Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 222, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 January 1934 — Page 5

JAN. 25, 1934

RETIRED CITY GROCER DEAD: FUNERAL SET William A. Schofield, 76. to Be Buried in Crown Hill. . La*t nte* for William A Schofield. 78. who died yesterday at the home of his daughter. Mrs. Eva L. Hitz. 5752 East Washington street, after an illness of several months, will be held at 2 tomorrow. The rites will be in the home of another daughter. Mrs. Clausing. 5852 Lowell avenue. Dr David M. Edwards. First Friends chyrch pastor. will ronduet the services. Buriat will be in Crown Hill. Mr. Schofield, a grocer here thir-ty-five years, operated a store at Sixteenth street and Central avenue for a number of years prior to his retirement in 1925. He was born in Indianapolis Feb. 1. 1855. a son of Samuel Schofield, pioneer Indianapolis resident who settled here in 1833. His father built the old Schofield mill, now known as the Fall creek mill. Fail creek and Forty-second street. The son operated the mill for a time following his father's death. Mr. Schofield is survived by four daughters, Mrs. Hitz, Mrs. Clausing and Miss Helen Schofield. Indianapolis, and Mrs J. H. Fauver, Detroit; a son, William A. Schofield Jr. Indianapolis, and four grandchildren. Walter Fisher Is Buried Services for Walter Fisher. 36, of 920 North Bradley avenue, who died Monday in St. Vincent's hospital, we£ held at 8:30 this morning in the home of his father, Omer L. Fisher, 1335 South East street, and at 9 in St. Patrick's Catholic church. Burial was in Holy Crass cemetery'. Mr. Fisher was a clerk for the Big Four railroad thirteen years and a lifelong resident of Indianapolis. Steel Treater Is Dead Marshall G. Spencer. 45. of 4957 West Fourteenth street, died unexpectedly in his home yesterday. Funeral arrangements have not been completed. Mr. Spencer w’as born in Philadelphia, and had worked as a steel treater there and in Boston and Wilmington. Del., before coming to Indiana about fifteen years ago. He was a member of the Baptist church and the Masonic order. Surviving him are the widow, Mrs. Edith Spencer; tw’o daughters. Miss Agnes and Miss Edith Spencer; his mother. Mrs. Emma Spencer, Germantown. Pa.; two sisters, Mrs. John Kilrain, Walnut Park. Cal., and Mrs. May Archer. Germantown, and three brothers. Charles Spencer. Indianapolis; William Spencer. Germantown. and Walter Spencer, Pensauken. N. J. Rites Set for Suicide Victim Last rites for Lewis S. Rosenthal, 56. Meeker hotel, who died yesterday in city haspital of self-inflicted wounds following a suicide attempt Tuesday, will be held at 10 Saturday in the Moore Sc Kirk funeral home. Burial will be in Memorial Park cemetery. Hold Funeral for Persian Funeral services for Babajan Solomon, 45, of 3360 North Meridian street, who died yesterday in Methodist hospital after an illness of several weeks, were to be held jtt 3 today in the Ragsdale Sc Price funeral home. Burial will be in Chicago. Mr. Solomon, a native of Persia, was a World war veteran, wounded in action, and a member of Memorial past No. 3. American Legion, and Calvin Prather lodge. F. Sc A. M. He is survived by a sister. Mrs. John Jacob. Chicago; brother. John M. Solomon, Indianapolis, and his parents, living in Persia. I. B. Mooshy, Indianapolis, is an uncle. Aged City Woman Dead Follow ing a ten days' illness, Mrs. Lena Thornbrought, 85. died yesterday at the home of her niece, Mrs. George Ostheimer, 4200 West Michigan street. Mrs. Thornbrought was bom near Connersville. the daughter of Alexander and Anna Anderson Walter. She lived .for a number of years in Zionsville. coming here about four years ago. She was a member of the Methodist Episcopal church. Last rites will be held at 10:30 Saturday in the Zionsville M. E. church, with burial there. She is survived by Mrs. Ostheimer. and a brother. John Walter. Chicago.

