Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 151, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 November 1933 — Page 4

PAGE 4

EVERYTHING A MAN NEEDS... IN The One-Stop Men’s Shop AYRES DOWNSTAIRS STORE

Two stairways lead direct to the One-Stop-Men’s Shop—both direct from Me- ~ ridian Street. Here you’ll find everything under the sun a man needs, from a pair of Gloves to a brand new Winter Suit or Overcoat ... all at lowest possible prices ... all of enduring quality . . . sizes for men and young men! I 2-Trouser Topcoats and Overcoats or rr T o have smart styling, faultless tailoring and fine **3 fabrics! The selection and assortment is large that we can fit you no matter what size you require, in regulars, touts, slims. Fine looking single or double breasted models. The exceptional for times like these, especially since you get 2 pairs coats and Overcoats J.'L/'Tn Z C Z. ret good service . . . good looks . . . smart tailoring in each t. They're garments that you can wear with real satisfaction y have the correct styling for this season, they come in blues, irowns and tans. Half and full belted styles. Models for men - >r Men s Clothing, $15.95 and $17.95 Men! Wear Just One of Our \ "Belnord Shirts and Youll Bea j Belnord "Fan' 7 for Life! The Pt ICC H • Fancy Patterns j Is Oti/V B* " • Collar-Attached Men make this test yourself! Buy just one Belnord shirt! Wear Ip I jm\\ <\ >\ • it! See how smartly the collar fits—how comfortable through the shoulders! And after it’s washed you’ll notice that it Still fits—and > m■ f| ‘ the colors still as bright as newt Man. that’s QUALITY! Buy an- jVA VjYm m other Belnord—a dozen—each will be satisfying as the first one! In a full range of plain colors, white, and fancies ... in both collar at- \ X ' It'B More Economical to Huy These Better Quality Shorts More economical because—full seat—ban- \ \ C 'V : ' jo seat for comfort. Fast colors—finer fabric for service—all of which means more WEAR! V* V Also Finer Athletic Shirts, each 3.5 c y \ \ Men s Fancy Socks Knit Union Suits 1 Fine sauce needle knit- Oneita and Pontiac tin- i :::',r‘ 0 h.;r "X h \T?:; O ••. * mmb r,i^w Th,.r 3 otur> *lv* M vrn nfL Elmlc knl M lon*cr **M lc than nunl W •* * retell at point, where M { Smart. neat pattern, in neeiled. >hort ,lee,e. an- * J • >■j dekirnhle hde,. Siie, 10 PAIR kle length. Irregular,. EACH

DOWNSTAIRS ** AYRESj

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

FERMOR CANNON IS ELECTED TO HOME LOAN JOB Named Director by Federal Board. Dispatch From Capital Says. The home loan bank board elections committee today made public, in dispatches from Washington, results of the secret election by bank members for directors of the local federal home loan bank. The local bank is for the IndianaMichigan district. In cases of ties, directors were named and by-elcc-tions will be held Dec. 5. Three directors were named from Groups A. B and C, into which the membership is divided according to size. Directors named were: Paired, Ix>wrey Bertelson. Benton Harbor, Mich., and George A. Schaal, Terre Haute, Group C: Fermor S. Cannon. Indianapolis, 3 years. Group A; Harold T. Donaldson, Lansing, Mich., 3 years, B: paired, Paul H. Graham, Decatur, 111., and Grant H. Longenecker. Benton Harbor. Mich., 3 years, B: Myron H. Gray, Muncie. 1 year, B: paired, Hugh G. Keegan. Ft. Wayne, and Theodore J. Louden, Bloomington, 1 year. C; Charles N. Remington, Grand Rapids. 2 years. A: J. I. Van Keuren. Lansing, 1 year, A„ and William C. Walz, Ann Arbor, Mich., 2 years. B.

INCREASE IN AIR TRAVEL SHOWN - Municipal Port Figures Are Released by Major Company. | Increase of 9 per cent in trans- | port and transient passengers through municipal airport in the S first nine months this year, com- , pared with the same period last ) year, was reported today by Super- ! intendent Charles E. Cox Jr. There were 12,136 transient and i transport passengers through the port, an increase of 913. The total passengers at the port numbered 14,628, a decrease of 363. There were 3,766 student flights at the port, increase of 364.

