Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 170, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 November 1934 — Page 9
NOV. 26, 1934_
SHRINE TO PLAY ' HOST TO 6,000 AT CEREMONIAL , High Officials to Take Pari in Fiftieth Anniversary Celebration. Imperia. Shrine council officers will attend the fiftieth anniversary ceremony -<•;< of Murat tempi* cf the M". s*,r Shrine here Dec. 14 ; at which more than 6.000 Shriners 4 are eitpe #>i. Included among these tv* dm s Williams, i.e .s----ton. Me North American Shrine im* * perial poten*ate and Jame H. Price, Rirhmnnd. Va . imperial recorder. Band and patrols from uniformed units of Evansville, Terre Haute, Ft Wayne and Hammond -aill join ,t! e uniformed Murat temple or- : - n > hou * along the line of pa- * rade march have be n r>f|Uested to dc orate sa itii Shrine colors, red, green and yellow and, in addition, *t ; play the national colors. 1.: • ceremonial pr< entation of % the shrine was in November. 1884 the year Murat temple was found/dales, William S. Rich. 1606 North Delaware street, the sole survivor, v ... ialu part In the ceremonies. FT. HARRISON T.ROOPS WILL BE TRANSFERRED Six Officers, IT4 Men to Go to Ft. Knox, Ky. Six and more than 150 cn-lL-’ed men of the Third field artillerv will be trail, ferred from Ft. Benjamin Harrison next month to the Sixty-eighth field artillery at F* Knox. Ky. The change is being made In yonr.erfion with reorganization of the Third field artillery into the Nineteenth field artillery. The Nineteenih will have only two gun battr:ie. winle the Third has three. Officers to Im* transferred sh the, Srxty-eighth field artillery arc Cnpt. William B. Leitch. Captain Arthur L. Shreve and Lieutenants Paul A. Berkey. Valentine R. Smith. James R. Lindsay and John P. Woodridge. MRS. VANDERBILT’S APPEAL IS DELAYED k T!ITnd to Regain t.loria to Await ' Judge’s Action. By f nf'erf Press NEW YORK. Nov. 26.- No action will be taken to appeal the decision of Justice John F. Carew that awarded custody of little Gloria Vanderbilt to her aunt, Mrs. Harry Payne Whitney, until Justice Carew replies to a writ of mandamus before the appellate court Friday. •Justice Carew has been required to show cause why he should not affirm or dismiss an application for a writ *of habeas corpus brought by the mother. Mrs Gloria Vanderbilt, in * her fight to regain custody of the .BOK HEIR IS MARRIED * Millionaire’s Sun Weds Nebraska Girl; Honeymoon in Last * lit I nit I Pr. < . IATLBCII V. N< - —Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Bok were en route ,to ,he east today on their honeymoon after their wedding yesterday. ►Mr. B *k is the multimillionaire son of Mrs. Edward W. Bok and the •late Mr Bok of Philadelphia, and the grandson of the late eminent •. Cyrus H. K. Curtis. Hi! bride is the former Miss Nellie Lee •Holt, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. wilhem R. Holt of Falls City. Js This Too (mod for Your Cough? Creemulleii mu be * better kelp thin * ii need. It rombineo seven help* - ■ i for qa k tolfa k for s.ifetT. ytibt ughs often yield to lesser W 1 - N< ran tell. No am knows wti >h fa- '-r will Jo most for any rerts:n • • --’i. -S.t ear* ful pet*pie. more and niore. are lights: treomulMon for any eonffh that starts. The ~.,t i- t little more than a single fcetp. 15-tt T..ur druggist is authorized t.. gtiarar.io* it. o it eosi nothing if it fails to |.r :-g v..ii quirk relief, t’oiighs are .tan.er vgn.ils lor safety’s sake, d-si n• ti tlo n u the b, -t way known. Advertisement.
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sJkNewDeal and ike, Joneses
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“I’d pay higher prices more cheerfully if I was sure the extra dollar was really going into higher pay for some workers and not just into bigger profits.”
