Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 258, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 March 1934 — Page 18
PAGE 18
NEWS OF MOTOR WORLD
DE SOTO AUTO SALES RECORD STRIKING GAIN Business Already 40 Per Cent of 1933 Total: More Dealers Serving. According to word received by A. R. Jones, president of Jones-Maley, Inc., from L. C. Peed, general sales manager of the De Soto Motor Corporation, orders now on hand for immediate delivery of the new Airflow De Soto models already have reached 40 per cent of the total business done by the corporation during all of last ypar. “Production is increasing steadily,” Mr. Peed said, “and the way orders are piling up daily, definitely indicates that production will not catch up with orders until about May.l. This takes into account the heavy production schedule set for March. Weekly Gain Shown “The combined retail sales of Plymouth and De Soto for the week ended Feb. 17 were 18 per cent ahead of the previous week and 112 p r cent ahead of the same comparable week of last February. “The splendid growth of our retail outlets, which have increased amazingly since the presentation of our 1934 Airflow De Soto, establishes a new' record for our company. Never before in De Soto history, not excluding the peak year of 1929, have w r e had as large a dealer organization as at present. We have 60 per cent more dealers than a year ago and there is not an important trading area in the entire country that is not reached by a De Soto merchant. "Buying Shows” Noted “I have just returned from a number of automobile shows in the west, including Omaha, Des Moines, Denver and Salt Lake City, and the reception accorded the Airflow cars was equally as enthusiastic as m the east. “One thing was very apparent at these points, that the automobile shows this year are ‘buying show’s’ —for the first time since 1929. The motoring public is ‘motor car hungry’ with the definite upturn in business that is already apparent. This, combined with the restoration of national confidence, gives us every reason to be optimistic.” GEMS ADORN MEDAL SPEED KING RECEIVES Presented Annually on Eve of Speedway Race. Contrary to popular belief, there is no “championship crown ’ in the automobile racing sport. It is a mythical symbol of “king of speed” which has been adopted by sports writers to designate the supremacy of the outstanding driver. -However, there is an award for the national champion. This, a diamond-studded gold medal, is presented by the contest board of the American Automobile Association each Memorial day at the Indianapolis Speedway prior to the start of the famous 500-mile race. Similar medals, but of less valuable metal content, are presented to drivers rated second and third on the championship list of the year before. Cars and Roads There is one car for every five persons in the United States. SOME WOMEN ALWAYS ATTRACT You want to be beautiful. You want the tireless energy, fresh complexion and pep of youth. Then let Dr. Edwards Olive Tablets help free your system of the poisons caused by clogged bowels and torpid liver. For 20 years, men and women suffering from stomach troubles, pimples, listlessness and headaches, have taken Dr. Edwards Olive Tablets, a successful substitute for calomel, a compound of vegetable ingredients, known by their olive color. They act easily upon the bowels without griping. They help cleanse the system and tone up the liver. If you value youth and its many gifts, take Ir. Edwards Olive Tablets nightly. How much better you wilj feel—and look. 15c, 30c, 60c—Advertisement.
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MUCH-LIGHTED AUTO PURELY UTILITARIAN
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At first glance, the front of this car may look like a young collegian’s idea of class and show. But every light had its particular use, recently, when the car participated in the Monte Carlo rally in France. Even the little light extending from the bumper kept the driver out of ditches. C. J. Joyce, British racing driver, is shown inspecting the arrangements, in London.
