Indianapolis Times, Volume 47, Number 45, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 May 1935 — Page 5
MAY 2. 1035,
YOUNG AUTHOR ADMITS FIRING 50 BUILDINGS 'Couldn't Fight Off Mad Thrill.’ Pyromaniac Tells Police. Rtf Timrt Sprr ini CHICAGO. May 2—A young autoh of adycnlure stories, embellishing his confession with excerpts from a 3000-page diary, told police today that he set fire to nearly 50 apartment buildings. “I couldn't fight off the mad thrill of it," the 30-year-old pyromaniac, H. Carl Peterson, said. Peterson, former student of Journalism at Northwestern University, purportedly confessed to setting 17 fires in recent weeks. He added that “all the fires would be nearly 50, but some of them were a long Lime ago.” Police announced that Peterson had been identified by a woman, who previously * had described a man “with a face like a demon” v ho ran from a blazing North Side apartment. The diary, police said, dated back to 1926 and listed an unchecked number of fires, large and small. It told vividly of Peterson's first realization that he was a pyromaniac and the futile efforts to escape the aberration. The arrest, brought about bv discovery of a peculiar type of kitchen matches in Peterson's home, climaxed two weeks of terror in the quiet North Shore community of Rogers Park, where fire broke out in 25 large apartment buildings.
Gone, but Not Forgotten
Automobiles rpnorrri to police .* stolen belong to; Donald Morin 814 N Rilev-av Ford ‘•dan 8-400, from .1000 Pro.<pect-st.. ' Joseph W Stark n. P 1 Kox 106 Ford srdan 21-464, irom parking lot at thr Statehouse Andre* Paaarh. 701 N Hangh-st Ford • dan. 26-010. irom 2700 W. WashingtonDonald Billing*. 1465 Carrollton-* v Tarkard Sfdan 81-576. from Fall Crakblvd and Ontra-av. Oeprtte Wirks. 517 Locket bic-st Ford roam. 81-711. from in front of 12 N * . t . •'ohn Deal 2047 Ontral-av. Ford roach 16-691. from narking lot at 125 S Pennsylvania-st. Stolen automobiles rerovrrrd bv mhrp belong to: R. W. Swt>aregin. Plainfield Tnd c - .tev*pdan. found at. 600 N Alabama-st. Mable Lowe. R R l. B„x 456. Stuck counr found at Glasgow. Kv. Irving Cornet* 2246 N Dearho-n-M Ford truck found on !*o;.d 11 „ ar 52th-
Announcing . . . HOOD TIRES on CREDIT! ♦ OPENING 10-DAY SALE! We created this new sensational Budget Pay Plan for Bvou —it's different and simpler—just make your selection up to Saturday—pay No Money Down, and set few minutes and you’ll be on your way. Hood White Arrow De Luxe Tires are speed protected—by means of the sensational new Speed Shield—yet they cost no l.t an y unfaty>rabl *xprimnca of thm past—our win Modern iiet Pay Plan trill tak care ms your needs no matter if it'i long YOUR CREDIT IS GOOD HERE • Bring only your liranaa certificate for identification iiliifl^iweiAl^#ssMEWT.v ! y Indiana Tire & Rubber Company Illinois A Walnut Sts. Lincoln 1071
A Beautiful Electric Refrigerator Awaits the Winner! Maybe It’s You
I B i \ ISSs H • j|j jv x
Here are two more beautiful, modern refrigerators. Identify them properly and you may be the lucky winner of one of eighteen prizes.
