Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 99, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 September 1934 — Page 5
SEPT. 4, 1934.
BOY'S BARROW IS SELECTED AS GRANDJHAMP Kermit Sands’ Entry Takes Top Honor in 4-H Pig Show. Not content with placing first in the 4-H Club pig show, Kermit Sands, 14. of Center Point, took his champion Poland-Chma barrow to the grand championship award in the 4-H Club barrow class at the Indiana state fair. Clay county, Hermit's bailiwick won top honors in the pig show with nineteen prize awards out of 300 entries. The awards, named in the respective placing order, follow: POLAND CHINA PIO CLUB OilU—Arnold Moore. Wolcott, Hnrii.n. KnlhUtown, EMcl Hiir.p Bryant: K-rmit Sand*. Center Pont. Henry T. Plaeher. Weldron Bruce Wells. Morgantown. John Stewart and Gilman Stewart of Groerubura. Noble Ratts. Hall; R. H. MeCoSley. Manilla Barrow*—Kermr Sands: M ,r:el Sands. Center Point John Coster. Mooresville; Stanley J Steal Manilla; Wayne Thomas. Brazil, Glen Pell and Bernard Pell of Carfean. John Stewart, Francis Thomas. Brazil. Bill Andrews, Romney. CHESTER WHITE Oilts—Roger Vroeman. Wabash; Junior Shanks, Washington. Owen RatclifTe. Brazil; James Pugsley. DalevtUe; Junior Vrooman. Wabash Lowell L Harton. Rushville; Gordon Sears, Lapel; John Brown. Runhylile: Janice Harlow. Tipton; Charles Stohry. She’byytile Barrows Floyd Adams, Mooresville. Glen Todd, Rensselaer. Junior Vrooman; James Norris Anderson; John Devore. Franklin. Clifford Sears. Lapel; Lowell Harton; Esfei Kelly. Sharpsville: Roger Vrooman; Mary Toad. Rensselaer. YORKSHIRE Otit—Richard Grenard. Wavnetown; Robert Record. Indianapolis; Robert Orenard. Wavnetown; Russel Knee and Maxine Kr.ee of Wabash; Jay D. Keith. Morna Haase. Norman Keith and Donald Keith, all of Mooresville. DUROC JERSEY Gilt—Dale Newby Arcadia; Wayne Carson. Atlanta; James Kernnle. Arlington; Howard Hoffman Bridgeport; Glenn Watson. Tipton: Malcolm Harris Farmcrsbure: Gerald Foster. Sharpsville. Beulah Bowman. Martinsville Harry Burnett. Paragon; Carl Miller. Tipton. Barrows—Beulah Bowman; Daniel Hiehlen. Liberty Center; Harrv G. Dow. Paragon; Glen Watson. Tipton: Rav Brown. Lvorw; Basil Bowman. Eminence: Vernon Hitchcock. Sullivan; Eugene Gardener. Carthage. William Higgs Brookrille; Stanley Hurst. Manilla BERKSHIRE Gilt—Bvron Powell. Leoanon: Donald Moore. Sheridan Donald Gossard. Kempton; Kenneth Wise. Yorktown; Allen Woody. Thorntown. Bruce Eihs. Indianapolis; Howard Rudolph. Williamsport: George Ellis. Indianapolis: Robert wise. Yorktown; II W Schackel. Acton. Barrows—Bvron Powell Robert Wise and Kenneth Wise of Yorktown: Raymond Hobson and Frank Truax Jr. of Monrovia. Dan McNeil, Paragon: Donald Moore; Allen Woody. Thorntown; Bruce Ellis. Indianapolis. HAMPSHIRE Gilt—John W. Miles. Springfield: Marjorie Saunders. Thorntown: Robert Harper. Llgonter; Dale Martin. Pence; Ravthond Leibonguth. Lafayette. John Hardin. Bridgeport; Tom Parkinson. Rennsalaer; Charles Moore. Wolcott; Wavne Haase. Martinsville; Junior Cax. Elnora. Barrows—John D Hardin. Robert Harper. Tom Parkinson. Chazles Moore. Marjorie Saunders. Donald McCorkle. West Point; Frank Wierste. Sanborn: Jack Sigler. Elwood: Bvron Brav. Monrovia; Thurman Fuller. Alexandria. SPOTTED POLAND CHINA Gilt—Robert Crippen, Columbus: Eugene Moore. Wolcott; Gerald Kester. Kermit Kester and Harold Kester of Cory: Dorwin Hump. Bryant: Earl Kumof. Brazil; Wm T. Hickey Morgantown: Lvn rvumpf. Brazil: Arthur McKiiip. Salem Barrows—Gene Cooper Wabash; Robert Crippen. Columbus: Eugene Moore: Glen McKilHd. Washington: Farl Kumpf and Glen Kumpf of Brazil; Troy Simons, Fortland Dorwin Hunt: Gerald Koster: Harold Kester Barrows—Robert Grenard: Morris Haase: Paul Hobson and Jimmv Bravos Monrovia: Maxine Knee; Norman Keith. Donald Keith: Jar Keith: Russel Knee: Myron Johnson. Monrovia. ALL BREEDS Champion Barrow—Kermit Sands. Adria. Italy, stand fourteen miles inland from the Adriatic sea. It once stood on the sea's shores, but sea deposits altered its location.
