Indianapolis Times, Volume 34, Number 84, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 August 1921 — Page 7
G. 0. P. REGULAR COMMITTEEMEN TO MEET SUNDAY Vice Chairman Announces Plan to Coordinate Organizations. Calling of a mooting of the regular Republican city committee for 2 o’clock Sunday afternoon at Moose Hall, 136 North Delaware street. Is part of the process of co-onttnating the efforts of the regular and the SbaDk-for-Mayor Clab organisations. Republican City Vice Chairman Ernest L. Kingston announced today. Shaak-for-llayor Club precinct committeemen are meeting at club headquarters with regular ward chairmen at the rr.te of about three wards an evening daring the feat of this week. This Is to got the ward chairman acquainted with the cluh committeemen. The final sealing cf bonds between the two organisations will be accomplished at the meeting Sunday, while a gathering of regular committeemen will be opened to the club committeemen of the primary organisation of E. J. Robison. Shank-for-Mayor Club women, and ward chairmen met at the club rooms in the Indiana Trust building yesterday afternoon with Mrs. Irma O. By rum., new women's city chairman of the club. Thu meeting had bearing upon the selection of regain? Republican women ward chairmen by the women’s advisory committee, headed by Dr. Amelia R Keller and lira. M. B. Spellman, regular city women's chairman, since it la understood that the Phank women ward chairmen were naked If they desire to be taken over into :ti regular organisation. Mrs. Spellman and Dr. Keller are selecting the regular women ward chairmen now. The appointments ars expected to be made i nblic early next week. - Taylor Gronlnger, one of the leaders in the Skank-fcr-Mayor Club, stated today that the dub’s membership has passed 83,000. He said that more than 1,000 new has signed cards pledging their gappert to Samuel Lewis Shank for fcayor since Saturday morning. He exhibited a nomber of the cards which were knarhei ‘•Democrat,’’ “A Shank Democrat” and ‘Pol. Dem.” which he claimed Is farther evidence that Mr. Shank will receive considerable Democratic support.
GAIN IN ARRESTS AND CONVICTIONS Leiber’s Report Shows Record of Law Enforcement. One hundred and thirty-two persons were arrested during July for alleged violations cf State' fish and game laws, and 124 cf this cumber paid fines and costs aggregating J 5.88370, Richard Lieber, director of conservation In Indiana. announced today. This Is an increase of five a-rests, seventeen convictions and $1,252.31 in receipts from fines and costs over July 1921. A summary of offenses committed follows : Hunting and fishing without license.. 41 Possession of illegal sine seines l’j Possession of ferrets without permit. 15 Beiring fish 12 I’o* —sion of fish trap 11) Taking undersired hi *9 b Taking far-bearing animals out of season b Possession of spear 4 Dynamiting fish 4 Killing squirrels ©tit of season 4 Illegal trot lines 3 Hunting without permit of land owner 2 Hunting on Sundny 1 Lodge Officers so; New Year Installed Officers for the ensuing year sere Instated at a meeting of the Shamba Temple. Dramatic Order of Kaigl.rg of Kherassan. an auxiliary of the Knights of Pythias, btid at the K. of I*. building last night. The officers are: J. Burdette Little, royal vizier; Allen Moore, grand emir; A. J. Coulter, mahedl: James Smock, mokanus; Robert S. Turner, Jock; J. XI. McCollum, secretary; J. K. Pearcy. treasurer; D. E. Karr, satrapp. nnd Harry South, master of ceremonies. The temple also made plans for- an elaborate ceremonial to be held Sept. S. when about two hundred candidates wtil be Initiated. Dr. U. B Lipes Is chairman of the committee which is engaged la reorganizing the temple.
