Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 62, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 July 1933 — Page 6
PAGE 6
—Dietz on Science — AUGUST SKIES j MAY DISPLAY RAIN OF FIRE Shower of Shooting Stars Expected in Eastern Horizon. BY DAVID DIETZ Smpp* Howard **rienre F.ditor Celestial fir<-work.s are promised for August! The annual 7ieteoric shower known as the Perseids is scheduled to Lake place on the nights of Aug 11 and 12. Astronomers already are making their plans for observing the event and the co-operation of interested amateurs is solicited by Dr. Charles P Olivi-r. director of the Flower Observatory of th r - University of Pennsylvana and president of the American M' t' or Society. Amateurs are ask-’d to count the number of "shooting stars" seen by l half-hour periods They are also a&ked to record the exact time at which extra-bright ones are seen and the length of time tha* the path or trail of the bright meteor re-1 mains visible Thos° familiar with star maps are asked to plot the trails of bright meteors with reference to the constellations. I ike the old-fashioned winters, meteoric showers don't to be what they used to be A' least, anyone who watched for the Leonids last November and then compared what lie saw with what observers of the showers of 1833 and 1866 described. would be led to that conclusion. Fall Like Snowflakes There is no escaping the fact that the showers of last November were disappointing. A moon in the sky and In many places clouds as weli, made things difficult for the astronomers. According to published reports, the meteors were as thick as snowflakes in the shdVer of Nov. 12. 1833. For years after, that date was known as "the night the stars fell.” It is estimated that more than 250.000 meteors were seen from one observing station. At times. it seemed as though the sky were raining fire. One meteor was reported to have been as large and bright as the full moon. The Leonids gave practically as good a show in 1866. But ever since then they have been disappointing, i The expected shower did not take place in 1899 Astronomers believed that it was du? to the gravitational pull of the planet Jupiter which that year passed close enough to the meteoric swarm to bend it out of its normal path. Compared to Horse Racing Astronomers were disappointed again last November, but they have not given up all hope. They will be watching again this November.' There may be a good shower then. Two other alternatives remain, however. One is that the swarm of meteoric material has been permanentlyscattered or diverted from its original course The other is that it has been burned out bv the showers of 1833 and 1866 The PerseirLs never have been as good a show as the 1833 or 1866 shower of Leonids. They have, however. been rather spectacular in some years, and so are worth watching for. In one respect, a meteoric shower is like a horse race: You just Hover ran toll. The Perseids might surprise us with an extra good show this year, and that is worth staying Up after midnight for. Meteoric swarms are believed by Rstronomers to be the disintegrated remnants of old comets. Phcre is considerable evidence to support thus point of view Thus, for example. Biela's comet was seen to break in two in 1846. Neither half has been seen since 1852. but annually a shower of meteors occurs at the end of November. coming apparently from the constellation of Andromeda. This swarm. known as the Andromedids, has the same orbit as Biela's comet.
7TTSGDR a rw •Y BRUCE CATTON 'T'HERE’S some rather brisk and interesting summer readinp to be found in ‘Sleepers East," by Frederick Nobel. This compact and unpretentious novel has an entertaining tale to tell, even if it is—in spite of the disclaimer on the jacket —another of those stories of a group of people thrown together by chance. Tire scene is a limited train speeding across the middle west in a winter blizzard, bound for New York. Aboard are divers people There’s a lawyer taking east a woman who will give testimony that will clear his client of a murder charge. There's a private detective who wants to get to this witness and get her to refuse to testify There’s a pompous congressman who has the same idea. There's a newspaper gal who s engaged to the congressman but who still is partly in love with the lawyer. There's a small town business man running away from his wife, a railroad detective trying to figure out why he was ordered to take thus particular train, a veteran engineer trying to get the train through on time on his last run. and a fidgety conductor. During the course of the night the activities of all of these people get badly scrambled. Chance becomes the arbiter of their destinies: and all of them except, perhaps, the newspaper gal. who winds up in the lawyer’s arms—find that they can’t make anything turn out as they ‘wish. . . . And. all in all. it’s not a bad story. Published by Little. Brown A- Cos.. the book sells for 12. Save by Buying Indiana Coal B\t In tied f'rM ANDERSON. Ind.. July 22—A saving of *6OO annually was predicted by the board of education today on the basis of contracts let for 1,400 tons of Indiana .nined coal for use in public echools. Only two of Anderson’s sixteen schools will use ooal mined outside the state, it was reported
