Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archiveArchive Home
The Richmond Item from Richmond, Indiana • Page 2
A Publisher Extra® Newspaper

The Richmond Item from Richmond, Indiana • Page 2

Publication:
The Richmond Itemi
Location:
Richmond, Indiana
Issue Date:
Page:
2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

2 THE RICHMOND ITEM, SUNDAY, AfRlL 10, 1938 may call at the home after Saturday House Bolt Shakes New Deal; evening. MRS. LUELLA BROOKS By Kofski CONNERSVILLE, Apr. 9. Victory Spurs G.O.P.

Hopes ACTUAL PHOTOGRAPH' Mrs. Luella Brooks, 35 years old, died Thursday morning at the home of her parents. Mr. and Mrs. Frank WASHINGTON, D.

Apr. 9. the bolters denied, however, that the issue was confidence in the ziunter of near uienwood, after sev The Roosevelt administration eral years' illness. Funeral serv Gypsy Ecru Curtain Dye for 25c aHalaHaHaHaBIHIaHl president. ices will be held Sunday afternoon enters the 1938 political campaigning shaken by a Democratic bolt in the house that party leaders them at 2 o'clock in the Glenwood Chro Their ranks included enough New Deal stalwarts of unquestionable loyalty to the president and his 19c tian church, with Rev.

Russell Doles of Orange off elating. Burial will selves called a mid-term vote of Dependable Drug Stores 901 Main Street 8th and Main Street FRED DIED ERICH, Mgr. be at the Connersville City ceme major policies to have reversed the outcome by a wide margin if they had chose. Yet they joined the tery. Friends may call at the solid and jubilant Republican ml Hunter residence any time.

willTam fry lack of confidence in the president. Recommitment of the Reorganization bill, already battered out of any semblance of its original form by amendments and administration face-saving concessions, saw more than a third of the huge Democratic majority in the house rush off the party reservation. Spokesmen for nority to administer to the White House a seeming rebuke only parallelled in President Roosevelt's time FALMOUTH, Apr. 8. Wil liam Fry, 81 yean old died Thurs by the senate's rejection last sum day night.

He, had apparently suffered a stroke. Mr. Fry was a mer of his program to make over the Supreme court. lifelong resident of this commu nity, and was a member of The outcome raised Republican hopes for 1938 and 1940 to the highest point they have yet the Plum Creek Christian church. Funeral services will be held Sunday afternoon at 2 o'clock, with Rev, Walter Crawley officiating.

Burial 'New Eye Test Finds Answers to Many Ills reached. It projected for President Roosevelt and his political strategy staff new difficulties in the inter and intraparty fighting just ahead. will be at the Fairview cemetery, Friends may call at the home. MRS. SARAH J.

WOODS Yet once the air has cleared in Washington and time has cooled LavorU Jfjw NEW MADISON, Ohio, Apr. 9. tempers raised to fever heat in the Mrs. Sarah J. Woods, 86 years old, reorganization fight, there is an as died Thursday at her home in Pales' pect of the outcome that all fac tions in the country devoted to the American system of representative tine of a heart ailment Funeral services will be held Sunday at 2 p.

m. in the Palestine Universalis aemocracy could find heartening. That system still is working, church in charge of Rev. G. W.

through the device created by the Wood. Burial at Palestine. ALEXANDER W. ANDERSON GREEN'S FORK, Apr. 9.

Alexander W. Anderson, 54 yean old, operator of a blacksmith shop two and a half miles southwest of A truly dizzy thought would be square bubbles, but if the cubes pictured on the left were tiny boxes, each would be large enough to here, died of a heart attack in his shop early Saturday morning-. He was the son of Mr. and Mrs. Silas contain 27,000 crystals in its original, true size.

And to the right we Here's the Answer for CHARMING TEETH 50c Dr. Lyon's OQft Tooth Powder 4-WU have a rock formation? Or the skull of a prehistoric monster? Here M. Anderson and had been a resi By HOWARD W. BLAKESLEE Associated Press Science Editor SYRACUSE, Apr. A new eye test that clears up unexplained headaches, indigestion, insomnia, and even loss of memory was described nere today in an ophthalmological paper.

