Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 249, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 February 1934 — Page 6
PAGE 6
MOOSE LODGE LEADER KILLS SELF IN HOTEL Body of Mrs. Mae Gary to Be Sent Here From Washington. Loss of health and bank savings and domestic trouble are believed to have caused the suicide of Mrs. Mae C. Gary. 41, prominent in the Moose lodge, in Washington, Saturday. The body will be sent to the McNeel.v mortuary here. Mrs. Gary, who was secretary for the last twenty-five years to William J Anderson. Indianapolis Ledge No. 17. was found in her hotel room with her throat and wrists slashed. She was said to have been despondent over divorce from her husband last fall. She is survived by her mother, Mrs. Edith Cope, 4852 Carrollton avenue, and a sister. Miss Gertrude Cope, Las Angeles. E. J. Jenne Rites Held Final tribute was paid last night to E. H. Jenne. 64. of 4353 Carrollton avenue, who died Friday night after an illness of two years. TTie Fvev Richard M. Millard, Broadway M. E. church pastor, officiated. Mr. Jenne was an official of the Broadway church. The Rev. Joe Grefne. Vincennes, district Methodist superintendent, will conduct services today in Patoka. Mr. Jenne attended De Pauw university and was a member of Phi Delta Theta fraternity. During the World war, he served with the Y. M. C. A. in France. He is survived by the widow, Mrs Bess Parrott Jenne; two daughters, Mrs. Kenneth E. Lancet. Indianapolis, and Mrs. Robert A. Wolfe, Dayton, 0., and three grandchildren. Resident of 53 Years Dead August Zessin. 88. of 2230 Winter avenue, who had watched the growth of the city since he first moved here fifty-three years ago, died in his home Saturday night. He was a native of Germany. Last rites will be held in the home at 2 tomorrow and at 2:30 in St. Peter's Evangelical Lutheran church. Burial will be in Concordia cemetery. He is survived by a daughter, Mrs. Mary Estle, with whom he lived; two sons. Carl Zessin and Herman Zessin, eleven grandchildren and one great-grandchild. Mrs. Leib's Rites Today Last rites for Mrs. Ida May Leib, 70, of 211 North East street, a native of Ohio whose education and life had been spent mainly in Indiana. will be held at 2 this afternoon in the home. Burial will be in Crown Hill. She died Friday. Mrs. Leib was born in Clarmont county, Ohio. She went to Frankfort when she was 4, attended school there and moved to Indianapolis in 1890. She was a member of the Roberts Park M. E. church and Francis Review' of the Women’s Benefit Association. Her husband died in 1931. She is survived by a son. Paul R. Hill, and four brothers, Albert, Ernest, Walter and Joseph Shinn. Frank Van Deren Dead Frank O. Van Deren, a former resident of Indianapolis, who was prominent in the real estate development of Florida, died in his Miami Beach 'Flap home last week.
COLDS Go Overnight When You Take The Right Thing! A cold doesn't have to run its course and expose you to serious complications. A cold can be routed over night if you go about it the right wav. First of all, a cold being an internal infection, calls for internal treatment. Secondly, a cold calls for a COLD remedy and not for a “cure-all.” Grove's Laxative Bromo Quinine Is what a cold requires. It is expressly a cold remeoy. It is internal and direct—and it does 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. Anything less than that is taking chances with a cold. Get Grove's Laxative Bromo Quinine at any druggist. 30c and 50c. Ask for it by the full name and beware of dealers who offer substitutes. —Advertisement.