USES OF CHROMIUM ARE MYRIAD
New Discovery Makes Earth Shine as Never Before
This is th third of William Er.gle a new senes of dramatic conquests in the realm of oractlcal science. BY WILLIAM ENGLE Timet Special Writer "TT is but a vain curiosity,” said A Louis Nicholas Vauquelin sadly. and he crumbled in his Angers the gray-white metal which he had discovered. Today—l3B years ago the old French chemist came upon that strange and brittle mystery in his laboratory—it is chromium-plating the earth. It is shining it. It is making parts of it seem as though they might be everlasting. It is a sheen of that "vain curiosity" that stripes the Empire State building in New York city with light, that glitters brighter than silver on the new automobiles. that makes rustless ten thousand products otherwise doomed to inexorable dissolution; it is this chromium that as an alloyproduces the stainless steels, puts the strength in the wings of the airplane and in the sinews of the new- towers. Yet its uses have no more than begun. It plates the dies which make
Thu u the third of WUliam Er.gle a _ new aer.ea of dramatic conquests In the v realm of practical iclenee. S , * y BY WILLIAM ENGLE / ~ Timea Special Writer f i f I Louis Nicholas Vauquelin sad- mJf ffr ■ jt* 1• 1 ly. and he crumbled in his Angers | - %J|| ' # J. had discovered. . gn|mOTßm|it - French chemist came upon that might be 'everlasting. |ulm 1 j i' l - nat vain ru p* jmlt J I *jSHj on -he new automo- /! f * 1 8 i-i.< • makes ru:-f less t*m thou- 'ill jf 2 ~ 1 i I u y f MbBBH L. \ I chromium tough. I US(KI , n the bath had been re _ _ from their studios the
the nation's bank notes; coats the pan in which, because it is smoother than glass, eggs fry without fat; it veins the industries that need a metal almost indestructible. and it makes tall promises still further to alter the ways of commerce. Not because the French chemist found it in 1797. Not because he found, in a red ore of lead from Siberia, the compound of the metal theretofore unknown. But because other chemists ftyent lifetimes studying it. Largely because a Columbia university professor, taking hold of it is an undergraduate youth, worked twenty-two years on its puzzle, found out what to do with it, found out how to make it stick to other metals a a a npms one is Colin G Fink, now head of the division of electrochemical engineering. In the Chandler laboratories a little while ago he held a rough, grayish lump in his hands. "It is pure chromium," he said. "See how heavy it is. See how it chips. Even though you can crush it in your fingers, it is the hardest metal in the world.” It is three times harder than case-hardened steel. It cuts glass almost as easily as does a diamond. It is rust-proof, practically corrosion-proof, and. when rightly applied, abrasion proof. Its lustre will last indefinitely.
TAKE ACTION TO SPEED ELEVATION PROGRAM Civic League leaders Call on City and County Officials. Led by E. H. Wischmever and J. Edward Burke, ten members of the central committee of the South Side Civic League visited city and county officials Friday to further the program of track elevation on Prospect and Morris streets. For more than two hours the committee conferred with Mayor Reginald H. Sullivan. Following the meeting Wischmever said that they had told the mayor the committee was interested in track elevation than flood prevention. Wearing goggles, hard shoes, and other protective garments would safeguard miners from many accidents. the bureau of mines reports.
Save a Nickel; Clip the Riverside Ride Coupons
Another coupon! Another nickel's worth of fun for Saturdav night at Riverside amusement park! All over town the arrival of The Times carrier is the signal for a grand scramble to see who gets the fun coupon —Junior or Betty, or big brother or big sister, or dad or mother. Junior has a big lead in fun coupons so far. it is rumored, as he has been canvassing the whole neighborhood and asking Times readers to save them for him. And that sort of wholesale collecting of the coupons is all okay with The Times and with the Riverside management. Get just as many of the coupons as you can for a big night of fun. The park management states you may use just as many coupons Saturday night as you wish, and ride as many times on vour favorite ride as you desire, but a hard and fast rule has been fixed that. UNLESS \ OU PRESENT A TIMES COUPON AT EACH RIDE. THE FARE WILL BE 10 CENTS. With the coupon. It costs but a nickel. Here's today’s coupon:
RIVERSIDE PARK r FUN COUPON 3C This Coupon and 5 Cents will he accepted any Saturday afternoon or night at RIVERSIDE AMUSEME\ T PARK in full payment for a ride on The Thriller The Aerial Swing The Flash The Motor Boats The Pretzel The Dodgetn The Canal of Venice The Whip Fun Castle The Motor Speedway The Mill Chutes Tipsy Town The Merry-Go-Round ■— fUp and save these coupons and save _________ | 5 cents on each of these 10-cent concessions Saturday. P* OC R° charge to enter the park at any time.