The test discloses muscular defects in the eyes which escape de- tection in usual examinations. It has been used on several thousand persons by F. W. Marlow, M. and is reported In the archives of ophthalmology of the American Medical association, Dr.

Marlow covers one eye of a patient, and observes whether the other turns slightly, like a searchlight changing its direction. This much of the test is routine and known as occlusion. The new part is to keep one eye covered for a week, instead of for a moment or a few minutes. During the week, the other eye has to do all the seeing. The result is that the single eye frequently makes a change in direction of looking which is not detectable in a short examination.

This change in direction, Dr. Marlow explains, means that the mus is a tip, right and left are used together. Answers on Page 8, Section 2. dent of this community all his life. He was a member of St Andrew's Catholic church.

Funeral services will be held Tuesday morning at 9 o'clock at St. Andrew's church, with Deaths and Funerals constitution to keep the national government in closest intimate touch with the people the house of representatives. Regardless of party rivalries, conflicting political ambitions and domestic differences over ways of procedure, the house vote was a concrete demonstration to the world that democracy is still a vital force in this country. It backed up what President Roosevelt and Secretary Hull have been saying again and again for European ears: that there is no place in -America for dictatorships. What has happened is that congress has refused to grant the president the right to reshuffle the executive organization for greater efficiency, although, within weeks it will give him new relief billions to spend as he likes.

It did so under the shadow of recent events in Europe events that aroused vague public fears here that the onward march of dictatorships abroad might somehow encroach on American democracy. Rev. Mgr. F. A.

Roell officiating. Burial will be at the church ceme' tery. Friends may call at the HOBERT SALYER EATON, Ohio, Apr. 9. Hobert Unser-Waltermann Funeral home, $1.25 $1.00 $1.25 Indovin Ironized S.

S. S. I Tonic Yeast Tonic I 93e 64 99e I Retonga Qftc Wampole's f0 $1.25 New Tonic'' C. Preparation 60c McCoy's OQc Yeastfoam OtV C. L.

O. Tabs. 50c Tablets Peruna 70 PensIafV CiA Salyer, 41 years old, farmer residing 25c Dr. West's Tooth Paste 3 for 50c 40c Pepsodent Tooth Paste 50c Ipana Tooth Paste 50c Pebeco Tooth Paste 39e 50c Calox Tooth Powder 50c Forhan's Tooth Paste Main street, in Richmond. He came to Richmond to undergo examination by a physician, but died suddenly at the brother's residence.

Funeral services will be announced later. He is survived by the widow, Richmond, after Sunday noon. Survivors are the widow, Mrs, six miles west of here in Jackson township, died Saturday night at the home of his brother, Steve, at 1125 Florence Winters Anderson; his mother, Mrs. Matilda Anderson. Ha-gerstown; five sisters, Mrs.

Mary Josephine; two step-sons, Clarence Rust, at home, and Frank Rust of Conway, of Jacksonburg, Mrs. Second; one from the three in the Richmond; four brothers, Garland and Clarence of Cortland, Walles of Hilton, and Steve of Third; one each from the two running in each of the Fourth and Fifth districts, and two nominees from among the five candidates seeking nomination as Tooth Brush Hanger Given The county clerk's office is recog COUNCIL $135. Tonic Wine, Konjola ftAe Nervine $1.25 Tonic Dr. Miles, $1 Bize Fellow's, 14 Scott's -e Hypophosphites 60c Emulsion Parke-Davis Irradol 8 oz 97c Squibb's A. B.

D. G. 25's Squlbb's Cod Liver Oil, 12 ezs. 79c Abbott's Haliver Oil Caps, SO's Parke-Davis Abdol, 25's nizing the opinion of the attorney Richmond, and two sisters, Mrs. Katherine Wilson of Los Angeles, and Hiss Blanche Salyer, at home.

eugeneTh. JOBES GREENVILLE, Ohio, Apr. 9. The body of Eugene H. Jobes, 49 years old, former resident of this city who died suddenly Sunday at Los Angeles, will be brought to You get one of these Sanitary Anti-Soggy Brush Hangers wlh every purchase of general and candidates for council-men-at-large were accepted during the filing period which closed Saturday night, Apr.

