Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 150, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 November 1933 — Page 8
PAGE 8
COUNCIL TALKS INCREASING OF WARDS IN CITY Proposal to Boost Total to Twenty-Two Up for Vote Monday. Poll books of political parties will need revision, for voters in the spring primary will find themselves voting under new ward banners, if a citv ordinance increasing Indianapolis wards from fifteen to twen-ty-two is passed by the city council. The ordinance splitting up the larger wards, the ninth, the fourth, the third, and Washington township, will be introduced Monday night in the city council. Democratic leaders say unwieldy wards will be eliminated by the ordinance's passage and keep the vote population in all ballot, districts down to between 7.000 and 10,000. Purpose Nonpartisan Although the lopping off of ward territory is held to be nonpartisan in purpose, it is the declaration of some Republicans that it will benefit the Democrats in wards that normally have been Republican in the past. Under state laws, the city council is authorized to set ward boundaries while the last legislature gave the county commissioners the right to establish precinct lines where the precincts are split by city boundary lines and county area. The new T ordinance proposes to split the Ninth ward almost equally and make its western section the 'tenth ward. Irvington, east of Emerson avenue, will be the Eighteenth ward. The Fourth ward is split into the Fourth. Fifth, Sixth, and part of the Seventh wards. Tenth Ward Divided The old Tenth ward becomes the Sixteenth and Seventeenth. Ward thirteen is divided into part of the Fifteenth and the new Seventeenth. The new thirteenth ward is composed of the old Eleventh and Twelfth wards. The First ward becomes the First and Second while the Eighth ward remains the same, with the Seventh ward composed of the old Third and part of the old Fourth. The new Twelfth ward is part of the old Fifteenth, all of the old Fifth and part of the old Sixth wards. The Fourteenth ward keeps the same boundaries. Wayne township in the city becomes the Nineteenth ward and Perry township in the city becomes Ward twenty-two. Boundaries Fixed The ordinance fixes the following boundaries for wards: 1. Massachusetts avenue, Emerson : avenue. Thirty-fifth street and the Nickel Plate railroad. 2. Massachusetts avenue, the cor- j poration line, Emerson avenue and Tenth street. 3. Nickel Plate railroad, Fall creek, Alabama street and Fifteenth street. 4. Meridian street. Thirty-eighth street and Fall creek. 5. Thirty-eighth street. Fall creek and Northwestern avenue. 6. Thirty-eighth street, Northwestern avenue. Fall creek, White river and the township line. Fall (’reek Is Line 7 Fall creek. Alabama street. Sixteenth street. Capitol avenue. Ninth street. West street and Tenth street. 8. Capitol avenue. Sixteenth street, Alabama street. Fifteenth street. Central avenue. Nickel Plate railroad, St. Clair street, Pennsylvania street and Ninth street. 9. Tenth street, Emerson avenue. Prospect street, Sherman drive, English avenue. Belt railroad, Washington street and Oakland street. 10 Tenth street. Oakland street, Washington street. Pine street, St. Clai" street and the Nickel Plate railroad. 11. Pino street. Washington street, West street, Ninth street, Pennsylvania street and St. Clair street. 12. West street. Tenth street. Fall creek. White river, Belmont avenue, the Big Four railroad, Washington street. Boundary for Thirteenth 13. White river. Washington street. Cruse street, Maryland street. Shelby street. Prospect street, Madison avenue and Raymond street. 14. Big four railroad. White river, corporation line and Belmont avenue. 1. White river. Raymond street, Madison avenue. Prospect street, Shelby street. Pleasant run, Ringgold street. Minnesota street. East street. Belt railroad. Pennsylvania railroad. Southern avenue and the corporation line. 16 Washington street. Belt railroad. English avenue, Sherman drive. Prospect street. Pleasant run. Shelby street. Maryland street and Cruse street. Pleasant Run Boundary 17. Pleasant Run. Prospect street, corporation line. Troy avenue. Pennsylvania railroad. Belt railroad. East street, Minnesota street and Ringgold street. 18 All territory west of Emerson avenue. 19. Wayne township, corporation line and Belmont avenue. 20. Thirty-eighth street, corporation line. Forty-fourth street. Sunset avenue. Blue Ridge drive. Illinois street. Fiftieth street. Central avenue. Forty-sixth street, corporation line. Thirty-eighth street from corporation line to Fall creek. 21. All territory north of Twentieth district. 22. Perry township inside the city Burned in Stove Blast ANDERSON. Nov. 2.—Mrs. Cora Barkebile. 54. was near death today from burns suffered when her clothing was ignited by explosion of a stove yesterav.
