Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 257, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 March 1933 — Page 12
PAGE 12
PARI-MUTUEL BILL KILLED BY HOUSE SPEAKER Adjourns With Betting Bill Hanging in Air anti Ready for Vote. Earl Crawford, speaker of the IM3 house of re present a lives which adjourned ,<nnc die at midnight Monday night, had to promise he would not impede Wright bone dry law repeal, before Governor Paul V. McNutt, gave his approval to Crawford as speaker. However, the Governor must have forgotten to pledge Crawford on other liberal legislation, and the speaker played a prominent part in the death of the pari-mutuel betting bid. The house in its eios.ng hours, witnessed the unusual spectacle of three house conference commitees heing able to agree with senate conferees on the inclusion of dogs in the betting provisions. Forced Through Senate McNut is known to have said at the last conference of administration leaders before his departure to attend the Roosevelt inaugural, that he saw' no reason why dogs should not. be included. The bill was dragged through the senate by its-ears when Senator Anderson Kctchum ' Drm. Greensburg>, the majority floor leader, broke the chambers rules during roll call. Admitting the bill was an administration measure to finance the old age pension act. Kctchum succeeded in .switching six adverse votes, and obtaining passage. Double Dealing Charged Senator Russell Krhoe 'Dem. .Jeffersonville started the closing day heat when he charged on the floor of the senate that the house conferees had been guilty of double dealing. Representatives William J. Black iDrm, Andersoni and Charles I. Allardf 'Dorn. South Rendi had reported to the house the conference committee had been unable lo agree on including dogs. Kehoe charged both with agreeing to and signing the report and then reporting differently to the house. New' committees were appointed in both houses. Crawford naming Representative Frank Finney 'Drm.. Martinsville*, a liberal, and Representative .1, Frank Regester • I>m . Bloomington', a conservative. “No Dogs or No Bill" Representative Eugene Martin i Drm.. Ft. Wayne, demanded an investigating committee be appointed to determine the status of the bill, hut Crawford shouted. "There would he no dogs or no bill." Discharge of the second committee was followed by appointment of a third. Crawford naming Representatives Wilfred Jessup 'Deni.. Centerville), and Christ Lassen iDem., Crown Point'. Lassen also declared on the floor as soon as he was appointed and before conferring, that, "there'll be no dogs.’’ As the minute hand of the house Hock drew nearer midnight. Representative Pat Cain <Drm.. Ft Wayne, waged a valiant, hut futile fight to discharge that committee and obtain one that could reach an agreement, with tiie senate, thus saving the bill. .State iVlinus Million There was a motion to table his motion and while only a few ayes supported it. Crawford ruled “the aves have It." There was a shout of disapproval and Cain renewed his protest, demanding a division. Regester called for the floor to be cleared and the senate reported its business transacted. Crawford did not even take a division count, but, recognized Representative Edward H. Stein, majority floor leader, who moved to adjourn sine die. The ring the speaker’s gavel left the mutuel bill hanging in mid-air and the state minus the million dollars in revenue the measure was scheduled to produce. MILK PRODUCERS TO BACK DRY CANDIDATES Return of Liquor to Peril Public Health. Is Assertion. Prohibition candidates for election to the state convention on the eighteenth amendment will be supported by the Natural Milk Producers Association, according to resolutions passed Monday in a meeting at the Washington. The association based this action op the helief “that the return of liquor will threaten public health by a decrease in milk consumption." H. P. Thompson of Bloomington, president of the association, was in charge of the meeting.
