Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 313, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 May 1933 — Page 5
MAY 11, 1533
to CUyvaa DownAtaikf 3otnovu)to fan. ... More New Rugs in Our SALE AGAIN our buyer went to market! AGAIN he made a SENSATIONAL PURCHASE... of hundreds of dollars worth of GORGEOUS RUGS There’s a REASON why our May Sale of Rugs has been so outstandingly successful—because it offers more QUALITY—more BEAUTIFUL PATTERNS AND COLORINGS—more VALUE—at ridiculously LOW PRICES! Come tomorrow and let us convince you that NOW is the time—and Ayres Downstairs Store the PLACE to furnish or refurnish your home! Remember! Our new Furniture and Rug department IS AYRES-OWNED, and operated under Ayres standards of quality and value-giving! Genuine Jacquard Woven I RicMy Highlighted v 9 h Xl2 Heavy Axmmsters ' v/l 1 Yery heavy quality Axmmster rugs, in . _ I R . . J a ■ either 9x12 or 8.3x10.6 size. In a beau- If** Wilton Rugs American ™ “r *ZS oo J “" 2 $0Q,50 Orientals Fine American Orientals of Them Just 5 extraordinarily fine rugs—washed uv 9xi2 American Orientals, made by the maker as™ QT Mm S os Gulistan rugs! Choice patterns and C* Up’% buy a rug as flne as M | Taow S EBB ralß *IJW- 0U these tor as little as *.j9..>0! Every rug is a Wilton —with colors and yarns woven through to the back. In exquisite Oriental patterns and colorings. Red, This is our THIRD shipment of these lovely aaa """ raMM " l rose, blue, green, rust, etc. These were bought as rugs! They’ve sold “like hot cakes” because the If ft Ift rThru “imperfects —but just TRY to find any flaw! value is so outstanding ... in spite of the fact —Downstairs at Ayres. that they are slightly imperfect! Heavy all- fll a IP l l ■ wool napped rugs—reproductions of beautiful I" Ift It ————— —— ’ Persian and Chinese designs—in soft oriental Ml ■Mill I IUUi WUIC I lllg V IB _ colorings. We are convinced that this is the “Kolor-Thni” is a tough, wear-resist-f 1 ■■ I"7 D |-< lIOf C best value in a rug of this type in the city! I ing floor covering, with patterns inlaid gSM* I' VI I Mmm I ■V 8 —Downstairs at Ayres. to the back (they CAN’T wear off), flpfe w r\ w , um Economical for kitchens and bathrooms. §| J| mP ~, In Perhaps the Most Complete emmmmmmmmm Good patterns and colors. Yd! Assortment in the W 9x12 Seamless “Mobawk” jg. Koior-Thru Rugs S|.lO to s£*j.so American Orientals *£s=Bsl 18x27-In. 4 , /^x6 , /2-F , t. a ■■ uTLXfYi ". “•*■* "I* mteautiful Persian, Chinese terns to match the 9xl2’s in our stocks. Every one is a liOlm Q6Slgns——in rich Colorings# Seamless. ) \ * remarkable value at its respective price! Fringed ends. One of the finest values anywhere, at -.,...■3*1 \^MW? -Downstairs at Ayres. this price. Some are slightly imperfect. PCWS&A ■MMmMHMnmnnMMMmMMHMMMMmmiMHmMmHmMm —Downstairs at Ayres. It PAYS to Buy ‘Madden” Quality Furniture r' This Is Our Best Selling Sr¥l"3 BBM ■ ■ ■ ■ pn, | chair—priced so low! p fWm Two-Piece Living Room Suite igg|H iSI It’s a case of “love at first sight” with nearly every one who gets a H| J” grand Election ©” ' ; '§Pb glimpse of this beautiful upholstered suite! And we don’t blame them! £•* g _ dg JB (? A beautiful coverings. £nBHHgHp|WK9B It is covered in beautiful quality mohair—plain color, with reversible loose Ml whafl ■ other Lounge chairs, arm cushions is pretty patterned mohair. Made in Indianapolis by “Madden.” _ $13.95 to $24.95 You Need These Curtain Values Now —for Summer |tH| Su ™ a y ’ Net F Q Sh N - et C ™ p P ™ cilla II || V gzjr jilll lilil mi pair plmnl \r%r PAIR pair i, r L tlHul d ‘?r r ilTr" C |in or ' 8 |i U ”X- S®|i? jp v 4 1 price* ever offered |j | ofjargi dishiM-d^mL"! \Wm hravy roUonX’sh—hi°ior' ijjnKBHV 1 C, Mad r <rfh4!“ Ash || | Made'with five-inch rumcs irtenM buckram reatl > ruffled PrhtciilacorniM top.
