Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 227, Indianapolis, Marion County, 31 January 1934 — Page 2

PAGE 2

COUNCIL CUTS REGISTRATION FUND BY 56.000 A .1. - Acts on Ralston Estimate; Defers Appropriation Till Feb. 5. A further delay of registration of Manon county voters became evident yesterday when members of the county council announced that final action on obeying a court mandate to appropriate funds to finance the undertaking would not be taken until Feb 5. The council tentatively fixed S9B--as the amount to be appropriated for the registration. Rent Money Saved Glenn B. Ralston, county clerk, who will have charge of the registration. petitioned the council to eliminate $6,000 from his original $104,000 request because he will not require $6,000 for registration headquarters rent as had been originally contemplated. , In explaining postponement until Feb. 5. John Newhouse. council vicepresident. said the meeting to appropriate the money was delayed because no money is available. "The council has no concern as to where the money is to be obtained." Judge James D. Ermston said. “They must appropriate it and it becomes the duty of the auditor to provide 19 from the county general fund.’” Many Delays Encountered Voters’ registration, scheduled under the 1933 law to begin Jan. 15, already has had a number of setbacks. originating last fall when councilmen refused to appropriate the money. A suit to mandate them to provide the money then was filed in superior court, room four, where special Judge James D. Ermston issued the mandate order. The case was appealed to the Indiana supreme court, which last week handed down an opinion sustaining the lower court and holding the 1933 registration law constitutional. FEENEY’S PROPOSALS USED IN U. S. BILL State Safety Director Returns From Washington Parley. Features of law enforcement suggested by A1 Feeney, state safety director, will be incorporated in a bill proposed to congress. Mr. Feeney announced today upon his return from Washington. Mr. Feeney conferred with Senator Royal S. Copeland, chairman of the committee on preparing crime curbing legislation, Senator Frederick Van Nuys and department of justice officials. Proposals were that the federal government could arrest gangsters traveling with guns and doctors who treated gangsters and did not notify authorities,.

ATTRIBUTES PSYCHIC FEAT TO DUMB LUCK Pittsburgher Disclaims Ability at Mental Marvels. By United Prmt PTCTSBPRGH. Jan. 31.—William J. Farrell, recently pensioned city employe, once drew the attention of the country's psychic experts. Farrell, now 63. telling of the story, says it was really only a joke. “But it seemed I was a mental | marvel." he said. "The key to a safe was lost, and no one knew where to look for it. I dreamed that Jim Brennan had the key. The next day I asked him for it and it turned out that he had it.” Letters and telegrams from all over the country were sent Farrell, but he attributed the feat to "dumb luck.” NEW YORK PUBLISHER SUCCUMBS IN FLORIDA Internal Hemorrhage Fatal to Frank Nelson Doubleday. By United Pre MIAMI. Fla. Jan. 31. —An internal hemorrhage today had brought death to F*rank Nelson Doubieday, 72. well known New York publisher, who capie here a month ago for the winter. His wife. Mrs. Florence Double - day. was at his bedside. He had been ill for some time, but his death came unexpectedly late yesterday. RICKETTS IS INDORSED Dearborn Bar Approves Candidacy for Supreme Court. Members of the Dearborn County Bar Association, meeting at Lawrenceburg yesterday, adopted a resolution indorsing the candidacy of Judge William D. Ricketts of Dearborn circuit court for the Indiana supreme court. Judge Ricketts is seeking the Democratic nomination. LOWROUNOTRIP COACH FARES NEXT SATURDAY CLEVELAND $4.50 Leave H>:00 p. m. or 10:50 p. in. Return on any train until 3:00 a. m. MonDETROIT $4.50 TOLEDO $4.00 Leave 10:00 p. m. Return on any train Sunday. NEXT SUNDAY ST. LOUIS $4.50 Leave 13:35 a. m.. 3:45 a. m. or S:ls a. m. Retnrn on any train aame day. CINCINNATI $2.50 Grtensburg $1.25. Shelby’le $.75 Leave 1:45 a. m. Retnrn on any train •ame day. WEEK-END TRIPS CHICAGO $5.50 Going 10:45 a. m. Friday*, until 1:35 a. m. Monday*. Return Monday*. Rett need round trip Pullman fare*. LOW ROUND TRIP 30-DAY FARES Ta JTEW YORK. BOSTON and other Atlantic seaboard point*. Keck Tuesday and Saturday during February. GOOD IN PULLMAN CARS BIG FOUR ROUTE

‘MYSTERY’ OF P. K.’S SOLVED AT I. C.

