Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 270, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 March 1933 — Page 7

MARCH 22, 1933

PERSIAN SHAH LIKE FIGURE IN ARABIAN NIGHTS Rise to Throne by Simple Soldier Provides Tale to Stir Imagination. Thl* Is one of a *erie of article* by Futene Lyon* decribinr the *bah of Persia. BY EUGENE LYONS United Pre** Staff Correspondent TEHERAN. Persia. March 22. "We Americans,” I informed the Persian shah, ‘are the last romantics left. We still believe in Santa Clans and the Arabian Nights. Your majesty's amazing rise to power from humble beginnings sounds to us like something of the 1.001 Nights. ‘•What is it in your majesty's character.” I continued, "that explains your success?” "That is not an easy question,” Riza Shah replied "But I should say: I am a soldier—a simple soldier—and I love the job I am doing.” Has Only Two Wives The simplicity of the shah’s dress is no pretentious gesture. It symbolizes something truly Spartan in his make-up and way of life. This is no self-indulgent oriental potentate. I felt, hut an industrious, even overworked executive; or the commander-in-chief of hard-driven forces. Riza Shah has only two wives, which for Moslem Persia is very modest. There are merchants who, besides the four official wives permitted by Moslem law, have dozens of “contract” wives in their harems. There were predecessors on Riza Shah’s throne whose harems were never counted in less than three figures. Spends Months “On Road” Riza Shah Pahlevi spends three or four months each year "on the road.” In a railroadless country where roads are few and poor and wander over snow-filled mountain passes and parched deserts, such travel is no holiday. It means work, hardships, hazards. Sometimes he goes to take personal charge of a punitive expedition against recalcitrant tribesmen. Other times it is to check up on the railroad spurs being built by Germans and Swedes in the north, by Americans in the south. Army Is Chief Care Ocasionally a tall, solitary man wanders unnoticed through the streets and bazars of Riza Shah's capital. He peers into shops, is nudged by veiled prostitutes, solicited by ragged beggars. Once this tall stranger walked into a shop to make a purchase. The shopkeeper recognized him and died of heart disease. It is Riza Shah looking over his household. His principal care, however, is the army—now said to number 70 uH and in any event the largest and best-organized Persia hae possessed in centuries. It was through the army that he gained power. It is the army, more so than any Peacock Throne, which Is his real throne.

VARIED LOOT TAKEN BY CITY BURGLARS Stores and Homes Are Ransacked in Invasions by Thieves. Loot including dresses valued at s4l; cigarets worth $2; $2.50 in pennies, a gun and flashlight, was obtained by a burglar Tuesday night in a thorough ransacking of the home and grocery of Herman Freije, 329 West Twenty-sixth street. Effort to open a safe failed. Report of a $275 theft committed Monday at the home of Oscar Van Ausdall. 3223 Ruckle street, was made to police Tuesday. An automatic dictating machine and silverware were stolen. A thief took SSO from the cash register of the St. Philip’s Athletic Club, 535 North Eastern avenue. Burglars who bored holes around locks of rear doors failed to effect entrances of the Stegg pharmacy, 2502 Central avenue, and a Standard grocery at 2504 Central avenue. FRIGIDAIRE LAUNCHES ADVERTISING PROGRAM Representatives Confer With Group of Factory Executives. Sales and advertising program of the Frigidaire Corporation for the remainder of 1933 was launched today at a meeting of several hundred representatives of the company at the Claypool. A group of factory executives arrived here Tuesday in a special car to conduct the meeting. This is their next to last conference of a series being held in thirty-six key cities throughout the country. From here they will go to Cincinnati tonight for the final meeting. Several motion pictures were to be shown on the program C. S. Wheeler, president of Refrigerating Equipment Corporation, distributors for this region, was host for the visiting executives. AWARD S4OO DAMAGES Judgment Returned for Injuries to Child in Auto Accident. Damages of S4OO in a SIO.OOO suit were awarded to Ruth Barrick, 7. by a superior court three jury on Tuesday for injuries received when she was struck by an automobile driven by Charles Gillespie, 2357 North Pennsylvania street. The suit, filed by her father, Robert Barrick. against Gillespie, alleged the child had suffered permanent injuries after being struck at Illinois and McLean place. Sept. 25. 1931. Three Cases on Customs Docket Throe cases are on the docket for the United States custom court, which will convene Friday with Judge Genevieve R. Klein, the court's only woman judge, on the bench. Indianapolis firms are asking reappraisals of imported article* in all three cases. Visiting Week Is Set March 20 to 25 has been designated as special visiting week at Crooked Creek school, and parents are urged to visit the school and observe the regular daily work of the pupils.

