Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 127, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 October 1933 — Page 16
PAGE 16
NEW YORK ST. ! DEDICATION TO DRAW THRONGS Celebration Tonight Will Begin With Parade; Unveil Boulder. A wider and finer east New York street will be celebrated at the formal opening and dedication of the new thoroughfare at 7 tonight. A police motorcycle escort will j head the parade of thousands of automobiles and marchers, which will be started by the firing of a bomb at Emerson avenue and New York street. A squad of United States naval reserves will officiate at the unveiling of a boulder in the triangular esplanade adjoining Highland square where the parade will end. The great rock will be marked by a bronze plaque commemorating the event. The east side citizens greater East ! New York street committee, under j Mrs. Mary A. Durkin, chairman, will preside over the ceremonies. Promi- ! nent east side citizens will speak from the platform on the west side of Highland square. Mr. and Mrs. E. Keller, 80 and 70, respectively, will be honored as the oldest residents of the east side present. They have lived in the same home for forty-eight years. The invocation will be delivered by the Rev. L. C. E. Fackler, pastor of St. Matthews Evangelical Lutheran church. Among those invited as speakers are Hilton U. Brown, Ernest C. Ropke, president of the city council; William M. Herschell; Paul C. Wetter, president of the Indianapolis Federation of Community Civic Clubs, and Floyd C. Williamson, state auditor. FLEET OF TEST CARS TO PAY VISIT TO CITY Sorony-Vaeuum Tour Goes From Canada to Mexico. Probably the most impressive fleet of test cars ever assembled will visit Indianapolis soon on the way through from the northernmost motor car highway in Canada to the end of the Mexican national highway. Twelve battleship gray motor cars from the “Under-Three-Flags” expedition, piloted by engineers of the Socony-Vacuum Corporation. They are making the trip in co-operation with manufacturers of the cars to test Socony-Vacuum products. The tour starts at Notikewin, a town in Alberta, 430 miles north of Edmonton. From their entry into North Dakota, the route is eastward to Boston, and then down to New York. From there, the expedition will come through the middle west and southwest into Laredo on the Mexican border, and then on to the new Mexican national highway.
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SALLY FLASHES HONEYMOON SMILE
Just married and already showing her teeth! Looks bad for the bridegroom, you might say. But that's just Sally Eilers’ smile of happiness as she gaves fondly at Harry Joe Brown, w r ell-known movie director. Brown is her husband now. They were married by a Yuma justice of the peace, flying to the Arizona city for the ceremony.
Bloody Havana Rioting Portrayed by Newsreel
Times - Universal Camera Man Shot After Filming Battle Scene. Hectic scenes of riots in Havana, Cuba, photographed by Joseph Gibson, New York staff camera man of Universal Newsreel, who was shot four times in the legs a little later, are to be seen in the current issue of the Times-Universal Newsreel. While mounted troops charge the mobs and machine guns rake the streets with bullets, Reds flee in all directions to safety after attempting to hold a gigantic mass meeting. Meanwhile troops stand guard over the Hotel Nacional, following a siege of the building, in which fifty men were killed before its defenders, most of the deposed army officers, surrendered. Other important news events included in the current issue are scenes in Chicago as President Roosevelt addressed the American Legion convention; views at Poole, England, where Hubert ScottPaines’ speedboat, Miss Britain, 111, was wrecked by a blast; appalling views of the havoc caused by a hurricane at Tampico; amazing views at Morgan City, La., where engineers set a huge bridge afloat and moved it into position; remarkable views of the proceedings in the supreme court at Leipzig, Germany, where communists are standing trial on charges of burning the famous Reichstag building; exciting scenes in Chicago as Martin Nelson won a $5,000 marathon swim; a rare scene in New York City as Babe Ruth pitches to victory in a ball game
with the Boston Red Sox; and unusual views of “Machine Gun” Kelly and his wife arriving in Oklahoma City by airplane to face charges of kidnaping. HOLDS JOB 60 YEARS Man at 81 Still Employed in Machine Shop. Bk United Press BARRE, Vt., Oct. 6.—Freeman W. Cilley, 81, has been employed in the same machine shop continuously for sixty years. At present he operatee a power hammer.
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
MATERIAL FROM LOST CONTINENT FORMS2J.ANDS Geologist Has New Theory on Scotch, Swedish Mountains. Bn Science Service WASHINGTON, Oct. 6.—Washings of sand and silt from a vast j northern continent, completely, vanished for more than half a: billion years, form large parts of the mountains of Sweden and Scotland, | as well as parts of preesnt-day; North America, in the opinion of Professor Albert Gilligan, noted British geologist, Professor Gilligan’s ] discussion of the subject appears in j the current annual report of the Smithsonian Institution. Some of the most ancient rocks j of the lands around the northern | end of the earth, Professor Gilligan notes, originally were sands and muds, washed down from a higher land somewhere by great rivers and deposited on the sea bottom, as the Mississippi delta is being formed today. Subsequently they hardened j into stone, and later still were lifted \ into plateaus and mountains. The great thickness and extent of these ancient sedimentary rocks in the chain of northern lands has convinced Professor Gilligan that a land mass of major continental size, drained by rivers of many times | the silt-carrying power of the present Mississippi, must have ex--1 isted around the North pole in | -emotely past time. G. 0. P. CLUB TO MEET Tenth Ward Group Will Convene at Ollie Mays’ Home. Business meeting of the Tenth Ward Republican Club will be held at 8 tomorrow night at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ollie Mays, 805 Spruce street. A card party will follow.
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_OCT. 6, 1933
