Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 142, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 October 1934 — Page 6

PAGE 6

RADIUM ENERGY MAY END LABOR, ROTARIANS TOLD Science Is on Threshold of Great Discoveries, Expert Says. The United States is on the verge of an industrial period which will make the present era look like the “horse and buggy days,” Dr. Luther 3. H. Gable, radium expert and Detroit *istitute of Technology, radiology and biology' department head, predicted here yesterday in a speech to the Rotary Club. Scientists are nearing solution of the problem of utilizing radium in transmit, ion of the stratosphere's cosmic rays to industrial machinery, Dr. Gable declared, adding that leadersnip in radium production may return to the United States through recent discoveries of ore deposits in the Arctic region. The possible effects of these discoveries are so far reaching that precautions must be taken lest any individual or group establish a selfish monopoly of the new deposits, the scientist declared, since this radium, he said, will give the world's populace a leisure it has never known before. Dr. Gable related his experiences in operating a thirty-five horsepower motor with a minute quantity of the precious element. Thus far, no method of controlling the energy has been discovered, he said. When this discovery has been made, use of radium power will be applicable only to fixed plants, since six feet of ground connections are necessary, he explained. Dr. Gable pointed out that the present value of radium, $2,400.00Q an ounce, may not be decreased through the Arctic discoveries. “Radium may be the secret to life Itself,” Dr. Gable declared in conclusion. ' Experiments on a tadpole have indicated that it might bo possible through the use of radium to produce a race of supermen who will never grow old.”

Crosley Fiver Gets Police and Airplane Calls Complete O os With Pictured Here is a compact, five-tube superheterodyne with late radio refinements at an almost unbelievable low price! The double purpose tube increases its efficiency to that of an ordinary fi-tube set! Small carrying charge on deferred payment plan. CROSLEY FIVER bsWWrfl DELUXE LOWBOY *39 95 !|| pose tubes, giving 7-tube 5 performance, automatic g= ** M volume control, three gang tuning condenser. electro-dynamic speaker! Crosley Fiver De Luxe Table Model 529.95 Re Sure Your Crosley Is \ Backed by Block's Liberal AM Service Guarantee ;! TO * ,r VIQ ;• pius Block’s Radio 30-DAY EXCHANGE i Liberal allowance on j PRIVILEGE 1 your old radio on a ! brand new Crosley! • Also at Block's Showroom. 424 N. Illinois. Open Evenings.

ATTORNEY-GENERAL AID PREDICTS DEMOCRATIC SUCCESS IN ELECTION

M '■' * ife 1 * ' jjr' •* ? ' t '-~ *' ~ **•'• :S*

Val Nolan

Governmental prosecution of criminals and expected Democratic successes at the coming election were the subjects of conversation at the municipal airport Monday afternoon when Joseph B. Keenan, assistant attorney-general and the department of justice’s ace criminal prosecutor, arrived here to meet Val Nolan, United States district attorney, and Congressman Virginia Jenckes. Mr. Keenan spoke at Terre Haute Monday night in behalf of Mrs. Jenckes’ campaign for re-election.

Haas Administrator Named Edward D. Bolstad has been named administrator of the $42,500 estate of Schuyler A. Haas, attorney, who died Oct. 7. The estate, of which $40,000 is realty, goes to the widow, the only heir.

Joseph B. Keenan

CATHOLICS OPEN BAZARTONIGHT Card Party at K. of C. to Precede Cathedral High Event. The Catholic churches of Indianapolis will sponsor a four-day bazar at Cathedral high school, Fourj teenth and Meridian streets, opening ; with a supper at 5:30 tonight. A card party at the Knights of Columbus auditorium this afternoon will precede the bazar. The Rev. James Mcßarron and the Rev. Austine Sansone will have charge of tonight's supper. Twenty-five booths and concession | stands have been placed in the auditorium and school grounds for operation each night. The booths and their chairmen follow: Art, the Rev. Walter Nugent; ice cream, the Rev. James j Hickey; cherry tree, the Rev. Joseph Grothaus; country store, the Rev. R. B. Doyle; bingo, the Rev. Charles Wagner, and fishing pool, the Rev. Albert Deery. Afternoon card parties at the Knights of Columbus hall will be in the charge of the Rev. Joseph Bryan, the Rev. Joseph Somes, the Rev. Ambrose Sullivan, the Rev. Arthur Piontkowski, Mrs. Katharine Crush. Mrs. Thomas Quinn. Mrs. George Usher and Mrs. Bernard Lynch. Assisting in the ice cream booth will be Miss Cecilia Vanier, Miss Henrietta Tuttle and Miss Winifred I O'Brien. Miss Maebelle Gordon will have charge of the candy store. Mrs. R. A. McKinney will aid Mr. ! Doyle in the country stdre. Mrs. Joseph L. Conley. Mrs. Vincent Concannon, Mrs. Timothy P. Sexton and Mrs. Thomas Gillespie will assist at the art booth. Young women from all city parishes will serve also in the various booths. The decorations committee includes the Rev. Henry Herman, the Rec. Joseph Terstegge, the Rev. Victor Goossens and the Rev. Herman Mootz. The committee on arrangements and construction includes the Rev. Joseph Tieman. the. Rev. Raymond Marchino. George Michaelis and Nicholas Linder.

