Indianapolis Times, Volume 34, Number 197, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 December 1921 — Page 12

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We Will Help You to I Save Safely jflrtrbrr ffcatomjs ani) Crust Company INDIANAPOLIS U.S. AMBASSADOR PLANS HOLIDAY STAY IN FRANCE Harvey Expected to Reach Cannes Before Allied Council Meets. CANNES. France. Dec. 2S.—George Harvey, American ambassador to England, is expected to arrive here Friday tc spend the New Year’s holiday before ibe meeting of the interallied supreme council later in January. Ambasador Harvey will participate in the meeting as an observer. The chief subjects for discussion are: 1 — Germany’s default of her January and February indemnity payments and the possibility of measures of reprisal or assistance. 2 Arrangements for a general economic eonfernece to which Germany and Russia wi.’t be invited. France wishes to apply severe pressure upon Germany for her failure to meet the indemnity installments. The British wish to give Germany assistance. France has already given assurance of her willingness to meet Itusian representatives for diseusion of financial and ••ommierclal matters but on the eonditian that this does not imply French recognition of the soviet government at Moscow. It is expected that Russia will ask either for official recognition of the soviet government at the conference or propose u fucure int ernational meeting, when recognition will be discussed. CHARGES OPIE RILLED ORDERLY Virginia Sergeant Sends Matson Letter Accusing Lieutenant Colonel. WASHINGTON. Dee. 2S.—The charge that Lieut. Col. 11. b. Opie of Staunton. Ya . killed his orderly. William Wo..!ine. in a dugout near the Argoune in October ©IS, was contained in a letter which Senator Watson, Democrat, of Get rgia. today handed Senator Brandegee. Republican. Connecticut, chairman of th * committee Investigating the \\ at son charges Thi< is the third killing of one of his men that is charged agalust Opie. who was formerly a major in command of a battalion of the 1 Hit a infantry. Opie already denied the ..the- two charges. The third is made by Lemuel O. Smith, of Marion. Va.. a former sergeant of company M. of Opies battalion. Smith said he refused to allow the negro to testify In his own behnif. "T was comma tiding a detail composed of Privates Toad Ellison. Lee Collins and William Askew, bringing in four prisoners when we heard a shot in a dugout.” wrote Smith. “We entered and found William Woolwine, Opie's orderly, lying dead. The room was still full or the smoke of the gun and Opie was looking at the body. lie tol.l us he had killed Woolwine a id ordered us to carry the body out.” According to sworn testimony already given by Henry L. Sett of Kenmore, Ohio. Scott saw (tide kill a sergeant who was crawling into a shell hole during a battle to protect himself against shells, and also a messenger who refused to turn over t<> opie a message which tic hitter demanded of him. Grayson 11. Withrow, 14H Retreat street. Baltimore. Mil., has written, saying he saw opi> kill the stgeaut Scott referred to. Watson demanded today that Smith and the three privates whom he named be summoned as witnesses. Watson also handed to the committee the names of Horace .T. Cook and Claude Breedon of Covington. \ a., who he declares, will testify they saw Opie kill the sergeant referred to by Scott. Watson further handed to Brandegee a letter from John S. Cannon an attorney and a former officer of the A. E. F.. whose address is 301 Lloyd for Gloydl building. Kansas City, Mo., and who charges that a court-martial on which he sat sentenced to death a negro whom he believed Innocent. Cannon charged that the presiding officer of the court forced the verdict of conviction. Seek Confederate of Murderer CHICAGO, Dee. 2S.—Police today are seeking the confederate of Charles Cecil Horner, 20. who confessed the slaying if Samuel R. Storer, a druggist, Dec. 12. Horner named his associate in his confession, pHoe say. Robbery. Horner said, was the motive and $3 in cash, some jewelry and some clothing was obtained. CLl'B DINNER TONIGHT. The monthly dinner of the Hi-y Club will be held in ihe rooms of the V. M. C. A. at 6:30 o’clock tonight. Milo Stuart, principal of Technical High School, will be the principal speaker. Music will be furnished by the Technical orchestra. At these monthly meetings Technical and Shortridge High School comhine their club meetings and dinners.

