Indianapolis Times, Volume 33, Number 157, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 November 1920 — Page 8
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DISCIPLES HOLD ONE-DAY MEETING District Conference Follows St. Louis Convention. “World Wide Evangelism” -will be the subject of an address by Dr. Royal J. Dye, Pomona, Cal., recently returned from missionary work In Africa, at the night session of the one-day district convention being held today by the Disciples of Christ at the Central Christian Church. An address will also be made by Jesse M. Bader, Kansas City. Kan., on ‘‘The Revival Meeting.” Approximately 300 delegates were present at the conference. Addresses were made by O. E. Kelley, Terre Haute, oa ‘‘The Church and Its Local Program," and H. O. Pritchard, Indianapolis, on •‘The Church and Christian Education.” At a luncheon served in the church din ing room short talks were made by Mrs. O. H. Griest and Garry L. Cook. C. M. Yocum, St. Louis, Mo., was on the afternoon program for an address on “The Church and the United Christian Missionary Society.” Addresses on “The Church and Evangelism” and “The Church and World-Wide Missions” were made by Mr. Bader and Dr. Dye, respectively. The conference is a follow-up of the international convention recently held In St. Louis and will be followed next week by a series of county meetings in each of the five districts. In the eastern district the following program will be given: Survey of work done in county, reports of county otflcers, appointment of new committees and election of officers. Addresses will be given: “The Evangelistic Program of the Local Church,” by G. 1. Hoover, Indianapolis; “The Program of Religious Education in the Local Church,” Miss Florence Carmichael; “United Christian Missionary Society.” W. W. Sniff, Union City; “The Women’s Missionary Society in the Local Church,” Mrs. W. E. Cold, Huntington; “The Educational Program of the Disciples of Christ,” Miss Carmichael; “Our State Program of Work,” Mrs. Cole; “The Investment of a Life,'’ Mr. Sniff.
ATHLETIC CLUB DINNER TONIGHT Novel Stunts Planned for Jollification. , Novel decorations, stunta and entertaining talks are on the program for the Jollification dinner of the Indianapolis Athletic Club. In the Riley room of the Claypool Hotel, this evening. The speakers include Mayor Jewett, Clifford G. Askln, Charles F. Coffin, Dick Miller, George A. Schneider, secretary of the Cleveland Athletic Club, and other out-of-town guests. The toastmaster will be Henry F. Campbell, president of the clnb. Eighty resident and nonresident members were reported. The list of resident members included Charles E. Coffin, Fred Bruhm, George W. Warmotb, Peter Baiz, J. L. Ashbaugh, Elmer-W. Stout, J. D. Eastman, John W. McCreary, F. D. Staley. P. A. Bessire, Robert P. Dawson, Jackson Carter, Dr. C. B. McCulloch, Cecil Crabb, Hiram Raffensperger, E. P. Long, W. J. Murray, Walter Ballenger, Charles E. Hall. Edward C. Relck, S. K. Ruick, Frank B. Shields, Mark W. Pangborn, R F. Davidson, Otto Krauss, Frederick R. Franke, C. E. Parsons, Sterling R. Holt, Robert Glazer, H. W. Krause, Albert A. Ogle, H. C. Knode, W. H Kennedy, C. A. Brown, R. H. Syfers, L. D. Clancy, Meyer Efroymson, John W. Carmack, Clemens Vonnegut, Anton Vonnegut, William G. Hoag, William P. Evans, E. C. Merritt, Harry Orlopp, C. A. fiockensmith, Hiram Brown, William Herschell. Frank C. OllTe, Clarence E. Coffin, E. M. Fife, C. G. Asking, W. H. Tobin, E. P. Meier, O. C. Haug, Harvey R. Wilson, Joseph L. Hampaon, Carl J. Fletcher, Sol Meyer, Ferdinand Meyer, Leslie Meyer. J. B. Shepherd, H. W. Kingsbury, T. C. Brodbeck, George B Wlegand, Pan! G. Darts, Joe Nathan, Charles J. Orblson, B. J. Callahan, Wil 11am E. Barton and W. B. Paul. The nonresident members reported are C. C. McCullough, W. H. Mooney A. VanEnde, Joseph Staley, Hugh TD. Miller, all of Columbus; E. W. Yule of Alexandria and Eugene F. Quigg of Richmond.
