Indianapolis Times, Volume 34, Number 115, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 September 1921 — Page 8
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LOOK TO SI'ORES OF AMERICA TO SUSTAIN LIFE Hard Winter Predicted for Orphans in Chaotic Near East. NEW YOEK, Sept. 23.—Hundreds of thousands of orphans and refugees in the Levant are depending upon the American harvest for life during the coming winter, representatives of the Near East Belief overseas declare In reports reaching national headquarters here. War and political and economic chaos from northern Syria to the Caucasus Mountains and from Baku to Constantinople have prevented the sowing of crops in many areas or have driven the inhabitants of these regions from their homes before crops" could be gathered in those regions where sowing was possible, according to these reports. Belief agents in Anatolia, where the military operations of the Greeks and the Turkish Nationalists have rendered thousands homeless, and In Transcaucasia, report the situation to be especially serious. Refugees from the famino cones in southern Bussla are increasing the difficulties in the latter area. Only the generous response of American farmers to the Near East Beliefs campaign for five million bushels of grain, according to these overseas workers, can save the lives of a large number of the thousands who are now faced with Starvation. Officials at relief headquarters have announced plans for the collection and shipment of this grain with little or no overhead expense,; much of the work being accomplished through volunteer workers and agencies.
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UTAH COMES OUT OF STORM IN GOOD SHAPE (Continued From Page One.) to sell their beets on the basis of the price of sugar. Now they had agreed to this for which he was thankful as it would be better for all concerned. Mr. Chamberlain said the city banka had been carrying quite a load for the country banks, but some these loans now were being liquidated from the sale of wheat, wool and other products. Business in general was fairly good and the prospects very good. UTAH HELD MOST UN DER-CATIT ALIZED. Mr. Armstrong said Utah was the most under-capitalized section of the United States, the last frontier of under-capital-ization. It had more undeveloped resources than any other State and the temptation of the Utah people, who appreciated what these resources were, always had been to take fluid capital and make It fixed capital. This tended to keep them hard up. In 'oanklDg undercapitalization was more evident than elsewhere. As to general conditions he believed we had turned the corner. As to deposits they were high and increasing in total although the average of individual deposit had decreased. Copper and sugar were the State's principal industries. Copper had suffered from a great depression and 6Ugar had fallen heavily in price. In canning, in livestock, in grains, wool and coal the State was making fine progress. Dry goods sales were runuing about the same as last year so far as volume was concerned, Mr. Pyko announced, but la mouey the total was from 30 to 40 per cent less. In the last sixty days there had been a general Improvement. Collections were 75 per cent of normal. He was optimistic as ♦' rade for the rest of the year. Sales of plumbing supplies were very satisfactory, Mr. Hampton, representative of the Crane Company, declared. The candy business was coming back slowly. Mr. Sweet said. It was up to the 1917 average now and orders wore rather
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free. He was looking forward to a splendid business. Mr. Collins made a remarkable report. He had between 2,500 and 8,000 real estate loans all on dwellings, on his books. He had just made an examination and found only six persons were overdue in payment of interest. There were few rentors in Salt Lake and few vacant houses. People owned their homes. There were between two hundred and three hundred dwellings uuder construction. STBEET RAILWAY MAN OPTIMISTIC. No business barometer was more sensitive than the street railway. Mr. Dicks said. His road felt the depression at Its beginning in August, 1920, and that sagging continued to June, 1921. Now business was coming back. Mr. Schweikhart said sales of light hardware were very good and of heavy hardware very slow. Ho was so confident of general Improvement that he bad not reduced his force. Mr. Richmond said the outlook In the mining machinery line was not cheering. Today sales were only 10 per cent of normal. Heavy hardware sales were on a SO per cent basis with some slight Improvement evident. He looked for a fair business in 1922, but not for a broad demand for mining machinery until 1923 and he did not expect to see the copper surplus absorbed until well along In ’.922. A prediction was made by Mr. Gray, of the Oregon Short Line that Utah would develop a steel Industry that would rival copper and sugar In Importance, Mr. Beeson, speaking for the lnterurban traction people, confirmed the view of Mr. Dicks. He said Utah had the second largest lnterurban mileage per capita in the United States. For the fiist five months of this year trafife was below last year’s in June. It began to pick up In July it was above normal. This lnterurban system serves (V> per cent of the population if Utah. Considering that copper raining and sugar raising