Simple Remedy Makes Pimples Go Quickly It's amazing that so many people put tip with ugly pimples when it is so easy to get rid of them. V .'to cent box of PETERSON S OINTM ENT is all that is needed in most, cases, and after a few applications, the skin is clear and smooth —soft as ever and not a trace of pimples. Instead of costly, fancy-named cosmetics and “beauty'' preparations, try this simple, inexpensive, dependable remedy and clear your skin of ugly pimples quickly. You'll iv amazed and delighted at the magic-like results. Your druggist has sold PETERSON’S for 30 years—get a box today Money back If it doesn t do all we claim. —Advertisement. PLEASANT RELIEF FROM CONSTIPATION Shoulders droop under weight of years. Young, ye' beauty has fled. Checks arc sallow and drawn. Unsightly pimples. Keep your system clean and you keep the beauty of youth Its energy, its irresistible charm Then life is not a failure. Clogged bowels and inactive liver cause poisons to se°p through the system. Health vanished and with it beauty and energy. Dr. Edwards Olive Tablets will help save you fjom this aaiK nou.. For 20 years rney have been prescribed in place of calomel to men and women seeking health and freedom from constipation. They act easily and smoothly. No dangerous griping. Take nightly before retiring. Results will amaze you. Thousands of •non *tn women would n#wr bf without Or Fit wards Mtivr Tablet'. * v, grt.ihl know them by their oh>u enlur IV •"<"< mid Me. All druggists.—AUverrisniuent
Let’s Explore Your Mind BY DR ALBERT EDWARD WSGGA.M, D. Sc. -Vj |j| I l , I ABRAHAM . '- , * " ™ LINCOLN •' i•' /' " -. ■•* ,J-|% y llklfe fzr.'S&v) i ijm |/|Y^ cob s 4 Y P YY MT I 1 I;/ \ I li HF: JU * T:p!e o and \ \ /\W *MB COSbIDFC Ngi I Ife TfcF MAXIM,‘vOU MA.O6 WWg BED. marriage? |j you Most ueonit'axr law o* kxy> A xr~Y - „ SOT \ \ 'Ov. -• left
1. I think not. Som" geniuses have, no doubt, owed their recognition to circumstances, but more often talented people make their own circumstances. This is particularly true of great leaders. In a sens? the Civil war revealed Lincoln, but it is just as true that Lincoln discovered the Civil war. There were millions of other men, but none rose to its greas opportunities or showed th° vision of Lincoln. Even the men in his own cabinet. who had the benefit of his counsel and example, did not become Lincolns. T think Lincoln is one of the geniuses who made circumstances more than they made him. 2. He is entirely justified in submitting the facts to the wom-
Garfield Leisure Club Will Conduct ‘Amateur Night’
New South Side Talent Will Be Introduced at Meeting Tonight. I MSI nr. HOI R ( AI KVIIAR TONIGHT Garfield Park ronimiinilv hoimr. Ml. .larksnn Club, Collier xlrfpf, WEDNESDAY Rrooksirlr Park rnmmnnili house. .1. T. \ . Hill comm unit v house. Prosprct-Shcrma n Drive Club. Rhodium Park community house. THCRSDAY Crispin AMucks hie h school. FRIDAY Christian Park community house. Ft. Wavnc and Walnut Club. Fletcher place community house. Municipal Gardens eommunitv house. Michigan and Noble Club. Schools). at 1111 Fast Vermont street. Oak Hill Club. School .*{, at , O:4U Winter avenue. Nebraska ('mpser. School at I .'sl South Illinois street. School No. .Y !•> West Washington street. School No. It*. |;tO| fast Sixteenth street. School No. HI, Kelly and Boyd streets. South Side amateur night will be featured tonight at the Garfield park community house. Mrs. Arthur D. Barnett will be in charge. Jane Flora. Betty Hoagland and Ruby Holmes will give tap dances; Rose Marie Sullivan, songs and dances: Morris and Kamstine, harmonica and guitar music: songs by Eva Fields; a Negro sketch by Aiken and Kirch, and a number by the Snellenberger Yodelers will be on the program. Other amateur features may be booked through Mrs. Barnett. Sergeant Frank Owen wall present a safety program at the Mt. Jackson club tonight. Readings w’ill be given by Billy Schrolucke and Charlotte Marie Grosskupf; accordion music, by Robert. Rothman; dances, by Frank Ristoff; harp and guitar music by Morrell Ravmer and James Rule, and songs by Lydia Ellen and Irwin McCray. In the Air Weather condition at 9 a. m : East northeast wind. 18 miles an hour; temperature. 42; barometric pressure. 29.49 at sea level: general condition, overcast, light rain, smoky; ceiling, estimated 5.000 feet; visibility, lb* miles: field, good. ANNOUNCING SCHIFFS BIG NEW OUTLETSHOESTORE 109-111 S. Illinois St. (Former Shoe Market) Ollier ><lllll Stores \... I —•>:< \\ . WtixiiiiiKloH No. •! —;.vi !■;. \Va>l>in K ton
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DO YOU Know? That the chanjjinjr conditions have not a flee tod the calibre of services offered by Harry Moore. At prices lit tins to your circumstances. HARRY MOORE Funeral Home 25th and Gale Sts. A 'ew Funeral Home 2050 E. Michigan St. CHerry 6020
an and allowing her to decide. If she is the right stuff for that sort of man. she will say, y?s. It is a fine tost, both of a woman's common sense and real love. 3. No. the whole progress of man. from savagery to the present, has been to mak? the bed softer for humanity to lie on to atone for their frailties and mistakes. Progressive Christianity, progressive Judaism, progressive religion based upon science, have been immense factors in softening this human bed. Man has laid on it. since evolution began, but a just society, enlightened by science, w ill strive to niak? it ever softer as time goes on.