Above, the chromium-striped Empire State building: tower and (below) Dr. Colin G. Fink, the man who made chromium tough.
Those qualities of hardness and smoothness, the mystery of why in its pure state nothing will cling to it, were what led the professor, and many another, into the study of how to make it a serviceable coating for softer metals. He was studying chemistry under the noted Professor Charles F. Chandler when he began. Accidentally, one day, he spilled water on pure chromium. He saw it, like quicksilver, gather in a ball. He aplied other liquids. They would not stick either. He tried molten tin. Few substances are more corrosive. It slid over the chromium like water. He even tried putting chromium into a red hot pot. pouring molten tin over it, keeping it red hot for an hour. No particle of the tin adhered to the chromium. tt a a THAT, the youth thought, was a challenge. He—with the others—began the long task of finding out how to make the astoundingly hard metal useful as plating for other metals ihat nature. through oxidation, was inexorably eating away. The great physicist. Robert Bunsen, had succeeded in electroplating with chromium, but the experiment could not be reproduced at will; the process was not commercially practicable. Others attacked the problem, but failed. Professor Fink, exploring all the possibility of the baths, examined them even after they had
‘Two or Three Children’ Hope of Dempsey’s Bride
Bit ( nih il Prrta ALNEVA. Nev.. July 22—Jack Dempsey and blond little Hannah Williams Kahn Dempsey, the “cheerful little earful" of the Ziegfield Follies, are looking forward to having children, they said today. The former world's heavyweight champion and Hannah Dempsey, who were married Tuesday at Elko. Nev.. said they planped to have "two or three children." "Were going to have a baby," the burly ex-champion said. "Yes. two or three of thorn." the third Mrs. Dempsey declared.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TOTES
been used; worked on them with test tube, retort, microscope, spectroscope. Year upon year. Then in what seemed a worthless fluid—one of the used baths —he uncovered the secret. Sulphuric acid, formed by chemical reactions of the salt used in the bath, had been regarded by chemists as valueless in their work on chromiuin. Professor Fink found it supplied the "sulphate ion”—the catalyst that would achieve the theretofore impossible. Found that, by uniting it with chromium, he could make chromium stick to other substances. found he couid piate with chromium. a a a CHROMIUM mixed with other metals, and thus forming alloys, of course is as important nowadays as chromium plating. When molten chromium is mixed with molten iron each molecule of the iron, as it cools, becomes intimately associated with the chromium. The manner is not clear even to scientists. But they know the chromium then prevents that fatal union of iron e.nd the oxygen of the air. The oxygen is kept out. Iron, thus made uninvadable by ’ oxygen, can not rust. So chromium has come to be among the most important metals used in alloys of iron and steel. Its hardness fortifies them—and then they are armor plate, guns, projectiles, high-speed tools, and enduring structural materials. They are. too, the gleaming new surfaces that shine outside and inside of the new buildings. All that hard, smooth brightness is devised with chromium plating, or with chromium mixed with iron or with nickel and iron. A designer of fine jewelry was first to see its possibilities in furniture of anew period, an intrins-
] "Both of us want children," said Dempsey. "Two little Jackies and one ! little Hannah—maybe.” Hannah Dempsey said were her wish.
Gone, but Not Forgotten
Automobiles reported to police as stolen ; belong to: Ferdinand Born. 3419 North Pennsylvania street. Biiick coach. 102-028 from in front of 3510 North Pennsylvania street. Frank Smock. 2724 North Talbot avenue. DeSoto coupe. 03-753. from Eleventh , street and College avenue. W O Weber 553 East First street. South Salt Lake. Utah. Buck sedan. 8-718 Utah, from Illinois nd Market streets Ora Ball. 1857 North Taibq* avenue. Oakland coach. 55-143. from Meridian and 1 New York streets.