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Suit Satisfaction at Moderate Cost Men who have been wailing for the restoration of real values in clothes •an tind complete satisfaction in
Rubens Famous Suits rv For Young Men and Men Dollar for dollar, you wiJl nut find it possible to equal the values we offer. You don’t have to be an expert to see the real value in these clothes. Young men and older men and men wjio want to stay young, buy our clothes year after year, because, they wear and look well so long. Every taste can be satisfied here, and every build can be perfectly fitted, in these wonderful suits at $25-oo SQQ.oo $05.00
Special Sa/e of . OVERCOATS Tomorrow offering a special sale of several hundred extra fine, all-wool Overcoats, in conservative and young men’s models, beautiful plaid back goods of richest colorings, with satin sleeves and yoke linings. Overcoats, same quaJity as bad to bring (1* /’"X last fall $45.00 to $55.00, p ® JW. O U Special Sale Price A Reasonable Deposit Will Secure Any Coat For Later Delivery
Buy School Suits Here for Less Extraordinary values in boys' school suits priced a full third lower than equal qualities command elsewhere. *7.50 no $ 12.50 RUBENS 39 w sS K For thirty-five years a dependable and trustworthy store. Open Every Saturday Night Till Nine. O’Clock.
INDIANA DAILY TIMES, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 23,1921.
and refining have had a very bad year Utah seems to have weathered the storm remarkably well. Unemployment In Salt Lake is not large. Today the total Is 2,5*1. There has been a fair amount of construction. Building permit® to September total., 1,024. Nearly all of these are for dwellings. A person who has not been In Utah for nearly ten years sees remarkable improvement in the country. The farms are cultivated to a high degree. In not a few instances they compare well with those of the bqst agricultural States of the Middle West. This Is all the more remarkable in view of the difficulties the farmers here had to overcome with an alkali soil In some sections and sage brush in others. There Is promise of Utah entering the coterie of oil States. Drilling operations by the Royal Dutch Shell, the Ohio Oil, the Utah Oil Refining Company are under way ia various places. PROMISE, TOO, OF STEEL INDUSTRY. Thus far on these opeshtions the companies have expended $1,500,000 in road building and on rigs and casings. There Is promise, too, of a considerable steel industry. The Utah Steel Corporation has ore teds that are' said to be equal to any in the country, together wdth coal in unlimited quantities, like Colorado. Utah is lavishly rich in coal. Some day with this fuel and the development of hydro-electric energy It will have high advantages at Its command. What Utah needs about as much as anything Is a press agent. Today Its attractions, so far as the outside world knows, might be summed up in the Mormon Temple and the Great Sait Lake. It's a matter of fact, Utah Is declared by those who should know whereof they speak, to he the scenic wonderland of America. The northern approach to the Grand Canyon of the Colorado is said even to surpass the section that is so well known. But it is out of the line of travel, although
Utah roads are pretty good, considering that a small section of the State pays for all the roads in an parts of the State. Tourist travel Is improving. Up to Sept. 1 a total of 01,696 visitors were recorded. Utah people are not slow la praising their country for its scenic beauty and Its mineral deposits, but they declare In tho same breath that America has not awakened to tho tremendous possibilities of Idaho. That State, they say, has some of the richest lead In the world, particularly In the Snake River valley, land that rivals that of tne Mississippi delta In fertility. In addition they say Idaho has possibilities of hydro-electric development and of irrigation beyond that of almost any other section of the great West. Watch Utah. It is coming up.—Copyright, 1921, by Public Ledger Company.
