Indianapolis Times, Volume 35, Number 40, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 June 1922 — Page 2
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MORE HOMES BETTER KIND BEING BUILT City Department Records Show Great Gains Over Last Year. PERMITS SHOW INCREASE Individual Values Make Advances in Houses Under Way. More and better homes are being built in Indianapolis this year than last, records in the city building department showed today. From Jan. 1 permits for 1,253 houses ■valued at 15,646,000 were issued. In the same period of 1921, 782 permits were issued for building to cost $3,889,206. Average cost per house this year was $4,600. Last year it was $4,300. So far this year there are 471 more bouses under construction. Values represented total $1,556,794 in excess of the figure for the same period ol 1921. Most of the permits were issued for one and two-story single family dwellings. These figures do not include apartment houses of which there has been a rapid growth. ‘SELF-SERVE - IDEa'fAILS TO MAKE HIT IN FRANCE French Meals Too Serious to Be Undertaken nastily. PARIS, June 27.—American visitors to the great French Mecca will not find "self-serve" eating places like ‘ In the good old U. S. A. They don't j exist, and, what is more, the Frenchmen doesn't want ’em to be intro- 1 duced. Time is not money in France. Life Is long and gay. and there is plenty j of time for eating and drinking. Ail French offices and nearly alt small ! shops close promptly when the noon : whistle blows and do not reopen their doors for business before 2 p. m : Every employe is allowed two full hours for his noon meal, so there no need of a quick handout on a i cne-armed chair. ’ Only one cafeteria is to be found in all Paris, and it is a modified one. The American Y. W. C. A. opened it; during the war. and since then it j has continued to serve cheap and good meals to French working girls ! No men are allowed. It caters to' the women who have the hardest life lr. France. It is patterned after our ; American variety, with a long steam ; table, but has a smaljer assortment j of dishes. There is a wise choice of food, how I ever, and it is well prepared and I cooked ala Francaise. It is the kind | of food needed by working girls. For 1 about 25 cents >n-‘ can vet a real “square meal.” a,id for double that amount she can have several dainties, j euch as" a cup of delicious i. © cr-an 1 served in tiny paper holder's fashioned j like flowers, or some good French pas try. Now, with the hot weather at I hand, the management has begin to . serve half bottles of beer for 5 cents j each. . This restaurant has probably done : more than any other one thing to combat the rising cost of living, be cause it is just near the Place de I’Opera, in the very center of the. great dressmaking and other sash- | Ipn houses where thousands of girls earn their daily bread. It is a lively crowd of Parisiennes—• petites and grandes, pretty and not so pretty—who buzz into the great room, chattering with both hands over the little happenings of the morning. They do not linger too long over their meals, for there is always shoping to be done, or they sit in the cool courtyard to do their week's mending. American shoppers (only women) who find themselves in this neighborhood at lunchtime will do well to dt-.p into this restaurant to see how French maidens serve themselves a l'Americjan.
Radium Supply Larger.' PARIS. June 27.—Indication-* that the world's supply of radium vill soon be increased and that the price of the precious element will soon Le correspondingly lowered, is suggested by reports received here that deposits of udanium. from which radium is extracted, have been discovered in Switzerland, and that the exportation of rad.o-active minerals from Mala gascar is to be increased. Federal Swamp Reservation. WAYCROSS. Ga., June 27. —Setting aside of the Okefenokee Swamp as a national reservation will be urged on the Federal Government if a united movement launched here Is successful. The movement was launched at a banquet recently by the University Club, at which a resolution indorsing the project was read. Railroad 'Official Dies CHICAGO. June 27.—A. Stuart Baldwin. vice president of the Illinois Cen tral Railroad, died today en route from Chicago on a Michigan Central traip. at St. Thomas. Ontario, accord-, lng to word received here. Funeral of John Ewing Bu United Press NEW ALBANY, Ind.. June 27. John R. Ewing. Democratic candidate for Congress from the Third district, who died from Brights disease, was buried in Fairview cemetery here today. Reports Bicycle Taken. A bicycle owned by Moel Johnson. No. 34. Washington apartreen's. was stolen today from in front of the National City Bank building, on East Washington street. Johnson told the police the bicycle was valued at sl4. Thieves Get Auto Marshal Evans of Carmel, reported to Indianapolis police today two young men drove toward this city with a car belonging to Harry Stanton, Carmel. Finds Son Alter Twenty Years. SALT LAKE CITY. Utah. June 27. —After a search, of twenty, years. Frederick-- Kennlcutt found In a hospital here his son. who ran away from Some I'ben only 10.
