that begged to be allowed to swap rabbits for chickens. “Move me when they're giving theater tickets for every swap that's j printed and listing your swap for I sixty days, free, in the swap-book?

this tobacco which is best for pipes. Having got the right tobacco, we then began to study the method of making it. We found out that Mr. J. N. Wellman, way back many years ago, in a small factory, made a pipe tobacco which was very popular. But he was not in f position to advertise it, and after he passed away there was nothing more heard about it. We acquired this Wellman Method of making pipe tobacco—and that is what we use in making GRANGER ROUGH CUT. The next thing was to cut the tobacco. We knew that fine tobacco burnt hot because it burnt so fast. It kept your pipe hot. You could hardly hold your pipe in your hand, it got so hot at times. Then we remembered that some folks back vonder used to “whittle** their toJ bacco. So we made GRANGER just like "whittle” tobacco— ‘ Rough Cut." It smokes cooler and lasts a lot longer. And

Bea sport, be yourself, I'm no Kringelein from Grand Hotel. Give me one hour to live, not one minute." Don't turn the page! Lock at that one. printing for groceries or coal.' Aw—ouch—" ana Davta was rudely knocked back into the middle of his book-ends to keep Indianapolis swap-a-crats safe for tradeocracy. NEW OFFICERS ARE INSTALLER Mrs. Hattie Bell Takes Post as Noble Grand of No. 801, Rebskahs. Mrs. Geraldine Stout, district deputy president of the Rebekah lodge, with her staff, installed the new officers of Evergreen Rebekah lodge, No. 801, Seventeenth street and Roosevelt avenue, Friday night. The new officers are Mrs. Hattie Bell, noble grand, and her aid, Mrs. Alma Giger and Mrs. Waile Har- j lett; Mrs. Nellie Hughes, vice-grand, and her supporters, Miss Blossom Giger and Mrs. June Fisher; Miss Nora Hughes, recording secretary; Mrs. Anna Kirby, treasurer; Mrs. Cecil Hughes and Mrs. Lillian Knapp, conductors, and Mrs. Mary Wilson, chaplain. About one hundred persons attended the supper following installation. < Plans for the new year, discussed at the meeting, will include a number of social affairs.

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O 1933, UGGETT & MYERS TOBACCO CO. also, you*ll find it never gums the pipe. So far, so good. Now we wanted to sell this tobacco for 10c. Good tobacco risdit process —cut right. It was a question of how to do it for the price. So we put GRANGER in a sensible soft foil pouch instead of an expensive package, knowing that a man can’t smoke a package. e gave smokers this good GRANGER

RECEIVERSHIP EVILS TARGET OF MEASURE Judges’ Powers Would Be Wiped Out by Bill. Receivership evils in cases involving preferred stock and bond securities would be curtailed sharply un-

WELI HOW GOES SUE'S j JOE, I’M NEARLY CRAZY. LOVE-AFFAIR... .AN SUE HAS TURNED ME DOWN. YOU WANT THE ENGAGEMENT YET ? WITHOUT A WORD OF EX- TRUTH-MAYBE YOU’vl /ALL OFF i SHE WONT PLANATION . ANY IDEA BEEN A BIT CARELESS TELL ME WHY. BUT I CAN HOW I'VE OFFENDED HER? ABOUT "8.0.' WHY SEE SHE’S VERY UNHAPPY / NOT USE LIFEBUOY"B O.' GONE -Sue Relents! For Q happy ending" SO SUE IS ENGAGED END ....AND TO HIM! YCS, WHATEVER THE TROUBLE ,“‘X| WAS, IT'S ALL SMOOTHED OVER AND THEY'RE BOTH SO HAPPY ! T F want success in love, in business, take no tfSL ~7 L chances with that unforgivable fault —‘‘B.O.” wAT \ /( ' (body odor). Especially now when heavy clothe* and gP \ r'T 1 overheated rooms increase the danger of offending. I gjy n ft pm \ U Bathe regularly with Lifebuoy. Its pleasant, quicklyyj \ iSlfcfl eJ C** 1-- *3 vanishing, hygienic scent tells you, ‘‘Here is no , - STrl Jg V' TS-.7 j ordinary toilet soap!” Lifebuoy gives extra proteci f tion. Its rich, abundant, penetrating lather purifies _ __: f' l • vT. jjjy 1 and deodorizes pores —effectively stops “B.O.” Help* >WI I[ V ;V "j -/f I safeguard health by removing germs from hands. a mooucT ofuraumm co.

rier provisions of a bill sponsored in the Indiana senate by S.-nalor J. Francis Lochard <Dem.. Milan* Terms of the proposed law, Lochard explains, would give a majority cf security owners the absolute power to name a receiver in court proceedings instead of affording opportunity to a judge to name a friend or some person with whom he had a political affiliation. This would be accomplished through giving the judge a recommendation which he would be bound to follow. "Too long have security owners

tobacco in a common-sense pouch for 10c. GRANGER has not been on sale very long, but it has grown to be a popular smoke. And there is this much about it we have yet to know of a man who started to smoke it, who didn’t keep on. Folks seem to like it. <ti/£yjeAJ\7o£cbcx&(Sr.

PAGE 7

b'rn the victims of the present vicious system cf naming receivers in ca'es Involving real estate against which preferred stock or bonds are outstanding." Lochard said. "Security owners at present have no determining voice in the selection of a receiver. Consequently, many county courts have used their power to further their own ends by appointing friends or political supporters.” Amesthe oysters are shucked more easily and quickly.