Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 150, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 November 1933 — Page 12
PAGE 12
BURNS IN SHIP BLAST FATAL TO CITY MAN Naval Reserve Veteran to Be Buried Here Tomorrow. Burns suffered in an explosion aboard the If. S. S> Hawk of the' Indiana naval reserve caused the death yesterday of Joseph Porten, 34, oi 1039 Blaine avenue. Mr. Porten had been in a Michigan City hospital for two weeks. He had served eight years in the navy, and had been a member of the naval reserve for five years. Funeral serices will be held at 9 tomorrow in the Assumption church, with burial at Holy Cross cemetery. Suriving Mr. Porten are the widow, Mrs. Jeanette Porten; his parents, Mr. and Mrs. N. E. Porten, two sisters, Miss Margaret Porten and .Mrs. H. J. Denx, and a brother, E. A. Porten. Fall Injuries Fatal Injuries incurred when she fell while sweeping leaves resuited in the death yesterday of Mrs. Margaret Jane Hogue, 82, of 1314 Reisner street. Mrs. Hogue was the mother of the late Joseph L. Hogue, city controller during the Shank administration. Sne was born in Ohio, but had lived in Indianapolis for fifty-five years. Funeral services wRI be held at 2 tomorrow, at the residence, with burial at Crown Hill cemetery. Surviving Mrs. Hogue are a daughter, Mrs. Mattie B. Albrecht, and a brother. William Norris, of Sheibyville. Aged Man Is Dead Funeral services for Charles E. Creasey, 73, who died yesterday, will be held at 2 tomorrow afternoon at the residence, 1049 Berwyn street. Burial will be at Crown Hill cemetery. He was a member of Shelby Street M. E. church. Surviving him ate the widow, Mrs. Flora B. Creasey; a daughter, Mrs. Victor Griffith, and a son, G. R. Creasey. Long Illness Is Fatal Edward T. Graham, 58, R. R. 2,' Box 106, died last night at the! Methodist hospital. He had been a ! patient in the hospital since Sept. 14. Mrs. Anna Getty Dead Mrs. Anna Get.y, 40, 231 South Eas. street, died last night in tne Indiana Christian hospital. She had been ill for a week. RAILROAD GETS MANY IDEAS FROM WORKERS Pennsylvania Receives 11.233 Constructive Suggestions. The Pennsylvania railroad announced today that its “bureau of new ideas,” which receives constructive suggestions for improving cper- ! ations directly from employes, had reached a total of 11,233 suggestions in the last six years. Practicality of the Suggestions is evidenced, according to railroad officials, by the fact that in 1928 when the bureau was established, 9.2 per cent of the suggestions received were adopted in whole or in part. The percentage of suggestions adopted steadily has risen until this year more than 40 per cent of the suggestions have been put to Use. Money awards or other forms of recognition are the rewards for the new ideas. Bank"r Given Freedom Hi/ 1 ,m<K *'/>< ci'if HAMMOND, Nov. 2—After serving the minimum of a two-to-four-teen-year term on charges of making unauthorized loans. Paul B. Lipinski, elderly Hammond banker, has been released from the Indiana state prison and is reported to have gone to California to live. Sfwer Work Loan Granted Hu 1 .huh Hiu-rial WASHINGTON. Ind., Nov. 2 A loan and grant of $150,000 for completion of a sewer project has been authorized for this city by the federal public works bureau, it was announced yesterday.
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A letter that brought results was the one 12-year-old Adam Schmidt of Trenton. N. J., wrote to the President saying that while he’d be “willing to sleep under a tree,” loss of his home by mortgage
COUNTY OIL MEN TO DISCUSS NRA CODE New Rules Are Subject of Parley at Severin. The petroleum industry marketing code will be discussed tonight when Marion county gasoline and oil dealers meet on the roof garden of the Severin at 7:30. R. F. Neff, assistant division manager of the Shell Petroleum Corporation, is in charge of the program for placing the new rules in effect and enforcing provisions of the code. “Similar meetings are being conducted in other counties ot the state, preparatory to strict enforcement of the code which is binding on the entire industry and provides fines as high as SSOO for offenders,” H. L. Rauch, assistant manager of the Indiana Refining Company and chairman of the Indiana state petroleum code committee, stated. Other officers of the committee are: A. L. Stallings of the Indiana Farm Bureau, vice-chairman, and Sam. T. Hurd, secretary. WINS SI,OOO DAMAGES City Man G.ven Verdict Against Railroad for Injuries. LEBANON, Nov. 2.—Frederick A. Wall, Indianapolis, was awarded SI,OOO damages against the Pennsylvania railroad by a jury here yesterday for injuries received in an auto-train crash at Columbus two years ago. At that time Mr. Wall was en route, with his bride, to be married. The serivees were solemnized four hours later at a Columbus hospital. Navy Flier Is Killed H/l I nitrtl I’ri kh SAN DIEGO. Cal., Nov. 2.—Ensign Oleon H. Felton, Pensacola, Fia., was killed yesterday the naval stunting plane he was flying fell 2,200 feet into Mission bay. A naval court of inquiry attributed the accident to a broken propeller.