$V 41 *'‘} V i|| MONEY IN , OVERALLS i —> Three years ago this league told investors to put their “white collar 9 ’ money in overalls ... to pnt it back to work. Those who did so have received regular dividends • • • their funds have worked steadily, furnishing jobs •• • buying material, in Indianapolis. Marion County Associations are making loans for repairs, and remodeling of homes. 64 Per cent, of the dwellings in Indianapolis need repairing. There’s a job for YOUR money! Put it back in overalls • • . buy Building and Loan Shares • • • and let it work for others as well as for you. <■ j 2.883 Structures la Indianapolis wen J < listed in a national surrey as no longer 5 1 suitable as dwellings. 68,035 homes need I /j \ repairs in Indianapolis. If you have an 1/equity in, or fully own your home you can get a repair loan from a local asoo* *■—ll eiation. THE MARION COUNTY / J LCiffUt (yf BUILDING £ LO IN ASSOCIATIONS a. v, tr 1 -nsmiia *<,... w I , i,
Indiana in Brief
By Timet Special WITH the price of com at 80 cents to 85 cents a bushel, hog producers must have a net price of 19 50 to SlO a hundredweight for hogs in order to make a profit, according to R. Highlen, director of the Indiana Farm Bureau livestock marketing department. ■ Newspapers are giving much publicity to the recent advances in the prices of hogs, and many city purchasers of pork products consider the prices paid by them too high. This may be true, but the $8 a hundredweight now received will not pay to the producer more than the cost of production, and the city housewife should not be paying more for pork chops than she did in the period from 1909 to 1914, states Mr. Highlen. “During that period, the fanner received 72 cents out of each $1 spent by the consumer. Now the farmer receives only 36 cents out of each $1 spent by the consumer for meat, which means that the cost of distribution has practically doubled since the above stated period. “These fact3 are not generally known by the consuming public. It is not unreasonable to believe that if the public was better acquainted with the fact that distribution costs have nearly doubled, there would be less talk About the boycotting of pork products," says Mr. Highlen • During the past few years the retail prices of pork have been practically as high as when hogs were $lO a hundreweight, yet the farmers received prices that were gradually bankrupting them. The 'Gnomic distress will not be removed until farmers receive a profit above the cost of production, and the present prices of hogs do not return that much,” he concluded
ana Files in Bankruptcy : By Timet Special COLUMBUS, sept. 4 —Mrs. Lydia j Newsom Lambert is the first Bartholomew county resident to in- j voke Section 75 of the federal bank- 1 ruptc.v act, which provides relief for, farmers in financial difficulty. Her petition is on file with Donald p. Shinn, recently appointed county> conciliator under the act by Federal Judge Robert C. Baltzell. Mrs. Lambert lists assets of $2,600 and liabilities of $25,000. nan Old Stor3 Being Razed Bu Time * Special HUNTSVILLE, Sept. 4. This town, one of the oldest in Madison county, is losing one of its landmarks, a store building erected ninety-eight years ago. The structure, weakened by age, is considered unsafe, and is being torn down. Various merchants have occupied the building almost continuously since its erection. a n Slot Machines Banned Bu Timr Special FRANKLIN. Sept. 4.—Beginning today. Sheriff A. R. Mulkins of Johnson county states any one found in possession of a slot’machine wil be prosecuted. He and his deputies made a round of the county several days ago warning all persons who had the machines to dispose of them. Freaks Displayed Bp Timet Special BLOOMINGTON, Sept. 4. Among freak farm and garden products being displayed here are: A stalk of corn 15 feet 1 inch in height, by Burl Chestnut; a sixpound beet, John R. Hacker, and a squash weighing twenty-three and one-half pounds, Morton Siscoe, 000 Building Passes By Timet special MARION, Sept. 4.—Former building of the First Methodist church, one of the city's older structures, is being razed. It was built in 1882. Pope Meets Bishops By United Print CASTEL GANDOLFO. Italy, Sept. 4—Pope Pius gave audiences today to Bishop Francis Kelly of Winona, Minn., and Bishop Francis Kief of Concordia, Kan.
