Indianapolis Times, Volume 34, Number 90, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 August 1921 — Page 7

HORTICULTURAL BUILDING NOW READY FOR FAIR Structure Gives Better Opportunity for Display of Garden and Field Products. The new Horticultural and Agricultural building 1 , which will be one of the most conspicuous shovr places' at the coming Indiana Fair, Sept. sto 10, has not only been completed, but exhibits for It are arrlTlng. it Is thought that visitor* to the fair will be as enthusiastic over the new structure as they have been over the other large,, permanent buildings on the grounds, for It measures with all of them in appearance and outranks some of them in floor space. With a rotunda 40 by SO feet and with two rooms each 71 by 220 feet, the building will not only offer much better facilities for displaying orchard, garden and field products, bnt he aisles will be broad and there will fce an abundance of apace for many special exhibits. In there has been a heavy demand for JS Bpace from exhibitors of many kinds ere han disa kIW BOLDING TYELL LOCATED. The new building is of such dimensions and so attractive and its location is so convenient for sightseers that the shows of fruits and vegetables will get much more attention from visitors than in other years. The old agricultural building has. year after year, bean gorgeously arrayed with corn, grain, grass and similar dis plays, but its location was remote and the number of visitors was comparatively email.

But at the coming f*l- the horticultural and agricultural show will “come Into Its own.” There are always a number of county socletes from over the State which compete for bine ribbons on general displays In the two departments. and with the larger and better facilities they are expected to make much better showing than even in the past. The building is so large and well appointed that every county In Indiana can find space In it for representative farming exhibits. GOOD OPPORTUNITY FOR THE GROWER. S. W. Taylor, director of the horticultural department, says the new building will open to the orchard'sts of Indiana new opportunities for reaching consumers of fruits. “There are many commercial orchards in Indiana which have, year after year, been sending their fruits to the fair and they have found that the winning of prize ribbons has been good advertising. The publicity which their exhibits will get in the new building will be far more widespread than in the past, for the crowds to see the displays will be much larger.” “A county that is especially proud of Its soil products should, by all means have a display of these products In the new building,” said Charles Smith, <ll rector of the agricultural department. “Some counties and individual farmers produce superior seed corn. Those that have sent their corn to the Indiana fair year after year have been enabled through this publicity to find a wide market for their quality seed. Some counties grow superior cebacco, some excel in seed wheat or grasses. They can not find a better medium for advertising these products than the State fair offers in Us new building.”

HOOVER TO SPEAK TO CHEMIST BODY International Organization to Meet Sept. 6-10. NEW YORK, Aug. 25. —Herbert C. Hoover. Secretary of the Cnlted States Department of Commerce, will address the 4.n00 British. Canadian and American chemists who will be in New York City from Sept. 6to 10. Both he and Sir WlUiam .7. Pope, the president of the Society of Themical Industry of Great Britain, will speak at the general meeting of the American Chemical Society to be held in the gymnasium of Columbia University on Sept. 7. Chemistry in its world-wide relations will be the keynote of the international meeting In which, on the following day. Sir William and other distinguished foreign chemists will share the program with leaders of chemical research on this Bide of the Atlantic. 1 The topics and the speakers follow rScience and Civilization: the Role of Chemistry,” by Prof Charles Basker ville: "Energy: Its Source* and Future Possibilities.” Dr. Arthur D. Little: “The Engineer; Human and Superior Direction of Power,” Dr. Leo H. Baekeland: “Chemistry and Life.” Sir William J. Pope. “Theories and Their Development, ’ Dr. Willis R. Whitney; “Research Applied to the World’s Work,” Dr. C. E. Mess; “Problem of Diffusion and Its Bearing on Civilization,” Prof. Ernst Cohen, and “Catalysis; the New Bconomlc Factor.” Prof. Wilder D. Bancroft.—Copyright, 1921, by Public Ledger Company.

