Indianapolis Times, Volume 47, Number 272, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 January 1936 — Page 7
JAN. 22, 1936
‘I DON’T WANT MILK POSITION,’ FEENEY_ CRIES Former Area Official Says He Wouldn’t Take Job at Any Price. A1 O. Feeney, dismissed milk administrator for the Indianapolis shed, today announced that he would not consider being rehired at any price, and charged that Lieut. Gov. M. Clifford Townsend who suggested that he might be was merely “passing the buck.” Mr. Townsend had said that the responsibility of hiring anew administrator or rehiring Mr. Feeney would be in the hands of a committee to be appointed Thursday. Mr. Feeney said: “I am not interested in the Job at any price, and I am surprised that the Lieutenant Governor would pass the buck to the local committee, which he knows, or at least should know, does not have the power to appoint that administrator. “It’s His Responsibility” “He fired me without any charges being preferred and without a hearing, so the responsibility belongs to him and his state board.” Mr. Townsend’s statement, issued on the eve of organization of anew distributor-producer committee for the Indianapolis area, said in part: “If it is the desire of the new committee to employ Mr. Feeney or any one else as administrator of the Indianapolis area, I am sure the state board will follow out the new committee’s wishes, just as it adhered to the advice and counsel of the old committee, both in employing and dismissing an administrator and other employes.” Members of the old committee, which nominated Mr. Feeney and then requested his dismissal by the state board, in turn have resigned at the state board’s request. Producer and distributor organizations are to make nominations at 3 p. m. today for anew committee, which will be charged with nominating a new administrator. GIRL SCOUTS TO HOLD MEETING ON MONDAY Annual Gathering of City Group Arranged for Lincoln. Annual meeting of Indianapolis Girl Scouts is to be held Monday at the Lincoln, Mrs. Charles F. Voyles, commissioner, announced today. Mrs. Montgomery Lewis is chairman of the luncheon and is being assisted by Mi’s. R. O. Jackson and Mrs. John, H. Toy. Earl Kiger recently was elected vice president of the Girl Scout Corp. of Indianapolis and Mrs. Voyles, secretary-treasurer. Other directors are Mrs. Thomas A. Wynne, president; Fred Hoke and James A. Ross. Mrs. Charles C. Binkley has been appointed acting chairman of the handicapped Scouts, tc serve during the absence of Mrs. C. Severin Buschmann. Mrs. George O. Swaim is chairman of the annual spring cookie sale. > Postal Robbery Suspect Out on Bond Sherman Collins, 22, Moreland, is held to the Federal grand jury today, charged with stealing $169 from the Moreland postoffice. He was released by Commissioner Howard S. Young yesterday on SIOOO bond.
HOW ABOUT THIS CORRESPONDENCE SCHOOL ISA AD, MR.HOLT ? WOULD SUCH A COURSE HELP P m ME? l'M KEEN TO GET AHEAD BUT I SEEM TO J BE THE FORGOTTEN MAN AROUND HERE i Vkijd ,T SOUNDS EXCELLENT. BUT '' SEE SOMETHING else WHEN YOU GET BACK TO YOUR A LIFEBUOY AD WARNING ABOUT DESK, LOOK AT THE AO ON ’’8.0."! IS THAT WHATS BEEN HOLDING PAGE 96 ME BACK? WHAT A FOOL I'VE BEEN J tow. TOMCTO! UFE BU OY changed his luck f' SO YOU'RE ENGAGED—EXPECT I'D NEVER HAVE GOTTHE RAISE OR TO BE MARRIED SOON ?THAT THE GIRL,EITHER, IF IT HADN'T BEEN NICE RAISE YOU JUST GOT WILL FOR YOUR TIP ABOUT LIFEBUOY COME IN LIFEBUOY, TOO. yT SO LIFEBUOY IS WHAT -2?* MARVELOUS FOR / MAKES YOUR SKIN SO < C K,N looking dull, noticeable. Watch out! /[ tired? Use that same Bathe regularly with / j Lifebuoy that keeps Lifebuoy. It gives X your person fresh! Irs abundant, purifying " t#/, * deep-searching lather lather in hardest water. WY'' cleanses thoroughly, gtntlyl Really Its own clean Kent washes away, protects your complexion! “Patch" Appnrrdh Bunaa tests on skins of hundreds of women show it is more than 1 20% milder Irani thao many so-called “beauty soaps. ‘ fTm/b f | A word to the wise I rt J j mjf'/j 1 Winter's here! Qose rooms, heavy U Li ||W||P|t^BjMpi clothing make“B.O. M (Wyair) more M*
TOWN HALL SPEAKER
