Indianapolis Times, Volume 35, Number 5, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 May 1922 — Page 3

MAY 17, 1922.

WOOD REQUIRES MORE TIME TO COMPLETE JOB Will Stay in Philippines Six Months Before Taking School Post. Ppeelal to Indiana Pally Times a.vl Philadelphia Publio Ledger. WASHINGTON, May 17.—Maj. Gen. Leonard Wood finds he cannot relinquish the governor generalship of the Philippines In September to become provost of the University of Pennsylvania without leaving undone very vital features of Philippine reorganization. Therefore he has asked the university trustees for an extension of time, to be not more than four months, with the expectation of taking the university post Jan. 1. Gen. Wood's decision was communicated in a cablegram to Secretary Weeks, made public today and transmitted to Provost Harrison of the university, Senator Pepper and George W. Wickersham of the board of trustees of the university; J. Norman Henry of Philadelphia and A. B. Brunker of Chicago representing the Pennsylvania alumni. Beyond indicating It still was the desire of President Harding that On. Wood remain in the islands until the reforms Inaugurated by the present administration were well under way. Secretary Weeks offered no comment on the communication. He made It plain the President looked on the question as one wholly for determination by Gen. Wocd and the university authorities. The general belief in the War Department, however, was that Gen. Wood will stay In Manila another six months, donbtlesa with the understanding he will come to Philade'""iia Jan. 1.

Motion to Dismiss • Mrs. Clara G. Carl SHELBYVILLE, Ind., May 17.—Arguments to dismiss the murder charges against Mrs. Clara Gibson Carl, Indicted in connection with the deaths of her second husband and bis father, alleged to have died from food poisoning, will be made in the Shelby Circuit Court, some time the latter part of the week, probably Friday or Saturday. Attorneys for the accused woman alleges that the allegations against her are insufficient. She is to be placed on trial Monday of next week for the alleged murder of her husband, the charges having been veaued here from Hancock County. BOOKNOTES “For contiguous opportunities of freedom In a land, lake-set and limitless, and incredibly near at hand, there is no rival nowadays to the Laurentians.” Thus T. Morris Longstreth on the Canadian wilderness which he has put Into a book. “The Laurentians: The Hills of the Habitant,” to be published by the Century Company, May 26. “For scenery I choose their sisters, the Adirotidacks: and for peculiar animals I suppose Africa still leadssays Mr. Longstreth. but—- “ Three hours' progress north from Montreal disclose* an unobstructed outpath to the pc le. Further, three days’ search In Canada's finest library had not disclosed a single book describing this great wonderland of the Laurentian mountains. So It seemed an alluring thing to stick a notebook in my bippocket and a duffle bag on my back and explore this terra non comftrtna. I took rare not to travel with the notebook in hand. I had no desire to tabulate all the places that a tourist should accomplish In order to say that he had done the thing with a clear conscience; neither did I desire that the natives should feel honor bound to perjure themselves for advertisement's sake. But If I have journeyed skiphazardly, seen superficially and re ported but a part, yet I have not committed Munchausen therein. There was too much true delight, too much delicious mishap, to require the spice of unveraclty.” “At the Moment of Death’’ bids fair to come at a moment extremely propitious for itself. This, the second volume of M. Flammarion’s trilogy on survival after

m%M j WJf OUSEWORK is no party any time of the I | } Jjjj year, but in the warm summer months it ■ I J is a positive nightmare, unless it is done fl n \ electrically. In the home that is equipped with 1 (I an electric washer, vacuum cleaner and ironer, JrZ&Ef PjjfikX V \ housework can be completed every day in the cool Jjr | y morning hours. After that the rest of the day ÜB| Kj A \ sits lightly on the housewife’s hands. Fortify 8 \ i yourself against summer’s fatiguing heat. V \ Electric Servants are EASY I | In to own . Every dealer listed Bjl below will make you easy I | terms . All you have to do M m a is ASK! U M Electric Appliance League WHOLESALERS DEALERS N TARNEY ELECTBir CO.. 121 8. Meridian St. w f C. M. C. ELECTRIC SALES CO., MTREKA SALES CO.. 84 8. Meridian St 1 |X 607 Odd Fellowsßldg. GOOD HOUSEKEEPING SHOP. V WESTERN ELECTRIC CO.. 236 Massachusetts Ave. j I 124 8. Pennsylvania Bt. HATFIELD ELECTRIC CO., 108 8. Meridian St ' U INDIANAPOLIS ELECTRIC SUPPLY CO., MODERN APPLIANCE CORP. ti 122 S. Meridian St. 34 S. Pennsylvania St. * 11 INTERNATIONAL ELECTRIC CO. *T9OO” ELECTRIC SPECIALTIES CO fu 211 S. MeCrea 81. 144 E. Ohio St. -l LIGHT AND POWER S^SK, E SS?iVo c BS. a ? £ s£a It A INDIANAPOLIS LIGHT AND HEAT CO.. VONNEGIT HARDWARE CO -'larket St. II 4* Monument Circle. 128 E. Washington St. ” A’ Iff MERCHANTS HEAT AND LIGHT CO. ELECTRIC GIFT SHOP, 115 E Ohio St 11 jfl Washington and Meridian Sts. THE ELECTRIC SHOP. 46 Monument Circle. V Hs^33Ssgg3egSSS^g3gg33ig^e^^ s |

