Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 280, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 April 1934 — Page 12
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GOMMITTEE FOR S.ENIOR PLAY AT TECHJS NAMED ‘Little Women* Will Be Presented at School April 20. Characters In the play, “Little " omen, to he given by the senior class of Arsenal Technical high school April 20, will be made up for their parts by a committee appointed by John Farrell Simpson, sponsor of the art department staff. Members of the committee are; Joan Baker, Joy Bettis, Jane Bosart, Ruth Funke, Marjorie Gadberry, William Heistand, La Donna Loftin. Charlotte McKay, Ralph Morgan, Betty Reid. Mariesue Spillman and Norma Stearns, all seniors. Betty Hancock will have charge of the hairdressing for the play. Character types will be studied and a trial make-up at a rehearsal. The then wall make necessary suggestions for changes in the makeup to be used for the play. Only the natural hair of the actresses will be used in coiffures for the performance. Characters will have changes made j n their makeup between acts to account for the passing of years in the play. Tech Rand Officers liew’ officers of the senior band of Tech have been elected. They are Charles Clark. president: Charles Antibus, vice-president; Dick Thoeny. secretary; Hugh Weaver and Jeanette Wherry, librarians, and Robert Powhler, ser-geant-at-arms. Dorothy Huff, of the concert orchestra, and John Davis, of the concert band, will be vocational assistants, with Raymond Oster as director. Publication Rewards Salesmen Special awards will be given fifty Tech pupils for their work as salesmen in the recent subscription campaign of the Arsenal Cannon, student publication. Announcement of these awards has been made by Werner Monninger, faculty business manager. The campaign was in charge of Walter Sinclair and Daniel Gleich. student business manager and circulation manager. Publicity was in charge of Robert Mikels. The highest award will go to George Messmer. It will be a certificate showing that he has earned two gold pins. Fifty or more subscriptions must be sold for a gold pin. Others who will receive these pins ar* 5 Virginia Miller. Jane Bosart. Margie Willsey and Mary Jane Wade. Eleven pupils receiving silver pins include Merrill 'Rockefeller, Walter Sinclair. Maryann Bitter, Jay Fix. David LaMar. Oscar Kirsch. Helen Karch. Art. Beard. John Baker, Paul Gentry and Alice Bray Fitz. Pupils receiving bronze pins are Frank .Jordan. Dorothy Lee, George King. Ruth Funk, Lois Noffke, John Springer, Edith Simmons. Paul Stetzel, Lawrence Sweeney, Carl Corbin. Bernard Rose. Margaret O'Connell, Sam Privett, Eileen Westover and Richard Brennen. Those receiving ribbons, in honor of selling ten or more subscriptions, are Lois Campbell. Mary Tegeler, Evelyn Haldey, Lois Smith, Rosemary Moore. Marie Chenoweth, Cortland Christner. Mary Cook, Charlene Plummer, Irvin Berkowitz. William McCauley. Marjorie Miner. Dolores Schmidt. Peggy Jean Yates, Jeanne Reed. Maxine Miller, June Zetterman. William Wilhelm, Dorothey Fulton. LaVerne Day. Rosalie Holman, Thelma Fitzgerald. Betty Williamson and William Wishart. Basketball Team Honored In recognition of the record of the Tech basketball team, members of the varsity squad and coach Tim Campbell were presented with gift books and certificates of appreciation from the student body. Each book is bound in green leather, with a white silk interliner and a block T and (he player's name stamped in gold on the cover. It contains autographs of hundreds of Tech students and faculty members. The project was planned by D. C. Park's Advertising IT class. Those taking part in the plans were Jane Schnell. Evva King. Joe Perkins. Richard Lutz. Barbara Dyar. Ted Lehmann. Victor Vollrath. Margaret Oldham and Alan Lashbrook. The printing and assembling was done by boys in the Tech print shop. Spanish Club Meets Customary observance of the speakers at the meeting of the Easter season was described by Spanish Club of Tech Thursday. Speakers were Jay Fix and Martha Main. MEDICAL DEPARTMENTS MERGED BY INDIANA U. Miss Winfred Conrick Heads New Grouping at Center. Dr. W. D. Gatch. dean of the Indiana university medical school, today announced the consolidation of the occupational and phvio therapy departments of the medical center, and named Miss Winifred V. Conrick director of the group. The move, according to Dr. Gatch. was for greater efficiency and economy. The Junior League will continue to support the occupational therapy department.