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; foreclosure would be hard on his parents. This was the scene in Trenton as Adam smilingly looked on j while his father and mother bright) received the | first loan check made out by the New Jersey branch I of the Home Owners Corporation.
MAKES NIGHT CHUTE JUMP AT CITY PORT Irvin Davis Entertains Crowd of 2,000; Carries Lights. Before a crowd of about 2,000 at Municipal airport last night, Irvin Davis, Detroit, made a 2,000 foot parachute jump, said to be the first night chute jump here. Leaping from a plane flown by Howard H. Maxwell, Ceneral Aeronautical Cororation, Mr. Davis had flashlights strapped to his legs and wrists enabling spectators to trace his descent. He landed safely beside the hangar. Circle to Give Penny Supper Capital City Circle No. 176. Protected Home Circle, will give a penny supper at Woodmen Hall, 322 East New York street, from 530 to 8, Friday.
Copyright. 1933, K. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company | p| if il II JyPll pi jUj tesjjjy jffljj ifjjjl H Ii '[ \ m ,%r ifh' HEH ■i'-’r y $p n. -v ii. - ■.i • r mm f HB • ABOVE —F.RICH HAGENLOCHER. twice 18.2 balk-line • RIGHT —TALKING IT OVER calls for more Camels, <4% billiard champion of the world, and holder of innumerable Steady smoking reveals the true quality of a cigarette. Prove J**’*s| SH ffl&M • other titles, is famous among billiard professionals for his cool- to y ourself that Camels keep right on tasting mild, rich and•-) #3l| •■ ness under fire. Healthy nerves have carried him successfully c001...n0 matter how freely you smoke them. Camel’s costlier cl ’ through the competition. tobaccos do make a difference! '* r Steady Smokers turn to Camels^SS^^Pl ‘‘l know of no sport,” says l *ich Hagenlocher, “that places a greater strain on the nerves than tournament billiards. The slightest inaccuracy, the most fractional miscalcula- *'■ |r^ tion can ruin an important run. If I were asked to give one simple rule for success, I should say, ‘Watch your nerves!’ IT IS MORE FUN TO KNOW That s why I smoke Camels, and have smoked them for , # V „ '/„ &. Jr years. I like their taste better and they’re milder. But Hraßlif WJffigE Camels are made from finer, more than that, they never upset my nervous system, and y JB MORE EXPENSIVE tobelieve me, I smoke plenty.” |||lF iT :^A; 4 baccos than any other pop<i o IhJMBj ular brand. They give more There is a difference between Camel’s costlier tobaccos and jP* the tobaccos used in other popular cigarettes. You’ll notice i' confirm this, the difference in taste and in mildness—and Camels never : /Vs^ jangle your nerves. You can prove this yourself. Begin today! ''' '/ BhU y* • '. / /; ' ji j',..i;", r ii
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
SPITZER AGAIN WINS CORN HUSKING TITLE Fountain County Man to Be in National Contest. Hu Vnitnl I'rt HK BLUFFTON, Ind., Nov. 2.—Lawrence Pitzer, Fountain county, was Indiana's candidate for national | corn husking champion today, after winning the state title on the Ora Lamm farm here yesterday with a record of 32.99 bushels in eighty minutes. The national contest will be held in Nebraska, Nov. 9. Mr. Pitzer is the first person to win the Indiana title twice.
OFFERS AWARD ! FOR RED CROSS DRIVE WORKERS Honorary Memberships and Emblems to Be Given by Fortune. Spur for volunteer workers in the : American Red Cross drive for mem- ' bership in Indianapolis has been ; furnished by William Fortune, city • chapter chairman, with the proffer of honoring chapter memberships | to workers who enroll fifteen paying | members. The honorary membership will be ! designated by a bronze emblem about j the size of a 10-cent piece. Two thousand emblems have been | struck off in readiness for the drive workers. The new drive membership is not the first innovation introduced by „ the Indianapolis chapter in Red Cross campaigns. The coupon membership book, ! now used by all chapters in the j nation, originated in Indianapolis J during the war days.
Catchinq COLD l 7
Closed Bank to Pay in Fall Btt Timm Special GWYNNEVILLE. Nov. 2.—Stringent regulations of new federal and
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state banking laws today were blamed by directors as reason for decision to suspend business of the I
_'NOV. 2, 1933
Gwynneville private bank. All depositors and stockholders will paid in full in the voluntary liquidation. it was .said.
