Indianapolis Times, Volume 47, Number 14, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 March 1935 — Page 6
PAGE 6
AUTO INJURIES PROVE FATAL TO CITY MAN Alleged Drunken Driver to Face Manslaughter Charges. An alb-sed drunken driver. Lawrence Shrmer. 38. Spink Hotel, fces manslaughter charges with the death late yesterday of Patrick H Byran. 2149 N. Alabama -st. Mr. Bryan was -truck by a car driven by
Shreiner at 22nd and D-daware-sts Saturday • With Mr Bryan's death the list of persons killed in traffic accidents this
37
year in Manon County stood at 37. At this time last year. 22 had been killed in accidents. Shreiner was arrested on charges of assault and battery, drunken driving and driving through a safety rrne Mr Bryan, an employe of the Em-Roe Sporting Goods Cos., is survived by ?he widow. Mrs. Erma Brian; a son. Edward F. Bryan: his father. Joseph Bryan; a sister. Mrs. Helen Walsh, and two brothers. Milton C Bryan and Edward Bryan. Funeral services are being arranged Mr Bryan was 59
FIRE REPORTS
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W rgfrr ms dimes sup away C'v Fj/ change carelessly i. \ Many of us who need glasses S. 1 x ■ perhaps don t realize how j . ■ KJk easy it is to get them on 5... Sdm Ka credit terms To you. —m . t>ho do not vou can afford i.asie- at sav VOU 1 vJ&MAWEEK/i QF course good eye- W j .1 W sight is worth 50c ) . / TAWinF : a week—in tact —you > :: : , ’ ;J *. . ik. J can not possibly measure j ■ M j, the value of so precious I;-• J ■ * possession! Opposite Indiana Theatre —^———— - *
THOUSANDS OF SICK AND AILING PEOPLE ENDORSE INDO-VIN
This New Scientific Mixture of Nature’s Medicines Is Helping People Who Had Never Been Really Helped Before By Any Medicine. Indianapolis people say that the new. Nature’s medicine, known as Indo-Vin i which contains Extracts from 22 Natural Plants* is a GOLDEN BLESSING to their health. It is helping people who had NEVER BEEN really helped before by ANY medicine, and suffering men and women from all over thus section are now flocking in daily to the Hook s Drug Store, Illinois and Washington Streets, here in Indianapolis to purchase the mediciae. What Indo-Vin Will Do Indo-Vm is taken after meals and mixes with the food in one’s stomach, thus throwing off the poisons that fc*6ter stomach troubles and permitting the kidneys and liver to function properly. It acts within minutes to stop gas and pains, sourness, bloat and belching. It will not gripe or nauseate you like ordinary liver medicines, yet It will work the old bile from the liver. At the same time. Indo-Vm drives the poisons from the kidneys and relieves backaches, bladder irritation and weakness. It strengthens the nerves and eliminates toxic poisons that cause rheumatism and neuritis, giving quick relief from pam. Indo-Vm will make your stomach, liver, kidneys and bowels more active; build you up m general and make you LOOK. ACT AND FEEL like a DIFFERENT MAN OR WOMAN. years younger than your real age. Fallowing are JUST TWO testimonials. selected at random from among the HUNDREDS that are being received from this immediate vicinity, praising and endorsing Indo-Vm and urging ALL WHO SUFFER to get it and take it. Read these statements: Man of 68 Praises It MR HENRY BURTON, of R F D No. 6. Bloomington, said: "My kidneys were so deranged that they got me up all night, and by morning I would feel as worn-out as though I had never been to bed at all. I was so stiff and sore across my kidneys that l could hardly stand it. Everything I ate would disagree with me. and my meals didn t seem to do me any good at all. Asa result I kept losing my energy, and finally got to where I was weak and wornout ALL THE TIME. I thought I would never find anything to help m: for I had tried medicine upon meu me. but when I got Indo-Vm,
News Survey of Indiana
By T,m-- Spennl Lm AFAYETTE March 27.—The best works of Hoosier and former Hoosier print-makers, etchers and lithographers will be exhibited for two weeks beginning Monday in the building of applied design at Purdue University. Miss Laurentza Schantz-Hansen of the Purdue department of applied design, will be m charge of the exhibit. Miss Loreen Wingard. a member of the art staff of the Indianapolis public schools, is exhibit chairman.