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Mrs. ITieodore Roosevelt Jr. (above), s to be the speaker in the Tov.n Hall series Saturday morning at the Columbia Club, on “Life in the Philippines.” While her husband was governor general of the islands, Mrs. Roosevelt took an active interest in the life of the people and usually accompanied her husband on tours. She devoted much time to the study of social problems. Mrs. Samuel Lewis Shank is to be hostess for the discussion luncheon following the lecture at which Mrs. Roosevelt is to be guest of honor. I. U. WILL CONTINUE GOVERNMENT TRAINING Several Students Placed in U. S. Jobs, Course Head Says. By United Press BLOOMINGTON, Ind., Jan. 22. Training courses for government service started at Indiana University last fall are to be continued, it was announced today. Several students in university classes have been placed in government positions, according to Ford P. Hall, head of the government department and chairman of the training committee. Indiana University, Mr. Hall said, is one of the few American universities to inaugurate goverment service courses. Examinations are to be held in May for foreign service positions and next summer for the United States Civil Service. [ForßadCoughi : j Mix This Better • > Remedy, at Home! (Needs No Cooking! Big Saving! j You’ll be pleasantly surprised when you make up this home mixture and try it for a distressing cough. It’s no trouble to mix, and costs but a trifle, yet it can be depended upon to give quick and lasting relief. Make a syrup by stirring 2 cups of granulated sugar and one cup of water for a few moments until dissolved. No cooking needed. Get 2 y 2 ounces of Pinex from any druggist, put it into a pint bottle, and fill up with your sugar syrup. The pint thus made gives you four times as much cough remedy for your money, yet it is far more effective than ready-made medicine. Keeps perfectly and tastes fine. This home-mixed remedy has a remarkable, three-fold action. It soothes the irritated membranes, loosens the phlegm, and helps clear the air passages. Thus it makes breathing easy, and lets you get restful sleep. Pinex is a Compound of Norway Pine, in concentrated form, famous for its effect in stopping coughs quickly. Money refunded if it' doesn’t please you in every way. -Advertisement.
YOUNG 6.0. P. LEADER TALKS HEREJAN. 29 George Olmstead, National Chairman, to Speak at Corumbia Club. George Olmsted, Young Republicans national chairman, is to speak to the Columbia Club membership and guests at 8 next Wednesday night on “The American Way.” John K. Ruckelshaus, lecture series comrflittee chairman, is to introduce Mr. Olmsted. Other members of the cofnmittee are Albert J. Beveridge Jr., Ralph M. Spaan, John A. Royse, John D. Pearson and William H. Remy. The reception committee members are: Elmer W. Sherwood, chairman; Arthur V. Brown, Frank \. Butler, Dr. Edmund D. Clark, Clifford L. Harrod, Irving W. Lemaux, Norman A. Perry, Curtis H. Rottger, John C. Ruckelshaus, Fred C. Gardner, Don Irwin, H. Sellers, Charles A. Halleck, Harry L. Gause, R. Hartley Sherwood, Ralph F. Gates, Maurice G. Butler, Gavin L. Payne, Fred C. Gauss, George M. Barnard. George S. Olive, Carl Wilde, Omar S. Hunt, Ralph B. Gregg, Maurice L. Mendenhall, Joseph W. Stickney, Maj. Gen. Robert H. Tyndall, James A. Stuart, William Henry Roberts, C. Walter McCarthy, E. B. Martindale, Charles Carll, Wallace O. Lee, Conrad R. Ruckelshaus. Walter I. Hess, Roy E. Adams, Martin M. Hugg, Henry C. Atkins Jr., P. R. Mallory, Joseph E. Cain, F. E. Schortemeier, George Jeffrey, John A. Brookbank, Ed Gallahue, Robert L. Craig, William B. Ansted Jr., William P. Flynn, Harry Boggs,
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
PLAYS FOR DANCE
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The Butler Independent Association is to hold Its annual allschool dance Jan. 30 at the Lincoln. Louis Partelio (above), and his orchestra is to play. A floor show and dancing contest are to be features. Mr. and Mrs. Jac Broderic are to judge the contest. M. M. Dunbar, Harry G. Leslie, Walter Krull, Dan White, Walter Pritchard, Charles J. Karabell, Fred N. Reynolds, Gaylord Morton, Lloyd Claycombe, William G. Sparks, Harold F. Kealing. John A. Schumacher, Ernest Baltzell, George M. Dickson Jr., William B. Stokley, James W. Ingalls, Fred Shick, Ed Hart, H. H. Martin, William G. Irwin, Walter A. Kennedy, Burrell Wright, Rae W. Powell, Howard Meyer, Wayne Emmelman, John H. Bookwalter, Alf O. Meloy, Solon J. Carter, John Caylor, Joe Hartman, Louis Fletcher, Howard Travis, Roy Volstead and Howard J. Lacey Jr.