HEZE (the irrepressible) CLARK, referee and newshawk, proved to the fans of Anderson last night that he can “take it.” Mr. Clark, who played football at Indiana university when foot- j ball really was rough, is known widely throughout the state as a guy who can “talk tough” to maulers like Strangler Lewis and get away with it. Last night Mr. Clark refereed the bout between George Gable of Cincinnati and Don Cortez, “the terrible Spaniard,” in Anderson. Growling fiercely at each other, the “rasslers” met near the ropes in a fierce headlock. They tumbled out of the ring and off the platform landing four feet below with a thud. Still locked in crushing grips they rolled under the platform. Mr. Clark went under the platform, too. The men slugged fiercely at each other, missing everything in sight except Mr. Clark, who was trying to pry them apart. Today Mr. Clark touched his jaw tenderly. “It, ain’t glass, anyhow,” he boasted. MOTHER KILLED. SON HURT IN TRAIN CRASH Automobile Is Struck Near Home at West Middletown. By f nitrrt Prefix KOKOMO. Ind.. Nov. 3.—Mrs. Ruth New land, West Middletown, was killed and her' 3-year-old son Joseph was injured when tfyeir automobile was struck by a Nickel Plate train near their home last j night. Bedford to Ask $79,842 By Timrsi Special BEDFORD. Nov. 3.—Preparations | were being made here today to ap- ! ply for a federal reconstruction finance corporation loan of $79,842 for a waterworks improvement pro- j gram here.

Why Hospitals Use a Liquid Laxative

Hospitals and doctors have always used liquid laxatives. And the public is fast returning to laxatives in liquid form. Do you know the reasons? The dose of a liquid laxative can be measured. The action can be controlled. It forms no habit; you need not take a “double dose” a day or two later. .Xor will a mild liquid laxative irritate the kidneys. The right liquid laxative brings a perfect movement, and there is no discomfort at the time, or after. The wrong cathartic may keep you constipated as long as you keep on using it! And the habitual use of irritating salts, or of powerful drugs in the highly concentrated form of pills and tablets may prove injurious. A week with a properly prepared liquid laxative like Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin will tel! you a lot. A few' weeks’ time, and your bowels can be “as regular as clockwork.” Dr. Caldwell’s Svrup Pepsin is an approved liquid laxative which all druggists keep ready for use.lt makes an ideal family laxative; effective for all ages, and may be given th* youngest child. Member N. R. A.

Heze Again Irrepressible Mr. Clark Proves He’s Tough.

ENDING 25 YEARS OF SERVICE

Iff FI | aNSSF Mi Am kl 1L |l yMM MM fIU

Twenty-five years of service as organist of the Meridian Street M. E. church will be completed by Mrs. Myra Goodnow Ciippingor. Sunday. She began the study of the organ under Charles F. Hansen in 1904, and was the first of his pupils to be graduated. Recently she has studied with Charles Henry Doersam, of New York, warden of the American Guild of Organists, and head of organ in Columbia university.

Newsreel Shows Tragic Plane Crash in Mid-Air

Graham McNamee Reports Important Events in Times Film. Appaliing scenes in Amarillo, Tex., I where three die when two planes of a “flying circus" crash in midair and fall into the heart of the I city, are to be seen in the current | issue of the Times-Universal Newsi reel. Graham McNamee, noted radio announcer and the screen's talking reporter, describes these and the I other important events in the reel. While stunting, the ships hit each other, one falling in the middle of a busy street and the other plowing 1 its way through the roof of a laun- : dry. The hapless occupants of one | plane are mangled beyond recogni- i tion in one of the most unusual j aerial accidents of the year. The other pilot was badly hurt. Other important news events re- ! ported by McNamee include scenes I of the U. S. S. Chicago returning J to her base after a mysterious fog- j bank collision with a British ; freighter off Point Sur. Cal.; im- i pres e ive view's of the Graf Zeppelin j leaving Glenview, 111., on her w'ay ! home to Germany; a remarkable | exhibition of a new' stream-lined. ! self-propelled railroad coach at Dearborn. Mich. Striking views at Corvallis, Ore., where students celebrate a gridiron | triumph w'ith a sixty-five-foot bon- j fire: Soviet airmen starting an epochal flight into the stratosphere j at Moscow’; Mussolini reviewing j Italian policemen at Rome, and j thrilling scenes in the Yale bowl at i New Haven, Conn., as the Army defeats Yale, 21-0, in a classic con- j test.

PUSH PROBE OF HOLDUP GANGS Shooting of Gas Attendant Brings Search for Bandit Mobs. By I nilril Press BLOOMINGTON, Ind, Nov. 3.—A thorough investigation of crime conditions in Monroe county and Bloomington was promised today following the shooting of David R. Deckard, filling station proprietor. Mr. Deckard’s condition is serious. He was shot by one of three men who entered his station and attempted to carry out a slot machine. Authorities said they would investigate reported activities of a slot machinge gang which has been operating in the county. Friends and relatives of Mr. Deckard gathered around the jail last night, eager to be near in case his assailants were captured. Precautions were taken against possible mob violence. Officials said that the wounded man gave them the names of the three men.