BACK HOME AGAIN
Stolen automobiles recovered bv police belong to: The Indianapolis Auti Club. 319 East New York' street. Hudson wrecker, found fn rear of 719 North Davidson street. Bob Bullard. 737 North Denny street. Dodge sedan, found at 100 West Drive. White River boulevard Fred Baker. 2966 Wlnthrop avenue. Ford ro dster, found at 3911 Wlnthrop avenue. Raymond 8 Lakin. 626 West Fortieth street. Chevrolet coach, found at the Belt Railroad and Prospect street NAB ROBBER SUSPECTS Three Burglars Caught in Act, Charge of Police. Police acting swiftly on a radio call surprised and captured three men allleged to have been found ransacking the Hi-Way serivee station. 1701 West Michigan street. Friday. Charged with vagrancy and burglars-, the police arrested Berlin Thompson. 19. of 817 West New York street: E.-nest Horton. 18. of 935 West Pearl street, and Clay White. 19, of 624 Coffey street. A door had been broken and a pay phone torn from the wall, police said.
3%. Paid on Savings Security Trut Cos. 11l North Pennsylvania Street
ically American period. Why conceal the true nature of metal furniture by making it into painful imitations of Louis Quatorze and Queen Anne? He put the question to New York interior designers. They knew no answer to it. Soon from their studios there began to come chairs and tables, ornaments and trimmings, with metal piping and strips; the American period of metal furniture undisguised: chromium alloy made to look like nothing but just that. a a a BUT chromium’s unseen contribution to material affairs in some ways is greater than the visiV.e. It coats the steel plates with which the United States mint prints its bills. Old-time copper plates could be used for 300 impressions. The steel ones made several thousand. Now, chromium coating on steel prints a million, and the last bill virtually is as clear as the first. When the chromium begins to wear, all that the mint men have to do is remove it and give the plate anew coat. The dyes which stamp the design on printed cloth are chro-mium-coated. So are needles that make silk stockings and the press rolls on which wall paper is printed. So are a thousand parts of machinery- designed to withstand immense friction, and a thousand other parts are chromium lused with steel. It is everywhere, too. in the realm of artificial color, since compounds of it impart brilliant hues to other substances, and so with brilliant reds and yellows and oranges it justifies its name. Next: The gas that gleams.
M'MUTT RENAMES PURDUE TRUSTEES Wires Reappointment From Omaha; Serve 4 Years. Governor Paul P. McNutt, enroute to the Governors conference at Sacramento, Cal., wired his secretary, Wayne Coy, from Omaha. Neb., Friday to announce the reappointment of all members of the board of trustees of Purdue university. Th nine members of the board including six selected by the Governor and three appointed after recommendation by the university alumni association, serve four-year terms. The trustees are: J. K. Lilly, Indianapolis; James L. Kimbrough, Muncie; J. E. Hall. Indianapolis; John A. Hillenbrand, Batesville; James W. Noel, Indianapolis; Palmer R. Edgerton. Marion; Mrs. Virginia C. MCridith, Lafayette: Robert A. Simpson. Vincennes, and David E. Ross. Lafayette. Scrip Pays for Marriage License Bit I'nitril Prmtt FT. WAYNE. Ind.. July 22.—Scrip money in which Iv n Repp, this city, was paid, bought him a marriage license. The license was issued at the office of Mrs. Alma App Reed. Alien county clerk. The bride was Katherine Kraick. Despite their ability to haul heavy loads, elephants have a tendency to have weak hearts.
BACKACHE? Diurex will help you if it comes from kidneys. Mr. Samuel H. Bass, Rochester. Indiana. R. F. D.. No. 3. says: "Diurex Pills are a real help when one has a bad backache from kidney trouble, and I recommend them." A continuous backache accompanied by irregular urination and a tired, nervous feeling may point to kidney or bladder trouble. Diurex Pills act while you sleep, and stimulate your kidneys, and are sold under a guarantee.
