Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 112, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 September 1933 — Page 16

PAGE 16

8500,000 GIVEN INSTITUTIONS BY WILL OF NEWBY Charitable. Educational and Religious Groups Receive Shares. Bequefcts of approximately $500,000 to charitable, educational and religious institutions in the city and state are made in the will of Arthur C Newby, local business man and philanthropist, who died Sept. 11. The will was filed in probate court Monday by Mahlon Bash, attorney for John W. Suverkrup of Columbus, vice-president of the IrwinUnion Trust Company there, who was named executor. Estimated at a total value of $2,750,000, the estate is divided into $2,000,000 personal property, and *750,000 real estate. Mrs. Mary C. Edwards, a first cousin with whom Mr. Newby lived, was given all personal property and household furnishings in the home at North Meridian street, and her daughter. Mrs. Bernice Edwards Brandt, received the house. Given Circle Property Miss B°rtha M Edwards, another daughter; Cora Phelps Kron. and Beilc Phelps were given real estate in the city. Miss Edwards received property on Monument Circle occupied in part by the H. P. Wasson & Cos. The Misses Phelps were given Mr. Newby's half interest in the Circle property occupied by the Test building Twenty-five per cent of the personal property residue was divided in public bequests as follows: Twenty per cent of the 25 per cent rendue to the Indianapolis home for aeed women Twenty per cent to the James Whitcomb Rilev hospital for children. Ten per cent to the Indianapolis Community Fund, payable one-tenth each year for ten years . T' n per cent to Earlham college of Richmond Ten per cent to Butler university. Ten per cent to the First Friends Church of Indianaoolis Ten per cent to the North M E Church of Indianapolis. Ten per rent to the Indianapolis Fundatinn 'o educate pumls in Indianapolis high school’' payable one-tenth each year for ten years Forty-Five Oct Shares The remaining 75 per cent of the estate was bequeathed to forty-five relatives, friends, employes and business associates. Suverkrup received a 10 per cent share; his son. Arthur Newby Suverkrup, 5 per cent, and Mrs. Mary Edwards. 2 per cent. Other bequests under the 75 per cent were Bruce M Wiley of Indianapolis. 2 per cem Miss Emma B Henry Indianapolis. 5 pe- < en’; Dr A B Graham of Indianapolis 1 per cent: Sterling H Keene of Indianapolis 2 per cent: Albert L. Willard of Indianapolis. 2 per cent: Dr. John A McDonald of Indianapolis. 2 per cent: George M Dickson Sr of Indianapolis. 1 per cent. George M. Dickson Jr. of Indianapolis. 1 per rent. Marion E Elstun of Indianapolis. 2 per rent; Carl D. Paidrick of Indianapolis I per cent. Norvey C. Blackburn of Indianapolis. 1 per cent; Ben Snyder. Negro, an employe. 1 per cent: Emma Snvoer. Negro, an employe. 1 per cent Mrs oia Edwards Schleicher of Indianapolis. 3 per cent. Mrs Luzema Tmcher of Mooresville. 1 per cent; Mrs. Lancia Landers White of Indianapolis. 1 per cent. Mrs, Alice Abel Rundel of Martinsville .2 per cent; Mrs Ethel MU'. Rathert of Indianapolis. 3 per cent. Mrs. Hazel Morris of Indianapolis. 2 per cent: Mrs Audrey Smith of Westfield 1 per cent. Robert Stuart of Indianapolis. 1 per cent, rhildren of the heirs of David and Ellen Sheets of Mooresville. 2 per rent; Tunis T. Hinshaw, cousin. White Salmon. Wash. 3 per cent; heirs of a cousin. Vernon T Hinshaw. Ore , 5 per cent, heirs of a cousin. Arthur C Chapman Goldendale. Wash. 2 per cent: Orie Hinshaw White, cousin. New berg, 2 per cent. Laura Hinshaw Wri-hy cousin. Portland. Or*.. 3 per cent, children of heirs of Elmer E. Hinshaw. cousin. Goldendale. 3 per cent; children of their heirs of Ella Hinshaw Iy*. cousin. Goldendale. 2 per cent Mrs. Estella Edwards Hall of Chicago S pc- eent; Mrs Cora E Phelps Kroch. cousin. Greenwich. Conn . 4 per cent. William 1,. Bravos Waverlv. Miss., cousin. 2 pe- cent: Codmus N Bravos Silver City N C. 2 per cent: Ida Welch of Silver City, cousin. 1 per cent: Paul G Welch of Greensboro. N C.. cousin. 1 per cent; Miss Ella Wood of Phoenix. Anz . 3 per cent . Arthur Harold Seigel of Miami. Fla 2 per rent: Mrs. Adella Chambers Nussbaum of Brooklyn. N Y . 5 per cent: John L. White of St Louis Mo. t per cent. Mrs Estelle m Rilev of Lone Beech Cal 1 p-r rent, and Charles G. Henry of Newport. Ark.. 2 per cent