Wonders of Blazing Sun Seen at Close Range in Rocket Ship

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We have brought our rocket ship to rest upon a rocky plateau on Mercury, the arid and scorched up world. Through the heavily shaded windows of the ship's control room we view the sun, which appears three times as large as from earth. We note many features of the sun visible from earth only during the few seconds of a total eclipse.

Space Explorers Streak Toward Pianet Mercury After Moon Tour. This is the fourth of a series of articles by David Dietz on ‘'Rocketing Through the Universe. ' Previous articles told of the trip to the moon in a rocket ship and described discoveries there. After making a series of observations. the adventurers soar for the planet Mercury, closest of all to the sun. BY DAVID DIETZ Scripps-How artl Science Editor AN arid and scorched-up world is Mercury, baking in the intense heat of the sun’s direct rays. Three times as close to the sun as is the earth, little Mercury receives nine times as much heat and light from the sun. Since the planet has no blanket of air, all of it falls directly upon the rocky surface. We head our rocket ship for Mercury, even though we shall not wish to stay there long, for' the surface temperature of Mercury is about 300 degrees, and about as comfortable, therefore, as the top of a red-hot stove. Our interest is not so much in Mercury, whose scenery will not differ very greatly from that upon the moon, as it is in the sun. Mercury will prove a wonderful vantage point from which to study the sun. Tuesday, you will recall, we completed our explorations on the moon. The hop from the earth to the moon was one of 240,000 miles, a trifling one as distances go in astronomy. We have a longer Journey ahead of us now. one of approximately 60,000,000 miles. The moon, astronomically speaking, is in the earth’s back yard. As every one knows, it is the earth’s sateilite, revolving around the earth. Cross Orbit of Venus Mercury is one of the nine planets, including our own earth which revolve about the sun. It is the smallest of all the planets and the closest to the sun. From the sun to earth is 93,000,000 miles. From the sun to Mercury is 35,000,000 miles. To get to Mercury, therefore, we must point our ship toward the sun and fly across the orbit of Venus, whose distance from the sun is 67,000,000 miles. Rocketing toward the sun is difficult, for the bright disk of the sun is directly in front of us. To protect our eyes, we must place heavy .-hades of dark violet glass over all the glass portholes of the control room. The sun grows larger, and brighter, and hotter, as we approach Mercury. We are flying faster now than on our journey to the moon. Then a mere 40.000 miles an hour was sufficient speed. But at that rate it would take us two months to reach Mercury. Accordingly we have speeded up cur ship to 10,000,000 miles an hour. At that rate we shall reach Mercury lin six hours, the same length of i time it took us to reach the moon j at the slower speed. Surface Is Obstrved Gazing ahead from the control room of our rocket slip we note Mercury, shining brightly, although, of course, by reflected sunlight only, :to one side of the sun. It grows brighter and larger as we approach it. Mercury moves in its own orbit with a speed of about thirty miles a second. We must take this into account in pointing our rocket toward the planet. Soon we are close i enough to the planet to make out its surface markings. From the rocket ship, Mercury ; looks now not unlike the moon There is neither air nor water upon Mercury, and. as we expected, the planet is lifeless. We note many large mountain ranges interspersed with large rolling plains. The plains, however, are criss--1 crossed with huge chasms, due to 1 the expanding and cracking of the surface rocks in the intense heat ■ of the sun. We bring our rocket ship to rest upon a rocky plateau. We shall not disembark because we are too near to the sun for comfort and safety. But let us study’ the sun through , the heavy glass shades of cur ship’s I control room. i shades will serve the same

