Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 252, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 March 1934 — Page 5
MARCH 1, 193*
REGISTERING OF COUNTY VOTERS Starts today Task Must End March 28; House Canvass Will Begin Saturday. Registration of Marion county >ters will begin today. Glenn B. ! alston county clerk, will have 1 large of the registration, which ! iust be completed by March 28. ( A house-to-house canvass by 1 eputy registration officers will not j lart until Saturday, when a brief ' ourse of instruction for the officers ’ ill be completed. Registration of voters in the coun- i t.i out h;.- the city limits will be conCu' -n by eighty-nine officers, Mr. Ralston announced. Voters who desire to register today must go to the registration headquarters at room No. 35 at the courthouse, which will be open throughout the registration period. Depu v registration officers will! be paid 5 cents for each person ' registered, under terms of the new registration law. The act also pro- | vides that the officers shall be appointed from members of the Re- I publ n and Democratic parties as chosen by their respective county j chairmen. The county clerk is given discretion in designating total I number of such officers and to determme the territory in which officers hall operate and tne time they shall work. The law does not means that the j registering officer shall ask the voter what his party affiliations are, Mr. j Ralston said. To facilitate registration, the 1 county clerk has directed that a j Republican and a Democrat be as- I signed to each of the 328 voting 1 places in the county and has au- I thorized them to call at homes of j voters. This, it is believed, will pro- ; vide more opportunity for everyone to register than a former law which compelled the voter to have his j registration filed at certain places j and within limited hours.
Rye an old American Family jfrjjfc 1§& : • J | J'S? ■- - ... ~ .-.- , - 3~^~~*" 1 “j" ; GARDEN has been known 11 nee you thot it is possi* ~ j h and Aristocrat liquors It ss ossy to the mmlitv and rniritv in among Rye whiskies. And Ift ~r, ‘f i I now its fine flavor and throat as four-ply velvet. One does not have to blended tiye whiskey at a J J 1 J * a ~ I its price enjoyment. A distinguished rye whiskey signals I6[OUNCtS m 9OiWOO VA-‘ * \ - aQ d f beads.” It is an |i I American . ssoz? K „ mmgjm ll The guide to the selection of America’s - A BL’END ? v purest blends of choicest rye is the seal of National Distillers and the Penn - Maryland ■ inti >;.o^BQßll^'" mt w signature which appear on ! often noMa (aruftftft II is a name you can trust when you buy 111 £ £ g aging can give to whiskey', and purity main- • • • Always ask to see the bottle and look for the National Distillers emblem. It signifies that the I?W whiskey on which it appears has its quality and purity safeguarded from the distillery to you rii3^•iJIAII M tUMrAA M 9 i by one watchful ownership X. Y.
Engineer Ends 37 Years Service With Railroad
Frank Courter Will Retire to Small Farm and Raise Peaches. Driving his puffing locomotive up |to the engine shops for the last ; I time, engineer Frank Courter, 70, ! Effingham. 111., ended thirty-seven years’ service with the old Indianapolis Indiana Southern and the Illinois Central railroads yesterday. Bluff and agile as he climbed from the cab. Mr Courter, clad in blue denim overalls, looked reluctantly ■at the greasy cab of engine 1110. Crowds of well-wishers gathered around to give him congratulations and josh him with well-meaning humor. His days as a pilot of a steel locomotive ended. Mr. Courter will retire to a fix and one-half-acre [ farm in Effingham, where he will j I raise peaches. Unlike most retired engineers who wander moodily around depots when their service is ended. Mr. Courter has something , to occupy nis time and interests. In 1896, Mr. Courter began the life of a railroader by cleaning ash pans. A year later he was promoted to an engine on a freight line. 1 His first charge was engine No. 10, a strange contrast to 1110. He has | been a passenger engineer twentyseven years. I Epochal changes have passed in railroading since Mr. Courter, or i “Frank,” as his friends shout, first set out with an engine. His first (engine weighed fifteen tons and re[quired two drivers. No. 1110 weighs 1210 tons. He has traversed the ! 'same route. Effingham to Indian- : apolis, these twenty-seven years. Last night when he returned to his home a celebration awaited him, j for it is a momentous occasion for one who has dedicated his life to the tracks suddenly to change his life. He has had no grave accident in twenty-seven years, authough he confessed that before that he “used to have a hell of a lot of them.” Frank Courter is a widower and has five children, three boys and two girls, two of whom live with him. , There are about 2.000 species of ■ amphibians throughout the world.