jft'% HOTEL LINCOLN j A 0 Management will celebrate the opening A \ of their wonderful fourteenth floor New Year’s Eve. Dinner will be served in the Travertine Room from 10 o’clock to 12 midnight and a splendid Dance Orchestra will furnish Music for those desiring to dance in the Lincoln Room and Lobby on the fourteenth floor. Tables will be profusely decorated with favors and noise makers and a splendid musical and stunt program will be given. AGAIN on Sunday, New Year’s night, dinner will be served in this room and our program will be in exceptional one. The Lincoln will continue to live up to its high standard of service, the best food obtainable excellently prepared and its extremely high order of music. Sunday night dinners hereafter will be served in the Travertine Room from 6 p. m., away from all noise and with splendid ventilation. The pipe organ will be installed the latter part of January and will. 1 am sure, be a delightful surprise to Indianapolis music lovers. Make Your Reservations Now! WM. R. SECKER, General Manager.

SCHOOL BOARD MEMBERS PASS POSIES AROUND Members-Elect Witness Battle of Roses From Sidelines. STORM CLOUDS APPEAR Had the lofty sentiments of mutual 1 esteem and forebearance, which marked the speeches of members of the board or school eommissionrs last night, been released duriug the last year, instead of being saved for a last minute burst or oratory, the sessions of the board might hare been models for a . race conference. instead of the cyclonic affairs they actually were. The meeting was the last one for Mrs. Julia Belle Tutewiler, president of the board, and Clarence E. Crippiu, both of j whom will retire Jan. 1, and after the regular business of the evening had been j transacted, only a trifle less bitter- 1 ness and quarreling than usual, the board members one after another arose and vied with each other in insisting that in all the differences and dissensions which have torn the board for (be last year, there was tio personal animus and then- was not the slightest doubt of the high motives which prompted each member in the widely divergent and antagonistic views held by the commissioners. MEMBERS-ELECT ATTEND MEETING. While all these verbal bouquets were being passed back and forth by board members more accustomed to hurling a vocal brickbat or two, the two corn-mlssioners-eiect. Dr. Marie Haslep and Adolph Kmbardt, who will take the places vacated by Mrs. Tutewiler and Mr. Crippin, were Interested spectators on the sidelines. Asa valedictory to her eight years "f service on the board Mrs. Tutewiler read a brief statement of the work accomplished by the board in the past four years. In part it was as follows: “The four-year term of the majority members of the school board has just hen completed These four years were during the most trying period that ever has confronted any school board, the war period with its aftermath of restlessness, discontent and conflict. “The board has been a divided board, but. in spite of the handicap, it has accomplished much that is worth while. A comprehensive survey of our schools and their needs was made. Afterward a committee visited the schools of the most r>regressive rities in the i nited States In order to obtain ideas for modern school buildings. Th- r. suit was our standard ized plans for school buildings, the merit of which alrea ly is being recognized by other cities. COMPLETE FIVE NEW SI lIOOI.S. “Following the plan ourselves we have completed schools 21. 22. 2<’>. 34 and r,s and •ire completing 37 and 3. We have ap proved plans for 73. 3'’.. Js. 62. and IB and have selected architects for 70 and 27. all of which are neecssary. ••At Technical much has lea n done along the lines of the Magonigb* plans approved by a former board. The great science building is in use and tip- shops unit has been completed. ■ The new part of Manual is being completed but will not function properly un iil the old part is remodeled as planned. When this is done w* will have a p*rfect high school •For Shortridge High Seh-xd we hare purchased gr -und on Thirty Fourth street, between M ridian ai.d Pennsylvania street*, and had hoped, and -till Ip pe to see. a wond< rful la-.v Shortridge, perfect in every detail, to take the place of the old. “Much credit for our building program is due to Mr Gadd. who has made a wonderfully efficient chairman of buildings and gronrds. “The in< rease of teachers’ salaries is an important step taken by the present ooard. Our teachers now receive salaries commensurate with the duties of the profession. They compare favorably with salaries paid in oth.-r large citi. * A complete and just salary schedule prepared by Superintendent K. F. Graff, has been adopted and is in use.''

