Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 185, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 December 1933 — Page 2

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WORKERS SEEK MACHINES FOR RELIEF SEWING

Red Cross Asking Loan of Equipment to Speed Aid to Needy. An appeal for fifty sewing machines was made by the Indianapolis Red Cross yesterday to enable the speeding up of its garment-making activities. The sowing work is being conducted on such a large scale that more sewing machines are in service than usual and as a result it will be necessary to find additional equipment to make possible the manufacture of garments for needy families. Mrs. Hugh McGibeny, director of Red Cross volunteer work, issued the call. "There must be literally hundreds of unused sewing machines s f ored away in Indianapolis homes.' Mrs. McGibenv said. ‘lf their owners will assist the Red Cross in thus emergency, they are requested to call Lincoln 6924 and we will send for the machines. The equipment will be returned to the owners in good condition, - ’ she said. CHRISTMAS PARTY ON SOUTH SIDE PLANNED Surprise Event to Be Staged at Garfield Park on Dee. 23. Arrangements for a Christmas surprise party for south side children to be held Dec. 23 in the Garfield park community house were discussed last night in the traffic department, at police headquarters. Those attending were Mrs. H. A. Bell of the Garfield Park Women's Club, Sergeant Timothy McMahon and Patrolman Harry Smith, both of the police accident prevention bureau, and Walter C. Rothermel and Arthur Houston, president and vice-president, respectively, of the central committee of south side civic clubs. The accident prevention bureau and the city recreation department will assist the women's club in holding the party. Dies In Train-Car Crash By Time* Special SEYMOUR, Dec. 13.—Mrs. L. S. Willis, River Forest, 111., was killed instantly last night when the automobile in w’hieh she was riding alone was struck by a Pennsylvania train at Peters switch, seven miles north of here.

GLASSES • ON CREDIT • ll.i W. Wash. St. "“'gj;,"

Give Useful Gifts % This year, more than ever before, • it's smart to be practical. Gifts that do more than just please are the vogue. Be wise this year and give a * useful gift that affords the receiver real satisfaction! Th "ARJUNGTON" Net r Number m Brown The "HTOSLANMR” .M adr r>l London G rum dS^BHSHw^ __ , mi . - , . Cel/ - Smart, Ncu TO' Bf 1 Extra-Soft Leather. 9uc ■>/ the papular, aHßßßSHß^W^3i|||safc. Bern “Broun Bu.-hnt ’, jPiyp|K?Sß^BWj^jßp^j‘'a bit tba tea.xm Scotch Gram is atuur< a Fall and V ,*' \ Venter Favorite. eyes will tell yon that these new Freeman Shoes sos Fall and Winter are up to the - minute in stvle. The "ssi T?rJZZd F D% Wear a pair, and vonr feet will tell you that Freeman is 1 the leader in comfort, quality and shoe-crafting. We are proud of Freeman quality —glad to offer our cuscorners such fine footw ear at such popular prices. Come in and let as show you these new modelv

P 7 49 YEARS lAsw 49 YEARS \5 fe/ OF RELIABLE r> /Ylf]/t(jl ] A OF RELIABLE \% I STOEVALUES SHOESERV ; a I We liavt leuwd feui generation i

Little Women —How They’ll Smile When They Get Those Warm Clothes

LITTLE Women of St. Paul street! Not Meg, Jo. Beth, and Amy, but Dollie, Waneda, Ella and Catheline. And their mother has no dollars to give to passersby as did Jos “Marmee.” Dollie is 12 and has twins—in dimples. Waneda, well, some might call her the tomboy, is 9. Ella likes kittens Just as B*-th did. but only the strays come by her humble door. While Catheline, only 3, may have a ’‘prissy - ’ tendency. Characters out of a Louisa M. Alcott book, but real because they are children, four sisters in one family, on the list of Clothe-a-Chikl. But instead of the mother

POSTOFFICE ROBBED; LOOT ABOUT $3,000 Registered Mail Taken by Detroit Crooks. Ry United Preen DETROIT, Dec. 13.—Registered mail, stamps and cash totaling between $3,000 and $4,000 were stolen last night from the Alfred street branch postoffice, it was revealed today upon opening. John D. Stackpoole, superintend- I ent of mails, said the burglars obtained approximately S2OO in small chahge in addition to a portion of the stamp supply and one pouch of registered mail. WABASH FACULTY PAY WILL BE MAINTAINED College Trustees Fix Scale for Present Year. No reduction in salaries fori faculty members will be made at | Wabash college during the present! year, according to a decision reached yesterday by the college j board of trustees. The present ; budget will be maintained, and student loans will be continued. The trustees also have announced a determination to carry out plans for improved accommodations for visiting athletic teams. PARAGUAYANS CAPTURE 700 MORE BOLIVIANS Troops in Gran Chaco Area Report Another Great Victory. Ry United Preen ASUNCION, Paraguay, Dec. 13. Paraguayan troops, continuing their vigorous drive in the Gran Chaco area, have captured Fort Samaklay, an official communique said today. Late reports from the front said that 700 more Bolivian troops had been captured. Capture of 8,000 men and 250 officers had been announced previously.