Reformer Faces Charges
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Charges of polygamy, grand larceny and conspiracy are said to be on Sle in a number of eastern cities against Donald D. Stewart, former Presbyterian minister and social reformer. When arrested in Los Angeles, Stewart and Mrs. Ethel Turner Osbaldeston Stewart, said to be his second wife, were planning to open a sanitarium. according to detectives. Stew-
INTERVENTICN OF B. LAW Government Wins After Firm Stand On Irish Issue. LONDON, June 27. —Intervention of Andrew Bonar Law. former chancellor of the exchequer, caused the government's firm stand on Irish issues, which resulted in its victory in the house, it was learned today. The test vote went to the govern ment. ?42 to 75. Bonar Law is most feared by coalitionists as Lloyd George's chief opponent at the next general election. SCHOOL HEADS TO CONFER State Inspectors Will Discuss Questions With Officials. Conference* with officials of Indiana rural schools will be held during the next six weeks by E. B. Wetherow. State school inspector, and Leroy Scoles. assistant. The conferences will be in the nature of informal meetings in which such matters as scoring. costs of school operation, read justment of curriculum and school sanitation will be discussed. WOMAN NEW POUNDMASTER Major Shank Announces Appointment of Mrs. Dotha Lantz. Appointment of Mrs Dotha Lantz, j 24 Richelieu Apartments, an active | member of the Indianapolis Humane Society, to be poutldmaster at the city dog pound, was announced by Mayor Shar.k today. She succeeds Dr. Elizabeth Conger, who resigned because of illness. Salary of the poundmaster is $1,200 a year. Bond Plea Is Heard A hearing was held today on ape- j tit.on of the Indiana Michigan Electric 1 Company to issue $300,000 in bonds and $200,000 in stock by Edgar M. Blessing, member of the Indiana public service commission. The company! operates an interurban line in Michi-' gan and Indiana. Makes Cheap Radio. TAMPA. Fla., June 27.—What is! claimed to be the smallest radio ap j paratus in the world has been manu- j factured by a Tampa boy. A. B. Shaw, j 13 years old. The apparatus was constructed with a matchbox and cost only 25 cents. , /
Shovel Started Mme Fight
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Dispute over operation of this steam shovel at the strip mine at Herrin. 111., with members of the Shovelmen’s Union working with nonunion miners, was the immediate cause of the fight that ended in scores being killed. In the foreground aie four men who figure largely in the news of the fight. Left to right, Col. Samuel N: Hunter, State Senator Williarfj J. Sneed.- a sub-district official of the miners’ union; Melville Thaxtoi., sheriff at nty, and J. A. Schafer, deputy sheriff.
[art has occupied pulpits In Paterson, |N. J., Saunderson, Texas, and-Chico. I Cal., and was at one time secretary of 'the prohibition forces in California. ! Among the several alleged wives of 1 Stewart was Miss Bertha Ellen Gr&n----1 nis of Indianapolis. Stewart was also wanted in Indianapolis for swindling the Aetna Trust Company out of $1,200.
Cavewornan Returns
By MARION" HALE. We have with us today the modern version of the ancient cavewornan. She lives not in a cave, but on the beach. Recently some designer, a furrier, we suspect, realized the picturesqyeness of the prehistoric woman’s garb, and has used it as a model for the season's sartorial sensation —the fur bathing suit: Doubtless you have struggled along several seasons without a sable swimming suit, and unless your family budget warrants an expenditure of several thousands, you can do so again, but if you wish the very latest —here it is. The why of the fur bathing suit eludes me. Why One should swelter
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
LEW APPOINTS PLAYGROUNDS INSTRUCTORS Mayor Doesn’t Know How Many He Passed in Joblots, but Ten, Anyhow. SUGGESTED BY JARVIS Thirty-Three Play Lots Now Are in Operation, With Many to Follow. Additional playground directors were being named today. Mayor Shank, who was interviewing applicants in droves and sending them on to Recreation Director Edward Mcßride with notes recommending they be put to work, said be did not know how many he had sent. At least ten, he thought. Thirty-three playgrounds opened Saturday with an instructor and matron force of 110. Besides those recommended by him, the mayor eaid Mcßride since has put to work ten girls, whom R. Walter Jarvia, superintendent of parks and recreation, wanted appointed. The girls are graduates of the city recreation workers' school. They were not in the original list, Jarvia said. It is understood Jarvis went to the mayor with a request they be named for the sake of efficiency. Since 3atarday a playground has been opened at School 63, one of the list of eleven slated" to be discontinued. Some of the eleven will be opened. Mayor Shank said. Private organizations owning them will operate them with city-loaned equipment, he said. iHe believed only four of the grounds will be closed finally.