Gone, but Not Forgotten

Automobiles reported to police as stolen belong to: Loran Brinker, 444 North Bevjlle avenue. Chrysler coach. 57-002. from Hovt and Spruce streets. Kenneth Scudder. 1225 West Thirtieth street Hudson coupe. 87-518 from Thirtieth street nnd Northwestern avenue. Leon Burton. 1235 Flaine avenue. Chevrolet of 1235 Blaine avenue Luther Orenshaa. 1865 South Keystone. Ford truck slip on bodv. from Senate avenue and Washington street Tra Manring. 2502 West Washington street. Studebaker sedan, from garage In rear of 2502 West Washington street

BACK HOME AGAIN

Stolen automobiles recovered by police belong to David Winkle. Connersvilie. Ind Chevrolet coupe, found in front of 140 West Ninth street. Howard Sellers 23 West Henrv street Cored Cab No 96. found at 4400 East Tenth street Curtis E Patterson. 1636 North Pennsylvania street. Buick coach, founa m rear of 405 Blake street Frank Richardson. 2118 Sugar Grove avenue. Ford coupe, found at Newman m A Phillips. 1422 Kappes street Whippet roadster, found at St. Clair and Illinois streets Ford roadster, no license plates, motor No 13355392. found at the main entrance of the fairground on Maple road boulevard. LEARN Evening Law School ■ rn ||o OPENS SEPT. 11 Til |J|| for 36th Tear JLr BBS® Throe i r m-Jard legal course lends to LL E. degree. Catalogue i pon Request. BENJAMIN HARRISON LAW SCHOOL 115! Consolidated Bid*. KMey SSBI

ACID-KNOX INSTANT RELIEF From INDIRECTION mm GASTRITIS C A SOI R STOM \CH OIARANTEED m ON SALE AT ALL HAAG URIG STORES

Don’t Take a Chance With Defective Eyesight! COME DIRECT TO MAYERS fnr r \ pert optometrist ariviMng <ou recommends tbe -*r glasses best sailed to sour type 1 •f *re <v 'X,' GLASSES AT LOWER PRICES l<|f| fife \ On Convenient Credit Terms Progress in School Often Depends on Good Eyesight luMg|| Have the children's Eyes Examined. Don't let j nr child be handicapped by poor vision. . . n- it Pays to Have IMfirZI DR' FARRIS fZ!L l Opl.metrist la Charge.

INJURED FLIER

Harold S. Neff

DANCE TO OPEN SEASON Century of Progress Affair Sept. 30 by Buddies Club. Buddies Club will open its falj activities with a Ontury of Progress dance Sept. 30 at the Kirshbaum community center with William Safrin in charge. A silver cup will be awarded the winner of a beauty contest. Other entertainment will include a floor show headed by Art Rose as master of ceremonies and music by Jimmie Nicholas and his orchestra.

State Social Workers

to Open Session Oct. 3

Sixty-Three Counties to Be Represented at Meeting Here. Social workers from sixty-seven counties in the state will participate in sessions of the Indiana State Conference on Social Work, to be held here Oct. 3, 4 and 5. A dinner Oct. 3 given for the American Association of Social Workers, will open the conference. Indianapolis last was host to the convention in 1929. when the late Msgr. Francis Gavisk was president. Headed by Farm Chief Conference officers are Ralph Howard, Indiana state farm superintendent, president; Miss Lena M. Reading. Terre Haute, executive committee chairman; W. A. Hacker, Indianapolis schools assistant superintendent, treasurer, and Miss Laura Greely of the state charities board, acting secretary. A general session, followed by a social hour at the Claypool. is scheduled for the first day. Tuesday, Oct. 3. The state Association of County Poor Asvlum Superintendents and Matrons'will hold a dinner at 6:30 in the Washington. Breakfasts on Program A general session Wednesday morning will be followed by division meetings with discussion of family and community, county charities, delinquency and correction, health and children. Breakfasts for the Indiana chapter of the American Red Cross and for the Indiana Society for Mental