GIRLS! LEMONS BLEACH SKIN WHITE
Squeeze the Juice of two lemons into a bottle containing three ounces of Orchard White, which any drug store will supply for t few cents, shake welt, and you have a quarter pint of harmless and delightful lemon bleach. Massage this sweetly fragrant lotion into the face, neck, arms and hands each day, than shortly nets the beanty and whiteness of your skin. Famous stage beauties use this Union lotion to bleach and bring that soft, clear, rosy-white complexion, also as a freckle, sunburn, and tan bleach because It doesn’t Irritate.—Advertisement.
Mother of Gypsy Bride Does Choosing MINNEAPOLIS, Minn, Sept. 23.—Although it is the custom among the gypsies to have the parents of the prospective bridegroom purchase a wife for their son, covetous wealthy candidates are not always successful even when bidding larger sums for the maiden’s hand. Such was the information gleaned by John D. Greathouse, who acted as counsel for a Chicago gypsy mother and
Now In Progress
This sale represents one of the most remarkable stove selling events offered in this community in years. Such values as we offer include
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New Peninsular Self-Feeding Hot Blast
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4-burner Range, large oven, with two racks; (3*OQ sale price . I 1) Cabinet Peninsular, w kite door; sale tf*4A 7C price pur*/* I O One-$82.00 Peninsular, two white doors, A A white splashers. . (DdJsUU One—sßs.oo Peninsular, white oven and broiler A A doors; sale price... 3U*UU All Poireliron Sanico Range, guaranteed 7C 25 years D I /• I D
Simmons Bed* De Lu*e Springs Hirsclunan Mtt re(,te Madden Davenport* Cheney Phonographs Lloyd Carriages Sidway Carriage* Peninsular Stovei
father, when they came here la an attempt to take back their daughter, whom they charge was kidnaped, while th mother of the groom-elect maintained she had paid $2,000 for the girl as a wife for her son. “I have learned that when the mother of a girl among the gypsies takes a liking to a young man and considers him suitable for her daughter, a nominal price will always get the bride-to-be, even though there are other offers much higher by men not so well liked," declared Mr. Greath >use. Mr. Greathouse said a settlement had been effected in the case with which
Works like a basebumer. heats like a baseburner, feeds like a basebumer. Burns hard coal, soft coal or slack. See this if you want the. best. Set up free. / $59-jo AND UP •■Your Old Stove Taken as Part Payment’ 1
Peninsular Hi-Oven Bakes —Heats —Cooks With the Same Fire
Cu f s Your Fuel Co:t in HALF No Stooping. Takes Up Only a Small Space. Guaranteed By the World’s Largest and Oldest Stove Makers, Peninsular, “Os Course.* ’ A Few Styles at Sale Prices Start at *s9
443-445 East Washington St.
he was connected, by haring the mtuy returned to the young man’s parents and the girl returned with her parent* b) Chicago. Girl, Run Over by Locomotive, Unhurt LOS ANGELES. Cal, Sept. 23.—A alow-i ly moving engine on the Salt Lake track* here struck, knocked down, and ran over Miss Mabel Benedict, 26. White-faced trainmen dragged her from beneath a following car. She was unhurt.
Peninsular hotb 1a s ts, combination ranges, gas ranges and coal ranges, San ic o porceliron gas ranges. Detroit Vapor Oil Stoves Reduced as Follows: 6-burner Red Star d*OA reduced 5-burner Red Star 1 C reduced 51d 4-burner Red Star dti a reduced ejlU 3-burner Red Star rtQ reduced .JJ)O All Red Stars Sold on Easy Payments
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Our Special C. and CfiA 7C G. Pange tpOil.l > Best value In the city. Peninsular, exactly as shown CQ7 Cft above, white door p Xf / #DU TERMS $2.00 A WEEK Porceliron Combina- C 7 CA tion Ranges P*UfsDv
Armstrong Linoleum* Washing Machine* Electric Cleaner* Electric Sewing Machine* Perfection Wick Stove* Gibson Refrigerator*
