Indianapolis Times, Volume 47, Number 201, Indianapolis, Marion County, 31 October 1935 — Page 4

PAGE 4

DEATH CLAIMS FLORA Cf.VINS, STATE PIONEER Mother of Attorney to Be Buried Tomorrow in Sullivan. Lit-l rut: for Mr, Flora Cavin.s. member ot a pioneer Indiana family ar.d mother of Alexander G. At' .in are to be held at 10 tomorrow m the Knr ; clo Bailey Tin. - Lev. G ■'■r c A;thin Frantz, parlor oi u.. First Probyienan Church . t.; offinit.* Burial ns .o be in Bulb van. M! a. Cavinr. who died yesterday after ai( illnc- . ot several months, was 07. Sine.' the death of her husband, Dr. Rib v W. Gavins, in 1907. ..la had lived at the home ot her son, 477.7 Park-av. She ... pent ma-.t of her life in Survivor:, besides the son, are a brother, Dr. .John S. Murphy of Sullivan; two grandchildren, Dr. Alexander W. Cavil.;; of Terr ■ Haute ano Mr Russell I Richardson of Ii dm.;.pop. , and four 'treatgrandchildren. Mrs. Laura Adams Dies Mrs. Laura Adams died yesterday at her home. 1.744 Fielcher-av, aft.-i an illn .... of two year. She was SI and had resided at the Fleteher-av address nearly .70 years. Surviving are a daughter. Mi..:Mary C. Adams, Indianapolis; a sister, Mrs. Oliver D: Camp, Brazil, and a bioilier. Henry 11. lleacnx. Harmony. Funeral .services have been tentatively arranged for Saturday at the home. Burial js to be m Crown Hill. Arrange Summers Rites Rites for Mrs. Alice B. Summers. who died yesterday at her home, 2174 Carrollton-av, are to be held in the Wlmaker (Ind.) Baptist. Church at. 2 tomorrow. Burial is to bo m Gosport. Mrs. Summers, who was (18. was born in Morgan County and had lived in Indianapolis 17 years Survivin'' are two sons, Herbert Grouns and Lee Summers, India flap ilir:. and two daughters, Mrs. Bertha Str.vwait, Indianapolis, and Mrs. Vesta Knoy, Gosport, Mine Accident Fatal Joseph R Risley, son of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Risley, 771 E. McCartyst, was injured fatally in a mine accident at, Sonora, Cal., Sunday, according to word received hero. Mr. Risley. who was 25, was a graduate ot Manual Training High School and had studied at Indiana University Surviving, in addition to the parents, are a brother, Robert, and a sister, Mrs. Wendell C. O'Dell, both of Indianapolis. The body is to be taken to Sheldon. 111., tor funeral services and burial. Lloyd Rites Sot Funeral services were to be held at 3:2.) torliy at the Tliftoy Sc Titus Funeral Home for Dr. Mary C. Lloyd, retired dentist, who died Tuesday. Burial was to be in Crown Hill. She was 79. Born m Bristol, Pa., Dr. Lloyd came to Indianapolis in childhood. She received her education in the city schools and the Cincinnati Dental College. She practiced her profession here since 1885 until her retirement a few years ago. She had been ill three years. Survivors are a nephew’ and niece, Brooks 11. Lloyd and Miss Marguerite Lloyd, both of Indianapolis; Spencer E. Lloyd, Miami, Fla., and Harold J. Lloyd, San Diego, Cal., nephews.

This fine gin s distilled from choicest grains and fruit ingredients —we distil! our own grain spirits, and there are none finer. ''S^* In all gin drinks cocktails, fizzes, bucks, coilins i* is good taste to serve Mistletoe. At most dealers, in fifths and pints, and at jga lj§f Mp® B#Mga bars which emphasize quality. & M IS |3L * IS** M mTm §{?® .■ NATIONAL DISTILLING CO. $3% ** £ bo MILWAUKEE, WIS * TB El L '1 Mutletoc Cim and Kuemmel I —also Ruby Slo • Gin B to*Mistletoe TOAA Gin —a delicious, slightly sweetened gin, ideal for Tom mV ~ -InM Collins, fizzes, bucks, and fine as a straight drink. In fifths and pints.

