Indianapolis News, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 March 1919 — Page 7

t Cfi ’

THE ODUXAPOLIS SEWS, MTrEDAT, MARCH 8. 1919.

BUY AND SELL BONDS

L ISSUES

MAN WDH REVOLVER STOPS me WOMAN

VETERANS

BY WILLIAM HERSCBLEIil*.

FIRE TEAM KNOCKED DOWN BV SERE CAR

TRUST CO. Market Street

Ml 88 D ELLEN SCREAMS AND HIGHWAYMAN RUNS.

THREE MACHINES STOLEN

the Sharp March Winds

i

the effect of sharp March winds, that

the hands, with jtwt a little

ilth and beauty of your skin with

OLD GIBRALTAR WITCH HAZEL JELLY

It Soothes and Sol tens th e Sk in

It is a scientific mixture of witch-hazel, glycerine and other supplementary compounds of recognized merit a* antiseptics and emofients.

Maawfeetsr#* Sf

KIEFER-STEW ART CO.

Indianapolis, ind.

ARE YOU SURE

4% - Upon Savings

that when you need money you can get it? Open a bank account—you can. That in case of fire yop have no loss. Insure and protect yourself. We can help.

State Savings & Trust Company opaa SatarUar SvealaaA • ta * P. M.

m

t A vouns woman waa 'feaiC 'an toy a. { man with a revolver, three aatocnoMleaf i were stolen and several other minor f ttoafta were committed last night, ac1 cording to report* at police headquari te»* today. A city automobile, whicb ! waa stolen Thursday night, was found ‘ near BmrSchsvflie Mias Iva Delien, m Rccbeater avenue. ; waa stopped by a man armed with a ; revolver, in King avenue, between i Tenth and Eleventh street*. The man ; ordered her to throw up her hand a she j •aid. and than tnaisted that she accompany him. Her ev-rearns attracted the _ attention of neighbors and the high--'

wayman fled.

Three Loee Machines.

! The automobiles tsfcen Just night be- • longed to W. J. Goop^r, Z\Z\ W aahing- > ton bdatevard. C!. P. Doney. WA HumeMaasur building, and <*«orge Secrist, ‘3*91 North Alabama .Cooper's ■ ear was taken from >n front of the i HmrUm Club. Doner's from in front of I the Hume-Mansui* building and Secrtst's ! from a garage in the rear of his home. : James Smith. *» West Sixteenth ; street, reported to the police that ! {'hicken thieves oroke Into a <*>op at the i rear of his home and stole a rooster ; and eight hens. The same thieve* are i believed toy the police to have stolen twelve hens from a bam belonging to I ~ West

M/era. a groeeryman at 314

Tw—<y«dhut street. ■

W. T

Robert Anderson. MU South Senate ,-w ■ I.... ■■■ j he saw prowling about hi* home

avenue, fired several shots at a burglar

>wling about hi* home last

night. He told motor policemen Burke

pro’

He t

and Reidv that he had seen the man •bout the premise* earlier In the week. City Automobile Found. An automobile belonging to the city, | which was stolen Thursday night froth | in front of the statehouse. where it had been parked by Dwight 8. Ritter, city purchasing agent, was found Friday afternoon near Kmrtchsville by motor policeman Pressley. A pouter, notifying the driver to appear in the city

/ANE was a Tank in olive drab, ^ The other a Yank in blue; One had fought in the years a gone. The other had just got through. Both were men as we measure men— Sturdy and brave and tree— But each had fought his own good fight And each had different view.

GRAY HORSES AT NO. 8 STRUCK |] AFTER MAKING A RUN.

liltiiliiiMiiitf

BARN DAMAGED BY FIRE

/"toN"E was young as we measure years, ^ The other was old and gray.

And one was sure that Argonne wood Was War’s most crimson fray. The other knew that Gettysburg Made Argonne seem as play— And who would urge that Flanders’ fields Ran red as Shiloh’s clay?

Jay and Harry, the team of gray ; horses attacked to hose company No, 8, ; 74* Massachusetts avenue, were injured last night when they were knocked down : by an East Michigan street car after they had responded to an alarm at . Noble and Michigan streets, where fire damaged a double barn in the rear of I the homes of Margaret Kaatmerley and Martin Zlnkan, 332 and 334 North Noble street.

Everything for SPRING

One Horse Injured.

The street car, which waa in the charge of Charles Hooper, motormaa, 1434 South Randolph street, and Guy Trent, 22$ East Tenth street., conductor, struck the hoee wagon and. horses just.