Cusack Services to Be Held Saturday Funeral services for Mrs. Joha T Cusack, 64. who died at her home 23 North Hawthorne Lane yesterday, wili be held at the Church of Our Lady of Lourdes at 9 o'clock Saturday morning Burial will be in Holy Cross cemetery. Mr*. Cusack, who was the wife of John T. Cusack, was born near Louisville, Ky.. f ct had lived in IndianapoU* for the last thirty-two years. She Is survived by her husband, a sister, Mrs. Lewis Stahl, and two -nephews. Walter J. Cusack and J. T. lieusch, all of Indianapolis. Alleged Keeper of Resort Takes Appeal Herman Stokes, 427 East Ohio street, arrested by Sergeant Xfarren and squad, with his wife, Florence, and Ernest King, of Amo, on a charge of keeping a resort, was fined *lO and costa and sentenced to thirty days on the Indiana State Farm by Judge Walter Pritchard in <pty court late yesterday. He appealed the case and a SSO appeal bond was signed by Ed. Thomas, a negro political worker. Statutory charges against Mrs. Stckes and associating charges against King were continued Indefinite! y. The trio was arrested at the East Ohio street address on the night of Aug. 8. King, the police allege, told them that he had never known tho Stokes until the night when he was arrested.
Woman*s Blouse Cut So Low ‘Pillars of Hercules? Showed ZION CITT, lIL. Aug. 18—Mrs. Lix*ie Naden was arreted today for violating the city drees ordinance. “Her blouse seas ent so low in the back that she showed divisions of the pillars of Hercules," Police Chief Becker said. “Her shoulders were visible.” CLEVELAND, Aug. 18.—An Ice cooler makes a poor bank, says Samuel Alber, butcher. Burglars secured his (195. DENVER, Aug. 18—When police separated a tangle of flying shreds of clothing mingled with blonde and brunette hair and loud squawks they found three striking waitresses had attacked a “lady scab.” All were arrested. NEW TORK, Acg. 18—A conscience stricken woman who In 1916 traveled from New York to Chicago with a child she said was less than 6 has sent $9.55 to the Erie Railroad. The child was 7.
Hie WORLD'S STRANGEST ANIMALS
Left— Tlie great kangaroo. Australia's notional animal, stands at the head of the Us* of marsupials, which Is the n.'kme for animals haring pouches in which the mother carries and feeds tii 9 young. In times long past.
MELBOURNE, Victoria, Austrelia. —Tbe native animals of Australia I are a type in themselves. They are of the pouched or marsupial I order once scattered over the world, but cow found only here, with one small exception. i In America, fossils of animals with pouches. In which the young were carried and fed by the mother, are found ' occasionally In rocks of bygone ages. But tbe 'posenm of our Southern States, tamed in plantation song, is curiously enough their only surviving relative out- ; side Australia. So when the Australian I sings "Dixie”—as he does often —it is the I link of kinship in the past calling him, i through the 'possum, from about the ‘eighth layer down. Why shouldn't two ; people with these ancifut blood ties get ! along well together, even if we have to I sink a well through the earth now to get .touch of the relationship? The biggest minis i in Australia, spread jail over the continent, is the kangaroo, of which there are four separate species which stand, when erect, well over five feet In height. The twenty varieties of wallaby are practically smaller kangaroo, while other still smaller spades are com- ; moniy known as kangaroo rats and mice. HID KANGAROO OFTEN BLCE ONE.