Hemorrhoids Go Quick All Pile Misery Without Cutting or Salves. Thousands who have idles have not yet learned that quick and lasting relief can only be accomplished with an internal medicin o . Neither salves nor suppositories remove the cause. Bad circulation of blood in the lower bowel causes piles. The hemorrhoidal veins are flabby, the bowel walls weak —the parts almost dead. To get rid of Piles an internal medicine must be used to stimulate the circulation, drive out the thick impure blood, heal and restore the affected parts. I>r. .T, S. Leonliardt. after years of study, found a real internal Pile remedy. He called his discovery HEMKOID. and prescribed it for 1,000 patients with success in over 900 eases, and then decided every Pile sufferer, no matter how stubborn their case, might try his prescription with a money hack guarantee. HEM-ROID tablets have such a wonderful record of success in this city that Hook's Itependahle Drug Stores and all good druggists invite you to try lIEM-ROID with guarantee of money refunded if it does not end your Pile misery.—Advertisement.

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AVIATOR WILL RECOVER FROM CRASH WOUNDS Small Boy Finds Hal Neff in Woods Two Days After Crackup. Bn I h it"! Prt ** JACKSON, Mich.. Sept 19—Hal Neff. 26-year-old pilot who crashed while flying tne night mail from Chicago to Cleveland and lay for two days beside his wrecked plane, was recovering from injuries and exposure at a hospital today. A score of rescue planes searched Neff's mail route after the disappeared. A small boy. walking in the woods near Leoni, Mich., found him Monday night. He suffered a fractured left leg and right arm and severe lacerations. Physicians said he was in good spirits after his hazardous experience and probably would recover quickly. Neff flew off his course in bad weather early Saturday. “I last my sense of direction,” he said today. ‘There was a heavy fog. so I thought I had better come down A storm was coming up and I thought I was near Cleveland. I crashed when I struck the woods.”

Hygiene Thursday will precede more divisional meetings, a conference luncheon and the closing general session. Michael E. Foley, Indianapolis, is arrangements committee chairman, assisted by Dr. Ernest Evans and Mrs. J. W. Moore. LOANS ARE JEXTENDED Blanks Ready for Borrowers of School Funds. Application blanks for extension of school fund loans now are available, County Auditor Charles A. Grossart announced today. Outstanding loans as of April 1, 1933, bearing 6 per cent interest, may be extended to April 1. 1938, at 5 per cent interest, if the borrowers will make application, Grossart said.

IU n/v* CUdcaM /C c tin: tobacco /If J PLANT Because... • j .®sbP§|/ Copyright. 1933. 1 a J. 1 * FOR THROAT PROTECTION—FOR BETTER TASTE 1

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Yes! Hoosier Bananas! Pawpaws Slip Politics Aside Even at Meeting of Irvington Republican Club. SKEPTICS who refuse to believe in Utopias were confounded today. For they were confronted with the fact that the famed Irvington Republican Club met Monday night and discussed pawpaws rather than politics. Not a single political speech was made at this most ardent of Indiana political debating, societies.

Feet Feat They’ll Be Off Tonight in Walkathon at Fairground. HARK, hark, the dogs do bark,” will be the theme song tonight as forty couples begin the weary trudge for the ambiguous, but coveted title of world's champion walkers in the Manufacturers' building at the state fairground. The starting gun at 8 will start the contestants on the newest in marathons. The couples will start with a forty-five-minute period on the floor and a fifteenminute rest period. A staff of entertainers will be present to enliven the twenty-four-hour -program. The show will go on the air three times a day over station WFBM. Broadcasts are scheduled for 12.45 to 1 p. m., 6 p. m. to 6:15, and 9:15 p m. to 9:30. Prominent persons are expected to attend the opening of the "howling dog” contest- Judges rule that there will be no “hitch hiking” and roller skates are out.

RUSSIA FORUM TOPIC Dr. S. E. Long Will Lecture in Series at Y. M. C. A. “Prophetic History in the Russian Situation,” will be‘ the topic of Dr. Samuel E. Long at the fourth of his forum-lecture series Wednesday night at 7:15 in the young men's clubroom of the Y. M. C. A. Men and wotuen are invited to the lectures which are sponsored by the Bible Investigation Club of the Y. M. C. A. The committee of twenty, leaders of the club, will hold a fellowship supper in the Y. M. C. A. grill, preceding the lecture.