I under a coat of fur on a hot day or | swim in weather so cold as to warrant one is beyond me. But reason and stylo do not always walk hand in j hand. | At a fashionable beach, not many ; - miles from New York, living models ; | parade the beach each day, wearing j ; fur bathing suits. These are cut on the popular lines j .of the silk or wool variety and are j made up in the popular’ furs of the jseason. j Ermine, which is not. nearly so cost'ly as It used to be. Is very fashion- ; able. Sometimes it is combined with , seal, the combination of black and | white against t;he.blue sky and water, j being greatly admired, j Some snappy little suits of leopard | skin, made up very much like ballet | costumes w'ith a bodice and shoulder | straps, are very reasonable—only a j hundred dollars. j Moleskin lends Itself admirably to the season's modes. So does squirrel and kolinsky. Six or eight hundred dollars will buy you a very nifty little suit if you stick to medium-priced furs, but if you have sable leanings then there's no limit to what you can spend. Silk Hose Income. LONDON, Juno 27.—What should be the income of a woman entitled to wear silk stockings? Failure to gett an answer to this question halted the suit of a shopkeeper against Mrs. Dorothy Phillips. Flower Girl’s Kind Act. NEW YORK, June 27. —Asa child patient was being removed from a local hospital, a ragged flower girl ran up and placed a bunch 'of violets fir the sick tot’s hands. Then the girl hurried away. “Chicken in Bloom.” NEW YORK, June 27.—The 8-year-old daughter of a prominent banker, making her first visit to a farm, saw a peacock, “Oh, Mr. Jones,” she cried, “here's chicken in full bloom.” Tragedy by Phone. ST. LOUIS, June 27.—Crying out “Good-by forever” to his wife over the telephone, Leonard Chalfln fired a bullet into his head. Five-Ounce Double Egg. GARY, Ind., June 27.—A White Wyandotte hen belonging to a Schererville farmer laid an egg weighing five ounces. Inside was a second egg.
SORE MUSCLES from outdoor sports are relieved by massaging with— VISITS Oust 17&jlUen Jan Un4 Yearly
ARREST OF HENDERSON CHALLENGE TO IRISH Collins’ Free State Forces Strike at Heart of Insurrection. By United Press DUBLIN, June 27- —Free State forces struck at the insurrection in the heart of Dublin. Michael Collins, head of the provisional government, ordered his troops to arrest | Commandant Michael Henderson, one of the leaders of the band of rebels which recently seized and held the Four Courts buildings and hotel. The arrest was effected. This move by Collins constituted a direct challenge to Rory O’Connel, rebel general, who has been defying both the Free State ar.d Great Britain to get out of Dublin. SUICIDE RELEASES WIFE Wealthy Contractor Writes Faraewell Note and Then Ends It AIL CHICAGO, June 27.—After leaving a note explaining that he was ending his life so that his wife might be free to send for “the other man,'' Guy L. Kluefer, 47, a wealthy mechanical engineer of Chicago,' committed suicide by taking poison in a north side hotel. His body was found stretched across the bed when hotel employes forced ■ the door of his room. Near by was a can containing a mixture of poisons, a small vial and an empty glass. Mrs. Kluefer is said so have left the hotel a week ago, go.ng to the home of a friend. There are two young children in the family. On the bed beside the body the, following note was found: “To My Wife—You have waited a long t’me for this, but you may now write to Unadilla and tell Fred that he can com© for you, as ho promised he would as soon as you were free. “Beter this than that you and the children should continue on intimate terms wi'h the people you have taken up with. You tell me you seldom see them .but I know you don't tell the truth. “If my end does nothing else I hope it will wak© you up. I have had enough heartaches in hell. Gl'Y.” The body was removed to an undertaker for an inquest and interment. OPTIMISTS LEAVE TONIGHT Delegates Will Seek to Retain Headquarters Here. A train bearing delegates to the fifth annual convention of the International Optimists Clubs from points north, south and east of Indianapolis ; will leave tho Union Station at 11:45 j o'clock tonight on the Pennsylvania i railroad for Kansas City. The train j will stop at St. Louis tomorrow where ; the delegates will be the guests of the St. Louis Optimist Club. Local delegates are: R. L. Mellett, j George Schmid, Eli Schloss and H. G. j Hill, International secretary of the or- j ganizat.on. Mr. Hill is seeking re- j nomination. If he is successful, in- J ternational headquarters will be re-! talned here.
