Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 282, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 April 1934 — Page 15
APRIL 5, 1934
KINGAN WORKER KILLED BY CAR; TOLL NOW 25 Native of Rumania Struck by Auto: Driver Is Not Held. Injuries receive when he was struck by an automobile at West and Washington streets last night proved fatal to John BaidVrk, 56, 111 South California street, who died in city hospital late last night. Mr. Baiduck was struck by an automobile driven by | Fred Anaker, 41, 1318 i Shepard street, who was I I not arrested. Mr. Daiduck, a native of Rumania, was employed by Kingan & Cos. The df'ath of Mr. Baiduck brings the total number of automobile fatalities for Marion county to 25 since the first of the year. Richard Riggs, 7, of 42 North Oakland avenue, was struck by an automobile as he crossed the street in front of his home yesterday, suffering a fractured right leg. The car was driven by George W. Shugert, 1138 Beville avenue, who w r as not arrested. Donald Little, 21, of 502 North De Quincy street, suffered injuries of the left arm and back when an automobile he was driving on Road 52, fifteen miles north of Indianapolis, overturned and threw him out of the car. Craig Hayes. 26, Lawrence, who was riding with Little. suffered lacerations and bruises. Both men were sent to city hospital. Chauncv Clark. 30, Ft. Harrison, suffered bruises and lacerations and Miss Pearl Haymaker, 30, of 614 North East street, suffered a fractured right shoulder when a car in which they were riding last night struck a telegraph pole at Emerson avenue and Pendleton pike. Clark was arrested charged with drunken driving and Miss Haymaker was sent to city hospital. Joseph Maynard, 27. of 821 North East street, suffered injuries to his right leg and wrist when a car whirh he was driving on the National road west of the Big Four railroad last night was sideswiped by a hit and run driver. Mr. Maynard came to city hospital for treatment. ELECTION LAW CHANGE URGED BY DRY PARTY Prohibitionists Would Open Primary to All Groups. Enactment of a primary law that would open the primary election to all parties, regardless of the number of votes cast by the patty, was advocated in the platform adopted yesterday by the Prohibition party of Indiana. Delegates to the convention selected a state ticket headed by Albert W. Jackman, Attica, as candidate for United States senator at the meeting in the Wheeler City Rescue mission. Other planks in the platform favored salary reductions, reduction of a number of state offices, public ownership of public utilities and a two-year moratorium on farm and home mortgage foreclosures.
Reliable Shoes at lowest pfuci-i NOW 2.V> E. ' Washington St. —S— 203 W. Washington St. STORES 100-111 S Illinois St.
AMUSEMENTS ■1 rncKTNL- HOUR V 1 301 ■l3®, „o® "■‘’Ml iUITH svy T if Jm FAY PAUL " . WRAY and LUKAS '* >P “The Countess of sa *&/ Monte Cristo" P The thrilling comedy-drama of a I * i|||M beautiful movie extra girl plunged into the 1 of Countess in real life!
ENTERS RACE FOR STATE REPRESENTATIVE
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Among candidates for the R-publican nomination for state representative from Marion county is Marjorie Rocmler Kinnaird, attorney, whose offices are at 1110 Fletcher Trust building.
STOMACH INTERIOR IS PHOTOGRAPHED WITH TUBE-LIKE CAMERA
liy l nitrd Prc* PHILADELPHIA, April 5.—A slender, tube-like camera, which makes sixteen photographs of the interior of the stomach, marks the latest invention of medical science in its fight against internal diseases. The camera was used on Henry Harrington at Hahhneman hospital when physicians were unable to diagnose an irritating stomach condition. Mr. Harrington was taken to an operating room and a long tube handed him, which he swallowed. A button was pushed, a flashlight exploded inside Mr. Harrington's stomach and medical science had made sixteen negatives of the stomach walls. A tiny flashlight bulb, connected to a battery by a thread-like wire, is in the center of the tube. A film containing eight exposures is placed above the light and another one is set below the bulb. Eight microscopic holes expose eight sections of the stomach to the upper film and the same number of holes expose the lower film. Ivy on a house wall is usually a protection from dampness, rather than a menace, unless there is a defect in the wall.
2 —BANDS—2 llfl JOHNNY HAMP Hi and His Orchestra M^r JOE CAPPO S Ol **R.vptian Srrenadem V Tickets 5*)C Inrl. tax till 6 MV V. M. Sunday. Sunday After ft 1\ M„ or. M Dance Tomorrow Wpfj JOE CMTO IreW jf and Ills Egyptian Serenadrrs isc Before 9 I ■ m o~i * n a| | Hjr oof W I baurooml p
Marjorie Roemler Kinnaird
GARFIELD CHURCH TO INSTALL NEW PASTOR The Rev. Norman Schultz Assumes First Charge Sunday. The Rev. Norman Schultz will be | installed as pastor of the Garfield park Evangelical church at services Sunday at 3:30. This will be his first pastorate. He succeeds the Rev. Titus Lehman, who •will take over a church in Baltimore. On its first meal, as an adult, a fly can drink twice its own weight.
