Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 290, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 April 1933 — Page 30
PAGE 30
PRODUCTION IS UNDER WAY AT CITY BREWERY Grinding of Malt for First Supply of New Beer Is Started. Brewery wheels turned today in Indianapolis as the Indiana Breweries. Inc., 926 West New York street, began operations. c nnu..ig ui malt that will go into Indiana Breweries' first suppy of Maesner .12 beer was started. The brewery will not put its produoi on the market until June, according to Leo McNamara, president. From tweive to fourteen days will be required to get the first supply in storage tanks. From there it will go to measuring tanks for federal inspection, and check before bottling. Gone, but Not Forgotten j An reported to police as stolen br.on to Denver Browning. 115 North Holme-, aveii le. Buirk sedan 122-504, from Ohio and A.abama streets. O and. Over. Freedom. Ind.. Ford sedan, 202-. ill. Irom Freedom. trank J. Barr. 401 Board of Trade huilriIni. Nas.i couoy. 23-855, from Biacktord and Washington street-. Jskf Cnermwcih, 143 V Hiatt street. Chet - rolet rodpe. 126-505. irom in front of 1437 Hi tt 1 reet. A I.ucu.". ritv. Ford coupe. 34-275, from ip front of 700 West Morris street. BACK HOME AGAIN Sto.en automobiles recovered bv nolice belong to . Fred Cox, 1702 North Alabama street. Apartment 7. Ford sedan, found at Senate a-eue and Vermont street. W L Winter. 64 North Holmes avenue. Buick sedan, found at Seventy-fifth street and Road 31. Edwin Schultz. 2737 Madison avenue, Ford roadster, found In rear of 2831 Cornell avenue, stripped. Mrs. M. E. Robbins. 20.37 Ashland avenue, DrSoto sedan, found at Park avenue and Twentv-third street John Cronin. 1543 College avenue. Nash sedan, found in rear of 1017 North Jefferson avenue. James Cummings 3221 Sutherland avenue. Ford coupe, found in front of 2819 Caroline street, Walter Moore. 1438 West Twenty-third street. Plymouth coupe, found at Twentyseventh street, and Northwestern-avenue. Mirim McConnell, Bedford. Ind.: found at New Jersey and Washington streets. W'tlltam O. Johnson. 1850 Jones street. Foret roadster, found north of State Road 87. and west of Holt. road. Mr: Carl Wallerich. 3946 'Washington boulevard. Chrysler coupe, found in rear of 5200 North New Jersey street, stripped. F H Bremmerman. 5146 North Pennsylvania street. Oldsmobile coach, found at Seventy-fifth street and Road 31. Motorcyclist Is Injured Bruises W'ere incurred by Charles Knannlein, 23. of 1609 East Michigan street, when the motorcycle he was riding was struck as he turned into an alley in the 1200 block East Michigan street by an automobile driven by George Miller, 17, of 1102 North Gale street. f Ayres’ Quality RADIO TUBES Every Tube Fully Guaranteed So. 220 No. 171A J So. 28( No. 201 V /111 No. 245 No. H 2 X No. 227 No. 23.5 “ U Complete Radio and Flash-Eight Battery Equipment L. S. AYRES & CO. Eighth Floor Radio Tubes
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AJ^Qvnjras. I I*lll/ 203 W.WASH.ST.* 109 S.ILL.ST.-259 E .WASH.ST. W OPPOSITE NORTH OF OPPOSITE : STATE HOUSE w LOCKERBIE MOTEL w COURTHOUSE ......
RESERVE OFFICERS ELECT NEW LEAOERS
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Lieut. Col. Frederick Hosman
BORDER TROOPS TO REMINISCE Hoosier Veterans of Call to Mexican Expedition to Meet Here. Hoosier Mexican border veterans who seventeen years ago shivered in i Tpxrs northers and side-stepped I tarantulas and rattlesnakes with ! Pershing s punitive expedition after Villa, will hold their first reunion at the Antlers, May 7.The veterans, whose original roll- | I call numbered 4,000 from Indiana. ! will spend most of the time at the , convention reminiscing. There will! be no set program. May 7 was selected as the reunion date because it is the eve of the old Mexican war battles of Palo Alto and Resaca de la Palma. On May 7. 1846, General Zachary Taylor left Point Isabela. Tex., to give battle to the Mexicans. Seventy years later, November, 1916. Hoosiei soldiers maneuvered for ten days over the same battlefields. Four combat commanders, Colonel ! Leslie R. Naftzger, First infantry; Colonel Thomas R. Coulter, Second infantry, Vincennes, Ind.; Colonel A. L. Kuhlman. Third infantry, Auburn. Ind., and General Robert H. Tyndall, artillery battalion. Indianapolis, are expected to attend the reunion. I IDENTIFIED AS KILLER Suspect Branded Slayer of Rich Farmer by Widow. ftii l nitcii Pits* LA GRANGE. Ind., April 14. 1 Charles Lindsey. 22. Ft. Wayne, held here as a suspect in the slay- ! ing of Charles Pyatt, 72, wealthy South Milford farmer, has been identified by Pyatt's widow as the assailant, officials said today. Mrs. Pyatt viewed Lindsey, Fran- ! cis Carroll. 32. Allen county farmer. | and Emerson Vester, 29, Ft. Wayne piano player, at the county jail S here.