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Family Washing Delivered Damp—Ready to Iron V.;sc Ib..r£g4 l /2C lb. ,*£’ PROGRESS LAUNDRY
HINDU DANCERS TEACH STEPS 0
/ *• '
Old Roeder Bar All Set for End of Prohibition
Beer and Wine Hall Opened Fifty Years Ago Had Lunchroom Interim. Through three decades of liauor control has stood John W. Roeder’s Beer and Wine hall, Michigan and Davidson streets. Jolly German and Irish neighbors gathered to celebrate the opening of the veteran saloon fifty years ago this Christmas. A military band played gallant tunes as John W. Roeder Sr., now deceased, welcomed the public to his bar. Now under the name of John W. Roeder’s lunch room, the same place patiently awaits the repeal of prohibition. The same hand made black walnut bar and ice box remain intact. The son of the original owner, John W. Roeder, has carried on. Faded prints of Custer’s Last Stand, old English hunting scenes, and baseball players long since passed to the roll of honor hang on the walls. Racks Await Wine After the saddening days of strict prohibition, once again the old walnut ice box, modeled by a local cabinet-maker after one exhibited at the Columbian exposition, drops out beer to thirsty patrons. The wine racks in the basement, long empty, are ready for the vinous liquid after repeal. John W. Roeder, present proprietor, says that his bar is the oldest in town. He entered the business when he was 16. under his father's tutelage. Continuously he has held the fort thirty-seven years, watching the failure of prohibition and hoping for anew- dawn for alcoholic beverages. He and Carl Monniger. well known owner of a restaurant on Ohio street, were confirmed together and entered the beer selling business together. Uses Old Beer Sign Baseball stars, whose names once flamed on the diamond, were frequent visitors to the bar—Amos Rusie, Jess and Ed Donevan, George Hogreaver. Billy Dammond, Si Bowen and Bill Sowers. Mr. Roeder says since beer has
7f\ / WATCH \ j REPAIRING 1 I Furnished M K m MAIN SPRINGS JEWELS BALANCE rl S’ y VIVO •STAFFS CLEANING All Watches Cleaned by Hand. No Machine* Vsed. CRYSTALS Round 14 Fancy Ofl. Shape .. 1u C Shape .
USE LYDIA E. PINKHAM’S PRODUCTS For women’s ailments take Lydia E Pinkham's Tablets. Not just another pill to deadeo pain but a very effective medicine which reaches the cause of the trouble and helps to prevent future disturbances. Chocolate coated New 50f size. For a dependable laxative take Lydia E. Pinkham's Pills for Constipation. Costs about 1^ per dose. • To break up a cold or to relieve headaches and neuralgic pains, take Pinkham's Pbenrin, 25e. Lydia E. Pinltham Mad. Cos. Lynn, Man.
F ORIENT
Here to show Americans how Indian bluebloods execute Oriental steps are these charming members of a troupe of high caste Hindu dancers and musicians, shown as they arrived in New York to begin a concert tour. Miss SimKi e (left), a French girl who embraced the Hindu faith and bears the red circle on her forehead. is shown with Miss KainakLata.
