Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 March 1937 — Page 8

PAGE 8

WOMAN KILLED IN LEAVING BUS ; DEATH TOLL 36

Another Pedestrian Injured Critically; Child Hurt Slightly.

Marion County's 1937 traffic toll reached 36 today with the 11th fatality in as many days. In two months 24 pedestrians have been killed by automobiles and street cars. raffic deaths for the same period last year numbered 17. Police arrested 38 motorists for traffic law violations yesterday. Eleven were charged with

erential streets and four with speeding Dies in Ambulance Mrs. Margaret Holtrop, R. R. 11, Box 221-J, died last night in a Cit) Hospital ambulance after she struck by a car driven by George Duvall, 23, of 536 N. Oriental St. She was 50 The accident occurred when Mrs Holtrop attempted to cross New York St. at Parkview Ave. alter alighting from a bus. Mr. Duvall

told police he swerved to avoid hit- |

ting her. He was not held

Alonzo Johnson, 42, of 1120 My- |

ron St.,, was in a critical condition at City Hospital today with injuries received when he was struck bv a car last night at 13th St. and College Ave Johnson stepped from behind a parked car into the path of one driven by Wilmer Mayne, 31, of Tipton, police were told. Mr. Mayne was not held Child Injured Clara McDowell, 6, 2439 N. New Jersey St. was injured slightly last night when she ran into the path ot a car driven by Jay B. Peck, 21, 135 E. 9th St The accident occurred at 25th St. and Central Ave. The child was treated at the City Hospital. William Bright, 33, 2242 College Ave. was injured last night when his car collided with another driven by Kenneth Hudson, 34, of 3922 Graceland Ave. at Fall Creek and Illinois St. Bright was arrested on a charge of drunken driving. Mrs. Laura Flint, 60, of 752 W Walnut St.. received a possible skull fracture today when she walked into the side of = moving automobile at Ohio and Illinois Sts. John Wynick, 33, of 1021 N. Warman Ave, was the car driver. She was taken to City Hospital.

NORTH SIDE REALTY SALES INCREASED

running | red lights, nine with running pref- |

Inspects Spring Pajama Display

Colors—and lots of them—that

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—Times Photo

's the keynote to the men's spring

styles, judging from exhibits at the Indiana Clothiers and Furnishers Association and the Men's Apparel Club of Indiana convention at the

Claypool Hotel

Here's Miss Margaret Scanling inspecting some of

the multi-colored pajamas which the men-folk are supposed to wear.

MANUAL THESPIANS WILL PRESENT PLAYS

Mask and Wig Club Will Give Benefit Performances. The Mask and Wig Club of Manual Training High School is to stage two one-act plays March 11 for the benefit of the Junior Red Cross Club E. Edward Green, speech teacher, is supervising both plays “Murder in Hollywood” is being rehearsed under direction of Margaret Webber, a pupil. The cast includes Bessie Rosenberg, Elsie Bradshaw, Robert Stringer, Alvin Mordoh, Robert Williams, Ruth Todd.

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Jeanette Patnick and Margaret Lahmann. “Pampered Darling” is being directed by Doris Brabender, a pupil. 1e cast includes Dorothea Lucas, Juanitta Truitt, Norman Burger, Elsie Beth Sutter, Wilbur Meyer, John Pappas, Burchard Bush, Robert Schwomeyer, Mary Vulk, Zula Hughes and Carol Cronin.

SENIORS AT ATTUCKS TO ELECT OFFICERS

Crispus Attucks High School June seniors are to elect officers at a meeting Thursday. The nominating committee, appointed by Mrs. Mary A. Johnson, administrative sponsor, included Graham Martin, Jerome Beene, William Webb, Eunice Meriweather and Roy Thurman.