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Lieut. C. S. Miller
Lieut. I). D. O'Neill
New officers of the seventh district, Reserve Officers, Association, elected Wednesday night at a meeting in the Board of Trade building, include Lieutenant-Col-onel Frederick Hosman, president; Lieutenant C. S. Miller, vicepresident. and Lieutenant D. D. O'Neill, secretary-treasurer. Lieutenant Talcott Powell, editor of The Times, spoke on “Military Intelligence.’' Plans were completed during the session for the spring military ball to be given by the association at the officers' club at Ft. Harrison. Saturday, April 22. Special invitations have been forwarded to the Indiana Naval Militia. National Guard and other military organizations of Indiana. A buffet supper will be served, following the dance. Flans were also discussed for the attendance of the Indianapolis chapter at the state convention of the Indiana Reserve Officers’ Association May 27 and 28 at Muncie. SWAPPED—I 929 Chevrolet Coupe for new Graybar electric washer. F. W. Fromm received more than 50 offers of trade from his one day ad in The Times, costing only 33 cents.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
POPE AT GOOD FRIDAY MASS IN SISTINE[CHAPEL First Pontiff to Attend Solemn Function Since Year of 1870. BY THOMAS. B. MORGAN United Cress Staff Correspondent VATICAN CITY. April 14.—Pope Pius XI, mounted on the sedia gastatoria, or portable throne, and fol- | lowed by cardinals, archbishops and members of the papal court was borne into the sistine chapel today for the most solemn function of Good Friday—the mass of the presanctified and the singing of ; the passion and of the tenebrae. The mass was celebiated by Eugenio. Cardinal Pacelli. Among the worshipers were Chancellor Engelbert Dollfuss of Austria, German Vice-Chancellor Franz von Papen and Frau von Papen. Princess Strfania of Belgium, and other memi Ijors of European royalty. Cardinal Pacelli later officiated at ceremonies in St. Peter's. The Eternal City of Rome was draped in purple mourning. Solemn processions of pilgrims, clergy, and the faithful moved tnrough the churches in holy commemoration of 1 the crucifixion of Christ. The Sistine chapel Holy Friday function had not been attended by a pope before today since 1870. The desire to give further solemnity to 1 the holy year led Pope Pius to attend the ceremony. In all the principal churches of Rome the mass of the presanctified was celebrated. Many old churches, no longer used, were opened for the first time since last Good Friday, and were visited by the faithful and thousands of tourists. At St. Peters, a solemn procession moved down the wide aisles to the chapel where the precious relics of the true cross were exposed for veneration. Cardinal Pacelli, archpriest of St. Peters, officiated. All day, the great cathedral was crowded with a variegated throngtourists, nuns, priests, seminarists. Purple draperies hung from all the altars and crucifixes. The holy water stoups were dry and will remain so until tomorrow, holy Saturday. Another procession was held in the Basilica of St. John Lateran, where boards from the table around which Christ and His Disciples gathered for the Last Supper were exposed for veneration. The day was a half holiday in Rome. Banks, offices, and stores closed at noon. CANARIES AID CHURCH Birds Again to Sing at Easter Serv- . ice in Illinois Village. til) Times Special BISHOP HILL, 111., April 14. Canaries will be used for Easter services in the Methodist church of this village Sunday. The experiment last year so successful and attracted so much attenthis year. Residents of the village I v vii: j . use ot chair songsters for the day. INJUR ED IN COLLI!SION Ohio Woman Suffers Head Injury in Crash on State Road. Mrs. Charlotte Ritson. 29, Stuebenville, 0., is in Methodist hospital with a head injury incurred when the automobile, driven by her husband. H. T. Ritson. 39. collided at the Bertermann road and Road 40. with a car driven by W. H. Hiatt, 35. of Knightstown. ind. isv* Now that Mrs. Roosevelt has been thrown by a horse, the Prince of Wales should feel considerably consoled. u u a Don't forget your new driver's license. Fifty cents covers the entire cost. Issued in our Branch License Department at the Station by State employees. tt o tt Save with safety. Miller Geared-to-the-Road Tires, now the lowest in price in the history of the industry, are built finer today than ever before. It is the tire especially built for high speeds and rough going. Come in and examine a cross-section of the Geared-to-the-Road and judge for yourself why Miller Tires can afford to carry a WRITTEN GUARANTEE to outwear any other tire made. Convenient terms gladly arranged. a Wednesday it was our pleasure to attend the opening game of the Cincinnati Reds and the Pittsburgh Pirates at Cincinnati. The ball park, which seats about 35,000. was packed. And in this enthusiastic crowd was a trainload of fellow Hoosiers who made a special trip to do honor to two of our own boys—Ownie Bush, manager of the Reds, and Ted McGrew, umpire, both from Indianapolis, and now on the big time circuit. a a a CHIEF TIRE CHANGER MILLER TIRE DISTRIBUTORS
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APRIL 14, 1033