Indianapolis Men Figure in New Books Excellent examples of book composition and printing collected by W. R. Voris of the Studio Press are now being shown in the delivery room of the Central Library. These Include books hand decorated and illuminated. Roycroft books and books with carefully designed type. A rich presentation of the Book of Ruth that is shown was designed by Ralph Fletcher Beyniour, Indianapolis. He also arranged the especially rich first page shown of “Lore Letters of Abelard and Helolae," modeled after the ancient books. Mr. Beymour also designed the Roman type used in this book. An unusually good piece of book composition in the classic Kennerly type was set by Edwin Grabhom, formerly of thta ■tty, and is called “The Defense of pbiletante’’ by another townsman, George (Chambers Calvert. A fine specimen of b&nd lettering after the style of ancient nanascript books is the book, “Holy fight, Peaceful Night.” A rather surnplous piece of book making intended for lluminatlon is used for the "Rubaiyat.” The exhibit will be shown for two reeks.

butterflies Battle on White House Lawn WASHINGTON. Aug. 23—Daily battles between humming birds and butterflies ire occurring in the White House grounds, i\|th the radiant blossoms of IS historic acacia trees as the spoils of l*fcr. Officer Walter. L. Hospital, a Whits House attache, spends several hours each lay underneath the famous acacia tree md has watched the altercation intently. The humming birds sre always vanquished in the figbts, he says, the buter81es putting them to flight as they hoTer ver the blossoms, but usually not without some spectacular resistance. Larger irds seem to have no terrors for the wffnming species, the courageous little always resisting valiantly in of their nests around the bioorabongbs. but the butterfly is a terriHt{ enemy. H AID FOR CXEXPLOTED. Aug. 25.—Local train lines been requested to grant free fares LVJ e S a m. to all persons looking for

ffe CALIFORNIA of AT ISTRAUA

? .• r *y^ Jftf >v S

Left—Government House Gardens at Perth. The city has numerous public gardens and reserves, where many kinds of tree* and flowers abound. One can walk knee-deep through wild flowers In this part of western Australia iti the season. There are thousands of different species which flourish tn the state —a blaze of glory when In bloom. Right—lmagine a forest of 1,200,000 acres thickly studded with smooth, straight tress, 200 feet tall on the average, fonr feet In diameter and more than a hundred feet from the ground to the first branch. Yet this la what western Australia has—4 typical karri forest and one of the greatest of the state’s many timber resources Beneath the trees is a rich, red soil, which is intensely prolific, once the trees have been cleared off and the sun given an opportunity to get to the land. That is why western Australia is faced with a problem—shall It kill off the timber, in itself valuable, in order to utilize the ground for farming?

PERTH. WESTERN AUSTRALIA.— If some day you should visit, as I have douo, the great museum at Amsterdam, Holland, ask the attendants to show you Dick Hartog's plates—two common affairs of tin such as you will find at every picnic party. For years they were in a box in the basement, but today they occupy a place of honor In a showcase of glass. Properly those plates should be in an Australian museum. for upon them was scratched with a knife the record which proves that Hartog, an adventurer of Dutch ancestry, was about tbe first white man who set foot on the continent of Australia. Hartog scratched his name and that of his ship and the date upon one of those plates and nailed it to the broken trunk of a tree on the inhospitable eoast of what now Is Western Australia and sailed away, to make to his king a most discouraging report ahont the new laud which he had discovered. Many years i*eer another Dutch adventurer came along, found the plate and over it nailed one of his own, also properly Inscribed Nether of these men had any Idea of the Immensity of the land. Neither did WlUiam Dampier, an English buccaneer. who came along In 1688, mapped the coast line and sent out parties to explore the interior. The forbiddng coasi and the desert beyond it resulted n a report being made that the land was “the most miserable on earth” and inhabited by a race of black savages. The

From the railroad into the sandy “oat spaces’* of western Australia the rumble plod along: with thHr loads of water, food and other supplies. It has hern proved that camel* are the best methods of transport In the dry country, so lax** numbers of these animals have been introduced with the Afghan drivers. Camel* In some of these caravans have been known to go as many M fifteen days without water, and they proved invaluable to tlie railroad builders who put In the line* across the desert country.. In the upper photograph )s a eutnel train, below at the left a camel sulky, and at the right two of the patient hearts are drawing a well-drilling outfit, or, a* they my In Australia, a goring plant. Tlie artesian well, or **bore,” is practicable over thousands of square mile®, which await, the coming of the settler to become productive.