For Yourself and for Your Home

B

OTH had fought where the shrapnel spat,

s -

IP*;.

But Youth told Age that Vimy Ridge Made jest of Malvern Hill. And Age told Youth no Pershing born Could miteh old Fighting Phil, Who made the ride to Winchester And gave the Rebs their fill!

DOTH told tales of wearying nights Cursed with a sleepless fag;

Both had fought in the valley deep Or climbed the topmost crag. And still they fight!—-but not as then!Today they jest and brag And thank God for a comradeship Beneath the self-same flag!

*ft*r H. A. Gardner, drivt r. had stopped I ; the team in the car tracks So firemen i

; coo|i| lay » line of hose One of the j i horses probably was permanently th- ; ! .Hired. , . . *

Hooper told Sergeatnt Cronin and •quad, who investigated th# accident, that he was malting up time and did not see the fire apparatus on th# tracks, t No arrest was made by the police. Slxty-Ssven Runs In February. The team, which was named after J. | Harry Johnson, former chief of the fire i department, is one of the most highly I prixed In the department. Firemen say that during the month of February the 1 team made sixty-seven runs and was ‘

not out of service a day.

An automobile belonging to ziwitan

waa damaged in the fife and the roof I and upper part of the barn was de-

stroyed. The loss was said t* '

TWO FULL PAGES 3 IN SUNDAY PAPER

Goods Ca

smm imui

$500.

be about

NO ADVANCE IN PRICE.

court at Rushville. Ind.. for violating the traffic laws, was on the windshield and a large white dog waa found In the bottom of the machine. The police

are trying to find the thief.

THE IN ARREffl; BOYCOTT AFTER MURDER INVESTIGATION i IN AND DOCS GIVE UP

HE WAS THERE WHEN PARIS CELEBRATED IN HONOR OF THE ARRIVAL OF PRESIDENT WOODROW WILSON

Lieutenant Thomas A. Hendricks, Formerly a Member of The News Staff, Got Into Paris by Hook or Cropk, Thereby Proving That Resourcefulness Comes in Handy in the Army as Well as in Newspaper Work—And He “Covered” Paris in 48 Hours.

TWO CLINTON RESIDENTS AL- PICKEL COX THEN TAKES LEGEO TO HAVE CONFESSED. PRIZE TO RUSHVILLE.

Lieutenant Thomas A. Hendricks, formerly a reporter on the staff of The Indianapolis News, ha* written an in-

(11:80 a. m. to 8:00 p. m.)

75 Cents

TAKEN TO PARKE COUNTY i YESSIR. CAPTURES IT ALIVE

igvletl iscribi

md finnday 4l«»#r meal of Alt# week mean for tetnerrew

B| earuee for the IbeimfiMfe

Kaglleto.

Read the Menu

Ksaenee of Tomato*

Oxtail Soup a 1'Ang!*!**_

Queen Olives

Watertown Goose Stuffed ry Dressing. Apple Sauce wned New « *-♦-«--

Sweet Pickles

Ream

rowned New Potatdes

Early June Peas In Cream

■•arts of Remains Lettuce Thousand Island Dressing i Ice Cream Fancy Cakes

beapolitait'

Cocoa

New Hotel English Cafe

Direct Entrance on Meridian

Iftpuetal to .The Indianapolis N««*l CLINTON. Ind.. March i.-Oarl Griffin, age twenty; Otto Auman, age twent-ty-one, and William PowalJ, the latter being known as Little Ky, were, arrested here last night and are held In connec^on with the murder of Clifford Taylor. 4 local taxicab driver, whose body was found in Little Raccoon creek in Parke county yesterday. Powell is a native of Kentucky, came lo Linton to live ssvel years ago, and came to Ulntoii. three weeks ago. Griffin and Aunuys have lived fibre all their lived. The men have been taken to the Parke county jail and turned over to the Parke county authorities, since the crime was committed in that county. Tha authorities »*v that Griffin and Auman have coufegtofd and that they

[Special to The Indian*poll# News!

RUSHVILLE, Ind., March A—Fun was being poked at local wolf hunters today because a big gray timber wolf, which they failed to find Thursday afternoon, waa captuced by Pickle Cox, a thlrteen-yeai-oid boy living southwest of Rushville, brought to this city, and sold to a farmer, who said he would

make a pet our of the animal.