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DOWNSTAIRS at AYRES a—— . • . .
TEE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
TO BE HERE SOON
Among the many clowns that Hagenbeck-Wallace circus will present here on Thursday. May 18. on the grounds of the old baseball park on West Washington street, will be Horace Laird. The circus has sixtyfive clowns this season.
LOTTERY TICKETS SEIZED, SAY POLICE 400,000 Taken, One Arrest Made, Is Report. One arrest and reported seizure of 400.000 baseball pool tickets resulted from two raids by police Wednesday. In a raid at t£e Ferguson Planting Company, 322 North Senate avenue, police arrested Walter Utterback, Negro, 1039 North West street, and made the ticket seizure. Utterback is charged with operating a lottery. The second raid w-as made at the Musicians’ Rhythm Club, 244 West Vermont street. The proprietor*, Lewis Cooley, Negro, was not found. He is wanted on a lottery charge.
The City in Brief
FRIDAY EVENTS Exchange Club, luncheon. Washineton. Optimist Club, luncheon. Columbia Club. Sahara Grotto, luncheon. Groto Club. Altrusa Club, luncheon. Columbia Club. Indiana Council on International Relations. annual conlerence. all day. Lincoln. Reserve Officers’ Association, luncheon, Board of Trade. Phi Delta Theta. luncheon. Columbia Club. Delta Tau Delta, luncheon. Columbia Club. Kappa Siema, luncheon, Washington. Harvard Club, luncheon. Lincoln. Royal Jesters, luncheon. Washington. The Rev. R. M. Dodrill, pastor of the College Avenue Baptist church, will give an illustrated lecture on his “Travel in the Holy Land,” at 7:30 tonight in the Brightwood M. E. church, 2414 Station street. Boy Scouts of Troop 3, will entertain the parent council Friday at 7:30 in the Irvington Presbyterian church. Service post, No. 128, American Legion, will present the “SevenEleven Minstrels,” Friday night in the Lawrence high school, and Saturday night in the Oaklandon Universalist church. The cast is composed of twenty-four members of the post. A cabaret dance will be given at 9 Saturday night at the Athenaeum by the Richard J. Litz detachment of the United States Marine Corps League.
A. W r . Herrington of the MarmonHerrington Company will be the speaker Friday noon at the weekly luncheon of the Exchange Club at the Washington. Election of delegates to the national convention of the National Federation of Federal Employes at Kansas City, Mo.. Sept. 4, will be held at the meeting of Local No. 78 at 7:30 Friday in parlor E of the Lincoln. Mrs. Rella Crabb, 818 Park avenue, reported to police a footpad snatched her purse containing $1 and a $35 wrist watch as she approached her home Wednesday night. Meeting of the Men’s Club of Our Lady of Lourdes parish in Irvington will be held in the church auditorium Friday night at 8, followed by a card party and refreshments. Activities in establishing groups of the Associated Retailers of Indiana in all congressional districts of the state were described by Fred Wiedman, South Bend, state chairman, at a dinner meeting of the Marion county committee in the Lincoln Wednesday night. Lewis Wilson, 515 East Fifty-third street, reported to police Wednesday night that a thief reached through a window at his home, taking a billfold containing $25 and a Phi Delta Theta fraternity set with pearls and a diamond, valued at S3B. Acacia Banquet Set for Tonight Governor Paul V. McNutt and Charles H. Fletcher will be speakers at the twelfth annual state banquet of the Acacia Alumni Association at Scottish Rite cathedral Saturday night.