explorers who came along after that expressed the some view and the country was left severely alone. Not even the discovery that in the southwestern pa-t of the continent things eou’d be made to grow and thnt iu the no.ihwcatern comer yearl oysters were to be had, r.ad* much change iu sentiment. A few white people drifted In and settled, hut until the construction, four years ago, of the transcontinental railway Western Australia was as Isolated from the rest of Australia as if it had been a separate island. The desert between 1* and South Australia was a barrier few cared to cross. It was in communication \yith the other and more prosperous states only by telegraph, and ships were the only method of transportation. “SCN, SIN. SAND AND SORE EYES.” The history of Western Australia furnishes an interesting instance of a state being forced, after a period of prolonged coma, into an era of progress through sheer force of circumstances. The BtUish flag was hoisted over it in 1791, but it was not until 1829 that it was formally annexed by the British empire. But when gold was discovered in 1887 it woke the “gropers," as the native born whites are called. In 1882 the sensational discoveries of the mines at Kalgoorlle and at Cnoigardie, a few miles farther on, started her off on a boom period. Tbs State whleh for years had beeu neglected and despised as a land of “sun, sin, sand and soro eyes.” as someone had dubbed it, began to assume real importance. Western Australia occupies nearly one-

-fSBSSBSSTM ; V 3C : '• ••rreayy y

The splilt which move . western Australia is well exemplified by the 351mile water main which r .ns from near the coast to the clil fields and sup. piles thirty towns in t' e so-called desert with water, a* well as furnishing water to agricultural districts by means of exteiuiion* 116 miles long. The photograph gives a view of the Vfundaring reservoir, the fountainhead of the great pumping system. Tim government of the state undertook and i'couipAetX'J the pipe line within five years, ft newer has been profitable from a money standpoint, bnt Is one of ghe asset* which keeps the credit of weetern Australia good. The pipe line can deliver five million gallons of water dally, bat is called on to eapply only three million gallons. The delivered price Is 75 cents a thousand gallons.

■* ® &xt fejipk^JS V . \ 7 r - ■ sj? Tfll

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 Expeditions, author of "Illustrated fonth America,” "t nlted States Colonies and Dependencies" and “The First Americans—Our Indians of Yesterday and Today.”

third of the continent of Australia. It covers a greater area than that of the sister slates of New South Wales. Victoria, South Australia and Tasmania combined and is as large as all of Ihe United States east of the Mississippi River, or a third of our own country. Yet its population of 810.000 is only abor) that of Idaho or Vermont and about •?<) per cent live in the city of Perth and the small towns surrounding It. Westein Australia's story Is a great deal like that of our own California, whose "forty-niners” had tbelr counterpart in the “roaring nineties" when thousands were lured by the prospects of gold, and where law and order were represented only by the rough and ready code of the

mining camp. Like California again, Western Australia came into her own only after she had been linked to the Eastern States by rail. The Importance of the timber trade of the American Pacific coast 1b being duplicated by tho vain* of tho great forests of Jarrah and karri which rank among the finest hardwoods In tho world, are practically Immune from white ants and marine borers and are kafdly affected at all by water or fire. Finally, California orchards have an established place in the markets of the world, but Western Australia apples topped the marlet two years In succession In London. PROGRESS REGAN WITH DISCOVERY O t GOLD. With the discovery of gold Western Australia's progress may be said to have started, nitherto unknown, she became world famous almost over night and the “gropers,” vainly protesting against the hustling of “totherstders," as they labeled the newcomers, were forced Into activity themselves At almost the same time the State was given a government of her own and her greatest son, John Forrest, later Lord Forrest, and the only native born Australian ever to become a peer of Britain, was her first premier. It was due largely to Forrest’s ability to see into the future that a bold standard of development was adopted. Wltljiu four years after the Coolg'afale golil dls coverics a railway had been pushed out to the mining camps, 350 miles from Perth. Even today the sites of those great gold mines are ntft calculated to appeal

INDIANA DAILY TIMES, THURSDAY, AUGUST 25, 1921.