After two dozen men, with their hound dogs, had given up the hunt, the boy persisted and his dog "treed'’ the var-

in Pari*,” he said, and off we went together. Our friendship was well founded, although our acquaintanceship wa* not 1 yet twelve hour* old. Had he not danced with Florence Hanokei of my home I town, at a fraternity party in Michigan? Had he not thrilled to the euphonious ukulele of Anne Louneberry, of Riverj aide, wtih whom 1 had sailed at Lake Maxinkuckee?. Had we not troth seen the Follies? Had he not spent one night in the same compartment of a French

get overseas until a nnoro time train—my shoulder in his lap and his before the armistice was signed. He ; elbow^ in rhy ribs?

flee, describing his experiences in Paris on the day that President Wilson arrived. Lieutenant Hendricks received a commission at the first officers’ train-

skies of Italy, where he had been in the employment of the United States i government, dropping bomb# upon the heads of too prominent Austrians.

ing camp at Ft. Benjamin Harrison, but did not get overseas until a short time

brought here from Carr and the hunt

vat;

rne woir wai

Iowa by Owen L.

was staged.

mint In a free. The wolf was

Auman, questioned

•hooting.■

ly, lie alleged to have said that

separate t he and

Powell were out of the automobile and

that Grllfin did the ahooting.

A .IB caliber revolver, which shoots cartridges similar to those with which Taylor was killed, was found In Griffin s

BLAND BACK IN INDIANA.

possession, th# police say. They added that Griffin and Auman toldM ■ I

When Teacher asked becomes of an the corn we raise I said

. „— them thai Taylor was killed on Mecca Hill, that I they then drove hie automobile tq the ‘ Amilesburg bridge near Montezuma, and that the body was thrown into the

creek, where It wa* found

Following the killing, the car was driven south of Clinton, twelve miles from the scene of the tragedy, and abandoned. Robbery is supposed to have been the motive for the crime, Taylor having had about 1600 on his person, it is

reported. ,

KiFT<

KILLING ON A TRAIN.

PUPILS WILL DANCE IN

James West Stay* W. O. Kittinger, Fellow Passenger, Near Richmond. [Special to The Indianapolis Newe] RICHMOND, Ind., March 8.—James West, age forty-five, whose home is at Alabama City, Ala., shot and killed W. O. Kittlnger. Stge twenty-five, of Bridgeport, Conn., last night while both men were passengers on a Chesapeake

& Ohio railroad train, sixteen miles \

Second District Congressman Visits Two Houra in Vincennes. [Special to Th# Indianapolis Nswa] VINCENNES. Ind., March S.—Oscar E. Bland, of Linton, representing the Second Indiana district In the coni gress at Washington, arrived in Vincennes late Friday afternoon and spent two hours greeting friends at a local hotel. He expects to spend most of his time in and around Linton until a call for a special session, tvhieli he thinks probably will come •by June 1, Mr. Bland, discussing public affairs,

said:

"The last session of congress finished

up more work than was expected. It is true the senate failed to finish what we passed, but there were probably some good reasons for that situation. The failure of the appropriation bills will cause- considerable inconvenience and ofttlmes serious

hardships. % *T certainly favor some agreement

among the nations as to disarmament or reduction of armament, as well as an association designed to force the

keeping of peace. I » of America going into

The flight Celebration.

"French spirit. * English cheer and American 'pep' resulted in a eeletors-| tion that evening fit for a president, in their own naive way the F'armlans had prepared .well for I he event All after-

Dlwn( Wl 111¥ , noon little groups, such as gather

fa now with the »«th prisoner of war " ‘We will dash around first and catch ? America * barked ./ rm L dn i m * n escort company, with headquarters at us a room.’ said John, who had befen in de a the Camp Montolr, in France. The letter f Paris before. But our dash was em- ’ ’ Ku^halr^l “f e,th * r . ,. R follows: phatlCally interrupted by an austere I o r ‘ „ pl * y,n * , a v L ol,n y morning, December 13. 191*. M. P. .Into a lengthy line of Yanks he ! ^ FOi™P««»P*ng harfound me In a desperate condition, motioned us with the directions; ’Check “Thai walin th^ y #»» CCOr<Won *. . President Wilson, the biggest man of in and get your orders stamped for a , fr,Tr«, f x.-*”** 000 At "i® 1 * the biggest age. wa* to arrive In Pari* twenty-four stopover’ | waT neSId?# a <' co >' d,on ! the morrow and I would be in mud- . "Into the line we stepped; away went J a !,on iK- no Montolr with my 4M Fritxies, W> the M. P. The wav was momentarily, r ^ CIU1 . rad 'o.^art a parade; no

kilometers away. At such a dark out- j clear. A duck look a dozen years back my eyes would i steps, and we mingled