Yet the evening didn't . pass without controversy. Having no politics to discuss the members took sides on the pawpaw, Walter L. Carey introduced the subject by bringing a basket of these lowly "Hoosier bananas” to the meeting. He was greeted with cheers by President Edward J. Hecker Sr.. of the club, with jeers by Stanley Phillips, who keeps the clubroom clean. nun PHILLIPS jammed through a resolution that the pawpaws could not be eaten from the floor. They found no friend, either, in Alfred E. Hogston, former state fire marshal, who said that he never could handle one and didn’t think they were fit to eat, even if he could. “I have handled lots of slick crooks and arsonists as fire marshal,” Hogston explained. “But a pawpaw is just too slick for me.” Others who joined in the pawpaw debate included Mahlon EBash and Harry R. Jones Abiding by the resolution, the pawpaws finally were passed around to be taken home and eaten by those who can eat them.

NO TWO Nor Are There Any Two Eyes Exactly Alike Optometry is your safeguard in maintaining good vision. May we serve you? drs. Established 30 Years i.ewiT* 2 —STOKES—2 HA D K R OI D MILTON to C JAFFE

FIFTEEN KNOWN DEAD IN AREA HIT BYJTORM Six Missing in North Carolina and Property Damage Exceeds $3,000,000. By I lilted I'rrs* NEW BERN. N. C.. Sept. 19.—A toll of at least fifteen dead and six missing, and property damage well above $3,000,000. was counted today as relief expeditions penetrated heretofore isolated areas of the hur-ricane-swept North Carolina coast. The list of fatalities was increased as coast guard patrol boats worked their way along the coast, in and out of sound, rivers and bays, ad-

IF YOU GET UP NIGHTS Physic the Bladder With Juniper Oil. Drive out the impurities and excess acids that cause irritation and irregularity. Juniper oil is pleasant to take in the form of BUKETS. the bladder physic, also containing buchu leaves, etc. Works on the bladder similar to castor oil on the bowels. Get a 25c box from any drug store. After four days if not relieved of "jretting up nights” go back and get your money. If you are bothered with backache or leg pains caused from bladder disorders you are bound to feel better after this cleansing and you get your regular sleep. Hook Drug Stores say BI’KETS "is a best seller.”—Advertisement.

ministering relief to the suffering and recovering the bodies of persons killed by the hurricane of Friday night and early Saturday. There was possibility today of receiving reports from isolated Manteo. island county seat on Roanok?

WHAT KIND OF MEN DO WOMEN ADORE?

Doctor Tells How Limp. Weak Men Get Vigor, Endurance With Vigovite, Wine-Like Elixir. Maybe you think there's nothing in this cave man stuff, but just ! your wife or sweetheart find that I you're weak, lacking in vigor and endurance, and you'll get contempt, j pity and the gate—instead of love and adoration. Women adore men of force, action—not softies! When your arms encircle them at the dance they want to feel solid, vigorous,, healthy flesh and muscle i —not flabby skin and gaunt bone. !No girl finds romance in skinny, : puny arms and legs. No wedded bliss results from weakness in either sex. That's why divorce courts are crowded. Savs Dr. I E. Booth, well-known New York physician: "This preference on the part of women is as old as the world. It's natural for a girl to look for stalwart, male strength on which to lavish her admiration and affections—men who have steel and whipcord in their fibre —men able to SET the pace as well as KEEP it. Some men can not meet this test This causes many divorces. But by far the majority can and will if only they take this plain, simple advice.

You All ff if uA Know Jgßl This fIUH HARRY W. FRED T. MOORE MOORE AFFILIATED

• Undertaker •

Harry W. Moore 2050 E. Michigan St. CH-6020.

_SEPT. 19, 1933

island, which has been cut off sine® the hurricane struck. Nothing more has been heard from Manteo since reception of radio distress calls early Monday calling for help.

Build up your strength with a good reliable tonic of iron, copper and manganese combined with stomach and bowel-

as Vigovite Elixi M

cleansing powers—such You'll be astounded how swiftly this Vigovite with the taste of rare old wine, sends its energizing power to certain vita! organs, •very nerve and muscle. • Almost before you realize it you may put on pound after pound of solid powerful flesh. 1 Weakness and that tired, washed-out feeling drop away like a worn out garment, being replaced bv pep. power and tireless energy. Appetite perks right up. sleep is restful. bowels throw off

Ir. L. E. Booth. • N. Y. C.

poisons. Stomach, liver and kidnevs click like a well-oiled machine You feel fit to whip the world. Try this without risking a peony— MONEY-BACK TRIAL OFFER Get yourself a big bottle of Vigovite Elixir today and take it regularly according to the plain, easy directions You'll like its bracing wine-like flavor—but you'll like the virile energy, the driving power and seemingly endless endurance it gives you even more. Unless you do after using less than half the contents, return the remainder and your money will be refunded. Specially priced 79c. Hook's Dependable Drug Store*