Sad Sight Senate G. 0. P. De pressed by Few Desks in Their Half of Floor. WASHINGTON, March 7. Senate Republicans today gazed ruefully at theiir side of the senate, where a paltry thirtyseven desks now : are ranged. On the Democratic side, fiftyseven are packed tightly together, the fruits of the election landslide of 1932. In the past when one party had a large senatee mapority, some majority members were placed on the minoritv side. This year. how Tever. the center aisle will continue to be the edividing line. Archdeacons Talk The Rev. William Burrows, archdeacon of the Episcopal dioeess of Indianapolis, will speak at a special series of lenten services to be held in St. Matthews Episcopal church, in Irvington, each Friday night. The services will be conducted bv the paster, the Rev. Francis D. McCabe.
Reduced Round Trip ly Coach Fares W EVERY SATURDAY ss.so Pittsburgh I.v. I ndianapoli* ff.so prr* or 1 1 .00 pm TANARUS; Lv. Pittsburgh 11.20 pm, following Sunday SiqiK S4.SO St. Louis MARCH 11 Ifßjp I.▼. Indianapolis lfi.Sfi pm. March 11 or L▼. Indianapolis 2.41 am or 8.27 am, March 12 Returning. Lv. St. Louis 6.00 pm, H,T 11.30 pm, March 1 2 or 12.03 am, March 13 EVERT WEEK $1.65 Richmond $2.25 Dayton 53.75 Columbus, O. Lv. Ind ian a po! i • 6.50 pm. Saturday* Returning ollowing Sunday Night Lv. Tndianapoli* 6.20 am, Sunday* Returning name data ®> EVERY SUNDAY $2.50 Louisville Lv. Indianapolie - 8.75 am ■ I.v. Louiavilla - - 8.00 pm Me ; WEEK-END EXCURSIONS $5.00 Chicago World'c Fair City C.oing on all train* from 2.35 am Fridays to 2.35 am, Monday*. RETURNING—Leave Chicago not ■ later than Monday* of same week- KHB end. ... • $3.60 Louisville in all t in*; 1-riddV'*. >alurdavß B and mir da x * <0 KIIIKNINC Not later than Epj&S Mondays. Go• *in Cu.iche* Onlv tj3||| Reduced Round Trip Railroad and Pullman Sleeping Car fares each week-end between I all stations. SpS§ CITY TICKFT OFFICE I-;... 116 Monument Phono Riley 9331 Pennsylvania Railroad I 'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiS
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HARRY w. MOORE
You All Knoir This Undertaker
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
STADIUM WILL BE SCENE OF CERMAK RITES Funeral of Assassinated Chicago Mayor Will Be Held Friday. K>! I f’m* CHICAGO. March 7.—Mayor Anton J. Cermak's funeral Will be held Friday morning in the Chicago stadium, scene of his mast pretentions success. It was in the stadium that Mayor Cermak, as "bass" of the Illinois delegation to the Democratic national convention, swung his support to nominate Franklin D. Roosevelt for the presidency. Cermak. host to the convention, because of his official position, was a major factor with William G. McAdoo of California in the final surge of votes that started the New York Governor toward the White House. Cermak's body, speeding northward from Miami, where he died Monday morning after a gallant battle against effects of a bullet intended for President Roosevelt, will arrive at 10 a. m. Wednesday. An honorary escort of members of the city council, the mayor’s cabinet and prominent Democrats will accompany the body to Cermak's home. Thursday morning the casket will be taken to city hall to lie in state j a short distance from the draped office from which Cermak managed the country's second largest city. Friday at 10 a. m. nonsectarian rites will be held at, the stadium, with burial following in the Bohemian national cemetery.
They’re LOOKING AT IT'.---They’re BUYING ITU Everybody agrees it’s positively the best value on the market today! These Beautiful 9x12 W^yhrwdcan. W^^w&Osue/zCaiZ A Small Deposit —Delivers Holds for S 1 .00 1 111 Pm to Your Future Delivery! " w w *“ - Home! Directly Opposite Statehouse PRE—WORLD*! FAIR REDUCTIONS To encourage travel to Cbicogo before the World s Fair, the New Bismarck Hotel is now offering new low rotes: SINGLE ROOM WITH BATH DOUBLE Room, Twin Beds, Bath . . $5.00 Room, Lavatory 1 Single $2.00 and Toilet J Double $3.50 The same high standard of Bismarck service. Delicious food in the five dining rooms served at 1933 prices, including the beautiful Walnut Room where Art Kassel and his "Kassels in the Air" are playing nightly. The Bismarck Hotel is conveniently located *'.xt- door to the shopping, theatre, and business districts. N E W OTTO K. EITEL, Manager BDMARCK H.TELCHICAG. RANDOLPH AT LASALLE
Sleeps On Patricia McGuire Still Slumbers Despite New Momentous Events. H’/ I itrrl J'rfft* OAK PARK. 111.. March 7 The national bank holiday, th* inauguration of anew President and the dpath of Chicago's mayor have been added to the momentous happenings that Patricia McGuire, asleep for more than a year, does not know about. She slept on today, her condition little changed from what it has been most of the time since Feb. 15. 1932. A week ago she withstood an attack of pneumonia, through aid of an oxygen tent. All effects of the pneumonia have disappeared, it was said today by her sister, Mrs. Gladys Hansen. Dr. Kiseer to Give Talk Dr. Edgar F. Kiser will talk on "Functional Diseases” Thursday at the meeting of the Indiana State Nurses’ Association in the auditorium of the nurses' home, in St. Vincent's hospital. Sleep All Night Without Waking It’s easy. Make this 25c test. Drive the impurities and excess acids from the bladder which cause the irritation that wakes you up. Get a 25c box of BUKETS me bladder physic, from any drug store. After four days test if not satisfied go back and get your 25c. They work on the bladder similar to castor oil on the bowels. You are bound to feel better after this cleansing and you get vour regular sleep. Hook Drug Stores say BUKETS is a best, seller. —Advertisement.