crowd as warily as ever did Arsene

Federal Tax Absorbed by Distributors of Turkish Cigarettes. Smokers of Turkish cigarettes have reason for added gratitude over the signing of the armistice and the consequent release of shipping space, because that. It is explained, accounts for the fact that there waa no increase in the prices of Turkish cigarette# this week, as there was In practically all brands of domestic cigarettes. H. G. Hoyt, division manager for P. T-rorlllard Company, which control* the sale of most brands of Turkish cigarette#. explained that there was no Increase In prices on these because, with the easing up of the whipping situation. Import expenses were reduced. His company, therefore, he Maid, ha* absorbed the federal tax and has also not found It necessary to advance its prices to Jobbers, as was done by the manufacturers of domestic brands, -

MAETERLINCK MARRIES.

In part t "Prldaj

on

Jr.

have become all blurry, not merely from Bittany mist, but from tears. Probably I would have gone so far as to bite my lip to keep it from trembling. But now I merely growled like a doughboy who had not received all the ‘corn willie’ coming to him. "Although in service months before so many of the two-striped fellows who htfully strutted by me. fate and irgton officials had forced me to remain in America, until September 2, 1918. before setting sail for France. When finally in France the same fate and general headquarters A. E. F had forced my division Into noncombatant existence by a single order. And then to reach the bights of irreconclliation. General Foeh (who has shown his su-

periority over fate by batting LOW | de g r ees. against her for the,last four seasons)* <“Tt wa

i we sieppea; away wont ; ---- ---- e way waa momentarily *, a * * under the rail, several {^vetoi/ iT mingled into the Paris • .. .? u ' i

rightfu Washlr

as warily as ever

Lupin.

They Got a Room.

”We filially got a room on the top floor of the Strasbourg hotel, high over the Rue de Valois. That is. it was a roonf, if a bed and four walls very close together constitute a room. Nevertheless It had its strategic value, being scarcely five minutes’ walk from the University Union. Every college man in Paris may be found there, from the boiler maker who took the fine arts and footlmll at Siwash to the

course

Rhode* scholar with his many Oxford

? am not in favor

■^■^^ito any agreement

With foreign powers which surrenders

and

our sovereignty

roe doctrine.

or destroys the Mon-

I think the constitution under consideration, however, can be amended so as to protect all our rights and still accomplish the same commendable purpose Intended."

PIONEER PHYSICIAN DEAD.

t-

U8E OF HOTELS AND CLUBS AT EVANSVILLE NOT FAVORED.

south of Richmond. West waa on his way to Mancie and KitUrtger wa* to have left the train at Boston, five miles south of Richmond, where he expected to be employed in a railroad construc-

tion camp.

According to information obtain owl th# Richmond police. West had b drinking and boarded the train at Cincinnati. He entered the smoking car and sat down beside Kittlnger. The men were not acquainted Shortly after the train crossed the Indiana state

line. West. It 1*

that his;money was gone and accused | Kittlnger of picking his pocket. Kittlnger, it is said, not only denied the charge, but arose and invited West | to search him. West drew his revolver ; and fired three or four times at Klt- ! Unger, three shots taking effect. Kit-

.# .w- . ! ttnger lived but a few minutes. West. IHP 1 81 ho ° ho8r<1 have an * in a written confessipn. claimed to have

that they will take action to ! been kttacked.

high school dances back

Elias H. Trueblood, Also Was Author

and Religiou* Authority. (Special to The Indlanapofi* News)

SALEM. Ind., March 8.—Ellas Hicks

had been f Trueblood. age eighty-eight, formerly

a practicing physician here, and one of the most widely known men In the county, is dead at the home of Mrs. Oliver M. Trueblood. of this city

b#o in# imuana aiat# t enllnxirivsfi- a nrotmeted ill said, told Kittlnger ■ HUs early education was ac

MAKES ’EM T00| SLEEPY

[ftp*cia: to rh* IndtanapoUe New*] EVANSVILLE, Ind.. March 8.~Mem-

to the ;

high school gymnasium. Teachers had criticised the dancea because they had been held in hotels and clubs until late

hours In the morning.

It was pointed out that as a result of keeping late hours at the dances some of the pupils had fallen asleep the next

His Shoes Size 16y 2

[Special to The IndianapoH* Newt} NEWCASTLE. Ind,. March 8,-Olaff Alexander, a Virginia soldier.

ness. His early

quired in a little log sohoolhouse four miles from town, and It was here thst his "Stdries of. the Dogwood school, which were' published several years ago were centered. In 1356 he was graduated from the Cincinnati School of Medicine. _ For more than half a century Mr. Trueblood was an elder in the Highland Friends’ church.’ He was regarded an authority on the religious history of the Quakers, and contributed many valuable articles to the publications of that society. He also was the author of a number of his-

torical sketches.