Gone, but Not Forgotten

Automobiles reported to police as stolen belonst to: Harold H. Bredell, 534 East Twentyninth street. Buick sedan. 90-991, from in front of home.

BACK HOME AGAIN

Stolen automobiles recovered by police belong to: Ben Fir.klestein. 240 Prospect street. Ford roadster, found at White river and Morris street, stripped. C. Kocher. Zionsville. Ind . Ford coach, found on steel street near Massachusetts avenue. Mrs. G. Garnett. 612 Woodlawn avenue, Ford coupe, found at Beech Grove, completely stripped and wrecked. Frank Duwalt. Hotel Antlers, Plymouth coach, found at Holliday park. O. Abrams. 1238 Prospect street. Ford coupe, found at Orange and Olive streets. Pete Shaneff. 462 West Washington street. Jordan sedan, found at West and Washington streets . Frank Leslie. 2927 East New York street. Essex coach, found in Eagle creek bottoms south of Thirty-eighth street, stripped. Rav Houser Lima. O , Chevrolet sedan, found at 200 Virginia avenue. Boynton Jacoby. 1727 North New Jersey I s'reet. Hudson sedan, found in 400 block ; West Washington street. Body Found Near White River The body of an unidentified Negro woman about 75 years old was found today about fifty feet from the water on the bank of White river in the 1300 block. White River parkway. A fisherman. William Stamm. 733 North Pershing avenue, made the discovery and notified police. 1:00 o’clock A STOMACH PAIN ✓ ltd g ALL RIGHT AGAIN! ! 2 MINUTE RELIEF FOR UPSET STOMACH V-/ Do roe s: fff.r from stomach acidity, mdige* uon, gas, belching, sour stomach? You'll bless the day you try thesr anti-acid tablets' They relieve distress in 2 minutes. Don't fool around with aorta doses. Take Stuart's—they're a scientific blend of Calcium Carbonate (twice as effective as todai and magnesium. Be sure you get Stuart's. Satisfaction or money back.. 25c. t>Oc at all druggists. Relied on by millions for 40 ytars

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Congressman Jenckes

Correct Vision Correct St vie 'As S' 4 \.. f \ own style. KAY Ssrmw W A SHI NGTONSnsS

k More SERVICE Ik Better SERVICE | x per mile ... round trip ■KV. Important changes have • Bykv\ been made on the inter* K.\ urban lines to give you better service, but the fare still remains at the N§k\ economical lVi cents e mile for a round trip; See your local agent /COMPARE\ 8 / these intemrban fares \ for full information on / with automobile costs \ / indESJapo us \ the time changes and To On* Roma I l Lo-miii, u7i uSi / the new time table. ! \ Ft. VTirne 2.47 3.71 / \ Terre Haute 1.44 2.16 / \ ’tichmood 1.37 2.06 / INDIANA RAILROAD SYSTEM BSFS

OGDEN L. MILLS GIVES SPEECH IN CITY TOMORROW Former Treasury Head and New Deal Foe to Be C. of C. Guest. Second of a series of addresses on national happenings, sponsored by the Indianapolis Chamber of Commerce, will be given at 8 tomorrow night in the Murat theater by Ogden L. Mills, former secretary of the treasury, and bitter critic of the New Deal. The first of the series was made last week by Donald Richberg, national emergency council director and right-hand man to President Roosevelt. Mr. Mills will arrive tomorrow morning, and will be a guest at a luncheon at the Columbia Club with Louis J. Borinstein, Chamber of Commerce president; Felix M. McWhirter, United States Chamber of Commerce vice-president, and Will G. Irwin. Columbus, national chamber dircetor. A reception in honor of Mr. Mills will be given at the Columbia Club at 5:45 tomorrow afternoon, followed by dinner at the club, when he will be guest of the Chamber of Commerce directors. Chamber members not planning to attend the meeting at the Murat are requested by the chamber to return reservations, since all available reservations now are in the hands of members, and additional requests can not be filled. Benefit Card Party Set A public card party will be given at 2:30 and 8:30 tomorrow at the heme of Mrs. Celia A. Finnegan. 1201 east Raymond street, for the benefit of Cathedral high school.