CITY TOILERS GET RAISE Wage of Laborers to be Increased Nickel an Hour. Authority to pay laborers on the city sewage disposal plant construction 40 "Sants an hour has been given. President Jay A. Craven of the board of sanitary commissioners announced today. The scale has been 35 cents. “We had to raise the scale to compete with other employers,” said Craven. WOMAN OFFERS MAYOR CAT Paves Way for Husband Who Craves C ity .lob. A woman offered Mayor Shank an Angora cat today. She also said her husband was coming to ask for a citv Job. “Fair enough trade, at that,” said the mayor. "I'd have taken the cat if I didn't have so many fox terrier pups out at the house." Four Murders in One House. MARSEILLES, .Tune 27.—During a quarrel. Mme. Emilie Wilkies, aged 57. killed her husband at their villa. This was the fourth murder in the same house in twenty years. Western Justice. NEW YORK, June 27. —Grabbing a pickpocket on a subway train, Samuel Burdett, a Nebraska stockman, thrashed the thief and then kicked him off at the first stop. Gray Hiiir Popular. PARIS, June 27.—Gray hair is popular. Gray wigs giving the so-called “Marie Antoinette effect" are worn by many of the smart set.
MOTHERS AND DAUGHTERS Read This Letter from Mrs. W. S. Hughes Greenville, Del. —“ I was under the impression that my eldest daughSl ter had some interill'l ill! naltroubleas ever since the first time hf‘ r sickness ap- ■ peared she had to £° to bed and Y r; l : f§pj even had to quit I " a- iffll school once for a ..0 week. 1 always take Lydia E. Pinkham’s VegeV&y table Compound 1 * myself so I gave u ' lit to her and she has received great benefit from it. You can use this letter for a testimonial if you wish, as I cannot say too much about vhat your medicine has done for me ands army daughter. ’ ’ Mrs. Wm. S. Hughes, GreenvUle, Del. Mothers and oftentimes grandmothers have taken and have learned the value of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. So they recommend the medicine to others. The best test of any medicine is what it has done for others. .For nearly fifty years we have published letters from mothers, daughters, and women, young and old, recommendingthe'Vegetable Compound. They know what it did for them and are glad, to tell others. In, your own neighborhood are women who know of its great value. Mothers—daughters, wbynottryiti
Accused of Two Murders
y —“— a. V MERE DIME NOVELS FAIL TO INSPIRE 15-YEAR-OLC \ 4 Marion Youth Had 65 Cents Left Afte MSSI \ Series of Exploits. Ufa t By Timts Special
Eilliott Padrick, 20-year-old Georgia clergyman, is held in Augusta, Ga. r on charges of having killed his IS-year-old wife and her mother, Mrs. M. G. Dixon, near Dover, Ga. Padrlck's father and two brothers also are in the ministry. Pictures show Padrick and the two women he is accused of killing: (upper left) his mother-inlaw, Mrs. M. G. Dixon, and (right) his wife.