purpose that smoked glasses did for you on earth last summer when you watched the eclipse of the sun through them. The disk of the sun has three times the diameter that it appears to have from earth. Since Mercury has no atmosphere, the sun shines in a black sky. We 'also are able to* see many of the features of the sun which are visible from earth only during a total eclipse of the sun. This is because upon earth the light of the sun is reflected back and forth by the molecules of air and as i a result, the whole sky is so bright • as to obscure these features. They become visible from earth during an eclipse because then the direct light of the central portion of the sun is cut off by the disk of the moon. Sun Spots Seen Looking directly at the sun, we note that its surface is not smooth, but mottled. We note bright grains which seem to be sprinkled upon a darkish background. We recall to mind Professor Langley’s description of the sun’s surface as ’‘snowflakes on gray cloth.” The flakes or grains are irregular in shape. Their true size is enormous, ranging in diameter from 400 to 600 miles. They change form continuously, old ones disappearing and new ones taking their .place. We also note a number of spots upon the disk of the sun, the familiar sun spots. We note that each spot consists of a darker portion, known to scientists as the "umbra,” and a somewhat lighter outer portion known as the "penumbra.” We note that these sun spots are scenes of intense action. Clouds of gaseous material are whirling about them. Sometimes a great cloud of gaseous matter is sucked down into the center of a sun spot. Drama Is Gigantic We forget how gigantic is the drama we are watching until we recollect the size of the sun. Actually, the disk of the sun is 864,000 miles in diameter. That larger sun spot at which we are gazing has a diameter of about 50,000 miles. The great cloud of gas, sucked down in less than a second, was larger than our entire earth.

Contract Bridge

BY W. E. M KENNEY Secretary American Bridge League Defensive bids are bids made after the opponents have opened the contracting, and usually have one of the following purposes: 1. To convey information to partner which will assist him in defending the hand should the opponents secure the final contract. 2. To interfere with the opponents’ communication, and render it difficult for them to reach their best declaration. 3. To force them, if possible, into a declaration they can not make. 4. To incur a small penalty intentionally to prevent the opponents from scoring a valuable game or slam. Bidding Defensive Defensive bids are not generally based on any hope of game or slam, and the best the defensive bidder can look for is to make a partial score, or to escape with a small penalty. And bid made after the opponents have opened the bidding should be construed as defensive unless it is definitely proved otherwise by aggressive rebids. A player holding a strong hand with possibilities of game, when the opponents have opened the bidding, should, either: 1. Make an informatory double. Example: South one spade. West double, or: 2. Make a jump overcall in his own suit. Example: South one diamond, West two spades. South one heart. West three clubs. Defensive bids should be slightly stronger when vulnerable, and the suit named must contain five cards because of the danger that a weak bid may be doubled and penalized heavily. Partner Forced The informatory double forces partner to name his best suit, however weak. * His only excuse for

