Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 April 1938 — Page 13

THURSDAY, APRIL 28,

CHEMISTS PLAN TOUR OF PLANTS

-DURING PARLEY:

Five Hundred Are Expected To Attend Sessions at Severin Hotel.

Inspection tours of Indianapolis industrial chemical laboratories and technical discussions are scheduled for the ninth biennial meeting of the Indiana Section, American Chemical Society, at the Severin Hotel tomorrow and Saturday. Five hundred chemistry and chemical engineering students enrolled in Indiana colleges and universities are expected to attend the two- day . sessions.

Students to Tour Plants

Following registration beginning at 7:30 a. m. tomorrow, the students are to be conducted through industrial plants from 9 a. m. until noon. Plants to be visited are the Fairmount Glass Works, Citizens Gas Co., U. S. Rubber Co. Real Silk Hosiery Mills, Indianapolis Water Co., Kingan & Co., Beveridge Paper Co., and Stokely Bros. Co. ° Registrants are to be guests of Eli Lilly & Co. at a dinner at 12:45 p. m. tomorrow. Between 2 p. m. and 3:30 p. m., delegates are to inspect the Lilly laboratories and see a motion picture of “Bromine From Sea Water.” Francis C. Frary is to speak on “Chemistry of Aluminum” at a dinner at 6:30 p. m. at the hotel. Saturday’s program includes tours of the Reilly Tar & Chemical Corp. .and the Indianapolis sewage disposal plant. Dr. N. J. Harrar of Franklin College is to conduct a faculty symposium at 9:45 a. m. Symposium speakers are Dean F. C. Whitmore, American Chemical Society president; Dean William Blanchard of DePauw University; Dr. E. A. Wildeman of Earlham College, and Prof. E. F. Degering of Purdue University. : Whitmore to Talk

Following a noon luncheon at the hotel, Dean Whitmore is to give an address, “Chemistry a Blessing, or What?” Indiana collegiate chapters of Al‘pha Chi Sigma have been invited to attend a dinner in honor cof Dean Whitmore at the Hotel Washington at 6 p. m. Saturday. R. K. Lewis of Indianapolis is dinner chairman. A. N. Stevens is Indiana section ‘chairman.

150 LUMBER DEALERS OPEN SESSIONS HERE

Dr. Haake to Talk Before Convention Today.

More than 150 Indiana lumbe dealers and manufacturers registered today for the convention o’ the Indiana Hardwood Lumbermen’s Association at the Severin Hotel. Following a business session this morning, members were to hear an ~ address this afternoon by Dr. A. P. Haake, secretary of the National Association of Furniture Manufacturers. Officers are to be elected. The convention dinner this evehing is to conclude the one-day program. Present officers are C. H. Colter, Kendallville, president; Charles E. Neel, Union City, vice president, and C. Fred Klee, Indianapolis, sec-retary-treasurer.

FIERMONTES © SEPARATE

NEW YORK, April 28 (U. P.).— Enzo Fiermonte’s lawyer said today that the Italian boxer had been ‘given a “suitable financial settlement” by his wife, Mrs. Madeline Force Astor Dick Fiermonte, before she sent him away so she could get a divorce.

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1938

THE INDIAN NAPOLIS' TIMES

Head Broad Ripple Committees

FARMERS’ ‘LIBERTY

LEAGUE’ HITS AAA

MACOMB, Ill, April 28 (U. P.).—

‘The Corn Belt Liberty League be-

gg SAL 1

that he had received inquiries from farm groups in. 26 states. More than 3000 delegates from Illinois, Ohio, Indiana, Missouri,

Iowa and Minnesota jammed the

Macomb armory last night and re-

affirmed a resolution passed “ the

SENTENCED TO CHURCH

organization's first meeting a week | BELLINGHAM, Wash, April 28

ago, which protested to President | (U. P).—A longshoreman here has

Roosevelt, the provisions of the pom Sentenced so lar church conviction farm program and demanded tS | ype mon was arrested for beating repeal. his wife.

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$50,000 ESTATE LEFT BY SCHORTEMEIER

Division Among 7 Children Provided in Will.

Henry E. Schortemeler, Indianap-. olis Casket Co. president, who died April 21, bequeathed his estate valued at $50,000 to his seven children, according to his will on file in Marion County Probate Court. Mr. Schortemeier, the father of Frederick E. Schortemeier, Marion County Republican chairman, was prominent in local business activities for many years. Under terms of the will, all cash and money in his checking a¢count is to be divided among the children. The home, at 616 S. New Jersey St., is to be held in trust for three daughters, Misses Elizabeth, Anna Marie and Sophia Schortemeier unless they desire to sell it, in which event they are to divide the proceeds of the sale. Maintenance of the home is provided from net income of properties he held. Remaining income is to be divided among the children or their heirs. His three sons, Frederick E. William PF. and Carl H, are named executors of the will ‘and trustees of the estate. Frederick E. Schortemeier also was named attorney for

STORE OPENS 8 P. M. CLOSE WEEK DAYS 5:30 P. M. SATURDAYS 9 P.M

Wallace Scott, left, Broad Ripple High School senior class president, is to head a comgpittee that will choose a class gift for the school. Assisting ‘him are Samuel Ritter, Bradley Reid, Ernest Schenk, Richard Wilkinson, Phyllis Pennington, Virginia Lang, T. J. Wood and MilMiss Mildred Crimans, right, is chairman of ticket sales for the school senior class play, “Spring Fever,” to be presented tomorrow night at the Public School 80 auditorium. Assisting her are Martha Butler, William Bowen, William Bowling, Irene Pollard, Mary Jane

‘gan organizing on a national basis

today -its “revolt” against the Federal crop control program. G. C. James, its secretary, said

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— A

237 W. WASHINGTON ST. |

Directly Oppesite Statehouse

the estate.