Tie so-called red kangaroo of the Inland plain* Is Just as oftca s blue kangaroo as a rod one. This was the. kind forui“rly bunted by dog* -gener : ally a coarse type o' greyhound. When j brought to bay the great kangaroo Is a plucky lighter, either backing up against a tree or taking to water deep enough to enable him to stand while compclVnc the dog to swim. Coming to grips, he j catches the dog in his forelegs used as arms and hand*—then with a forward ; lunge of that powerful hind leg. the j central toe of which is armed with a long, j dagger-like nail, he can cut a dog to rib j bons and disembowel him at ore blow. | He has been taught to box in a perfunctory way, tut prefers to deliver the i goods in the French style of T.e Ssvatte. ! or kicking, the kangaroo using the hindleg with great force. When be s'ands erect, the long. heavy tall Is nse.l to bal ; flnee him like the third leg of a tripod, and as he moves in a succession of leaps it becomes a counterpoise for the body. Taking a fence quite easily in bis stride, a single kangaroo leap has beeu measured to cover sixty feet. Moving slowly, he looks slow and awkward, but a fly ng kangaroo doe at the top of her pace Is as graceful as she 1* fastThe young When born are at one* placed In the pouch, where they live until they become too large for the nursery The Boongarry tree kangaroo of Queenland, a fine climber, lives and feeds most of hi* time in the treetopa, leaping as easily at the most agdle monkey from bough to bough. In the Island State of Tasmania alone nearly a hundred were killed last year. THE COMICAL KOALA OS NATIVE BEAR. A curious little createra ia the koala, or native bear of Australia, which la about 32 Inches long, gray with whitish underparts, feet and ears, with fluffy hair and prominent ears and cheek poaches for temporary storage of food. The koala is lazy, sleeping In a tree during the day and feeding at night on roots and leaves. Each aprtog these anlmrJs have a single addition to the family. When the little one is able to leave the mother's poach It frequently gets on her back and holds on there while she climbs about the trees. The yonng one has a cry much like that of a small child. On windy nights especially the shrill cry of toe little bear can often be heard, answered bj the Oecp voice of the mother. The fur of the koala Is dense and their skin thick, so that they are difficult to shoot. They generally rest on the higher branches of the tall trees. Another queer animal with a queer name is the wombat, khlch ha* also
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When the first of these creatures was sent to England the skin was carefully examined, as the scientists believ,* 1 it to be a fake. It the platypus, or duck mole, with the fur of a sewl. the bill of a liuolt, the tail or a beers' wad fevt that are a* much fins or flappers at flaws, title strange mixture of beset, bird and Ash spends its life in or near the water, having much the no--*' habits as the muskrat, using Its bill as a duck doee, to grub Into wet mud. It lays eggs 118* a turtle bat suckle* its young. The platypus is eighteen to twenty inches teng. its nest is a long tunnel in a bank, entered from the water as well as above it, and It rarely comas out In broad daylight;
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marsupial* of all kind* were scattered over the world, but now no living member is known outside Australia, except the American opossum. All native animal* of Australia are marauptalw. with Hie exception of the dingo and a few hats and rnt. The kangaroo 1* the L ;ri** t Australian animal. t>f which four separate specie* stand, when erect, tn er five feet In height. They have a remarkable development of the hind logs by which they can leap enormous distant*. A kangaroo lias been known to leap over a horse and rider, and the hare kongaroo. which U only twenty Inches In length, has been seen to leap oter a mail's head. Their hind lea* are their method* of defense. The big kangaroos live on the grassy plains or prairies. Kiglit—This flufTy little chap looking like the teddy bear of the children Is the koala* or native bear of .Australia- It Is lees than three feet lon* and lift woolly lwdr la gray gud white, Hlceylng In trees during the day. It feeds at night on leaves and roots. These comical nfaturcs have a single addition to the family each spring and the youngster lives la Its mother’s pouch or hangs to the fur of her back until ft can take care of lteelf. The blackfallow* of Australia aro as fond of the flesh of the koala as our Southern negroes arc of oponeum, and the koala’s hide tans into excellent leather.
been called the native bear of Australia. It Is like the koala in some respects, but not muon like a bear. The wombat Is small, h\vy, and short-limbed, with front teeth like those of a rat. Like most marsupials, It sleeps in the day, coming out lit night to foed. It lives under the ground, as It Is a burrowing as well as a gnawing animal, Its feet being furnished with long and powerful claw*. Its food consists of grass, other herbage and roots. Australia's bandicoots are like bushrats, from nine to sixteen inches long, plus a tapering tail. They inhabit wooded places, living In nests of grass which look like heaps of rubbish, and feeding at night on leaves, fruit, mice. Insects, etc. There are few animals that cannot be tamed, but the Tasmanian devil Is one of them. This ugly beast of prey, now almost exterminated. isDdack and shag gy, with a head somewhat like a bear and with jaws and teeth strong enough to crush big stones. In size It Is about the same a* the wolverine. It lives In self dug burrows like a badger, whence it prowl* at night. When these animals were numerous they killed much poultry and live stock. The zebra wolf, which Is also almost exterminated, makes Its home in the rocky ravines of the island of Tttiirania. It is long bodied, short-legged, dog-headed, marked on the hinder part with sixteen blackish stripes.