f HERE'S MV 1 AiccMor„ wuc „ (oh, I DIDN'T MEAN THAT-IIOVE BILL SO! U, -ff*J \ BOUQUET, 6IBLsT) l- £LkT BOUQUET {wjjwk ( BUT SCRUSWNS CLOTHES !S WEARIN6 me our AT AAY WEDDING? TWO ) s v : v ' vVJto- _ pflf? I MONTHS LATER YOU A 3/ ( WHY, VOL) $1(17 CHILD ! mmut' J -Tl M- . uJ&A (ojljLP ] ELOPED WITH B/LL ’ f next washday | AND, DARLING! RINSO MAKES \ ( hate to see voo work ) CLOTHES LAST 2 OR 3 TIMES LONGER.) / WE LL SAVE LOTS Or MONEY JjjP i*6 TYE KIND t 0 your clothes—to your Rinso is grand for dishes and all m Kyy iW. % Rinso, the soap that soaks clothes u biter, a package at your grocer’s and see for y' 'jLc / [jjj? jjJ brighter — makes them last many times yourself why it s America s mr a longer—saves you money. . most popular package soap! washers, the home-making experts of jj b|’ f Good' .-- ~. | : t The biggest—selling package soap in America

Indiana in Brief Lively Spots in the State’s Happenings Put Together ‘Short and Sweet.’

By Timr* Sprrinl GREENTOWN. Jan. 25.—Horses are to replace tractors on small farms, it was indicated from conversations of farmers who attended a horse sale here in which eighty animals were offered The sale, with an attendance of about 500 which came from a radius of twenty miles around Greentown. had all the aspects of similar events in the age when horses were all-important in farm operation. Prices were considered excellent, one roan team having been sold for $475. Most of the animals offered were of draft type.

Child Charges Faced By Times Special MUNCIE. Jan. 25.—Three men. including a former Muncie school teacher and a father who was acquitted in 1926 of a charge of slaying l.io baby son, are in custody pending trial on charges of deserting and failure to provide for children. All were arrested in Peoria. 111., and returned here by deputy sheriffs. Cleo C France. 34. one of the accused, was a teacher in two schools here. He was operating a night club in Peoria when taken into custody. He is charged with deserting his two children. Others held are Charles B. Gray, 31, charged with failure to provide for a 6-year-old child, and Thomas Ellis. 26, charged with failure to provide for three children, whose ages are 2, 4 and 5 years. Trial of Gray on a charge of murdering the baby was held in Randolph circuit court at Winchester. Acquittal followed evidence that the principal state witness was insane. 0 0 0 Seeks Another Office By Timet Sprrial FRANKFORT, Jan. 25—Dan Powers. Clinton county sheriff, has announced his candidacy for mayor of Frankfort on the Democratic ticket. 000 Robbery Trial Set By Time* Special KOKOMO. Jan. 25—Ross Locke, Greentown, dubbed “the toy pistol bandit,” by police, will be tried Feb. 2 in Howard circuit court on a charge of robbery. Locke is accused of robbing Mrs. Alice Hagey of $11.50 and Mrs. Katie Murphy of a purse valued at $5. A toy pistol was found the following day on a street where the robberies occurred. 000 Wounded Man Held By Timet Special SHELBYVILLE, Jan. 25.—Russell Lee, said by police to be a paroled convict, is a patient in a hospital as a result of a bullet wound inflicted. according to officers, when they shot at a man who was fleeing from a grocery with several loaves of bread. Lee was arrested at his home and placed in jail. A few hours later he was transferred to the hospital on discovery that he was wounded. Charles Goebel, police chief, says Lee was released from the Indiana state prison on parole after serving part of a three-year term for burglary. 000 Former Florist Dies By Timet Special ELWOOD, Jan. 25.—Funeral services were held today for William Bradley, 75, former Elwood florist, who died Monday of heart disease in the Indiana Odd Fellows home at Greensburg. Mrs. Bradley died about two years ago. He leaves two children, Mrs. George Slick, Anderson. and Clem Bradley, Marion. 000 G. 0. P. to Meet By Timet Special PLAINFIELD. Jan. 25—First of a series of meetings sponsored by the Guilford Township Republican Club will be held in the Plainfield high school auditorium. Wednesday night. Jan. 31. Speaker will be Don Irwin, state Republican committee chairman. 000 Invalid Is Buried By Timet Special MARTINSVILLE. Jan. 25.—Funeral services were held today for Mrs. Anna Cain. 69. who died Tuesday after being an invalid for sixteen years. Her condition became more serious eight weeks ago as a result of a fall from a chair. She leaves her husband, William Cain; a daughter, Mrs. Gladys Hyatt, and two brothers. P. C. Johns, Indianapolis, and Edward Johns, Bloomington. The land surfaces of North America are older, more prominent, and more extensive than those of Europe; and land surfaces of Africa are older than either.