The riddle thit it the New Peal isn’t so much of a riddle when the Joneses, an aterage Ameriran family, yet down to talking it oter at supper and in the etening. They discuss it in their own wav in (his series, of which this is the setenth article. BY WILLIS THORNTON CHAPTER SEVEN J STOPPED at Nobles’ to got a pair of your regular kind of shoes. Pa.” reported Ma Jones, as her husband hung his hat on the rack in the hall. ’’You need anew pair for Sundays. ‘But they’ve gone up $1 from what we’ve always paid. I didn’t know whether you'd want me to get them or not.” “Ye-c-es, go ahead,” said Pa slowly. “I suppose it's this NRA business that's put ’em up. Seems as if everything's going up except the stuil I sell. I can t seem to put my prices up on account of the chain store down the street. “Still, as John's always saying. I suppose we just have to pay the extra as our part in workin’ for recovery. I’d do it more cheerfully, though, if I was sure the extra dollar was really going into higher pay for some shoe worker, and not just into bigger profits.” ! “Aren’t they going to change this NRA law this winter?” asked Ma. "I hear so many of the women at the Home and School Leasee: say that prices have gone way up over what higher wages would make I hem. ”1 feel sure a lot of these Industries have set higher minimum prices than they’d really have to—taking advantage of the NRA to profiteer.” mam " yTES,” replied Pa Jones. “It'll all X have to get a good combing over in congress this winter, for it all expires, next June, anyway, you know, unless it's extended or something. It'll be a big job. I'd just as soon not be in congress trying to do it. myself.” “Well, it's like everything else. Some of it's good, some of it’s bad,” mused Pa Jones. "The trick is to keep the good and throw out the bad. Nobody can deny that it’s put a lot of people to work, cut out child labor, reduced hours some. “It's cut out a lot of bad things. I know it’s stopped the Mammoth Stores from advertising trick items below cost, just to get a crowd in the store. “They can take a temporary loss on a thing iike that, and I can't. But. on the other hand, there’s some things I can sell below code minimum prices and still pay code wages and follow code conditions. "I think I ought to be allowed to. but I'm not. I think they ought to lay off price-fixing as long as you keep up wages and hours. I still think it's only through competition that the buyer gets a break. “And so long as the com pet ion
sn't in cutting wages and hours, I'm for competition, not price-fixing and reducing production to quotas.” 000 “TT7ELL, Pa,” responded Ma YV Jones, “I haven’t minded paying more for things as long as I thought the farmers and workmen in factories were getting the difference. “But you can be mighty sure our consumers’ council will make a protest if we find that somebody's taking advantage of the codes to profiteer. “I don’t care whether the NRA is run by a board or by General Johnson, or whether workmen help run the codes or not, or even whether it’s all constitutional. “I just know that if some of these prices keep going up, there are a lot of things I'm going to stop buying. And that isn't going to help anybody, workman or manufacturers or anybody else.” “Sure, i know, Ma,” responded Pa Jones. “The trick is to keep the things about the law that help the main things; No child labor, shorter hours, better pay, ending cut-throat competition without ending real, fair competition. “It’s a big job, and it’s one of the main jobs that congress has to do this winter.” • Copyright. 1934. by NEA Service. Inc.) NEXT—Labor—an old friend who lias boon active in trying to solve labor's problem calls on Pa Jones and explains much that I*a didn't understand before. •CRUSOE' BANKER TO BE SENTENCED TODAY Absconding Cashier Ready to Start Prison Term. fly United Press CHICAGO, Nov. 26. —Nicholas Schwall, absconding bank cashier who lived a Robinson Crusoe life in the Wisconsin north woods for more than two years to avoid capture, was to be sentenced late today in federal court for embezzlement. Schwall said he would lie “glad” to start a penitentiary term immediately so he might return the sooner to his wife and three children. who lived on relief rolls while lie was a fugitive.
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
INDIANA TRUCK GROUP TO MEET IN CITY DEC. 13 1 Legislative Program to Be Mapped at Annual Convention. The Motor Truck Association of ' Indiana Inc., will hold its seventeenth annual convention Dec. 13 at the Lincoln. The association's legislative program is expected to be the chief subject of discussion at the meeting. All Indiana legislators have been invited to attend, C. W. Abraham, association secretary, has announced, and representatives of ail allied industries will be welcome. Speakers will include representatives of the public service commission, state highway department and the state police, as well as several prominent motor truck users. Arrangements for the convention are being completed by Charles E. Foreman, Indianapolis, Mid-West-ern Petroleum Corporation presiI dent. Mr. Foreman is director of the truck association, of which J. Duane Dungan, president of the Poik Sanitary Milk Company, is president.
SEEKS TO STOP SALES OF FUNERAL CAR FLAGS Inventor Says Former Employes Are Hurting His Business. Charging that ten former employes are selling a funeral car flag which he invented six months ago, and which he has been manufatcuring at Bloomington and Indianapolis, M. Glenn Henderson applied Saturday for a permanent injunction in superior court 2. Mr. Henderson alleges that the former employes have injured a profitable business. POLICE FUND GETS $4lO Auction of Unclaimed Articles Brings Yield. The police pension fund was wealthier by $4lO today as’ result of the auction of unclaimed articles held Saturday afternoon in the headquarters garage. Police sold 273 articles for prices ranging from 25 cents to $7.50.