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

It would be possible to pick up our little earth or the planet Mercury upon which our rocket ship is now resting and drop it into the center of one of those sun spots. And since the temperature is about 10,000 degrees Fahrenheit, it would last about as long as a snowball would, if you dropped it into a redhot furnace. We note that the edge of the sun is rimmed in red. This is the upper portion of the solar atmosphere, consisting of red-hot gases, chiefly hydrogen and helium. Scientists call this rim of red "the chromosphere.” It can be seen from earth only during a total eclipse. Fire Tongues Measured Rising from the chromosphere we note long, red tongues of fiery gases. We are fascinated by their fantastic shapes. With the aid of astronomical instruments which we have in our rocket ship, we measure the height of some of these tongues of fire, these “solar prominences” as the astronomer calls them, and find that they are 80,000 miles high, ten times the diameter of our own earth. We watch these gigantic flames as they rise and flicker. Occasionally one breaks loose, and floats away into space, a flickering cloud of flaming gases. We wonder what would happen if ever a flame so gigantic flashed out of the sun that it would reach our own earth. Rocket’s Perch Too Close Beyond the rim of fire and the rising flames, we note a great silvery halo surrounding the sun. This is the corona, a thin cloud of gaseous material made eluminous by the sun’s rays. The sun is a majestic sight as wc see it. For the first time we begin to appreciate the true grandeur of the universe. But our perch on Mercury is too close for comfort. Despite the fact that we have the rocket ship’s cooling system going full speed, it is getting extremely | hot. And so, let us sail away, rei signing Mercury to its fate, an arid | and scorched-up world, baking in the heat of the sun's direct rays. NEXT: We visit the other planets.

) passing is absolute certainty that ! the contract can be set, and that | the resulting penalty will be more valuable than any contract that could be made by his side. If he holds a weak hand, he should make a minimum response. Example: South one spade, West double. North pass, East two diamonds. This bid indicates that East has four or more diamonds but little high card strength and has no desire to continue bidding. If East has one and one-half high card tricks and a biddable suit, he should make a jump response. Example: South one diamond, West double. North pass, East two spades. This bid is strongly constructive, and indicates that East has enough strength so game is probable for his side. Great caution should be used in supporting a defensive bid. It should be assumed to be weak unless the defensive bidder shows, by a rebid. that his hand contains a fair amount of strength. (Copyright. 1933. by NEA Service. Inc.) CHURCH PROGRAM SET Concert to Be Given by Capitol Avenue Methodist Orchesra. Concert, including ensemble, solo, duet and quartet numbers, will be presented by the Capitol Avenue Methodist church Sunday school orchestra, under direction of Lynn J. Arthur, in the Sunday school auditorium of the church at 8 Friday 1 night. Vocal soloists will be Mrs. Marjorie Tucker Brown and Miss Mari ian Chaplin will offer a violin solo. With the program Roger Dunn will offer a magic act. Preceding the concert, the weeklly church night dinner sponsored ! by the Calendar Club, will be held at 6, the time having been changed 1 from Thursday night. H

INVESTORS TO BE GUARDED BY PROPOSED LAW Roosevelt Aids Rush Work on Bill to Ban 'Blue Sky’ Stocks, Bonds. BY RAYMOND CLAPPER United Press Staff Correspondent (Copyright. 1933. bv United Press) WASHINGTON. March 22.—Administration advisers are rushing work on a securities control bill to protect the investing public against “blue sky” stocks and bonds. As soon as the details are completed, possibly next week, Presi-, dent Roosevelt will send a message to congress asking immediate passage. This federal protective measure will cover both foreign and domestic securities. It is expected to: 1. Require full publication of the names of promoters, the amount of their bonuses and commission, and the full extent of their financial interests. Forbid Concealment 2. Forbid any concealment by promoters of material facts or circumstances surrounding the securities offered. 3. Place responsibility for full disclosure of the facts upon the promoters. 4. Require refunds with interest or cancellation of contracts wliere misrepresentation is disclosed, without requiring fraud to be proved. 5. Make those issuing false or misleading information liable to criminal prosecution for obtaining money under false pretense and ! likewise liable under conspiracy statutes. Thompson Works Out Plan The draft is being perfected for the President by Huston Thompson, former chairman of the federal trade commission. In that capacity he gained intimate knowledge of the methods used by unscrupulous stock and bond promoters. Daniel Roper, secretary of commerce, and some of his assistants have been associated with Thompson in working out the proposal. The purpose of this measure is to save American investors from a repetition of the losses, running probably into billions which they suffered through worthless foreign bonds and pyramided stocks. RURAL RATE SLASH PACTSJSIVEN 0. 1 23 Counties and 3 Towns Are Affected by Orders. Rural rate agreements made by the Public Service Company with its farmer customers in twentythree counties and three towns have been approved by the public service commission. For the most part the new rates represent decrease for electricity averaging around 20 per cent. Some increases are included, however. Towns affected and the average reduction for each were Moore’s Hill, 19 per cent; West Lebanon, 15 per cent, and Whitewater, 23.2 per cent. Marion county rural subscribers are included in the group with Benton, Boone, Clinton, Carroll, Hamilton, Howard, Tippecanoe, Montgomery and Warren counties. Reductions for the group averaged 19.8 per cent, making a total net saving to patrons of $8 348.22 annually. More than 800 residential and commercial users will receive reductions averaging 12.20 per cent, while 168 will be increased.