min i: iu \oi\<.s BKSTOKKD IV SCHOOLS. Mrs Tutewilder :il<n spok<* -if the r<‘catablishment of Bible readings in the school and the work done hy the firm of Snider \ Kotz, engineers, in preparing data on which the standardized specifications for school buildings were prepared It was at this point that the board member* began their eulogies on their erstwhile antagonists. However, before this several little stonnlets appeared in the offing and there were frequent storm rumbles throughout the evening. W. I*. Allison charged Ilarry McCoy, head janitor at Arsenal Technical High ’ I School, had “flagrantly violated the rules lof the board," by contrlf>uting to the | campaign fund of the Better Schools League in the recent campaign, and had i discharged two other janitors because] : they refused to contribute. Mr. Allison 1 said he thought a special session of the i ! hoard should be called to Investigate, but the new hoard will have the task of set- ! • tling the trouble, for it was referred to! | Mr. Allison and C. W. Burton, superintendent of buildings and grounds, for In- i vesflgatioti. They will report to the new j '■ board. A policy of more schools for colored ) j children, rather than crowding large numbers of them in a few schools, was .advocated by Superintendent Draff. The matter came up when it was reported that, although School No. 20, Columbia ! j avenue and Sixteenth street, has just ; [been opened with a capacity of 1,300

DOG HILL PARAGRAFS

l T • M =75 Jr* in Sile Kildew took his pet screech owl to j preaching with him in the Calf Ribs neighborhood last second Sunday. The owl acteil all right, and felt at home as It used to roost In the church. • * • Sile Kildew, vvno wished all summer for autumn to come, has now set In to wishing for a deep snow, as he is aiming to begin wishiug on the first of the year for spring. • * * If there is much cloudy weather this winter, the Rye Straw storekeeper is either going to have to light a lamp or wash the windows. pupils it already Is In danger of over crowding. Mr. Graff said 1,000 pupils was about the proper limit for an elementary school, and he felt it would be well to consider ; the further development of School N. 37. a colored school at Baltimore avenue and Twenty-Fourth street. The recommendation of Ralph W. Douglass, business director, that the board renew the loan of $400,000 from the school building bond fund until Felt 20, 1922, in order to meet teachers’ payrolls. was adopted. After that time, he said, the boartl can go into the open market and borrow the money, it was explained that this will save interest for two months. This is the shortest length of time the board ever has had to bor row money for this purpose. Heretofore it bus been forced to borrow for at least I a six month period. The following changes in the personnel j of the teaching staff were reported by | Superintendent Graff and were approved by the board : Resignation—Thelma - King. Appointments, elementary, evening—Lillian M I.e Mon, No. 24, music; Ellen Thomas. No. 20, music. JAPS NOW WANT j RESERVATIONS’ Storm of Protest Arises Over Clause of Pacific T reat v. TOKIO. Dee. 28.—The so-called “tiro lection clause” of the Pacific treaty , drawn up by the Washington conference, 1 has aroused a storm of protest In Japan and there were indications today that Japan would inly ratify with reservations unless the pact is revised. Vi--.- Foreign Minister Tanaka received *he Diet committee and promised a rut! , inquiry into the “protection clause" and i complete interpretation of it. "Ratification is possible, but only wttnj reservations covering the ‘protection clause.’ ” said the foreign office official. 1 Members of the government claim that 1 it would be humiliating to Japan to In j elude the homeland In the treaty.