300 Register for Librarians* Meeting More than 300 delegates have registered at the Hotel Severin for the Joint conference of the Indiana Library Association and the Indiana Library Truntees' As sociation, being held .today, tomorrow and Friday. The executive committees of each association held meetings this morning to make plans for the ensuing year. Separate business sessions were to be held this afternoon at the Centra! Vublle Library, followed by a Joint ses_Sn in the Cropsey Auditorium, at •which Miss Margaret A. Wells, presideni of the library association, presides. The program includes an address, “Our Common Task,” by Miss Alice S. Tyler, pres ident of the American Library Association; a musical program and reports of representatives at the A. L. A. conference. A Joint session will be held at the Severin tonight, at which Evans Woollen president of the Fletcher Savings and Trust Company, will make an address on “Education and Its Service to Business.” The Orioff Trio will give a musical program and Harry F. Kepner, president of the trustees' association, will preside. Logansport Woman, Teacher 50 Years, Dies Special to The Times. LOGANSPORT, Ind., Nor. 10.—Miss Ellen Cobingore, 88, for more than fifty years a teacher In the Logansport public schools, Is dead at ter home here. Death was due to an apoplectic stroke suffered ten days ago. In memory of her services In the schools here, all classes will be dismissed daring the time of the funeral. Tax Board Meets Lake County Men Representatives of twenty-eight industries in Lake County were to be in conference today with members of the State Board of Tax Commissioners to give information necessary for the correct assessment of their property. The factories represented are largely steel industries of the Calumet district.
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London Has Cemetery For Dogs
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The accompanying photograph is the dog’s cemetery in aristocratic Hyde Park, London, where canine pets of pedigree have found a resting place. The picture was seat to Dr. Elizabeth Conger, 1714 East Tenth street, by Miss Lucy McGee. 218% East Pratt street, who is touring Europe. Miss McGee sent the picture with her contribution to Dr. Conger for the Indianapolis Humane Society
Parasites Flock West for Winter CHICAGO. Nov. 10.—Weary Willlies, panhandlers and moocher* —those who live on what Is given them by the other half of the world —are arrrlving in Chlccgo in large numbers from the East. ‘‘The East is getting too hardboiled,” said “Jim” Hardy, whose last address was New York. ‘‘‘lt’s hard to work the sympathy racket on them, they've been stung so often. We all come West in the winter.”
One Killed, One Hurt a t Hammond Plant Special to The Times. HAMMOND, Ind., Nov 10— Lewis Sickafuse, 58, was killed and Blondell Barry, 40, was seriously injured when they were caught under a mass of sheet .iron that fell Tuesday at the plant of the Standard Oil Company at Whiting, where they were employed. Sickafuss was dead when dragged from the debris. Barry is in a serious eondirl >n aid physicians say his recovery is doubtful. CASCARETS “They Work while you Sleep” You’re losing your “pep”! You are constipated, bilious! You need Caecarets tonight sure for your liver and bowels, then you will wake up wondering what became of your sluggishness, dizziness, sick headache, bad cold or upset, gassy stomach. No griping—no Inconvenience. Children love CascareU, too. 10, 25. 50 cents. —Advertisement. Ltjoa. — tJ,,—ri Home-made Remedy Stops Coughs Quickly The beat cough medicine you ever used. A family supply easily and quickig made, haves about S3. 1 Ik You might be surprised to \\\ know that the best thing you \\\ can use for coughs, is a remedy \\\ which is easily prepared at home \\\ in just a few moments. It’s \ cheap, but for results it beats \\ anything else you ever triedk \ Usually stops the ordinary cough 11 or chest cold in 24 hours. Tastes 11 pleasant—children like it. Pour 2 1 ,* ounces of Pinex in a j pint bottle: then fill it up with plain granulated sugar syrup. Or use clarified molasses, honey, or corn syrup, instead of sugar syrup, if desired. Thus you make a full pint —a family supply—but costing no more than a small bottle of ready-made cough syrup. And as a cough medicine, there is really nothing better to be had at any price. It goes right to the spot and gives quick, lasting relief. It promptly heals the inflamed membranes that line the throat and air passages, stops the annoying throat tickle, loosens the phlegm, and soon your cough stops entirely. Splendid for , bronchitis, croup, hoarse- 1 ness and bronchial asthma. Pinex is a highly concen* JIL trated compound of Norway , pine extract, famous for 1 I healing the membranes. To avoid disappoint- rS, ment ask vour druggist for “2 1 /g ounces of Pinex” with full directions, and don’t accept anything else. Guaranteed to give absolute satisfaction or money aSatfwßßasrefunded. The Pinex Cos., Ft. Wayne, Ind. S ror Coughs -A.