Indianapolis Tomorrow
Indiana state fair, all day, fairground. Purdue Alumni Association, luncheon, Severin. Kiwanis Club, luncheon, Columbia Club. Lioas Club, luncheon, Washington. Twelfth District, Legion, luncheon, Board of Trade.
Wives Help Hold Husbands’ Jobs! What you feed your husband for A breakfast makes a lot of differ- /n n g ence in the kind of work he does j all morning. Give him a heavy, c'ZjHC \ indigestible breakfast and be It/* \ will be slowed up until eleven o’clock. Give him Shredded Wheat, fruit, and milk, and he j / will be full of pep all morning / —clear headed, feeling fine, /Jilt i ready to lick the world. / Shredded Wheat on the table ' r //T* is a sign of the wise housewife, I ' who buys food for her family \ on its health value, because she you the carbohydrates you need knows it is good for them. for energy; the proteins you Shredded Wheat is just whole need for bone structure; and wheat —nothing added —noth- vitamins to resist disease, ing taken away. It is whole Start your family on Shredded wheat in its most delicious and Wheat today. It will keep them easily digested form. It give* happy and healthy. of Niagara Falls and the N. B. C. UneedaSeal. NATIONAL BISCUIT COMPANY Une*da Ball** I
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
PUBLIC RITES PLANNED FOR MRS.MOONEY Gigantic Parade of Working Class Proposed for Funeral. By United Prrtt SAN FRANCISCO. Sept. 4.—From his cell in San Quentin prison, Tom Mooney, America's most famous prisoner, today directed plans for a gigantic public funeral—a procession a mile long with 100,000 persons viewing it—for his mother, Mrs. Mary Mooney, 85. Tom, it appeared, will not be able to attend the funeral himself. Prison officials said they knew of no law which would permit his release, even temporarily, from the life | sentence he is serving. He was convicted of participation in the 1916 Preparedness day bombings in which ten persons were killed here. Members of the Mooney family— John, his brother, and Mary, his sister—joined in the efforts to arrange a tremendous “working class public funeral.” “It was mother’s wish,” Mary Mooney said. Her funeral will be either Friday or Saturday. The body will lie in state in a funeral parlor here before burial.
Women's ” v • ln,a "’ s ' Wool Flannel Ok* Store of G/teaA*r \Jalu*A. \ Flannelette SJ THE FAIR)s Smart tailored V 31L325 WEST y s| 00 styles in pret- - ty stripes. ■nfri r ~~~~ ” 4 Boys’ Balbrig. Infants' $1.98 & 2 Pr. Full-Fashion UNION SUITS SILK COMFORTS £ . Oil If uncp Boys’ Balbriggan but- fl Slightly mussed quilt- ■ DREootS, Z TOr OILn HUOC ton on shoulder style ed comforts in pink or lin sizes 6to 16 years. H blue. ™ Fast color plaids, -■polka and o t sand $1.49 INFANTS’ -g VnnTwwts <C *0 '“"*"4 NURSERY SEATS s*| $ | * W "’ ’ mSSSSSSSSSSSSSSBSk and well constructed. fl shawls. ™ — 2 Girls’ and Jr. 3 Rayon & Wool ? (2M 8 > \ ew 6 Pr. Boys PRINCESS SUPS <t INFANTS' VESTS (1 lue o QUIDTQ CUf|DTQ Rayon taffeta, lace or H Button or fold over H rfljHmHO, O TOl OMnlO onunio tailored, pink or white, ■ styles in all sizes. | slcening sizes 6to 18 years. ■ " uo\eiy sleeping Full cut pattern garments in pretor roa s a nd“ h S$ T 2 Women’s Elastic g I D f' B j r D d . s,y ' C T? 7„ shirts, sizes 6to ■ STEPIN GIRDLES t | DIAPERS $ ■ s's' pd - 6 ‘° 16 years. | Anothsr blg s Da y ■ Also Flannelette. ■ " value. I hemmed ready for use. ■ ~— 7TT. 7~ 2 Women's Print 3 Women’s Wash 3 Totg - Crisp ew UNION SUITS HOOVEREnES DRESSES WASH DRESSES UNION SUITS Color Si.es 16 to U Tot , pretty print ST C Organdy trimmed . “ m s a(Jc " assn C with snubber B anand backs. Sizes 6to B colors. Fine mate- B print or polka and B colors. 