Indianapolis Times, Volume 34, Number 306, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 May 1922 — Page 12

12

We Will Help You to Save Safely jflrttDtr fcatotftjs enu £rust Company NEW MOVE TO TIE HANDS OF LABOR BOARD Missouri, Kansas & Texas Railroad May Ask Injunction. CHICAGO, May 4.—Another move to further tie the hands of the United States Labor Board was threatened today. The Missouri, Kansas & Texas served notice on the shopmen that should the board decide against the railroads' right to contract out work, thus evading paying the wage scales set by the board, it will institute injunction proceedings following the precedent set by the Pennsylvania in its court action against the board. The notice was given the shopmen by W. E. Williams, one of the chief operating officers of the Missouri, Kansas & Texas. The threat was read into the record in the contract case of this road on hearing today before the board. The “Katy” line served notice that it would turn over its shops at Sedalia, Mo.; Parsons, Kan., and Dennison, Texas, to the firm of A. S. Hecker & Cos., of Cleveland. It gave notice that its employes would be discharged, their seniority terminated, as well as rights <f free transportation and hospital service. The Hecker company was under no obligation to take the men into its tuploy. Piece-work at terms to be set •y the road was to be instituted. The labor board took jurisdiction and ordered the road to hold the present arrangement until the case could be dc- • ided A decision will b handed down in a few days, It was said. AUTO THIEVES STEAL 3CARS Owners Report Machines Missing During Last Night. Three automobiles were stolen last night. Gordon Murdock of the H. C. S. factory, Capitol avenue and Fourteenth sireer, reported his automobile with license M HI stolen from Ohio and Bird streets. Yernie Woodruff, 1315 North llinois street reported his automobile with license 329199 stolen from near his home. M. S. Frosscott. 21 Hampton street, told the police his Cadillac automobile with license 1)100 was stolen from North and New Jersey streets.

SILENT ORATOR TO BOOST SHOW Will Carry Message From Governor McCray. United public support of the Indiana Health Exposition to be held at the state fairground May 19 to 27, was asked in a statement issued today by Gov. Warren T. McCray. The message will lie carried by the silent order of the Mcr-i-hants Heat and Light Company at Merllian and Washington streets, beginning b y lt> and continuing during the week . ’ rli,- exposition. ** The message read" as follows: "You avc a personal interest in the Indiana Health Exposition at the State fairground May 19 to 27. Health building is the tirst business of the State and individual. Injure your home against preventable disease. Governor Warren T. McCray.” Every department of the State government which contributes in any way to health building will present an exhibit at the exposition, together with several Federal Bureaus and nearly a hundred other educational agencies.

TROOPS TO STAY AFTERJULY 1 Conditions in Germany May Modify U. S. Policy. -p®<ial t n Indiana Daily Timex and Philadelphia Public Ledger WASHINGTON, Mar 4. —Representations made to the State Department by the allies. Germany and groups of tmeriean Government to change Its re i ently announced decision to withdraw all American troops from the Rhine by July 1. Orders already issued by the War Department, withdrawal of about 2.500 men within the next thirty or sixty days, will be carried out. but Indications are the requests of the European nations will be heeded and a relatively small garrison will he maintained in the Coblenz area. Acknowledgment that the question of the retention of some of the troops nowon the Rhine was under consideration was made at the War and State Departments. but any definite announcement of policy at the time, it was said, would e 'Tremature." TWO DATS IN CHIMNEY. .IVERI’OOL. May 4—John Stone, ed 12. fell down an eighty-four foot •himney Enable to make himself heard, he finally climbed out. It todk him two Jays.

