Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 291, Indianapolis, Marion County, 16 April 1934 — Page 2
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3 ARE HURT AS AUTO SMASHES INTO ABUTMENT City Woman and Two Men Are Victims; Heavy Rain Is Blamed. A woman and two men were seriously injured when an automobile crashed into a Belt railroad overhead abutment at the East Washington street crossing during the driving rain last night. Mrs. Hattie Swengel. 42. 843 Holt avenue, a passenger in a car driven by Manson Parker, 65, Chicago, suffered a severe scalp wound and other serious head injuries. Mr Parker suffered a crushed chest and cuts. Clarence Smith, 44. Chicago, received a scalp wound and severe bruises. Two other passengers escaped injury. Mr Parker said he failed to see the concrete and steel pillar. Floodlights on the standard were burning. Pedestrian Is Injured Charles H. Dinkaiacher, 63, of 688 East New York street, suffered a fractured shoulder yesterday when he stepped into the path of an automobile driven by Ralph Johnson, 23, of 401 South Harlan street, at East street near Market street. Three Hurt as Car Overturns Three persons were injured yesterday when an automobile turned over after collision at Emerson avenue and Washington street. They are L. B. Shirrell, 60, of 5042 East New York street, bruises; Mrs. Juanita Seitz, 72, Greensburg, hip injuries, and Mrs. W. H. Seitz, 31, of 504 North De Quincy street, cuts. Mr. Shirrell was driving south on Emerson avenue when his car collided with a car driven by Carl Hill, 24, Ladoga. Hill was arrested on a charge of disobeying an automatic traffic signal. Suffers Hip Fracture Thomas Price, 47, Southport, was struck down by an automobile driven by Herbert Wheatley, 26, R. R. 1, Box 361, yesterday at Stop 9 on U. S. road No. 31. The driver said he was blinded by the lights of another car. Mr. Price suffered a fractured hip and was sent to city hospital. CITY FURNITURE PLANT WILL REOPEN AT ONCE Old Wiegel Company Assets Sold to New Concern. Sale of the Wiegel Cabinet Company plant to the newly organized Wiegel Cabinet Corporation and leasing of the Wiegel building, Sixteenth and Lewis streets, by the corporation, announced thus morning, signalize the immediate reopening of a large Indianapolis furniture plant. Albert L. Frankel Company, real estate brokers, made the announcement. The Wiegel Corporation officers are Julian Freeman, president; Earl Moore, treasurer; and Manuel Freeman, secretary. Founders of tljp new corporation have no connection with the old Wiegel company which was organized in 1877 and closed only recently. Morgenthau Against McLeod Bill By United Preu WASHINGTON, April Iff.—Secretary of the Treasury Henry Mnrgenthau Jr., disapproves of the McLeod bill to release frozen bank deposits in closed banks, he has Informed chairman Duncan U. Fletcher, (Dem., Fla.) of the senate banking committee. Boynton Moore to Speak Boynton J. Moore, candidate for the Republican mayoralty nomination. will address a meeting at 423 Hamilton avenue tonight. Tomorrow night he will speak at State avenue and English street.
WASHOUT 15 MILES OF KIDNEY TUBES Win Back Pep . . .Vigor .. .Vitality Medical authorities agree that your kidneys contain 15 MILES of tiny tubes or filters which help to purify the blood and keep vou healthy. They should pour out thru the bladder 3 pints of fluid a day which contains 4 pounds of waste matter. If you have trouble with bladder irregularitv causing irritation and discomfort, the 15 MILES of kidnev tubes need washing out. This danger signal may be '.he beginning of nagging backache, leg pains, lost of pep and vitality. getting up nights, lumbago, swollen feet and ankles, rheumatic pains and diitiness. If ktdnevs don t empty S pint* event day •nd get rid of 4 pounds of waste matter, your bodv will take up these poisons causing serious trouble. It may knock you out and lay you up for many months, Don't wait. Ask vour druggist for DOAN'S PILLS ... a doctor** prescription . . which has been used successfully bv millions of kidnev sufferers for over 40 years. They give quick relief and will help to wash out the 15 MILES of kidney tubes. But don't taka chance* with strong drug* or so-called "kidney cures" that claim to flx you up in 15 minu’es. Your common sense will tell you that this is impossible. Treatments of this nature mav seriously injure and irritate dt,icate tissue* Insist on DOAN 8 PILLS ■ the old reliable relief that contain no dope or habit-forming drugs Be sure you get DOAN'S PILLS at vour druggist. Copyright , 1934. Foster-Milburn Cos. Advertissment.