School Head Wins J}y T’m't LAFAYETTE, March 27—School trustees were reconciling themselves to the return of Albert E. Highly as superintendent of Lafayette schools today after Judge Edgar A. Rice ruled in the Montgomery Circuit Court that Mr Highly had been unlawfully dismissed. The court returned a declaratory Judgment fixing the rights of the superintendent under the terms of his contract. m m m Center Proposed Bp Time* (.pedal CRAWFORDSVTLLE March 27Establishment of a Crawfordsville Community Center is one of the features included in the plan for utilizing the funds of the Community Chest. This was announced today by Andrew Foley, general chairman of the Community Chest, m connection with a drive for $7500 which will officially start tonight with a dinner in the American Legion hall. m m m Girl Sentenced B>f Time * Special BROWNSTOWN. March 27—A 16-vear-old girl wife, Mrs. Ruby Embry West, arrested in connection with the theft of five rings, was sentenced to the Indiana Girls’ School until she is 21 in Jackson Circuit Court. The girl admitted stealing the rings in Seymour and pawning them in Louisville. Her young husband, Ed West, was released.
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G. H. MOSBY Originator of Indo-Vin
it took command of my trouble FROM THE START. My kidneys are acting in a normal manner now. I can go to bed and sleep, without having to keep getting up and down all night and I don’t have any kidney pains in my back. My meals are digesting perfectly now. My food agrees with me and it never turns sour and forms gas in my stomach like it used to, and that awful nausea is a thing of the past. I urge even- one who suffers to get this medicine and take it.” Stomach Trouble MR. NEAL HOWE, of 1322 Wade St.. Indianapolis, said: "For years I almost suffered death with stomach trouble. Everything I ate would disagree with me. but it seemed like the acidy foods were worse than anything else, and another thing was that my meals didn't seem to do me any good at all. They would not nourish my system like they should, and as a result. I kept losing my energy, and Anally got to where I was weak and worn-out ALL THE TIME. My condition was awful, and Indo-Vin was the first medicine IN YEARS that had any effect on me. It has worked the misery out of my whole body. I can even eat the acidy foods now. and they agree with me. In fact. I can eat anything, and my meals are nourishing my system and doing me so much good that I have ten times the energy I had before. This is the greatest thing of the Kind that EVER CAME HERE. I never saw anything like it, and I am PROUD to give you this statement and publicly endorse it to all suffermg people.” The indo-Vin Man is now at Hook s Drug Store, Illinois and Washington Streets. Indianapolis, daily meeting the public, and introducing and explaining this new mixture of Nature's Medicines.—Advertisement.
Worker Injured By Timet (•pedal MARION. March 27.—Blaine Weller, an employe of the Daly Bros. Shoe Cos., is recovering slowly in the Grant County Hospital from a basal skull fracture received recently when a heavy motor fell on his head. Factory officials said several employes. including Mr. Weller, were moving a motor weighing several hundred tons, when they lost control of it and permitted it to fall. He was in the path of the motor apd slipped to the floor as the heavy machine fell. a a m Liquor Lid Clamped By Timet Special HARTFORD CITY. March 27. Enforcement officers have put into affect all provisions of the new state liquor control law. No one was arrested here Monday for intoxication, and all beer and liquor establishments in Hartford City and Blackford County were closed Sunday. a a a City Faces Rent Suit By Timet Special HARTFORD CITY, March 27. A suit asking SIO,OOO for rental of the high school gymnasium has been filed in Blackford Circuit Court here by Will H. White, receiver for the Hartford City School Building Corp. Defendant is the local school city. Allegation is made that rent is due from Aug. 1, 1934 and that a fair rental value is SIOOO a month. The suit further sets out that the school city is in charge of the building and that it is being used for educational and athletic purposes. a a a Recreation Proposed By Timet Special ALEXANDRIA. March 27.—A list of suggested projects contemplated for the Alexandria recreational program has been compiled by a conference of the projects committee of the Community Recreation Council here. Most of the activities suggested are of a type adapted to group participation with a marked tendency toward revival of many almost forgotten children’s games. Other projects named were baseball, softball, volley ball, horse shoe pitching and tennis for older groups.