COPS MOVE GALLOWAY Takes Rostrum to Curb During Plea . to Real Silk Workers. Forced by police to move his pop case rostrum. Fred S. Galloway, Marion county member of the Indiana house of representatives, Friday addressed woikers of the Real Silk Hosiery Mills, pleading with them to form a union under the national recovery act. Galloway Arst mounted the case in the traffic portion of the Cincinnati and Walnut streets intersection, and complied with a police order to move back to the curb Three police officers were on duty at the place.
LEGALS 56 Legal Notices NOTICE OF THE SALE OF MARION COUNTY TEMPORARY LOAN TO SINKING FUND NOTES 1 NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN That at a ! session of the Board of Commissioners of ' Marion Cour.tv. State of Indiana pursuant to Ordinance No 78 of the Countv Council of said Countv. adopted on the 21st dav of Julv. 1933. it tras ordered that a loan ;of Three Hundred Thousand Dollars (*300000.00' for the Sinicins Fund be made i on behalf of said Countv for fire months Said issue to consist of sixtv io- notes Icf Five Thousand 1*5.000.00 Dollars each 1 dated August Ist. 1933. and maturing or. the Ist dav of December 1933. and to bear interest at the rate of not to exceed six per cent iSff - per annum -bidder to designate the rate of Interest to be charged and the lowest and best rate of Interest to be considered In the award. t Both principal and interest of said notes to be parable at the office of the Treasurer of Marion Countv In the Courthouse In the Citv of Indianapolis. Indiana The undersigned, pursuant to said order will receive bids for said loans at the Marion Countv Auditor s Office up to ten o'clock A. M.. on the 2nd dav of August 1933. The right Is reserved to reject anv or all bids. Each bidder must state the full j amount of cash which will be paid bv the bidder for the notes proposed to be purchased and shall be accompanied bv a certified check for three per cent of the par value of the notes bid upon and drawn against mor.evs in some reliable ’bank in Marion Countv Indiana, said check to be made pavable to the Board of Commissioners as a guaranty of the performance of said bid should the same be accepted Bids must be made upon the form provided bv the Auditor and approved bv the Hoard of Commissioners.' without additions. interlineations or erasures and no other form of bid will be considered and no alteration shall be made in the form prescrib'd Said bids shall be sealed In an envelope marked 'Bid for Marlon Countv Temporary Loan to the Sinking Fund Notes" and shall have no other writing or printed matter or distinguishing marks on the outside of the envelope Bids must be accompanied bv an affidavit of non-collusion as provided bv law. No conditional bid will be accepted and the opinion as to the validity of said notes to be furnished bv the bidder. Said sale shall continue from dav to dav untu sold. CHARLES A GOSSART Auditor Marlon Countv. Ind.
NOTICE OF THE SALE OF MARION COUNTY TEMPORARY LOAN NOTES Notice is herebv given, that at a session of the Board of Commissioners of Marlon Countv. State of Indiana, pursuant to Ordinance No. 79 of t.ie County Council of said. Countv. adopted on the 2lst day of Julv, 1933. It was ordered that a loan of Three Hundred Fifty Thousand '*350.000 001 Dollars, for the General Fund be made on behalf of said County for four months. Said issue to consist of Seventy '7o* notes of Five Thousand Dollars i*5.000.00> each dated August Ist, 1933. and maturing on the Ist day of December. 1933. and To bear interest at the rate of not to exceed six per cent per annum (bidder to designate the rate of Interest to be charged and the lowest and best rate of Interest to be considered in the award*. Both principal and Interest ot said notes to be payable at the offico of the Treasurer of Marlon County, in the Courthouse in the City of Indianapolis. Indiana. The undersigned, nursuant to said order will receive bids for said loan at the Marion County Auditor's Office up to 10 o'clock A. M . on the 2nd dav of August, 1933 The right is reserved to reject any or all bids. Each bidder must state the full amount of cash which will be paid bv the bidder for the notes proposed to be purchased and shall be accompanied bv a certified check for three per cent of the par value of the notes bid upon and drawn against moneys In some reliable bank of Marion County. Indiana, said check to be made payable to the Board of Commissioners as a guaranty of the performance of said bid should the same be accepted. Bids must be made upon the form provided bv the Auditor and approved bv the Board of Commissioners, without additions, interlineations or erasures and no other form of bid will be considered and no alteration shall be made in the form prescribed. Said bids shall be sealed In an envelope sealed and marked “Bid for Marlon County Temporary Loan Notes" and shall have no other writing or printed matter or distinguishing marks on the outside of the envelope. Bids must be accompanied bv an affidavit of noncollusion as provided bv law. No conditional bid will be accepted and the opinion as to the validity of said notes to be furnished by the bidder. Said sale shall continue from dav to dav until sold CHARLES A GROSSART. Auditor Marion County. Ind.
