Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 285, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 April 1934 — Page 7
APRIL 9, 1931.
Riches Fail to Provide Every Joy After All, Winner of $150,000 Can’t Have Everything. BY GRETTA PALMER Times Special Writer What would you do if you discovered that you had won $150,000 on the sweepstakes? Probably, if you were a man, rush out for a case of champagne and entertain your friends. Probably, if you were a woman, buy a S3O hat. But after that? The annual
winners of these prizes have a disconc ern in g way of plumping back into their obscurity the week after the awards. Few of us, even now, could give the names of the families which were enriched by the Irish sweepstakes a few' days ago. We never find out just how the sudden wea Ith
Miss Palmer
was spent. They can use the money to buy leisure for the rest of their lives, if they want to invest it at 6 per cent and live conservatively on the interest. But active, alert people do not want to retire and spend the rest of their lives twiddling their thumbs. They would find, to their vast astonishment, that six months of holiday from their jobs would find them eager to scamper back to the slavery of the alarm clock. They could use it to pay their debts—but if you have previously been living on a salary, these are probably trifling. Nobody will extend $150,000 credit to a simple job holder. , They could use some of it for a little place in the country or a trip abroad—but these things are comparatively cheap. Even after they are through, they still have, say, $140,000 to worry along with. Won't Buy So Much When you think about it, the contentment which $150,000 would add to your lot is startlingly little. You could aflord, perhaps, to buy $125 dresses instead of $32.50 ones—but that is hardly a revolutionary change. You could afford to have a larger apartment or to live at a nattier address, but if you have a comfortable home now, the difference would be negligible. And that, it seems to me, is a somewhat comforting realization—the fundamental unimportance of the scale on which we live. For if there are the profound social changes which some economists predict, nobody will have the luxuries which $150,000 will buy, and everybody will have the comforts provided, say, by SSO a week. The difference, in such a change, would be far less uncomfortable than the rich are apt to suspect. Prestige Counts So much of the value which we place on money is due less to the things it buys than to our idea of it as a symbol of prestige—a mark of success and a prop to our vanity. The man who amasses great wealth, in nine cases out of ten, derives his pleasure in it from the fact that it sets him apart as a titan among men. The fact that he gets private cars and yachts, which he has no time to enjoy, is secondary. If the rewards of business astuteness were titles of decorations or non-negotiable counters, he would work just as hard for them. The first week of coming into a fortune would be swell—the sense of being able to shoot the works in the matter of ordering from a menu and charging a dress would be a liberating and grand sensation. But after that? Life, we suspect, has changed very little for the lucky families who won the Irish sweepstakes. RECENT BRIDE TO BE HONOR GUEST Bridge party and miscelleanous shower will be given tonight iri honor of Mrs. J. C. Wilson, formerly Miss Mildred Funk. Miss Lea A. Whaley will entertain at her home, 722 Weghorst street, assisted by her mother, Mrs. Richard Whaley. Peach and green appointments will be used. Guests will include Mrs. Wilson. Mesdames J. C. Funk. O. C. Wilson, Russel Duke. William McCarthy. Joe Corrall and Harry Brauherd; Misses Virginia Barnett. Gwen Beard. Margaret Boatman. Constance McDonald. Peggie Rork, Mary Fisher, Florence Condrey, Lorraine Law, Margaret Rosenberg. Margie Turney, Minnie Haynes. Dorothy Hausner, Virginia Stich, Alma Marie Hitzel, Mary Tedrowe, Adelaide Kluger. Frances Hause, Marie Paetz. Mary Harding and Elizabeth Barnett.
A Day’s Menu Breakfast — Grape juice, cereal, cream, fish and rice on toast, milk, coffee. Luncheon — Tomato rarebit on toast, button radishes, dried apple pudding, milk. tea. Dinner — Swiss steak with brown gravy, mashed potatoes, creamed onions, red cabbage with potato mayonnaise. raspberry trifle, crisp cookies, milk, coffee.