DENIES ACTION IN RECEIVERSHIP Insurance Company Not Insolvent, Declares President. Exceptions to statements made about the Indiana Liberty Mutual Insurance Company at a meeting attended by a number of former policy-holders were taken in a signed statement issued today by John Rynerson. company president. Newspaper stories stated that a resolution demanding official probe of actions of officials of the company was adopted at the meeting, reference being made to the company having receivership action pending against it. The company is not insolvent and no receivership action is pending at this time, Mr. Rynerson stated. The mass meeting, he said, followed action of the company in filing several hundred suits to collect assessments said to be due from former policyholders of the company, “under a mandatory statute.” Nearly 90 per cent of the injury claims owed by the company are to injured workmen or their widows, and it is the company’s hope to pay these injury claims in full, said Mr. Rynerson. The claims against policyholders average only about $22 each, he said. Radio Chief to Speak D. E. Kendrick, radio station WKBF manager, will speak before the Exchange Club Friday noon in the Washington.

" Startling " TO REJECTMPS ORMUMYBREWERS finest QUALITY | AMERICA'S ... BUT YOUR TASTE TELLS THE DIFFERENCE WITH A FULL, NEW ENJOYMENT! STERLING is a brew that’s a great advance. ‘‘Passably ( good” hops just won’t do for Sterling because hops vitally YES YOU’VE NEVER determine the head, the flavor and the real body of beer. DCAI IV RPFD Sterling uses only hops selected from the best hop-growing DLuK regions. Just the crops Nature has specially favored. Those ...UNTILYOU TRY * J that have been harvested at the peak of perfection. Such hops INC* I are costly —but Sterling wants you to enjoy A nerica’s finest O I t KLI IN U . beer. Every step in the brewing is governed accordingly. m * j\ Sterling is a slowly fermented beer, made of the choicest f j|| ingredients. A beer of uniformly high alcoholic content. ■—JMI Leisurely aged, too, and filtered 53 times. In every respect an costly made beer. no cost to you! So try a few glasses of Sterling /JFflTi JF draught. Order a case of Sterling. Note the creamy, staying head. Enjoy anew taste thrill! W (j .|lU| STERLING BREWERS, Inc. ■|i3|l ORDER A CASE OF THIS HIGHER ALCOHOLIC BEER TODAY If Your Dealer C an’t Supply You, Phone: DUNN BEVERAGE CO. 1440 N. Senate Ave. Lincoln 3435

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Clff OFFICIALS ASK MINERS TO REMAININ CITY Sullivan, Others Protest Removal of National Headquarters. City officials last night urged that the headquarters of the United Mine Workers of America be retained in Indianapolis. Mayor Reginald H. Sullivan and Ernest C. Ropkey, president of the city council, sent word to the miners’ international officers that Indianapolis would regret deeply the loss of the international headquarters and convention and expressed hope that the officers would deem it advisable to keep the offices here. Henry T. Davis, manager of the Indianapolis convention and publicity bureau, also communicated with the officials to point out the advantages of Indianapolis as the union’s headquarters. He cited the central location of the city and low maintenance cost of the headquarters here. The officers and executive committee will come to a decision in a few months as to the desirability of removing the headquarters from Indianapolis.