Beauty, simplicity and economy of operation mark the 1935 model electric refrigerators and The Indianapolis Times is giving you a chance I to win one of these modern, new' boxes in a unique contest so simple thar. even a child may enter. Tuesday, The Times published the pictures of two unnamed electric boxes. Yesterday two more boxes . were illustrated and above are shown two more of these beautiful iefrigerators. The final set of two boxes will be shown tomorrow, i All you have to do is take your list when it is completed and properly I identified and send it to The Times j Electric Refrigerator Contest Editor and you may be the winner of | the box you long to own. 1 Correctness, neatness and origi-
nality of presentation will determine the winners in this startling easy contest. For every day we drop a little hint and here's today’s: The boxes illustrated above can be seen at Sears, Roebuck & Cos. and at Electric Appliances, Inc. Here are the prizes. First Prize: Anew electric refrigerator, rhosen by the winner from any one of the boxes illustrated in the contest. The box will be of 4' 2 cubic feet capacity. If the winner desires an even larger box, the purchase price of the box he wins may be applied on the larger one. Second Prize: A SSO merchandise certificate applied on any electric refrigerator in the contest. Third Prize: A $25 merchandise
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
certificate applied on any refrigerator in the contest. Fifteen other prizes: One pair of tickets to the Lyric Theater for the week May 12 to the next 15 winning contestants. Employes of The Times and members of their families are not eligible to enter the contest and all entries must be received by The Times not later than midnight, May 9. The names of the winners wiil be published on May 13., The Times will be the final judge in awarding the prizes. Remember—keep your lists until they are complete, then send them to The Times.
BACK TO NATURE MOVEMENT HELPS MANY SICK AND AILING PEOPLE OF INDIANAPOLIS
Science Brings Us A New Mixture of Natural Plant Juices. Called Indo-Vin, Which Works With Our Food and Drives Out Poisons That Cause Rheumatism, Liver And Kidney Trouble, Stomach And Bowel Affliction. Today, a more enlightened public is getting away from the use of nerve-deadening pills and tablets. People are depending more on nature and placing less faith in drugs. That is why Indo-Vin is made principally of natural ingredients. It is a food supplement and medicine combined. Its ingredients act directly on the four important organs of digestion and elimination, and tone up the whole nervous system, bringing restful sleep and increased energy. This new', scientific medicine is now being introduced to
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crowds daily here in Indianapolis by the Indo-Vin Man in person, at Hook's Drug Store, Illinois and Washington Sts. It was first introduced in Indianapolis a few weeks ago and has become a complete sensation and druggists and public alike state that it is helping people who had NEVER BEEN
G. H. MOSBY, Originator of Indo-Vin
really helped before by ANY medicine. How It Works Indo-Vin is taken shortly after meals and mix.ee with the food in one's t r omach, thus throwing off the poisons that foster stomach troubles and permitting the kidneys and 1 liver to function properly. It acts ! within 10 minutes to stop acid rising, bloat and belching and will bring out awful gases and impurities (frequently from the first dose) ; which may have been inside of you for a long time, contaminating your blood and inner-organs. It will cleanse the BOWELS cleaner than they have been for months, or for years. (Not violently or severely in a way to destroy your appetite.) It will give you the greatest appetite you EVER HAD. It acts as a diuretic to sluggish kidneys, flushing out quantities of impure matter which may have become dammed-up in the system (a common cause of backache, sharp pains, rising at night.) It will wake up that lazy liver, get that old bile flowing, and thus help any bilious person more than physics. Sick headaches will just disappear. Indo-Vin goes to the cause of your troubles, removing deep-seated im-
• ROt GH DRV (A *5% finished sfrr* ice.) Flat nieces, such as table and bed linen, ironed square and true. All bath towels, wash rats, knit pieces, quilts and comforts fluffed drv. Wearing apparel dried and starched as required. fie per lb. All week Excelsior Eaundry KI ley 3391
OLYMPIC STARS LAST WORD IN EQUESTRIANISM I Teams Will Provide Thrills at Coliseum Event Sunday. The last word in equestrianism will be shown by the American Olympic horse -and - rider teams when they perform at the Indiana State Fairgrounds Coliseum at 3 Sunday under the sponsorship of I the Indiana Saddle Horse Associa- , tion. j This week Gen. Robert H. Tyndall, ; general chairman, is directing subj committees in preparing for the ' show. T.t. Col. C. L. Scott of the office of chief of cavalry, Washington, and ; Lt. Col. Thomas J. Johnson. Q. M. C„ Lexington, Ky., will be here to direct the riders. Among the risers will be Capt. W. B. Bradford, Ninth Cavalry, : captain and trainer of the 1936 American Olympic Equestrian team; Capt. N. J. McMahon, First Field Artillery, captain of the field artillery horse show t#am; Capt. I. L. Kitts, First Field Artillery, member 'of the American dressage team, J which won third place in the 1932 i Olympics in Los Angeles; Capt. H. E.. Tuttle, Q. M. C.; Lt. Earl F. Thomson, Second Cavalry, member of the American team, which won all around equestrian horsemanship tiltle in 1932, and First Lieut. J. M. Williams*First Field Artillery, member of the field artillery horse showteam. Among the eight events of the program will be the parade of horses and riders of the dressage, Prix Des Nations and all around equestrian champion teams; a school ride by six horses- and riders of the dressage and all around equestrian champion teams, including 45 movements, exhibition of longing over jump, by horses without riders; , dressage performance of cavalry school horse as required in Olympic games; all around equestrian championship jumping; dressage exhibition of field artillery school dressage horse; Prix Des Nations jump, and farewell salute of the assembled horses of all three teams. The army men wall ride the horses which they themselves have trained and schooled. Ticket sales are being directed this week by Lt. Col. Paul E. Tom-
LIFE IN THE RAW in Africa. Nafives of this district are healthy and happy, however. Many gather the Aloe plant which flourishes there, and which makes a valuable medicinal ingredient. Indo-Vin, the world's newest medicine, contains Aloe.