Hoosier’s Gift Brings Membership in Firemen’s Group at Nation’s Capital

jf ;

Charles Nehf Presented Pumper Used in 1854 to Institution. Times Special WASHINGTON, Oct. 31. A Hoosier rode into honorary membership in the District of Columbia Eire Fighters Association on an ancient hand-pumper of the vintage of 1354. He is Charles T. Nehf, Terre Haute. With appropriate ceremonies at a Washington hotel, Mr. Nehf was presented with a silver certificate of membership by President Jesse M. Jamieson of the association. This honor was conferred because Mr. Nehf is the man who donated Old Vigo,” the ancient handpumper of the Terre Haute Fire Department, to the Smithsonian Institution here, where it now reposes as a museum piece. Dr. C. G. Abbott, secretary of the institution, was among the guests at the presentation. Others included Police Superintendent Ernest W. Brown, District Commissioners Melvin C. Hazen and George Allen and Rep. Virginia E. Jenckes. Mr, Nehf, a Terre Haute jeweler, wore a medal at the ceremony. It was voted to him by the Travelers’ Protective Association at its Buffalo convention in 1907. Mr. Nehf had received severe burns while battling a blaze on a Wabash River excursion steamer carrying an association picnic crowd and the medal was for his heroism. He retained his interest in fire protection and fire prevention since that time. So when his city decided to dispose of the old pumper, which had been bought from a Boston concern for $740 back in 1854, Mr. Nehf rescued it and presented it to the institution. His greatest pride, however, are not in these things, but in the fact that he is the father of Art Nehf, a World Series pitcher for the Giants. DOCTOR TRIES SUICIDE North Manchester Physician Is Secretary of Medical Council. liy United Press NORTH MANCHESTER, Ind., Oct. 31.—Dr. O. G. Brubaker, secretary of the Indiana Medical Council, attempted suicide by hanging at his home here today. Relatives w r erc unable to explain the act.

The upper picture is of “Old Vigo.” the hand-pumper used by the Terre Haute fire department in 1854 and now a piece in the Smithsonian Institution. Left to right are President Jesse M. Jamieson of the Washington (D. C.) Fire Fighters’ Association; Charles

ARRAIGNMENT TODAY SET FOR 13 ACCUSED Persons Named in Indictments to Face Court. Thirteen persons, indicted by the Marion County grand jury, are to be arraigned in Criminal Court today. The persons and the charges against them are: William Bowman, Thomas Skaggs, George Nelson and Robert j Phillips, grand larceny; Charles Clark, criminal assault; Lillian Col- | lins, murder; George Haygood, asi sault and battery; Lawrence Jervis, failure to stop alter an accident; Willis Johnson, robbery and grand larceny, Samuel Lethridge and Frank Zopp, carrying a pistol; James Vanlandingham, vehicletaking ancl unlawful possession, and Francis Wathan, burglary and petit larceny.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

T. Nehf, Terre Haute, donor of “Old Vigo”; Dr. C. G. Abbott, institution secretary, and Rep. Virginia E. Jenckes, Terre Haute. Lowes picture shows President Jamieson presenting Mr. Nehf with a silver certificate of membership in the association.

TWO SENTENCED FOR THEFTS OF CLOTHING Man and Woman Given Fines and Terms of Imprisonment. Thefts of two suits of clothes from cleaning establishments resulted in fines and imprisonment for Eugene Barrett and Mrs. Geialdine Leland, 21, both of 6C4 S. Meridian-st. Barrett was fined $25 and costs and sentenced to 120 days on the Indiana State Farm yesterday by Judge Charles J. Karabell and Mrs. Leland was fined $25 and costs and sentenced to 60 days in the Indiana Woman's Prison.

Ij'S?- V Elt before has radio reached such jir, j 1 \jjj| li | / A heights of tone, power and world-wide ill; | |||| ! j;||j& reception as in the new 1936 Philco! Your |if favorite American stations—Europe, Austra- if ip llilly lia, South America—all the world! The most \ MtMW exciting reception in radio history! ‘ oc J * HPFN FBIHAY NITF 7tn Q I Co\ClS I.\Cl} RlOcldCclSt FRIDAY HITE 7to 9 | gg|g||gg|| Service on the Air Model 6JOB HI ink Ap* A nr American and Foreign 11 ffi-giu, / I£. ‘PHILCO’ yjl|yil Exceptional Power Complete With “Philco” $/ /g bbjj H A Superbly Beautiful Radio! / 1 / IL* / J li We recommend this full-sized, floorHe 8 type Philco as the biggest value of Complete With “P/7co” programs . Police Calls .. . greater f// Tl r • s.• / fm 1 inlww enjoyment of all American broact- - ‘ ’ a! ( 1 :Ut casts. Latest features—marvelous Features include Precision tone! Handsome cabinet of satinRadio Dial. Automatic Aerial finish Walnut K 2 A P rJc n ™l n ; WJmBMm Big Trade-In Allowance Control. Two-tone mahogany VP/ us/ Only si OOP “w k' 7~__ 5 la Per WEEK! faction ,sure ot “ mplete s3,is ' 231-237 West Washington Street Directly Opposite Statehouae