HIGH BLOOD PRESSURE Quick Relief or Vou Only Pay When Satisfied. If vou suffer from High Blood pressure dizziness, rinsing in tlie ears, can't sleep at nigh;*. feel weak and shakv. bad taste, nervous. If vour hear; pounds and vou fear a paralytic stroke, to demonstrate Dr Haves' prescription we will send you postpaid, a regular $1 treatment on absolutely FREE TRIAL. While it is nonspecific manv cases report remarkably quick relief; often symptoms diminish and normal sleep returns within 3 days. Contains no salts, physics, opiates or dope. Safe with any diet. PAY NOTHING UNLESS GREATLY IMPROVED Then send sl. If not improved your report cancels charge. Write Dr. Hares Ass’n 1291 Coates, Kansas Cuy. Mo.—Adrerusenuati
v) %% \ L/ ~*y Gtcriirrrv-j. j * o 'V' +& SkiA iSu’m / (/ J mß™ * \ittk laocH. in cme / / * M o) near kaAfeJ I t* rs jfffPf' / *6 * j||r a. rvtur a-n<A A>ma>tE & J- c / Ip " fs. kaA on aCttKacta*, J i J | VyT Tv CWina, line ending jUj || UL/ ir\ ]doc k&L I * J | fyM n* * - * ' *b * j Inclosed find 15 cents for which send me Pattern No. 210. Size Name Street City State IT has class and comfort at the same time, this smartly cut little frock that you can make up in prints or gingham. Designed in seven sizes, 34 to 46 bust, size 38 requires 3% yards of 35-inch fabric. To obtain a pattern and simple sewing chart of this model, tear out the coupon and mail it to Julia Boyd, The Indianapolis Times. 214 West Maryland street. Indianapolis, together with 15 cents in coin.
Manners and Morals BY JANE JORDAN
Ii you feel unequal to the task of meeting your problems alone, write to Jane Jordan for sympathetic advice. Dear Jane Jordan—ls you can figure this out. you can do more than I can. I am a married man with a daughter 12 years of age and am plenty old enough to know better. Some four years ago I became
involved in a love affair with a young lady in my office and completely lost my head over her. Because o f certain family differences at the time, I let m y indiscretions go too far, resulting in the birth of a son to the young lady in question. I am
i 'laiatig
Jane Jordan
fully satisfied that I am to blame. She has since married and now has another child. Try as I may to forget, I still love her and can not get my mind off of her. I know in advance when anything is going to happen to her. If the boy is ill I know it before I am told. Very often we meet in a certain public place where both of us are members. Aithought nothing ever is mentioned, I feel sure that she loves me. To see her with the youngster almost drives me insane. My present home life is pleasant enough. Although my wife suspects the truth she says nothing about it except in a kidding way. She is very well acquainted with the other woman. I might add that my daughter almost worships me. My hair is turning gray with worry over this situation, for I want both of them. What shall I do? I am nearly forty and know what love really is. I was married when I was twenty. Can any one help me? RED. Answer—l do not believe that any rearrangement of your external situation will bring you peace of mind. An elopement, even if it | ended in a double divorce and marriage with the womah of your heart, would only mean an exchange of burdens. Instead of the torment of frus- ! trated desire, you would carry the i weight of your daughter's grief, j your wife’s unhappiness, not to ; speak of the wronged husband who ! had fathered your son only to lose his own child. I doubt if it is posj sible for two to achieve much happiness at the grievous expense of four. If a readjustment were possible at all, I should think it would have I been easier to make when you first found yourself in love with another woman. Now your lives have become so hopelessly entangled with others that you can not retrace i your steps to a simpler situation. The past is there and it can not be | ignored. As it is. the readjustment must come from within instead of without. I do not know of many people. except the very religious, who get much comfort from the dreary consciousness of having been faithful to duty. The inner demand refuses to be silenced by the approval I of conscience, and takes its revenge in various personality upsets. The only thing I know that would help you is self-examination with the help of an expert. You must know by now that no human being ! gets ■ himself so hopelessly messed I up without some emotional defect of which he is unaware. The un- ; derstanding of your own inner i drama and what it means would help you live in a world in which you simply can not rearrange things to your satisfaction. As it is, you are tempted to break the situation by force before it breaks you. Far better to avoid all this breakage by a better grip on your struggle. Some desires simply have to be abandoned because they are Incompatible with others which are more important. Reconciliation