NINE LOSE LIVES IN BLAZE IN BROOKLYN Negroes Perish as Flames Sweep Tenement. ! /?,1/ Vvited Pi rn n NEW YORK. Nov. 3. Nine Negroes were burned to death early today when they were trapped in bed by a fire of suspicious origin that swept a three-story dwelling in a crowded tenement section of Brooklyn. The house was a roaring furnace from top to bottom when firemen arrived. Three families occupied the I structure and out of twelve persons who lived there, only three escaped. They were burned seriously, and one was not expected to live. BOY SCOUT TROOP 3 TO ATTEND SERVICE F. O. Belzer to Explain Movies Taken at Jamboree in Austria. Boy Scout Troop 3, Irvington Presbyterian church, will assist with the special service at the church, Johnson and Julian avenues, at 7:30 Sunday night. The Rev. John B. Ferguson, pastor. has arranged with F. O. Belzer. chief of the Indianapolis Boy Scouts, to be present and explain the moving pictures of the BoyScout international jamboree held in Austria last summer. The public is invited. Os 12.000.000 insured persons in England. 7.000,000 are in continuous employment. 2.000.000 undergo brief periods of unemployment, and 1,000.000 are out of work one month in every four.

STATE OFFICIAL DIES SUDDENLY George Terrill. Field Agent for Accounts Board, Served 16 Years. George Connelly Terrill, 78. for sixteen years a field examiner for the state board of accounts and a former state insurance commissioner, died suddenly at his home, 410 South Emerson avenue, last night. Born in Moores Hill. Ind.. Nov. 7. 1855, Mr. Terrill attended the public schools in Dearborn. Ripley county, and law school at Lebanon, O. Following his graduation, Mr. Terrill taught school and later became schopl superintendent of Ripley county. He left teaching to become state insurance commissioner, serving under two Democratic administrations. Sixteen years ago he became a field examiner for thp state board of accounts, which position he held at the time of his death. Mr. Terrill is survived by three daughters. Miss Fay Terrill, who lived with her father. Miss May Terrill, and Mrs. R. L. Morgan of Panama Canal Zone.

Double Honor Wins Contest, Given Prize by Roosevelt.

By T niled Press WASHINGTON. 'Nov. 3. Joseph S. Brendler. young graduate of Messmer high school, Milwaukee, today received five SIOO bills from President Roosevelt as first prize in the fifth annual Gorgas Memorial institute essay contest. The President is honorary president of the institute and awarded the prize in the presence of a group including Admiral Cary T. Grayson, president of the institute, and Mrs. Henry L. Doherty, wife of the donor of the award. Young Brendler’s essay was judged the best out of 18.000 submitted by high school students on the subject “The Problem of the Mosquito and Other Insect Life in Relation to Sanitation, Health and Industry.” TRUCK GROUP TO MEET Several States to Be Represented at Session Here Nov. 11. The sixteenth annual convention of the Motor Truck Association df Indiana will be held Nov. 11 at the Lincoln. Delegates from neighboring states will be present to discuss interstate problems. The trucking code, tariffs, new trucking laws and their application will be discussed at the morning session of the convention.

Ease Pain Now In Few Minutes

VIM AFRAID ILL HAVE TO 'j I M.SS THE DANCE- AT THE \ CLUB TONIGHT. Ip LOVE TO/ GO, BUT IVE / —~gr~r VI tL Af! i,WFUL s' (OH, DONT GIVE | HEADACHE...| l UP! SEND OUT j N. ( j BAYER ASPIB'N \ Ns/? A ! AND TAKE TWO { RIGHT ;

A Discovery That's Bringing Fast Relief To Millions

Now comes amazingly quick relief from headaches, rheumatism, neuritis, neuralgia ... the fastest safe relief , it is said , yet discovered. Those results are due to a scientific discovery by which a Bayer Aspirin Tablet begins to dissolve, or disintegrate, in the amazing space of two seconds after touching moisture. And hence to start “taking hold” of pain a few- minutes after taking. The illustration of the glass, here, tells the story. A Bayer Tablet starts to disintegrate almost instantly you swallow it. And thus is ready to go to work almost instantly. AYhen you buy, though, see that you get the Genuine BAYER Aspirin. For Bayer Aspirin’s quick relief always say "BAYER Aspirin.”