to thp visitors. Rare, sandy desert, with a sun that blisters and tortures —just a part of the great waste where the rain of a year may be precipitated in one day or where several years may go by without enough rain to really wet the ground. Water was the great problem in the nineties and even though western Australia had only 127,000 people then she bravely undertook the ambitious scheme of pumping water from a point near the coast to the mining camp, 351 miles away. Today a steel main thirty-three inches in diameter, through which it takes the water n month to reach its destination, and which is raised by pumps 1.290 feet and emptied into a reservoir with a oa parity of 5,000,000 gatlons, stands as a monument to the determination of Forrest and the engineering genius of 0. Y. O'Connor, who took his life before his work was completed because of public criticism of it. It cost $12,000,000 to build that main and reservoir, but today It supplies wafer to consumers at 73 cents a thousand gallons, which be fore cost $lO to sl2. It was the necessity of feeding its constantly growing population that set western Australia finally to work. Its best available harbor was at Freemantle, twelve miles from Perth, the capital, and that was only a sandbar-looked river mouth. But Engineer O’Connot was equal to that ta3k, too, and at an

expense of 97,500,000 he gave the people of his state a splendid harbor. Today Freomantle la a pretty little city of 20.000, a summer resort and the port at which most travelers from Europe first touch Australia, and many take the train from there overland. OTHER POSSIBILITIES COME TO FRONT. Attention began to be directed more and more toward land about that time because the gold mines ware beginning to piay out end agricultural possibilities came to the front where before they had been almost wholly neglected. Light railways were pushed out into the regions where it was found the ralnflall was sufficient for fanning Still up to December, 1990, nearly thirty-four million fine ounce* of gold, valued at half a billion dollar*, had been produced in the State. At this time, even with her diminishing mining activities, the Stale produces more gold than ail the rest of the commonwealth combined. How romantic 1 the afcory of her famous “Golden Mlio” which In the year of its greatest prosperity produced as much gold as the rest of the world combined. I was greatly amused at the story of the first discovery of gold in the Sta e, as it was told to me by a man who Is thoroughly In touch with, the conditions of --astern Australia. He said that s ojutlemats. riding through the highly mineralised district of Roebourne, picked up a rock to throw £t a crow and discovered that he held in hi hand a nugget of almost pure gold. When he.reported hie discovery an Incredulous official inquired, “And what became of the crow?" I have run across those who believe that some day It will be found that Western Australia again will have a boom In gold mining, that her vast riches did not play out along with the decadence of Kalgoorlle and Cooigardie, where the rich alluvial 'deposits almost on top of the ground have been replaced by lower grades of ore as the mines have been pushed deeper and deeper into the earth. That the Stato government also shares that belief is evident from the fact that it has established twenty-eight batteries in various places where the prospectors, whom It so generously assists, may have their ore tested. Recent discoveries have not proved bonanzas, bnt there are enough of. them to give some weight to the belief that more gold may be found in some of the parts of the 800.000 square miles of desert which bag now less than a thousand population. NO CURVE OR GRAD® IN SOO-MILE BTKETCH. Some idea of the region may be gained when I mention that the trans-continen-tal railroad was laid out with a compass and that no .surveyor’s level was needed for the greater portion of Its length and that for one stretch of more than three hundred miles It has no curve or grade. It Is a dreary, monotonous trip for those who find amusing themselves aboard a train difficult unless there Is scenery to watch. Rails and supplies and above all elsp, water had to be t&fcen to those railroad buUd irs by camels, those patient