ORDER SEEDS FOR JOBLESS GARDENS Unemployed Signing for Land, Must Keep It Clean. Seed requests sufficient to plant 600 backyard gardens have been made by the Family Welfare Society to the Community Garden Center. The requests will be handled by the Center township trustee’s office, which is providing the seeds for the unemployed. The garden center has numerous plots of land, 50 by 100 feet, for families of the jobless who desire to raise garden truck to augment table food. Persons desiring the land may register on the second floor at Tomlinson hall, says Mrs. Perry E. O’Neal, chairman of the center. Gardeners signing up for land agree to keep the plot free of weeds and rubbish, not to trespass on any other garden lot and not to sell any produce raised. Bovs Blamed for Blaze Boys are blamed for starting a fire Tuesday night in the Nies & Jones feed store, 1702 West Michigan street, which was extinguished with little damage. Persons in the vicinity said they saw one of a group of boys toss a flaming newspaper beneath the store.

yI®GE^MmE W, gg SCANDAL RITE | M MCKINNEY’S I', If PICKERS Rj FLOCR°SHOW &JS 35c ALL EVENING I IWD I AN a| li HOOF a baurctoa*|

DR. PER DUE’S Clinic Skin Diseases—Facial Blemishes Established 28 Years 411 State Life Bldg.

Let’s Explore Your Mind BY DR. ALBERT EDWARD WIGGAM, D. Sc.

16 THE PREVALENCE (t j OF NEAftSKWTEDNEffc V/W / ]Z% j V OUR SCHOOLS 7 3 / yy heredity? 1 Jl Wfrr’/f A CAN A PERSON CONTROL Hl€e 4wr/T BELIEF& AT WILL? ib, L\ \ Te&oTho 's. Vi 1 / \ COWMSUt

1. No. Temporary infatuation often is blind, but even it is not blindfolded. As Popenoe and Johnson point out, any love worthy of the name is a product of the will and intelligence as well as of the great emotions. Stanley Hall, the great psychologist, showed that men and women have surprisingly clear ideas as to the sort of person they are seeking in love. On the physical side he found they listed the following traits in the order in which they considered them important: Eyes, hair, stature and size, feet, eyebrows, complexion, cheeks, form of head, throat, ears, chin, hands, neck and nose. Would this be your list? I deliberately held one quality to the last. The quality they emphasized most was the voice. 2. Mostly by heredity. Karl Pearson, great English biologist, studied thousands of children and adults and found that