FACES TAX CHARGES

Mil I'm k SllkVsf'* JPji

A former dry goods and notions salesman who rose as Senator Huey Long’s lieutenant to presidency of the New Orleans levee board, Abe L. Shushan, above, has been indicted on a federal charge of income tax evasion in the sum of $53,918 over a period of five years. Shushan calls the action political persecution.

The Indianapolis Times COOKING SCHOOL is conducted for your benefit. It will pay you to attend Miss Ruth Chambers will discuss problems of the home and the merits of products she uses in the school. Be sure and notice the special demonstrations of the double-tested, double-action KG BAKING POWDER ECONOMICAL AND DEPENDABLE Same Price Today as 44 Years Ago 25 OUNCES FOR 25c ★ Manufactured by Baking Powder Specialists who make nothing but Baking Powder under supervision of expert chemists of national reputation. -— ■—i KC is economical. Because a”"a/ e‘"’v k . , ~7rKousa rids 1 of its high leavening strength Hundreds?„* only 1 level teaspoonful to a hrp \ S ®^\ cup of flour is sufficient for ml tiiu^ u S^recipe 8^ tw \ It is a time saven That's due' gji please *.’O u - t 0 {rom a can \ to the double action. One IS \ action in the mix and the H etc., hours in advance, set

2 Hours PARKING for the TIMES COOKING SCHOOL GUESTS BY PRESENTING THE PROGRAM AT Denison Parking Plaza 10c for Each Additional Hour ★ Smartest and Most Complete ★ r 1 \n Parking where you need it street level directly back ot 9 j {TOUR to 1 dutyg most — ideally located in the our service station, safe parkPARKING . . . , . ... ing is provided for over one SERVICE heart of downtown Indianap- hl f ndred P cars . olis. Convenient for business and professional . , .. . PARKING RATES men shopping and theater. Pleasant waiting j Hour 15c 10 Hours 40c rooms where you'll enjoy meeting your friends. 2 Hours 25c 12 Hours 50c In our downstairs parking space, easily 3 Hours 30c 24 Hours 75c reached from either Pennsylvania or Ohio Evening 6to 12 25c streets, we can accommodate 200 cars. On the Monthly Rate, §6.00, 58.00 and 510.00 COMPLETE ONE STOP SERVICE A modern convenient store to serve motorists in downtown Indianapolis. Competent, experienced personneL TAKE ADVANTAGE OF OUR SPECIAL COMBINATION RATES DENISON SPECIALIZED LUBRICATION THE FINEST CAR WASH YOU EVER HAD The cost includes 3 hours day Q -i Price includes 3 hours day (J* 1 An parking or entire evening 0 1 *UU parking or entire evening O I*UU Ask about our Special Combination Rates on other sendees. Standard Gasoline and Oils—Quaker State—Pennzoil —Ring Free —Yeedoil—Kendall Oil Firestone Tires, Batteries and Accessories. OHIO AT PENN. DENISON SERVICE LINCOLN ins FRITZ BASTIAN, Manager

$22,000 ADDED TO FUND FOR HOSPITAL UNIT $750 Gift Made to Mission by City Couple for Memorial. An even $22,000 has been raised thus far for the Flower Mission Tuberculosis hospital fund, it was announced today at campaign head-

How to Make Better Cough Remedy Than You Can Buy

A Big Saving, and It’s So Easy! No Cooking! Cough medicines usually contain a ! large quantity of plain syrup—a good I ingredient, but one which you can j easily make at home. Take 2 cups of granulated sugar and 1 cup of water, and stir a few moments until dis- ! solved. No cooking! No trouble at all. Then get from your druggist 2H ounces of Pinex, pour it into a pint i bottle, and add your syrup. This gives I you a full pint of truly wonderful cough remedy, far better than anything you

_OCT. 24, 1934

quarters, 712 Chamber of Commerce building. Mrs. Robert Elliott, Flower Mission first vice-president, has received a gift of $750 from Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Zumpfe for a room in the new hospital as a memorial to their daughter, Gcorgeanna. A gift of SSO has been received from the Coreopsis Ciub, a group of twelve women organized nearly thirty years ago for philanthropic work. The club often provided special treats for patients at the old Flower Mission hospital which the new building will replace. Mrs. W. H. Funderburg is club president. The Monday Guild of the Woman's Department Club, composed entirely of blind women has voted a $25 contribution to the fund.

could buy ready-made, and you get four times as much for your money. It last* a long time, never spoils, and children love its taste. This is positively the most effective, quick-acting cough remedy that money could buy. Instantly, you feel it penetrating the air passages. It loosens tba germ-laden phlegm, soothes and heais the intlamea membranes, and make* breathing easy. You've never seeu its equal for prompt, lasting results. Pinex is a highly concentrated compound of Norway Pine, the most reliable healing agent for severe coughs. It is guaranteed to please you, or money refunded.