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
PUPILS EXHIBIT ART PRODUCTS AT SHORJRIDGE Growth of Program Shown in Display; Fine Work Is Praised. BY JOHN THOMPSON Times Staff Writer The Shortridge High School art department is a growing concern. From a meager beginning in the old Shortridge building at North and Pennsylvania-sts, it has expanded until now’ 670 students, more than one-fifth of the entire student body, are enrolled in some art class. The annual exhibit of student work in the Selleck Memorial Galleries at the school now shows the variety of artistic accomplishment gained through instruction in 26 classes. There are 360 sketches, drawing, and paintings: 57 pieces of wood carving, 161 pieces of jewelry, and 34 pieces of pottery. The wood carving and sculpture eroitp-:. in the display are above average for high school students and other divisions u’ould compare favorably with almost any secondary school in the country. Sculpture Display Fine Os interest Is the sculpture and pottery division of the art department. Because of crowded building conditions the department is partly on the third floor, where preliminary sketches and designs are made, partly on the first floor where modeling and sculpting take place and partly in the basement W’here firing and bal-ing are done. Horses seem .to have taken the fancy of Shortridge modeling students this year and a veritable stable of clay steeds graces the exhibition. Masks and symbolical heads are also included in the group. The advanced mechanical drawing and architectural designs on display are splendid examples of precision and accuracy, although of less interest to the casual observer than the more colorful drawings. Jewelry Exhibit Lauded Although some cf the best of the Shortridge jewelry work is at another exhibition, the work being shown gives an adequate impression of the type of creative work the students are allowed to do. Students in the painting and drawing courses have also turned out some good work in “finding” themselves and deciding just what branch of art in which they wish to specialize. The art faculty of the school Is headed by Theodore Van Voorhees and includes Clifton Wheeler, Janet
Payne Bowles, Gordon Johnson, Colin Lett, Miss Essie Long. Miss Jane Messick and Miss Marie C. Todd. The current exhibition will end Friday. DR. TOWNSEND TO RUN FOR PRESIDENT IN ’35 Pension Plan Sponsor to Enter Race If Program Is Refused. By United Brest BOSTON, March 27.—Dr. Francis E. Townsend of California, sponsor of the pension plan that bears his name, will run for President in 1936 unless Congress adopts his plan in the interim, according to a statement by Capt. Charles M. Hawks, his personal representative. Capt. Hawks said that ‘because of the sympathy which Senator William E. Borah has shown for the Townsend bill, there is no doubt that he will be the Doctor's running mate, probably for the berth of Vice President.”
WARNING TO TIMES READERS ABOUT “B. 0.” ONE of the most common mistakes made among men and women is the belief that “white collar” people are never guilty of “B.O.” (body odor). It is often assumed that only manual workers, or those who are active physically, can be victims of body odor. But this belief is decidedly uiTtrue. For any doctor will tell you that everyone —regardless of the work he does—perspires at least a quart a day, even during the winter when the perspiration may be invisible. The guilty rarely know the truth The tragedy of “B.O.” is the fact that the first one to offend is usually the last one to know. For we soon become used to an ever-present odor and don’t realize it’s there. That is why so many people in every walk of life offend unknowingly. Millions of men and women have come to realize how foolish it is to take chances when there is a soap like Lifebuoy. For Lifebuoy’s purifying, deodorizing lather ends “B.O.” quickly —protects you against offending. Wonderful for complexions, too Lifebuoy’s bland, abundant lather agrees with the skin as no other soaps do, say millions. It penetrates deep into the pores, coaxing out dirt and clogged waste. It stimulates, soothes and refreshes. And it’s so mild and gentle the most delicate complexion thrives on it. Scientific tests made or the skins of hundreds of women show that Lifebuoy is more than 20 per cent milder than many so-called “beauty soaps.** Use Lifebuoy and watch your skin gain healthy radiance.
FHA SESSION SET FOR BUILDING SUPPLY GROUP • ” Construction League Sponsors Meeting for Material Men. Representatives of building material firms will meet in the Architects and Builders Building next Wednesday under auspices of the Indianapolis Construction League, to discuss benefits of the Federal Housing program. “Much of the fufire success of the nation lies with the Federal Housing Administration,” R. S. Foster, chairman of the building industries division of the Indianapolis Chamber of Commerce, told a preliminary meeting of the Construction League’s arrangements committee yesterday. “The public has been sold on the FHA program,” Mr. Foster declared. “The rest is up to industry.”
Detroit Musician Is 111 DETROIT, March 27.—Condition of Ossip Gabrilowitsch. noted conductor of the Detroit Symphony Or-
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