16 - B rials in pretty, gay B wash . Jesses. In | i-J Lgj—ggicolors. All sizes. ■ sizes 16 to 44. U ■————l . pyfTcl.li'Vi'ggygl I BIG JOHN OR C. B. CONES CLEAN-UP SHIRTS Women’s BETTER 2 For ii pVri. ' / jklen, here's a clean up sale of on P" 1 1 3 as !*■* chambray work shirts in sizes l§yMft “I*. Men's Broadcloth ..... . j | ■maT OOATS Here is a bargain value in men’s |ri| Don’t fail to be here early for A fine quality broadcloth dress shirts, Kwli A this bargain Value in Women’s /fZf'A in white or colors. The popular colV Fall Weight Tweed Coats. lar attached styles. In sizes 14 to 17. -—■ 'r ~ , 4 Yards Rayon 8 Men’s Quality ~ ~ 3 DRESS PRINTS $1 SHIRTS & SHORTS $ \ PRINCESS SUPS Unuaual duality rayon I SJSJV ribbrt'JlSrtlc I SPREADS 1 print dress patterns. ■ shirts, sizes 30 to 44. ■ ■ .i.m-.i i■■ Here’s a real SPatex M el DISH TOWELS $ | Rlbb^™Lß $ J -r The towel that dries ■ i n oxford grey or H mSjSSSSSSStSSSBKS dishes faster and drier. g brown. B Wont's Chardonese f\°LL SLACKS C 3 Boys'Broadcloth HOSE, 5 Pair Larg e ßA a L ß^ S P iai d 1 S3t r& I DRE SS SHIRTS colored rag rugs. | terns . sizes 29 to 36. B Boys’ fast color Sen’ice weight , , , at* hose that look and (1 3 Yds. 50” Rayon Boys’ Melton m $ wear well, in all■ Drapery Damask fB LUMBERJACKS C piam colors’ ■ colors and sizes. ■ Good looking Sicilian ■ Warm heavy blue ■ =—=. s(Mnch dra P er y dam ’ B melton lumber jackets. B ■■■■■■■■Hi ask, all colors. M Sizes 8 to 16 years. ■ Worn. Full’Fash. ^ L K PATTERNS” J LINED KNICKERS C Boys All-Wool HOSE, 3 Pair Fas t col or dress prints + I Zipper Sweaters that look like Silk. jg| Sizes 8 to 16 years. Chiffon weight, ” Brushed wool, zipreinforced with d* *5 YdS Wnltß 2 Mfin’S Ribbfid per style sweaters 41 lisle seconds in B OUTING ( J UNION SUITS C ■ in all colors and - n :fl COl ° rS B Good quality snow & H Medium weight, short B sizes. au sizes ’ ■ white 27-inch white if sleeve and ankle; in B outing. ■ sizes 36 to 46. B I 3 Worn. Embroid’d STRIPED OUTING C T DRESS HOSE C | 2 Pr. Boys’ Tweed Kiawwaiap itomuft Good looking stripe or Men's fancy pattern I#lllftftFEfnQ NIGHT GOWNS P laid 27 - inch white B rayon plaited dress B KNICKERS outing. ■ socks. ■ mean "SJ?! * 10 Yds. Bleached p* 2 Beys’ Long Sleeye ZTZTJ?- C while or flesh in Ip ■ 36 In. MUSLIN CT| PLAY SUITS Cl tom knickers Size I regular and stout ■ gmart good , 00king ■ Hickory stripe or blue *4> ■ „ t 016 „ B color dress prints. B and an cov ert play m suits. Sizes 3 to 8. M 2 Women's Rayon 81 In. SHEETING g FALL SUITS C Misses'School TACeCTA Cl IDQ Closely woven 81 -inch B Fall patterns, pants B Cl IDDCDC lAirClAwLird unbleached quality ■ with light top or solid B OUlirtlld 1 sheeting. ■ color. Sizes 3toß. B —— patent straps, 10 Yds. New 6 Pr. Beys' I comfortable and FALL PRINTS s*l SCHOOL HOSE C*l “J ““ Good looking, new fall B Nw fall ? chCK ? 1 fl to 2. fast color dress prints. terns in :■ - length, mSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSs _________hose; ail sizes. M i — 4 Yds. Rayen 3 Women’s Knit 1 r —, . 10 Bxs. Sanitary SPORT SATIN tl UNION SUITS cl Boys Sturdy NAPKINS I I SCHOOL SHOES ,0 Boxes, each hox _ !■ Biack sol. ieather ■ con talning 12 C*| 3 regular size ab- *r B DRAPEnY NET C B Tk B for school wear. fl sorbent napkins. B Attractive open mesh ■ sizes 10 to SH. ■ Mexican color, 36-inch | This value for $ p&Y | diapery net. B only. B ■■■■■■!■■■
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