Depend on p Pinkham m IH| nrYYnrr- l^isi^BSiiip^ Products JBBF __i iidMlll. _.i . H^i. JHR jPPIs jw MRS. ESTHER EOE Sg > .^^ t 2349 North La Salle Street mt *j.%s£:. Indianapolis. Indiana "I was in bed three weeks with SB j j tie of your medicine put me on my ,erf- * ll V our laxative pills, too." v‘ 1 : j ———————— .jaßfik. . "My mother told me to take the .'v. i Vegetable Compound before my HF habv was born and it helped me N*i t wonderfully. —Airs. Charles Byers, 108 Washington St., Warren, MRS. MARYIM. lynn * “Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable 883 Roger* street. Bucyroa, Ohio Compound helped my nerves and ... . back at middle age.”—Mrs. S. C. 2wm weak and rundown and Carik< . r 500 Soulh Qak Sti) fretful. Each month I had terr.ble H oldenville. Oklahoma, pains. When I was so bad it seemed as if I could not endureit any longer A medicioe which has HR A * *'l°* . toW zb T u Lyd, V * the written endorsement Pinkham s medicine. I hare taken D f more than 700,000 {oat bottles and nsed the Sanative women must be good, Wash and I am almost well now.** Let it help you, too. "** 98 out of 100 Report Benefit
FACES PROBERS
WK*IU ifjt MMHgr - W Wmpf jjUgl
Second Hoover cabinet member called as a witness in current congress inquiries is Charles Francis Adams, above, former navy secretary, who agreed to testify before a house subcommittee probing awards of airplane engine contracts. Walter F. Brown, former postmaster-general, was questioned by the senate air mail probe committee.
His Part Man Supports Family on 50 Cents a Day.
'fT'IVE CENTS an hour, ten hours a day and seven days a week have constituted the working conditions and “salary” of an Indianapolis man with a a wife and three children, testimony in juvenile court revealed last week. The man had been brought into the court to answer charges of failure to support his children, and he testified that for the last two years, he had been employed by a downtown business concern doing porter work and running errands for 50 cents a day. “I suppose there was an ls/fc,A sign in your employer’s window,” observed Judge John F. Geckler. “Yes—a great big one,” replied the defendant. The judge continued the case and instructed the defendant to demand a raise in salary from his employer. “Report back to me,” said Judge Geckler, “and if your pay is not increased I will report the matter to the local board. Your employer is the one who should be facing the court, not you.” Funeral Services Held Bp Times Special TIPTON, Feb. 26.—Funeral services were held today for Mrs. Cale B. Ramsay, resident of Tipton twenty-five years and who had been an invalid for twenty years. For the last seven years he conducted a real estate firm in Miami Beach, but had been associated ivith Carl G. Fisher formerly. He was a member of the Masonic order, the Knights Templar and the Mystic Shrine. Stone Company Official Dead A five days’ illness ended with the death of Robert Taylor Clark, 33, of 441 Drexel avenue, superintendent of the W. H. Colegrove Cut Stone Company, Saturday. Last rites were to be held at 2 this afternoon in the Flanner & Buchanan mortuary. Burial will be in Memorial Park cemetery. The Masonic ritual will be read at the services by members of Centre lodge No. 23, F. & A. M.. of which he was a member. He also belonged to Indianapolis county No. 2, Royal and Select Masters, apd the Tuxedo Baptist church. Surviving him are the widow, Mrs. Margaret Colegrove Clark; a son, Donald Robert Clark, 4, and his parents, Dr. and Mrs. George O. Clark, Indianapolis. Veteran Brewery Worker Passes Frank Woerner, 85, one of the early German settlers in Indianapolis and a veteran brewery worker, died Saturday in his home, 1310 East Southern avenue. Last rites will be held at 2 tomorrow in the home. Burial will be in Crown Hill. Mr. Woerner came to this country in 1872 and was associated with the old Indianapolis Brewing Company before his retirement. He was a member of St. John Evangelical church. He is survived by the widow' and a son, William Woerner, Indianapolis.