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LEADERS AT CAPITAL IN AFTERMATH Reflections Vary as to Result in Indiana. IS REPUDIATION? Friendship of Harding and New Held Significant. Special to Indiana Dally Times and Philadelphia Public Ledger. WASHINGTON, May 4.-Eepor‘.s in dicating the defeat of Senator Harry S. New by Albert J. Beveridge, former adherent of Theodore Roosevelt, for the Republican nomination for Senator from Indiana, took Republican leaders .here by complete surprise. The results of the primary election immediately were interpreted by unbiased political ot servers as a crushing repudiation of this Administration. RECORD OF HARDING ISSUE FROM START. This itsue of the campaign was from the start the record of the Administration. It was given unusual significance by the recognize 1 personal and political kinship of President Harding and Mr. New. who was an Administration spokesman in the Senate. Mr. Beveridge said from the start he would support President Harding if elected. Every voter of Indiana, however, as was pointed out here, knew tha: a vote for Mr. Beveridge was a vote against the wishes of the President. REPUBLICAN'S OFFER ALIBIS. Republicans, scarcely recovered from the shock, were unwilling to attribute Mr. New’s defeat as a repudiation of the Administration. They gave numerous explanations for Mr. New’s defeat. They claimed local Issues turned the tide againßt Mr. New. Some said the women did it. For the most part they withheld public comment. Democrats were elated. Cordell Hull, Democratic National committeeman, held the defeat of Mr. New "a plain and emphatic repudiation of the Harding Administration and Senator New’s part therein.” Democratic Senators seized upon Mr. New’s defeat to make numerous statements attributing it to various policies for which the Administration stood. Excepting on the Newberry issue. the primary results were regarded as not so much a manifestation of protest against any particular policy, but against "things as they be.” Police Break Up Party and Arrest 4 An early morning party was interrupted today by the arrival of four police officers in the 300 block on Ells worth street. Asa result three men and one woman were arrested. Everett "Little Shiner" Middaugh, 31, 71(5 North Capitol avenue, was arrested on the charges of operating a blind tiger and drunkenness Gene Zeller. 25. the Lorraine Hotel, was charged with drunken ness. Albert MeKeever. 23, negro, sis North Senate avenue, was charged with vagrancy, and Miss Marion Hall. 19. 414 East Michigan street, was arrested on the charge of vagrancy. BABY’S ESCAPE. DUDLEY". England, May 4.—A runaway motor truck smashed through the wall of a cottage here and wrecked a couch on which John Fisk was holding his baby. The baby escaped, but Fisk was killed.

DEMOCRATS FIND HOPE IN PRIMARY RESULTS OF INDIANA DISTRICTS

That a number of Indiana eongrea sional districts which in former years were Democratic may return Democratic Congressmen in the election next fall is indicated by the votes cast in the pri mary. In the Third district, whDu has hi en represented by James W. Dunaar of New Albany, now vice president and manager of the Citizens Gas Company of this city, the Democratic vste great'y exceeded that of the Republican In Clark County, the largest in joint ot population in the Third district, the combined vote for the Democratic candidates for Senator was 5,022. as against the combined vote of 2.358 for Beveridge and New. In addition to the Third, the Democrats sec the primary voting as an indication of strength in the fourth, -where they lost by a slight majority In 10-0. Harry C. Canfield of Batesville. renominated by the Democrats, will again cppose John S. Bonham The fact thaa a contest existed for the Democratic nomination may account for the much larger