In addition to the daughter with whom he made his home, Mr. Trueblood is survived by two other daughters Miss Sarah Trueblood, of Phil

sureiv ters Mias Sarah Trueblood. or rniia-

—. . . . mK§ . . surely, - - v j a an< ! Mrs M illiam Berkley. day at their desks. Replying to the crltl-] must be some man if his shoes are a this citv and two sons, Ernest H.

_ „ „ ' commanded by Lieutenant I^ealie Rin- _

high school gymnasium. The particular f wrd, of this city, and Rlnard was so im-

dance that aroused the criticism of th# ; pressed with the size of Alexander that ACIfC OIIP^TION^ DF BAKFR high school teacher* was given last he brought a pair of his shoes horn* AbKO UUCO HUIlO ATT DHKCn

Tuesday night at the Crescent Clgb j with him The shoes are size 16%, he-

ro reed the kaiser to call the whole thing off just a* I wa* dreaming of wound stripes and Croix de Guerre*, and praying that all the big ones the Germans would send over would he duds. And now headquarters Camp Montolr. Base Section No. 1, 8. O. S. wa* going to •fox’ me out of seeing President Wilson's triumphal entry into Paris, for the hlghups had turned stone eyes on my request ‘to be alwent to visit Pari* for a period of twenty-four hours.’ And to make the situation hopeless, the colonel’s signature on the disapproval referred me to general order 104, G. H.

Q. 8. O. S. A.

that).

The Order Condensed.

"Turning to the orders of the A. E. F.. which are more binding than the laws of Rome and more voluminous than the ancient tome* enclosing those laws? 1 found this particular order to be ten pages long, exclusive of references and cross references. In short it was: “ ‘Doughboys, beware ye of Paris. If found there without permission ye will be quartered and strung up. When ye mvist of necessity pa** through Paris In proceeding up front to be killed or to Nice to heal your battle torn nerves, ve shall tarry not in that evil city longer than from sundown to sundown. Hear ye’ Hear ye! This is writ for ail save those .virtuous beings of the K. of €.. Jewish Welfare Board. T. M. C. A.. *te., who are above the Folies Bergere. Ciros and other places of wickedness.’ "So I was up against it—out of luck— as we snildiy put ft. Have I not said I wa* desperate? Blame me not. then, for extreme 1 measures and judge not the following action by the usual Christian standard but from the results It brought. Take the Machiavellian viewpoint of Tt ain’t what you do to get it. It’s the fact you got away wdth it.’ And re/nember. for my sake the words of no j less a king than Henry IV. ‘Paris is well

worth, a mass.’ ,

"MV railroad map showed me that to get to almost any plfice from an5* other place in France, you must go through Paris My map also assured me that to go from Camp Montolr (near FtNazaire') to Kouen, for instance, you must imuss through F^ris, On tn6 strength of that information and a heavenlv ‘hunch I presented the following masterpiece of iniquity to headquarters and It was duly approved as “ ‘Request permission to be absent

It was 9:30 the next morning and Wil-

son was due at 30:30, but an hour was not a moment too long to bring myself into position. Sometime* the crowd was no thick it took twenty minutes and much maneuvering to progress a single square. I left the Union a member of an Amertoan unit. In, scarcely half a block I was converted into a nondistinct unit of a Parisian crowd, and coqld go only the way of that crowd. It had a single definite destlna-

danee; no dance to

■Tough-house,’ and no

rough-house" to make a celebration. 8ong, parade, dance and ‘rough-house’ came all at once, forming one brilliant Anglo-Franco-Anzae-American partv— all for the President of the United

States.

"Arm in arm. pollu. Tommy, doughboy, granddaughter and grandmother came down the street. Arm in arm other Tommies, pollus, doughboys, grandmothers and granddaughters came up tne street. Head-on they met, one group Inclosing the other. When inclosed It

cost a kiss around to get out. Usually

Belgian Playwright’s Second Wife Is Young Woman of Twenty-Six. NICE, March $ (by the Assoointefi Press).—Maurice Maeterlinck, Belgian playwright, several days ago married Renee Dahon. a young woman of Nice. Maeterlinck has lived In Nice for the last ten year* The marriage took place at Chateau N>uf-de-Conte*. a small village, twelve mi.es from Nice, with the *trletest privacy. Only four villagers were present as witnesses. It crown* a romance which began eight year* ago. Maeferw linck is fifty-eight years old and fit* bride twenty-six Maeterlinck was dtvetced from hi* former wife, Madame Georgette l^Blanc. five week* ago.

