Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 141, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 October 1934 Edition 02 — Page 2
PAGE 2
NEW-BORN BABY GAINING AFTER APPENDECTOMY Tiny Doses of Oxygen Aid Infant in Battle for Life. Bv Cnilril Prrm BALTIMORE, Oct, 23—Tiny quantities of oxygen today aided ' Baby Shepherd in a unique fight lor life after being operated on for appendicitis only thirty minutes alter birth. The chud, .so young it still ha3 no j given name, was fighting valiantly j for life following the unusual operation. physicians at Maryland G f, n- j era! hospital said. The operation was performed last j Friday. The child continued to show j vitality today and attendants wre j hopeful it would survive. The ! youngster was placed in an incu- j bator after the operation. Today occasional small quantities of oxygen were bemg administered to aid the child's lungs. The baby was born to Mrs. Marcia Shepherd, Fullerton, Md. CIRCLE TRAFFIC CURBED FOR HALLOWEEN FETE Ropes to ( lose All But One Lane for Buses, polire Decide. Upon recommendation of Chief' Mike Morrissey, the safety board today approved the roping of! of Monument circle, except for a bus i;cute on one segment, and neighboring streets on Halloween in an effort to centralize the city’s celebration of this ordinarily prankish occasion. The busses will enter the circle on Meridian street from the north and will leave the circle on West Market street. CLOSED KOKOMO BANK TO PAY OUT $427,000 Fourth Dividend to Bring Total Payments to 45 Per Cent. By L'nilrd Prmt KOKOMO, Ind., Oct. 23.—Payment of a 15 per cent dividend, tolling approximately $427,000, to depositors of the closed People's Trust and Savings bank, was announced here today. The didivend will be the fourth since the bank closed in October, 1931, bringing total paid on deposits to 45 per cent. RED CROSS TO MAP ACTIVITIES FOR YEAR Annual Meeting to Be Held at War Memorial Tomorrow. Members of the American Red Cross will meet at 3:30 tomorrow afternoon in the War Memorial building to plan activities for the ensuing year with William Fortune, Indianapolis chapter chairman, presiding. The session wall be the eighteenth annual meeting of the local chapter, which will begin its 1934 membership drive Nov. 11. AUTHOR TO TALK HERE Butler Students, Faculty to Hear Irving Stone. Irving Stone, New York, author of two recent novels, “Lust for Life” and “Pageant of Youth,” will speak at Butler university at 10:45 tomorrow morning in Arthur Jordan Memorial hall before the faculty and student body. Dr. T. F. Reavis, chairman of the chapel committee, announced today. Mr. Stone is appearing in the city under the sponsorship of the L. S. Ayres bookstore. MISS M'ADOO TO WED Senator's Daughter Engaged to Hollywood Resident. LOS ANGELES, Oct. 23 —No date has been set for the wedding of Ellen Wilson McAdoo. 19, daughter of United States Senator William Gibbs McAdoo. and Rafael Lo}iez de Onate of Hollywood, it was announced today by the bride-to-be's mother. Mrs. McAdoo. divorced wife of the senator, said the wedding would be in “the near future.” EDGEWOOD DRAMA SET Parents Club to Present One-Act Flay Friday Night. Edgewood P.-T. A. Dramatic Club will present a one-act play at 8 Friday night in the Edgewood school gymnasium. The cast, which includes Paul Kennedy, Paul Miller, Miss Catherine Carson and Mrs. Hilda Dewsnap. is under the direction of Robert W. McAllister. “Life of Christ” Will Be Shown “The Life of Christ.” a motion picture based on the famous Passion I play at Oberammergau. Germany. I will be presented tonight at the iGarfleld Park Christian church. Bradbury and Boyd avenues, under the auspices of the church's official Board. Japanese Pact Aids Turkey Jf y C*ih (J Prt ft | TOKIO. Oct. 23 —Terms of anew Turko-Japanese commercial treaty will increase Japanese purchases of tobacco from Turkey, it was learned today.
MIAMI BEACH Has sent you jtVTPl 1 You’ll Agree it’s a better talcum^
UFFLEO CQ IRTAINSUU PA IK
DELEGATES OF STATE FEDERATION OF WOMEN’S CLUBS ARRIVE HERE FOR ANNUAL PARLEY
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Upper left. Miss Elizabeth Haymaker, Mrs. W- D. Keenan, Mrs.
Hundreds of clubwomen from over the state assembled today at the Claypool for the opening of the forty-fifth annual convention of the Indiana Federation of Clubs with Mrs. Robert A. Hicks, Cambridge City, presiding. The convention, with its program theme, “Higher Goals for Indiana,” opened its three-day sessions with advisory board, department and district meetings. Mrs, Edwin I. Poston, Martinsville, conducted a club institute at the morning meeting, and Mrs. Frederick G. Balz, first vice-president of the state group, led the department talks. Mrs. Grace Morrison Poole, Washington, as president of the General Federation of Clubs, is a special guest at the local conclave and will address the convention’s official opening tonight with a talk on “Builders of the New Day.” Other General Federation officers attending include Mrs. E. C. Rumpler, chairman of law observance division, and Mrs. Edwin N. Canine, Terre Haute, director, and former president of the Indiana federation. Guests from olit of state include: Miss Elizabeth Haymaker, president of the Ohio Federation, and Mrs.