Worn Tires Involved in Numerous Auto Accidents
Firestone Dealer Discusses Factors of Economy and Safety. The chief cause of automobile accidents, statistics show, is the inability to stop quickly due to ineffective brakes or smooth, thin-worn tires, asserts E. 2. Short, manager of Firestone Service Stores, Inc., 502 North Delaware street, in discussing precautions car owners should take. He continued: “Your brakes will stop the wheels but your tires must stop your car.” If you ask the average car owner what starts his car, he will say ‘the engine.’ But the engine starts the wheels—and it is the gripping action of the tires on the road that really starts the car. More important from the safety standpoint, is the fact that, w r hen the brakes are applied, the tires clinging to the road stop the car. “The two front wheels are really steering wheels. Every car must have three good steering wheels—one in the hand and two on the road. Failure of any of them is likely to mean disaster. “The car also needs eight good brakes—four tires on the road and four brakes on the wheels. All eight of these have a direct relation to stopping the car w'hen the brakes are applied, and to whether it will swerve sideways. “Driving on fires until they fail is the worst kind of false economy. The last 1.000 miles in the average tire is worth only 41 cents at today’s tire prices. To use this last thousand miles is likely to involve much greater expense and the possibility of an accident. “The greatest enemy of tire life is friction heat within the tire, and to minimize this was the chief purpose of the gum-dipping process developed by Firestone engineers. The tread of a tire is of great importance to the motorist. It is interesting to note that the number of nonskid angles in contact with the road has the most to do with the amount of gripping action the tire provides.” LAUDS SCHOOL PATROL Sir Malcolm Campbell Terms Plan Great Safety Measure. Sir Malcolm Campbell, world speed king who plans to return to America next August for an attempt to better his own land speed record of 272 miles an hour, believes the school-bov patrol to be one of the finest safety activities of the public schools. So well impressed was he with the system upon visiting several American schools while here last year for his second record trial, that Sir Malcolm took the idea back to his native England and since has been prominently affiliated with a group proposing adoption of the patrol in British Isles.
GOODRICH TIRE DEALERGHOSEN N. H. Kassal Returns to Business After Period of Retirement. Appointment of the Kassal Tire Company, 229 Massachusetts avenue, as anew Goodrich dealer, is announced by L. L. Sowers, district manager of the B. F. Goodrich Tire and Rubber Company. The new organization is headed by N. H. Kassal, who, up until his retirement from the tire business several years ago, was a popular figure in city tire circles. His return to the field is indicative of the optimistic feeling for the return of better business. Howard Kirk, who has been identified in the city with the tire field for many years, will be associated ■with the Kassal company. PRODUCTION OF REO TO START SATURDAY Orders on Hand Reported Highest in Years. Ray De Vlieg. works manager of the Reo - Moior Car Company, Lansing, Mich., states that production of the new 1934 Reo Flying Cloud, W'hich will be announced to the public in the near future, will start Saturday. He said that “orders on hand are the highest in years. Reo truck business is exceptionally good. For February truck shipments were more than three times those of February, 1933. For the year to date truck shipments are up 138 per cent over 1933. This is a very heathy sign because it is direct proof of expanding business requirements for fast and economical transportation.” SHOCK DEVICES WORK DESPITE TEMPERATURE Terraplane and Hudson Absorbers Well Lubricated. Temperature changes have virtually no influence on the operation of the road leveller shock absorbers used on Terraplanes and Hudsons. So great is the quantity of oil in the shock absorbers, and so large are the apertures through which the oil passes, that changes in its viscosity, due to temperature changes, have no effect on the road leveller action.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