KILLS HIMSELF IN HOTEL.

you could ‘get by’ by kissing one.

if you were w ise, just as soon as being surrounded you’d make a hurried recon-

naissance of the crew circling around.

is? rc* Lr , ,i5; kl r;.,te

Tc h i.% h L m JF k c t, o?7:i y .

your

somebody

ish welfare worker would beat time and you would catch son

° ne those^hard*nosed ^perswitf who fnTtht ' b ~ ad ' d ' ir - ‘ Tax ie* had a terrible time. When; they Hesitated they were inst&ntlv lout Neither the stouteit motor nor the mc^t ! skilful robber-driver could make head- i

forthe crowd in front pushed and tb« crowd in back pulled, and

John C. Carothers Was Organizer of White River Button Company. (Special to Th* Indianapolis New*] * SHOALS, Ind., March 1.—John C. Car others, of Shoals, president and organizer of White River Pearl Button Company, former county auditor and a prominent Republican polltican, committed suicide last night by shooting himself in an Evansville hotel. No caose is known.

CUTICIM

HEALS

ECZEMA

Almost all over husband’s body. Treated but jot worse. In rseh form and skin was sore and red. Burned and itched and he scratched very much. Sleep waa broken and hit clothes aggravated till trouble became very severe. At last used Cuticura Soap mod Ointment and one cake Soap and one box Ointment healed him entirely. From signed statement of Mrs. R. H. Finney, ReelsviUe, Ind., July

18, 1918.

Use Cuticura Soap and Ointment for all toilet purposes. be net fait to test the ft

~jg| a jig powtter, 36 centi cnwrr»h«r*.

skin perfuming powder,

'

THE BEST

m

!i

Wy hiffl M

p

crowd laughed, 1 laughed, when the j rock!” so vigorously that

sea compared to crossing

ffto ,h?bSSEJS? aS ’apu" ln« tC! i ’ de 11 * - W-l. crowd, and of course I, continued down At the Opera. “rnrrf!,™aU?„ P1 ^ p 7 r 7 *!„«. in,»

there scattered as if deploying as I f lac ® <3® !a Concorde came the twelve of

skirmishers. - us who had taken dinner

together at

the University Union and liad progressed with remarkable congeniality considering that our martial adventures had ranged all the way from Redan through the 8. O. S. to Sicily. As we hK the Place de !’ Opera we swung into

mention majors, already gained these v ,, att 4 l6 . fr ° nt i for _ the « rand a bo real site* most advantageous for V ar,s » and m thirty seconds

"In this scattering I became an individual again and somewhat master of my own destination. I picked the broad steps of the Madeleine as my objective and started out. I might have chosen a tall tree or telephone post and thereby have sustained evidence in Darwin's theories, had not other lieutenants and captains, not to

parade reviewing.

"The steps below the facade, the great wall-like stone balustrades flanking these steps, the colonnades facing the Boulevard Malesherbes, and In fact the whole Madeleine was plastered with

people. Men clung to heroic statues of holy personages; small boys sat

ioly personages; small boys eat atop sainted heads 01 stone. The sandbags and the scaffolding which only thirty days before protected the most treasured portions of the Madeleine from boche bomb and Bertha served splen-

didly trow as bleachers.

The Parade.

attack on we were

scattered to^the four streets meeting there. Three of u* came out of the attack together. Lieutenant Walters, from Notre Dame; June Lounsberry, of Chi-

cago. and myself. Waft ere “had been

luyaeii, wai

and June had seen the ‘Follies Ber-

gere. —

“After stopping a minute to look at the place where one of the shells hit the Madeleine. I took up an observation post commanding the length of the Rue Roy ale Here I perched, tiptoes on a pile of sandbars, one arm around a muchly bedecked and tri-color ribboned baby, and the other embracing the classic curves of a Corinthian column. The street was broad and clear; the blue-coated pollus kept it so. Cheerin

■B _ .. Ing from Camp Montolr to get baggage at j f r0 m downstreet preceded the mounted Rouen France, that can not be obtained gendarmes, who led the way with lances bv writing.’ *’ • and shining casques, wherefrom was

[’ttfiT : .« ~ - —- - - “When we left St Nazaire all com- ; much flowing stuff. Even in ye olden