PLEASANT RELIEF FROM CONSTIPATION Shoulders droop under weight of years. Young, yet beauty has fled. Cheeks are sallow and drawn. Unsightly pimples. Keep your system clean and you keep the beauty of youth. Its energy. Its irresistible charm. Then life is not a failure. Clogged bowels and inactive liver cause poisons to seep through the system. Health vanished and with it beauty and energy. Dr. Edwards Olive Tablets will help save you from this dark hour. For 20 years they have been prescribed in place of calomel to men and women seeking health and freedom from constipation. They act easily and smoothie. No dangerous griping. Take nightly before retiring. Results will amaze you. Thousands of men anti women would never be without Dr. Edwards Olive Tablets, a vegetable compound. Know theig i>y their olive color. 15c. 30c anti, 60e. All draggiat*.—Advertisement.
TURNING TO STONE
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Victim of a strange malady that ossifies muscle and tissue, little Benny Hendrick. 7, sits here at the Wilkes-Barre (Pa.) General hospital with rock-hard arms and bark—unaware that he has 1 rendezvous with death. The disease, baffling to doctors, is expected to prove fatal as soon as the hardening process reaches a vital organ.
RETAIL FOOD PRICES ADVANCE .4 PER CENT Index Reaches Highest Point Since January, 1933. Py f nited Prrtn • WASHINGTON. April 3.—Retail food prices advanced .4 per cent during the two wepks ending March 13, bringing the index to 108.5 per cent of the 1913 average, the highest point since January, 1932, the labor dejvrtment reported today. Prices for the period were 20 per cent higher than the corresponding in 1933. The advance was attributed to substantial increases in prices of meats, lard, butter, cheese, potatoes and coffee.
I JUk. J 0? DRAW A CIRCLE AROUND fi§llJr THE'CENTER OF THIS .FINE TOBACCO PLANT * ; M;TOSw ■KBHMHMjL line, smooth quality doesn’t just happen— center leaves are the mildest leaves —they ~' /•' * ..x „ ' for we use only the center leaves! Not the top taste better —then ’ — for / - £j%* leaves because those are under-developed— throat protection. And every Lucky is „ Js*** -•'* ; '* ' ' not ripe. Not the bottom leaves because those fully packed with these choice tobaccos—- ' are inferior in qualitv—thev grow close to the made’round and firm —free from loose k ..;_ —;> -->.-v>~. & ? ground and are dirt-covered, coarse, sandy. ends—that’s why Luckies do not dry out. We select only the center leaves—for which Luckies are all-ways kind to your throat. “It’s toasted” y/ Luckies are all-ways kind to your throat —-i the top t r^ r^, nder ' develot>ed Only the Center Leaves —these are the Mildest Leaves They taste better | L3T Ccryrifht, 1*34, Tie 4bk>:u Totneoo Comptcj. 1 ni NOT the bottom leaves they're inferior in quality—coarse and sandy \ j.X\ i ■ t
RETAILERS ASK GROSS INCOME TAX REMOVAL Levy Is Special Hardship for Small Merchant, Says Official. Repeal of the Indiana gross income tax law by election of candidates to the legislature favorable to its removal, was the plan outlined by the Marion county division of the Associated Retailers of Indiana at a meeting yesterday afternoon. County headquarters of both parties will be visited soon in behalf of repeal of the bill by a committee to be selected by the association. Referring to the gross income tax law as “a hardship against all, especially the small merchant.” L. F. Shuttleworth, executive secretary of the association, told members of the work w-hich is being • conducted in twelve counties in the interests of repeal. He pointed out that under present conditions, it is impossible to pass the tax on to the consumer, and therefore it merely is an additional tax for the retailer. The organization advocates a four-point tax program as a substitute for the gross income tax law according to Mr. Shuttleworth. First—Retention of the gasoline tax for roads exclusively. Second—Limitation of property taxes to $1.50 in cities and $1 on farms. Third—Provision for a permanent moratorium on public bond issues. Fourth—Following repeal of the gross income tax and passage of a maximum levy on property, if the school system is handicapped, then the merchants would accept a retail sales tax. which would be required by law to be passed on to the consumer; and which would be used only for current expenses in the schools. Former Resident Succumbs Mrs. James H. Lesley, 71, of Mebane, N. C.. died last night, according to word received by a niece, Mrs. Martin Henry Wallick. 1507 North New Jersey street. Mrs. Lasley was a former resident of Indianapoli^
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
ROMANCE ENDS
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Ada Williams Ince. former “Miss Florida.” finds her romance wrecked at 19. She is suing William T. Ince. son of the pioneer film producer, for divorce. Mrs. Ince is shown here at the counsel table in superior court, Los Angeles.
