Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 242, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 February 1933 — Page 9
FEB. 17, 1033.
SECRET SERVICE DOUBLES GUARD ON ROOSEVELT President-Elect's Informal Habits Are Ended, . Say Advisers. (Continued From Page One) be curtailed, though not necessarily abandoned, as was suggested in Washington. It was clear also that Mr. Roosevelt would not be allowed his usual freedom of movement in New York w here he v. ill spend much of his time from now until his inauguration. * Reports to the train showed that a heavy guard would protect him on his arrival this afternoon, and it was understood that the old, informal days at the Roosevelt townhouse were ended. There was no disposition among those responsible for Mr. Roosevelt's safety to suspect that the attempt of Giuseppi Zangara to asset . mate him was part of any widespread plot involving other persons not yet arrested. But secret service men and others recognized that such an incident as the Zangara attack of cn inspires crazed men 16 imitation. Both before his inauguration and after he enters the White House, Mr. Roosevelt will he as closely guarded as was President Wilson in war days. Mr. Roosvelt told his own story of the attack shortly after the train left Miami Thursday morning, and repeated it in part to James and Betsy Roosevelt, his son and daughter-in-law, who visited him during a ten-minute stop at Nahunta, Ga., where they had halted on a trip to Thomasville, Ga., fox a vacation. The rest of the time, Mr. Roo.sevMt preferred to ignore the shooting, though all day messages of congratulation on his escape reached him, coming from this country and abroad. Confers on Politics He turned to conferences on polities and economic conditions before noon, and continued them indefinitely through the day. Professor Raymond Moley, his economic and war debt adviser, discussed for some time developments since Mr, Roosevelt departed on his tenday yacht vacation. After Moley left the train at Jacksonville to fly to Cincinnati, Jesse Jones went over Reconstruction Finance Corporation affairs with the President-elect. Jones, now a member of the corporation, is expected to become its chairman after March 4. He is a millionaire lumber and utilities man from Houston. Texas. Agreement With Hull Mr. Roosevelt, and Senator Cordell Hull of Tennessee were believed to have reached a definite understanding today on the cabinet situation. Hull, who may become either secretary of state or secretary treasury, journeyed with Mr. Roosevelt from Richmond, Va.. to Washington, leaving the train at tlie Capital. dhe train left Washington for the north at 11:35 a. in., after stopping long enough lor Hull to leave the train and Senators Carter Glass fTnd Bronson Cutting to board it for conferences with the Presidentelect. The President-elect appeared on the rear platform and was photographed during the Washington stop. A heavy police guard was at the station. The discussion with Senator Glass was expected to determine which . portfolio Hull would take. DECLARE MORATORIUM ON SCHOOL FUNDS Five-Year Holiday on Delinquent Loans Voted in Senate. Suspending the rules today, the state senate passed an administration measure declaring a five-year moratorium on delinquent loans of school funds. Interest also is reduced from 6 per centtto 5 per cent. Senator Walter S. Chambers (Dcm., Newcastle), author, explained that so many delinquencies exist in srhool fund mortgages that it is necessary to relieve counties from paying interest on these delinquencies to the state. Exemptions for judgment debtors would be raised from S6OO to SI,OOO. under terms of the bill passed by the senate today and sent to the house for action. Senator Chester A. Perkins (Deni., South Bend) is author of the measure. Vote was to 13. Both real and personal property are included in the exemption by the senate bill. SUBMITS REPEAL PLAN Alternative for Convention Proposed by I.eacier of Wets. An alternative plan for Indiana’s dry amendment repeal convention was proposed today by William Stokes, state director of the Association Against the Eighteenth Amendment. The proposal to have the convention consist of fourteen delegates elected from the state at large has first consideration, he said, but the alternative would be fortyeight delegates. This would permit two from each congressional district and twentyfour from the state at large. STREET CUTTER BOUGHT 53,697 Is Appropriated for Machine to Level Pavement. On recommendation of Albert Losche. purchasing agent, and Wilbur Wmship. street commissioner. the works board today purchased an asphalt cutting and slicing machine for us’ in leveling rough streets. The machine w ill be bought from Perry ti Wilson. Indianapolis dealers, on a low bid of $3,697. The board also agreed to appropriate 31,508 for payment for use of th<’ machine on Meridian street and Central avenue. An innocent-looking package of orchid plants recently brought to this country was iound to harbor nine species ot ants, five kinds of beetles, five species of co kroaches, two moths, a cricket, a predacious bug. and an insect living on decayed maLer.
Times Cooking School to Open Tuesday Afternoon
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Dorothy Ayres Louden Will Be in Charge of Institute. The Times Cooking School and Better Housekeeping Institute, greatly expanded and improved over the event of 1932, will open in the English theater next Tuesday afternoon, Again in charge of instruction and demonstrations will be Dorothy Ayres Louden, nationally famous in her field. Three afternoon sessions will be held—Tuesday, Wednesday. and Thursday, starting at 2 o'clock—and one night session—Thursday at 8 o'clock. Doors to the theater will be open an hour before time for start of the program. There will be no admittance fee.