CITY INDUSTRIAL NEWS OF THE WEEK
TASTE OF OLD BEER IMPARTED TO SILVER EDGE Brewmaster Explains Why South Bend Product Pleases Palate. “The only w’ay we can make a 6 per cent beer taste like pre-prohibi-tion beer,” said Zdenck Sobotka, head brewmaster for Silver Edge Beer, “is to increase the body content, which we have done. “We are fortunate in having available in South Bend virtually the best brewing water in the country,” he continued. “We have analyzed the best brewing waters in Germany and the United States and found the water in South Bend comparable. The only defect in the local water is its hardness. ' To offset this we use a Burtonizing salt to break up the hard particles. This gives us the same kind of brewing water as used in Germany and obviates the use of softeners or filters. “In order to imbue Silver Edge with a real hop flavor that will meet with consumer acceptance, we use the finest hops in America. They are grown in Oregon. We blend domestic hops with genuine Bohemian hops, which gives a typical Pilsener beer. “Another factor in our brewing is having our own cold storage for hops. Use of cold storage retains the oil in hops, which helps to impart the necessary flavor in the finished brew. Few plants this size have their own cold storage. Usually they have a dry storage.” Silver Edge beer is distributed in the Indianapolis territory by Amencan Brewers, Inc., 429 Madison avenue. R. H. Daugherty is sales manager and in charge of the Indianapolis branch, which has its own cold storage facilities, maintaining the same temperature as in the brewery. Mr. Daugherty states that the reception of Silver Edge has been unusually favorable in Indianapolis. ALCOHOL FROM CORN USED IN AUTO FINISH New Market From Grain Expected to Be Broadened.. Recent improvements in the automobile industry are expected to benefit the farmer directly by providing a market for a large portion of his corn crop. The lacquer anl lacker thinner used in painting automobiles this year are made from alcohol products distilled in the heart of the western corn belt from American grown corn. A single automobile manufacturer estimates that his production during the next month will consume nearly 25,000 bushels of corn, with a yearly estimate set at half a million bushels. If the 3,000,000 cars scheduled for production during this year make use of a proportionate amount of this corn product, it is pointed out the effect on general agricultural prosperity will be considerable.
EXPECTS RECOVERY ERA TO AFFECT DECORATIONS Official Painters Society Predicts Neutral Tones for Homes. By Times Special WASHINGTON. Feb. 24.—The new deal in home decoration will take on the colors of security and gi'eater peacefulness, according to Joseph Eckart, officer of the International Society of Master Painters and Decorators. The post-war era. the jazz age, with their exciting colors and garnish novelties, are out of date, Mr. Eckart believes, and subdued human emotions, subdued colors in the home, will reflect the transition into recovery. “Color in the home affects our psychology and determines our dispositions,” Mr. Eckart said. “After the hectic past decade, we all want a rest, and neutral colors bring peace to the soul. We expect the new color tendency in home decorationto be toward tones that are : cheerful without being exciting.” PROFIT BY EXPERIENCE Competent Painter Should Be Consulted for Special Problems. Special painting problems that endanger the protection of property should have the attention and advice of an experienced painter. An “experienced painter” is described as an individual who knows paints, understands what each type ana grade of paint can and can not do, is capable of determining whether or not a surface is in proper condition to be painted, and in addition is familiar with the proper methods for applying paint to achieve satisfactory results. Paint Durability Explained The life of a paint coating is said to depend upon three things—the quality of the paint, its application, and the condition to which it is exposed. A good paint, well applied to a frame house and exposed to ordinary weather conditions should protect the surface adequately for from three to five years.
Established 1887 CENTRAL TRANSFER AND STORAGE COMPANY COMMERCIAL TRUCKING WAREHOUSE FORWARDING DISTRIBUTING 209 West Sooth St. RBey 9384
The Year-Around American Family Dessert Eat It Dally ftr Its Concentrated Food Value Lofk for Potter in Dealer’a Store Announcing New Velvet Special
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
DRUGGISTS OPERATING FOUR STORES CALL FURNAS ICE CREAM BUSINESS BUILDER
The drug stores pictured here serve Furnas ice cream. Upper (left) —The John P. Koehler pharmacy No. 1, Thirtieth street and Central avenue. Mr. Koehler has operated a drug store at this location for fifteen years. Upper (right)—Koehler pharmacy No. 2, located at Thirtieth and Illinois streets.