DILLINGER GANG MEMBER LOSES CASE IN COURT Supreme Body Upholds Old Decision by La Porte Circuit Judge. Another echo of the John Dillingcr case was heard yesterday when Sam Goldstein, Ft. Wayne, one of the original Dillinger gang members, was handed a technical legal reversal, in the Indiana Supreme Court. The court decided that the La Porte Circuit Court was correct in 1932 in refusing to liberate Goldstein from the Indiana State Prison on a writ of habeas corpus. However, the decision doesn't mean much to any one, most of all, Goldstein. The former Dillinger mobster was sentenced to five to 15 years in Vigo County in 1919 on a robbery charge. He was paroled after serving his minimum sentence, but arrested again on charges of assault and battery with intent to commit a felony and given anew sentence of two to 14 years. He claimed the new sentence jeopardized his right to parole at the end of the old sentence and filed a writ of habeas corpus. The La Porte court refused the writ and it was this ruling the high court affirmed yesterday. Goldstein got his last parole in 1934. He hasn't been heard from since, unless he is the Samuel “Goklsteine” recently arrested in Chicago in connection with an Ohio bank robbery. WASHINGTON SCHOOL GIRLS ARRANGE PARTY Senior Club to Mark Halloween at Gymnasium Tonight. The Washington Club, senior girls’ organization of Washington High School, is to entertain' freshmen girls at a Halloween party in the school gymnasium tonight. W. G. Gingery, principal, and Mrs. Gingery, are to be honor guests. In the receiving line are to be Jeanne Berning, club president; Betty Kreutsinger, vice president; Nellie Minnick, secretary, and Margaret Case, treasurer. PENNHOFF TO CONTINUE Grille Will Be Operated by Receiver and Former Owner. Although in receivership, the Peniihoff Grille, 23 N. Pennsylva-nia-st, is to remain in operation, Robert H. Ellis, receiver, announced today. Michael J. Hanrahan, former operator, will continue with the grille, Mr. Ellis said. seven-year - ITCH ENDED The itch (scabies) is hifflily contagious, if not treated it will continue for life. It is not a blood disease, but is caused by the itch-mite, which burrows and forms torturous galleries within the skin. Tho itch-mite spreads rapidly and is immune to ordinary treatment. The Psorio institute has perfected a simple treatment called EXSORA that kills the itch-mite almost instantly, and rids you of your trouble in three days. Ort complete EXSORA treatment at once at 9. Dependable Drug Stores

TRANSIENTS MAKE VARIOUS ARTICLES

Men at Indiana transient shelters, pupils of vocational guidance, use odds and ends of materials to create useful articles in their workshops. The picture above shows a transient workman mak-

GOAL PRICE-FIXING BOARD IS SELECTED Four Local Men Named to Administer Act. By United Press TERRE HAUTE, Ind., Oct. 31. Seventeen members of a price-fixing board to administrate the Guffey Coal Act in Indiana was named here last night by the operators. The Indiana Coal Trade Association was chosen as the official marketing agency for Indiana operators and will work with the district board in carrying out the act. Producer members of the board are H. B. Lee, Terre Haute, chairman; B. E. Lundblad, Indianapolis, vice chairman; Jonas Waffle, Terre Haute, managing director and secretary treasurer; G. H. Leahy, Chicago; R. E. Snoberger, Indianapolis; John Shirkie, C. G. Hall, C. N. Templeton and H. P. Smith, Terre Haute; W. M. Zeller, Indianapolis; G. A. Enos, Cleveland; Earl Oliphant, Vincennes; M. M. Soule, Chicago; A. V. Grossman, Indianapolis; R. H. May, Chicago; William R, Rootz, Evansville, and W. J. Tipton, Brazil. Black-Draught Long-Established Reliable Laxative A clean system for health! And a good, purely vegetable laxative to help cleanse the digestive tract when it gets sluggish! For this, thousands of men and women recommend Black-Draught. Mr. O. F. Ansley, of Dallas, Texas, writes that he has used BlackDraught, when needed, for more than fifty years. ‘‘lt gives me Quicker relief than anything I can take," he declares. “I consider it the best medicine for certain ailments.” Mr. Ansley has enjoyed remarkably good health. He has lived in Texas for more than seventy years’ Ills former home was Cuthbert, Ga„ which he frequently visits. He served in a Georgia regiment during the War Between the i States. —Advertisement.

ing a name plate of a scrap of wood with a jig saw. Shops have been set up at all camps and one has been equipped at 16 N. Sen-ate-av. Tire men make everything from cookie cutters to card tables.

