Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 November 1940 — Page 5
THE INDIANAPOLIS
THANKSGIVING SERVICES SET BY CHURCHES
Bishops Kirchhoffer, Lowe To Preach to Union Congregations.
Services, some of them co-opera-tive, will be held by Indianapolis churches tomorrow and Thursday in observance of Thanksgiving. All Episcopal churches will com-
TUESDAY, NOV. 19, 1940
$637,928 GIVEN BY RED CROSS IN DISASTER HELP
Extended Aid in 34 States, As Well as Foreign Lands, Is Near.
WASHINGTON, Nov. 19 (U. P.).— The American Red Cross spent $637,928 during the past year at the scene of catastrophes which cost the lives of 693 persons in
Officers there the other night and was voted into membership. Ten minutes later, the members elected him a director of the Association. : And last week, he was elected president of the East Chicago Fraternal Order of Police Lodge.
count them before making their
Hoosier Goings On purchase.
DAWN PATROL
Squth Bend Dog Joins Traffic Detail; Ft. Wayne Woman, 69, Famed Whittler By FRANK WIDNER
THE LATEST wrinkle in traffic safety campaigns comes from South’ Bend where a little brown police dog has declared war on all pedestrians who fail to obey traffic rules. The animal, named “Dawn,” daily makes it a point to shed the light of safety on the more careless citizen. She was trained by her owner, E. R. Belvel, and is a familiar sight! trotting about the downtown district with a huge sign over her back Which reads: “Please ‘wait for the green light.” She’s very conscientious about her campaign, too.
» » SPEEDY, these East Chicago police. Patrolman Donald Meyers attended a meeting of the Asociation of Police Communication
Ready for the Holiday
: oe
Xo) y oS
every type of furniture with her 10-cent knife, but none of her creations are for sale. She has five granddaughters and each of them kept her busy supplying them with doll
Allowance for Your Old Mounting
continental United States, its an-
nual report reveals.
During the year, which saw 1917 persons severely injured and more
than 17,000 buildings destroyed, the Red Cross extended aid suffered in the Natchez,
men, women and children died.
Four foreign disasters during the year cost the Red Cross $55,520. A
contribution of | $5000 to the Vene-
Zuelan Red Cross aided victims of
an oil field fire, $25,000 to Panama An earthquake in northern Ana-
iolia called forth a contribution of
$22,920 to the | Turkish Red Cross lo care for the thousands of home---less. The largest foreign grant—$25,000 — was to aid 10,000 persons made homeless by a fire which swept through 22 blocks of buildings in Colon, Republic of Panama, while $5000 went (to the Peruvian Red Cross to shelter 5000 children left homeless by the Lima earthquake. Aid to China continued during the vear, the report shows, with $33,556 being sent to victims of famine and warfare and the Spanish Red Cross received $2000 for repatriation of Spanish war refugees.
Only Britain Aided Now
War relief activities virtually have been limited to Great Britain since Sept. 1. Since that date the Red Cross has spent $7,261,489 for war relief to that war-torn island. Its total] outlay for war relief in Euro since the beginning of hostilities to | Oct. 31 was $12,339,505. The distribution of war relief funds follows: Belgium, $57,050; China, $303,068; Finland, $1,827,407; | France, $1,745837; Britain, $7,261,489; Netherlands, $25,000; Norway, $45,700; - Poland, $1,000,000; and Switzerland, $5000. Officials pointed
out that no supplies have been sent |;
to France since June.
tie PREVENT
‘Action Helps Colds Developing
Put Vicks Va-tro=nol up each nostril at first sniffle, sneeze, or nasal irritation. Its stimulating action aids Nature's defenses against the cold—and so helps prevent colds from developing. Try
in 34 states. The greatest loss of life was Miss., dance hall fire in which 212 Negro
:Any- butcher will tell you to ke giving Day. who has to stand for all manner There are nearly 10,000 turkeys Independence,, Mo. \
British Cigaret
LONDON, Nov. 19 | British smokers soon will be forced |
pe | 10 use “war-time” cigarets contain-| Pe ling Turkish tobacco because of the! current ban ‘on imports of the! American commodity. “Substantial imports” of matured Turkish tobacco are expected short{ly after current trade negotiations are completed. Britishers, who now are using cigarets made of American tobacco, soon will be smoking an 8 per cent Turkish blend. The ratio of Turkish to Virginia tobacco, it was said, will be increased slowly thereafter so as not to incur public dissatisfaction. A campaign also has been start-
their waste of cfgarets by smoking them shorter. Total British consumption of cigarets last year was nearly 60,000,000,000, compared with only 43,000,000,000 a few years ago. British corset-makers are up in arms over a Board of Trade ruling classifying them as “non-essential” to the Empire's war effort.