LIBBY HOLMAN STUDIES FOR RETURN TO STAGE Widow of Smith Reynolds Enters School Near Philadelphia. By United Press PHILADELPHIA, Jan. 25.—Libby Holman is believed planning a return to Broadway and the legitimate stage. The widow' of Smith Reynolds, tobacco heir, whose baby received $2,000,000 from the Reynolds estate, w r as discovered as a student under Jasper Deeter at his famous Hedgerow theater near Media, w'here Ann Harding learned the principles of acting. Miss Holman pays $lO a lesson for private tutoring. She commutes several times each week fropi Montchanin, Del., near Wilmington, to Mr. Deeter’s theater.

Aim to Please" French Duelists Shoot; No Harm Done.

By United Press PARIS. Jan. 25—At dawn today, in the cold, gray stadium of the Parc Des Princes, the first duel growing out of parliamentary insults following debate on the Stavisky banking scandal was fought to a draw. Nobody was hurt. Not even bystanders or seconds. The deputy, Andre Hesse, and the lawyer-journalist, Joseph Beineix, met with primed pitsols and were placed an ample distance apart. Each fired four shots. Where the shots went nobody knew. The principals refused to become reconciled, although the honor of each has been nobly maintained.

CHINA SEEKING TREATY Replacement of 1903 Commercial " Pact Desired. By United Press NANKING. China, Jan. 25.—A new Sino-American treaty to replace the commercial pact of 1903 is being considered in discussions between the Nationalist foreign office and United States diplomatic representatives, it w r as learned today.

Doctors Give Creosote for Chest Colds For many years our best doctors have prescribed creosote in some form for coughs, colds and bronchitis, knowing how dangerous it is to let them hang on. Creomulsion with creosote and six other highly important medicinal elements, quickly and effectively stops coughs and colds that otherwise might lead to serious trouble. Creomulsion is powerful in the treatment of colds and coughs, yet it is absolutely harmless and is pleasant and easy to take. Your own druggist guarantees Creomulsion by refunding your money if you are not relieved after taking Creomulsion as directed. Beware of the cough or cold that hangs on. Always keep Creomulsion on hand for instant use.—Advertisement.

RED TAPE REMOVED, TAG ARRESTS START Long Stenographic Delay Holds Up Order. With all red tape finally out of the way, Indianapolis police today began looking for motorists driving without 1934 license plates. Order to start arrests at once was announced at the office of Chief Mike Morrissey at noon yesterday, but, because of a shortage of steno-

Fall Asleep Reading? /TH4. -r Properly Fitted Z GLASSES Eliminate gy looked as It Is ""■"•.■Jv to ro to sleep. FAIR OPTICAL —311-325 W. Wash.