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CLOTHIER SAYS TAYLOR DOESN'T

LEAD FASHIONS Wainer Mercer, Basil Wade and! | { ae {

‘Men’s Furnishers Hold Con- | vention at Claypool. |

Robert Taylor is not the screen's ranking dictator of men's fashions, members of the Indiana Retail | |

{Clothiers and Furnishers were in- | formed in an address at their con- | vention luncheon in the Claypool | Hotel yesterday. | Caesar Romero is setting the pace, | {and the current top male screen | {idol and Clark Gable are in the | runner-up positions, S. J. Freeman, | |L. Strauss & Co. advertising man- | | ager, told the clothiers. Max Adler, South Bend, was | {elected president at the luncheon, | {a feature of the convention which is marked by a two-floor display | of men's fashions at the Claypool. [Other officers named were Harold | | Wolf, Wabash, vice president; Henry | Bailey, Logansport, secretary and | treasurer. The Men's Apparel Club elected Karl Harris, Indianapolis, president; | R. B. Wallace, Indianapolis, vice | | president, and John Lanni, Knights- | town, secretary ang treasurer, Delegates and wives attended a | dinner dance last night in the Columbia Club.

THREE ENLIST IN ARMY

Enlistment of three Indianapolis | youths in the United States Army was announced today by Lawrence | W. Sherfese, substation com- | | mander. They were Oral V. Cal- | lahan, 3411 N. Capitol Ave.; Fred H. Cosand, 412 E. 10th St., and Ray E. Shannon. They were as- | signed to Ft. Harrison. DEAN GAVIT TO SPEAK | Dean Bernard G. Gavit of the |

{Indiana University Law School is |

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES 10 JURORS CHOSEN

{to discuss “The Growing Extent of | [the Administrative Practice of the |

Law” before the Indianapolis Bar Association tomorrow at 6:30 p. m. in the Columbia Club.

START TODAY !

|

|

FOR ASSAULT TRIAL

By United Press J BLOOMINGTON, March 2.—

Robert W. Seay, Bloomington |

| youths, held in connection with the

attack and robbery of Earle Robert Scheider, crippled Indiana Univer-

| sity student, were to go on trial to- | (day after selection of a jury. { |

The hearing was recessed late | yesterday by Judge Willis Hickman, | Spencer, |

TUESDAY, MARCH 2, 1937

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Puzzles 1-6 HERE'S HOW TO START!

etic Rw lie SOLVE THE PUZZLES AT THE LEFT SEND YOUR SOLUTIONS ON THE ENTRY FORM BELOW!

All the other puzzles issued to date will be mailed to you promptly. Further puzzles, to complete contest, will be mailed you, as issued.

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les last week by the North ide Realtors Association totaled 97.950, bringing the total for the two months of the year to 820, William Murray Huse, secry. reported at a luncheon in 1e Hotel Washington yesterday. The sales volume so far this year compares with $372,250 for the same period of 1936, a 45 per cent increase. E. A. Broderick, formerly of Gregory & Appel, Inc, now in the real estate division of the Railroadmen’s Federal Savings & Loan Association, resigned as chairman. Forest M. Knight, vice chairman, was named to succeed him. Howard Fieber, P. A. Havelick and Leo McAllister were named to the membership committee.

FACES CHARGE OF RESISTING OFFICER

® Princess Style Coats! Paul Shannon, 32, of 621 Patterson St, was to answer charges of

resisting an officer in Municipal $ S 3

Court today. He is alleged to have To slugged patrolman Rudolph Price 16.98 last night in a fight at Douglas and Nr Vermont Sts. Patrolman Price said he had Coats ‘of new Spring fabrics, stopped Shannon to question him. fleeces! Suits of worsteds, serges, Shannon was found later in the herringbones, sharkskin, gabarhome of Miss Pearl Tucker, 835 Tor- dines! Tailored and dressy stvles! bett St. He said he had been out on | —- ih te parole only four davs. Miss Tucker was arrested on charges of vagrancy.