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campaign for funds to build an animal shelter home. Strays that are impounded in Indianapolis have no such haven. If they are healthy and desirable, homes are foun.l for them, otherwise they are “Oslerized” for the good of the community, lucres sed facilities at the new home soon to be started will permit saving a larger number of outcast animals than is now possible at the city pound. Contributions may be sent to 909 Lewecke building.
Colorado Rangers Guard State Prison CANON CITY, Colo., Nov. 10.—A squad of State rangers, the newly organized State police, with machine gnns, arrived here today as a precautionary measure against any outbreak of disorders at the State Penitentiary following the escape late yesterday of Neal Robertson, no torlous burglar. Four other prisoners nad Joined Robertson in a plan for wholesale prison delibery, but the four were captured before leaving the prlsou grounds. A fellow prisoner sms beaten into un consciousness with • shovel by the convicts in their attempt to get away. Posses are searching for Robertson.
IF I \ /R. H. H. HILL, Chemical EnI lvl gineer of the Bureau of Mines, Hkfli&ikA m discussing the future of gasoline says: “It is up to the refiners to • extract more of petroleum’s useful sacLiiicicnc? torsfromthccrude ” This he says can be effected through m efficient management and by improved j itHl jTTlr*"s wmethods of cracking and blending. Mr. Hill thus expresses the opinion which has dominated the policy of the Standard Oil Company (Indiana) for many years and has enabled this Company to raise its efficiency peak year after year. The Standard Oil Company (Indiana) has been a leader in developing processes to increase die yield of gasoline from crude oil. The best known and most successful of its improvements is the the Burton process, originated in the laboratories of thc Standard Oil Company (Indiana). Speaking of thc Burton process, Mr. Hill says that ' “since it was first installed on a commercial scale it has produced approximately 40 million barrels of gasoline from heavy distillates, and , has thus saved approximately 150 million barrels of crude that would have been necessary to produce an equivalent amount of gasoline.” This vast saving has been accomplished without sacrificing quality. Red Crown, the motor gasoline, made and sold by vthe Standard Oil Company (Indiana) is acknowledged by petroleum chemists and other authorities to be the standard fuel for motor cars, t It more than meets Government specifications, which require an initial of not more than 140 degrees F; 20 percent of! at 221 degrees; 50 percent off at 284 degrees; 90 percent off at 374 degrees; and a dry point (complete vaporization) at not more than 437 degrees F. During the semi-annual test conducted in July 1920, the average for Red Crown Gasoline showed an initial of 102 degrees F; 20 percent i off at 210; 50 percent off at 281; 90 percent off at 387; and a dry point of 427 degrees F. This shows an initial 38 degrees better than Government specifications, which means easy starting; 20 percent off at 11 degrees better than Government specifications; 50 percent off at 3 degrees better than Government specifications; and 90 percent off thirteen degrees higher than Government specifications, which is more than made up by the 10 degrees difference in dry point. This proves that, notwithstanding the greatly increased quantity of gasoline which this Company is able to take from the crude, it has in no way sacrificed quality, and is another indication that the large scale operations of this Company have worked to the distinct advantage of every user of gasoline. Standard Oil Company (Indiana) SB2 £ 910 So. Michigan Ave. f Chicago, 111.