DOG HILL PARAGRAFS JOC I .* __ Columbus Allsop says the sun moves so fast a person can pick himself out a right nice cool shady place in which to take a nap, and when he wakes he is liable to be sitting in the hot, broiling sun. • • • • Jefferson Potlocks says his children, after having taken particular pains to leave all the doors open during the winter weather, are now beginning to close all of them during the warm weather. The Hear ay Club assembled writh Mrs. Tohe Moseley on last Friday afternoon. Nothing of any importance could tie taken up. as nearly everybody that could be talked about was present. TRUST OFFICER, IN TALK, CITES QUEER WILLS Urges Necessity of Having Document Made by Expert. A will in which a father provided that the income from his estate, held in trust, should be paid in equal shares to his two daughters as long as they both remained unmarried, but in which both shares should be paid to the unmarried Bister when the other married a husband able to provide for her, was one of the unusual examples of will-making cited by Donald Morris, trust officer of the Fletcher Savings and Trust Company, iu his talk on “Wills” before the Seventh district. Indiana Federation of Women’s Clubs, at their meeting in the director’s room of the trust company Thursday morning. Mr. Morris added that when the old gentleman was asked his reason for this queer provision he said "he wanted his girls to stop fussing and help each other get married." He emphasized the ne eessity of every one having a will, and of the need of having such wills drawn* up by specialists, who have been trained to think of and provide for changes which may come about between the time the will is drawn and the time It Is used. “The fact that according to common belief most anybody can draw a will and therefore it can be done at any time, often results in the consequence that it is never accomplished,” Mr. Morris said The other speaker of the morning was 11. F\ t’lippinger, manager of the corn pany’s bond department, who talked on Sound Investments." “Most people,” Mr. f’lippinger said, “du nut ask for advice until it is too late, and then argue with us to support their bad judgment." 250-MILE WALK IN DAZE. CHICAGO. May 4.—A woman suffering from aphasia but plentifully supplie i with money was found in a daze here. It was learned that she had walked 200 miles from an East German town.

vote rast in the Democratic primarv than In the Republican, as Bcnha.n was unopposed. Scott County, normally considered reliably Democratic, returned to its old prefo cnees when It cast a vote for Ralston alone that exceeded the combined vote for Beveridge and New Aside from the apparent rejuvenation of the Democratic party, another feature of the primary is the apparent disaffection in the ranks of the Republican local leaders whose fight lor party control is regarded by many as one of the factors contributing to the defeat of Senator Harry S New. Prior to the primary no cohessive organization back of Beveridge had any aspiration for control of the party machinery. Friends of Senator Watson and Governor McCray, who are generally credited with the desire to name the State < nairman, had been ac cused of being only lukewarm In their support of Senator New for the reason that the New for Senator organization was bound up too closely with the State Republican organization beaded by Ed ward Wasmuth.

INDIANA DAILY TIMES.

BLOODY FIGHTS OF WITNESSES STRAIN PEACE Additional Troops Called to Keep Quiet at Trial of Strikers. OLD FEUDS REVIVED * CHARLESTOWN, W. Ya„ May 4 Bloody fist fights among witnesses for the State today threatened the already strained peace prevailing at the miners’ treason trials here. An additional squad of State troopers is on its way here, following sev?rul hotel, street and poolroom brawls. The limitation on firearms which both the State and defense have sought to enforce apparently has been the only preventative of open warfare. Some of the principals in he most bitter feuds growing out of the West Virginia mine wars are here and they never forget the past. Two witnesses last night fought in a poolroom for ten minutes until the proprietor ran screaming Into the street. One boy witness then staggerer out, his face and clothing splotched wl h blood. Both fighters disappeared quickly and the police were notified. The State is preserving the utmost secrecy regarding the movements of Its witnesses to prevent encounters vlth oldtime enemies on the streets here. They are being kept at Harpers Ferry, seven miles away, -.util just before they are to appear In court. It was learned that Don Chafir. former sheriff of Logan County, whoso- death was sought by some miners in the march into the coal fields last summer, has conferred with the prosecution at Harper's Ferry. Plans of the prosecution are to bring him here next week in an automobile, under a heavy guard, have him testify and then rush him out of town. COUGHS TO DEATH. BUENOS AIRES, May 4—A tiny particle of food lodged in his throat caused Tomaso Pannero to cough to death.

STOMACH - TROUBLE ~ V. When you have socalled Stomach ZStfej-jA trouble there is a L nerve pressure at the *1 jy place in the spine In N n dieated by the ar Let me release the pressure and therdiy Remove the *4 Cause of your stomach I have done it for others. Why not for you? w * c CHIROPRACTOR 904 Odd Fellow Bldg. Honrs: 10 to 11:80 A. 51.; 1 to 5 amt 7 to 8 P. M. Sunday and other hours by appointment. Office Tel., Main 6941 Residence Te!., Randolph 7717. No Charge for Consultation

