Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 271, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 March 1933 — Page 10
PAGE 10
JOB HUNT FAILS. $2,000 TO WED HER GOAL NOW Hitch-Hiker Girl, 22, Is Seeking Husband in Indianapolis. And she wouldn't even take brewery stock. Nor any part of an interest in the brewer's four horses. She wants $2,000, and no tin scrip or soap coupons, but cash on the barrelhead, or wherever you put cash you're going to give a bride for a dowry, for marrying any man, regardless of age, size or complexionThis is the offer today of Miss Arvis Rose Warner, 22, of Lewistown. Pa., after resting at the Tourist Inn, 359 West Washington street, from a nation-wide job of hunting employment only to begin a hunt for a man. Disdains $3-a-Week Job Hitch-hiking for work has resulted in the girl selecting Indianapolis as the city to trade her sin-gle-blessedness for a “hitch” in matrimony. She doesn’t care whether the man has fever blisters on his “kisser," a can so palsy perambulating, or is tongue-tied by twisting phrases. “The $2,000 is the main thing. That and that he is good to me,’ ehe says. Indianapolis tried its best to prevent her from offering her heart, soul and scrub brush to one man for life by offering her $3 a week to do housework. Miss Warner has just enough Pennsylvania Dutch in her to refuse all offers of washtub activities unless accompanied by $2,000, a wedding ring, “some nice furniture,” and a man “who treats me right.” Cooks and Makes Pies Attempts to lower her price got her down to “SI,OOO I can give my father and the other twelve children at home, and SSOO for myself is as low as I'll go.” She's willing to call the first year of the marriage a trail and give the bridegroom his money back if he’s not satisfied and write it all off as “experience.” She admits to a bad t- mper at times, likes theaters; can cook and make pies, weighs 144 pounds and is five feet two inches tall, chestnut hair and green eyes, but isn’t jealous in disposition. P.-T." a7 party slated Hard Times Event to Be Given at District School 5. The P.-T. A of District School 5, Franklin road and Washington street, will sponsor a hard times party to be given at the school at 7:30 Friday night. An entertainment arranged by Mrs. Charles Lewis, chairman of the entertainment committee, will be given by Paul Dorsey and Stanley Moneymaker; Arthur and Doris McDermid, pupils at the school; Ed Stillabower and William Mitchell, and singing by the Eddie Foster trio. A reading will be given by Margaret Laughfner and dancing and 1 cards will follow.
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Dr. Hans Luther (above), former president of the reichsbank in Berlin, is the new German ambassador to the United States, succeeding Friedrich Wilhelm von Prittwitz und Gaffon, who resigned because of differences with the Hitler government. Luther, 54, former mayor of Essen, great industrial city in the Rhineland, was chancellor of Germany for brief terms in 1925 and 1926. CREDIT UNIONS BACK TO NORMALJ3USINESS Authorize Activities, Halted by Bank Holiday, to Be Renewed. All credit unions in Indiana have been authorized to resume their normal business, halted by the national banking holiday, it was announced today by Luther F. Symons, state bank commissioner. At the same time the Indiana Bankers’ Assoication issued a statement pointing out that Indiana banks are prevented by state law from applying me new federal banking act provision permitting issuance of preferred stock having no double liability. Purpose of these issues is to permit them to take advantage of Reconstruction Finance Corporation money.
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PROPOSED LAW BANS DEPORTING OFJHILDREN Foreign-Born Boy or Girl of U. S. Women Would Be Protected. BY RUTH FINNEY Times Special Writer WASHINGTON, March 23.—Recently immigration authorities noti- | fled an American woman living in ! lowa that her 10-year-old boy, born :in Mexico of a Mexican father, I would be deported to the land of I his birth, although he had no rela- | tives or friends there. Under existing law. the child is | an alien although his mother is an American. The deportation has been halted | temporarily by an injunction, but j still is pending. To make such a situation impos- ! sible in the future, Senator Royal i Copeland (Dem„ N. Y.) and RepreI sentative Samuel Dickstein (Dem., N. Y.) havt introduce a measure giving a child born abroad of an American mother the same right to American nationality now possessed by a child born abroad of an American father. If the measure becomes law, it will remove the last remaining discriminations against United States women in regard to nationality. It is backed by the National Woman’s Party. In the closing days of the old congress, similar legislation was passed by both houses, but because the two bill were in slightly different form they were lost in the i last-minute rush. “Another case that shows the urgent need for this proposed law is that of a Vassar graduate who is now the president of the Vassar Club in Paris,” said Dickstein. She was American by birth but lost her nationality upon marriage to a Frenchman. “After the passage of the Cable
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
' * , Today’s I AifflctUcic; Marclx23 r^ ■ 1775 -Patrick Henry delivers speech, asking for liberty or death. Gets libertyIQOl' Phll--1 i ppS 10 insolent, capped. liberty too- ! 1 |Si Jt $60,970% wisecrack madP afroul "k/oedin' money*
Act she was able to regain her American nationality, and promptly took the steps necessary to do so, including a special trip to this country. “Her American nationality regained at such cost is, however, not as good as that of any foreign man who has been naturalized as an American, because her repatriation does not give her child born in France the right to American nationality.” FLIER ACQUITTED IN DEATH FALL OF GIRL Freed by Jury on Charge of Murdering Fiancee in All-Night Party. By United Press HOUSTON, Tex., March 23.—Harold M. Edwards, 37, Reno (Nev.) aviator, was acquitted late Wednesday of murder charges in connection with the fatal seven-story plunge of his fiancee, Ivy Young, from his hotel room window after an allnight party. The state asked the death penalty, and sought to show the flyer pushed the woman from the window.
M’NUTT NAMES A, F. WALSMAN TO TAXBOARD Takes Post on April 1 When Showalter’s Service Ends. Representative Albert F. Walsman, chairman of the ways and means committee which handled all administration tax measures in the j 1933 session, has been appointed to the state tax board by Governor Paul V. McNutt. Walsman is research director of | the Indiana Taxpayers’ Association of which Harry Miesse is head. He will take the administrative post April 1, when resignation of James Showalter, Republican, is j effective. Democrats then will have a tax board majority. Phillip Zoercher, j board chairman, is a Democrat and
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has served for years as a minority member of the board. Third member is Gaylord Morton, a Republican, and former secretary to Governor Harry G. Leslie. He will be out under the reorganization law on June 1, unless reappointed by McNutt. The board likely will be transferred to the new treasury division, McNutt said. Walsman served in the house in the 1931 and special sessions as a member of the Marion county delegation. He was Center township trustee from 1924 to 1927 and business director of the Indianapolis public schools from 1927 to 1929. He was Fourth ward Democratic chairman from 1921 to 1926. Riley 5551 is the number to call to save real dollars on your want ad advertising. Times want ads cost only 3 cents a word (lowest rate in city).
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."MARCH 23, 1933
