Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 87, Indianapolis, Marion County, 21 August 1934 — Page 5
AUG. 21, 1931
WYOMING PICKS CANDIDATES FOR SENATE BATTLE O’Mahoney Is Unopposed in Democrat Race: G. 0. P. Draws Four. Bv I nitd Prm Wyoming today joined the growing list of states to pick its candidates for the important New Deal elections in November. The chief fights are in the Republican primaries, and no issues of direct national significance appeared to be involved. ' However, the compuiUit votes polled in the Democratic and Republican primaries were expected to afford som'* test of whether opinion has shifted. Senator Joseph O Mahoney is unoppo ed lor the Democratic senatorial nomination. Four Republican candidates are in the held, with Representative Vincent Carter and District Judge Harry P. Isley believed to be in the lead. Governor Leslie A. Miller seeks renomination on the Democratic ticket. He is opposed by Thomas B. O'Neil, a stockman. Secretary of S’a'e A. M. Clark heads a group of four Republicans eeking the governorship nomination. Political issues also were to the fore today at Nashville, Tenn., where a group of “straight Democrats’’ met in a state-wide convention to pick a candidate for Governor who will be given Republican support in a fusion fight against the regular Democratic faction. The move is led bv Lewis a Pope, unsuccessful opponent of Governor Hill McAlister at a recent primary. MERGER OF 3 AUTO COMPANIES RUMORED Auburn. Reo and Pierce-Arrow to Unite, Wall Street Hears. /:•! I Hit'll l‘r> NEW YORK, Aug. 21—Rumors of a mercer of the Auburn Automobile Company, the Reo Motor Car Company and the Pierce-Arrow Motor Car Company circulated in Wall Street today without any confirmation. They grew out of application of the Pierce-Arrow company in Buffalo to reorganize under the new bankruptcy law. Such merger, should it be arranged, would make a "big four” of producers rather than the existing “big three," made up now of General Motors. Chrysler and Ford. YOUNGSTERS EXEMPT FROM BICYCLE FEE Council Amends Ordinance Exacting Two Dollar Fee. Bicycle riders under 18 are free to peddle through the city streets without a license under terms of an ordinance passed last night by the city council. Because so many children are forced to depend upon bicycles as a means of transportation to and from school. George A. Henry, council member, introduced the ordinance amending the old measure which required all cyclists 16 or older to obtain a $2 license. SCOUTS TO CELEBRATE POOL LIGHTING GIFT Water Carnival Set for Thursday at Reservation. A water carnival, celebrating presentation of pool lighting equipment donated to the Boy Scout camp by Paul H Keller of the Peerless Electric Company, will be held at the reservation Thursday nicht. Water polo games, fancy diving and life saving exhibitions will feature the aquatic program. R. D. Hammer, camp swimming director, will have charge. Sixteen boys are taking part in the fourth and last summer camping period at the reservation. AUTO INJURIES FATAL TO DANVILLE RESIDENT Basketball Coarh Hurt in Same .Mishap Recovering. Samuel Brown. 40. Danville. Ind., died today in St. Vincent s hospital of injuries suffered Friday in a headon collision of two automobiles on the Rockville road near Avon. Janice Hunk Frances. 30. Danville. coach of the Jeffersonville high school basketball team, also Injured in the crash, is recovering in Methodist hospital. The other car was driven byH.C. Yager. 43. Xenia. O . who was accompanied by his wife. They were injured also. FLAMES KILL WOMAN Clothing Ignited by Gasoline Stove; Tourists Give Aid. Bit l'nitfil Prcst BOURBON. Ind . Aug. 21— Burns received when her clothing caught fire from a gasoline stove, were fatal late yesterday to Mrs. Lester Disher. 77. Four tourists rushed to the woman's aid as she dashed from her home One man extinguished the flames by wrapping her in his coat.
Indianapolis Tomorrow
Purdue Alumni, luncheon, Sevenn. Kiwanis Club, luncheon. Columbia Club. Lions Club, luncheon, W'ashington. Twelfth District Legion, luncheon. Board of Trade.
Gone, but Not Forgotten
Auion.obiics reported to police as stolen belong to: Thomas Quinn. 247 West Washington street Ford V 4 sedan 16-562. from Tm:v-fllth street and Central avenue. H w K;<Sd. 1416 Fletcher avenue Chevrvet -idan. 51-402, from New Jersey and Twentieth streets A. G M.:e.>r 725 V.rgtnta avenue. Ford ccach. frem salesroom
BACK HOME AGAIN
6:oirn autotr.cbilts recovered by police belong to Mary Modiock Til Cleveland street Ford eo..he Sound a: Sixteenth street anc Mar lnda.e avenue M E K.rx. 22*5* H.l.s.de avenue. Buiek sedan found at Arsenal atenue anc Twenty-ninth ttreet Tony Ouerr.ert. *lO Prospect street found at I-bba avenue and Washington atrewt. R H Patrick. 110 South Pennsylvania Chevrolet coach, found in the Hawthorne woods, stripped.