TRUCKING CODE MAY PROVIDE 30M00 JOBS Annual Wage Increase Resulting Would Be $260,000,000. By Times Special WASHINGTON, March 7.—Owners of approximately 2,000,000 motor vehicles, transporting property over publicly used roadways, came under the code of fair competition for the trucking industry, effective Feb. 26. They include operators for hire and operators not for hire, except to the extent that the latter are covered by other codes. Asa result of the effectiveness of the trucking code, it is estimated by the American Trucking Associations, Inc., that about 300.000 employes will be added to trucking pay rolls, representing an annual increase in wages of $260,000,000. The code provides for a base work week for forty-eight hours and minimum wages for skilled and unskilled labor ranging from 25 cents to 35 cents an hour in the south and 35 cents to 55 cents an hour in the north. It requires that all operators subject to the code register within thirty days of the effective date, giving the number of vehicles, number of employes, tonnage carried and other pertinent facts necessary for proper policing of the industry. Rate Filing Required Operators for hire must file their minimum rates within forty-five days and must adhere to them under penalty of violation of the code. Certain trade practice rules must be observed by all such operators and additional rules may be formulated by trade agreement by natural or territorial divisions of the industry. The code will be administered by a series of decentralized code authorities under the supervision of the administrator of the national recovery act. After compliance with provisions of the code, members of the industry must display an insignia on all their vehicles. All operators for hire must comply with all provisions of the code. Operators not for hire must conform to all provisions, except the provision covering rates and except to the extent that their trucking operations are subject to any other approved code of fair competition. Exempts Farmers Farmers, owning about 835,000 trucks, are not subject to the code if they do not operate for hire. Trucks owned and operated by farmers’ co-operative organizations, however, must register, observe the maximum hours and minimum wages, supply certain reports and carry a modified insignia. Vehicles owned by furniture warehousemen, used in the transportation of household goods, if the amount of other merchandise occasionally carried in such vehicles does not exceed 10 per cent of the total revenue earned by the vehicles, may register either with the trucking industry or under the code of the household goods storage and moving trade. “Through the code, sponsored by the American Trucking Associations, Inc., an organization composed of 108 state and local motor truck associations, a system of decentralized administration and control will be set up which should prove considerably more effective than any system of bureaucratic control,” asserted Ted V. Rogers, president of the national organization. SALES OF FORDS CLIMB Passenger Cars Disposed of Total 789; Last Year, 194. Retail sales made by dealers in the Indianapolis branch area of the Ford Motor Company during the first forty days of 1934 indicate a decided upward
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trend in business. During this period 789 passenger cars and 128 commercial cars and trucks were sold at retail, states R. A. Hayes, manager of the Indianapolis branch. Comparing this with 194 passenger cars and fortysix commercial and trucks sold during the cor-
R. A. Hayes
responding period of last year indicates very clearly that the new Ford for 1934 with its new dual carburetor, clear vision ventilating system, new enamel finishes, and more than thirty other new features is meeting with popular approval. SALES GAIN REPORTED FOR AC SPARK PLUGS More Advertising Ordered in Belief Business Will Improve. “In 1933, 71 per cent of all new cars were equipped with AC spark plugs, as against a six-year average of 61.9 per cent,” Wilson S. Isherwood, general sales manager of AC Spark Plug Company, states. “Sale of spark plugs for replacement purposes.” he stated, “during the last quarter was more than 100 per cent above those in the corresponding quarter of 1932. Total sales in 1933 were well above 1932. “Because we sincerely believe improved business conditions will get even better, we are planning a more active advertising campaign for 1934 ” Isherwood added. WHY GET UP NIGHTS? USE BUCHU AND GIN Make This 25c Test It is as valuable to the bladder as castor oil to the bowels. Flushes out impurities and excess acids which cause the irritation resulting in getting up nights. Irritation, irregularity, leg-pains and backache. On account of the alcohol in gin use juniper oil from which gin is made. Ask for Bukets. the bladder laxative also containing buchu leaves, etc. After four days, if not pleased your druggist will return your 25c. You are boujnd to sleep better after this flushing. Bukets guaranteed by Hook Drug Stores.—Advertisement.