MOTION PICTURES
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SpSftENTAfiONS ,; r, NEI6H&ORHOOP THgATgRgf
mjKTH SIDE ZARING -\ nn H * rd ‘ ne , uheeler and Woolsey “HIPS. HIPS, HOORAY” t ii Talbot & !!**nd lALdOII Double Feature Joe E. Brown ‘•SON OF A SAILOR” • SOLITAIRE MAN” c\a it j 13th and College Mrattord Double Feature JUUUOIU Sidney Fox •MIDNIGHT” “WORLD GONE MAD” i Noble mt Mass. MECCA "SENSATION HI'NTERS” “SHADOW L.ALGHS” GARRICK Dou^ 1 Vesture Uiiixivivii Warner Baxter “AS HIBANDS GO” “DESIGN FOR LIVING” REX 30th Si Northwestern “PROFESSIONAL SWEETHEART” I) ITT Illinois at Stth •vl 1 Li Native Cast j “ESKIMO” pep /"SI ain St Clair. Ft. Wayne ST. CLAIR Edmund Fe Low r e e “LET’S FALL IN LOVE” “SHRIEK IN THE NIGHT” rvn ptif 33.51 Station St. LfKhAM Ir,ne Dunne Ciire Brook “IF I WERE FREE” uptown “ROMAN SCANDALS" EAS'T'siDE T' 4 f' l /A A1 4 2443 E. Wash. St. I ACUMA Double Feature liivivi'iit Win. Powell “PRIVATE DETECTIVE 62" STRAND Double Feature 'TrrviTr * i P( . (has. Lsuthton PEnAT^C t o l£k t glg^ 1 VHP RIVOLI u tde **F ea t u re** IRVING Warne/ Oland “CHARLIE CHAN’S GREATEST CASE” EMER SON 4620 Elenth SPECIAL FEATFRE 1 ATTRACTION HAMILTON Double^Featn^e lULtHU>IV/n John Barrymore “COCNSELLOR AT LAW” “BEFORE MIDNIGHT”
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
C. E. MURPHY, CITY RESIDENT, DIES IN MIAMI Ex-Agent of Johns-Manville Was 66: Funeral Set for Saturday. Indianapolis relatives have received word of the death of Charles E. Murphy, 66. formerly local agent for the W. H. Johns-Manville Company, at his home in Miami. Fla. The body will be returned to Indianapolis tomorrow. Funeral services will be held Saturday at the home of a sister, Mrs. I. M. Graham. 3837 Graceland avenue. Burial will be in Crown Hill cemetery. Mrs. Julia Huey Burial Today Funeral services were to be held | in Kalamazoo. Mich., this afternoon for Mrs. Julia Huey, 85 at the home of a daughter, Mrs. Lura Butler. Mrs. Huey was a former resident of Indianapolis. She had been ill only i a short time. Surviving are the } daughter and a son, Harry Huey, Indianapolis. T. D. Smith Rites Set Services for Thomas D. Smith, J 87, Civil war veteran, will be held I at 10 tomorrow in the W. T. Blasen--1 gym funeral home. Burial will be
MOTION PICTURES Last 3 Days! KFiTU’C I\LI I II O nights, XV AIM J.TS ONLY.