KS LONG 10 HAD IJ/j'l SHOULD QUICKLY RELIEVE It|
Clean Out Kidney Poisons Wash Out Your 15 Milei Os Kidney Tube* If kidneys don't pass 3 pints a day that contain nearly 4 pounds of waste matter, the 15 miles of kidney tubes and filter* become clogged with poisonous waste products and the danger of acid poisoning la greatly increased. Elimination becomes irregular and painful. This acid condition, brought about by poor kidney functions Is a danger signal and may be the beginning of nagging backache, leg pains, loss of pep and vitality, getting up nights. lumbago, swollen feet and ankles, rheumatic pains and dizziness. Most people watch their bowels which contain only 27 feet of intestines but neglect the kidneys which contain 15 miles of tiny tubes and filters. If these tubes or filters become clogged with poisons. It may knock you out and lay you up for many months. Don't run any risk. Make sure your kidneys empty 3 pints a day. Ask your druggist for DOAN’S PILLS, an old prescription, which hag been used successfully by millions of kidney sufferers for over 40 years. They give quick relief and will help to wash out the 15 miles of kidney tubes. , But don’t take chances with strong drugs or so-called "kidney cures” that claim to fix you up in 15 minutes. Treatments of this nature may seriously Injure and irritate delicate tissues. Insist on DOAN’S PILLS . . . the old icliahle relief that contains no “dope" or habit-forming drugs. Be sure you get DOAN'S PILLS at yous druggist. (£) 1934, Foster-Milburn Cos. —Advertisement.
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GIVE YOUR KIDNEYS AND BLADDER A CLEANING Plnrex rills wilt expel the poisons from your system and rtlake yon feel like anew person. A continuous backache takes nil the joy ont of living. If accompanied by Irregular urination and a tired, nervous feeling, backache may be caused by kidney nr bladder trouble. # Diurex Pills will help you as they helped Andy Yunber. 215 N. Illinois St., Indianapolis, Indiana. He says: "Piurrx will help any one suffering from a backache caused by kidney trouble. I have taken two boxes of Diurex and my backache Is almost gone. 1 would ray. gladly, twice as much as you ask for Diurex. If necessary, because It Is a wonderful inedieine.”
fSfe I'nfinished Kitchen M CHAIRS FJKiO Sturdily Jtaa r',*79c finish 4f White Furniture Cos. *43-2*9 w. wash. It.
REPRESENTS BUTLER
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Karl Stipher At the National Student Association’s annual convention in Boston Dec. 28 to Jan. 1. Karl Stipher will represent Butler university. He is president of the Butler student council. Post to Seek Record By United Press BARTLESVILLE. Okla.. Nov. 26. Wiley Post will attempt to create a new airplane altitude record “on the first day weather is favorable.” he said today. Post arrived yesterday from Chicago.
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OAKLANDON MAN NOW ‘LIKE NEW’ Mr. Charles Schmid Gives His Unsolicited Statement; Now Free of Misery. Mr. Charles Schmid of Oaklandon, Ind. (just 14 miles from Indianapolis), is still another LONGTIME local resident who is publicly praising and endorsing the new,
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3IR. CHARLES SCHMID scientific mixture of Medicinal Plant Juices, known as Indo-Vin, which ! is now being introduced to crowds daily here in Indianapolis by the ; Indo-Vin Man in person at Hook's . Drug Store. Illinois and Washing- | ton Sts. Following is this widely- j known man's statement: ‘'For years I had been a victim j of rheumatism,” said Mr. Schmid, j “If anybody ever suffered more from rheumatism than I did in the | PAST YEARS. I don't see how they could stand it. Several years ago I began to have sciatic rheumatism and got so I was almost disabled with it. My arms and shoulders got so weak and painful and were almost stiff. Even my back was weak and sore and it just seemed like ny whole system was poisoned and fill of this rheumatic affliction. Was having bowel trouble and it had gotten chronic with me and I was always taking physics. * “I tried everything under the sun. i but nothing helped me until I got Indo-Vin. Its great natural action eliminated the poisons from my system and that awful rheumatism that had been over my body is all gone and the joints of my arms and shoulders are limbered up. This t medicine is the most wonderful thing that I EVER SAW and 1 gladly endorse it.” The Indo-Vin Man is now at Hook's Drug Store, Illinois and Washington Streets, Indianapolis, where he is daily meeting the public and introducing and explaining this new mixture of Nature’s Medicines.—Advertisement.