IT TOOK 30 MINUTES TO LAND THIS ONE
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Thirty minutes of naval warfare was necessary to overcome the four-poimd. thirteen-ounce small mouth bass shown above. The victor in the engagement. Carl Breindl, was angling for pan fish in the Bloomington reservoir on Sunday when the big boy struck. "I never caught as large a bass before and probably never will again," he says to sum up his feelings in the matter.
Indiana in Brief
Hh 7 'mi* tiprrinl NEWCASTLE. Aug. 21—Henry county farmers, faced with crop losses caused bv drought, are whiling away some of their spare time by figuring out how much they benefited by the government crop restriction program. One farmer estimates that the yield from thirty acres of corn will be from twenty to twenty-five bushels to the acre. If the price is 75 cents a bushel, he will realize about sls an acre. The government paid him for reducing crop acreage and hog raising, the sum being about SSOO. With the money from the corn raised, he will realize approximately SI,OOO. which he says is considerably more than he has made in any year during the last four. 0 About 1.500 farmers, of the county have received $600,000 this year under the corn and hog reduction program.
nan Foxes Slaughter Poultry R’l I lined Sncri'il GREENFIELD, Aug. 21.—Foxes have killed thirty-nine chickens among a flock of White Leghorns owned by Frank Eastes, Buck Creek township resident. So far he has succeeded in killing but one fox and wounding another. All colors of chicken feathers were found and a fox sighted by Otto Cook while cutting hay near the Eastes home. A fox drive this fall is being proposed by farmers of the township. a a tt Veteran Retires 1{;I Timid Special LEBANON. Aug. 21.—Miss Rose Sims, a teacher in the Lebanon schools for forty-three years has retired and will receive a pension from the teachers' slate retirement fund. She has lived here since the age of 5. and was graduated from the Lebanon high school in 1889, one of a class of four. tt n u Mass Tonsil Exit Rtf Timed Special CRAWFORDSVLLE. Aug. 21. Four of the seven children of Mr and Mrs. Frank Mangus, Ladoga, returned to their home after having their tonsils removed at the Culver hospital here. The other three children previously had submitted to the operation. SHIPS CRASH: ONE SINKS Italian Schooner Goes Down After Hitting United States Ship. Bit l niteii Press LONDON. Aug. 21.—The Italian schooner Efisiaserra sank today after a collision with the American steamship Exochorda, according to an Exchange Telegraph dispatch from Turin. The crew was saved. The Exochorda is a 10.000-ton freighter operated by the Export Steamship Corporation.
How to Hold YourJob!^® The way to bold yoor job is to / /I Jv! hare your mind always dear, IjK Ul< /[ / M your disposition good, and to I\\ w fiL ■ feel like working. |V \Uyft All these things depend eery L, j ' k largely on what you eat. ots | I , T . can slow yourself up to the point V" of driving the boss crazy if you * eat the wrong kind of lunch. No wonder it makes yon fee\ At least one meal a day, eat fine. If you wanted to, you could Shredded Wheat, milk, and lire oo this food combination fruit. This gives von the carbo- and nothing else. It’s economhydrates you need for energy, teal —and it’s mighty wise eatthe proteins for tissue building, ing—especially during the hoi those mysterious vitamins that weather. Start Shredded Wheal help you to resist disease, and today and see how much more bran to keep you regular. it puts you oo top of your job; s Hsedded wheat ” I ||| 1 } Pltase be fare to get this package u itb the picture of Sugar a Falls and tbe S. B.'C. ineeda SeaL NATIONAL.BISCUIT COMPANY |j||| Bd nnT
Carl Breindl
CITY POLICE STAGE SLOT MACHINE RAID Gambling Device Is Seized; Tavern Owner Held. One 5-cent slot machine was seized and one man was arrested late yesterday afternoon in a police raid on the Canteen Tavern, 37 South Illinois street. The arrested man is Herb Haag, described by police as proprietor of the tavern. He is charged with keeping a gaming device. The raid was the first outward sign of police activity in the slot machine drive since Chief Mike Morrissey announced ten days ago that his department was determined to clean up the slot machine situation here. Last week, state police seized three machines in Morgantown, arrested two men, obtained guilty pleas from them and wrecked the machines. SUICIDE HOP FAILS FOR PIONEER ALASKA FLIER Intrepid Airman, Missing Since Sunday, Reported Safe. R't l niteii Press ANCHORAGE. Alaska. Aug. 21. Fears that a suicidal flight by Frank Dorbandt, pioneer Alaskan flier, had caused the air hero’s death were dissipated today by a report he had been seen near Susitna Station. The report was the first word concerning Dorbandt since he took off alone late Sunday into the fogfilled mountains, saying farewell to friends as he left the ground. “You'll not see me again.” Dorbandt shouted as he lifted his plane into the air with only sufficient gasoline for a two and one-half hour flight.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