Practical and Scientific Dorothy Louden will bring to the women of Indianapolis—and the men, too-many new ideas for preparation of food, balancing of diets, and domestic budgets. Mrs. Louden is a practical cook, as well as a scientific one, and she has planned all her menus with an eye to economy as well as to tempting appetites. She is emphasizing thrift in all her recipes. As an added feature for entertainment of the throngs which will attend. The Times will present M. Roland Rapier, prominent throughout the midwest as a bass soloist, and his accompanist. Robert Hackett. Rapier is well known to radio listeners here. He at present is singing on WFBM programs and for more than a year was one of the headliners on WLW programs. Program Is Announced He also is soloist at Tabernacle Presbyterian church in this city. For two seasons he sang in St. Louis municipal opera and appeared in the Cincinnati opera May festival. His program Tuesday will include “Todeador Song” (Bizet), in French;
KNOW THIS When You Go to Buy Aspirin and Want to Get Rid of Pain Quickly /^t\)' IK 2 SECONDS BY STOP WATCH f m A Genuine BAYER Aspirin Tablet <rrT VI J Starts to Disintegrate and Go to Work |~~~B Ijjf ‘‘fij \\ lllfllj /jDrop a Bayer Aspirin It Hltsthe\ 11 IfII V Tablet into a Glass of / Bottom of the Glass it J j j|j;| |||| Neater, is Disintegrating. |; I . |l| I j What Happens in These Glasses— | L *.•;• .'lf I j Happens in Your Stomach I ..il Because of This Quick Dissolving Property , Genuine BAYER Aspirin Tablets Start “Taking Hold” of Pain a few Minutes after Taking If you have a headache or any “takes hold” of the average pain other common form of pain— or headache within a few minutes rheumatism, neuritis, or neural- after taking. The fastest, safe P* a you want to get rid of it as relief, it is said, ever known forpain. ) fast as possible—and in absolute Remember, it is Genuine Bayer safct - v - Aspirin which lays claim to this I hen the first thing to know unique, quick-acting property. ls l ' s ‘ So be sure you get the Real Never ask for aspirin by the Article— Genuine Bayer Aspirin For Pocket or Purse, Tin name “aspirin” alone. But always when you buy. Naturally you Boxes of 12 Tablets sav “Bayer Aspirin.” want the fastest, possible relief— - The pictures of the two glasses and that's the wax to get it. above tell the story. The sure, safe way is to see that i ‘ For what happens in those the name Bayer is clearly EHgPII glasses happens in your stomach, stamped, in the form of a cross, Because of a unique process in on an y tablet that you take. manufacture. Genuine Bayer Keep that in mind when you Aspirin Tablets begin to dissolve buy. Carry in mind, too, that • h almost instantly in the stomach. Genuine Bayer Aspirin Does Not 11 They start to disintegrate within Harm the Heart. jit# the amazing space of two seconds Ask your druggist about the alter touching moisture. recent price reduction on the _ to a Hence Genuine Bayer Aspirin 100 tablet size Bayer Aspirin. or a b l! *ts° XTTn f A V NO TABLETS ARE GENUINE BAYER ASPIRIN WITHOUT THIS CROSS ■ viy
Dorothy Ayres Louden
a ballad, “Dear Old Girl of Mine,” and a popular selection, “In My Gondola.” Wednesday—" Song of the Vagabonds” (from “Vagabond King”), "I Passed by our Window” (May H. Brake), and "Two Hearts in Waltz Time’ (from “Zwei Herzen”). Thursday—" That's Why Darkies Were Born” (from George White's Scandals); ballad, “When Irish Eyes Are Smiling,” and ‘‘Romeo in Georgia” (John Scott). Thursday Night—"On the Road to Mandalay” (Oley Speaks); “Friend o Mine” (Wilfred Sanderson), and a ballad, “Daddy's Little Sunny Honey Boy.” House Dresses so: - Usherettes A colorful touch will be added by the usherettes, who wall demonstrate house dresses from the William H. Block Company basement store. Entertainers will wear Capitol Clothes Shop suits. In addition to the program, visitors to the cooking school and better housekeeping institute will enjoy inspecting the many displays which w'ill be placed by city firms. THREE SENT TO FARM Plead Guilty to Stealing Stove; Two Get Thirty Days. Pleading guilty to theft of a stove from a vacant house at 449 West South street, three men were given penal farm terms today by Municipal Judge William H. Sheaffer. They are Arthur Hamlan, 44, of 539 Cradwick street, sixty days; Thomas Brackett, 57. of 446 Abbott street, thirty days, and Thomas Hollin, 59, of 418 South Missouri street) ten days. The men admitted selling the stove to a woman living at 500 | Soutr West street, for $3.75 and a bottle of alcohol. All said they were ! under influence of liquor when they | stole the stove.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
PUT U. S. IN POETS' HANDS, ADVISES KING Humorist Brings Chuckles to Town Hall Audience at English’s. Poets have axes to grind, said Stoddard King, humorist and poet, today as he told a Town Hall audience at English's that he “also has a platform.” “I am starting a movement to turn the affairs over to the poets,” said king. “Just turn it over to the poets and let them do their worst. “You say that poets are irresponsible, always accompanied by a lyre, but look what some people who have run the country have been accompanied by.” “Poets can supply the rhyme and that is reason enough,” added King, in a more serious vein. Laughs at “Frozen Assets” He maintained he was one lecturer who was different becaues he does not alk on technocracy or the Russian problem. Speaking of the many snowdrifts he encountered recently in a trip through zero weather, he said he arrived at his home in Detroit, “with the frozen assets of Michigan” staring ilm in the face. Although his subject was announced as “A Jester and His Jingles,” King said his theme actually was “The Influence of Modern Poety Upon the Modem Home.” All About a Sink “In the old days,” he said, “the influence of poetry was confined to , a very large and bulky volume which was used only when company came, so the youngest of the family could sit on it at the table.” Tre old poets had to be classical, and King contended they could not write a poem about a kitchen sink such as modern poets do. Then to prove it, he read his own poem about a modern kitchen sink in which he bemoaned the fact that | the modern sink had to be ornai mental—“lt takes on lavender and ! pink and it no longer is an honest I sink."
