Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 5, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 May 1934 — Page 19
MAY 17, 1934.
POOL FEES TO GO UNCHANGED, SALLEE SAYS Salaries Likewise Will Be Same as Last Year, Is Prediction. Swimming pool fees and salaries of recreation employes probably will be the same this year as in the 1933 summer season, A. C. Sallee, park superintendent, said today. Although the park board has taken no action on the matter as yet, Mr. Sallee said that no changes are anticipated in the size of the recreation personnel. w Due to the trimming of the recreation budget last year, the personnel was sliced nearly 50 per cent, he said. The department will continue to operate on the reduced budget this summer, he added. Swimming pool fees will remain at last year's rate of 10 cents a person after 2 p. m„ with the pools open free to children in the mornings and all day Monday.
SAVE, by getting A A ■ wM H| ■in STANMRDRED CROWN SUPERFUEI I'‘ ■ ' '’More Live Power per dollar" describes this im- Mat port ant advance by Standard's refining engineers JraA. Just as accurately as “more Live Power per gallon." JiM The amount of keen, responsive propelling | M power delivered by gasoline is the only true Bty if measure of its dollar-and-cents value. 'TfjFMIW .> Mfig On that count. Standard Red Crown Superfuel £fm gives you a full money's worth, plus. We know that. Mm? It has been established by tests of many gasolines. $mW ! Anew car with a high compression engine re- J quires Superfuel's responsiveness to perform at its best. And, if you have an older model which /v# f- j[^onrr has begun to slow up, Standard Red Crown Superfuel is prescribed. Chances are there is still plenty sMI of vigor in the motor. The extra Live Power in WwMm wil JSSSBm | Superfuel will bring it out. i 3K. -' f May we suggest that you get a tankful? Make J|P!r^PP^ Superfuel prove, in your engine, what has been .aid here about its economy and performance, t W per ounce than anything m SN& on wings the Peregrin mW Falcon strikes its prey at : |||j n Ga 6 '' y - '~'- Highway —With more Live Power per gallon, and per dollar, too. Standard nglgr Red Crown Superfuel gives you all of the Ikf 7| swift response and distance-eating speed the maker carefully built into your car. S? SJX Copr. 19J4. Standard Ol Cos. SOLD EXCLUSIVELY BY STANDARD OIL STATIONS AND DEALERS - ALSO DISTRIBUTORS OF ATLAS TIRES AND BATTERIES Jk 9
City Woman Is Listed on Byrd Broadcast Sunday
Cincinnati Post Arranges Nation-Wide Hookup for Program. Mrs. Mae Shannon. 1630 Central avenue, will take part In a radio program at 10 o'clock Sunday night from WLW, honoring Admiral Richard Byrd and his fellow explorers in Little America. Mrs. Shannon is an aunt of William M. Bowlin, pilot with the Byrd expedition. Appearing also on the program, which has been arranged by the Cincinnati Post, a Scripps-Howard newspaper, and WLW, will be David Dietz, Scripps-Howard science editor; Mayor Russell Wilson, Cincinnati; Carl D. Groat, editor of the Past, and Ralph H. Quinn, business manager. The program, originating on Cincinnati’s 500,000-watt station, will be heard throughout the nation over a fifty-one-station network, and will reach the Byrd party over W2XAF. General Electric short wave transmitter. Music on the program will be'
furnished by Dan Beddoe. 70. Welsh tenor, and two 10-year-old children. Catherine Morse, violinist, and | Elaine Shapoff, pianist, who apI peared recently with the Cincinnati Symphony orchestra. TRADE BOARD ORDERS RADIO AD CLEAN UP Broadcasts Fare Same Scrutiny as Newspapers. By United Pr* tx WASHINGTON, May 17. The federal trade commission today announced a campaign to “clean up’’ radio advertising. It will start July 1. All broadcasting companies will be required to furnish the commission with weekly copies of commercial continuities for study to see if they violate the federal trade commission act prohibiting false or misleading advertising. The action brings radio advertising under the same scrutiny to which newspapers and periodicals have been subject for many years.
. THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
FLIERS HONORED BY FREE STATE Air Force and Civil Officials Invite Sabclli and Pond to Dublin. By United Prrxt LAHINCH, Irish Free State, May 17—Cesare Sabelli and George R. Pond, awaiting repair of their transAtlantic airplane, Leonardo da Vinci. accepted an invitation to visit Dublin today, to be greeted by memBilious Attacks Mrs. S. G. Ramey, of Henryetta, Okla., •writes that she has taken Thedford's Black-Draught about twenty-five years, when needed, and has “found it very good.” “When I have a sour stomach and my mouth tastes bitter, and I feel bilious, sluggish and tired, I will very soon have a severe headache if I don't take something. I have learned to keep off these spells by taking Thedford's Black-Draught. Very soon I am fppling' finp. I fool that Rlark-Dratichf ran t hr bratrn as a family mriiirinp." . . . Got a parkatrr of Black-Draught today.—Advertisement.
bers of the free state air force and government. They found that the undercarriage of their plane, when it landed in a field two miles from here after a flight from New York, was more seriously damaged than at first believed. A mechanic hoped to repair it in time for the fliers to start for Rome, their original destination, Friday. Mr. Pond announced that he and Mr. Sabelli hoped to fly back to the United States. Light rays. X-rays, heat rays and wireless rays all travel at the same speed, but vary in length. IsYourHealth Slipping? Xnv Gland Tonic Discovered If you fcol that the “big kb’k - ’ of life is passing, if your vigor and pep is waning, try Glendage, the new money-back glandular tablet. It is no longer necessary to be weak, nervous, frail, run down. By regulating and stimulating gland secretions millions of red blood corpuscles are built, and you again feel the glow of youthful vigor. Start today faking Glendage Tablets. Manufactured bv a large pharmaceutical company—it is a real gland tonic. You don't risk a cent : Full 30-day treatment, 53.00. At the Honk Drug Cos., and other druggists—Advertisement.
Auto Complete Ort q C W A Al IMHL™I *4 A i 11 kl 'Hr Installed LJ|||A,JfHßWill|||ik Easy Terms! 21 North Meridian Street S. 11. Corner Meridian and Circl P *I 99 UMT
An Acknowledgment to Republican Voters and Workers To our many friends and loyal supporters and workers who cast their votes for us in thja recent primary, we take this means of sayina, ‘Thank you.” 4 Our selection by the electorate from such |ai large field of aspirants places upon us mor& than ever the weight of the candidates’ responsibility in carrying the Republican party banner in the coming campaign. | The splendid work of those who took an active part in the primary in our behalf can not hj<?3 too highly commended. To them must go mucih of the glory for whatever measure of success tbte Republican Party shall have at the coming election. We believe they will all have reason to VA3 glad for having had a part in the success of the’nr party and its candidates next fall. j The confidence placed in us by all who sup*ported us in the primary makes us conscious 0^: .the solemn trust that is ours in conducting campaign that is just ahead. We shall strive to be worthy of that trust and bring nothing buj; credit to the party that has made us their sentatives. * | ! Walter Pritchard, Mayor j Edward W. Holl, City Clerk | Wm. Henry Harrison, Prosecutor j Ralph M. Spaan, Criminal Judge William Duke Bain, Superior Court No. 2 John F. Engelke, Juvenile Court | Charles W. Mann, County Auditor James L. Bradford, County Recorder Frank Cones, County Treasurer Dr. Ralph R. Coble, County Coroner George W. McDaniel, County Assessor Delbert 0. Wilmeth, Congress 12th Dist. Wm. M. Gruner, Center Township Assessor
TRI A WANT AD IN THE TIMES. THEY WILL BRING RESULTS
PAGE 19