Everyday Religion

BY DR. JOSEPH FORT NEWTON "T-xON’T be tired tomorrow,” an JL/ old African adage tells us. In other words, do not try to live the day before it gets here. To pile tomorrow on top of today makes a load too heavy to lift. It weighs us down and wears us out. "Sufficient unto the day is the evil thereof,” said Jesus. For .that reason he told us to live one day at a time, offering the wise prayer, "Give its this day our daily bread.” Nine-tenths of our weariness is mental, not physical at all. It is due not to work, but to worry. If we are tired physically, we can sleep and rest. But when w r e worry ourselves weary we can not sleep; the mind goes on and on, unable to stop. It is like an auto engine left running without the clutch. It wears the engine, wastes gas, and gets nowhere. After a while, if we do not stop, we are worn out and go flop. If at the end of a hard day, when you could hardly drag one foot in front of the other, some one told you that by walking ten miles you yould get SIO,OO0 —how would it be? If you believed it, off you would start and not stop till you got there. At the end you might be a little tired, if you thought about it at all, but happy. No, it was the mind that was weary, not the body. an a HOW can we cope with worries that wear out our minds and unfit us for our tasks? First we must face the facts, bring them to a focus, and see the situation whole. If necessary, write it down, putting the pros opposite the cons. Then we must make ilp our minds as to what is the next thing to do, and do it. If practicable, do it at once. Indecision and delay, more than any other two things, pull us to pieces and tire us out. A decision will let the clutch in, and instead of the mind racing itMOTION PICTURES & INDIANA LAST 2 DAYS! Attend Afternoon Show for Immediate Seating! 3 Stage Shows Todav At 2:00 siaPlP' ON THE SCREEN ALr SEATS Douglas Fairbanks, Jr. chJdren in ‘Parachute Jumper’ i 40c with Bette AVT TIME , ijHßftfitek . o All-Star Entertainment Program .. . * Liberty Magazine story by 10 famous authors. ~ “THE WOMAN V ACCUSED" el*'' with 25c 7 NANCY CARROLL Any CARY GRANT Tiaie JOHN HALLIDAY + * fit; On stage Slain the celebrated r IT “MERCEDES” assisted by Mile. xSTANTONE

children whose adults parents were not near-sighted did not often develop this characteristic; but that parents, cne or both of whom were near-sight-ed, had children who developed it in about the percentages expected by the laws of heredity. An enormous amount of help can be achieved by early fitting of proper glasses. 3. To an amazing extent, yes. To understand this fully, read William James' famous essay, •‘The ’Will to Believe.” Also, “is Life Worth Living?” As he says, your very belief in a fact helps to create that fact. If you have to do a thing, but believe you can not succeed, usually you will fail. Believe you can and usually you succeed. As James says; “It is the part of wisdom to believe what is in the line of our needs, for only by such belief is the need fulfilled.

self without result, the worry is killed. If no decision can be made, admit the fact and face it. To worry about it is fruitless and unfits us to deal with it. In the meantime, if our religion has any meaning, it will help us to master our minds and find quiet. Once we learn the art, fatigue, and irritability are ruled out. (Copyright. 1933. by United Features Syndicate. Inc.)

See Back Page! Trustee’s Sale Entire SIO,OOO Stock of WALK-OVER BOOT SHOP Bloomington , Indiana! Bought and Offered for Sale at About 25c on the Dollar by

MOTION PICTURES e/fISHMO* WHERE 810 PICTURES PI.AV! Isc” m. IQctiTO'MOc ££ HK ! BENNETT ‘HUP, BETTERS’ BIS Special Return Showing JEAN HARLOW CLARK GABLE In Hetro-Go'.dwyn-Mayer’t ®“RED DUST’* With 3fary Astor aJvlScTii IJ Jl I lI’JTIh Illinois and K 6 P M DDAiI ICI-lN Market Ruth Chatterton in 2 “FRISCO JENNY” R 15c Till f.18T17T51 Illinois at Ld ■/ 6p. m. uiSalUftS! Ohio M ||o BIG Loretta Yoon* “Thejß Hits'. Call It Sin.” Rex Hellßf yflin ‘‘Diamond Trail.” * NEIGHBORHOOD THEATERS NORTH SIDE ■■■■MPHI Talbot ??nd SlflljtflSß Family Mte "MEN ARE SUCH FOOLS” s > HfKli Tnomey "STRANGE ADVENTURE" WEST SIDE Wash. A Belmont I;] A Family Mte C. Audrey smith "MONKEY’S PAW” —mm mo w Mich. sC llT‘VKm'3 Family Mte TojaMlx “MY PAL. THE KING”