NEW OUTBREAKS IN STOCKYARDS One Man Shot as Rioting Is Resumed at Chicago. CHICAOO, lee. 28. Pneklngtown was an armed camp today. Sporadic rioting, which resulted in the shooting of one man. probably fatally, broke out again and necessitated the calling of several hundred police reserves. This is the first outbreak In the yards district between strikers and strike breakers In ten days. The trouble* started when a negro employe ttash*sl a gun on a crowd of strikers who Jeered him for working. The negro fled from n street ear and took refuge behind a door. When strikers attempted to reach him. he fired nt the leaders, wounding William Mil ler. Miller is in a critical condition. WAINWRIUHT TO SPEAK. Lucius M. Wainwright, president of the Diamond Chain and Manufacturing Company, will address the Indianapolis Bond Men’s Club nt a luncheon In the Tyndall room of the Columbia Club' at 12:lo o'clock, Saturday afternoon. Ills subject will be “My Impression of the Exchange Situation.” Mr. Wainwright has studied this subject extensively at home and abroad. Mending Tissue No tawing or darning Repairs clothing, silk. satin, cotton goods, ribbons, fabrics of all kinds, kid gloves. mackintoshes, umbrellas, parasols, stockings, etc. Package postpaid, 15 cents, two packages, 25 cants. Address PENN PUBLISHING CO., i Blalrsvlllc. Pa.

INDIANA DAILY TIMES, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 28,1921.

WILL ABOLISH MONOPOLY'. LONDON, Dec. 28.—The Moscow Soviet government is about to abolish government monopoly and grant absolute free-

Don’t Blame •"TROUBLE v/lth' the | children and dissatisfaction with the wear their shoes give can be avoided if you select the right brand of footwear, lo be sure of getting stylish, honest-* • leather, long-wearing shoes for the children, ask your dealer for The “Red Goose' * School Shoo # I Cood leather is becoming scarcer and som-v ! i I manufacturers are tempted to use cheap substi- /'' lutes for leather in making their shoes, but “Red 0 E3O \ Goose" shoes are made of SOLID LEATHER 4 l vt >n the insoles, counters, outsoles and every lift of YV SCSKMH. Jl the heels, and they accordingly give the utmost ; ] \ SSS3S / wear, as well as comfort, unj afford the greatest VvTrZ/ health protection. dSYw/’ Visit our store and select the proper Style for your girla and boys. I ( will pay you. HORUFF’S S .;t:-31l Virginia Avc. 1108-1110 Fountain Square F- I Norilinc.trrn !H-!MO V Meridian M. [(Pj jl

NOTICE REDUCTION IN PRICE OF ICE Commencing Jan. 1, Until Further Notice Our Priors for lee Will Be: Family trade*, delivered, r>.V per hundred. Wholesale or weight trade, delivered, Hoc per hundred. Peddler t ratio at plat form, 32 1 he per hundred. Polar Ice & Fuel Cos.

After You Get Money for Christmas —What? Answer —A Savings Account You can make a Rift of money a lasting gift if you will deposit it in a Savings Account. Don’t wait until January Ist to “turn over the now leaf”—Start NOW. % 4Vi% Meyer-Kiser Bank 136 East Washington Street

Eight People -'fere Injured In One Day by Travel Accidents In the columns of the Daily Times Monday were listed eight injuries caused by street ear 01* automobile accidents on Christmas day. Os this number one of the persons may die, his injuries being so serious, little hope is held for bis recovery. All of these injuries eonld have been covered with a Daily rimes Travel Accident Policy. Each of them could have received benefits of $lO a week —not to exceed 13 weeks—for the time lie or she was disabled. The cost to each would have been only 50 cents a year—less than one cent a week. Daily Times Travel Accident Insurances have been supplied to thousands of Daily Times readers. Call at the Times office and arrange for this insurance, or fill in the coupon and send it to the office with your remittance of 50 cents. ORDER AND REGISTRATION FORM (Copy of this order, signed by Times representative, must be given subscriber.) Indiana Daily Times, Insurance Dept., Indianapolis, lnd. Date I will buy the Daily Times from your carrier from date hereof and regularly thereafter until further notice, and wish you to register me as entitled to the travel accident Insurance procured by you for your subscribers. This is to be in accordance with the provisions of the travel accident Insurance policy which is to be delivered to me hy the Insurance company or the Daily Times within one week from date. I herewith pay the Daily Times representative fifty cents (o()c) to cover cost of securing and haudling policy. Name Age Street N<k Telephone No. (if any) City Where do you wish the paper left by carrier? Are you at present a subscriber? Start paper (date) Signature of Times’ Representative VERIFIED BY

j dom of commerce abroad, said a Central News dispatch from Copenhagen today, I quoting a report received there from MosI cow.

r Photographic portraits? Os course you’ll have t \slil-them made by Ninth FiMt. Kahn Bide.