We Cash Civil Government Pay Checks Weil lined. Belted style. White, oreani or TanAll colors. In sizes 6 OTfTVIC M, ■ I—i dom. All styles. \V Into 16 years. 81k.-*- T, * < " ter weight. In all sizes. PRRIE H M tJust the Thing to Brighten Your Wardrobe Neieest Materials ami Styles IPARTY HOSTESS BUSINESS ft You°Fin7 ffiPafPffKSlfr j SPORT AND SUNDAY NITE l Valnoc ~ ' Hundreds of dresses for all occasions, *■■■■’'■* 1 " fresh from their tissues. The new midseason fashions that are so adorably tnrfcTO o pretty. We give you positive assurance COATS & that for quality and style you will get BERETS ' your money s worth * $#"1.95 Women’s Part-Wool A,„ Snuggies 5B Tailored or fur trim- Form Fitting Women’s form g| \ ] VT interlined, in red, fitting part- IN gH | , blue, green and new wool snuggies, HI JH , c'"- J browns. Sizes Ito 6 slight imper- ■ wfSB j years ‘ sects, white, in H Jig AND SISTER small, medium ■ U trim' $1.49 WOOL JERSEY and large sizes. SUITS OR DRESSES Worn. Flannelette Worn. $1 Winter j Sizes 2to 6 Trs. _ _ GOWNS UNIONS M |/ Adorable one or two- warm ■ ton or hort \ • \fiuJ piece, appliqued trim- M%M p striped M A anYie' or ■“ F" W med, wanted colors, llalh quality. Inf| „ knee |% . ymMm Second Floor. regular ■# C length; 1 1C V""! CWA WORKERS! Fabric Gloves ARMY MITTENS - —OO, One finger army mittens with mam ors and sizes. ... * good serviceable leather palms. | II Ideal for warmth and comfort- I Bars Health 50ap...19e able for work. || 6 Bars Lifebuoy Soap. .33c LOOK! MEN’S FLANNELETTE s.a P tu * PAJAMAS A real bargain! VIuCKS M Nice warm flan- m nelette pajamas £ 40k M in neat stripe % 1 /h MBm M patterns. Special H H _ ■ H m today at only- M 1 f ■—■■■■ 1 11 ■■■' Good Quality Better Quality FLANNELETTE FLANNELETTE ■ I NIGHT SHIRTS PAJAMAS HHe av \ quality H Light stripe flan- _ Our better qual- I J 11 h US noiotto _, _ . ,Jl iI y flannelette ( 4 1 C H Slde buckle ad- H nelette night UUp pajamas re- W | .13 ■ justments in tan ■ shirts. All size£. V duced. I I color only - Sizesi^^^M J H 8 to 18 years. - ,

graphic help, the order did not reach the captain’s desk, In the next room, until 8:50 a. m. today. The order immediately was breadcast over the police radio. State police yesterday arrested three mo-

AVOID UGLY PIMPLES Does a pimply face embarrass you? Get a package of Dr. Edwards Olive Tablets. The skin should begin to clear after you have taken the tablets a few nights, if you are like thousands of others. Help cleanse the blood, bowels and liver with Dr. Edwards Olive Tablets, the successful substitute for calomel; there's no sickness or pain after taking them. Dr. Edwards Olive Tablets do that which calomel does, and just as effectively, but their action is gentle and safe instead of severe and irritating. Thousands who take Olive Tablets are never cursed with a “dark brown taste,” a bad breath, a dull, listless, “no good” feeling, constipation, torpid liver, bad disposition, pimply face. Olive Tablets ’are a purely vegetable compound; known by their olive color. Dr. Edwards spent years among patients afflicted with liver and bowel complaints and Olive Tablets are the immensely effective result. Take nightly for a week. See how much better you feel and look. 15c, 30c, 60c. —Advertisement.

PAGE 5

torists here for failure to have the new plates.

Knock Out that COLD! Give It No Chance To Get Going! Cold once underway is a cold hard to drive away! Let no cold endanger you. At the first chill or sneeze. take Grove’s Laxative Brorno Quinine. It usually makes short work of a cold because it is expressly a cold remedy and because it gets at a cold from the inside. A cold, you know, is an internal infection and calls for internal treatment. Grove’s Laxative Bromo Quinine means COMPLETE relief because it is COMPLETE treatment. It does all the four things necessary. It opens the bowels, combats the cold germs and fever in the system, relieves the headache and grippy feeling and tones and fortifies the entire system. That's the action you want and anything less is taking chances. Get Grove’s Laxative Bromo Quinine at any druggist, 30c and 50c. Ask for it by the full name and accept no substitute.