death which the Century Company la translating and publishing In America, will appear daring May, and should meet some part of the tremendous appetite for information on things psychic so generally aroused by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle’s lectures. It le said to contain an enormous number of carefully authenticated instances of those strange phenomena of the deathbed of which we have all of us heard more or leas, together With a consideration of the significance of these occurrences In connection with the great question. Camille Flammanon la one of a considerable group of prominent scientists who are, at this point of long and distinguished careers, Intently and passionately Interested In the problems Involved In life after death. Those of ue who may be Inclined to scoff may do well to j recall that, whatever contrast M. Flam- ! marlon’s present ardor may offer to the “cold scientific spirit,” his achievements as a scientist are absolutely beyond question. His contributions to astronomy belong to the permanent history'of that science. Incidentally, we hear that of the first volume, entitled “Death and Its Mystery,” devoted to proving by means of an inconceivable number of carefully recorded psychic phenomena that the soul

We Believe in Indianapolis

Work Gloves Indianapolis boasts of the largest individual glove factory in the world. This city’s production of canvas, jersey and leather re-inforced work gloves would place over forty pairs on the hands of every man, woman and child in the city each year. In making these gloves one and one-half million yards of Canton flannel, one and three-fourths million yards of knit goods, two hundred and sixty million yards of thread and one million square feet of leather are used each year. Five hundred people are employed in this industry and 78,000 square feet of floor space , are used. Each year 185 freight cars leave this city laden with cotton gloves destined for all points in the United States and most of the civilised countries of the world. Fletcher American National Bank of INDIANAPOLIS Capital and Surplus, $3,000,000.

exists and acts in*. pendently of the physical body, 40,0(10 copies were sold in France rp to July, 1020. Sydney Greenble’s “The Pacific Triangle”. has been adopted as a Chautauque text, and will be nsed thia season In its summer studies. The Century Company Is preparing a special edltlbn for this purpose. A book to come from the Century Company in May Is "Food Products from Afar.” E. H. S. Bailey and H. S. Bailey, the authors, are both well-known food specialists, but their book Is said to be deliberately popular and entertaining, In no sense a text, but containing a thou- ! sand romantic, strange, interesting and thought-provoking facts about opr exotic foods. Headers will be regaled with one fact calculated to stagger the imagination, we are told: America Imports for her Immigrants about eight million pounds of garlic every year. (No wonder we are enthusiastic about “Americanization!”) To pick out one fact, and that “a statistic,” Is not fair, since the Century Company declares this is probably at I once the most Inclusive and Informal book about our Imported foods ever written. Joseph Hergeshelmer Is the subject of

INDIANA DAILY TIMES.

the May Bookman's "Literary Spotlight.” Among other things, we learn that: “One of Hergeshelmer's weaknesses Is of speaking before women’s clubs. He la in great demand for that sort of thing. But usually he does not get a second invitation to speak before the same club. He has a faculty for getting himself In bad; he Is a consummate egotist and he takes a sadistic delight In saying things which make his audience uncomfortable. Probably ninetenths of his readers are women, but when he has an audience of women, he usually asperses their intelligence categorically and In detail. "That Is a cultivated attitude which feeds his own vanity. When he was in Chicago, he felt called upon to upbraid the dltxens for the physical unloveliness of the city. He lamented that the architecture there was not the same as that of Florence. He was Invited to speak before a certain club and In sheer perversity failed to show up. When no one later showed concern for his negligence, he called up his hostess five times, trying to get her to arrange another lecture date for him.” Hugh Walpole, In “An Open Letter to