DENTIST NITROUS OXIDE GAS For Painless Extracting Just a quiet gentle sleep. You feel nothing. Safe and harmless if you are worried, uervous and afraid to have tlioae old teeth taken out, come to us, and forget your troubles. (United Union Dental Corp.) Eiteljorg & Moore Corner E. Market St. and Circle. (33 years in same location) Ground Floor. Lady Attendant.

We Make PANTS and sell ’em direct to YOU at a saving. 11 r AKI tailoring co. LLUII -5-' Mass. Ave.

STATE LIFE LUNCH ONLY A STEP FROM YOUR OFFICE STATE LIFE BLDG.

DETROIT VAPOR STOVES PENINSULAR STOVES GURNEY REFRIGERATORS CHENEY PHONOGRAPHS For Sale by HOOSIER OUTFITTING CO. 443 5 E. Wash.

Everything About Cuticura Soap Suggests Efficiency

TOYS 50c on the Dollar Little Furniture Store *ll E. Washington St

fWe clothe the Entire Family ON CREDIT Peoples’CreditClothingCo. 46 North Pennsylvania Streot Second Floor.

You Can Buy It Cheaper at MOYER’S 137-139 W. Washington St.

Union Made aa f* Sheepskin Work Shirts— J I Lined Coats—--1 Just one square east of Pennsyl- j 97c $11.79

ii 1 * J I The M Wfbjg&h- E-Z-BA KE mmW s ays; “A Happy New Year to air Order a sack of Evans’ E-Z-BAKE FLOUR. You’ll learn that with this every-purpose flour you get equally good results every day in the year. Your Grocer Has It. EVANS’ E-Z-BARE V FLOUR. ** ,(®. 100 Years Regressive Milling

Sterling Rough Dry The quality of the work is just as important with Rough Dry as with finished laundering. Unless the washing and the ironing of the flat pieces is done with care, and using only the best materials, it is iinn possible for Rough Dry service to really satisfy you. Rough Dry work is a very large part Cents of the business here at tlie Sterling, and a Pound we solicit your work on the same basis that has built the business —careful workmanship and superior quality. Sterling Rough Dry Costs no more; lie. a pound. Call DR exel 6300 for complete details. STERLING LAUNDRY “Quality Assured"

Post Bankruptcy Sale Granger Department Store 33S West Washington Street MEN’S SUITS QQ Sizes from 54 so f>2. Hundreds of pat- TP p t#rns in newest materials and shades. tt These suits are well tailored and of TO good materials. Young men’s and con- _ servative models. A QQ Up to S4O Values. - ' - - SHOES —Men's, women’s and children’s: up aq to $5.00 values wlds Men’s Heavy Fleece AQ Men’s Heavy Fleece Underwear AQ (union suits) : fOC DON’T FORGET THE NUMBER. 336 West Washington Street

The Apex Electric Suction Sweeper “Takes the work out of housework. ’ Free demonstration in your own home. Tbe Hatfield Electric Company Main 0123. Cor. Maryland and Meridian Sts. Auto. 23-123.

GET THE HABIT Wear \ NOE’S QUALITY Jewelry THE FLETCHER IVI. NOE 103 N. Illinois St. JEWELRY STOKE. Opp. Terminal Station.

ll<inest Service. Reasonable Trices SHIRLEY BROS. CO., Inc. UNDERTAKERS OFFICES —946 N. Illinois St., 5317 E. Washington St.,? 3020 N Illinois St., 2108 W. Michigan St., 2815 E. Washington St. Circle 1918. Auto. 81-138. Amb. Service. We Manufacture Our Own Cement Caskets, " 1 i