Th tlfw nnnk of Acmtralfo# who** vfnom U ton time* moro deadly than that of the Indian cobra. It net* it a name from tho fact that It I* marked! in yellow. It Ih four to five feet lon* and D thick to proportion to Ita length. Auatmlla ha* a nide variety of anaken, four of which are venomous, Including: tlie and the ilewth adder, which ! the moxt deadly* but U rarely found.
THE PLATYPCS ONE OE MANY STRANGE FORMS. Among the many strange forms of wild life in Australia, the platypus is surely the paradox, because if baa the fur of a seal, feet that are as much fins, or flapera. as claws—though it can burrow pretty cleverly with them —and the olli of a duck. Hunting and feeding in the water, it sleeps out of it In a burrow, the opening of which is beneath the water line, though always extending upward so that the nest at the end, well above water mark, is always snug and dry. There this strange mixture of beast, and bird and fish lays a curious round egg with a white parchment-UVa flange attached, from which its young is hatched and euckled In much the same way as other animals. The platypus feeds only by night, puddilng the soft batiks and weed beds for marine life In exactly the same way as a duck fossicks in the mud of a pond. In the early morning or evening it floats placidly on the surface, to disappear with a sudden splash on the least alarm, for though it has no external ears it has a very fine sense of hearing. The under fur, like that of a seal, is of a beautiful lustrous brown. Recently investigators have discovered in the platypus some hitherto unknown glands, and on a native reservation near Melbourne the strange creatures are bc-
INDIANA DAILY TIMES, THURSDAY, AUGUST 18,1921.
tng artificially brad for further research In a matter of much Interest to the medical profession. Tu platypus and the spiny ant-eater of Australia are the two surviving members of the monotremee, which is a scientific naaae of the lowest order of tho mammals, or anlinu's that suckle their young. I,lke the platypus, tho spiny ant eater lays eggs which are Latched In a pouch, where tb# young are raised on tho mother’s rallk. The body of the spiny aut-eater is small, 15 to IS inches, is long and broad anil t carried liy short, strong legs .terminating In big claws. The head is small and tho nose is prolong"-! Into a slender snout covered with a moist black membrane like a dog's nose. The month 1* without teeth, but the palate Is studded with small curved spines and the tongue la slender. Instead of a molellko fur. the spiny ant-eater has the upper surface of the bend and body covered with a mixture of short hairs and stiff spines. When dinger threatens the anlmul curls up like a hedgehog, it lives In burrows and feeds on ants, catching them In the same way s ordinary ant-eaters. W hen tho ants are collected on Its sticky tongue they arc quickly drawn Into the mouth and swallowed. SEH ZEAUNDS SNAKES ll.IV; AUSTRALIAN MANY. While New Zealand has no snake of nr.y kind, and only a few lizards — among them the famous tnatara, tne ildoet unchanged creature upon the face of the earth today -Australia has more snake* than she nally needs, nnd tales them very seriously Tb'> results of snake bite, however, Justify the widespread fear of it. Os the four species of reuomoua snakes of Australia, tha tiger is the most dangerous. Measure for measure. Its venom has been proved ten ti ms mo-e deadly than the Indian cobra, will'll kills thousands of (he native population evry yknr. Tlio tiger snake, like other Australian varieties, discharge* far less venom than the cobra, through much shorter poison fangs, and
How Old Age Comes To Those Who Invite It “There’s a Reason”
TKERE are plain rules, well understood, about keepings piece ofmachinery in repair and*running smoothly. Is the bddy as important as an automobile engine or a furnace? Is it a9 reasonable to talk about the best way 9 of sustaining the body as it 13 to talk of proper care for the engine or the furnace? Well, then — The body is strengthened, warmed, sustained - kept young —in a very practical and scientific way. Some Simple Facts Food 13 heat and power and renewal for the body. After all, there's nothing mysterious or magical about what food doe3 in serving human need. Nothing mysterious, but much that is interesting—and important. Some foods are particularly good for the body. GRAPE-NUTS is such a food. Grape-Nuts is made from whole wheat and malted barley fiour product of the two grains which are richest in food elements for human need. Under the outer, or bran coating of the grain,