to the unpleasant fact is a job for an emotionally adult person. Only children expect to have all their desires gratified. a a a Dear Jane Jordan—l was delighted with your answer to the mother of sons. TANARUS, too, had a son and I know that a husband doesn’t care for the home where bcyt are. I also know that this woman’s husband keeps up his nagging so that she will not suspect that he is intimate with another woman. But most wives are so conceited that they do not want to think that their husbands do not love them. The husband surely wants to leave her or he surely would not keep on the subject. Why doesn’t she leave him and marry the other man and let the husband marry the other woman? The boys will quarrel when they marry because their parent’s quarreled. Who invented marriage anyway? BUSY. Answer—One of the hardest things to do when considering another person’s problem is to refrain from coloring it with your own experience. I am not at all sure that the husband in the case to which you refer wants to marry any one else. He is enjoying the persecution of his wife too much. It is true that an unfaithful husband makes a point of finding faults in his wife in order to justify his own conduct. That is why it is so much harder to deal with a wife who gives one no cause for unsocial behavior. For example, the first writer in the column today is considerably bound by the fact that his wife is pleasant in a situation which would turn most women into perfect demons. Divorce and remarriage do not always solve the problem satisfactorily. Too often a second marriage only repeat the mistakes of the first. Such a rearrangement works only when the people involved have given the situation mature consideration and found that it was the only intelligent thing to do. That is, their actions were based on things as they are and not on the fulfillment of dreams. a a a Dear Jane Jordan —How can a person determine whether a party really likes him or not? I have been going with a boy for quite some time and he terats me grand, but there is something he says and does that makes me wonder. Now how can you tell whether a person like that is true or not? PUZZLED. Answer—How can I answer without knowing what it is that the boy says and does that make you wo- ler? Asa rule a young man sincerely in love does not leave the girl in doubt of his state of mind unless he is a shy, repressed person. I know of no scratch on the arm which will reveal the presence or absence of love, as if it were a microbial invasion. The beloved's behavior is the best guide to his emotions. MISS GOOTEE WILL BE BRIDE IX MAY The engagement of Miss Alma Gcotee to Bernard J. Mudd, Detroit, was revealed in telegrams to guests at a miscellaneous shower, given Friday night by Miss Gootee and Mrs. Charles Richter for Miss Betty Gootee, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Gootee of Lagootee, whose marriage to Joseph S. Mack will take place April 21. Marriage of Miss Alma Gootee. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Alfred T. Gootee. to Mr. Mudd will be on May 28. Rose Anne Richter and Norma Dean Lex presented gifts to the honor guest. Guests included Mesdames Hugh Ryan. C. W. Patterson. C. H. Cunningham, H. P. Richter and Ida Richter; Misses Mayme Hunter, Helen Kathryn and Beatrice Custard, Mary Spellman, Marie Mack, Helen and Callie Mudd and Elisabeth. McCann.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