Murder Charges Dismissed Charges against Edw’ard Me-1 Millan, Negro, 2452 ! i Martindale avenue, growing out of the murder j of his wife. Cora. March 20, were i dismissed in municipal court today by Judge William H. Sheaffer. Mrs. i McMillan was found stabbed to death in a field on West Sixteenth ! street near Eagle creek. M\CKS COUGH drop . Real Throat relief! Medicated with ingredients of Vicks Vapoßub
REBELS NEED BUT ONE VOTE TO OUSTCURRY Tammany Chief Doomed, Executive Committee Poll Indicates. By I'nitrd prr*s NEW YORK. April 3—John F. Curry, political overlord of New York City, until the voters divested him of most of his power in last November's municipal elections, sat defiantly on a tottering throne today as followers, in increasing numbers, demanded abdication. He had been confident that the revolt against his rule over the House of Tammany would be confined only to a few- discontented and jealous district leaders. But today he learned that the insurrection had spread so widely that if his foes muster one more vote, he will be ousted. The strength of Mr. Curry's oppo-
sition was revealed at a meeting yesterday of hostile district leaders. The conferees represented 112-3 votes of the 25 in Tammy Hall's executive committtee. Sponsors of the revolt declared that the meeting did not demonstrate the full strength of the antiCurryites. They pointed out that several other district leaders were unable to be present, or were uncertain as to their position. As soon as a definite majority is obtained, a meeting of the executive committee will be called to oust Mr. Curry, who has been charged by his opponents with misleadership in failing to support President Roosevelt and with responsibility for Tammany's defeat at the hands of the Fusion party. The insurrectionists appointed a committee to seek to bring other district leaders into the fold. They have reached no agreement on a successor to Mr. Curry should he be ousted, but it was suggested that a triumvirate or a larger committee could rule. Infirmary Charge ‘Fire Trap’ Charging that the Marion county infirmary in Indianapolis has been reported to him as a “fire trap,” A1 Feeney, state fire marshal and safety director, will visit the institution this week, he announced today.
CAPITALISM NO SOVIET WORRY, SAYS DIPLOMAT Russia Not Moving Away from Communism, States Troyanovsky. T tn'frrl pres • CINCINNATI. April 3.—Rrvolutions are a domestic product and can not be imported, in the opinion of Alexander A. Troyanovsky. Soviet ambassador to the United States. Interviewed as he came here to address the foreign policy association. Mr. Troyanovsky said that Russia is perfectly willing to deal with its capitalistic neighbors, unafraid of any counter-revolutionary propaganda that foreigners might introduce. “Internally, however, there is no compromise.” the ambassador said. "We are not moving away from communism. “Stalin is an able man, conse-
.'APRIL 3, 1931
Iquently he has great Influence. But he does not control the party. Tha party controls him. In Russia, | obedience to the man is not. re- ! quired. but obedience to a system.” "Since Russia is primarily interested in building up her internal economy she is anxious to avoid j war." Mr. Troyanovsky stated. I However. I find Europe today in 1 greater danger of war than at any I time since 1914.” Regarding possibility of war between Russia and Japan, the ambassador shrugged his shoulders. Russia, he is sure, does not want it. The English language is taught in every high school in Japan, even in the rural districts.
ALL-BRAN MADE HIM REGULAR AS CLOCK Delicious Cereal Corrected His Constipation We quote from his voluntary and enthusiastic letter: “After reading your advertisement, I decided to iise All-Bran. I had been taking pills right along. But now I don't have to take pills. “I take All-Bran every morning. and am as regular as the clock. It. has done me a lot of good."—Stephen Higgins. 51 S. Nein St., South Norwalk, Conn. Common constipation frequently causes headaches, loss of appetite and energy. Yet this condition ran he overcome, usually, by eating Kellogg’s All-Bran. Tests show r this delicious cereal provide? “bulk” and vitamin B to aid elimination. All-Bran* is also rich in iron for the blood. The “hulk” in All-Bran is much like that in leafy vegetables. Inside the body, it forms a soft mass. Gently this clears out the intestinal wastes. Isn’t this safer than taking harmful patent medicines? Two tablespoonfuls daily are usually sufficient. Chronic cases, with each meal. If seriously ill. see your doctor. All-Bran makes no claim to be a “cure-all.” Enjoy All-Bran as a cereal witß milk or cream. Use it also in making fluffy muffins and breads, etc. Get the red-and-green package at your grocer’s. Made by Kellogg in Battle Creek.