in an open-grooved tooth instead of tubed fang, so that when a snake bites through clothing of any kind, and especially woollens, a great deal of it Is thus absorbed. The tiger snake, which rarely reaches a length of five feet, though It is very thick In proportion to its length, is! marked in successive bands of brown and pale yellow, the brown snake (six feet.) is bronze-colored, the black and the copperhead, though distinct species, much : alike in color, black on the back, ver- ; million on the lower sides. A census of snake bites extending over nutny years in the State of New South Wales, shows that 45 per cent of people bitten by tiger snnke3 died, while with the brown snake the mortality was reduced to 16 per cent, and the copperhead 17 per cent. Although the stockman of inland Australia will assure you solemnly that tlie black snake, admittedly the largest and ugliest, of them all, Is the most deadly, tho fact Is that in elghty-9even cases of snakebite from this species not a single death occurred. More deadly even than the tiger Is the smaller death adder, with a mortality of 30 per cent, but it Is fortunately so rare that very few people have been bitlen. The big lizard of Australia—called the iguana In town end a "goanna" in tlie bush—is fetter known perhaps than anything else in their world of reptiles, because It is found all over the continent. It is a true lizard, a flesh eater, Dying and hunting a good deal on the ground, but climbing the high trees for shelter. It climbs as fast as it runs, keeping the tree trunk between Itself and a possible enemy. Tho big lizards hare some reputation as snake-killers, and the sheepmen regard them as friends, because they kill so many young rabbits and other pests, but I they destroy as well the young of many | rarities of cockatoo which nest in the I hollow Hint's of high eucalyptus. ’’GOANNA” LAYS ABOUT li EGGS.
The “goanna” is oviparous, laying about a dozen eggs -as large as a duck's egg—in a hole burrowed out at the foot of an old tree stump, where they are hatched by the heat of the sun. The Australian stockman has a Ann belief In ‘ goanna-oli,*' obtained from tw - o masses of yellow butterlike fat, as a better cure for rheumatism or lumbago than anything which the patent medicine man can sell him, on the strength of Henry Walkers affirmation that It ’’cured me when all the doctors done me no good.” Australia is not a big game country in anything Hke the same sense as North America or Africa, though of smaller game, such a* water fowl—and especially duck and quail—it ha,. a fine supply, as told in last week's article. The Australian ha* tried to supply his needs as a hunter by introducing game such as red deer and fallow deer from Great Britain, sambur and hog deer from India. In the north there are immense herds of Asiatic buffalo hunted for profit rather than sport. New Zealand has tried to estabUsb some American deer, the moose among them, but in Australia they get most of their hunting and shooting from rabbits, hares and foxes, which, given a first footing, have, with the habits of the rave, inherited the earth. I have *een 4.000 rabbits poisoned on one farm on one night. Last year wbeu fox fur was In demand trappers on the western sheep runs, using a motor car to lay the baits and pick up the game, frequently accounted for fifty foxes on one ten-mile run. The bush boy of Australia and the prairie boy of America are twin brothers in their love for a gun and for game, and the Australian depends inulnly on Ju*t four things -rabbits and hsres. duck and quail. These are in abundance. In fish acclimatization the Australians have made some un-cesses anil several serious mistakes. The mountain stream* of southeast Australia and Tasmania are well stocked with introduced European brown trout and American rainbow, which have done wond-ruflly well, the big fish ranging up to ten and twelve pounds about the river months, though In the head waters six pounds is considered n good trout. In the hLr game fishes of the sea their nearest approach to our Florida Bey or Santa ('stall.a sport, is with the tnullaway or king fish, ranging up to fifty or seventy pounds, but the Australian angler Is more interested In his sen snapper, a fine red bream running up to thirty pounds In weight and one of tho flievit table fish in existence, the gea whiting, a very delicate fish, colored much like a fresh water trout, and tb • pike, a surface ranging sea fish caught by trolling from a boat. Australia's inland streams, such a* the Murray and Us feeder*, were originally stocked with some great fish, the Murray cod. a giant has* running from twenty to one hundred pounds In weight, the golden perch, another beautiful fish, and
nature has placed phosphates and lime which go to the making of bone, and the red blood corpuscles. This may sound like physiology, but it works like health. Hunger Not Cheated All the richness of the kernel, together with essential mineral elements, are retained in the making of Grape-Nuts. Oiten, in the manufacture cf foods, some of the most vital of nature’s provisions are thrown away. The long baking process (Grape-Nuts is the result of 20 hours continuous baking) partially pre-digests the food substances, develops the Starches into dextrin and maltose —giving to Grape-Nuts its own natural sweetness — and produces a food which, when served with milk or cream, ha3 been found by chemists to be almoct perfectly balanced in qualities of nutrition. The Enemies Within Now, old age begins in the larger intestine. This is what the scientists have found who know the human body as the mechanical expert knows hi3 automobile engine. No need to go intothe particulars —it’s enough to say that certain effects produced by food which is slow in digest-
West by Southwest New Zealand, Australia and South Sea Islands. By W. D. BOYCE. Organizer and leader of the Old Mexico research and African big game expedition#, author of ‘‘lllustrated South America,” ‘‘United States Colonies and Dependencies” and ‘‘The first Americans—Our Indian* of Yesterday and Today.”