I partments were filled and persons sat in ! days, men-at-arms of Philip the Bold, i the narrow aisles. When we left Nantee or Samuel the Parrott, conld have

”“ r y«! , ® us . and brought back to j ^ ^ Zai 2? palace ,n fhe Land of Oz. We had to hurry along and gave the ‘grand staircase, a masterpiece in decoration and grouping ’ *n American double-time, double-over a 1 the top a big desk affair like a Judge’s bench In a courtroom served as a bresto work for two men, who took our ticket and politely told us to keep on going in P a a box’ iP W * Went and found ou ™e‘ve*

r.oSM'u,'? sffisv-

■ -v ymmmtxi

SOLD BY ALL DEALERS

How

v Y>ur Nei Drink

P0STUM

"fou know-of some, but theij drink it? It’s because jeoffeo disagrees with them. Next bme a wakeful night or nervousness, hearl-fhiter or sfomach dishirbance fellows oofiee-drinki^ Think of Fbstum

j

For Mental and Physical Poise

one nrast receive max imam nourishment from the food itn. mt*. To do this, the digerttve iraet must be ir prime condition.

ENOS ■FRUIT salt

(BeMwxhm CewptMd)

a gentle aperient, la ■*>, tonic regulator, keeps the digestion healthy - - mouth sweet, and prevents the ill effects so often resulting from ever indulgence. Sf at All Dragfimt, Prepared only toy A C. *NO. IM.. koodoo, «. K. Cnglasd Afent* tot the Conttr: n»t of Amsflea: HAilOl.D F RtTfPtK ft CO., lac. New York. TT. ft. A.—Toronto, Canada

WANT ADS TWO CENT A WORD

m

of control at the high school, on which tors several pupils, intended to take ovar the senior fund of 1160. In order to have their fun before Lent and bethelr mona.v could be confiscated. • planned an Impromptu dinnerdance and on which they spent 1125 of thtf money. The next morning after the Crescent Club dance many of the pupil# were absent from school and many of those who did go to school fell asleep, the teachers reported.

inches tall and weighs 2TR pounds.

.fore th< senior*

Exonerated; Asks Damages. (Special to The Indianapolis News’! STJLUVAN. Ind.. March S-Murrey

Coleman, a young merchant of Carlisle.

Downtrodden Aristocracy. (Baltimore American}

ififtie is w a ’.kSrvir <*t% tmn*ar» “ "What! Ha* tw Joliwd tlw^iroevikir'

who was taken to Ft. Wayne Februar> 23, charged with theft of $+*> worth of liberty bonds frone Charles Glass, of that city, was exonerated and has returned home. Before doing so. however, ' he filed suit against Glass for $10,600, ; alleging false imprisonment, j Coleman says Glass, after causing his arrest on suspicion, found the missing bonds

] in his own papers

Representative Johnson Says Evidence Seems Contrary to Statement. WASHINGTON. March Representative Johnson, of South Dakota, who served with the American expeditionary forces in France, has written a to Secretary Baker requesting answers to eight specific questions re

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ITn D

SAFE DEPOSIT DEPARTMENT

Fletcher American National Bank

PENNSYLVANIA AND MAR RUT STRRKT*. THE MOST CONVENIENT LOCATION.

iating to the recall of Brigadier-General Edward A. Kreger from France to act as Judge-atLocate-geneml a^d^the discommtssion as* a’ temporan’ bri^dier^ Representative Johnson said the public waa interested to know whether General Ansell was returned to his prei war rank of a lieutenant-colonel In the t regular army "because of his 'stand I upon the administration of military jus- ! tice," referring to Secretary Baker * i statement that the court-martial controversy' had nothing to do with the

' situation. Mr. Johnson said; “The evidence seems flatly to contra

an hour later persons stood In the aisle* ; scarcely formed such a grand array. , , Ji — „ w _ sr°“ no ,on " r r “ ra “ i'&z'osn&zry "All night it seemed very short, we: t,}©* hat-tippir.g from softly gliding «ang. And besides a glorious bunch of fortunates of the ‘compartment re*; pierce-Arrows, and conclude with city 1 kewpies a 1 good-looking Greek rod * v ' i * - -» _** -s-*«n|w i-* #***—«—— I vchr% -ek. i . %

liki

Jl_ t - 1 T vQ 1 ♦ jtkjri ♦ b» *>. wiui*, tw ww 1

Of

ss^sHt _ „,g Greet

serve‘ half slept No one grumbled ex- ! councilmen riding in fuming Fords, No i desses who adorned the dome kept us mAm* ff| * * *‘ Y - C|| H| ™ 1 frc V m reeling lonesome. The fellow who !

cent a noisy ‘shaVy’ who mumbled about j long ceremony like that for the French. French frogs and French railways and j Every one in the parade rode in car

painted them must have "spent "most

shouted how much pleasure he waa go-! riages. There was scarcely a dozen of j ««* aerial acrobat.