INDIANA DAILY TIMES, WEDNESDAY, NO VEMiiEIC 10, 1920.
APPROVES LOVE FOR MARRIED MAN Mother Sorry She Interfered With Daughter’s Laison. Otto Paul Milde, ng 41. arraigned before Federal Judge A. B. Anderson on the charge of violating the Mann white slave act, will be transferred to Philadelphia for trial, following the declaration of Ada May Taylor, 15-year-old daughter of Mrs. Naomi Taylor, that her love for Milde prompted her to travel about him through several States, even though she knew Milde was married. The charges leading to Milde’a arrest a few days ago in La Porte, where he was employed as a musician in a theater, were filed before the United States commissioner in Hammond by Mrs. Taylor, wbo testified that she had followed the couple for several months. Mtr. Taylor was unwilling to continue the prosecution instituted against her daughter's sweetheart, but was advised that the charge could not be dropped, and she then expressed her willingness to let the law take its course, provided she could have the responsibility of her daughter’s future and take her home. Miss Taylor and Milde met when he was.a church organist In a small town lti Virginia, and since that time the couple were together continuously, except on two occasions when Mrs. Taylor had persuaded her daughter to return home, only to find that Miss Taylor had rejoined Milde a short time late.. Mrs. Taylor declared her daughter loved Milde, that she thought Milde was a man of honor gaid loved her daughter, Rnd gave her consent to a marriage, provided a divorce suit filed by Milde'u wife In Pittsburgh is settled.
Two Arrested Here on Fugitive Charges Hersohel Yettman, 16, of 606 West New Y'ork street, was arrested by detectives today on the charge of being a fugitive from Juatlce. The police say Yettman will be taken to Terre Haute to answer the charge of burglary, Hayes Shafer, 43, 1718 College avenue, was arrested on the charge of being a fugitive from Justice and detectives say he will be taken to Anderson, where he Is charged with issuing a fraudulent check.
In Which Kathleen Learns Some Mysteries of the Fur Marke
My KATHLEEN McKEE. Are you an aristocratic vamp, one that is an honest to-goodness exclusive highbrow ? Or are you a cheap Imitation? Perhaps you are Just a common, ordinary, every-day vamp. Well, it doesn't make much difference which kind you are, because if you are of the female variety of the human species you are classified as a vamp regardless of the nonexistence of any such animal lu the literary columns of the Standard Dictionary. Meer man hasn’t anything to do with vamping, because when it comes to tirstclass vamping, mere man is rated way down at the end of the alphabet; for thc conquest of the vamping profession counts him as an uni voidable Incidental. But a genuine vamp counts her power of seduction by the number of soft, fuzzy skins of once-upon-a-time animals which she wraps around herself while she sweeps through the doors of the department store reducing every other member of her sex to mingled envy and admiration. Realizing that I would be doomed to perpetual and likewise eternnl Insignificance If I were compelled to live without the acquisition of a couple of yards of the before mentioned furs, I set out in quest of a special marked up bargain day sale. MI ST DEAL WITH NEW YORK BUYER. Emboldened by smiles from a row of salesladies possessing the bloom ol atber of roses, I demanded the presence of the New York buyer for my important purchase. “What is good in sets this year?” I Inquired, with the dignity of an expert. “Sets are entirely out of fashion,” that individual Informed me commlseratlngly. “but of course we carry a few in stock to accommodate our old-fashioned cuatoraers.” Just then, our attention was trans ferred from less Important matter* to o man who was excitedly telling n sale* lady that he couldn't possibly pay the moderate sum of $495 99 which his wife had had charged to his account for the small Item of one fur coat. With determination he placed the trifle on the >unter, hurling a parting ultl matutu as he dashed for the elevator that he would “Just as soon pay the first Installment on the Marion County courthouse as buy that coat for his wife."