several others of the perch type, bnt not content with this bounty the Australian must, for sentiment sake, introduce English perch, tench and carp --poor stuff, “neither fish, fiesfh nor good red herring.” With these many of his southern streams are overstocked and spoiled for angling. In tidal streams black bream ghe more sport than any other fish. The State of West Australia occupies nearly one-third of the continent of Australia and is as large as all of the United Prate* east of the Mississippi River, or one third of our country. Yet her population of 340,000 is only about that of Idaho and Vermont and about 40 per cent live In the city of Perth and the small town* surrounding it. Mr. Boyce, In his article in next week, will tell of this interesting State—‘‘the California of Australia.”
SHOPLIFTER TO SERVE 6 MONTHS ’ TERM IN PRISON Detectives Recover SSOO Worth of Stolen Goods in House.
Handsomely dressed, wearing a white silk sport dress, a black sweater with long fringe at tha bottom, a long seal scarf over her shoulders, fancy white hose and oxfords, Mrs. Rose Brillhart, 28, 1516 North Rural street, appeared in city court yesterday afternoon before Judge Walter Pritchard and pleaded guilty to a charge of petit larceny. Her appearance aided her not In the least for Vfter the court heard a brief statement of facts she was fined $1 and costs and sentenced to six months in the womkti's prison. Tho case had been scheduled to be heard Aug. 23, following her arrest last Saturday by operatives of tho QulgleyHylaud detective agency, but Ralph Spaan. attorney for Mrs. Brillhart, asked that the case be tried at once. The sentencing of Mrs. Brillhart to the long prison term is the result cf a twoyear search for her, detectives say. They assert she is the cleverest shoplifter they ever hare dealt with. They say she has carried on a series of thefts in downtown department stores for more than two years and has boon arrested only once, In December, 1019. Tho system used by Mrs. Brillhart had been so planAed that it was almost impossible for detectives to fasten the evidence on her until, by accident, last Saturday she had a large "purchase” delivered uext door to a woman operative of the detective agency and the woman dotective was standing near when she gave a name that she knew was fiefitions. Her system was to select numerous articles of merchandise, always of the finest quality, and have them charged or delivered O. D. to some address north and always in tho 1500 bloek. While the elerk was making out his sale slip she would take any article she desired and leave. When Mrs Brillhart was arrested, the detective* allege she wore a pair of shoes which she had purehased at a department store and in payment gave a check using the name of D. F. Wellhart. In her home, the detectives have recovered about SSOO worth of merchandise. Identified by clerks of various department stores as having ben stolen. The detectives assert Mrs Brillhart ha* stolen merchandise In the ln*t two rears or more that will amount to possibly $5,000 or more. It was learned Mrs. Brillhart has been separated from her husband, Delbert F. Brillhart, who Is believed to be' In Tort land. AMERICAN WEDS GERMAN. BERLIN, Aug. 18.— Ray Beveridge, an American woman and former newspaper correspondent, has been married to Hauptmann Hugo Jaeger of Kbsingen, affording to a dispatch from Kissingen today.