working in a relief agency as Jo s mother did. the mother of Waneda waits for Clothe-a-Child donors to come to her Little Wpmen at Christmas. The Little Women of St. Paul street, in Southtown, have never read of Meg, Jo, Beth and Amy. Living has been mostly relief baskets from the township trustees since babyhood. Their clothing covers them. That's all. m m m DROPPING temperatures mitten their hands with red chap. Winds wrap their ears on their way to school. Their “Marmee” mother to them—knows that relief agencies of the Community Fund will not bring her girls warm clothing for Christmas. She doesn't understand why? She doesn’t know as you know that relief agencies must make their funds last throughout 1934. All the Little Women and Little Men, too, of Clothe-a-Child, have been checked for need by the social service department of the public schools as well as the agencies. You receive their names by calling Riley 5551. You go into the home. You make a date to shop for your Jo or Meg. Flour-sack

A Mile of Dimes A SHRINE to a child, built by a dime, was started today on Washington street, in front of L. S. Ayres Company and S. S. Kresge Company. Clothe-a-Child, of The Indianapolis Times, knowing that many wish to contribute to the campaign tp aid needy school children, offers this spot for the building of “A Mile of Dimes.” Dimes may be laid, edge to edge, over 150 feet of sidewalk, in front of the two stores w'ho so generously granted permission. When one row ends anew one curves for another 150-foot line of dimes. It will be an endless chain with each 150-foot line meaning that $l5O will have been contributed by passersby toward clothing needy school children. Your dimes will buy mittens, grow’ Into sheepskin coats, fatten Into shoes that the snow doesn’t soak through. Men will be there to make change. Day or night, rain or snow, your dime will be there. Just w’here you put it. Then the day before Christmas It will go Into homes where you want It to go to—Clothe-a-Child. It will be a shrine for your dime or as many dimes as you wish to give. You can give any day, any time —midnight or morn, — to this “Mile of Dimes” as Christmas comes.

DEATH DRIVER CLEARED Paul Ehlers Blameless in Accident Fatal to O. M. Pollock. Paul Ehlers. 28, of 1215 Polk street, charged with involuntary manslaughter as a result of striking the late O. M. Pollock with his automobile at Thirteenth and Delaware streets on the night of Nov. 30, was freed In municipal court yesterday. Prosecutor James Watson told Judge Dewey Deyers that Mr. Ehlers was not responsible for the accident, which Mr. Watson had witnessed. A charge against Mr. Ehlers of failing to have an operator’s license also was dismissed.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

underwear is supplanted for the niceties girls like. You are the Judge of their needs. Clothe-a-Child merely desires that its children have one warm outfit. If you can’t clothe your boy or girl the Indianapolis Times will do it for you and send you the name and address of the child. mam THE cost? It ranges from $7 to sl2 for a complete outfit. You are the shopper. The bill is paid by the smiles you get and by the hand of a child cuddling confidently In your own as you go from counter to counter In a department store. Donors to the campaign, bringing the total wlth-tn three of the 150 mark, follow: Employes of Board of Health, elty hall, two children. Police Chief Mike MorriaaeT. two box*. Employes of Georye F. Cram and National Map Company, two children. Anonymous Santa, boy. Thirteen Painters, Civil Work*. Critpus Attucks high srhool, eared for one boy and took another. block's Optical Ladles' League, child. A Lady Who Works Around Fnr, girl. Mrs. North Broadway, girl. Mr. East-side, girl. Civil Workl Men at No. 5 Engine house, girl. Chevrolet Employes Bowling league, Indiana alleys, boy. Sears-Roebuck employes, boy. Delta Alpha class of Blaine Avenue Methodist church, girl. Group of Real Silk Gray-dye and Redye dept., boy. Don't List Me, boy. Ladies' Auxiliary of Firemen’s Association, girl.

New Ford V-8 for 1934 Greater power at still lower cost through new Dual Carburetion—lncreased motoring comfort because of simplified Clear-vision Ventilation —Easier riding through more flexible springs, deeper seat cushions and softer cushion springs Distinctive new appearance Many other features *

IMore Miles Per Gallon —More Power, Speed and Efficiency with Dual Carburetion —Greater Oil Economy The performance and economy of the 1933 Ford V-8 have been the talk of thousands of motorists. Owners said: "Leave it alone, don’t change it.” Dealers said: "Impossible to improve it!” But we have improved it —in every direction. We started with the engine. The Ford V-8 for 1934 is more powerful, more efficient, easier to start in cold weather, yet it is the most economical Ford to operate ever built largely because of the new Dual Carburetor and Dual Intake Manifold. Furthermore, even in the coldest weather the V-8 engine warms up quickly and maintains an efficient operating temperature because of new thermostats in the waterline. Added engine refinements get the details about all of them from the nearest Ford dealer reduce oil consumption and further reduce operating and maintenance costs. 2 Clear-vision Ventilation—and the Windshield Opens There’s nothing to obstruct the view in the new Ford system of Gear-vision Ventilation. It’s