GIVEN 1 TO 5 YEARS -FOR THEFT OF CORN Two Ex-Convicts Are Sentenced at Warsaw. By United Press WARSAW, Ind., Oct. 31.—A pair of former convicts were sentenced to one to five years imprisonment and fined SIOO each by Judge Donald Vanderveer in Kosciusko Circuit Court yesterday when they pleaded guilty to charges of petit larceny. Charles Denbar, 29. Ft. Wayne, and Victor Hamman, 35, Millwood, were sentenced to the State Reformatory and Prison, respectively. Both admitted the theft of 25 bushels of corn.

9 SUPER j Bought From Well-Knou n Maker! 450 PAIR WOMEN’S SMART NEW FALL “ARCH-SUPPORT” ~ OXFORDSa^ Kids with special fSi -c&Q& B*lj tfV .'^y. Military or CuFRIDAY ONLY! FRIDAY ONLY! Guar. 5 Grain jj FRIDAY ONLY: Reg- 5c Candy Aspirin <ga | Baby Ruth Ears Tablets aaic bars #f„ b 1 : 1 :,;." ,„.uT !! JL W A Special Sale of ***<&wm* 350 Women’s NALLY KNOWN “COOPERS” si Quality “ Tuck-Stitch ” Union Suits Medium -**: jflßh Senate* - ,V|lp % r AUn e s, &', If RIDA Y( O\LY! Hand Picked FRIDAY ONLY! “SA \ ITAS” NAVY BEANS Oilcloth fj 4%V 2 3 LBS. f3 Irreß R o?39c Qtlaf- H, FOR MEN! FRIDAY ONLY! ! ff SSS^FTP? A One-Day Sale of Men’s Sturdy Built I I CORDUROY f> .t";TROUSERS jßap.ik: i:y :'-:- r 3a They are in Rust. Brown B lit or Nary. Veil made and Cr O Q ||MHh —• wni Ow BpH||| VALUES TO 52.43 P^;AjlHSftjl&ii Ml - - 12 but not in aHHmRBr > wry coIor! g: Pair WJULE 65 PAIR LAST! YRIDAY ONLY! Girls’ ?i to $H 9 A. M. sharp! tVhile 150 Last: Coats hats t 9 |fi c Sizes 7to 14 Just F .,. a - . Uwd 7? of them in JSjf anted colors. hpad

The Junior League Trading Post 1507 North Illinois Street Offers WINDOW SHADES 10c CURTAIN POLES 15c BABY SWINGS (NEW CANVAS) 50c FOUR-POSTER DOLL BED (Mahogany).. .SI.OO Also CHILDREN’S UNDERWEAR 10c LADY’S REAL TAFFETA EVENING DRESS, $3 LADY’S BLUE WOOL ENSEMBLE $4.50 DONATIONS SOLICITED IT PAYS TO PURCHASE AT THE POST

OCT. 31,1935

WALLACE LO ATTEND CORN-HUSKING MEET National Contest at Attica to Be On Air. l imf ? Special WASHINGTON. Oct 31— Henry Wallace, Agriculture Secretary’, is to attend the national com-husk-ing contest on the farm of Leslie K. Mitchell, near Attica, Ind.. Nov. 8, Rep. Virginia E Jenckes announced today. She got the National Broadcasting Cos. to carry the event on its national network, the broadcast being scheduled for 11 30 a. m. to 12:30 p. m. that day.

Why Net Enjoy Fresh Cranberries Now? l\ . l Cranberry Sauce makes roast pork Usta better. Jellied Cranberry Sauce 4 cups cranberries 2 cups watef 2 cups grcr.ulatcd sugar Method: Boil cranberries with water until berries stop popping. Strain through fine sieve,- add sugar and stir; then boil rapidly for 8 to 10 minutes — or until a drop jell* ! on a cold plate. Turn at once into a wet | mold; and cool. Many delightful and different recipes ere in the new cranberry cook book. Send for free copy to — Dept N AMERICAN CRANBERRY EXCHANGE 90 Wert Broadway, New York City