2. Ballots being printed for use here in the May primary will contain only the names of candidates facing opposition. Dr. West Water-Proof Tooth Brush cles of that eye have assumed their natural position. It means also that when both eyes were used, those muscles were under strain to keep the eye "pointed" parallel to the direction of seeing in the other eye.

About 97 persons out of every 100 have this eye conflict, Dr. Marlow finds. Yet they seldom know it, even when the muscular strain seriously affects their comfort or health. The paper reports relieving people of headache, sensitivity to light, indigestion, and other stomach "neurasthenic and psychasthenic" troubles. These names include insomnia, pain in the back, exhaustion after slight exertion either physical or mental, irregular heart, vertigo, loss of memory, morbid fears, and feelings of unreality.

this city for interment, according While it will be possible this fall Walter Irwin, of Cambridge City, Mrs. Belle Rockmeyer, of Connersville, Mrs. Laura Dyke, and Mrs. Charles Atkinson; both of Hagers-town, and three brothers, Alonzo, of Richmond, Lorenzo and John Anderson, of Hagerstown. ALEXANDER BOWMAN UNION CITY, Apr.

9. Funeral services for Alexander Bowman, 91 years old, who died Friday evening at his home six miles southwest of here, will be held at the residence Monday afternoon at 2 o'clock. Rev. Elvan Thornburg will officiate, and burial will be at Union City cemetery. The body was returned from the Fraze Funeral home to the Bowman residence Saturday evening.

WILLIAM KNAUBER, SR. William Knauber, died suddenly Thursday evening as he was entering the home of his daughter, Mrs. Raymond Nolan, 531 South Tenth street, with whom he resided. Funeral services will be held Sunday at 2 p. m.

in the residence where friends may call any time. Burial will be in the Lutheran cemetery. Msgr. A. Roell will 47' in the general election to elect WJSK at BEAUTY AIDS councilmen representing both political parties, the opinion of the attorney general holds that it also is permissible to elect a complete set of seven councilmen from one party.

(Continued From Page 1, Section 1) ion from the attorney general, the attorney general writes In his opinion: "The provisions relative to the procedure in the third, fourth, and fifth class is ambiguous and open to question and is subject to an interpretation to obtain the intent of the legislature passing the amendatory act, "By the plain language of the first paragraph of the amendatory act it is beyond question that the legislature intended to retain the plan of electing councilmen by a vote at large, whether the vote is for a declared candidate of a certain councilmanic district or for a councilman-at-large. "The provisions of the act relative to the division of the cities into councilmanic districts and its reten to word received by relatives here. The body is scheduled to arrive Sunday morning, and will be removed to the Turpen-McKnight Funeral home. Funeral arrangements will be completed after the body arrives. MRS.

MEL J. STANT CONNERSVILLE, Ind-f Apr. 9 Funeral ritesr for Barbara Stant, wife of Mel J. Stant, who died Friday morning at her home, 452 West Seventh street, will be conducted at 2 p. m.

Monday at the residence by Rev. George S. Tae- This is provided for by the nom inating of seven candidates from each party. In the 1934 election only five candidates were nominated from each party, with seven councilmen to This forced The muscular eye trouble is removed by use of prismatic eye glasses. The angle of light passing through these glasses changes so that both eyes see parallel without straining the muscles.

In most persons this cockeyedness does not cause serious trouble. But it is so universal that Dr. Marlow gart. Burial will be at Dale ceme $1.00 Angelus Lipstick 60c Angelus Rouge 50c Brownatone Hair Dye 50c Dioxogen Cream 25c Golden Glint Shampoo 55c Houbigant's Face Powder. 49c $5.00 Inecto Hair Dye $3.98 25c Jo-Cur Waveset 19c Lux Toilet Soap .4 for 23c 75c Maybelline Mascara each party voter to vote for two nominees on the opposite party ticket if he Wished to cast his vote for seven councilmen.

tion in the amendatory act is evi dence ot tne intent of th leeisla- traces its cause back to evolution, NEW DEAL the time-Nvhen a remote ancestor laration of candidy for council. of man whose eyes were on oppo-, man by district, even though those site sides of ms head, began to successful of nomination 3 successful of nomination are voted tery. Mrs. Stant was prominent in social and church affairs here, and was one of the first leaders in the local Girl Scout movement. WILLIAM HODSON MODOC, 9.

