Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 108, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 September 1934 — Page 10

PAGE 10

DR. THAYER TO ADDRESS SOCIAL PARLEYIN CITY Noted Crime Expert to Talk on Prisons at State Convention. # Discussion of the problems and methods of practical human improvement will be the general subject of the Indiana state conference on social work Sept. 30 to Oct. 2 at the Claypool and Lincoln. Dr. Walter N. Thayer Jr.. New York state corrections commissioner, will address the conference on "Prisons—Yesterday. Today and Tomorrow.” at the opening session. Dr. Thayer has served as physician and administrator in Connecticut, Manlar.d and New York penal institutions. A former president of the American Prison Association, he has had forty-two years’ experience in penal problem**. He inaugurated in Maryland and New York methods of prison administration corresponding in essential details to the proposal of The Indianapolis Times in its campaign to end conditions which have contributed to escapes from prison and Jails throughout the state. . Dr. Arthur L. Swift Jr . associate professor of applied Christianity at Union Theological seminary. New York, will spread on Leisure and Group Leadership,”. Sunday night, Sept. 30. Child I-abnr to IV Topic Milt D. Campbell, American Legion national child welfare chairman, will speak on the child labor amendment, at the child welfare luncheon, Oct. 1. L. Russell Newgent, Marion county juvenile court referee, is child welfare division chairman. Miss Agnes K. Hanna, social servive division director, will be a conference guest. James W. Fesler. local attorney and Indiana university trusteess' board president, has been named conference chairman. Mr. Fesler was made an honorary member of the Indianapolis Community Fund last year for “outstanding and unselfish service to the public welfare." Local Committee Members Twenty-nine different meetings are scheduled for the conference. Local committee members are: O. C. Ridge, conference secretary’, assisted by Laura Greely; Allan Bloom and Dr. Ernest N. Evans, attendance; Mrs. J. W. Moore, decoration and music: F. E. Trucksess, exhibits; Mrs. Larz A. Whitcomb, hospitality; Kate D. Huber, meeting places, and W. J. Ash, publicity. Among the problems to be discussed are relief methods, the management of charitable and correctional institutions. Juvenile delinquents and public wards, and social isurance

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Modernize Your Home by ROGER B. WHITMAN

Thi H th* third of a <oi f twrlr* article. be B-fer It. Whitman, famoo. ktniißc capcrt. n thf rrir *nd •"'!- ernisatian •( th bm Tb* artirlra ar mtrndwl *• a |W in ronnerttnn with Ihr federal hoo.iitf adminiatrattin i home rrnaiitiai campaign. A friend of mine rented a house for the summer, and had no more than moved in when I heard a wail from him about the hot water supply. I gpent a week-end with him to look things over. 'The hot water outfit was wrong wherever it could be. It started with a water heating stove, in which some previous user, I suppose in a desperate attempt to make the thing work, had built so hot a fire that the top lid had warped. This made a leak that reduced the draft, and that, of course, was trouble number one. The supply tank was alongside the stove, and although there were three bathrooms in the house, not to mention the kitchen sink and laundrytubs, the tank had a capacity of only twenty-five gallons. Fault number two. Larger Tank Needed The low connection from the stove led to the bottom of the tank, and had no drain cock by which the tank could be flushed out. Faults three and four. Anew lid would fix the stove, and anew tank of at least twice the capacity better yet, three times should be put in. After a few months of use, a galvanized tank, which this was. will be crusted inside with a deposit of scale and probably rust. The connecting pipe to the heating stove being at the bottom, the flakes and sediment settle into it either to be carried to the faucets or to collect in the low pipe and eventually clog it. With the low pipe from the stove connected to an opening low in the side of the tank, there is space at the bottom of the tank in which the sediment can collect without being carried along by the circulation. This will avoid clogging of the system and rusting of the water. Opening the drain cock in the bottom of the tank once in a while will get rid of the sediment. Overheating Causes Rust Avery usual cause of rustiness and discoloration is overheating of the water, for raising water to or near the boiling point will develop a sediment that at lower temperatures would not appear. With some kinds of heaters the temperature can not be controlled. A draft regulator will prevent overheating by opening and closing the damper according to the temperature of the water. A temperature of 140 degrees is plenty hot enough for domestic use, and with the regulator set for that temperature, the draft is turned off before the water becomes so highly heated that sediment will appear. A water heating coil attached to a steam boiler, and called an indirect heater, should be fitted with