The New Y’ork buyer sighed deeply, muttering something about women’s evils. "I tried to sell a woman a scarf last week, and after having shown her a couple of dozen she told ma she guessed she would go home and tell her husband about it.” What a husband doesn’t get the blame for 1 don’t know,” lie continued belligerently, “he is the best excuse for not buying when you are just looking, but there are others, such as looking for a friend.’’ TRIES TO YOCCS ATTENTION AGAIN. I murmured something appropriately sympathetic, hoping to revolve the cycle of his cranium to my specific incident but was successful in starting more grandfather'*, reminiscences. “Some of these professional shoppers who think the department stores are a free show and who stroll up and down admiring themselves in a SI,OOO fur coat for a couple of hours need a nurse-maid to keep them at home,” he remarked, gazing at a 200-pound lightweight chain plon who had been strutting for the las fifteen minutes before the largest glas.* In the room. "Now, I bet you a peanut that The will stay downtown until she la invited to leave the store, gets the last seat in the street car, and tells her neighbor over the telephone whaba ’de-ee-light-ful time she had looking around.’ ” The pivot of my attention was changed to a rival of the lightweight champion, who was telling the saleswoman that her husband saw a woman on the street the other day with a scarf in which the paw a arranged "Just so,” and she wanted one with the paw made just that way. New York buyer shook bis head in desperation and returned to his elucidation of the “latest thing." “Have you seen the Dolman atyle?” be asked. “Mr. Dolman? No, I don't believe I have met him,” I returned, only to be Informed that It was a style of fur wrap. “Now In the chokers”— “1 don’t Intend to be choked for anybody,” I Interrupted, but he continues Ignoring me, saying the styles which predominate this fall are made from Ruaalnn Sable, Hudson Bay seal, Stone Martin, Arstocratlc Beaver, Bine Fox, Silver Fox. Baun Martin.
“Wraps and coats,” he said, “are good only in squirrel, scotch moire, beavers, chip munk, Hudson seal, dyed musk rats, Alaskan seal, black lynx, white ermine.” “That’s enough,” X said, “what’s In a name anyway, and, by the way, are they being served with or without tails?” “It is merely a matter of choice.” he said throwing out the remains of an animal which must have had tails like the thousand-legged worm has legs. “Now here's one that Is the natural ring tailed tall,’* he said, exhibiting a specimen with plenty or luxurious tails, but no rings—which caused ms much amazement. “Now here Is a nice little coat for $785, Just marked down from $800,” displaying a coat which had the appearance of being slightly motheaten in spots. Hastily I glanced at my wrist watch, and murmuring something abont having forgotten 1 had an appointment I made my exit past the floorwalker.
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\ j *" ,r^ THE HI ARMY BUILDS MEN A soldier earns a good living— Sees new places and faces— Has a chance to go to school or to learn a trade if he chooses— But a soldier doesn't drill or study or work all the time. Soldiers play baseball and football, swim, box, wrestle, and are crack A athletes in the various field sports. EARN, LEARN and TRAVEL
New Police Captain Proficient in Firing Edwin Ball, newly appointed captain of police, today received another honor when he was awarded a special certificate of proficiency from the Small Arms ing School. The certificate was signed by Lieutenant Colonel McNnmma of the United States Cavalry, commandant at Camp Perry during the rifle matches last August. TEe certificate states that Edwin C. Ball of the civilian rifle team has demonstrated his proficiency in Rmall arms firing and is recommended as an instructor in the use of the service rifle, and that he qualified as “expert” in the regular Army course, Aug. 26, with a score of 261.