HOAD TO RUIN
EAST SIDE -v . New Jer. at E. Wash. Paramount Double Feature i aiaimuuu Lilian Harvey “MY LIPS BETRAY" "MASTER OF MEN” II ,| , 1500 Roosevel* Hollywood jkjjs %•, “DESIGN FOR LIVING” “WORKING MAN” TlTVrnfi 4020 E. New York I Ah It) Double Feature IGAL(I7V Elissa L andi "BY CANDLELIGHT” “SOLITAIRE MAN” r> 4 T* 17' PTV 3030 E. 10th St. PAKKKK Double Feature 1 1 vt'tVLAV Gloria Stuart “INVISIBLE MAN” “SCARLET WEEP END” SOUTH SIDE FOUNTAIN SQUARE Double Feature Joan Blondell “HAVANA WIDOWS” “VOICE IN THE NIGHT” SANDERS P Doub'e Feature** Chester Morris “KING FOR A NIGHT” “RETURN OF CASEY JONES” ORIENTAL Double Featur** t/iVIL/ltltlL/ Madge Evans “FUGITIVE LOVERS” “TROUBLE BUSTER” GRANADA 1046 A e “ALICE IN WONDERLAND” Roosevelt Marie Dressier SWEETHEART” AVALON 4 z;°r “S. O. S. ICEBERG" GARFIELD Double Feature Geo. Brent • FEMAT E” “HELL AND HIGH WATER” LINCOLN B ? 2 b.‘“” “ONLY YESTERDAY” LOOKING FORWARD WEST SIDE DAISY Doable Feature Chas. Laurhton “PRIVATE LIFE OF HENRY VIII” “THE CROSBY CASE” BELMONT Double Fe^ure 001 Kav Franris “HOUSE ON 56TH STREET” "ORIENT EXPRESS” CX A TF **® 2 T * nlh 8 1~ MAI Li Doable Feature “SON OF A SAILOR” “ONLY YESTERDAY”
in Lafayette. Mr. Smith died Tuesday at his home, 712 North Alabama, Surviving him are two daughters, Mrs. E. C. Smith. Indianapolis, and Mrs. J. F. Lytle, Kansas City, Mo., and two sons, Charles A. Smith, with whom he lived, and Bert R. Smith, Valparaiso. F. W. King Rites Tomorrow The funeral of Frank W. King, grocer in Indianapolis since 1912, will be held at 2 tomorrow in the Harry W. Moore funeral home. Burial will be in Crown Hill cemetery. Mr. King died Tuesday night at his home. 4250 Winthrop avenue, after an illness of several weeks. He was a member of the Masonic order and the Woodmen of the World. Surviving him are the widow, Mrs.
s Ton A V The _ greatest ad- |? / I vl/H I venture drama iLibertv 3 / =5 magazine gave it 4 "stars!)"" and a 1 X J | = hilarious comedy riot . . . BOTH on / F 1,. § PATROtf im^j..: •""ffEBSSI WKEITi WXXMi oVhntHZASU PITTS | IUI * T.S.rp K„.. ff .trtnn ■* U EDWARD EVERETT -ll r,ll# Magazine r il HORTON, =3l PERT KELT ON =
...*Ne *• jJIA • X; xj*-;: *,; |k Jfc&Af. <9 JgKsw ' VM Today she reigns over StarMi % : ■■ :.;% dom! .. . Again the amazing i •Br Hepburn . . . superb in a role 9 completely and daringly different! : '^/ r as the fighting, thieving, loving l||||f spitfire of the hills! A wildcat girl who stole men's hearts and prayed for their IPy.: , '9K> souls! Only Hepburn would dare such a role. with ROBERT YOUNG • RALPH BELLAMY MARTHA SLEEPER
Starts Tomorrow AT 11 A. M.
Grace King; a daughter. Mrs. I. C. Young, Indianapolis, and a sister, Mrs. Paul Pence, Frankfort. John M. Moore Dies Last rites for John M. Moore. I local photographer, were held at i 2 this afternoon. Following a J week's illness. Mr. Moore died in St. Vincent's hospital Tuesday. He formerly had been employed by The Times. He was a member of the Christian church. Mr. Moore is survived by his widow. Mrs. Etta Moore; and five children. Mrs. Charles Harmon. Mrs. Harry McKinstray, Claude Moore. | Arthur C. Moore, all of Indianapolis, and Clyde Moore Alert. Homes for no fewer than 30.000 persons are provided by London's basement dwellings.
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CIRCLE fgff] :T
music recital set FOR RHODIUS PARK Pupils of Mrs. I.eila Neaville to Present Program. Pupils of Mrs. Leila Neaville will give a music recital Satural night at Rhodius park in the fourth of a series of entertainment programs sponsored by the park department. Pupils taking part are June Keene. Ethel Smiley. Juannette Bailey. Pauline Polly. Robert Burkhart. Billy Deaken. Sheila Brower. George Bales. Hazel Boyd. June
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O-o-o-oli DOCTOR! rw mFZ —I hn I’m trim I nil Ibp qirlm ir 111 b v ha#/ ih q ir It p n the" " r ° CLARK CABLE Mill ind/ MYRNA LOY "Mil 111 WHITE" Mctro-Goldw \ n • Ma\ cr Picture u /tk ELIZABETH ALLAN - JEAN HERSHOLT tou.a v From the stage play that shocked l.nt Times _ and startled New iork still \ O R >1 \ shearer the biggest hit on Broadway! •H'mnE" STARTS FRIDAY zSt 'J
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Garrett, Max Kutton, Billy Leak, Pauline Garrett, Louise Foreman, Robert Everett, Noema Chenoreth, Dorothy Weber. Eugene Leak. Mildred Snyder, Dolly Snyder, Wilma Slagle. Wanda Ruth Helm and Wmefred Freeman.
MOTION PICTURES rjiyj ■ J4oc 7 LllkVTl.Tr POSITIVELY LAST DAY! ‘WONDER BAR’ IS STARS—CART OK .ViOO:
