Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 130, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 October 1933 — Page 16

PAGE 16

BAR ASSOCIATES TO HONOR LATE NOBLEJUTLER Lawyers to Hold Memorial Service for Former Federal Clerk. Final services for Noble C. Butler. 89, who died Saturday, were held at 1 the home, 1204 Park avenue, yesterday. A memorial service was to be held by the members of the Indianapolis Bar Association at 3:30 this afternoon in the Federal courtroom. Mr. Butler formerly was clerk of the United States district court, and was a recognized authority on bankruptcy laws. Greenfield Man Dies Here Nicholas Rohrman, 87. of Greenfield, died Sunday at the home of his son, Nicholas Rohrman Jr., 1050 Harlan street. Funeral services will be held at 9 tomorrow morning in St. Patrick's Catholic church. Burial will be in Park cemetery at Greenfield. Surviving Mr. Rohrman are eight children. Native of Paris Dies Here Funeral services for Mrs. Marcelle May, 35, who died at her home. 2519 South Pennsylvania street, will be held fit the Sacred Heart church at 9 Thursday morning, with burial in St. Joseph's cemetery. Mrs. May wa a native of Paris, France, and car.* to this country after her marriage to Ora May, a member of the American Expeditionary Force. Surviving her are the widower; her father. Charles Brixley, and two sisters, Georgette and Chorttle Brizey. The father and sisters live in France.

Fall Results in Death The funeral of Mrs. Joseph Hunter. 80, 5714 University avenue, will be held at 2 tomorrow in the Downey Avenue Christian church, of which she was a member. Burial will be in Crown Hill cemetery. Mrs. Hunter died Saturday of injuries suffered when she fell down the basement stairs at her home. Surviving her are a son, Scott Hunter; a daughter. Mrs. William R Longley, New Haven, Conn., and a brother. Oscar Kuhn, Indianapolis! Dies at Christian Hospital Funeral services were to be held at the Paul E. Dorsey funeral home at 1:30 today for Jesse Warren Locke, 92, 112 North Denny street. Mr. Locke died Saturday at the Indiana Christian hospital. He formerly lived in Knightstown. Death Ends Short Illness After an illness of more than a month. Mrs. Emily Mansfield, 82, died yesterday at the home of a daughter, Mrs. C. A. Nickerson, 443 North Bancroft street. Funeral services will be held at 2 tomorrowin the residence. Mrs. Mansfield was a member of the Englewood Christian church. She is urvived by tw'o sons, P. A. Mansfield, Indianapolis, and Norman Mansfield, Elkhart; five daughters, Mrs. J. W. Welch, Mrs. Frederick Polled, Mrs. W. L. Salmon, Mrs. H. E. Ety, and Mrs. Nickerson; a sister, Mrs. J. W. Ollinger, Toledo, and a brother. Dr. Thomas J. Lambert, Aurora, 111.

Ihuk July* Ttlohe u^Smi£e HENDREN PRINTING COMPANY INC. \jO CENTURY BLD& RI-8533

£^ART RA By the way, wasn’t there some talk of u.> electing a Vice-President M ou*mi last November or was it just another political rumor. a a a Every day batteries brought into the Rose Tire Cos. - that were ruined through downright neglect. If the owner would have taken just a few minutes to let us service his battery. free of charge, we could have added weeks of extra performance. Save your battery and save money by driving in tonight or tomorrow for our thorough FREE BATTERY SERVICE. Remember, there is no charge and no obligation. It is a Goodwill Service of the Rose Tire Cos. BUB Our early settlers came from Europe but the late ones are still there. B B B Turn on the heat. Enjoy home comfort when you drive* to the game next Saturday. We are ready with a complete line of Arvin and Ha-Dees Heaters. We can guarantee these heaters for efficiency and trouble-free construction. Install yours now on our Pay-As-You-Ride Plan. It’s the convenient way of buying that hundreds of Indianapolis motorists enjoy. B B B CHIEF TIRE CHANGER MILLER TIRE DISTRIBUTOR

Attempt Is Made to Weigh Some Factors of Theater Critic Gives Consideration to the Question of Whether a Sex Disease Story in Movies Is Entertainment. BY WALTER D. HICKMAN EVERY time that I am called upon in my work to review a movie which concerns the effects of certain sex diseases upon humans as well as society. I am confronted with the questions: Are such things entertainment? Are they theater as I understand it? The problem I have before me now is "Damaged Lives,” a movie, according to announcement, sponsored by the American Social Hygiene Association. To understand the way this thing is being presented at the Ohio, one must understand two Tacts. For the first eighty minutes or so a "drama'’ in movie form is presented showing w-hat happened to Joan and Donald

before and after they were married. Just before Donald married Joan he took a fling with a blonde who had no health ri&ht to take the

fling. That experience in time branded Donald as unfit for marriage, and he transmitted his folly to his own wife, who soon was to be a mother. Then the drama showed some shots oi patients bearing the evidence of certain diseases and the effect such sights had on Joan and Donald. Joan could not believe expert medical advice that a two-year

r j

Charlotte Merriam

treatment would break the chains of her husband’s folly. Sosshe turned on the gas in her home while her husband was asleep. sjle awakened in time to shut off tftie gas and made his wife believe all was not j hopeless. To me. the story is not entertain- j ment and is not theater. The dialogue often is far from brilliant, everything being sacrificed to point to a moral. The cast taking part in this* drama is adequate only at times, j Cast includes Diane Sinclair as Joan, Lyman Williams as Donald,, Murray Kinnell,- Harry Myers, George Irving, Charlotte Marceline Day, and others. To me, this "drama” is not enter-i tainment and is not theater. Then there is a seven-minute in-* termission in which attendants at-, tempt to sell three sex and health pamphlets for a certain sum. The second part of the program; follow-ing the sale of the pamphlets’' is devoted to a lecture done as a, talking movie. This is really a clinic: lecture as the screen goes into* minute detail of every angle of birth, effect of disease on parents! as well as the unborn child. Some of these scenes really made* me sick. Those scenes should be confined to the clinic. I know there are many men and women who honestly believe that this picture in its two forms will do great good. I. am willing to grant that, but I do. not consider it an entertainment for

-lagging appetite There Is a reasonable way to cor- ttfic research and by millions of rect this condition. Pause and rea- rpy -users. son You know that body weakness Take S.S.S. and note the way your Ifi y resu,t of f. strength and appetite are restored. Picture lowering of the red- Two convenient sizes at all drug blood-cells and their hemoglobin stones —the larger size is more eco necessary to nomicai . Don't permit any one to strength and vitality. “switch” you la your determination Then why not try S.S.S.—the to restore your red-blood-cells and proven tonic for decades? Its value their hemoglobin content for regalnhas been proved by extensive scien- ingustrength. © The S-S l. Cos. StiSM 15 sturdy Y health

t A QQFQ — That Fit Your Eyes! V_T Li x\ O Li -—That Fit Your Face! Your Eyes Are a Vital Organ They must bo preserved and cared for. Neglect of the eves injures your health, impairs your ■ youthfulness, retards your earning power. MR A A Small Down Payment— Hiuj| '\gjk2f Easy Weekly Payments. Dr. West. Optometrist for 30 Years in Charge 21 North Meridian Street —Corner Meridian and the Circle.

You All m JB This Wmlml HARRY W. FRED T. MOORE ' MOORE AFFILIATED • Undertaker • Harry W. Moore 2050 E. Michigan St. CH-6020.

cHandAomje. GLASSES Fit to your individual neutered requirements at new /TT\ LOW PRICES! jgjBBBMBRPf J 1 "Uh easy weekly Af J ] payments arranged y jto We believe as you do. f that good looks are scrOlid only to good eyesight. to v If. a w lUMnctM 3 Doors £ast of Illinois Streak

a theater with mixed audiences. The thing to do is to take the lecture part of the program, place it in city clinics and for older young people in high schools and colleges so the lesson comes to them free. ’• I honestly have tried to give my reaction to "Damaged Lives.” To me it is not theater. Be your own judge. Now at the Ohio. a a a Other theaters today offer "Night Flight'’ at the Palace, "The Power and the Glory” at the Apollo, "State Fair” at Keith’s, "Ann Vickers” at the Circle, "Torch Singer” on the screen and Brooke Johns on the stage at the Indiana, "Midnight Mary” at the Ambassador, and burlesque at the Colonial and Mutual.

r^ijLSPECIA^ P-AIN Ls S $ THE PEOPLES DENTISTS W. WASHINGTON St.

Family Washing 51 Delivered Damp—Ready to Iron &°£fcsc lb. c lb. "'T PROGRESS LAUNDRY

CJliflA OUTLET SHOE STORES RELIABLE SHOES AT LOWEST PRtbs| NOW Z.tß K. wasiimirtwii n. —3— tO3 W. Washington St. SXPBKS 109-111 S. Illinois St. Iw -

ACID-KNOX INSTANT RELIEF ETrom INDIGESTION jm gastritis eu B A SOUR STOMACH GUARANTEED ON SAI.E AT AEE HAAG DRUG STORES

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

HIT-AND-RUN SUSPECT TO BE QUIZZED HERE Victim in Serious Condition at Hospital: Motorist to Be Grilled. Following a hit-and-run case in which Harry Schafer, 54, of 815 Daly street, was injured seriously while walking across Southeastern avenue and Washington street last night, police ordered James Buress. 4125 Spann avenue, to report at headquarters today for questioning. According to poiice, G. C. Kipple, 125 Johnson avenue, reported that he saw a car answering the description of the automobile which struck Schaefer in Christian park with the lights off after the accident. The license plates on the car corresponded to those issued to Buress. Mr. Schaefer remained at city hospital after being treated. Mrs. Betty Lawton, 22, of 739 North New Jersey street, suffered lacerations of the head when she fell from a moving automobile at

||P makes anything taste HP > '%! (p makes a thing taste better. Pp ml CHESTERFIELDS taste better because we buy ripe tobaccos. These ripe tobaccos are aged two and a halfyears—thirty months. During this time the tobaccos improve ageing. * 6 hy CHESTERFIELDS taste better because they have the right kind of jJMr home-grown tobaccos and Turk/W ish Tobaccos "welded together.” --y x question. Chesterfield the cigarette thats MILDER the cigarette that TASTES BETTER 019)). Liscfrr n Myibs Tobacco Cos.

East and New York streets Monday : night. She was treated at city hospital. Her husband. Dean Lawton. 27, told police that the latch on tfts side of the car on which his wife was riding was defective. Lawton was arrested, charged with drunken driving, no driver's license, no certificate of title and improper license plates. While walking across Delaware street near Thirteenth street Monday night. Clifford Long, 31. of 312 East Thirteenth street, was knocked down by a car driven by John J. Earls, 2170’ 2 North Talbot street, who was arrested for failure to have a driver's license. Escaping after his car struck Michael McHugh, 47, of 810 Woodlawn avenue, at Georgia street and Capitol avenue Monday night, a i hit-and-run driver was sought by police today. McHugh suffered in- | juries to his leg and shoulders and was treated at city hospital. Li Beau Services Are Set Following an illness of two months. Mrs. Mabel C. Li Beau. 1915 Central avenue, died yesterday in the Methodist hospital. Funeral services will be held at the Hisey & Titus funeral home tomorrow afternoon. She was a member of the Central Avenue M. E. church. Thewidower, Harry R. Li Beau, is her only survivor.

Fall Fatal to Farmer ELKHART. Ind.. Oct. 10.—W. E. J Davis. 42, farmer near here, died yesterday of injuries suffered when he fell thirty feet from the roof of a barn.

No More Hemorroids All Pile Agony Ended Without Cutting or Salves. If you think a surgical operation is the only way to get rid of Piles, it s because you haven't heard of the harmless internal medicine discovered by a prominent western physician. After years of study, Dr. J. S. l.eonliardt found the cause of Piles to be internal—congestion of blood in the lower bowel—the hemorrhoidal veins flabby; the bowel walls weak: the parts almost dead. Right away the doctor set to work to find a real internal remedy. He succeeded, and after prescribing it for 1,00 l patients, with success in over itOfi cases, he named his prescription HEM KOID. The doctor wants everr Pile sufferer i to benefit by his discovery, and so i there will he no doubting or delay Hoc k s Dependable Drug Stores and j druggists everywhere are authorized to I sell HEM-ROID with guarantee of i money-back if it does not end Piles in j any form. So why waste time on external treatments or think of an operation when j HEM-ROID tablets are guaranteed.— j Advertisement.

"Cro.ley** RADIOS w M fcrfll a fa A Wj| 3 ' £, V If S A- L, ™

TRY A WANT AD IN THE TIMES. THEY WTLL BRING RESULTS.

oirr. 10.