Apartment?^^^^ Then Ride FREE or for Half Fare in a RED CAB # **.. .-CT' . JK|j jit ~‘wkr §%s&&> yyr pany to provide FREE transportation to apartment-seekers who rent through Times Want-Ads And—through this same arrangement—if you LOOK and DO NOT RENT—your Red Cab will cct you only HALF-FARE while you are inspecting Times-advertised/ aparments The Times invited the Red Cab Company to co-operate in this plan because of their reputatl.on ™ p ™ mpt ’ *•** and courteous service. When you are read yto go apartment shopP u , DC L NOT Phone the Red Cab Company. Rather, telephone The Times.—Rl-5551—and ask for The Times-Red Chb Service. Your cab will be dispatched from here. Here Are the Particulars: 1. Lock through Times apartment rental ads 4. If you rent one of the apartments, pay and make a list of the vacancies you wish the driver what the meter reads, get a re - to inspect. ceipt and give tfle agent or landlord the 2. Telephone The Times, RI. 5551. and ask rCCelpt 10 * credlted 10 your rent ’ for’the Times-Red Cab Service. Give your , . name and address and the addresses of the 5 ’ If you do NOT rent - thp cab driver wlll apartments you wish to see charge jou only HALF fare at the last apartment visited. 3. The Times will then have a Red Cab call | for you and take you to the places that 6. Half fare only will be charged for the reinterest you. • turn trip.
LEGALS 56 Legal Notice* NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS Notice is herebv given to taxpayers of the Citv of Indianapolis that the Common Council of the Citv of Ir.dianap oils now has pending before :• Appropriation Ordinance No 13 1933 appropriating the sum of Fortv-Se\er. Dollars and X : Cents M 7 09- from the unexpended and unappropriated balance of the general fund for the • *ar 1932 to Dep* of Finance. Citv Controllers Fund No 51—Insurance and Premiums The above described ordinance is due to come up for passage at the next regular meeting of the Council to he held or. the 7th dav of August. 1933. at 7 30 p. m After said appropriation has been determined anv ten or more taxpayers feelmg themselves aggrieved may appeal to the S’fte Board of Tax Commissioners for further and :ma! ac'ion thereon bv filing of petition therefor with the Marion Countv Auditor not la'er than ten davs after said additional appropriation has been made bv the said COi.-.moun Council and the Slate Board of Tax Commissioners will fix a date for hearing in this counts Witness mv hand and the seal of the Citv of Indianapolis, this 19th dav of July. 1933 HENRY O OOETT. SEAL' City GENERAL ORDINANCE NO. 84. 1938. * Amended* AN ORDINANCE amending General Ordinance No 23. 1933 licensing and regulating dealers in poultry butter, eggs and game classifying such dealers repealing all ordinances In conflict herewith providing penalties for the violation -.hereof and declaring a time when the seme shall take effect BE IT ORDAINED BY THE COMMON COUNCIJ OF THE CITY OF INDIANAPOLIS. INDIANA SECTION 1 That General Ordinance No 23. 1933 be and the same is herein- amended bv striking out m their entirety each and ail of Sections 1 to 14 both inclusive, and substituting in lieu thereof each and ail of the following Sections numbered from 1 to 16. tc-wit: Section I—Poultry dealers for the purpose of this ordinance are hereby divided into two classes Itinerant Poultry Dealers.” who are herebv defined as anv oerson. firm corporation or association who. in person or from anv vehicle or temporary location within the Citv of Indianapolis sells or delivers, or offers for sale, anv butter egg? game or live or dressed poultry such dealer having no permanently established poultry stop in the Citv of Indianapolis where butter eggs game ana live or dressed poultry are regularly sold or offered for sale, and Local Poultrv Dealers." who are hereby deftn-ri ns anv person, firm corporation or association having an established poultrv store, within the Citv of Indianapolis where there is sold or offered for sal" at retail or wholesale. anv live poultrv or game. Section 2—lt shall be unlawful for anv person, firm corporation or association to engage in the business of an Itinerant Poultrv Dealer” or Loral Poultry ivaler in the Citv es Indianapolis without first having secured a license so to do as here-