I W WBm U - . t T ' - . PH Wf il'

Two P. K.’s," Miss Dorothy Cooper, of Wabash. Ind., left, and Miss Treva Miser. Muncie, placarding the platform of Indiana Central’s unofficial club as some folk at least would have them be.

They’re ‘Preacher's Kids,’ 11 Per Cent of “Em. and Proud of It. The question ‘‘Are You a P. K?” at Indiana Central college has nothing to do with chewing gum or, turned backwards, an old army term, ‘‘kitchen police.’’ An Indiana Central “P. K.” is a full-fledged “preacher’s kid,’’ students at the school will tell you. Eleven per cent, forty-three in number, out of 385 enrolled in the college, are sons and daughters of ministers. “Goody-gocdy” and “piety-pie” are two expression the “P. K.'s” are forced to “live down”—or live up to. “But we’re really not.” they chorus, “we're just college students like any one else. Long faces, always attending chapel, are denied by the feminine contingent of the unofficial club. “We re just what we are—P. K's. —and we don't discriminate whether we go to parties with a bricklayer's son or a banker's boy, so why should they?” they assert. PRESIDENT NAMED BY STATE NURSES’ GROUP City Hospital Education Director to Head Association, Mrs. Margaret Culbertson, city hospital educational director, was elected president of the new Central district of the Indiana State Nurses Association. formed yesterday. Nearly eighty nurses from eleven counties attended. Other officers named tvere Miss Marie Schulz, first vice-president: Miss Josephine Dcup, second vicepresident; Miss Florence Sayce, secretary; Miss Aurelia Willers, treasurer; Misses Esther McClain, Elizabeth Candy and Emma Stoll, directors. Misses Emma Hannafin. Indianapolis, and Miss Anna Lampkins. Bloomington, are holdover director'’

Her face- . : reports DR. ANTOINE of Paris W 1 JB A “case history.’’ Fiom the records of one of France’s leading diag- IHpk Mjk nosttcians. Dr. Edouard Antoine, who numbers a king and other royalty among hs oatients! If you or anyone you know is suffering jgmjs from skin trouble, read what this eminent doctor says .. . ' fj more energetic. Your digestion Improves—you eat ■|C * better. AND—most gratifying result of all—you observe such an improvement in your skin! "THE PATIENT." .rates Dr. Antoine. "EXAMINATION SHOWED she had a bad con- "I FORBADE CATHARTICS and pre- *l7*h.vpdnnp th. n "-age 25— had for year, suffered from dltion of the intestines ... constipation .. . which scribed yrast. It quickly brought a&ut smoother .. . simply because you have done the seneruprionsontheface.Had employed oint- she had treated by means of purgatives. Obviously the desired result.” (Note, above, chart sible thing and corrected the real bodily cause Os your mem&, lotions, etc.—without result... her auto-lntoxication wag the cauge of her bad skin... showing intestines, where yeast works.) skin trouble. Honestly, is there any medicine, any ■ * ■■■ ■■■—'■■' ■■ ■ ■ ■■ ■ i -■* 1... i— . ' ■— cosmetic you know that will do this? yiv • You can get Fleischmann’s “CJKIN TROUBLES.” says Dr. Antoine, “—like) bad but a/ood— possessing very amazing properties. east at grocers, restaurants and / b breath, co.ted| ,o„ a „e. dan . to <|M _,^. day _ lt actually stlmu . Tc?nd £ ter signals. Si 4 n,. usually, ot ,lu tt uh mteume,! latea and "rentthen. ,h, inline,. It ,l„ soften, it %/ft “It* my opinion,” ho adds, “sating yamt is tha most effective the wastes that collect in the body daily, helping you tween meals and at bedtime— (f ** * way ta combat this evil, stpn disorders such as pimpfes and get rid of them more easily. p l ain or dissolved In a third of a Sir furunculosis (bails) respond ta yaast’s purifying effect. •* Then, a., yeast acts to expel the harmful poisons glass of water. Start the treatr r Fleischmann's Yeast, you know, is not ajpxedicine that form in your system, you notice you feel so much ment today! cowris*. um. Bub tacwsmus