$1.25 Gris Gingham Dresses $1.25 Jffomen’s Boom Dresses Ages Bto 14 years. VH I h Wm B 1 ■ I You'll be surprised when \ A remarkable purchase. Just )P S f B * I Ji| | V AOfe ■ l|l 1 fl ? ee thes ® well made dresses ( I* f* arrived in time for this sale. (Lv L. 9Uf VH m JH Mt 1 Bjf are offenn S in this sale. > lov Hundreds of prettily trimmed \ ■ ■ ™ 111,1 SlLFfiSi * ) U*3i> \ Xn-321 W. Wm^WngteO | Tlwrsdlay Is 55c Day! To you who have attended our previous 55c sales we need say j No J?' ?' D, s no more. To the rest of you we say, don’t miss this one. Offer- w o °e No Exchanges ; ng new , f res h, seasonable merchandise at phenomenal savings. No No Layaway g e ()n [ lun j ear j y- You’ll save as much as you spend. | _

$1 Women’s Wash Blouses Prettily made of fine sheer asl nd | voiles and dimities; with collars of check ginghnm or gfl dotted swiss; sizes 36 to 46. Women’s Khaki Over’ll Suits I These suits are well made, art M | cut full and roomy; just the j_ |_ thing for women who work in factories, etc. 36 to 44. v Women’s Bloomers, 2 for ! Well made of crepe or ba- pd asm. | tlste in plain pink and blue- |_ L bird patterns; a remarkable value for Thursday; all sizes. (/(/V $2 Men’s Auto Brand I Overalls or Jackets I 55c The famous Anto Brand overalls and jackets of heavy blue deuitn. Buy one pair for $1.59 and get an extra pair for only 55£. Boys’ Shirts and Blouses j Well made of light and dark F* P* I percales, with collars at- L. tached, sizes 6 to 14. "l jßfl $1 Boys’ Wash Suits j Well made of chambrays; In P* j - I all colors and the newest styles; while 600 last. _ li Boys’ Comb. Overall Suits \ Wabash stripes; plain blues P - j - I and khaki; prettily trimmed Ivwte. a in red. Sizes 2to 10. To $lO Boys’ 2-Pants Suits fuh lined * Knickers Hundreds of quality suits that are actually worth up to $lO are included in this sale Thursday. Bring your boy and outfit him at a saving.

r $5 Girls’ Coats Sizes f* P* Ito 8 9^ years. Well made of the new shepherd check material. sls Girls’ Wraps Sizes CC 2 to 14 years. m W ■— High-grade, all wool wraps and sports coats. ,

H. L. Menehen” in the May Bookman, refutes Mr. Mensken's charge that the English critics are neglecting the more recent American novelists. By way of explaining the comparatively small sales of their work in England, Mr. Walpole says: “For some reason, the American novel presents English readers with conditions that are very difficult for them to understand. Part of the difficulty is beyond question this problem of the new American language. Take ‘Main Street’ or ‘Three Soldiers' or ‘Moon-Calf,’ and you will find pages of those books peppered with phrases that to nine Engllshmea out of ten are quite unintelligible. When you get to the words of Don Marquis or Ring Lardner they might, for most English readers, he Just as readily written in Russian or Chinese. But it is not only difficulty of language. American conditions simply have no parallel In this country. The majority of Englishmen have not visited the United States, and many of those who have been there have penetrated no farther than the wilds of New York and Chicago. • • • “The fact remains that the American novel is at present dealing with conditions unknown to the English reader,

STORE OPEN SATURDAY UNTIL 9 P. M.j

Women’s Brassiers, 2 for | Prettily made of brocaded j material or basket weave |_ L cloth; regular 39c values; all g sizes. (/ Women’s Union Suits, 2 for Ribbed unions for the large jert aril j woman; shell knee styles; |_ |_ _ crochet and tailored tops; | 'll* extra sizes. Extra Size Dressing Sacques I Well made of fine quality P - F* S percales in pretty dark pat- W. k A terns; all sizes. Women’s Petticoats, 2 for j Made of striped gingham, in I™ f regular and extra largo sizes. Women’s Bungalow Aprons Womens’ house aprons of ad pi j good percales; In attractive |_ patterns; belted styles; all sizes. %JfKjf\j Girls’ Percale Aprons, 3 for Well made of new- summer I - I percales; in the popular bib styles; all sizes for girls. U Bfl Girls’ Princess Slips Embroidery trimmed in deep f - | flounces, made of good qual- L. U ity muslin; sizes 4 to 14. | # |( Girls’ Combination Suits j Made of white muslin, vest P* I and bloomer style, prettily |. k trimmed; sizes 8 to 14. Bi Children’s Bloomers, 2 for Well made of black sateen, P* P - | reinforced, or pink crepe; all sizes for children. • Pettibockers and Petticoats For women; made of good P* P* f sateen; in green, copen, navy L L and black; all sizes. B M $1 Boys’ Knickers j Remarkable value for 65c P* | day; all mothers whose boys need pants should be here.