•eturned, many, of the old-timers jp :e dropped in to place their feet against the bar. reminiscent of the gay 90s. An old beer sign, hanging in Milwaukee for forty years, now' heralds his bubble refreshments. When Mr. Roeder w r as a boy, his father’s hall w r as on the edge of the city. Families such as the Vonneguts, Brinkmeyers, Feeneys and Aufderheides were neighbors. An interesting side light to the habits of old-time beer drinkers, Mr. Roeder said that his father always kept a poker in the stove to heat the beer. The old German and Irish liked their beer w'arm. By the bar hangs a clock, years old, how old Mr. Roeder does not know. It ticks hours, days, years, for that day when once again the old sign, Roeder’s Wine and Beer Hall, proudly may welcome the thirsty. FUNERAL HOME MOVED Wald North Side Parlors to Be in Old Otto Frenzel Residence. Removal of the north side funeral home of the Wald funeral directors from 1619 North Illinois street to the old Otto P. Frenzel home at 1637 North Illinois street will be completed by Sunday, giving the company additional space.
NO-STOP SPECIAL TRAIN CHICAGO Saturday, November 4 Leaves Indianapolis . . . . 8:00 A. M. Leaves Boulevard Station . . 8:15 A. M. Arrives Chicago 12:00 Noon SQZfi R ° r u " d This special fare also good on all regular trains beginning with No. 38 leaving Indianapolis 11:10 a. m. Friday and continuing until No. 36 leaving Indianapolis 1:15 a. m. Monday. Good returning on all trains t until No. 35 leaving Chicago 11:45 p. m. Wednesday night, November 8. Good in Coaches and Pullman Cars—Reduced Pullman Fares TRAVEL BY TRAIN—SAFE AND COMFORTABLE For reservations or furthor information cad F. V. MARTIN City Passonsor and Tickst Agent 114 Monument Placa Phone Lincoln 6404 l,',lil,'lil!l:li|ll(S _
FIX THAT COLD AND FIX IT RIGHT! Don’t Let It Take Root and Grow!
A cold neglected may be a cold regretted! Don’t expose yourself to serious complications. Adopt a sensible treatment of colds. Remember, a cold is an internal infection and, as such, calls for internal treatment. Remember, too, a preparation good for half a dozen things besides colds can't be equally effective for colds. A cold calls for a COLD remedy! Grove's Laxative Bromo Quinine ’s what a cold requires. It is expressly a cold remedy. It is interial and direct. It is complete in effect, it does the four things necessary. First, it opens the bowels, gently but thoroughly. Second, it combats the cold germs in the system and reduces the fever. Third, it relieves the headache and grippy feel-
Face Terrible with Hard, Red Pimples. Healed by Cuticura. “My skin break out in pimples that were very sore ana were hard and red. They came in blotches and itched and ached like small boils. The itching was so bad I could hardly stand the bedding and some nights I could not sleep. In two weeks my face was terrible, much worse on my chin. “This lasted about six weeks when I began using Cuticura Soap and Ointment, and I used about four cakes of Cuticura Soap and one box of Cuticura Ointment and I was healed.” (Signed) Mrs. E. E. Davkin, 501 N. Maumee Sc. Tecumseh. Mich. ffitlCUl-A Sop 25c. Ointment 25c and 50c. Talcum 25c. |U** *** Q Proprietors: Pott. Dm* A Chemical Corp., Malden, tm.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
RILEY HOSPITAL, ORPHANAGE TO GETS2OO,OOO Agreement in Proctor Will Case Is Reached in Danville Trial. By Time * Special DANVILLE. Nov. 2.—As a result of agreement reached in the James Proctor will case, two Indianapolis charitable organizations will receive $200,000, and $300,000 will be spent in building a home for elderly men and women at Indianapolis. The $200,000 will go to the James Whitcomb Riley hospital for children and the Indianapolis orphans’ home. Decree was entered in the contest case by Circuit Judge A. J. Stephenson after the agreement tvas announced by Paul G. Davis, one of the attorneys in the case. The property was left by Mr. Proctor, former part owner of an Indianapolis department store, in trust to his widow, Mrs. Mary Jane Proctor. In her will, Mrs. Proctor, who died in 1932, bequeathed the property in trust for the benefit, comfort and care of children, the trustees selecting the orphanage and Riley hospital as the beneficiaries. NRA CODE SESSION SET Apartment Owners Asked to Attend Hearing Tuesday. All apartment operators and owners have been asked by the Apartment Owners Association to attend a hearing at 3 Tuesday in Chamber of Commerce building before state NRA officials on a proposed code for the industry. President H. H. Woodsmall announced tlat T. A. Moynihan will be spok’""an for the gnup.