BARRETT TRIAL TRANSCRIPT TO BE COMPLETED Copy of Testimony Likely to Be Sent to Appeal Court. A transcript of the testimony in the George W. Barrett murder trial probably will be completed today,, Walter N. Carpenter, Federal Court reporter, said. Barrett is scheduled to hang March 24 in the Marion County
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BLEMISHES MADE HER OLD LOOKING Face Clear Again With Cuticura Soap and Ointment
Here is a letter every skin sufferer should read. Its message is vital. “There were blemishes on my face, of external origin, and they made me look old and haggard. They were red, hard and large. They would hurt, and when I scratched them the skin would become irritated, and I would lie awake at night and start digging at my face. “But after using two cakes of Cuticura Soap and one tin of Cuti-
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jail yard, if the conviction is affirmed by the Circuit Court of Appeals, Chicago. Barrett shot and killed Nelson B. Klein, a Department of Justice agent, in West College Corners. Ind., Aug. 26. It is expected that the transcript will be sent to the Circuit Court soon, so that immediate action may be taken on the demand for anew trial. EVANGELIST TO SPEAK Mrs. Mary Knode to Talk Before W. C. T. U. Unit Friday. Mrs. Mary Knode, evangelist for the Wheeler City Rescue Mission, is to speak on “Prohibition and Law Enforcement,” at a meeting of the Mary E. Balch unit of the W. C. T. U. in the home of Mrs. D. C. Hills, 718 W. 31st-st, Friday afternoon.
cura Ointment my face was cleared again.” (Signed) Mrs. L. Whetzler, 2nd St., Floreffe, Pa., June 15, 1935. Physicians can understand such letters. The Cuticura formulas have proved their effectiveness for over half a century. Remember, Cuticura Soap and Ointment are also for pimples, rashes, ringworm, burning of eczema and other externally caused skin blemishes. All druggists. Soap 25c. Ointment 25c.—Advertisement.
VETERINARIANS ELECT CLAYPOOL MAN HEAD j State Association to Hear Reports of Committees Today. Dr. P. C. Tucker, Claypool, today is the new president of the Indiana Veterinary Medical Association as the result of elections held yesterday in the Severin. Other new officers include Dr. E. D. Anderson, Mentone, vice president; Dr. W. B. Craig. Indianapolis, secretary-treasurer; Dr. H. M. Ham-
MILK MfIMMMMNNI They Will Work If Given An Opportunity MADAM HOUSEWIFE An Appeal Is Made to You to Help Keep Them Working. Return Them to Your Deliveryman or Grocer. Put.. Them.. Out.. Today
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ilton, Muncie; Dr. H. E. Miller, Paragon, and Dr. J. L. Kixmiller. Indianapolis, directors. Committee reports are to be heard today, and the convention is to close tomorrow night with the annual dinner-dance. Howie to Show Trek Movies Hillis L. Howie, orchard School principal, will show motion pictures taken on the 1935 Prairie Trek Children Museum expedition to the Southwest at an Orchard School assembly at 11 tomorrow.