DEMOCRATIC PARTY CHIEFS HOLDPARLEY Wheelhorses Discuss Fall Election at Session Here. Wheelhorses of the Democratic party of the state held a reunion today in state headquarters at the Claypool. „ A luncheon, with Sherman Minton, Democratic senate candidate, as speaker, featured the reunion of the older Democrats of the state. Omer S. Jackson, Democratic state chairman, presided. Tomorrow, the Ninth district meeting of the American Legion will be held at Corydon, with both Mr. Minton and his Republican opponent. Senator Arthur R. Robinson, scheduled to share the platform. Mr. Minton is scheduled to speak at his home town, New Albany, tomorrow. John Minton, father of; the senatorial candidate, who came j from his home in Ft. Worth, Tex., j is expected to attend both meetings. Mr. Minton will speak Thursday at a women’s rally in Muncie. Sunday, Monday and Tuesday the Democratic candidate will spend at Gary at the state legion convention. Democratic chairmen and vicechairmen, 146 irf number, received their final campaign instructions yesterday in the Claypool. Governor Paul V. McNutt urged the party workers to depend on their own efforts for ballot success and not upon the press of the state, which he termed largely dominated by the Republican party. “The eyes of the nation are on Indiana. It is watching to see whether this state will send back to the senate the man who has done much to oppose President Roosevelt,” the Governor warned. clothinlTthief hunted Negro Grabs Women’s Wearing Apparel in Store. A Negro with a fondness for women's apparel stole silk slips, silk pajamas and hose valued at $57.50 from the dry goods store of Mrs. E. H. Sumner, 5402 College avenue, yesterday afternoon. The Negro snatched the material and ran when Mrs. Sumner went to the basement for a box to pack a “purchase” the Negro had made. Grandma’s Advice Was Best! Thanks to the persistent urging of his grandmother, J. P. Werling, 94 Northhampton St., Buffalo, N. Y., has triumphed over stomach suffering. The treatment which grandmother recommended and to which he now gives credit for his recovery is the Udga Treatment, based on a famous stomach specialist’s triple-action prescription. Its purpose is to neutralize excess acid, soothe and heal the inflamed stomach lining and stop pain. Already 54,169 letters praising the Udga Treatment have been received from victims of stomach ulcers, acid stomach, indigestion, heartburn, gas pains, belching and other symptoms of excess acidity. Write Udga, Suite 65, Foot-Schulze Bldg., St. Paul, Minn, for a free sample. The 7-day trial box of Udga Tablets is_ sold on a moneyback guarantee of * satisfaction by Hook's. Haag's, Walgreen’s and all good druggists.—Advertisement.
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t Rush Jobs Make Us Smile Hendren Printing Company, Inc. 470 Century Bldg. RI. 8533
STORE-WIDE CLEARANCE SALE ...... J tar THE FAIR) ” jj . ■ WEST WASHING-TON y J | "mS* || j | jjj mump* 8 profit 1 I SI.OO GLOVE SILK |\" Infants’ 1 1 MESS “ ATH ” || 1 BLOOMERS | | PANTS If UNION SUITS | j_ss*_J J 4* Pr . jjj _ j W Full-Fashioned J f WOM. SUMMER gS | Infants’ Rubber |8 I Hoys’ Blue Melton 'l | SILK HOSE 11 UNDIES j | CRIB SHEETS 1 § LUMBER JAC'S 1 j __P| ! | |)p , f 10* j j !•* | I “pads' I smrsetalls flaSffiSß.l SI I o* box I 74* I | or °j r *>T es j ....#4* nl Girls’Swan Suede jf ! INFANTS’ WOOL ! 1 ROYS’ & GIRLS’ 1 JACKETS | BOOTIES 1 § OXFORDS j_ _ *IJ _ j 10* Pr. j 92* mi Girls’Broadcloth 1 •GIRLS’ WASH 1 1 MEN’S WOOL | BLOOMERS I DRESSES I | Golf Knickers I I I2 c 111 44c 11 *i°° I Os Pink || | Fast fall prints. ) $ | Men’s all-wool golf knickGIRLS’ | § MEN’S STRIPED \ | W 17x17 DAMASK || I SUPS Ii SHORTS I I NAPKINS ' I 19* I 12%* Si 8* I mi Mom. Rayon Knit !§ | MEN’S DRESS || \ 81x90 MOHAWK "j| SWEATERS j| I SOX-PAIR j SHEETS | Clearance SALE I Coats & Suits | B “ S T S f ■T * ORIGINALLY SOLI) FOR & i'J V-MI 510 : 56.98 &$4.98 * Smart C ° atS Snd SO9B Wednesday only 4 1 M RAYON ] I BEDSETS 1 I SLACKS Wash Skirts | S 2 ® I \ 1\ £AA ft M 4 ■ m phlow*. spread, ro n \ \\ M 9 /■ H B K JW I'srr.| jX \ \\ _ i I
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