ARREST OF FOUR MAY SOLVE HOLDUP SERIES Young Negroes Held Following Failure in Grocery Robbery. The series of holdups by Negro bandits was checked today, police believe, with the arrest of four Negro suspects, following a frustrated daylight holdup at the Pete Stolhap grocery, 1221 North Missouri street. James Hughes, 17. of 2402 Northwestern avenue, admitted, police report, to six holdups within the last two months and implicated Claude Pitts, 17, of 827 West Twentyseventh street, and Eddie James Bennett, 19, of 729 West Twentysixth street, who were taken into custody. Police also anrested Clarence Wallace, 25, of 804 West Walnut street, for questioning in connection with the robbery and shooting of a taxicab driver Sunday north of the city. Wallace was not implicated by Hughes. The four were held on vagrancy charges temporarily. SOCIETIES SPONSOR ST. ANTHONY BAZAR Three-Day Fete Planned Beginning Tomorrow. A bazar will be held by the combined organizations of St. Anthony’s church. 365 North Warmen avenue, tomorrow, Friday and Saturday. George Usher, general chairman is being assisted by Mrs. John Collins. William Fitzgerald and Louis Doerr. Leo Bullock has charge of booths; William Conner, H. Stevens, J. Mahoney and B. Dugan, publicity. Others on committees include: Mrs. John Collins. Mrs. L. Doerr. Mrs. J. O'Neal. John Roach, Helen Sellmeyer. Lenora Pattisoij, Mary Elizabeth O'Neal, William Conner, Leo Cool, M. Healey, M. Haney and G. Farrell.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

‘BE NICE BOY/ WOMAN SHERIFF TELLS JHLLINGER Expert With Guns Herself, Prepared for All Emergencies. BY SHERIFF LILLIAN HOLLEY (Written lor United Pressi CROWN POINT. Ind.. Jan. 31. John Dillinger may be able to fight his way out of some prisons, but he won't break the Lake County jail. After all the warnings I received that John Hamilton and other Dillinger gang members were planning to rescue Dillinger. I was glad enough to see him locked up in a cell. We have taken every precaution now against Dillinger breaking out or an attempt to rescue him. We brought out the machine guns when v.e heard that Dillinger and the others had been captured. Deputies on Guard Every day the deputies have practiced with these machine guns since then and I have little fear that anything short of an army could take the jail. I can handle one of these machine guns myself. It’s nothing new for us to have desperate men to guard. Recently James fFur) Sammons was held in the Lake county jail until he received a life sentence. Although Sammons, somehow or other, successfully gained liberty from Illinois jails, he was safe here. I’m not afraid of any gunfire, if it does break loose. I’m down in the shooting gallery with the men every day and I can handle a gun well enough to hold my own in a fight. Promises Fair Treatment I’ve been interested in guns ever since my husband was killed by a demented Gary farmer. I was appointed sheriff in his place and I made up my mind that a sheriff should know something about guns. Dillinger went to sleep last night right after he was placed in a cell. He'll get good treatment here as long as he behaves himself. I have twenty deputies placed about the jail. They will not do any special favors for Dillinger or communicate with him in any way. Although cactus plants are found in many parts of the world, they all trace ancestry to American cacti. Demand the Genuine j&t u&uA BabysSkin

**’ '' :v;

ASKS PARDON FOR DRAFT-DODGING SON

m mi—. j - + v

“I have passed the three score and ten span of life and I knew that it will not be long before I pass on. It is my one desire to see my boy and three children.” . . . Mrs. Emma Bergdoll is shown at her Wynnefield. Pa., home as she wrote these words in a letter to the President, whose portrait is before her. requesting that he pardon her son, Grover Cleveland Bergdoll, the draft dodger, fco that he might return from Germany to “see me before I die.”