$25 Women’s Knit Crepe Dresses SCSS Every dress a worth while value; come down early and save a good day’s wages. All colors and sizes.

while the English novel is speaking of manners and customs that have been known for generations to American visitors.” GIRLS! LEMONS WHITEN SKIN AND BLEACH FRECKLES Squeeze the juice of two lemons into a bottle containing three ounces of Orchard White, which any drug store will supply for a few cents, shake well, and yon have a quarter pint of harmless and delightful lemon bleach. Massage this sweetly fragrant lotion into the face, neck, arms and hands each day, then shortly note the beauty and whiteness of your skin. Famous stage beauties use this lemon 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.

Women’s Ex. Size Vests, 4 for I Quality knit vests; in white | or pink, made with bodice L. tops;, all sizes. gl Ming Toy Dresses Girls’ panty dresses of good t* P* | linene; in pretty, plain col- kk/k ors. Sizes 2 to 6. "w jSfl Child’s Socks, 3 pairs for In plain black, brown or P* J white, with pink or blue tops, Kb. sizes 4 to 8. tJiJL Women’s Hose, 5 pairs for Fine silk lisle hose, in black, P® j white or brown, with rein- g^ forced soles, all sizes. _ r_ li Children’s Hose, 5 pairs for I Ribbed hose for boys or girls, Pi J* | in black only, while they last, L. L. g* sizes - jjt Women’s Silk Hose i Reinforced heel and toe, col- E - F* j ors are nude, black, gray and In. /r\ brown, all sizes, _ B_ Ms Double Ex. Size Unions Fine knit unions for women, P® F* | in white only, summer weight, k. L g* sizes 4S to 64. Ja. Infants’ Dresses Well made of fine batiste, pP* | prettily embroidered, in long In. L, g% or short styles. | JS Infants’ Petticoats ] In the popular Gertrude P* P* | styles, embroidery trimmed, k. L n sizes 2 to 6. * B- Bo Infants’ Blankets, 2 pairs for I A good size blanket, attrac- P* | tively trimmed, in pink or |^ ■• jjC Infants’ Rubber Pants, 2 for I Extra good quality, 1n pink j - P - I or natural color, all sizes |n L while they last. jn . jSfl

Women’s Tweed SUITS $£.55 Tailored and Tuxedo styles. Sizes 14 to 44.

4 “Live a Little Longer ** Health Exposition May 19th to 27th Refresh yourself with a Mountain Valley Water Jf ,i at our Health Exposition r PhqsictaTU in Stomach. Kidneq, liver and Bladder Disease*-* MountainVaDeDVater , s. Aflc. ;— cl preventive of dLlse-ctse-

$25 Women’s Chinchilla Sport Coats All-Wool $2^55 Just think, the season’s most wanted garment at such a ridiculously low price for Thursday.

Infants’ Vests, 5 for j Also children’s fine knit vests, W* | in long sleeve or Bleeveless L. fa. g% Children's Rompers j Made of plain or check ging- F* F - | ham, In pink, blue or laven- k. U. der, sizes 2to 6. JB jlfi Men’s Silk Hose, 2 pairs for This Is a remarkable value, p* P* | black, white and colors, all fa. In. g | sizes, ‘‘substandards.’’ $2 Quality Men’s Khaki Trousers 55c Men’s good quality khaki pants, in cuff bottom stxde; all sizes. The first pair costs $1.59 and you get an extra pair for 55£. Men’s Hose, 7 pairs for j Good quality cotton work hose F® W& | in all colors and sizes, while fa L. g± they last. JPJ v Men’s Nainsook Unions | Also balbriggan unions; In P* JP 1 | white or ecru; athletic style, nainsook, with elastic back. j|l Men’s Work Shirts | Well made, cut full to size | of good quality chambray; fin sizes 14 to 17. • Up to $1 Women’s Undermuslins Gowns, mggg Chemise, _ Petticoats, Bloomers, Everything in undermuslins in this big 55c sale. Petticoats, gowns, chemise, silk camisoles, j corset covers and bloomers. Os good materials; in all sizes. Regular and extra sizes.

sls Stout Women’s Spring Coats All wool mate- £ ptf -i m rials; all sizes; many to choose *r • **** from. Sizes 43 to 55 Stout Women’s Silk Poplin Dresses A large assort- A pr ment of colors; all smartly de- “ ***' signed. Sizes 43 a 1 to 55

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