State to Be Represented at Meeting National Convention of Voters League to Open April 23. Local and state members of the Indiana League of Women Voters are making preparations to attend the national convention. April 23 to 27. in Boston. Delegates are: Mrs. Charles Teetor, Hagerstown, state president; Mrs. S. N. Campbell, state second vice-president; Mrs. C. T. Boynton, Elkhart, state chairman, department of child welfare; Mrs. S. M. Compton, South Bend, state chairman, department of social hygiene; Mrs. J. J. Daniels, Indianapolis League president; Mrs. Thomas Sheerin, Indianapolis League vice-president; Mrs. Richard Edwards, Peru, state third vicepresident; Mrs. Joseph Shirk, Peru, finance chairman of the Peru league; Mrs. George Keagy, Hagerstown, state chairman, department of education, and Miss Florence Kirlin, executive secretary, Indiana League, Alternates are: Mrs. William Ray Adams, member Indianapolis League boara; Mrs. Frank C. Pennell, president Kokomo League; Mrs. Waneta Hughes, chairman of department of international* co-opera-tion of Kokomo League; Mrs. Sylvester Johnson Jr., member Indianapolis League board; Mrs. F. W. Kranz, Ft. Wayne League president; Mrs. I. F. Selector, chairman of living costs department, Ft. Wayne League; Mrs. Robert Rossow t , Culver League president; Mrs. Ralph Mowbray, Culver League vice-president; Mrs. Robert Sinclair, chairman, international co-operation department of Indianapolis League, and Miss Helen Potter, Lafayette. Governor John Winant of New Hampshire will talk on “Public Relief and the State’s Responsibility.” New’ Hampshire was one of the first states to assume the relief responsibility on a state basis. Dr. Leonard J. White, new member of the United States civil service commission, will speak on “Standards for Public Personnel.” REPORT GIVEN ON GIRL RESERVE PLAN Girl Reserve program of the Y. W. C. A. as studied by a national commission* over a period of two years was the subject for the weekly convention preparation group meeting today at the luncheon hour in the central Y. W. C. A. building. Mrs. Walter P. Morton, acting Girl Reserve chairman, presided and Miss Jenna Birks, Girl Reserve secretary, presented the report. The report, made under the direction of Dr. Helen Davis of the national Y. W. C. A. staff, covers the age range; program material and content; methods used by the professional group and by lay leadership, and differentiations found in urban, rural and racial groups. Y. W. C. A. groups of the entire country participated in the study which will be presented, for discussion and acceptance to the national biennial convention in Philadelphia May 2 to 8. Mrs. R. E. Adkins and Mrs. Paul E. Tombaugh, president of the Indianapolis association, have been appointed convention conveners for Indiana. Mrs. Charles W. Gilkey, Chicago, is convener for this area. Board to Meet Board of assistants of the Indiana Society of Mayflower Descendants will meet Monday at the Y. W. C. A. for a noon luncheon. Mrs. Fred Hoke will preside at a business meeting to follow’.
Daily Recipe EGGLESS MAYONNAISE 1 teaspoon powdered sugar 1-2 teaspoon salt 1-4 teaspoon mustard 1-4 teaspoon paprika 1-4- cup evaporated milk 2 tablespoons vinegar 1 cup oil 2 tablespoons evaporated milk Oil and milk should be cold. Measure sugar, salt, mustard, paprika and the U cup evaporated milk into a cold bowl, eat well, add M cup oil a little at a time, then remainder of oil and vinegar alternately, beating well after each addition. Add the two tablespoons evaporated milk and beat again thoroughly.
"Two things I wanted- “... more strength and a clear skin.” It is well to remember that a probable reason why you do not have red lips, rosy cheeks, a clear skin, good health, energy and cheerfulness is that your blood is in a run-down condition. Lack of hemo-glo-bin, the red-coloring of the blood, may also cause a weakened condition of the bod}'... loss of strength ... poor appetite. Neglect of diet, worry, overwork, coids or sickness frequently break down and retard the natural development of the red-blood-cell3 and their oxygen-carrying hemo-glo-bin. Why not set in motion the rebuilding of these precious blood-cells instead of procrastinating and sacrificing your appearance and the feeling of being well and fit? If your condition suggests a tonic of this kind, try S.S.S. It is not just a so-called tonic but a tonic specially designed to stimulate gastric secretions, and also having the mineral elements so very, very necessary in rebuilding the oxygen-carrying hemo-glo-bin of the blood. Unless your case is exceptional, you should soon notice a pick-up in your appetite ... your color and skin should improve with increased strength and energy. S.S.S. is truly a blood and body tonic. Its ▼alue has been proven by generations of use, as well as by modern scientific appraisal You will find S.S.S. at all drug stores in two <fan • •• the larger is more economical £ ra* s.s.. co.