beasts who can go so long without a drink and who make it possible for the few white men who are still battling with the great desert at its oasis to exist. From the end of the rails into the sandy “out spaces" the camels plod along with their loads of water and food for the missions and stations. It Is an interesting sight to see one of these camel trains starting out with Its silent company of men. whose faces are wrinkled and whose eyes squint from the constant glare of sun upon sand, relieved only by mirages of lakes and streams which they know are not there. I enjoyed watching the faces of some of our party who never had been In desert places as they discovered that the bodies of “water” which they were so willing to bet was just beyonxl faded Into stretches of sand as we approached. But gold Is not the only egg In the mining basket of Weatralia which Is the accepted popular shortening of the State's full name. In addition she produces copper and lead, sliver, tin, zinc, asbestosiron, antimony, mica manganese, graphite ami other minerals. At Yaropi Sound a deposit of more than a hundred million tons of rich Iron ore has been found and not long ago new seams of coal were found in the already extensive fields at Collie. While the mining industry has waxed and waned the agricultural industry has advanced rapidly and is expanding today. Until fifteen or sixteen years ago the capabilities of the land of Western Australia were for the most part ignored and the State did not grow enough wheat to supply the needs of its own small population. High averages, however, resulted In more and more encouragement being offered the settler by the government and the land laws were made attractive. Early in her history Western Australia was free from the rabbit *p“st Just as now sh is free of the F.ngltsb sparrows which are so troublesome In the eastern states Ii was felt, however, that it was only a question of time before the rabbit would arrive and a race developed btween man and pest with tbe government trying to block off the state with rabbit-proof fencing before the rabbit showed up. About 2.000 miles of fencing was built at a cost of *1.250.000, one fence extending from a rocky point on the south coast right across the continent to the north coast and later two subsidiary fences were built west to the Indian Ocean. But the rabbit must have arrived by airplane, for today the bunnies are to be found both inside and outside the lences! GETTING SETTLERS A DIFFICULT TASK. Getting settlers upon the land in Western Australia has been a difficult task The so-called “dry areas'' presented difficulties which seemed Insurmountable to the man In search of raw land for himself. The man who did take up land, however, found that if he worked and used hts head he could make It pay. However, Western Australia still is a country of large holdings and official figures reveal that one hundred persons hold between them 40.000,000 acres, most of which l devoted to cattle raising. One outstanding feature of the land In the dry areas, the finest part of the wheat belt and the part of the state where dairying is advancing, Is Its wonderful recuperative ability. While re garded as Immune from drouths, the disastrous season of 1914. which wss felt ■ll ovor Ausirails, reduced the yield to less than two bushels of wheat to the acre, yet tbe very next season a record harvest thst averaged 10.5 bushels to

AMUSEMENTS. 11l II fl 1 T Matinee Todnjr. Tonight, I muKftl ■**' I The Stuart Walker Cos. HONOR BRIGHT A Brand New Comedy By Meredith Nicholson and Kenyon N Irholson. The Dramatic “Crickets” liked It “The Meesr*. Nicholson have more than the makin’s of a successful play..” —R, G. Tucker—Star. “The idea Is a good one. (he dialogue natural, and ut times brilliant.” W H. Whitworth—News. “ ‘Honor Bright’ Is a Joy box containing many new and Interesting toy* to Interest those who are ‘fed up’ on conventional comedy.”—W. D. If lck man—Times.

jjffg SEVEN ROSEBUDS Juvenile Stars tn a Smart ~ Song and Dance Offering. KEE TOW FOUR Oriental Harmonists 6 OTHER BIG / Dancing In the Lyric Ball Room Afternoon and Evening. MOTION PICTURES.

LOEW’S STATE THEATRE NOW PEARLWHITEin “The White Moll” By FRANK L. PACKARD, author of “THE MIRACLE MAN.”

Trrr m -| iiiWiimiWl—ft—r'll—l NOW SHOWING ANITA STEWART

B9G HIT AMERICAN QUINTETTE BROAD RIPPLE PARK Sunday, Aug. 28th Afternoon and Evening Musical and Vocal High-class entertainment, a bunch of merrymakers full of mirth and music. They have many new stunts. It’s a pleasure to see and hear such an organization. Take a one-hour ride on the big passenger boat (Sunbeam). Many other attractions to please. Restaurants and refreshments. Don’t miss it. UNION TRACTION COMPANY OF INDIANA