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a shut-off valve and drain cock for keeping the coil free from sediment. NEXT —Modernizing the bathroom. DEMOCRAT INCUMBENTS GAIN RENOMINATIONS New York Renamed Twenty-One In Primary Voting. By United Press ALBANY, N. Y., Sept. 14. Twenty-one Democratic congressional incumbents were swept to rer.omination today in New York state's primaries. Two Republican incumbents, facing contests, also were nominated. A swelling vote cast for congressional nominees of both parties, served to forecast a division of the electorate on the ‘‘New Deal” issue at the November elections.

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

0. B. LLOYD, 57, SALESMAN. DIES ON GARY VISIT Spanish American War Vety eran to Be Buried Here Monday. Funeral services for O. B. Lloyd. 57, of 4003 Ruckle street, who died yesterday in Gary on a business trip, will be held at 11 Monday in the Hisey & Titus funeral home. Burial will be in Crown Hill. Mr. Lloyd was a salesman for the Todd Burial Blanket Company. He was a veteran of the Spanish-Amer-ican war and a member of the Broadway M. E. church. Surviving are the widow, two brothers, Roy Lloyd, Vincennes, and Paul Lloyd, Denver, and two sisters, Mrs. Robert Bates, St. Petersburg, and Mrs. I. F. Owen, Indianapolis. Daugherty Rites Set Burial rites for Austin Daugherty, 89. who died Wednesday in the United States Veterans’ hospital, will be held at 2 Sunday in the home of his daughter. Mrs. Henry Bishop, 968 Garfield drive. The body will be taken to Acton for burial. Mr. Daugherty was a veteran of

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Indianapolis Tomorrow Junior Chamber of Commerce, state convention, Lincoln. Sigma Alpha Epsilon, luncheon. Columbia Club. Alliance Francaise, luncheon, Washington. 1 p.m. . the Civil war. and one of the oldest Masons in the state. Surviving him are the daughter, a son, James M. Daugherty, Los Angeles, and a granddaughter and a great-grand-son. Harry Fidler Dead Funeral services and burial of Harry L. Fidler, 64, former member of the Indiana Republican state committee, who died Wednesday in his home in Miami, will be held in Miami tomorrow-, according to word which has been received by Indianapolis friends. Mr. Fidler was an engineer for the Pennsylvania railroad when he lived here, and gave up his work when he was appointed to the Federal Board of vocational Education by former President Harding in 1920. He served on the board until 1927. Surviving are the widow, Mrs. Bertha Fidler; a son, Frederick Fidler, San Francisco; a daughter and a brother.

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Names Committee to Have Gary Man’s Name Placed Before Voters. Steps to place the name of Joseph Kyle, Gary’, on the election ballot as Republican nominee for LieutenantGovernor will be taken by a committee appointed yesterday by Don Irwin, Republican state chairman. Mr. Irwin also has been advised by an advisory legal committee that three holdover members of the state senate have vacated their posts by accepting state administration jobs. While the Lieutenant-Governor ordinarily is elected during presidential years for four-year terms, it is the Republican contention that M. Clifford Townsend, Democratic incumbent, vacated the office by

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becoming head of a state department. The committee of attorneys named by Mr. Irwin include U. S. Lesh, Solon J. Carter and Sidney Miller, Indianapolis, and Addison K, Sills. Lafayette. The procedure, it is said, will be a mandamus action if the state election commissioners refuse to place Mr. Klye s name on the ballot. In the case of the holdover senators, whose posts the Republicans believe have been vacated. Mr. Irwin Instructed the Republican organizations in the districts affected to place nominees in the field. Musical Instrument Stolen A musical instrument valued at SIOO was stolen from the Nazarene Don’t Read This Unless you are interested in a medicine which has helped over 700.000 women and girls. Take it before and after childbirth, at middle age or whenever you are nervous and rundown. 98 out of 100 say, “It hefps me!” LYDIA E. PINKHAM’S VEGETABLE COMPOUND

_SEPT. 14, 1934

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