REVENUE POST FOR W. M. SMITH Van Nuys’ Campaign Manager to Be Named to Succeed Neal. Recommendation for appointment of Will M. Smith of Indianapolis to succeed Everett E. Neal as United States internal revenue commissioner for Indiana will be made by Senator-Elect Frederick Van Nuys, he said today. The recommendation has approval of Thomas D. Taggart, Democratic national committeeman, and R. Earl Peters, state chairman. Smith, who managed the campaign of Van Nuys, which culminated in election last November, was born in Lexington, Ind. From 1913 to 1919 he was chief deputy internal revenue collector, and for the last fourteen years has been engaged in the insurance business, specializing in that phase linked with taxation.
TWO WOMEN INJURED IN AUTO ACCIDENTS Collisions on City Streets are Cause of Hospital Cases. When the automobile in which she was riding Thursday was in collision with a truck at North and Blake streets. Miss Minnie Calvert. 35. of 1137 River avenue, received head injuries and was taken to citV hospital. The automobile was driven by Mrs. Doris Wilson, 45, of 2720 North Illinois street, and Dave Miller. Negro. 26, of 915 West North street, was operating the truck. No arrests were made. Mrs. Ella Woodfield. 47. of 357 Lansing street, was taken to city hospital with cuts and bruises after the automobile 1r which she was riding, driven by Henry Heaton, 29, of the Lansing street address, was in collision with a car driven by James Walker, 30. of 1125 West Thirtieth street. The accident occurred at Oriental and Market streets.
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AUDITS TO BE MADE OF THREE CLOSED BANKS Depositors Losing by Slow Liquidation. Says Judge Cox. Depositors of defunct banks “would have received more money if liquidation had been completed two years ago.’’ Circuit Judge Earl R. Cox asserted today, as he prepared to audit assets of three financial institutions. Investigation of three banks and their receiverships indicate assets have been dwindling since they closed their doors in 1930. Cox said. Receivership expenses have absorbed thousands of dollars that could have gone to creditors of the
Washington Bank and Trust Company. the City Trust Company and the State Savings and Trust Company. evidence before Cox discloses. Cox. who proposes to consolidate receivership as an economy move, said he will seek to preserve remaining assets of these defunct banks. “It has not been good business sense to continue operation of receiverships for a long period," Cox declared. “My conference with receivers have disclosed. - ' he continued, "that they postponed liquidation because they thought business conditions would improve. Instead, cash reserves of the banks gradually are disappearing." Several banks are loaded more heavily with real estate now than when they collapsed, although receivers hoped to sell much of this burden by waiting, receivers' reports indicate. Many parcels of real estate have returned to the banks because buyers have been unable to continue payments. More than a quarter million Times readers read the Want Ad page each evening.
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Colds can be ABORTED (with lemon juice) Don’t waste time with cold remedies that only relieve a cold. If you want to end your cold, abort it The lemon juice treatment will do it. Squeeze two full-sized lemons in a large glass of very hot water and drink without sugar, first, take three tablets of Pape's cold compound an hour apart This clears the head, dries the nasal passages, reduces any fever. The lemon juice then drives all cold symptoms right out of the system. Bedtime is best. This treatment will abort the worst cold, overnight. One cold compound tablet will check a cold at any time, lor several hours: then when night comes you can get rid of it by abortion. Any druggist has Pape's cold compound. It's perfectly safe. Try it, and you'll never go back to halfway remedies. —Advertisement.
TRY A WANT AD IN THE TIMES.