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Enjoy Your Watch" WHILE YOU ARE PAYING. r That's one of the greatest advantages of our liberal credit offer. The *-• "n goods are delivered Into your Jit possession v.lth your first CJ} payment and you have all the pleasure of using them while . you're paying the bill In such small amounts that the money Wp'Jh Is nover missed. Our credit ilS'Ma P r * ces are no higher than •LeJjl > ou 'd had In stores where V’TjYy spot cash Is demanded. Gray, Gribben & Gray Corner Ohio, Indiana and Illinois. " We Trust Anyone Who Works DECORATING SPECIALISTS Prather Wall Paper Cos. 229 E. Ohio St. LI ncoln 6225 SCREEN Doors, Screen Window* and Screen Wire can be obtained at —VONNEGUTS—--120-124 E. Washington St.

A Store Within a Store Perhaps you do not know this Boys’ Store of Sehloss Brothers Cos. as you should. We really believe that you owe it to yourself to come in and find how this store ivithin a store can serve you. While entirely separate from our men’s store U is bound by the same strong desire to serve, the most complete showings and the Bame helpful service that has been building our store for men. The displays of suits for boys should be of special interest. New models, dependable fabrics, extra trousers with every suit, at - *10.95 $ 12.50 s ls —Are pleasing many mothers each day—and we know you will like them, too. It’s Underwear 1 Pleasing Time Wash Suits One of these days you'll dis- The kind that please mother, cover that summer IS really j because go.d looking and in here! And a rush for sonny a good style, please ,ather, beunderwear will be on! Get 1 c^ us ° s ,° f , a Pricoa; readv now the I'ttle fellows, because no * ' matter how they soil them Hatch-way Buttonless Union they come up smiling. Suits, SI.OO 1 OC In linens galatea. chambray, ani * kiddie cloth; all wanted colFirst quality Porosknlt j °[ s aml Sizes 2 iO .- Union Suits tf* i rtn A special full-cut Nainsook 9 1,/l M 7 — ° to .“. s “! t . 75c $3.95 THE BOYS’ STORE OF Schloss Pros Cos Second Floor—State Life Building

High School Graduates And Under or Over Listen to the appeal of Business Think of the rich opportunities it holds In store for you Just muke the specific preparation, and business will rendlly and eagerly welcome you. Once you are started. It will surround you with daily Influences that will compel the very best development on your part That Is why a business college course means so much Tt forms the connecting link It makes the right start possible There's always a substantial demand for business college graduates. Attend Indiana Business College at Marion. Muncle, Logansport. Anderson, Kokomo. Lafayette. Columbus, Richmond, Vincennes. Crawfordsvtlle. l’ern or Indianapolis. Cbas. C ('ring Is President and Ora E. Butz, Gen Mgr. This school is in session the year round. No vacations; no stopovers; po interruptions. Enter now and attend continuously until your course is completed and you accept a position. Get In touch with ihe point you wish to attend, ■ see, write or telephone Fred IV. Case, Principal. Pennsylvania and Vermont—First Door North V. IV. C. A., lndpls.

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WHY NOT LIVE A LITTLE LONGER? INDIANA HEALTH EXPOSITION State Fair Ground May 19-27 Tickets On Sale at Your Drug Store.

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Excursion to Louisville, Ky. SUNDAY, MAY 7th, 1922 Round Trip : $2.75 : Round Trip Train leaves Traction Station 7:00 a. m. Returning, leaves Louisville 7:00 P. M. Details see T. J. Gore, Jt. Tkt. Agt. Main 4500. INTERSTATE PUBLIC SERVICE COMPANY

Which Do You Prefer — BIG GAME HUNTING, SMALL GAME HUNTING, OR FISHING? No matter what your choice, you’ll be tremendously interested in the stories told by America’s greatest all-round sportsman. REX BEACH & LIKES ’EM ALL Beach, the author 7 Yes, he’s among America’s greatest allround sportsmen. lie tells of many Urilling experiences in a (P Twelve Interviews for Lovers Monday, Mjm* May, 8 in the Miami JlatJij kitties

MAY 4, 1922.

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