inafter provided Section 3—Everv applicant for anv such license shall make application In wrung to the Citv Controller which application shall set forth the name under which ttvbusiness Is to be conducted and the name of everv person interested ns owner or part owner in said business **‘4 shall contain as reference the name.i of at leas' two citizens of the Citv of in diar.npolis as to the character of th applicant or applicants Section 4 Licenses for the carrying on of said business shall be issued annualA and shall expire on the 31st day December. of each vear; shall not ,1* hie and no deductions shall be allowed from the fee for such license for anv part of the vear during which the license "hay have been issued The license fy** for carrying on the business of Dlnyrant Poultrv Dealer." id herein defined shall be .2nnno per annum The license fee for carrying on the business of Ifcal Fou.tnr Dealer ' as herein defined, shall be $.5 00 per annum for each and every such poultry store Provided that one-half of the regular license fee shall be charged for anv llcenes issued on or after Julv Ist of any year. Section s—Everv such “Itinerant PoultryDealer ' licensee shall execute and file bond with the Citv Controller of said City in thF sum of Fiv* Hundred 'SaOOOOO' Dollars pavable to the Citv of Indianapolis, to be approved bv the Citv Controller as to sureties and form, which bond shall be conditioned upon the faithful observance of the provisions of this ordinance and of all ordinances of the City of Indianapolis and laws of the State of Indiana concerning or regulating the merchandising and handling of said products dealt in by the licensee, and it snail also be conditioned so as to Indemnify anv person obtaining a Judgment against the licensee because of anv damage sustained on account of the violation bv the licensee of any terms of this ordinance. Section 6—Upon filing of the bond and the pavment of the license fee hereinbefore prescribed, the Citv Controller shall Issue to the ‘ Itinerant Poiutr.v Dealer" applicant a license as Itinerant Poultry Dealer" and shall furnish the said licensee two signs upon which shall be inscribed "Itinerant Poultrv Dealers license Indianapolis. Indiana. No. filling in the blank space the number of such license and the vear during which the same shnll be in force, which signs shall be carried on the person of such licensee or securely fastened in plain view on both sides of the vehicle used bv such licensee whenever such licensee Is engaged In operating under such license Section 7—Upon the payment of the license fee hereinbefore prescribed, the Citv Controller shall Issue to such ' Local Poultry Dealer" applicant a license as “Local Poultry Dealer : a sign, upon which shall be prescribed “Local Poultrv Dealer's License. Indianapolis. Indiana. No. filling in the blank space with the number of such license and the vear during whtrh the same shall be in force, which license certificate shail be con-
.JULY 22, 1933
LEGALS 56 Legal Notice# splruouslv displayed in the pmcipal place of business of said licensee Section 8 No I,ce:ie a< an Itinerant Poultrv Dealer shall be required of persons, firms, corporations or aaaociation* who sell such produce exclusively to ar.v licensed itinerant Poultry Dealer or Local poultry Dealer as defined bv this oridnance. nor of any peraon selling such produce of his own raising or producing, provided such person selling - :ch produce of his own rt‘.ng or producing, shall fl> with the CV.V Controller an a'.idavit seating forth his name and address trn* amount and variety of such produce he proposes to se;i annually, the mare where such produce !;a* been, is or will be grown and produced bv him Upon the filing of such affidavit and the pivmc.it of a reglitratlon fee of One St POi Dollar for th current calendar year the Cl” Con'rol.er ahull issue to such person a regis'ration certificate, du’.r numbered and which she.l be carried by him when selling or delivering such produce of hu own raising or producing ' uth certificates rha.l be issued annually and shall not be transferable. Section 9 Each Itinerant v ultrv TValer ' at the timr of makin# mi' sale of such produce, shall deliver ‘o 'he purchaser a sa.es slip which shall contain in a conspicuous place thereon th* - name address and license number of such licensee Any person selling ar.v surh produce of i ;s own raising or producing shat! deliver to the purchaser a sales slip w hich sha.l con. tain his name and residence num er cf his registration certificate Section lfh The issuance of ar.v llcerv* hereunder shall not be construed in anv manner to exempt the