VICKS VA-TRO-NOL
Representatives of some 200 cor-
Anglo-Turkishs
ed to induce women to cut down)
ep your turkey on ice until Thanks-
Here's a live one on ice — Frances Ice, TWA hostess,
of bum gags because of her name. in this flock, photographed near
s Go Turkish;
Corset Rules Are Tightened
(U. P.).— set firms, contending that the fem-
linine corset is not a luxury, plan {a protest meeting in the next few |days to consider action on the | {board's new regulation, which would (limit sales in the United Kingdom
to 50 per cent of last year's turn- |
over. Old-timers were particularly incensed over the ruling because of the fact that the corset was regarded as an essential ‘‘war-mate-rial” in the last war. They recalled that Spain at that time refused to sell mercury to Britain unless it received consumer
sands of skilled corset-makers were {brought back from the trenches to fill the bill.
DES IN HIT-RUN CRASH
EAST CHICAGO, Ind, Nov. 19 (U. P).—John D. Archdeacon, 30, died yesterday in a local hospital from injuries suffered when struck by a hit-run motorist.
-
“| discovered Balance
an acrobat
SRST sconces
would envy”
says FRAZIER HUNT
. World-Famous Reporter, War
Correspondent and Radio Personality
Continues Mr. Huw:
Bill Binard is the Propeller Expert of Ameri-
can Airlines, and when he ance”, what he has to say is
Says Bill, “We balance every part of each blade . . . then we balance the three blades with each other . . . Only by this procedure can we avoid wasteful, sluggish operation. So with a winter gasoline. It must be balanced in those qualities that assure fast-starting, pickup and power without waste.” Such balance has been achieved in Tydol Flying A gasoline. Each needed quality is the
result of refining talks about “bal« worth listening to.
of fuel waste . .
Why not prove
and blending for balanced
winter performance.
That’s why this gasoline gives you not only a fast-starting motor, but a motor that quickly warms up to proper operating temperature... so vital to complete combustion and avoidance
« Naturally, you keep going
with steady pick-up, full power and mileage.
this balanced winter gasoline
in your own car?. . , It’s a real convinzer for it tells its own story . . . best!
Copyright 1940, by Tide Water Associated O11 Company
RE os itn a
bine in a union service at Christ
Church, on the Circle at 10:30 a. ni. Thursday. The Rt. Rev. Richard A. Kirchhoffer, Bishop of the Diocese of Indianapolis, will preach. Bishop Titus Lowe, of the Indianapolis Area of the Methodist Church, will speak at a co-operative service of 14 churches in the North District at the Meridian Heights Presbyterian Church at 9 a. m. Thursday. Tomorrow’s Thanksgiving services follow:
Union Services Brightwood District
Winter Ave. Nazarene Church, 7:30 p. m., sermon by the Rev. R. R. O’Haver, pastor of Hillside Christian Church. Churches co-operating: Hillside Christian, Roosevelt Temple Methodist and Winter Avenue Nazarene, Brightwood Methodist Church, 7:45 p. m., sermon by the Rev. Malcolm D. McNeal, pastor of Prentice Presbyterian Church. Churches cos operating: Prentice Presbyterian, Brightwood Methodist and Calvary Baptist. Bellaire District
Forty-Ninth Street Christian Church, 7:30 p. m., sermon by the Rev. Harold W. Ranes, pastor of North Baptist Church. Churches co-operating: Forty-Ninth Street Christian, North Side Pilgrim Holiness, Bellaire Methodist and North Baptist. *
Central District
For Dawn always crosses with
furnishings.
furniture playhouse
You Can Watch Our Experts Remount Your
Central Baptist Church, 7:45]
goods in return, including an ample prethodist,
supply of corsets, and that thou-|.,4 Riverside Pilgrim Holiness,
[Avenue
p. m., sermon by the Rev. Vernon | Couillard, retiring minister of | FR Second Moravian Chuyre Churches co-operating: First Moravian, Second Moravian, Central Baptist, First United Pres-! byterian and Sutherland Presbyterian.
