Indianapolis Times, Volume 35, Number 13, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 May 1922 — Page 11

MAY 26,1922.

GRAHAM AND SMALL ESCAPE FACING JUDGE Two Leaders of Thirteenth District Republican Organization in City Court. SOUTH BEND, Ind., May 20.—Charts Aurainst Archibald G. Graham of South and P. O. Small of La Forte. leadThirteenth district Republ'ran politicians, filed In the city court at ilisha•waka. have been continued indefinitely. The two were arested following a district convention two weeks ago. Graham was charged with driving an automobile while under the influence of liquor and Small was alleged to have been intoxicated. The two secured repeated continuances, until finally announcement was made of an Indefinite continuance, which means that the cases will never come to a hearing. Graham and Small have returned from the State convention, where they played prominent parts in Thirteenth district affairs. Small is Republican chairman in La Porte County, Indiana Year Book at Public Library Copies of the Indiana Tear 800k —just out—have been placed in the Business Branch Library, ir. the old Library building, for general distribution. Business m*-n and women may call and get their copy of this valuable reference volume issued free by the State on their way to or from tbelr work. POLICE HOLD MULE CAB. The police today are holding an autoblle said to belong to Nathan Tumbler, <145 Union street, pending Investigation of the ownership of eight pint bottles of white mule which were found when the car was searched In a garage at 924 Union street.

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Highways and By-Ways 0/Lil’ Ol’ New York By RAYMOND CARROLL (Copyright. 1922, by Public Ledger Company.) 1 1 1 11

NEW YORK. May 20.—The University of Pennsylvania, beginning next week, will have a New York outpost—a permanent clubhouse for Its alumni at 35 and 37 East Fiftieth street, two handsome brick and limestone four-story residence buildings. which are next door to the town house cf the late Whitelaw Reid with its spacious yard. Number So for the last sixteen years has been the home of Col. William Barclay Parsons, the engineer who planned and built the New York subways, and number 37, the adjoining residence, was the home for years of Colonel Parsons’ mother-ln-law. Among the enthusiastic University of Pennsvlvanle graduates who have personally pledged themselves financially to the twenty-year lease taken upon the Fiftieth street residences are: Former Attorney General George W. Wiekersham, former Attorney General William A. Redding, former district attorney of Philadelphia, George S. Graham : William Guggenheim, Judge Henry G. Ward, Frank C. Ford. I>r. William McClellan, Luther Martin, Jr., and William L. Saunders. Mr. Saunders is president of the University of Pennsylvania Club of New York City. Asa nucleus for membership the new club will havo the I.SOO University of Pennsylvania graduates on the lists of the homeless old New York Alumni Association. These include Lindley M. Garrison, formerly secretary of war; Milton V. Snyder, co-author with Alice Ziska Snyder of "Paris Pays and London Nights;" CoL Lloyd C. Grissom, Robert 0. Hill, Severe Mallet I’revost; William B. Boulton and E. C. Klndlebarger. The promoters predict within a comparatively few years the new club will rival either the Yale Club or the Harvard Club of New York City. Nowhere in the world are such magnificent college alumni clubhouses as in New York City. The Yale Club, at

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Forty-Fourth street and Vanderbilt avenue, represents a cash outlay for build- j lng and ita appointments of 52,500,000. j It is the only skyscraper club In existence and ocupies twenty-two stories. W. H. Taft, Chief Justice of the Supreme Court, when In New York Is usually found there. In 1899 Yale graduates living In New York City met and decided to form a club, which for many years held forth at 30 West Fo-ty-Fourth street. Seven years i go the sons of Old Ell moved to the present location, and the membership has grown until now 5,130 alumni | belong, about equally divided between j resident and non-resident. While Yale ! alumni In Philadelphia and Boston have I small clubhouses and there are alumni associations in various other large cities, the New York Yale Club Is the place from which the New Ilaven University joes its most active campaigning for students and dollars when the latter are needed. In membership the Harvard Club, at 27 West Forty-Fourth street, leads them all. It has 5,655 on Its rolls. 2,419 resident, 3.007 non-resident, 19S life and two honorary, the latter being A. Lawrence Lowell and Charles W. Elliott. The club is noted for Its spacious lounge, extending the entire width of the build ing and rising through a space of three stories. The growth of the Harvard Club has been steady since Its Incorporation, in 1875. and for the last sixteen years has occupied Its present site, there being 'various additions made, the last on, an eight story annex on the west, having been finished In 1915. The late Col. Theodore Roosevelt loved the rambling structure and at least one of his surviving sons can be found there almost any day.