Peoples Removal Sale Becomes Colossal teS'S.&'iS farsrca,er •■ -■ -•* tm Everything in Store and Ware- E'SkinT'-r.iala”^ a . • mm V* g-v inr irc Im/>lil rl rk /4 /k v/i/)n/ ffj 1!' l//7 HI O i. i? _XV aX m/- /\ **v Vi n Id A V“1
So for as we know, there has never before been such a sale. • All we’ve done thus far, has been to announce that we're having a Removal Sale! • No prices have been mentioned because no list we could possibly print would be complete. used several thousand tags, slipped over the regular price tags, in marking doicn the merchandise for this unusual event. A few dozen, or even a few hun- . *
E. c. Bumpier and Mrs. R. J. Barbour. Upper right, Mrs. Edwin I.
E. H. Heller, president of the Illinois Federation, who told of their club activities. Others attending the meetings are Mrs. W. D. Keenan, second vicepresident of the Seventh District Federation which is acting as hostess group, and Mrs. R. J. Barbour, state president of Epsilon Sigma Omicron sorority, which entertained with a breakfast for delegates this morning and honored Mrs. Clarence J. Finch, Seventh District president. BURGLAR LOOTS HOMES S7O, Jewelry, Stolen From City Man While He Is Away. Frank Stascheit, 620 East Minnesota street, reported to police today, the theft of a watch valued at $lO, a ring valued at $5, and S7O in cash, which he says was stolen from his home during his absence, some time between Oct. 18 and 21. The Rev. Carl Hildebrand of the same address reported that a shotgun belonging to him had been stolen during the same period. The value of the gun was placed at $25.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Poston. Lower right, Mrs. Robert | Poole and Mrs. Edwin N. Canine. A. Hicks, Mrs. Grace Morrison | Lower left, Mrs. Frederick G. Balz.
INDEPENDENT^ROCERs/
dred items, especially selected, would give only a meager idea of the bargains! We expected a big response
PEOPLES outfitting co. 133-135 West Washington St.
SHARE RELIEF BURDEN, PLEA OF ROOSEVELT President Asks Citizens to Lighten Government's Load. B<j Vnitcd Prr • WASHINGTON. Oct. 23.—President Roosevelt presented today to citizens an appeal to share with the government the terrific burdens of relief. The appeal was made in the opening of the annual community chest drive under the direction of the 1934 mobilization for human needs. The President called attention to the unusual relief burdens being borne by government, both local and national—“a load so heavy that every good citizen should seek to lighten it in every way passible.” “This effort on governments of all kinds to bear their share of the emergency needs,” he said, “proceeds very clearly on the assumption that the total amount of relief of human needs, heretofore borne by private contributions, w’ill continue in the future at least at the same pace and in the same amount as in the past.” U. S. FILES TA)TIIENS Brings Claims Against Falenders for Alleged Tax Arrears. Liens against the property of Julius Falender, 4611 North Meridian street, and Samuel Falender, 4605 North Meridian street, are on file today in United States district court. The liens w r ere filed by Will H. Smith, United States internal revenue collector, because of federal income tax the government seeks to collect from the Flanders. Julius Falender is alleged to owe the United States government $2,964 and Samuel Falender $2,970.
the results have been far greater than we anticipated. Everything in Store and Warehouse is included except a few items on which manufacturers control retail prices. We call especial attention
OSTEOPATH SPEAKER
Dr. C. G. Beckwith An address on “Postural Studies” will be given by Dr. C. G. Beckwith tomorrow afternoon at the Indiana Osteopathic Association's annual convention in the Lincoln. Dr. Beckwith is assistant roentgenologist in the Chicago Osteopathic hospital.
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to Rugs, because we fear wholesale prices will go higher! • Reductions are general —and practically uniform throughout the stock—no “specials" picked out for effect—no emphasis on any one thing —or any one group.
EASY TERMS “It’s Easy to Pay the Peoples Way” FREE State-Wide Delivery • Our new Store, at Washington and Canitol, will be one of the largest Home Furnishing Establishments in America.
OCT. 23. 1934
WELFARE WORK TOPIC i Society Vice-President to Talk Before Civic Clubs. Austin V. Clifford, Family Welfare Society vice-president, will disi cuss family welfare work before members of the Indianapolis Fedi eration of Communltyl Civic Clubs at 8 Friday night in the Washington. A federation dinner will be i served at 6 30. KIDNEYS MUST GLEAN OUT ACIDS The only wav your body can clean 'out Acids and Poisonous wastes from 1 your blood is through the function of ! millions of tiny Kidney tubes or filter*. ] but be careful, don't use drastic, irrij rating drugs. If poorly functioning ; Kidneys and Bladder made you suf I fer from Getting t'i< Nights. I.eg Patna, j Nervousness. StifTness. Irritation. Add- ! tty. Neuralgia or Rheumatic Pah Lumbago or Loss of Ka-'rgy. don t waste a minute. Try the Doctor's pr< scription called Cystex (pronounr- and Siss-tex) Formula in every parka Starts work in 13 minutes. Booth>* and tones raw. irritated tissues. It is helping millions and Is guaranteed to fix you up or money back on return of empty package. Cystex is only 75c at druggists —Advertisement.