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Frank Courter BUTCHER FINED S3O FOR MEAT TAMPERING Market Operator Convicted of Food Adulteration. A fine and costs of S4O were paid yesterday by Mortimer W. Schussler, meat markets operator, when he was convicted by Municipal Judge William H. Sheaffer on charges of adulteration of food. The court held him guilty of placing a chemical substance in hamburger. In pronouncing sentence, Judge Sheaffer said he was sorry he could not fine Mr. Schussler more than S3O. the maximum penalty under the law.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
CITY SYMPHONY ‘ALL-REQUEST’ MUSICALE SET Experiment Arranged for April Concert May Be Regular Feature. Patrons of the Indianuapolis Symponhy orchestra and local music lovers in general will be given a chance to have a finger in the local “musical pie” when the symphony plays its all-request concert in April. Have you a favorite symphony? Are you occasionally taunted by some tantalizing and elusive bit of melody? If it has appeared on previous orchestral programs, or if you would like to hear it played, Ferdinand Schaefer and his musicians want to know it—and want to play it for you. Requests should be mailed now to Ferdinand Schaefer, in care of the Indiana State Symphony Society, 120 East Ohio street. Saidy Mr. Schaefer recently: “This is an experiment. We would like to make it an annual feature of the local concert season. That, however, will depend upon the interest and response of the public. “So far I have received a variety of requests. I have been asked to play everything from Beethoven’s
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‘Second Symphony’ and the Tschaikowsky • Suicide Symphony’ to Gershwin’s ‘Rapsody in Blue. We shall, however, try to select our numbers from those most often requeued.'’ Recent check-ups on requests alj ready received reveal that symphonies by Haydn and Mozart, the Brahm “Hungarian Dances’ and the “Blue Danube Waltzes” remain per- | rental favorites of orchestral devotees. The next symphonic program should prove particularly appealing to lovers of “Romantic" music. Presenting works by Rossini. Schumann, Svendson and Saint-Saens. it will be given at the Murat theater Tuesday night. HOOSIER A. C. NAMES NEW OFFICERS’ SLATE Walter Lauritzen Is Elected President for 1934. New officers of the Hoosier Athletic Club for 1934 are Walter Lau- • ritzen, president; Arthur Link, first | vice-president. Otto Roos, second | vice-president: E. F. Scherer, reI cording secretary: John L. Nicholson. corresponding secretary: A. F Westlund, treasurer, and John Long, assistant treasurer.
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CAB DRIVER ADMITS ATTACK, (!OPS SAY Argument Over Fare Is Blamed for Fight. Enraged in a dispute over a taxi fare. Marvin Enright. 27, of 1710
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(East Ohio street, a taxicab driver, struck William Memfield. 57. of j 1429 W r est Thirty-fifth street. SaturI day night, he confessed yesterday. ! according to police. Mr. Merrifield is near death in the 5 city hospital suffering from a broken nose, fractured skull and paralysis ;of the left side. He was found with his brother. Verne Merrifield. 52, on the sidewalk near their home on West Thirty-fifth street. Enright confessed to detectives
PAGE 5
Louis Fossati and Phillip Miller, they said, that he struck Mr. Merrifield, j throwing him onto the pavement, after a fight over a fare which Mr Merrifield refused to pay. Pastor Is Sought Here Indianapolis police have been asked by Robert Barnes, Terre ; Haute police chief, to find the Rev. | Robert E. Davidson, to notify him of the death of Hugh McGulnis in 1 Terre Haute.