Le NI (a iT

can he!

JOE KEEPS his hand in on mending nets. a * His family are fisher folk' from away back. DiMaggio is 6 feet tall — weighs around 185 “pounds. His nerves are h-e-a-l-t-h-y!

pEOPLE Re FR ae sR

et) LIER (CLL

| THEY ARE THE |

CICARETTE Lr Yau (23 [ ON

CHECK UP ON YOUR Time F FOR HEARING E+D-D-I-E C-A:N-T-O-R!.

Mies ys ft and 2 perssation bevnate to-you by

EE LI hav {Sen cigarettes

_elsare the. cigarette for me: They set me sight!” :

LARGEST-SE LLING |

~ “I'll bet Joe doesn’ : think all ciga-

rettes are alike! How about it, Joe, do you find that Camels are

different from other cigarettes?”

0

Good taste. give me the

“Any all-cigarettes-are-alike talk doesn’t jibe with my ex_perience. There's a big difference. Camels have a lot extra. I've smoked Camels steadily for 5 years, and found that Camel is the cigarette that agrees with me, in a lot of ways.

Mildness. Easy on the throat. And Camels don’t feeling of having jumpy nerves. Yes sir, Camel

is the only cigarette for me. Like a lot of other people 1 know, ‘I'd walk a mile for a Camel!’’ 2

WHEN BILL GRAHAM saw Joe DiMaggio pull out his package of Camels, he asked Joe's opinion on smoking. Joe came straight to the point: “There's a difference, a big difference, between Camels and

DURING THE WINTER, Joe's busy at his restau- ~~ BACK

rant. Ask Joe what he does when tired—"1 get a ‘life’ with a Camel — another reason I say Cam<

. Camels are a matchless blend of finer, MORE EXPENSIVE

; Also BENNY GOODMAN'S BAND Hpar the great Goodman Swing Band “ga to town.” Every Tues

SE

IN THE KITCHEN of his pieuresiie - water: front restaurant, Joe says: “I eat pretty much what I like all season long and smoke ‘Camels with my meals and afterward—‘for digestion’ s sake.’ I think - Camels wy just made to order for mealtipe Contentment” ;

-.

ONE SMOKER YELLS ANOTHER

v

do sisi 830pmB.5.T. 0:30 pm ED. $.T),730pmC. 8 T, 2

a 6:30 pm. M. 8.T 5:30 pm Pe Sto

%

. the others.” Like Joe DiMaggio —like millions of other Camel . smokers — you, too, will find in Camels a matchless blend of finet, more expensive tobaccos—Turkish and Domestic,

\

‘CLOSE-UP OF JOE'S GRIP. “Ball

players go for Camels in a big way, he says. When someone mentioned

that he had a sensitive throat, Joe

remarked: “I'm a steady smoker and I find that Camels don’t irrie

tate my throat. That shows Camels

have real mildness all right.”

| pay more to get the best.

“TOBACCO GROWERS FAVOR CAMELS FOR THEIR SMOKING!” — is the majority opinion in a survey

of well-known tobacco planters

“When Camel says ‘costlier tobaccos’ 1 know - it’s right,” says Mr. Edward Estes, capable young planter. “Camel bought all the best parts of my last ot ciop—paid me the most I've ever gotten. The men who grow tobacco know what to smoke—Camels!”

“Last year I had the déndiest crop ever,” says Mr. Roy Jones, another/ experienced planter who prefers: Camels. “I smoke Camels Hesrdzs they pay more dt the auctions for the choice lots’of leaf

I ever got from anybody. It’s not surprising that Camel is the lead. ing cigarette with us planters.”

Mr. Harold Craig knows the -kinds of tobaccos that go into various cigae rettes. “I'm the fellow who gets the check — so I know that Camels use more expensive tobaccos. Camel got the best of my last crop. That holds true with most planters I know too. You bet I smoke Camels.”

Last year, Mr. Wal. ter Devine’s tobacco brought the highest price in his market. “Camel . paid top prices for my best lots;” he SEY says, telling what happened at Ty auction. “Other planters got top prices from the Camel buyers too when their to bacco was extra-choice grade. Being in the tobacco growing business, I'm partial to Camels. Most of the other big growers here - feel the same way.”

Top prices, that’s what J. B. Jackson, another suce

| cessful planter, | gotfrom the Cam-

el buyer last year. “Camel buyers - don’t buy just any has = they That | means finer tobaccos are used for

the

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