DAM PROJECTS IN WEST RIVAL GREATLAKES Enterprises Held Greatest Power Development Yet Undertaken. By United Press SAN FRANCISCO, Cal., April 9. Behind three great dams situated at the points of a vast triangle, the federal government is building the ‘ great lakes of the west." Separately, each project in itself is a huge undertaking. Considered together, as a composite stride in the conquest of the west, the projects form perhaps the greatest water, power, and navigation developments ever attempted. The three projects are Boulder dame, the Grand Coulee dam, and the Ft. Peck (Montana) dam. Boulder dam, situated in Black canyon on the Colorado river between Nevada and Arizona, forms the southern tip of a great triangle of development. At the northwestern point of the triangle lies the Grand Coulee dam on the Columbia river, twenty-two miles north of Almira, in eastern Washington. Engineering Problems Immense The northwestern point is formed by the Fort Peck dam on the Missouri river, some twenty miles from Glasgow’, Mont., and near the junction of the Missouri and Milk rivers. If the three projects are considered as a single unit the immensity of the engineering problems become more conceivable. Combined the three dams would rise to a height of 1,212 feet. Behind this great mass of steel and cement w’ould be a lake 440 miles long—longer than any of the great lakes. Individually, the Fort Peck dam would form a lake 175 miles long. The lakes of the Boulder and Coulee dams will form lakes 115 and. 151 miles long, respectively. Total Cost 5205,000,000 Cost of the combined projects will be $205,000,000, and if all power potentialities are developed the cost will mount to approximately $656,000.000. In man hours of work the trio of jobs outstrip anything ever attempted, it is said. They will provide a total of fourteen years employment for 13,000 men. To house this army of engineers, artisans and laborers the government has erected or is erecting model towns. At Boulder dam there are 400 cottages, administration offices, camp theater, hospital and dormitories. At Grand Coulee 375 buildings already have been erected. The government plans a tow’n of fifteen square blocks at Ft. Peck, with its own fire and police departments. The first draft calls for 227 buildings. Combined Width 500 Miles Further statistics show the combined width of the three dams will be approximately five miles, with the Ft. Peck project—the largest earth fill job ever undertaken —four miles wide. The pounds of steel and the barrels of cement that will be used run into the millions. More than 2,000,000-horse powei of electrical energy would be available from a dam generating as much pow’er as the three dams. The Grand Coulee dam alone will make available the largest block of cheap electrical power in America. Som idea of the gigantic excavation which would be required for a composite dam such as that described may be gained from the fact that more than 2.040.000,000 cubic yards of material are to be removed from the Grand Coulee dam site alone. ROOSEVELT POLICIES “FUTILE,’ REED SAYS Pennsylvania Senator Sounds G. O. P. Election Keynote. By United Press WASHINGTON, April 9.—Senator David A. Reed <Rep„ Pa.) launching his re-election campaign,' today sounded what w’as expected to be a keynote for the Republican election campaign with a strong attack on Roosevelt policies as “futile and fantastic,” “poisonous,” and dangerous to American civilization.” 120 REPORTED SLAIN Brief Revolt of South American Cadets Related. By United Press TACNA. Peru, April 9.—Travelers from Bolivia reported today that 120 persons died in a brief revolt of cadets at the National Military Academy at La Paz Thursday. They said there also was fighting at Siles. Government announcements at La i Paz, telling of the revolt, said but two persons were killed. The travelers, however, insisted there was bloody fighting, and that persons held guilty of leadership in the revolt were executed summarily the j same afternoon.
I found out my trouble
“ . . . and it was all so simple . . . my physician said I had no organic disease, but I did have what is so commonly and truthfully called a low percentage of hemo-glo-bin in the blood. It didn’t take S.S.S. very long to get my blood back up to normal . . . and as my strength and energy returned my skin cleared up.”
Indiana in Brief Lively Spots in the State’s Happenings Put Together ‘Short and Sweet.’ By Times Special /COLUMBUS, April 9.—Barholomew county authorities are confronted with the problem of arranging for care of two children of Mrs. Della Holcomb. 25, slain last week by her 62-year-old husband. Hosea Holcomb, who committed suicide. The children are Luella. 4. and George. 2, born to Mrs. Holcomb during a prior marriage. Authorities believe the father, whose name is reported to be Wilkerson. is living in Kentucky, and recently asked Mrs. Holcomb to give him the children, but she refused. For a few days following the double tragedy, the children were cared for by Mr. and Mrs. Fred Bollman, at whose home the murder and suicide occurred. The children now are in care of authorities here. Neither the father of the children nor other relatives appeared at funeral services for Holcomb and his wife. Authorities said an attempt will be made to locate the father.
tt U tt Engineer, 74, Dies By Times Special ■ LAFAYETTE. April 9.—Funeral services were held today for Henry A. Conver, 74, for thirty years employed as a passenger locomotive engineer by the Monon railroad. He leaves his widow, Mrs. Doris Conver, and two daughters, Mrs. Charles Barth. Indianapolis, and Mrs. Lester Downing, Lafayette. u t> tt Singer Asked $4,000 By Times Special MUNCIE. April 9—Lawrence Tibbett, baritone of the Metropolitan Opera Company, who once sang in a’ church choir for $5 a day, it is recalled by Mrs. E. P. Daugherty, wife of Dr. E. P. Daugherty, pastor of the Jackson Street Christian church here. Fourteen years ago, the Daughertys were in Los Angeles where he was pastor of the First Christian church, in which Tibbett and Mrs. Daugherty sang. The matinee musicale of Muncie recently sought to bring Tibbett here for a concert. He asked $4,000.