HITLER GUILTY, MASS MEETING IN N. Y, FINDS Nazis Charged With Crimes Against Civilization; No Defense. By United Press NEW YORK, March B.—Adolph Hitler and his Nazi associates were adjudged “gUilty” last night of crimes against civilization. They were “tried” before 25,000 men, women and children at a Madison Square Garden mass meeting sponsored by the American Jewish Congress, the American Federation of Labor, and fifty other liberal groups. An elaborate case was presented against the German chancellor and his followers, but no defense was offered. According to sponsors of the meeting, German Ambassador Hans Luther did not reply to an invitation to present the Nazi side. Crowd Roars Approval The assemblage roared approval of the verdict, presented in the form of a resolution by United States Senator Millard E. Tydings of Maryland. “We declare,” said the judgment, “that the Hitler government is compelling the German people to turn back from civilization to an antiquated and barbarous despotism w'hich menaces the progress of mankind toward peace and freedom, and is a present threat against civilized life throughout the world.” Twenty speakers, representing a cross-section Qf every field of human endeavor, various political and religious creeds and “public opinion” appqgred as “witnesses” against the Hitler regime. Among these were former Governor Alfred E. Smith, Mayor F. H. La Guardia, Matthew Woll, vicepresident of the American Federation of Labor, representing President William Green; Michael Williams, president of the Calvert Associates and editor of the Commonweal; the Rev. Dr. Arthur Brown, chairman of the American Committee of the Rights of Religious Minorities and secretary-emeritus of the Presbyterian Board of Foreign Missions, and Gustavus Kirby, treasurer of the American Olympic committee. Bainbridge Colby Judge Bainbridge Colby, secretary of state under President Wilson, presided as “judge.” Aldermanic President Bernard S. Deutsch read the “indictment” charging the Nazis with crimes against democracy, free i press, free assembly, religious and ! civil liberties, academic freedom, against the arts and sciences, world peace, against women and against all workmen, minorities and liberals. His concluding statement, “public opinion here indicts Hitlerism,” brought a wave of applause. The psychopathologic case against the Nazis was presented by Dr. L. F. Barker, professor-emeritus of Johns Hopkins university. He analyzed Nazism as a “psysichic. epidemic.” Mr. Woll flayed Hitler’s suppression of the German labor movement; Mr. Kirby spoke on the discrimination of Nazi Germany against Jewish athletes; Chancellor Harry Woodburn Chase of New York university, denounced the “barbaric” interference with intellectual freedom in Germany. Mr. Smith said Hitler had returned Germany to “caveman law, the law of the sharpest tooth, the angriest growl, and the greediest maw.” Before seeking international justice from other nations Germany should “do justice to her own elements,” he said. “Bigotry and intolerance is not a thing that can be controlled. It is something that runs wild. It is a cancer in the body politic and the only thing to do is to cut it out.” LUTHERANS FORM NEW ANTI NAZI MOVEMENT Clergy and Laymen Defy Hitler Authorities Near Berlin. By United Press BERLIN, March B.—A new antiNazi movement in the evangelical church was underway today. Members of the “free synod of Berlin and Brandenburg” were pledged to “restore the true Lutheran creed” to the church. The movement was regarded as one of the most important since the dissolution of the Pastor’s Emergency League, composed of clergymen opposed to Nazification of the church. Two hundred and fifty clergymen and 500 laymen in defiance of Nazi church authorities, met at the suburb of Dahlem last night, to form the synod. The Rev. Gerhard Jacobi, pastor of the famous Kaiser j Wilhelm Memorial Church, was; named president. 10 HAZERS OUSTED BY TEXAS COLLEGE CHIEF Drastic Action Taken Against A. & M. Upper Classmen. By United Press COLLEGE STATION, Tex., March B.—Hazing of freshmen by upper classmen had resulted today in the j dismissal of ten sophomore stu- j dents from Texas A. & M. college here, it was announced by Presi- I dent T. O. Walton. “Such drastic action is regrettable,” President Walton said, “but j in view of our rigid policy against hazing, the authorities have no j other course. Bronchial Irritations Need Creosote For many years our best doctors have prescribed creosote in some form for coughs, colds and bron-! chitis, 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 j treatment of colds and coughs, yet j it is absolutely harmless and is j pleasant and easy to take. Your own druggist guarantees Creomulsion by refunding your money if you are not relieved after taking Creomulsion as directed. Be- : ware the cough or cold that hangs on. Always keep Creomulsion on hand for instant use.—Advertisement. y
PAPAL RITES RECORDED BY CAMERA
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An impressive Vatican ceremony is strikingly recorded here as Pope Pius XI, surrounded by members of the Sacred College, presided at preparations for the solemn canonization of the Beato Cottolengo. This was in the throne hall.