Riverside District
Union Congregational 7:30 p. m, sermon by the Rev. J. Ray Stanton, Unity Methodist Church pastor. Churches co-op-erating: Riverside Methodist, Unity Union Congregational
Church,
South Side District
Immanuel Reformed Church, 7:30 p. m, sermon by the Rev. Roy H. Turley, pastor of the ‘University Heights United Brethren Church. Churches co-operating: Madison ~ Methodist, University Heights Christian and University Heights United Brethren. West Indianapolis District Belmont Avenue United Brethren Church, 7:30 p. m., sermon by the Rev. C. A. Wade Westview Baptist Church pastor. Churches co-oper-ating: Belmont United Brethren, Second - Free Methodist, Blaine Avenue Methodist, West Morris Street Christian, Second Friends and Westview Baptist.
Individual Services
Friedens Evangelical and Reformed Church, 7:45 p. m., sermon by the Rev. Robert C. Kuebler, pasor. St. John’s Evangelical Church, 7:30 p. m., sermon by the Rev. E, A. Piepenbrok, pastor. Gethsemane Lutheran Church, 7:30 p. m., sermon by the Rev. J. S. Albert, pastor.
HARRELL TO SPEAK AT Y. M,C. A FORUM
Samuel R. Harrell, vice president of the Acme-Evans Milling Co., will address the Y. M. C. A. Good Citizenship Forum this evening at the Central “Y.” The last of eight speakers on the weekly forum, Mr. Harrell will speak on “Current National Issues” at | 7:30 o'clock. The meeting is open to the public. “I'm sure that each of the persons attending these forums now has a deeper sense of obligation to the part he must play as an interest citizen and that each of them now knows very much more about the operations and aims of our government,” Fermor S. Cannon, president of the Y, M. C. A, said in commenting on the series.
FARM FALL IS FATAL
LEBANON, Ind. Nov. 19 (U. PJ). —George N. Coble, 69. of Lebanon, was killed yesterday when he fell from a scaffold at the farm of Milo J. Wiley near here. He was working on the roof of the Wiley home.
TTT
FUNERAL HOMI
GIVE YOUR LAZY LIVER THIS GENTLE “NUDGE”
Follow Noted Ohio Doctor’s Advice To Feel “Tip-Top” In Morning! If liver bile doesn’t flow {freely every day into your intestines—constipation with its headaches and that “half-alive” feeling often result. So step up that liver bile and see how much better you should feel! Just try Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets used so successfully for years by Dr. F. M. Edwards for his patients with constipation and sluggish liver-bile. Olive Tablets, being purely vegetable, are wonderful! They not only stimulate bile flow to help digest fatty foods but also help elimination. Get a box TODAY. 156, 305, 60%. AR urnatinpot a
» » s
Mr. and Mrs. Alex Majewski, South Bend; decided that the time had come to buy a new car. . So they went to a dealer, hoisted a huge sack on a table and made known their desire. The salesnian opened up the sack and found 8885 dimes. Mr. and Mrs. Majewski said it took them five years to save the coins and more than four hours to
the lights. And she never jaywalks!
2 ® =
In Ft. Wayne there is a 69-year-.old woman who knows what she is doing when it comes to -Whittling. She is Mrs. Alf D. Hunter, wife of a retired railroader. She has hacked away on pieces of wood since she was 18. Mrs. Hunter has created nearly
NASA AA Rayon
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ADORABLE WINTER
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Use the Fair's Convenient 10-PAY PLAN
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NYLON HOSE
Selected irreg-
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Young Men’s
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MEN'S WOOL GLOVES Men's fine wool gloves excellent for driving; leather trimmed. Snap wrist in brown and oxford gray. All sizes.
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DINNER SETS
Lustrous cotton and rayon mixed dinner sets—52x 68-inch cloth, 6 napkins. Assorted colors.
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LUNCH CLOTHS
100% beautiful PURE LINEN cloths with bright borders, natural centers. Sizes 36x36,