Inflation ala Hoosier Victim Raises Ante on Robbery From $760 to $1,900; $7.60 More Like It, Says fop.
BRIGHT lights beckoned insistently, so Charles Hamilton, 55, came to Indianapolis about ten days ago from near Palestine. Ind. Mr. Hamilton went out to see the sights and do a little plain and fancy elbow bending. No half measures for Mr. Hamilton when he drinks beer. He started about 9in the morning and ended his peregri-
nations about 1 the next morning. Police under Sergeant Harry Schley answered an anguished complaint about 1 a. m. from Mr. Hamilton that he had been robbed of $760. “H’m, $760, eh?” ruminated Sergeant Schley. Mr. Hamilton agreed regretfully that it was. Police went to the home of Fred Yarbrough, 4214 Manlove avenue, where Mr. Hamilton was rooming. Mr. Hamilton was listing somewhat to port. Mr. Yarbrough said he didn’t know anything about Mr. Hamilton’s $760, but that Mr. Hamilton had come home about 1, announcing he had lost S9OO in a purse. Advised to walk, not run, to the
TOOTHPASTE |p! Size 18x36. Hit and miss patterns with SSSSS 8?. %X&' a nd: jg, if* mw* mMc Limit—Main Floor mmm^^mmmm— Limit—2nd Floor PEANUT SQUARES jwy SEWING ~ ~T~’ 15c Value. Fresh, crisp, wholesome pea- a THREAD it||| Spools nut and molasses candy. POKlfSdf—• M Nos No "] ' u WEßmw& £or '"** Moor „ Limit—Main Floor Women’s Jc WASH HANDKERCHIEFS IS _ CLOTHS Hfi Si White with dainty colored borders on © Size 12*12 in as- £OP QE sale tomorrow at only sorted colored j3rt* i Main Floor I Women’s 50c 10c Part , Pure Silk Scarfs MSf ** LINEN TOWELING fjj~ Many patterns and colors to lo Inches Wlde with colored borders. © choose from. On sale Yard— Women’s New * Pepperell Sheets - . . Spring Neckwear •§ M 81x90 seamtas sheets, bleached, &*§ Iteg ha” 40 COl 'l F .' a ”o cu ? SetS ' Double bedsize wide hems M mRSM C? Women’s Full-Fashioned 300 Pairs of Women’s Pur© Silk HOSIERY Novelty Footwear Irreg. and 2ntk of SI and $1.50 Quality. OXFORDS, PUMPS, STRAPS New spiing shades. The gr®*. Parchments, patents, kids and greatest hosiery value satins, high and Cuban heels. wPm we’ve ever offered! All Regular $1.50 and $1.95 values. SsasL jwL ** sizes. PAIR All sizes in the lot. Pair bTj&C tCTjajf!l Main Floor Main Floor WOMEN’S REGULAR SI RAYON Curtain Cretonnes TAFFETA SLIPS New fP patterns. Ito 10- gg Bias cut. California and bodice xengti.S. Yard JSIf tops. Full cut. Lace trimmed, jmSf WP9 Slightly soiled. Mostly whites. Main Floor 2nd Floor Enamel INFANTS’ TEA KETTLES RUBBER SHEETS $1 Value. Double coated, ivory Size 25x39 inches. On sale Tuesday at M © trimmed with green xSSssp’’ only 2nd Floor 2nd Floor MIXED PAINTS INFANTS’ ” All colors. Guaranteed paints. On £ RAMNFTC tP? sale tomorrow at— V> 39C BONNETS ttg oQjfif* _ J|(i New spring styles and colors. Wr v £j CallOn Slightly soiled lot. On sale at jJSEf I 2nd Floor 2nd Floor Men’s BOYS’ , 3 All-Wool Sweaters CHa WHOOPEE PANTS I SI and $1.5.1 rallies. Sleeveless HV© ffilc value. Heavy blue denim with I style in an assortment of colors. iacf elastic inserts m sides. Full cut. B Counter soiled. Some irreg. All MjWßpy only I sizes Main Floor 2nd Floor 1 Men’s Work Pants MEN’S $1 SHIRTS ll Light and dark cottonades. Well Fine want broadcloth in w hite ■ tailored with separate waistbands. M MVQ only. T-button fronts, pleated C fj I -•<* K S'. u J I / Muln Floor Main Floor %
c o tt Business Improves By Times Special TIPTON, April 9.—Business volume comparable to that which prevailed prior to the depression is reported by officials of the Tipton Furniture Company, which manufactures a high type of upholstered furniture, most of which is sold in Indiana, Illinois and Michigan. tt tt tt Steady Work Assured By Times Special SHELB YVILLE, April 9.—With enough orders on hand to assure steady operation until July 1. tne Great States Corporation is producing nearly 1,000 lawn mowers daily. About eighty men are employed. tt a a Crop Cut Forecast By United Press LAFAYETTE, April 9.—With 2.400 tobacco producers in Indiana signed in the federal crop reduction program, Purdue university agricultural officials estimate production will be reduced by at least 40 per cent this year.