SALES SESSION WILLJE HELD General Electric Group to Discuss Spring Activity Plans. The annual spring sales convention of the General Electric appliance distributors of Indianapolis will be held tomorrow, Feb. 27, in the Travertine room of the Lincoln. More than 250 salesmen, dealers, representatives of department stores and utilities and other sales outlets will attend, according to H. E. Warren, sales promotion manager for the Indianapolis distributor. Detailed plans for the spring and summer sales campaign, including advertising, promotion and merchandising activities will be outlined at the convention. The session will be featured by several talkng pictures and dramatic skits which will emphasize spring sales ideas. Representatives of the Cleveland national headquarters of the General Electric specialty appliance sales department will appear on the program. These include Fred Harvey, lake states district manager, and E. PJ. Wiggs. Others who will take part in the program will include A. F. Head, lhanager; Paul Lewis, retail sales manager; Carl Schurmann, commercial sales manager, and the majority of the personnel of the Indianapolis distributor. KILEY BEER WILL BE ON MARKET SHORTLY Product Made in Modern Brewery at Marion. One of the most modern breweries in the country, the Kiley Brewing Company, Inc., at Marion, will soon have its product on the market, according to an announcement by H. P. Kiley, president. Mr. Kiley, whose father, Patrick Kiley, was in the brewing business at Marion in pre-prohibition days, has associated with him William E. Jung, recognized as an outstanding brewunaster. Mr. Jung, now vicepresident of the company, formerly was brewmaster for the Kingsbury Brewing Company in Wisconsin. Another former Kingsbury official associated with Mr. Kiley is George Deegan, chairman of the board. Mr. Deegan formerly was in charge of sales of Kingsbury and will serve in a similar capacity w r ith the Kiley brewery. The brewery, built entirely new T from the ground up by John S. Gingrich, Indianapolis contractor, represents the latest improvements in the brewing industry. The plant is air cooled and air conditioned. All grain is drawn from cars by suction and is not touched by hands. A laboratory in which scientific check is kept on all operations of the plant and its products has been installed.
Painting Emphasized as Part of Building Design
Magazine Article Asserts Time Is Here for Changed View. By Times Special WASHINGTON. Feb. 26. The time has come when owners and builders must plan their painting projects and treat painting as an essential part of building design, according to the February issue of Real Estate Magazine, which discusses the necessity for “Planning Painting” and its relation to sound, light, heat and ew types of building materials. Responsible builders, owners and managers, the magazine says, should “crack down” on the acceptance of “carbon copies of some old specification for any and every bit of painting." “Paint may be the last thing on the wall, but it certainly should not be the last thing thought of,” the magazine states. “It is no more sensible to pursue a slap-it-on policy with regard to paints, varnishes and enamels than It would be to indulge in a stick-’em-in-anyway policy in installing water and drain pipes and electric wiring.” Contending that planned painting must come “because of every economic and esthetic consideration,” the magazine article finds that the situation has four aspects, as follows: Due to the present modernization trend, “short-term touch-up jobs and stop-gap painting merely to preserve must give way to carefully conceived and executed decorative jobs that will enhance valuations.” New’ types of building materials, accessory equipment and services for apartment house and office building make the modernization movement both possible and imperative.
NOTICE— Manufacturers and Jobbers SPACE FOR RENT Complete Housing Facilities for Large or Small Plants Private Switches, Served by Belt R. R. and Traction Lines Connecting With All Railroads. Watchman Service Free Indianapolis Industrial Center 19th St. and Martindale Ave.' CHerry 1915
A Good Job Offered Wanted party with $3,000 working capital and necessary qualifications to organize sales for elaborate program and setup, investment protected by merchandise. Address Roy 0. Stringer Cos., Ltd. 621 N. Noble St.
AUTO PEJtMR By ifi" Means Satisfaction!