A Pv*om ■NTdtow York t/n i f hAi?A

insr to have riding from New York to | these, then the affair waa over. St ix»uis on the extra-fare train when I remember pointing out a smiling KSti&t world W i I still a contrast in b’aok of night rfnd 1 Clemenceati!" as that hero passed, and whit# of rtreel lights when we slowed of seeing many generals and admirals down at the Austertltx station, the first | and rtc ogniring onlv one-Perehing.

: Then came a terrible moment. Some-

_ , ; thing had slipped. It must have been

Those Energetic M. P. s. j the bottom sandbag, for down came

^ ! Amex. Parisian baby and all. We land-

stop In Paris

‘Tf you give the conductor a clandestine wink he will slip you out the offside of the train where no M. P.’s lie in wait—and If you slip him a Si-franc note, not onlv will he guarantee you safe exit, but will also call after you. 'Bonne chance, mon lieut’nanf The added attention is well worth the price. But if you are caught in the big city without

ed without casualties, leaving the Rue Rovale and the parade far out of sight. "The sand bag pedestal was repaire

in plenty of time for me t

tyre of the day—the Alpine chasseurs Rnappv, peppy. Jaunty, swinging, short stepping almost to a prance, came these Blue Devils, the foremost fours flourishing their trumpets in double-eights. The following fours columned to perfection

an official permission may Hercules and ' bayoneted to * brilliancy, advanced and

diet you. unless this turns out to be some tnfluentialJTriend at geneml head- showed the produest sight in the worid

one of those rare instances where what quarters, A. E. F., be on your side when appears as compelling evidence turns t the day of reckoning comes. Rumor

j - - ■ - - upon those who

appears out upon incidence.

explanation to he a rare co-} hath

were . v. —- sto ^•» marshal of Parts 2.060 victims, ranging

it that a A. W. O.

raid

Ia netted

the provost

from bald-headed brigadiers to eret-

‘ ith

No Hardships. While blithe buck privates.

[Louisville Courier-Journai | “The train stopped again, and out "Why ion t you eat more cheese and less j everybody tm*ried at the Gare d’Orsay. terrapin? Don't you know vou Jiby* to ^ar ^ I found alongside John C. Is. \™? n* mfch terrapin to yet the «me ! Parker, of Michigan university and Chi•mount of catorirer ctogo. an avifftor with the enviable in-

“I <lon t mind." rewionded tbs bon vivam I signia of the 1st army.

“J Uks satins tarrmptn." i " Two can got along better than one

the poilu on parade! The crowd had cheers for Wilson, smiles for Poincare, vivats for Clemenceau and cheers, smiles, vivats and—tears for its pollus. "Long after the parade I stood on the Madeleine steps and watched the crowd below, and four airplanes, two French and two American, above. 1 looked into the sky I do not know how long, wishing I was Lieutenant Shuck, who was driving one of the two American planes way up there. Ueutenant Shuck, vou must know. Is from Indianapolis, and more recently from the blue

The Ballet Appears.

"At last the ballet! Down stage came many marvelously whirling dam*ela. then many more. I can’t tell you what sort of costumes they wore or if they wore any. The stage was a toyiand filled with pretty dancing dolls. Th«* dancing was splendld-the most wonderful I have ever seen, and my heart would have been filled with gladness if the orchestra had played ‘Smiles’ Just

to see the fea- i once. The curtain went down.

"Out we went, paraded, ran, circled, laughed, sang, and until‘after 2 o’clock danced the French street dance, a funny cross between our old barn dance and the hoppy affair you see in the Palace bar in William Hart movie* Tommies, poilus and doughboys who didn’t dance’ danced anyway, or added joy to the occasion by dragging over all Paris even the largest Krupp trophies Pretty girls rode in these death carts —the prettier the girl the longer the joy ride and the larger the gun crew. One civic authority is said to have feared they might drag the cannon into the Madeleine or Notre Dame, and pleaded with Clemenceau. ‘The, people shouldn’t move the cannon. They might lose

them-’

" Let ’em lose ‘era.’ said the Tiger, j there’s lots more where they came from!’ ’• J

Smack

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