NOV. 3, 1933

CHOIR PROGRAM WILL FEATURE ' MUSIC FESTIVAL Mid-Westminster Guild to Present Recital at Rite Cathedral. Indianapolis residents will be treated to a rare privilege Sunday afternoon when the Mid-West-minster Conductors’ Guild presents its choirs in a music festival at the Scottish Rite cathedral at 3:45. The Guild consists of men and women who have studied at the Westminster Choir school, Princeton. N. J.. and who are carrying out the Westminster plan in churches of> the Middle West. George Frederick Holler, i.unister of music at the First Presbyterian church of this city, is president of the guild. The program is as follows: Chora! Prelude ' Harh Andante Rhetnoerger Berceuse Sealy In the Cathedral'' Zimmerman Lee Walker, organist Call to Worship, the Rev D. H Hammond Choral Response Dav Is nving in the West Sherd In Hymn Now Thank We Ail Our Lora'' Crtiger Soloist, Nun Danket Anthems—"Lo a Voire to Heaven Sounding .. Bortianskv Combined choirs ‘ Like as the. Hart". .Palestrina Psalm 150" .... Franck Prayer bv the Rev O. S Steele Choral Response - O God, We Pray” Anthems—"A Joyous Christmas Song Oevarrt High school choirs •'Triumph! Thanksgiving" Rachmaninoff Combined choirs Address by the Rev George Arthur Frant* Anthems —"O Praise the Lord a! Heaven" Arenskv ‘Hallelujah Chorus" from "The Messiah" .... Handel Benediction, the Rev Warren W Wiant Choral Response The Lord Bless You and Keep You" Lutkin The choirs participating in the festival are the following: First M. E. church. West, Lafayette. Mrs. Helpn S. Anderson, conductor; First U. P. church, Springfield. 0.. Mrs. Charlotte Baumgartner, conductor; Covenant Presbyterian church, Springfield, 0.. Ruth Tngle, conductor: Broadway M. E. church, Indianapolis, Willard Beck, conductor; North M. E. church. Indianapolis, William Kugel, conductor; First Presbyterian church. Indianapolis. George Frederick Holler, conductor; King Avenue M. E. church, Columbus. 0.. Herbert Huffman, conductor; Northminster Presbyterian church. Columbus. 0.. Harold Reusser, conductor; St. Paul Lutheran church, Richmond, Mrs. Marjorie Beck Lohman, conductor; Reid Memorial U. P. church, Richmond/ Robert Dafler, conductor; First M. E. church. Zanesville, 0.. Mrs. Blanche Mathena, conductor; Memorial Presbyterian church. Dayton. 0., Mrs. W. H. Overpack, conductor; Central Presbyterian church, Dayton. 0.. Mrs. Elsie Wirsching, conductor; First M. E. church, Sidney, 0., Mrs. G. U. Rhees, conductor; Wyoming Presbyterian church, Cincinnati, Christian Ulrich, conductor; First M. E. church, Mishawaka, Gladys Wagner, conductor. The guest conductor is to be G, A. Lehmann, who is head of the music department of the ColgateRochester divinity school, Rochester, N. Y. Mr. Lehmann was formerly assistant director of Westminster choir. Lee. Welker, organist at North M. E. church, of this city, will be guest organist. MRS. ROOSEVELTAiDS MOTHER OF TWELVE Buffalo Widow Gets Clothing, Foo<| After Appeal. Bu i m ili'il Prct* BUFFALO. N. Y„ Nov. 3.—A personal appeal to Mrs. Franklin D, Roosevelt has brought relief to a Buffalo widow, the mother of twelve children. After the widow wrote of her plight to the first lady of the land, Mrs. Roosevelt asked one of her personal secretaries to investigate and make a personal report. Ever since, there has been enough food and clothing in the house. BENEFIT CARD PARTY PLANNED BY DRUID3 Merlin Chapter to Give Event at Hall Tomorrow Night. Merlin chapter No. 6, United An* cient Order of Druids, will hold $ euchre and bunco party for th# benefit of their relief fund tomo row night at 8:15 in Druid’3 29 South Delaware street, Charles Geider. William Bofie* steel, Harry Stafford and Charing Cummins are the committee charge. The public is invited.

2. IN AN HOUR r \ WELL, DID BAYER S ASPIRIN STOP THAT V -V HEADACHE ? i fIT CERTAINLY DID-) ' \ - ' AND IN A FEW / | NM NOTES ! IT* \ ‘P* ReMABXABir,BUT \ , % ■ IVE HOT ATAACF -1 -V- / _ . OP HEADACHE I ETT./l. 9 j II I I come right on gr r y !■ ■ , OVER ! I \ \ I j^ —

WHY BAYER ASPIRIN p WORKS SO FAST I Drop a Bayer Tablet I*l in a glass of ua'er I ' Note that BEFORE A it touches bottom, it |. W "I" HR has started to dis- ■ I integrate. 1 1 What it does in this ms glass it does in your JH stomach. Hence its if] fast action .u 1 Does Not Harm the Heart