nearest phone and notify police, Mr. Hamilton, according to Mr. Yarbrough, went upstairs for his overcoat, came down and informed Mr. Yarbrough he had been robbed of a purse containing $1,900. “I thought you said $900,” said Mr. Yarbrough. “Nineteen hundred dollars,” firmly insisted Mr. Hamilton, his dignity somewhat marred by a slight weaving, apparently due to unequal distribution of ballast. So police are faced with the necessity of charging the case up to the weather, which is very conducive to growing things. “Maybe it was only $7.60,” observed Sergeant Schley.
PAGE 7
VOTER POLL TO CLOSE TONIGHT, RALSTONWARNS Offices at Courthouse and Branches to Be Open Until Midnight. Voters who fail to register by midnight tonight will De ineligible to vote in the May primary. County Clerk Glenn B Ralston pointed out today. House-to-house registration has ended, but voters may register at Room 23. courthouse, and at twen-ty-seven branches until midnight tonight. Branch registration offices include : Forty-second street and College avenue. Uptown theater. 619 East Sixty-third street. Broad Ripple Auto Company. 2357 Carrollton avenue, engine house No. 22. 1718 North Meridian street. 2962 Princeton place. 2630 Indianapolis avenue. Thirtieth and Clifton streets, Haag drug store. 518 Indiana avenue; Indianapolis Recorder. | Nineteenth and Yandes streets. 1575 Roosevelt avenue, engine house No. 2. 3326 East Tenth street. 5436 East Washington street, Sholty Motors Company. 352 North Beville avenue, engine house No. 11. 339 North Sherman drive, engine house No. 12. 2302 Shelby street, engine house. 744 Virginia avenue. Beech Grove, Pierson’s service station. Harding and Morris streets, engine house. Decatur Central high school, Decatur township, state road No. 67. Glenn's Valley. Highsmith's store. 4302 Madison avenue. 6345 West Washington street. 548 Minerva street. Haughville. 2601 West Michigan street, Moroney drug store. Merrill street and Russell avenue, engine house No. 10. Linen Accessories Linen accessories give your navy blue spring suit or dress a fresh touch that is both fashionable and charming. Try a plain white linen collar, deep cuffs and a linencovered purse. Grandma Walks Upstairs Without Suffering P*3n Quick Actiarf Nurito Enables Hur to Enjoy Life Again For surprisingly quick relief from the cruel pain of rheumatism, neuralgia, lumbago, neuritis and other torturing aches and pains, simply take two or three doses of Nurito. This amazingly fast relief, a doctor’s prescription, can now be had at drug stores everywhere. Nurito, contains no opiates, no narcotics or no heart deterrent and is absolutely harmless. If you want to feel again the joy of living, banish needless pain that prevents sound sleep get Nurito at once. If the very first three doses of Nurito do not stop the most intense pain, even of many years’ standing—your money will be refunded. Ask your drußtcist for Nurito oq this positive money hack guarantee. At all itrunirists and Haag Drug Stores. NURITO for NEURITIS Pain