BISHOP H. H. FOUT TO ADDRESS FELLOWSHIP ‘Cup of Fellowship’ to Be Subject at Northwood Christian Church. Bishop H. H. Fout of the United Brethren church will speak on “The Cup of Fellowship” at the fellowship dinner of the Northwood Christian church at 6:30 tomorrow night. Dr. Talbot Reavis, head of the Butler university sociology department, will be chairman. The Rev. R. Melvyn Thompson, church pas-

J^SS!^SISSSaSS!^SSSSES^SSSSSSSS*ESESSESSmSmimmmm*mamiiim Examined —and it brought me Yes! I found out that my work was lagging because my eyes weren’t on the job. The right glasses proved that in no time—and now I have a better position. Let Kay’s expert optometrist IMRpM examine your eyes and prescribe Wpf || the correct glasses to aid your vision ... if glasses are necessary. r . Wash. StTfeA

I tor, will lead devotionals. Mrs. i Carolyn Ayres has arranged a musical program. Dinner will be j served by the church women's j council. BOY, 8, SINGS OPERA Son of Sydney Rayner Follows in Father’s Footsteps. NEW ORLEANS. Jan. 31.—Eric Rayner, 8-year-old Son of the opera singer, Sydney Rayner, already is following in his father's footsteps by singing arias from “Carmen” and other operas.

TRACE CHILD RHYME TO ANCIENT EGYPT Counting Game Traced Back to 12th Dynasty. Eji Science Service LONDON, Jan. 26.—When mothers play “This Little Pig Went to Market” with babies' fingers and toes they are repeating a spell which may date from countless ages. Dr. Margaret Murray of University college, London, has made a study of modern Egyptian nursery and children's rhymes in which she traces some of them back as far as the twelfth dynasty of ancient Egypt, about 2000 B. C. When the modern Egyptian moth-

am—— rara ———— v Tasty Luncheons, 25c, 35c NV^x Washington at Delaware Ironing BOARD PAD Upland COVER Fits all _ Standard C Sizes Jf set A non-inflammable pad that makes ironing easier and better, plus an adjustable cover made of good quality, unbleached muslin. 24x36 Chenille RUGS Attractive, reversible rugs for bedroom or bath; M 4 patterns and 5 colors. Each ~ PURE LINEN MATTRESS TOWELING COVERS H > b ry. r m WHM Unbleached mm ■BBT bleached with O M muslin; double M M m der or ' rt bor : Yds.%o # V bed size. Each.. ## V (GOLDSTEIN'S. Street Floor) El $3.69 COKDLttv' w vVEL , jliwra $3.49 Waterproof SW ripp , r !.- I of these styles made * ,tn ß duced for speedy I Men's $1 Cotton | UNION SUITS 1 I Medium wegh‘. . I '“ nßth in Vr. ran- MMC INFANTS' WEAR Everything the new baby needs, at money-saving prices for fond relatives iFf'* and friends. -2 V—:— All Hand-Made V X DRESSES m\\ Made by hand V And trimmed V with hand era- M |* & I broidery Mm l ,VI I All-Wool SACQUES These adorable sacques are hand-crocheted. In M M £ white with pink or blue trim m m Bootees 7. Outing *| q . hand knit A# C Wear I3FC All wool, in white with trim- Warm gowns and kimonos of * 1 , ~ white flannelette with pink or ming of pink or blue. blue she „ trlmmin(r . ( GOLDSTEIN'S, Second Floor) ■TiSTiSR!^ 1 Bobby Hair Pins, cd. SHOE LACE , 1 SwFir rri 1 "bow Women’s 75c to 98c and hold your chin high C* R ned u 10c K Zd r C C . ' Others mr J) V Very smart, these 2-handker-chief bows, gaily printed in Slipon gloves of washable colors to match or contrast fa^ cy # and , tai,ored ... styles, reduced for clearance, with your costume. Wanted shades. (OOLDBTEIN 3. Btreet Floor) La PURSES Our SI.OO Q 1 Quality mW C 1 Reduced to M ~ I „.jii Hke for their good , 1 .m i Handbags yon poUch and under--1 • Black looks and * mar * * ' ith p i ar es for initials arm models, some wWi P • Brown ""-ZZZZZ. MiMiwwa— wa

JAN. 31, 1934

j er plays with the fingers and toen !of her baby instead of singing cf ! little pigs she sings “The Song of the Egg." It goes like this: “This is the ; Egg. This is the one who brought | it. And this is the one who boiled it. And this Is the one who peeled it. And this is the one who ate it up “ And as she pulls the last toe she sings the last line on a high note just as in the English game—the ritual note which completes the spell. Dr. Murray traces this counting game back to the twelfth dynasty, when the soul of a sorcerer or ! learned man was not allowed to 1 enter the kingdom of Osiris until , he had shown his ability to count ! his fingers. What is claimed to be the first I aviation service station is located on Long Island.