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Each of these puzzles represents a familiar name. The solution,> or name

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WHAT NAME DOES THIS PUZZLE REPRESENT? | WHAT NAME DORKS THIS PUZZLE REPRESENT? | WHAT NAME DOES THIS PUZ2LE REPRESENT? The Correct Solution Is in the Following Lise The Correct Solution 1s in the Following List The Correct Solution Is in the Followina List

Washington Irving Jack London . Charles Dickens Stephen Decatur Thomas Carlyle Warren Hastings John Ringling Marie Antoinette Mark Twain Rudyard Kipling Horace Walpole Amerigo Vespuccl Roscoe Arbuckle George Washington Texas Guinan Carrie Nation John Stuart Min Oliver Cromwell Oscar Wilde Sic Walter Raleigh Charles Lamb Israel Zangwill Ponce de Leon Johann Strauss Noah Webster Robert Louis Stevenson Anna Paviowa William Penn Christopher Columbus Benjamin Franklin William Pier Lillian Russell rey Chaucer Robert Browning Percy Shelley John Ouincy Adams

PUZZLE No. 4 PUZZLE No. 5

Women's Silk HOSIERY LN wv S00 BS :

Lovely sheer silk chiffon hose in the : 3 x ac is HE WRITES GOOD newest Spring shades! Lisle reinforced ; . Ny

OLIVE BRANCH MEETING neve accordance with the Rules. Further puzzles, to Olive Biearitn. Pam Noble Cirstitts i C finish the contest, will be mailed to you as issued.

Association, 1 is to meet tomorrow Yi. rR. ; 8 : C : ; U) ] : noon at the home of Mrs. Earl Full- | enwider, 720 Prospect St. A busi- | = ness meeting is to follow the lunch- Sheer Chiffon

eon with Belle Van Horn, president, FR HOSE presiding. Assisting hostesses are to | = RAR Full fash- y be Mrs, Harry Melhorn, Mrs. Arlie | = ) 5 foned. Spring C £5

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WHAT NAME DOES THIS PUZZLE REPRESENT? | WHAT NAME DOES THIS PUZZLE REPRESENT? | WHAT NAME DOES THIS PUZZLE REPRESENT? The Correct Solution 1s In the Fohowing List The Correct Solution Is In the Following List The Correct Solution Is in the Followina List Henry Clay Pocahontas Cotton Mather Franz Schubert Millard Fillmore Willlam Shakespeare Wiley Post Walter Raleigh Stephen Foster King Canute ‘Arc Robert Morris Diamond Jim Brady James Oglethorpe Harry Houdini Juliet Capulet Admiral Dewey Leif Ericson Russell Sage Jane Austen Robert Southey Henry Ward Beecher Thomas Jefferson George Washington Jeanne Fagels Percy Shelley Eugene Field Julius Caesar Thomas Meighan Patrick Henry Nicolai Lenin Rudolph Valentiwo George Eastman

This contest, in its entirety, sopyrighted, 1987, by P, Lorillard Co., Ine,

1,000 CASH PRIZES. .."200,000.00 w AWARD

FIRST PRIZE... 100,000.00 2nd Prize. ..’30,000.00 3rd Prize... .’10,000.00 4th Prize... .’10,000.00 5th Prize ....'5,000.00 6th Prize... .'5,000.00 7th Prize....%*2,500.00 8th Prize... .2,500.00

2 Prizes $1,500.00 each . . . $3,000.00 2 Prizes $1,000.00 each . . . $2,000.00 10 Prizes $500.00 each . . . $5,000.00 28 Prizes $250.00 each . . . 57,000.00 50 Prizes $100.00 each . . . 55,000.00 : One Hundred Prizes $50.00 each . . . $5,000.00 Eight Hundred Prizes 510.00 each . . . $8,000.00