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FRATERNITY FOUNDER
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L. H. Millikan of Indianapolis is one of the founders of Sigma Delta Chi, honorary journalistic fraternity, which will celebrate its twenty-fifth anniversary at the Lincoln hotel here tomorrow night. Tne fraternity, which now has chapters in colleges and universities in many parts of the country, was organized at De Pauw university. Two other founders, living in Indiana, have been invited to the silver anniversary dinner here. They are Eugene Pulliam, Lebanon, and Paul Riddick, Lagrange. The Indiapapolis alumni chapter will have charge of the dinner.
BUTLER SORORITY TO INITIATE CANDIDATES Class of ’2B Member Slated to Address Group. Initiation services were to be held today by the Butler university chapter of Pi Epsilon Phi, honorary home economics 'sorority. The initiates will be Betty Lou Meyers, Dorothy Ellis, Ruth Long, Rosemary Rocap and Marigrace Mojonnier. Virginia Garr, president of the Butler university chapter; Dorothy Davis, Rebecca Allen and Miss Helen Cade, sponsor of the organization, will have charge of the services. Dorothy Helmer. a member of the class of '2B, will talk to the group on “The Training and Duties of an Interior Decorator.”
■ •! % r I IS reel of cigarette pa- places. Note also its dead H -l per is sufficient to make H ':\JPT jfIHH In texture, in burningqual- If the paper is made right— if. |jp|{ wtm | ity, in purity, it is as good as there will be no taste to it ■ f ISa- V \ money can buy. and there will be no odor ' % ~§zi ¥§■'-Ilk ( >it open a Chesterfield *£ P P V \ yf Mi * cigarette. Remove the to- Other manufacturers m I bacco and hold the paper up use good cigarette the cigarette that TASTES BETTER 6 19M, Uoaire * Mvm Tomooo Cos.
KARL DANE, 4T, DF FILM FAME, | KILLSJMSELF Driven Out of Movie Jobs by Talkies, Actor Ends His Life. By Unit'd Prrte HOLLYWOOD, April 16. Karl ' Dane, 47, who left a small machine shop to become famous in the moving pictures, is dead. Despondent because the talkies held no place for him, he killed himself with a revolver in his tiny \ apartment early yesterday. Miss Frances Leaks, 28, who had befriended him in the final dark days
of his life, found him dead, sprawled in a chair. A note lying on a nearbytable said: “To Frances and all my friends, good-by.” To Hollyw oo and police, it was an old story, written frequently with gun and poison by men and women whom fate denied :he success, or ?ven a job, they coveted. With
Dane it was only a job. Born Rasmus Karl Thekelsen Gottlieb in Denmark, the tall rawboned actor won film prominence in his first vehicle, “The Big Pai rade.” A casting director found him I in a small southern California town, operating a machine shop. Tais Valdemar, Russian dancer once sued Dane for breach of promise but the action was later dropped. Funeral arrangements were Incomplete today. Authorities were trying to locate his only known relatives who live in Denmark. Dane Popular Here Karl Dane, who committed suicide Saturday night in Hollywood, had many friends and acquaintances in j Indianapolis, as a. result of spending several weeks here in 1929 film-
YOUNG G. 0. P. CHIEF
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New president and chairman of the board of the Young Republican Organization of Marion County, Inc., is J. Elwood Jones, elected at a meeting of twenty-one ward chairman. Mr. Jones, an attorney, is with Fenton, Steers, Beasley & Klee at 1108 New City Trust Building. New secretary and treasurer of the Young Republicans are James Campbell and Edward Hall, respectively. HOSPITAL CHIEF NAMED ON CHARITY COMMITTEE Dr. John G. Benson Designated by Golden Rule Foundation. Appointment of Dr. John G. Benson, Methodist hospital superintendent, as a member of the temporary organization committee of the proposed church charity recovery committee, was announced today. The program is being organized by the Golden Rule Foundation in the interest of church, charity and character-building agencies throughout the country. ing “Speedway” at the Indianapolis motor speedway. The big comedian became a favorite with spectators watching the movie filming. He also returned to the city in 1930 for a personal appearance at the Lyric theater.