ing develop fermentation and other conditions which cause the bodily machine to slow down and wear out sooner than necessary. Grape-Nuts digests quickly and wholesomely. Much of this is due to the fact that the long baking has partly pre-digested the nutriment; partly to the fact that there i9 contained in GrapeNuts the essential “roughness” to stimulate the action of the intestines. Health’s Splendid Champion Grape-Nuts is a delightful food, for it is uniquely rich and sweet in flavor, and always crisp. It is\inusually nutritious, for it has all the body-building elements of the most perfect food grains. It is a convenient and economical food, for it is ready to eat from the package, keeps in any climate, and is appetizing to the last bit. It builds strength and vigor without taxing the digestion or leaving, within the body, elements whose familiar harm is really the beginning of “old age.” Grape-Nuts has been a favorite food, around the world, for nearly a quarter of a century — And there is a reason!
START WORK ON BUILDINGS SOON Contracts Awarded for Asylum Structures. Work will begin within a short time on a dining ball and two new infirmary buildings at the Central Indiana Hospital for the Insane. Contracts were let for the three structures yesterday afternoon. The total cost will be $229,971. The contract for the dining hall went to Sehlegel & Roehm on a bid of $60,442. The contracts for the two infirmary buildings went to the Karstedt Construction Company on a bid of $135,309. The beating and plumbing work will be Installed by Freyn Brothers who bid $26,490. The Sanborn Electric Company will install the electrical equipment at a cost of $4,670. The board of trustees' of the hospital reveiced nine bids on the dinnig hall, nine on the Infirmary buildings, seven for heating. eight for plumbing and three for electrical work. Chicago Officers Look Over Alarm Systems Twelve Chicago aldermen are in Indianapolis today to inspect the fipe and
For a flaky, delicate and easily digested pie crust —follow a good recipe and use EVANS’ E-Z-BAKE FLOUR The careful milling of this flour, which is a Secret blend of the choicest wheats, insure equally good results whether you use it for pie crust or for bread, cake or biscuits. Your Grocer Has It EVANS' E-Z-BAKE V FLOUR**
Now Is the Time to Order Your Fuel For Next Winter July prices are continuing in August, but there can be little doubt that all fuel prices will advance in September. FOR Cleanliness, Economy, Convenience ORDER For use in furnace, baseburner, stove, range or water heater. For Sale by the Following Dealers: Indianapolis Coal Dealers.
Aldan. F. 4Y. A Cos.. City Yard, E. 4Vaeh. and Belt. Irvington Yard, Bonna and Good. Cool Cos.. 1025 N. Senate. Barrett Coal A Fuel Cos., 319 YT. South. Bis. hot A Flsse, 2051 N. Rural. Brookside Lumber Cos.. 1402 Commerce. Bugbee Coal Cos., 360 llolton Place. Capitol City Cool Cos., 320 8. Stute. Casoady Coul Cos., Tenth and Sherman. Control Coal Cos., 340 44. Michigan. Citv Ice A Coal Cos.. 720 E. 4Vasb. Commercial Fuel A Feed Cos., 310 4V. Ohio Cross Cool Cos., 1351 Blaine. Danish Fuel A Feed Cos.. 902 Torbett. Davis Coal and Block Cos., C. I. A 4>Y. and Kilter. Dell. Frank M., Cruse and S. East. Ehrlich Coal. C0.?*601 Kentucky Ave. Frederick, J. 44. 