HONOR MEMORY OF NOTED T. B. CLINIC WORKER

Impressive Services Held on Death Anniversary of Dr. Alfred Henry. Honor to the memory of Dr. Alfred Henry, nationally famed worker in the field of tuberculosis control, who died a year ago, was paid yesterday morning at the city hospital, when friends ol Dr. Henry and hospital officials joined in a memo- 1 rial ceremony during which a portrait of the Indianapolis physician was presented to the tuberculosis clinic room by the Marion County j Tuberculosis Association. Attending the ceremony were J representatives of more than a dozen civic agencies which have some part in the community : struggle to bring down the death ; rate from tuberculosis. These included the Indiana Tuberculosis Association, the Indianapolis department of health, the j Indiana State Board of Health, executives of the Sunnyside Sanatorium, the Public Health Nursing Association, the Marion County Board of Health, clinicians and nurses in tuberculosis clinics of the city, the Indiana university school of medicine, the Indianapolis Rotary Club, of which Dr. Henry served as president, and others. The portrait of Dr. Henry was j presented to Dr. Charles Myers, city j hospital superintendent, by Dr. E. M. Amos, president of the tuberculosis association and long co-worker j with Dr. Henry in the work of the ! free tuberculosis clinics. Dr. Stanley Coulter, state chair-1 man for the Christmas seal sale, and | Dr. M. Joseph Barry, president of j the city board of health, spoke of Dr. Henry’s- unusual community service during his life and of the progress made toward eventual control of the “white plague’ ’under his guidance. Dr. Amos, presenting the portrait, emphasized that the ceremony was appropriate on the first anniversary of Dr. Henry’s death, “to pay honor and respect for achievements which were his as a pioneeer in a comparatively new j endeavor in the field of medicine.” |

ACCUSED BOUND OVER IN REFORMATORY CASE Storekeeper Charged With Receiving Goods Stolen From Institution. Charged with receiving stolen goods Robert Davey. storekeeper. 537 West Morris street, was bound

Turn NOW to Ayres Downstairs Store's Special 8-Page SectionFeaturing Dependable Christmas Gifts at Good-Will Prices! You'll Find It Both Profitable and Pleasant to Do All Your Shopping Downstairs at Ayres

P ut It to the Test Ride in this New Ford V-8 for 1934 and find out—personally —what it can do. It is the one sure way to find out which car gives you the most for your money. built-in simplicity itself. The same handle that raises the window glass also slides it back horizontally to the ventilating position, and then the forward motion of the car draws the air out of the body. Drafts are eliminated, passenger comfort is assured, and windshield will not fog in cold weather. Another interesting feature of the Ford system the windshield can be opened! This, and the cowl ventilator, provide the additional air needed for hot-weather comfort. 3 Greater Beauty—New Radiator Shell and Grille—Fenders in Color A car to be proud of, the Ford V-8 for 1934 has newly designed chromium-plated radiator shell and grille, and other distinctive features. Interiors are more attractive, with new tufted upholstery,

ever to the grand jury on SSOO bond in municipal court yesterday by Municipal Judge Dewey E. Myers. Davey was held In connection with the theft of shirts and pants from the Indiana state vreformatory at Pendleton several weeks ago. From testimony of two inmates of the prison, George Dillon and Bruce

new mouldings, new cove-type headlining, new instrument panel, new arm rests and new hardware. Swivel-type sun visors in De Luxe bodies prevent glare from front or side. Fenders on all De Luxe cars are in color to harmonize with body colors wheel colors optional. New enamel finish on all bodies and fenders has greater wearing quality and more enduring luster. 4 Transverse Springs—Comfort with Stability and Safety Ford transverse springs provide the utmost stability and safety. Placed crosswise, they tend to prevent the body from tilting on uneven roads, and turns can be taken safely at relatively high speeds. Free and easy action of all four wheels is permitted because the outer flexible tips of the springs are attached to the axles. Thus the most sensitive parts of the springs receive road shocks first and absorb them before they reach the body. The advantages of the solid axle are retained. PRICED AS LOW AS *515 F. O. B. Detroit, plus freight, tax and delivery. Bumpert and spare tire extra. Small down payment . Easy terms.

iDEC. 13. 1933

Michael, evidence was given that several hundred dollars worth ol apparel manufactured at the institution has been diverted in transit. Michael alleged that- he had been told to hand over the shipments of clothes to a certain truck driver by one of the reformatory guards, for which he received $2 a month.