How are Your Nerves?
IF your day begins with nerves frayed, backache, headache or periodical pains, you need Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription. Read what Mrs. E. R. Caskey of 1321 Silver Ave., Indianapolis, says: “After
mv babv girl arrived I began to have spells with my nerves and head I rouldn’t sit down and talk to my friends, if I did it just seemed as though I would have a nervous spell. I just kept on suffering this way until I knew I must do something for myself, so I got three bottles of Pr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription and used Dr. Pierce’s Lotion Tablets and in a few weeks I was feeing like myself again.’’ Sold by druggists. Write to Dr. Pierre’* Clinic, Buffalo, IV Y„
KeiUff l OUTLET? SHOE STORES Reliable shoes at lowest pfticffl NOW 2SI) E. Washington St. —3- 203 W. Washington St. STORES 109-111 S. Illinois St.
! ing. Fourth, it tones the entire system and fortifies against further attack. Anything less than that is j taking chances. Grove’s Laxative Bromo Quinine contains nothing harmful and is absolutely safe to take. For more I than forty years it has been the j standard cold and grippe tablet of | the world, the formula always keeping pace with Modern Medicine. Every druggist sells Grove's Laxative Bromo Quinine, 30c and 50c. Good druggists won't try to talk you into a substitute for the sake of a few’ pennies extra profit. When you feel a cold coming on, don't wait or delay or bother with makeshift methods, but go right to your druggist for Grove’s Laxative Bromo Quinine. Always ask for it by full name and look for the letters L B Q stamped on every tablet.
STORE GROUP EXPANDS Twenty-First Rosenberger Wallpaper Unit Opened in Michigan. Miss Emma Foster, local manager of the Martin Rosenberger Wallpaper Company store. 302 North Delaware street, has been informed of the'TTpening of anew Martin Rosenberger wallpaper store at: Grand Rapids. Mich. This is the twenty-first unit of
// = W 4 Good Place to Eat—GOLDSTEINS RESTAURANT 0 , * ' ,Li ncoin 1301 STORE HOURS DAILY (Except Saturday) 8:30 A. M. TO 5:30 P. M. Lady, Look in the Mirror! FURRED | COATS MBMJtm —in the mirror will tell you more about its 'witching •if '*■* I style and superior quality than we could tell you in an jjjiy Mandel! 3*4 .T 4 tManchurian I ■ ■ wolf! ■ ■ ■ ■-wmjJW Lap ‘ w! ■ Don't just read about these coat values but come see them and be happily surprised. Their all-wool crepes are tailored 9 f * wmmMM by the hands of experts, and their smart furs are heaped ma- WMff J§|||P yA/f///, / jestically to frame your face. Black and wanted colors! \% /g Wsmf Warm inner linings! And the price speaks for itself! w# Kill * Sheared Rabbit t Chinese Dog (GOLDSTEIN'S Second Floor) y, - 'f _ „ , . _ _ , Ask Our * Big Value in Men s Credit Department About rr j BROADCLOTH our io-pay plan SHIRTS 72x#4~P ART-WOOL jj njjk yj Collar Attached Style BLANKETS \\ Jfff / \ St.l9 Quality P „ R . v\l) jl -77 tLc) / 7811110,1 —‘ pair ' / Just shirts you like to buy and wear, --- • i>i m l I \\r men. Choice of white, blue, tan, green, ><t | I I y and gray .. . colors guaranteed not to fc • RoSO / | I ' fade. Pre-shrunk collars, too. ' * Ol'Chid MEN’S SILK AND RAYON SOCKS First quality, fancy socks, made with double soles and jE RBg jjSafc? > ! M'l reinforced heels; sizes 10 to 12. Pair •■'-K'yp-. ™ •>- iv (GOLDSTEIN’S Street Floor) - ,)C Layaway! 