391 Beecher. Knit*, J. E., 543 Miley Ave. Gansberg, 44 in. F.. 1903-8 Shelby. Gates, E. E. Coal Cos., 577-83 Vinton. Gem Coal Cos., ltfll Roosevelt. Gnepper. Fred, 4t3 X. Holmes. Grover Coal Cos.. 335 4V. Wyoming. Ilagelskamp Brt>. A Haverkamp, Churchman and Belt. llado Coal Cos., 2335 Sherman Drive. Hado Coal Cos., S. Sherman. Heller, K. E. A t 0., Fletcher Ave. and Bltf Four. Hobart A Matthews, 1C37 S. Keystone. Ilosrue, J. E. Fuel A Supply Cos.. TwentyNinth and Canal. Home Coal Cos.. B ; g Four and E. North. Indianapolis Coal Cos., Bankers Trust. Yard No. 1, Fine and Bates Sts. Yard No. 4, Twenty-Third and Cornell. Yard No. 5, Wash, land Noble St. Yard No. 6, 320 S. West St. Yard No. 7, 328 4V. Sixteenth St. Yard No. 8, 2130 4V. Michigan st. Yard No. 9, Motion and 51st St. Yard No. 10, 936 E. Michigan, Indianapolis Mortar A Fuel Cos., Main office, 497-10 Odd Fellow Bldg. Sooth Yard, Madison Ave. and Ray St., Pennsylvania R. R. East Yard, 1010 E. Thirteenth St., Monon R. R. North Yard, Thirtieth and Canal, Big Four R. R. West Yard, Thirteenth and Missouri Sts., Big Four K. R. Brl gilt wood Yard. Rural and Roosevelt, Big Four R. R. Mill Yard, W. 44*ash. and Belt R. R. Northcreft Yard, Forty-Ninth and Monon. Irvington Coal and Lime, 6543 Bonna. Keep*rt, A. B. A Cos., 620 X. Senate. Lamb At Cool and Coho Cos., 115 8. State
police alarm systems. They are accompanied by several other Chicago offldala Besides Indianapolis they will Tlslt Columbus, Cleveland, Washington, Philadelphia, New Y'ork, a few other eastern .cities, some Canadian municipalities, and return to Chicago through Buffalo and Detroit.
Y&ixr „ I Babyneeds tRe splendid Realthdivind and building qualities jdtm&dU EAGLE BRAND .
Lambert Coal A Coke Cos.. 2409 Cornell, Litten, L. C., Coal Cos., 1005 E. I'ratt. Local Coal Company, 801 Bates st. Focal Coal Company, 921 E. 23d St. Marshal Bros., 3407 Roosevelt. Meyer, A. B. A Cos., main office, 225 N, Pennsylvania. 4Vi-st Y'ard, 830 N. Senate. East Yard, 1007 E. Michigan. East Yard, Annex, 1910 E. Vermont, South 4ard. 1240 Madison Ave, North lard, 25th and Cornell. North Yard Annex, 24tb and CornelL Kentucky Ave. Yard. 1120 Kentucky Ave. Northwestern Ave. Yard, 21st St, and Northwestern Ave. Minter Coal and Coke Cos., 131 S. California. Mono, E. F., Coal Cos., Tibbs and Walnut. Monn. E. F., Coal Cos,. 201 8. Harris. Monon Fuel Cos,. 940 E. St. Clair. Motion Fuel Cos., 2820 44'. Michigan, Mueslng-Merrlek Coal Cos., 114 15. 22d. Miieslng-Merrick Coal Cos., 1745 English Ave. My ff;s Fuel Cos., Ohio and Davidson. Narkenhorst Coal Cos., 1721 Naomi. Fenn Coal Cos.. 777 K. 44ughingtonPeoples Coal A C ement Cos., main office, 818 Traction Bldg. North Yard, 42d and Monon. East lard, 15th and L. E. A W. South lard, Shelby and Bates. Fhelps Coal A Cement Cos., 2712 E. Washington. Pittman Coal Cos., IC2 S. LaSalle. I’layfoot, A. E., 3339 Roosevelt. Polar Ice A Fuel Cos., 20tli and N. Webster. Potter Coal Cos.. 3505 K. Washington. K. A S. t oal Cos.. 2820 44’. Michigan. Robertson, Nick, Coal Cos., 430 S. Harding. Roberts, Sherman, Coal Cos., 1503 W. Washington. Schuster, Frank J., Coal Cos., Troy and Allen. Silcox, S. C., 1510 Madison. Silver, M. A.. 1634 Alvord. Splekelmler h uel A Supply Cos., 30th and L. F. A 4V. Snyder, Enos R.. Bluff Ave. South Side Ice A Coal Cos., 1902 S. East. Stuck, Robert G., C., I. A W. at Trowbridge. Stuckraeyer A Cos., Big Fonr and Lexington. ‘S'Tuxedo Coal 0., 4301 E. New York. Best Side Ice Cos, Lynn and Bir Fonr. Inion Ire A Coal Cos., 1910 Bluff. Wlthinmp, Elmer, 11X5 Roach.
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