BUTLER BARES FASCIST PLOT IN TIMES FILM i General Repeats Charge He Was Asked to Lead Army to Capital. General Smedley D. Butler states that he was asked to lead a 'Fascist” army of 500.000 men on Washington to seize the government in a sensational newsreel interview in the
Cor. Washington and Delaware Sis. TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY! AUCTION z. 500 PAIRS OF MEN’S-WGMENS-CHILDREN’S shoes We bought these shoes for much less than their original worth. We have taken these, together with our own high grade shoe stock and offer you— Values Extraordinary in This Smashing Sale of 1200 Pr. Ladies' Footwear -In 4 iiX Extremely Low Priced Groups! 200 PAIRAT 1% P 200 Pr. at 50c m ■n!| c 1 Pr. at 75c ffl 1 Pr. at S1 I "dr I„_ „„ . , 157 IT. Boys’ & Girls’ 61 Pr. Men’s SHOES JS®KJL Rubbers SHOES 1; SO' 2S e ii Broken Sizes Small Sizes Only Broken Sizes Heavy Duty. All Sizes I 53 Pr. Boys’ Housf 87 Pr ’ * Gir,S * 1 Hi-Cuts Slippers TENNIS Oxfords 99' 10' 19' 99'1 Broken Sizes Some slightly soiled. Small Sizes Only Sizes 6 to 11 Broken sizes. jr e jrjv Ladies ’ First Quality Rayon | Ladles' SWEATERS Taffeta SLIPS i :V~ M A AW Beautiful lace I broken si z e S.MJS MJB Q trimmed and ■ slipover styles. tailored slips. JP ■ Asst, colors. > shades, 0 ~ ~ I’ink, tea rose M H■ H m Women’s Smart Winter an (l white * HwaW mI / +*** a ||J*||Bl Sizes 33 to 14. W # POLO COATS VWK(J 1 Ladies ’ Br’dclolh Slips / All sizes. Allt I r : ood qua,itv brnad * # colors. Anew) 159 ( ')oth prineess slips. 9 HJ| m * 'jjT v v IrmmL Pink and white - An JL ow pi,ce on I sizes ’ M these coats. Smn l(f| S/m Ladies 9 Wool Scarfs M l\l Assorted colors, OtA / MEN’S WHITE HDKFS., 2V 2 c \% m ''i’' l 'A x en s Sturdy Work Pattis, 69c (Wilson's k A Asst’d Candy | A * T K Milk 91/ril -- -7, 11 L r 2 undr y ap 1 IZ" <*"■£ /2 C ■ ■ / y 2 c ■ | sbabs jQc p A Ginger Snaps K A ASST. CHOCOLATES K A Navy Beans U I Fresh baked. A H H 1-Lb. Box gM H 9 Choice hand 1 sst dfl,r ;r: o c plggl j c M “'Tir o p and CHILDREN S HOSE | 4 | | | I Q/2 ? 1 i -101/2cg 62-Pr. BOYS' LONGIES f*£% (22 MEX'S HEAVY bark hlce\ Odds and ends, broken sizes. ' WPltnTI f!G A ll While they last. I _ | BOYS’ SWEATERS A A Meltons. Zippe r A A 1 Odd lot assorted colors. front. Cossack C MM Broken ■rJ9Hn i " lt t <im ' " H - j Str .> 1;i s h pockets. PILLOWCASES g* i\ All sizes. Itreg. *}■ o'liiit J If C i 1)1 > 1 quality. 'blankets" AufsTl c * ps A O Men’s Dtess Skirls Q. flHc . mm tern, rot too blankets. ■ t,. r11 . All sizes. • It V broadINFANTS’ BLANKETS I M M “ TT colors ar and Q I , , , A I Neckwear iHi tan c>- m ■ ■ Assorted colors, cot- "Ay J w of I /l/ 2 C Prints. Sizcs^^ ton crib blankets. AA# - J patterns and colors. Ilm “ io 17 *
current is.sue of The Indianapolis Times-Universal newsreel. General Rutler says this 'army" was to be used a "bluff” or “club ’ and that it was expected that the government would surrender without bloodshed. Other important events to be seen in the current reel include the impressive ceremonies surrounding the silver jubilee of George Cardinal Mundelein in Chicago, 111.; the hearty "battle" between Jim Londos and Everett Marshall at Madison Square Garden in New York City in which the Greek successfully defended his wrestling title; striking maneuvers by athletes in a monster parade celebrating the anniversary of the Mexican revolution at Mexico City. Also the colorful rites at the Buddhist temple in Salinas, Cal.; the horrifying head-on crash of two
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stunting motorists at an exhibition :n Memphis. Tenn and the fingerprinting of the entire town of Oeneseo, N. Y. Stops* Torture of Rheumatic Pain Sufferers from rheumatic pain are certainlv happy over their of N'siritc*. Now they hare found a prescription that quicUv relieves the aeomztng pain of rheumatism, sciatica, lumojgo. neuralgia or neuritis. This effective iormula —developed bv an eminent specialist —is now available to the public everywhere. It works like a charm, fast and powerful, but harmless, no opiates or other narcotics. By all means make a trial of this prescription that eases torturing pain and makes sufferers grateful. And to make it more emphatic, if it doesn't relieve the worst pain with two or three does. your monev will be refunded. Try \unto today ■>n ihis _-imrantee. At all druggists. Vdvortlsoment.