purities from the rough walls of the stomach and lower intestinal tract. Cleansing out these impure substances permits freer flow of the digestive juices, makes the digestive organs sweet and clean and gives complete relief from indigestion, heart palpitation from gas, shortness of breath, lupip in stomach and dyspepsia. Likewise it has a great action upon the Kidneys, Liver and Bowels, and thus it cleanses and improves the whole system in general. START the Indo-Vin treatment today or tomorrow, and before another week has passed you will sense a BIG improvement. Notice the condition of your SKIN as soon as the organs are rid of impurities. From the day that the stomach, liver, kidneys, and bowels are ALL more active you will LOOK, ACT and FEEL years younger. This is no mere tablet or pill, not a powder, syrup or capsule, and it does not contain alcohol or a single habit-forming drug, but it is a scientific LIQUID mixture from 22 Medicinal Plants, all blended into one remarkable compound. It is ; vastly different from any previously known formula, contains perhaps ' more ingredients than three ordinary medicines put together. While it is being introduced in Indianapolis every suffering person can try it at the small cost of only a few cents a day. So if stomach afflic- , tion, or even some little digestive difficulty, is bringing you misery it j would certainly be a mistake not to try it. The Indo-Vin Man Is now at Hook's Drug Store, Illinois and Washington Streets, here in Indianapolis. daily meeting the public and introducing and explaining this new mixture of Nature’s Medicines.-y Advertisement.
INVEST* with Ist Mortgage Security on Improved Real Estate BUY Building & Loan Shares
baugh. general seat sales and arrangements committees chairman; Mrs. August C Bohlen. reserved seat sales committee chairman, and Robert B. Rhoads, box seat sales committee. A speakers committee, led by Urban K. Wilde Jr., is providing speakers for various luncheon clubs in an effort to acquaint members with the project. Members are Gen. Tyndall. Wallace O. Lee. Maj. Richard Habbe. William Bertermann IT. John T. Rocap. William Kiger, M. L. Mendenhall, Volney Brown, Maj. C. H. Libbert. Wiiliam Hoffman and David V. Burns. CITY MAN IS MISSING Wife Asks Police Aid in Search for Mace Lost Since April 4. Mrs. Cora Stuck 333 Lincoln-st. a buyer in a downtown department store, yesterday asked police to search for her husband. Louis W. Stuck. 50. who has been missing since April 4. Mrs. Stuck said that her husband had been in ill health and was despondent over an impending operation.
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COMMUNISTS HEAR MAY DAY SPEAKERS * Military Park Is Scene of Quiet Demonstration. Approximately 150 persons gathered in Military Park late yesterday to take part in the Indianapolis celebration of May Day, and the demonstration, as in other parts of the world, was quiet and marked by no confusion. David Poindexter, Negro Communist of Chicago, spoke and urged both employed and unemployed to join forces in the world to banish the capitalistic forces. Others who spoke were Sol Larks. Indianapolis section Communist organizer; Miss Helen Layton. International Labor Defense, and Charles Stadfeldt, local Communist secretary.
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Don't taka taKK TRY A WANT AR IN THE TIMES THEY WILL BRING RESULTS.