the acre was taken off the same lands. Since the war the average yield of the atate has been around the 10,000,000 bushel mark. Figures for last year show more than 7,000.000 acres of land being ured for agricultural and pastoral purposes, 1,600.000 acres being under crop, while almost two million acres were being used for grazing, the rest lying I fallow or only partially cleared. Western Australia has just reached the ■ polqt where she can begin to dispense i with the huge quantities of dairy pro- j duce, potatoes and other food products j which she has been In the habit of get- | ting from the eastern states and can ; feed herself and also look forward to exporting a surplus. Much rich land that in the closer settled states of Victoria and New South Wales would cost a large sura per acre can be obtained free in western Australia because the government is so anxious to attract settlers that farms of 160 acres are offered free except for surveying and other small fees and the State Agricultural Bank will advance up to SB,OOO to settlers This, in connection with the policy of pushing out railways Into the new farming sections, Is expected to bring the desired population. The state of Western Australia is only in her infancy as regards her pastoral and agricultural development, for the artesian well, or bore, as Australians call It, is practicable over thousands of square miles which await only the coming of the settler to become productive. One thing, too, is needed—a great port from which the products of the still undeveloped hinterland may be shipped, and that now Is being sought. The state is building freezing works agafnst the day when the frozen mutton trade will have grown to real size, the day when full advantage will be taken of all the pastoral possibilities of western Australia. When that day comes the state will he not only the largest of Australia but one of its most important as well. There is glamor and romance in the search for pearls oa> the northwest coast of Australia. For many years adventurers from all parts of the world have gone to Broome and other spots on the coast, where Japanese, Filipinos and Malays far outnumber the white people. At certain seasons “willy willies,’’ or tropical hurricanes, wreak great havoc to the pearl fishing fleets and periodical riots between races frequently result In bloodshed, but the industry produces about half the world's supply of pearl shell. Mr. Boyce In bis article next week tells of the great pearling grounds and of the vast northern territory of Australia, more than 500,000 square miles with a white population of less than 2.500. MOTION PICTURES.

THIS f * A \ WEEK /Balloon divmK I to eachchilcm l Attending m j Return Engagement / HAROLD LLOYD IN “| DO” \ Also LongfeUow’s _ ~\ “The Courtship of Mrjorie\ Miles Standish” Kdwarda \ Hone^ <> nialTOi in a Pro|r*m\ vV* \JTi2 w \ 1 OMm Jnecitre

AihambrA JUSTINE JOHNSTONE —IN—“HEARTS TO LET”

fCIC ENTIRE ioSiS WEEK Ivan Abramson’s Production “THE WRONG WOMAN” BEN TURPIN IN “She Sighed By the Seaside”

Sander c# Recker's August Sale Final Clean-up on Old Hickory Furniture 12 Old Hickory Side Chairs s‘t ,95 Sold up to $6.50. Choice 10 Old Hickory Arm Chairs J ,95 and Rockers. Sold, up to $12.50. ■%= Choice 6 Old Hickory Tables sr*,9s Sold up to $16.50. Choice A FEW OF THE BIGGEST BARGAINS LEFT IN KALTEX FURNITURE. Baronial brown. In choice ere* torme or tapestry. With cushion 7 seat and back, *fl ££ construction 51 i*vu SANDER & RECKER FURNITURE COMPANY Meridian — at — Maryland

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 fi hidianapolis By-Product y For use in furnace, baseburner, stove, range or water heater. For Sale by the Following Dealers: Indianapolis Coal Dealers.

Alda*. F. W. A Cos., City Yard, E. Wash, and Belt. Irvington Yard, Bonna and Good. Atlas Coal Cos., 1025 N. Senate. Barrett Coal A Fuel t 0., 349 W. South. Blschot A Fisse. 2051 N. Rural. Brooklde Lumber Cos.. 1402 Commerce. Bngbee Coal Cos.. 360 Holton Place. Capitol City Coal Cos.. 520 8. State. Casxady Coal Cos., Tenth and Sherman. Central tout Cos.. 340 W. Michigan. City Ice A Coal Cos., 720 E. VI ash. Commercial Fuel A Feed Cos., 316 W. Ohio Cross Coal Cos., 1541 Blaine. Danish Fuel A Fed Cos.. 902 Torbett. Davis Coal and Block C’o., C. 1. A W. and Ritter. Dell. Frank M., Cruse and S. East. Ehrlich Coal. Cos.. 601 Kentucky Ave. Frederick, J. W. 891 Beecher. Fnlti, J. E., 543 Miley Ave. Gansberg, IVm. V., 1906-8 Shelby. Gates. K. E. Coal Cos.. 577-83 Vinton. Gem CoaJ Cos., 1161 Roosevelt. Goepper. Fred. 443 N. Holmes. Grover Coal Cos., 535 W. Wyoming. Hagelskamp Bros. A Haverkamp, Churchman and Belt. Hado Coat Cos.. 2355 Sherman Drive. Hado Coat Cos.. S. Sherman. Heller, E. E. A Cos., Fletcher Ave. and Big Four. Hobart A Matthews, 1037 S. Keystone. Hogue. J. L. Fuel A Supply Cos., TwentyNinth and Canal. Home Cool Cos., Big Four and E. North. Indianapolis Coal Cos.. Bankers Trust. Vard No. 1, Fine and Bates St*. Yard No. 4, Twenty-Third and Cornell. Yard No. 5, Wash, land Noble St. Yard No. 6, 320 S. West St. Yard No. 7, 323 W. Sixteenth St. Yard No. 8, 2130 W. Michigan st. Yard No. 9. Monon and 51st St. Yard No. 10, 936 B. Sllchigan. Indianapolis Mortnr A Fuel Cos., Main office, 407-10 Odd Fellow Bldg. South Yard, Madison Ave. and Ray St., Pennsylvania R. R. East Vard, 1010 E. Thirteenth St., Monon R. R. North Vard, Thirtieth and Canal, Big Four R. K. West Vard, Thirteenth and Missouri Sts., Big Four R. R. Bright wood lard. Rural and Roosevelt, Big Four R. R. Mill Yard. W. Wash, and Belt B. R. Northcroft Vard, Forty-Ninth and Monon. Irvington Coal and Lime, 5343 Bonna. Koeport, A. B. A Cos., 620 X. Senate. Lumbert Coal nod Coke Cos., 115 S. State