PRIZE CROP TOBACCOS make them DOUBLE-MELLOW

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should submit hoth + and Weeks Series as 1. To qualify fora prize, the contestant is required to ac: T M E R U L E S well as the 3rd ees I and oii on. All series company each series of solutions with three OID GOLD should be qualified in accordance with Rule No. 7. plow packuge wrappers, or three Jeasopiably accurate 1. OI.D GOLD'S PUZZLE CONTEST is apen to and-drawn facsimiles. Either will be equally accepteverybody residing in the U. S. A. or its territorial able. It fs not necessary to ke urchase in Srdet fo ssessions with the exception of the employees ol compete contestant is privi to enter more than 3 i" er iird TAP ANY. vl and their families, and its andy. yo 23 ' ar ong complete det Sf 3otutionn, Duy ea 1st be Nr GOLD CONTEST Date re s motion agencies and their Bk . ‘our dealer cannot supply you, we Wi 4 individually identified as entry ent 2 Ot} . 0, Box rick ; Bd veitising $i ales prom " you these puzzles free on request. ENTRY FORMS Each entry will be judged as a nit. "No chitestant in 9. Va Stree Seation, New York, N.Y Ay may be clipped from newspapers, magazines or circu-

. ha ( eligible to win more than one prize, the highest prize The following are My solutions to puzzles 156: 2. A group of not less than 00 puzzles which will be. lars and will be equally acceptable. Once you are en- won by any individual entry mig by that ae Po. come increasingly difficult as the contest proceeds will tered in contest, current puzzles will be mailed to you testant. | 1 a ‘a

S. Contestants ‘are requested to mail their solutions 0 Cl - EnTRY i ORM * EACH WEEK, in series of six. The hrst four weeks’ series may be obtained FREE at many cigarette

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be offered for solution, Each puzzle will represent or in some definite way contain clues which will convey the idea of a name. The name may be that of a person, book, song, movie, city, state or nation. The earlier puzzles will be of the more elementary type, in order to assist contestants in familiarizing themselves with the principles for solving this particular kind of puzzle.

3. OLD GOLD will pay a First Prize of $100,000.00 and 999 other cash prizes (a grand total of 1,000 prizes aggregating $200,000.00) to the one thousand contestants who by their submissions achicve the one thousand highest scores through solving puzzles they are called upon to solve under these rules, and who in all other ways conform to all of these Official Rules.

4. The puzzles will be issued for solutions in weekly series of six, and contestants are asked to solve and submit solutions EACH WEEK. The 1st Week's ies of 6 puzzles bears the release date of Monday, Feb. 1, 1937. Each Monday, for fourteen additional weeks, there will be another weekly series to solve. Contestants should solve the puzzles and submit solutions to same during the week following issuance date of each series. In submitting the solutions for any current series, a contestant is privileged to submit solutions for preceding series. a contestant

FREE, as issued

6. Neatness will not connt. Do not decorate yonr solutions. Just solve the puzzles in accordance with the rules. In case of ties, as many of the prizes will be served as there are contestants ced pefore any prizes are awarded for a less perfect submission, that is, if two Or more persons tie in submitting the correct solutions to all of the puzzles then the first two or more prizes will be reserved for them, and these two or more prizes will be awarded in the order of the accuracy of the submissions to a first or, if necessary, a second grotip of tie-breaking puzzles, the second group of tie-break-ing puzzles to accompanied by a letter as hereinafter specified. In event a second tie-hreaking group of puzzles is necessary contestants eligible to solve same will be required Lo accompany their solutions to this

ly in case of ties still existing aft bmissi to 8 er submissions the second tie-breaking RToup bf puzeles have been checked will the accompanying letters be conside

and in that event pri he of originality in descript ube A Sere ¢ San In case two or

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8. Upon entering this contest and by the Jubmseidn t

of solutions to the the Shntestaht, . the decision of P, r n | { affecting the conduct of the’ » the | Ace. submissions, the mak a L

invoked to insure individual estab!

h contestant, not missions or com sal ona uly del or il either to It.

the

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9. Fach ly | of solutions together with 3 .D corn low Rackage y Ts ach iis BES Nest. Bb PRS Vance Steer

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rules. Send me all puzzles

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