Assault Victim’s Father May Hang 3 Attackers
Special Mississippi Law Is Passed by Senate; Repeal Pledged. By United Press s JACKSON, Miss., March 8. —The Mississippi house today took up a bill that would give the • father of the white girl victim of assault by three Negroes the right to spring the trap when the attackers are hanged March 16. The bill passed the senate yesterday, over the protests of Senator Whittington, who declared that “we ouht not to go on record as authorizing a person of this state to hang another person for personal reasons.” Mississippi law now permits a sheriff to delegate any citizen of his county to carry out the duty of hangman. The Negroes are to be hanged in De Soso county and the father lives in another county. The bill authorizes the sheriff to appoirit any citizen of Mississippi. Senator Richardson, its author, pledged himself to ask its repeal the day after the executions. ‘RAT BITE’ MALADY CLAIMED BY PATIENT Fever Sufferer Undergoes Treatment in New Orleans Hospital. By United Press NEW ORLEANS, March B.—Contending that he was suffering from a seven-year-old “rat bite fever” malady, Dane Wagner, 25, former Dayton (O.) medical student, was under observation invCharity hospital here today. Mr. Wagner said that he had been treated in Cincinnati and New York clinics without relief for intermittent attacks of the disease that started after he was bitten on the thumb by a rat in 1926. Physicians at the local hospital were diagnosing his case before verifying his assertions of suffering from the “rare and unusual disease.” j RARE LIQUORS SHOWN AT CHICAGO EXHIBIT Vodka of Russia and Mexican Tequilla Among Displays. By United Press CHICAGO. March B.—A king's choice of brandies, wines and rare liquors was on display today at the teeming national wine and liquor show. There were 200 exhibits from j nearly every country in the world, including the vodka of Russia and the tequilla of Mexico. For those who liked lectures with their liquor there were experts from fifty-four nations. Mexican salesmen explained the “wallop” of their native “habanero” and suave Jap- j anese spoke of their saki.
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ARREST DENIED HIM, INSISTENT MOTORIST PAYS FINE ANYWAY
By United Press LOS ANGELES, March B.—A $2 check mailed the police relief fund tagged motorist Elmer E. Carey as a disciple of honesty today. Mr. Carey, stopped for a traffic infraction, insisted on being tagged, but motorcycle officer Bruce W. Riley refused. Officers Riley chased the pleading motorist away with a warning. Still, Mr. Carey was insistent. “I feel I deserve the regular $2 punishment,” he wrote in the letter in which he inclosed the $2 check.
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MARCH 8, 1934
AM3ERGRIS FIND MEANS WEALTH, VILLAGERS HOPE Discard of Whale Used for Perfume Found: Tests Are Awaited. By United Press SAN FRANCISCO. March 8 Dreams of fabulous wealth, gleaned from the sandy shores of Bolinas Bay, were revived today by a chemist's cautious report finding ambergris, a rare and valuable substance, in samples of the “treasure trove” of the little coast town. Confirmation of the chemist's finding would mean approximately SIOO,OOO for the residents of the town who stopped work, closed school, and let bakings burn while they combed the shore for the evilsmelling substance used to make perfume. A sample of the stuff picked up on the sandy beach was submitted to a chemist here. His finding purportedly indicated that the sample contained “70 per cent ambergris.” The substance sells at S2B an ounce. Bolinas residents have between 200 and 300 pounds. An old salt, now a radio operator, started anew “gold rush” when he picked up a lump of jelly-like stuff, smelled it, and announced that it was the costly discard of a sick whale. Families rushed to the shore. One more test remained between the hopeful treasure-hunters and the wealth of which they dreamed. A report was awaited from a perfume manufacturer. Until that report is made the finders of a “new California ononza” can not be certain whether they have found ambergris or not. But on the basis of the chemist’s report, plans already were made to spend the new-found wealth. The family of Louis Pepper, CVVA worker, had enough to pay off the mortgage on a home and send daughters to college, if the stuff is ambergris. Ronald Gandee, 24, and Frances Longley, 20, planned to set up housekeeping with the proceeds of seventeen pounds. There were two disconsolate figures. Leroy Kower, coast guardsman, found a five-pound lump, then tossed it to another searcher. His gesture may cost him $1,500. Arthur Cook, who rents boats, made money last Sunday by selling small pieces of the stuff to visitors, attracted by the reports of the new “gold rush.” Arthur averaged $1 a pound on his sales. On the basis of the chemist’s report he lost $2,990.
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WHY BAYER ASPIRIN p WORKS SO FAST \ /7) Drop a Bayer Tablet g* m l i*yf Hfc in a glass of water. 1 JC_T Note that BEFORE fegfc' -yj it touches bottom, it ST/1 " ""'if has started to dislll' I iff integrate, i 3 I|jl W hat it does in this IfjJ glass it does in your ill stomach. Hence its I I #S fast action. HI Does Not Harm the Heart
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