TIME? WANT ADS BRING REdCXT S, A TRIAL WILL CONVINCE TOC.

Lambert Coal A Coke Cos.. 2409 Cornell, Litten, L. C., Coal Cos., 1005 E. Pratt. Local Coal Company. 801 Bates st. Local Coal Company. 921 R. 23d St. Marshal Bros., 3407 Roosevelt. Meyer. A. B. A Cos., main office, 225 N, Pennsylvania. West Vard. 830 X. Senate. East Vard, 1007 E. Michigan. East Vard, Annex, 1010 K. Vermont, South lard, 1240 Madison Ave. North Yard. 25th and Cornell. North Vard Annex, 24th and Cornell. Kentucky Ave. Vard. 1120 Kentucky Ave. Northwestern Ave. Tard, 21st St. and Northwestern Ave. Mlnter Coal and Coke Cos., 134 S. Call* fornla. Monn, E. F., Coal Cos., Tibbs and Walnut. Monn, E. F., Coal Cos., 201 S. Harris. Monon Fuel Cos., 940 E. St. Clair. Monon Fuel Cos.. 2820 W. Michigan. Mueslng-Merrick Coal Cos., 114 E. 82d. Mnesing-Merrick Coal Cos., 1745 English Ave. Myers Fuel Cos., Ohio and DavidsonFrank P. Baker Coal Cos.. 1721 Naomi. Penn Cool Cos., 777 E. Washington. Peoples Coal A Cement Cos., main offloe, 818 Traction Bldg. North Vard, 42d and Monon. East Yard, 16th and L. E. A W. South Vard. Shelby and Bates, Phelps Coal A Cement Cos., 2712 E. Washington. Pittman Coal Cos., 102 8. LaSalle. Playfoot, A. E., 3539 Roosevelt. Polar Ice A Fuel Cos., 20th and N. Webster. Potter Coal Cos., 5505 E. Washington. R. A S. Coal Cos., 2820 W. Michigan. Robertson, Nick. Coal Cos., 430 S. Harding. Roberts. Sherman, Coal Cos., 1502 W. Washington. Schnster, Frank J., Coal Cos., Troy and Allen. Sllcox, S. 0.. 1516 Madison. Sliver, 31. A.. 1634 Alvord. Spickelmler Fuel A Supply Cos., 30th and L. E. A W. Snyder, Enos R., Bluff Ave. South Side Ice A Coal Cos., 1902 S. East. Stock, Robert G„ C., 1. A W. at Trowbridge. Stuekmeyer A Cos., Big Four and Lexington. Tuxedo Coal Cos., 4301 E. New York. West Side Ice Cos, Lynn and Big Union Ice A Coal Cos., 1910 Blnff. Wlthlnger, Elmer, 1125 Roach.

7