Lower (left)—View of Fisher’s Cut Rate Drug Store No. 1. Ray Fisher has operated this store at Fifty-fourth street and College avenue for five years. Lower (right)—Fisher store No. 2, Forty-ninth street and College avenue. These drrggis.r. state that Furnas ice cream is one of the main reasons why their b'i:iness is good the year round.
New decorative schemes are essential if the new'ly developed materials and equipment are to be fully utilized. The effect of color on light and sound is important. Results of paint experiments, properly coordinated with the findings of technologists in other fields, will make possible a true modernization of buildings. The owner or landlord who plans his painting with relation to sound, heat and light, the article concludes, “w'ill be putting that extra something Into his properties w'hich will, materially speaking, enable him to take an extra something out of them in the form of paying dividends.”
FOR ECONOMY PLUS QUALITY Bathroom Ostermeyer Paper Cos. Riley 6902 219 W. South St
ENROLL NOW Until Jan. 22nd INDIANA I LAW SCHOOL University of Indianapolis For Information, address the Sec’y, Riley 3433 INDIANA LAW SCHOOL * The 8E Market St. Bldg. Indianapolis, Ind.
Above All Things { MONUMENT 9 COAL CO. f| Commercial fl COAL-COKE jffiL Domestic flHft- COAL-COKE jjpplji 701 E. WASH. ST. ~ Lincoln 2233
RI. 9381
Hanning Bros. Dentists WASHINGTON A Pennsylvania Sts. KKEHGE BLDG.
BUILDING CODE DECLARED BOON Dow Service Writer Expects Revival of Interest in Investment Field. Owner-investors, regarded as vital factors to prosperous conditions in the building trades, are expected to take anew interest in building as an investment medium after March 2, when the new construction code becomes effective, according to Myron L. Matthews in the Dow Service daily building reports.
AUTO BODY REPAIRS Axles Straightened Cold While on the Car Fenders, Radiators and Bodies Repaired C. OFF & CO. 107 N. East St. Li. 1549
500 MILE RACE Wednesday, May 30 Tickets ready Jan. 15 444 N. Capitol Ave. LI. 5217 indpls. Motor Speedway Corp.
1 "■ —■—rm —1 [“imagine! linoleum ri ITFyes, Indianapolis has
With “Fisk” Tires You Take No Risk If Investigate “FISK” Quality you buj * the l3est when you buy j Fisk Ti res or Tubes. Their increased tread rubber assures you \ of longer wear and better service, Every FISK Tire Is unconditionally guarantced against faulty workmanship or Time lb Re’ilra material. CETAFiSKI C.ld. FRANCK TIRE SERVICE Fisk Tire Distributor 543 E. WASHINGTON RL 7878
.FEB. 26, 1934
EACH OF NEW STREET CARS COSTS! 9,000 New Equipment to Be Run on Washington Street Next Week. Each of the new Indianapolis railways street cars, which are to be placed in service about March 1 on Washington street, represents an investment of more than $19,000, or approximately twice the cost of the average home. The new cars will be installed on the College avenue line later in March. The exterior appearance of this latest, group of new cars is much the same as those installed last year.. However, a great number of minor improvements have been made for the comfort and convenience of passengers. In addition to the usual front and side destination signs, a route number also will appear on the front of the cars so that prospective passengers can distinguish the proper car at a glance. The familiar green marker lights on the front of the car have been moved to the extreme sides of the car and are attractively streamlined.
PLENTY OF Crystal-clear Sparkling ICEis a compliment and necessity to any Hostess. Continued healthfulness and g-enerous hospitality ordains that you should use only PURE ICE—odorless and taste free. Save with ICE POLAR ICE & FUEL CO. TAlbot 0889
Defective Steering Is Dangerous Does Your Car Shimmy, Wander, or Steer Hard? Such Defects Are Easily Corrected Without Much Expense INDIANA CARBURETOR AND BRAKE SERVICE 325 N. Delaware St. LI. 1876