HOUSE, SENATE SPLIT ON BONUS Lower Body Flatly Refuses to Follow Example on Extra Pay to Clerks. House and senate presented a sharp contrast Monday night on the matter of paying bonuses for work in connection with preparing journals for printing. Without discussion the senate voted a total of $550. of which $275 was for its secretary. Dick Heller, and a like amount for his assistant, Julius Bouslog. Heller already has a permanent job as secretary to Lieutenant-Gov-ernor M. Townsend, whose SI,OOO a year salary was increased to $6,000 under the McNutt state
A TONIC IN TABLET FORM A Body Builder Koloidal Iron and Cod Liver Oil Extract Tablets. Mrs. Laura Oberton. 602 South Noble Street, says: "Koloidal Iron Tablets simply amazed me. After using only tw'o boxes of them my nerves were quieted and I slept soundly. Any one troubled w'ith nervousness, underweight or loss of pep will find these tablets highly beneficial.” Koloidal Iron and Cod Liver Oil Extract Tablets, a builder of Nerve and Muscles.
[ 7 • r* Rush Jobs Make Us Smite Hundren Printing Cos. IncorporiteJ ♦7O Genturv BlJg Riles SS.Vt
in the Past 48 Hours!
These Ads Only Cost — The ad below rent- __ ed 6-room house belonging to John M f* Heidenreick. The g 11 U east was only w DAVIDSON, 401 N. fi-Room rlonh'p semtmodern; garagp. Sl2. The ad below rent- _ ed a vacant, house belonging to Wm. Robinson. The cost # was only * $10: EDGEWOOD -5-room house, garden plot and chicken lot. DR-4293-W. The ad below rent- __ • ed 2 vacant, rooms f belonging to Mrs. Mabel Fisher. The ij V-> cost w r ag only 2 -ROOMS Private homp pvervth'ng furnished; 53.2S por week. 1121 N Tacoma. The ad below rented 5-room house J belonging to Mrs. I p O. E. Bone. The Ve cost was only S2O: OAKLAND. S., 247—5 rooms modern, new bath, 2 garages; redecorated. DR--6751-J. The ad below r rented one-room apt. bo-C j fli? longing to Mrs. Geo t I * Cannon. The cost was only TALBOT N 2342—1-room modern apa:tment; rang*, 'ink. furmshd rom.ple'e HA-4309-M
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government reorganization program. When an attempt was made in the house to vote SSOO extra pay to the clerk, John J. Ryan, a storm broke which resulted in fixing pay at $6 a day for each day actually spent in getting the journal ready for the printer. Representative J. Clayton Hughes ■Deni.. Goshen> led the opposition to the extra pay. He asserted it was agreed at the start of the session that the custom of voting such bonus would not be followed. An amendment to reduce the amount to *250 failed, and the $6 a day plan, proposed by Representative John M. Cant ley (Drm.. Lojgansportr was adopted. Hughes declared that he had information that completion of the
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-MARCH 7, 1933
clerk s work w ould not require more than three days, and said SSOO tvs* too much for that amount of work.
WANTED OLD JEWELRY Pure Gold Worth $20.67 an Or,. Highest cash value for old watches, rings, chains, gold teeth, etc. in any condition. lk-Kt. Gold . ..$14.40 Or. 14-Kt. Gold .. $11.20 Or. I.ess Refining Cosls Bring in or mail to Indiana Gold Refining Cos. 135 W. Market St. Indianapolis.
Actual phone calls received on Monday from advertisers who used Times Want Ads last Friday and Saturday . . . and reported rentals . . . was greater than on any similar day in the past eight months. That's what our records show today. It proves people are moving and renting houses!! In every case, the cost of The Times Want Ad was a matter of only a few cents . . . far less than what the cost would have been in any other Indianapolis newspaper. The whole town’s talking today . . . and here's the good word “You can't heat Times Want Ads for COST or RESULTS!” LOWEST RATE IN CITY
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