holder thereof from the obligation of c .mpliance with any and all o'her ordinances of the Citv of Indianapolis or laws of th- State ot Indiana Section 11 Everv Itinerant Poulttv Dealer 1 and Local Poultrv Dealer to whom a license shall be issued under this ordinance before selling or oiherwise disposing of anv surh produce on ar.v dav. shall display the same for inspection bv inspectors assigned to such duty bv -be Board of Public Hral'h and Charities and or the Board of Public Safety of ‘he Citv of Indianapolis, upon demand b' such inspector and upon said inspector showing evidence of his authoritv so to and and. upon inspection if ar,< of such prod . a shall he found unwholesome stale, diseased or otherwise unfit for food purposes. such produce shall be forthwrh condemned and removed from the vehicle or other place where found and shall not tv* sold but as to all such produce which shall he passed bv said tr.sepctors as fit for food purposes there shall be issued a certificate :o such Itinerant Poultrv Dealer ‘ or Lora! Poultrv isrnler showing that such produce has been inspected and pa .sed on the date therein set out Section 12 No poultrv shall h slaughtered. picked or drawn in the same room where other fresh mrn’s or other food products are sold or offered for sale nor !at anv place no 1 zoned f*r business under anv pre-ent or future zoning ordinance of , the Citv of Indianapolis Section 13 Anv person, firm corporation or association, or anv officer agent, of the provisions or regulations con'ainrrj : of the provisins or regulating contained
in this ordinance shall, upon conviction tnereof. be fined in anv sum not exceeding Two Hundred inN.NI Dollars or bv imprisonment for a period of not more than ten ilfti davs or both such fine and imprisonment, for each and everv offense, and each violation during anv dav or fraction of a dav shall he considered a separate and distinct offense Section 14 Any person, firm corporttnn or association who has heretofore secured a license as an Itinerant Produce IVealer " under and bv virtue of General Ordinance No. 23. 1933. as originally enacted from the Citv Controller and has paid *he required license fee ol Two Hundred • *2OO 001 Dollars therefir shall no' be required to secure a license for the vear 1933 as an Itinerant Poultrv Dealer ' wa defined bv this Ordinance and mav exercise all the rights and privileges as an Itinerant Poultry Dealer during the vear 1933 Section 15—Any person, firm, corporation or association who ha*- heretofore secured a license as a Wholesale Produce Dealer, under and bv virtue of General Ordinance No. 23. 1933. as originally enacted. from the Citv Controller, and haa paid the required license fee of One Hundred isloo 001 Dollars therefor, shall not be required to secure a license for the vear 1933 as a “Local Poultrv Dealer as de,l} . ■ ‘^* s ordinance, and may exerelsa all the rights and privileges ns a “Loral Poultry Dealer ' during the vear 1933 provided. however, that for the vear 1933 the City Controller shall Issue to the holders of surh “Wholesale Produce Dealer" license such additional certificates, plates or other things required bv the terms and conditions of this Ordinance to be held and displaced bv surh licensee, upon proper showing bv such licensee to the Citv Controller, that surh licensee has paid for such license as a Whole ale Produce Dealer"; provided further, however, that this provision shall not be construed aa exempting surh holders of such Wholesale Produce Dealer" Itccrre from complying with any of the other provisions of this Ordimy.ee or from the pavment of anv other fees required bv law Section 16- -All ordinances or parts of ordinances In conflict herewith are hereby repealed “ SECTION TWO This ordinance shali be in full form and effect from and after t’s passage, approval hv the Mayor, and publication a required by law. STATE OP INDANA. MARION COUNTY. CITY OF INDIANAPOLIS ss I. Henrv O Goett. Clerk of the Citv of Indianapolis. Indiana, do hereby certify that the above and foregoing is a full, true and complete ropy of General Ordinance No. 34. -1933 Amended that said ordinance was passed bv the Common Council on the 17th dav of Julv. 1933 and was signed and approved bv the Mavor on the 18'h day of July. 1933, and now remains on file and on rerord In mv office Witness mv hand and the official seal of the City of Indianapolis, Indiana, this 19th dav of Julv. 1933 (Seal) HENRY O OOETT. Citv Clerk.