William Hodson, 81 years old, died Friday evening at his home at Carlos. He had been ill for more than a year. Funeral services will be held Monday afternoon at 2 o'clock at his home, with Rev. Orvilie Canaday officiating. Burial will be at Union Chapel cemetery, near here.

Friends swivel tnem around so as to focus them both on a single object in $1.00 Mello-Glo Face Powder. 53c Hundreds of People Are being promptly relieved from severe pain and suffering by the use of Alf's Compound Winter-green Tablets. Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Lumbago, Neuritis, Acute Headaches, and other pains yield quickly. Price $1 at All Drug Stores, The A. G.

Luken Drug Distributors. Nationally Known DRUGS $1.25 Absorbine 4 25c Anacin Tablets i 17c $1.50 Anusol Suppositories 75c Bell-Ans Tablets 65c Bisodol Remedy 25 Carter's Liver Pills 17c 25c Chocolate Cascarets 16c $1.00 Crazy Water Crystals 50c DeWitt's Kidney Pills 75c Doan's Kidney Pills 30c Edwards' Olive Tablets 35c Freezone Corn Remedy $1.00 Germania Herb Tea 60c Jad Salts, condensed .7 $1.50 Kelpamalt Tablets, 70c Kruschen Salts $1.00 Marmola Tablets 71c 50c Midol Pain Tablets 40c Musterole Ointment 29c $1.00 Nurito for Neuritis 50c PhilKps' Milk of Magnesia 26c $1.50 Pinkham's Compound "Hurry to Hook'a" (Continued From Page 1, Section 1) to override the administration on reorganization, they said the house had made it clear it also might oppose administration tax wishes. Administration leaders in the sen front. 60c Neet Depilatory Pacquin's Hand Cream 39c Phillips' Dental Magnesia 17c Pond's Face Cream Pomoeian Massage Cream 45c 50c 25c 50c Salt Treatment To Fight Polio, Told by Doctor 60c M0 50c Woodbury Face Cream 50c Zip Depilatory 29c Luxor Face Powder 50c Lady Esther Cream 50c Jergen's Hand Lotion Cutex Nail Preparations Princess Pat Rouge-. 47c "Hurry to HooKs" I III Im I THESE on at large." At the conclusion of his opinion the attorney general says: "I am of the opinion that the provisions of Section 9, of the 1933 act, interpreted to provide for minority representation, are by the (1935) amendatory act obviated, and that the voters are entitled to vote upon a slate of candidates of each party equal to the number of councilmen to be elected." In Richmond, according to official records at the office of the Wayne county clerk, there are two Democratic candidates for councilmanic nominations who have no opposition in the primary, and so are automatically nominated to represent their districts.

These two are John L. Wagner, in the Second district, and Ralph Suavely, in the Fifth. There are two Democratic candidates for councilman-at-large, and since only two may be nominated, it is obvious that the two candidates, like Wagner and Snavely, also automatically become nominated for their classification. However, there are two candidates each for nomination on the Democratic ticket in the First, Third, and Fourth districts. Democratic voters will choose a nominee in each of these three councilmanic districts at the primary election.

The Republicans are confronted with contests In every district, and also for councllman-at-large. One nominee must be chosen by Republicans from among the four candidates in the First district; one from SYRACUSE, N. Apr. Evidence that acute poliomyelitis (infantile paralysis) can be treated by injection of a hypodermic salt solution into the blood stream has been found in a series of experiments, first on monkeys and later on humans, by Dr. George M.

Retan of the College of Medicine, Syracuse university. 'These experiments, started in 1935, cover a three-year span. "This hypotonic salt solution (low salt content) has been used successfully in the treatment of acute poliomyelitis, acute encephalitis (sleeping sickness), and syphillis of the central nervous system. Future experience may also show that it may be of advantage for treatment of streptococcus and meinin gococcus meningitis," Dr. Retan said in reviewing the results of his experiments.

ate predicted confidently, however, that the finally-enacted tax measure would carry some form of undistributed profits tax, the administration's pet proposal. As passed by the house, the tax measure Imposed, rates ranging from 16 to 20 per cent on the income of corporations with income of annual income. The Senate committee substituted a flat 18 per cent on corporation income. Under both the house and senate, measures, special treatment is provided to reduce the tax payments of corporations with income of and less. The senate also ripped out the house-approved capital gains tax, under which taxpayers would include varying percentages of long term capital gains in their ordinary income to be taxed at applicable normal and surtax rates.