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The Harvard Club values ita property at $3,500,000. The Princeton Club of New York Is close upon the heela of the two big j college clubs and early this fall will be found In Us new premises, 39 East TUlrtj - j Ninth street—a new eleven-story bailding upon which construction starts next week—and extending out Into the handsome Gothic four-story mansion facing Park avenue on the northwest corner of Thirty-Ninth street, known as the Governor McCullough home. The Princetoners now number 2,150, and since May, 1918, have been guests at the Yale Club, which has made it difficult to tell who Is who in the halls of that skyacraper club. All clubs felt the effect of the war In a falling membership when the Army camps claimed the youth of the land. The late Frank C. Platt, then president of Yale Club, and MaJ. Francis G. London, president of Princeton Club, g"t together and the upshot was an invitation from Ell for the grads of the Orange and Blaek to come and live in the new skyscraper cluh. The old Princeton clubhouse, at 121 East Twenty-First street, was given up and the lease was I taken by the Y. W. C. A, which still I occupies It. Since tiie wa- the membership of the

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The Suite Measures as Follows — BOW-END BED: Has six legs,, full width, headboard 54 inches high, foothoard 35 inches high. CHIFFERETTE: 60 Inches high, 36 Inches wide; 2 small drawers at top, 3 trays behind drawers and ono small drawer. DRESSER: Top measures 46x41%, French plate mirror measures 32x26. VANITY: Cut-out front, 60 inches high, triple mirrors. Center mirror is 13%x 27, swinging mirrors are 7x19, 36 wide.

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Princeton Club has been mounting again until Its officers felt that it was crowding the members of the Yale Club. Accordingly, the new location was found, and th eplans for the new annex decided upon. The Princeton Club has mare than twelve hundred resident members, but in the expansion plans .efforts will be made to draw into the nonresident class many of the 12,000 aimnni of the college throughout the country. At 4 West Forty-Third street is the Columbia Jdniversity Club, which is under the handicap of being in the same city as the university Itself. However, it has 2,100 graduates upon its rolls, more than half being resident members. This club was founded In 1901, and until four years ago was IS Grammercy Park. Then came the chance to buy the eight-story Renaissance Hotel and transform It into a clubhouse, representing an Investment of $1,009,000. The first of the small colleges to decide U> Invade the big town with a clubhouse was little Williams College, which since 1913, has occupied two converted dwellings at 289-91 Madison avenue. The

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property Is owned by Mrs. Mary C. Thompson, widow of Frederick Ferris Thompson, who has been a trustee of tha college. The management was put Into the hands of Carl Sclieu, a practical hotel ’man from London, and the membership has reached 1,304, about equally divided between resident and non-resident. The success of the Williams College venture has caused the alumni of Amherst College and Dartmouth College to consult with Mr. Scheu, and before anohte ryear each of these will l ave a New York home. Os course, there Is the magnificent University Club, at Fifty-Fourth street and Fifth avenue, a gorgeous granite! building decorated with twenty-eight college shields and possessing a large membership, limited to graduates of colleges or universities where a course of three years is required, to distinguished men who have received honorary degrees and to graduates of West Point and Annapolis. But it Is of clubs formed for the graduates of Individual colleges we are writing about, clubs which in the metropolis boom this or that college.

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English Examine Treaty of Irish LONDON, May 26.—English officials today began thedr examination of the Irish coalition agreement, enacted by Michael Collins and Eamonn Do Valera, to determine if it violates the AngloIrish peace treaty. INSANE MAN ESCAPES. Indianapolis police were asked today to watch for Sherman Spocce, 48, who escaped from the Central Hospital for the Insane last night. Spoece was committed from Madison County. TOUGHS 1. - Apply over throat and cheat —swallow small pieces of — VJCKS w Varoßub Ooer 17 Million Jan Used Yearly

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