2 -> c a Week ■ You will choose these lovely block plaid blankets for their extra large size, extra heavy weight, extra quality and extra low price. They contain 5^ Quilt Frame FMs / "'° s ’ n "" Space A sturdy, ratchet roil- _ 'vi er type frame, de- j jM 9 5 signed to make quilting easier. Special at I’se Our 10-Pay Plan or Layaway A very substantial board supported at three points; complete 'llirfWM bh pad and cover. No. 2 Willow 36xfi Window CLOTHES tO SHADES DRAPERY PANELS BASKET 98® I £Reen J for sl ' „ , , , Good cloth shades, and WEJI -gr I I I 0£ Trooical Net va goot * t * ual ' good rollers; have slight il |1 S j * ity, substantial basket. irregularities. T WITH ) EACH (GOLDSTEIN’S HOCSEWAKES, BASEMENT) BULLION Thp 1 FRINGE r; LOKCE R WEARING IY I Slip Cover Material •] WOMEN’S 1 81 A serviceable, figured fabric, +O% \ f i F ilill in choice of rust, or green. \d. Jl Jg| CRETONNES \ I and CRASHES \|f , rop: New fall patterns, in- —f and homespun weaves MO© I LA \ fall and Winter Shadex eluding warp prints; R Cfi in green, rust, red and | \ \ Ine ch ardonized stockings that u, 20c quality, yard mulberry: 54-inch width. Vard j U \\ tie and wear long. Lay i n a sunn . t .“ I (GOLDSTEIN’S Third Floor, ( Y\jN A — I ■ l,eS d ® not affect their wear I Dainty, Economical ' I § UNDERWEAR Save on Domestics Ol Fine ) | ij.% i Step,™ 32-In. FEATHER TICKING, yard 19c QUALITY ■ Uc . Panties 16-In. PART-LINEN TOWELING, yard 7V 2 c RAYON ) (Bloomers 36-In. BLEACHED TUBING, limit 6 yards. Yd., 8c Women's and misses’ smart undies, trimmed MOUNTAIN MIST QUILT COTTON, roll 39c with lace or in contrasting colors. They will 36-In. COMFORT CRETONNE, yard 12C wear well, and are easily laundered. 81-In. UNBLEACHED SHEETING, yard 25c Women's Knit Bloomers 36 ■ ,n, ° h UT,NG FLANNEL ’ bIack and * hite y vyi\ Warm indeed, are these cream cneCK, yard lUC i \r\ tint cotton bloomers, 3 6’ ln * BLEACHED MUSLIN, soft, no starch, \ ’( j, lustrous rayon stripes. Pair.. yard 9c (GOLDSTEIN’S Street Hoor) (GOLDSTEIN'S Street Floor)
the company, which hsw embarked on a policy of expansion during the last year. Other stores owned and operated by the company are located throughout Michigan. Indiana, Kentucky and Ohio. Fall From Buggy Fatal LINCOLNVILLE. Ind.. Nov. 2—A skull fracture suffered by Matthew Eviston, 20, when he fell from a buggy on a gravel road, caused his death at his home here last night.
EXPERT WILL LECTURE Home Problems Will Be Discussed at Walker Casino. Miss Helen T. Best, home economics expert, will give a lecture at the Walker Casino Nov. 11 on home problems. Groceries and other prizes will be offered in a series of contests. Admittance is free, ac-
NO V. 2, 1933
cording to an announcement by Q. Blackshear. manager.
SORE THROAT? GLY-RINE 35c AT YOUR DRUGGIST’S