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PUPILS' LOAFING PLACE ‘NECKING’ nook; is claim Court Orders Officer Sent to Shortridge Youths’ Alleged ‘Hangout.’ No immoral conditions will be tolerated in “hangouts ' of pupils of Indianapolis schools. Juvenile Judge John F Geckler warned Tuesday at a trial of operators of an alleged Shortridge high school pupils’ "loafing place ” Mr and Mrs Max Rutenberg. operators of a case at 413 East Thirtyfourth street, near Shortridge. charged with encouraging two girl pupils to become belinauent. were told by Geckler that if conditions ! in the place are not improved immediately, the couple will be sent to jail. Witnesses testified that scores of ; young high school boys and girls visited the place each day. frequently when they were supposed to be ! in school, and were permitted to "neck,” dance sensuously, and smoke cigarets. Tells of “Necking” Among those testifying were Dr. J. Ambrose Dunkei. Tabernacle Presbyterian church pastor; Dr. Charles 1.. George. Shortridge Bible ; teacher; Emmett A. Rice. Shortridge ! assistant principal; Frank R. Lay, 13025 Guilford avenue, grandfather lof a 17-vear-old girl frequenting j the place, and others. Lay said he visited the sandwich | shop and delicatessen several times j to study conditions. “I saw many young boys and girls |in booths, imbibing soft drinks, j “necking,” playing cards and dancI ing voluptuously,” Lay testified. "I got acquainted with some of ! the boys and girls. Rutenberg ! didn't say anything when the bovs and girls hugged each other, and, j just to see what he would say, I | hugged one of the girls, myself, and | the proprietor said nothing," the ; white-haired grandfather added. Dr. George told of seeing sixtyI six boys and forty-nine girls of high j school age enter the delicatessen “hangout” during school hours in one day. • Judgment Is Withheld Rice testified that .Rutenberg forced him to leave the case one day when Rice visited it for an inspection, and reproached a student for "skipping” school. Rutenberg told Geckler he tried to operate the establishment properly, but added that he could not control the youths. Geckler withheld judgment and announced he would appoint a volunteer probation officer, recommended by the school, to inspect this and other places where Shortridge pupils congregate.

ggfWHISPERED Great Complexion ■ .. T° * lPr friend she remit F fever) thesecret of her flawless cle.ar white akin. WwiiQ& Yvh Long ago she learned J? that no cosmetic would I JUg hide blotches, nimplesor j KjLTip' ta:lo?.-r,ec,s. She found iffir the secret of real comr y" >%><.sJjr plexion beauty in NR ! \ \ .'/ Tablets (Nature’ftßetn- ! : i .i Wk. edyj.They cleansed and cleared the eliminative tract corrected slug- : gish bowel action—drove out the poisonous wastes. She felt better, too, full of pep, tingling j with vitality. Try this mild, safe, dependable, ! all-vegetable corrective tonight. See your complexion improve, see headaches, acid irvdijteaTUIVNj tion, heartburn. Only 10c. A concentrated mineral water In tablet form, for Sremach. Blood. Liver Kidnevs and Constipation This Adv. and 75c Buys Large $1 Box. Money-Back Guarantee. W 51st Illinois Bldg w >^^^l^E^L\^(Ll)is^^ndianapoii!^^ NOTICE: { During' 1933 thp following: low prices nil! prexitil on Maker's fin© WATCH REPAIRING MAINSPRINGS . _ rLEANING ) j STAFFS 1 i/V WATCH HANDS, 15c , All Watches Taken Apart When ! C leaned. Not !>!pp“d. hr do only first-class work! 42 W. WASHINGTON l _/ TRY A WANT AD IN THETIMES. THEY WILL BRING RESULTS.