Karl Dane
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
J. Elwood Jones.
MUSIC DIRECTOR NAMES SUMMER SCHOOUTAFF Conservatory Course Opens June 19: Fifty Members on Faculty. Max T. Krone, director of the Arthur Jordan Conservatory of Music, has announced the membership of the 1934 summer term faculty of the music school, which will open June 19 and close Aug. 4, Fifty persons will be on the staff offering courses in academic subjects, dramatic art, languages, piano, violin, voice, organ, dancing and orchestral and band instruments. The term will be affiliated with the Butler university summer school. Members of the staff will be Frederick Barker, Fiances Beik, Tull Brown, Lenore Coffin, Donald Gilley, Clarence Loomis, Flora Lyons, Pasquale Montani, Staley Norris, Adolph Schellschmidt, Geraldine Trotter, Ralph Wright, Susannt Monninger, Humbert Pagani, Martha Martin, Leontine Gano, Louise Schilling, Harriet Smith, Bomar Cramer, Earle Howe Jones, Mary A. Kilmer, H. Otis Pruitt, Mary E. Wilhite, Marie Zorn, Florence Lewis, Virginia Fefry, Blanche Brown and Grace Flagg. Others on the faculty will be Helen Quig, Leone Rickman, James Q. Thrasher, Frances Wishard, Lucille Wagner, Hugh McGibeny, Edwin Jones, Thomas Poggiani, Glenn Friermood. Fred Pefry, Ila Freirmood, Emma Igleman, Franklin Taylor, Ida Belle Sweeney, Lulu Brown, Seth Cary, Glenn Downey, Ernest Micheiis, Raymond Oster,
Wanted-Old Gold Jewelry Broken or any condition, watches, chains, rings, bridges, teeth. Sell your n’d eold direct to the oldest established jrtvl.l refinery in Indiana. Licensed by U. S. Government. Cash paid immediately. Briny to Standard Gold Smelting Cos. 423 Lemcke Bid*., 4th Floor Entrance 106 East Market, St.
Robert Prietz and William Schumacher. Two short terms have been scheduled in addition to the regular term. The first will last from June 6 until June 16 and the second from Aug. 6 until Aug.. 17. Charity Card Party Set Daughters of Isabella, will give their annual card party and musicale Thursday afternoon May 3 in the Columbia Club. Proceeds will go to the charity fund of the group.
TWENTY-EIGHT CANDLES ON MY BIRTHDAY CAKE, AUNTIE... AN OLD MAID SOON. SOME 6JJRLS DOnY MIND BUT I'VE ALWAYS CHILD, BECAUSE I WANTED A HOME OF MY LOVE YOU l'M GOINS OWN... A HUSBAND... TO BE VERY FRANK
T Z/wo tfeotrs fa/er a// /ter t/reeutt<S /tat/ come/tree/ SEE, DEAR, SHE LOVES HER LIFEBUOY BATH. IT'S SUCH A BLAND, GENTLE SOAP, IT AGREES WONDERFULLY WITH HER DELICATE, BABY SKIN SHE'LL TAKE AFTER
POLITICS IS DENIED IN BAR INCORPORATION Group Wants to Protect Name, George Sheehan Says. I The Marion County Bar Association, incorporated here. has been in i existence five years and is composed . of j about sixty attorneys, it was stated today by George Sheehan, one of the incorporators. Mr. Sheehan denied there was any ! political significance in the action.
YOU £$ ATTRACT MEN, BUT ONE LITTLE PERSONAL FAULT KEEPS THEM FROM COMING BACK AUNT)E,YOU CAt/f ! MEAN I'VE BEEN / CARELESS ABOUT ' *8.0.’? I'LL CHANGE TO JJZZS LIFEBUOY RIGHT AWAY
THING ) > THAT'S ALWAYS \ ( SCORE AGAIN { WHAT an all-’round, 100 per cent satisfactory soap Lifebuoy is! Kind to tender baby akin tot woman a delicate complexion—yet how thoroughly it cleanse*! Its creamy lather does more than just remove surface dirt. It goes down into the pores; deep-de*nses; deodorizes. Stops “B. O." (W erfW) —so quickly noticed when windows are dosed, rooms hot and stuffy. Rich lather always I in hot or cold water, hard or soft. Its fresh, clean, [iij PffTwlf quickly-vanishing scent |: |f|f|l||[flp/§ tells you this purifying lath- tlljJ' et gives extra protection. ' ' A PRODUCT OP LEVER BROS. CO.
.APRIL 16,1934
adil"3 that incorporation had been decided c>n to protect the name, as it was reported another group Intended to incorporate with the same name.
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