The House bill provides that the percentages to be included would depend upon the length of time taxpayers had held assets on which gains were realized. The taxpayer would have the option, however, of paying a flat 40 per cent on long-term gains. Under the Senate bill, a flat 15 per cent rate would be imposed on long-term capital gains, but a taxpayer would have the option of including 50 per cent of his gains in his ordinary income and paying reg- ADVANTAGES OF Tool for that gjH orning bhave ELECTRIC COOKERY TSTI See the new 1938 Hot- Burma iw'T fljfN (Jfl 1 1 Shave ROYlW SCnS I 32c 1 WAmjESi Jin point Electric Ranges. Only in a Hotpoint Lewis in Race for City Council the five seeking nomination in the I ular income tax rates THE smart t9l8 huill-tt'tbt-finr tUctric ran ft with Mm. Jirtt liihtmg, mtuchtdnndimnu ut, StUtt-A-5pd Culrtd.

fullUntUuu numtl He Was Right MODELS As Low As 4 Range will you get all these advantages. Ask for a demonstration. Come in today. 1 FAST Hotpoint's Calrod unit is world', fastest. 2 CLEAN No smoke or soot to darken your poti and pans.

3 COOL No heit escapes to raise the room temperature. 4 ECONOMICAL-Select-A. Speed Calrod cooks faster more efficient! 5 BETTER RESU LTS Hotpoint Electric Range is automatic. 6 HEALTHFUL AND SAFE No fumes or lames to injure health. 7 TIME RELEASING Hotpoiot releases tunc gives new hours of freedom.

8 MODERN Streamlined styling, smart modern design. 5 .50 28C R01 Climax Dri-Brite 39C I Waterless Japer Liquid 0 I Cleaner Cleaner Wax Hi 5 87- So- 33c "Sa.22' Dir24 Barbasol 50c Shave Aqua Velva Williams, 50c Mennen's 50c Shave Cream-Gillette Razor Blades, S's Molle 50c Shave Colgate's SELECT-A-SPUO CALROO Hocpoint'i sensational aew cooking anit which provides 3 different cooking ipcedt the electrically correct peed for vtrr cooking need. Talc for Men uwn "TO John Wanamaker once' said, "Just as soon as a good article is manufactured to sell at a fair price, somebody makes a shabby imitation and sells it for just as much." The imitation never gets into our stock. There are no misleading labels and no factory seconds. Every dollar's worth is guaranteed by the and by us.

Palmolive Shave Cream 23c KU cos. A-iqt 15c ELECTRIC RANGES Hair Tonics ri 1 Hand Soap Old Mission Windex ftc Dry Cleaner with Sprayer" 44 Small Down Payment Balance Monthly Danderine 60c Hair Vitalis 50c Hair Tonic. Wildroot 60c Hair Tonic. Lucky Tiger QQ 4 Jn ml Powder 12c; cake .1. 10o 09C X.

Climalsne Cleanser 3 fT. A V. Wterle Cleaner, 5 lb, SS Lare' Poetical Sponges ZL Hoo.ierKnoxall8ap2"ibii7c RICHMOND ELECTRIC COMPANY 1024-1026 Main St. Phones 2826-6826 General Electric Merchandise Distributors Fred J. Lewis Fred J.

Lewis, a candidate for the Republican nomination as city councilman from the Second district, has been a resident of Richmond for 28 years. He has been connected with the Pennsylvania railroad for 26 years, and is now freight cashier. He is a trustee of Harry Ray post, American 50c Hair Tonic Liquid Arvon $1 Hair Tonic Putnam' ava 79cv Sg T).

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

Publisher Extra® Newspapers

  • Exclusive licensed content from premium publishers like the The Richmond Item
  • Archives through last month
  • Continually updated

About The Richmond Item Archive

Pages Available:
173,127
Years Available:
1877-1939