Face Disfigured with Larjje Pimples. Healed by Guticura. “My pimples first started on my chin and moved upward toward my forehead, which soon was covered with them. They were hard, large and red, and festered and scaled over. The pimples itched and burned, causing me to scratch, and scratching caused sore eruptions. They bothered me for one year, and my face was disfigured. “I used many different kinds of soaps and ointments but they did not help me. I tried Cuticura Soap and Ointment and in four or five months I was completely healed.” (Signed) Miss Elizabeth Rundle, Nickerson, Kans., Sept. 15,1932. Soap 25c. Ointment 25 and 50c. Talcum 25c. Sold everywhere. IIIUvUTA One sam4ie each free. Address: "Cuticura Laboratories. \|g " Dept. H, Malden. Maw."
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WARNING FLUNG TO WISCONSIN'S FARM STRIKERS Minority Can Not Rule State. Is Edict of Governor. R;i r nitrti Trr,* MADISON, Wis., May 11.—Unless farmers who join the May 13 embargo of the National Holiday Association are in the majority in Wisconsin. they will find state and local officials acting to break the strike. Governor Albert G. Schmedemann said here today. *‘l do not propose that in any community in this state a minority amongst any group shall be able to effectually deprive the majority of their constitutional rights.” Governor Schmedemann declared. Wisconsin, with lowa and Minnesota, is in the center of the proposed strike area. Schmedeman expressed alarm over reports of threats of barn burning and business boycotts against farmers who fail to join the strike. He warned that Wisconsin may lose its Chicago market and dairy prestige unless the strike is national. lowa Farmers Divided BY HARTZELL SPENCE Vnitrd Pres* Staff Correspondent DES MOINES, la., May 11.—An intimate, unvarnished picture of just how farmers, urged by the National Holiday Association to join in a nation-wide strike May 13, view the embargo was obtained from two lowa planters. Each operates an average farm in the heart of the corn belt. Each profited in the boom years, and each has felt the pressure of depression prices and debts since 1929. Equally sincere in their convictions, one will not join the strike; the other will. Wants to Try Relief Lester O. Hunter, cattle feeder and poultry raiser on 160 acres of good Boone county land, is 35 and father of two boys. He feeds several carloads of cattle annually, and has one of the most modern chicken hatcheries in the state. “I surely am not in favor of the strike,” Hunter told the United Press. “I feel that it is unfair to the government, especially to President Roosevelt and congress. It's apparent that they’re really trying to do their best for us. ‘‘Let’s try this farm relief plan before we get into such a thing as a strike.” “What’s the Use?” On the other side is John Edgren. He is a middle-aged corn and cattle raiser near Oskaloosa, in Mahask county. He will be in the front ranks when the strike begins Saturday. “If we can’t get cost of production, what’s the use of selling our crops?” Edgren asked. ”We might as well hold them. I’m going into this strike, and so are a lot of my neighbors. “We've got to show the country how bad things are.” THE EASIEST and quickest way to locate your new house or apartment is to obtain The Times MidMonth Rental Guide, out Saturday. Free at any HAAG Drug Store.
SPRING TONIC in TABLET FORM A Body Builder Koloidal Iron and Cod Liver Oil Extract Tablets. Geo. W. Black, 127 West Georgia St., Indianapolis. Ind., says: “Koloidal Iron Tablets simply amazed, me. After using only two boxes of them my nerves were quieted and I slept soundly. Any one troubled with 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 Musrles.
Sleep Undisturbed! THIS 25c TEST FREE If It Fails. Physic the bladder as you would the bowels. Drive out the impurities and excess acids which cause the irritation that wakes you up. Get a regular 25c box of B{ KET.S, made from buchu leaves, juniper oil, etc. After four days t*st. if not satisfied. go back and get your 25c. They work on the bladder similar to castor oil on the bowels. Bladder irregularity is nature's danger signal and mar warn you of trouble. You are bound to feel bftter after this cleansing and you get your regular sleep. Hook Drug Stores sav BI'KETS is g best seller. —Advertisement.
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