NEW BUDGET HEAD
BRIG. GEN". H. M. LORD. INSET: CHARLES G. DAWES. Brig. Gen. Herbert M. Lord becomes national budget director on July 1. Ha •ucoeeda Charles G. Dawes. Most governments at least pretend to run thetr finances on the “budget plan.” That is, they estimate their incomes and try to keep expenses inside them. Until a year ago the United States Government departments simply got as big appropriations as they could. President Harding resolved to try the budget system. He engaged Dawes as director. Dawes refused to stay more than a year. Lord has been chief of finance of the War Department Strikers Lodge Protest FORD, lowa, June 27.—Five hundred striking miners swooped down on the coal fields here today’ and demanded that non union workers quit their jobs. PostofTire rienic Athletic contests, baseball games and a basket supper will be features of the annual picnic of the Indianapolis Postoffice Athletic Association at Garfield Park Sunday afternoon, July 16. Reports Theft of Watch. F. P. Bitters of 426 W. Walnut St., reported to the police today his watch* valued at S2O, was stolen from his room Saturday.
GUHaiH HEALS SEVERE!* On Mother’s Body. Caused Her To Scratch. Could Not Sleep. “ My mother was troubled with a breaking out of pimples on her body. The itching was very severe and caused her to scratch, which seemed to make the breaking out spread, and she could not sleep good at night. ” The trouble lasted about four weeks. She tried several remedies but not.e of them were successful. She began using Cuticura Soap and Ointment and after using one cake of Soap and one box of Ointment she was completely healed.’’(Signed) Richard Brockman, R. 3, Huntsville, Missouri. Use Cuticura for every-day toilet purposes. Bathe with Soap, soothe with Ointment, dust with Talcum, Sample E*rfc Trss by Moll. Ad<r*M: ••Ootloaea LMv. oratorio, Sept. H Mal&>a**,Ma." Soldevrrrmlfilf’ 9o * t>^g - Ointmct26 and SOc. Talcum ffic. ■■e Cuticura Soap shave* without mu|.
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MERE DIME NOVELS FAIL TO INSPIRE 15-YEAR-OLD Marion Tooth Had 65 Cents Left After Series of Exploits. By Timts Special MARION, Ind., June 27.—Reading dime novels was not responsible for exploits of David Sloderbeck, 15. No more dime novelist could plot the things David did. said Sheriff Albert Fowler today. When he was Jailed for stealing, officials were led by his tender years to release David on probation. Iramediatqiy be stole three bicycles and a horse, the authorities wondering what new band of robbers had struck town. He stole another horse ana the sheriff struck his trail. Learning he was pursued, he abandoned this animal and commandeered another horse and buggy’. The sheriff still hot on the trail, he traded the outfit to a negro for a shotgun—this to another negro for a rifit, which he finally pawned for sl. When the sheriff caught up with him he had 65 cents left.
JURY LACKS APPRECIATION Jim Robinson, Negro Tenor, Goes From Jail to Prison. DALLAS, Texas, June 27. —No longer will “regulars” and strangers passing in the thoroughfare adjacent to the Dallas County jail pause and gaze up yard to amazement as they listen to the strains of some popular air issuing from the sixth floor cf the jail building, and wonder, perhaps. If anew Caruso has fallen into the clutches of the law. Jim Robinson, negro, he of the powerful and well-trained tenor voice, has gone to other fields —the State Penitentiary, in fact—to be gens for four long years. When first arrested. Jim .declared his intention of “singing his way out,” and daily his shining black face could be seen as he clung to the bars that kept hi mfrom “without,” while he poured forth his very soul in the : sweet strains of some plantation mel-, ody. Jim made a hit with passersby. a decided hit. and he will be greatly missed by his fellows, but he failed to make a hit with a jury, which upon his plea of guilty to a charge of burglary, suggested that his voice was entirely too powerful for such a small “audience” and sent him on his way to the great expanses of the State Penitentiary farms. Woman Chief of Police. MARTINSBURG, W. Ya„ June 27. • —The new city council has appointed a woman chief of police, or city sergeant, as the office is officially designated here. She Is Muss Hattie Zep, Republican, and well-known business woman. She succeeds Oscar B. Miller. Teeth That Tear. SCRANTON. Pa.. June 27.—Anton Maryk bet he could lift Terence Malone with his teeth. He won, but his teeth tore Malone's coat, so tbs latter has sued for damages.
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JUNE 27, 1922
MINE LEADERS WILL BE SENT TO BIOT SCENE William Green, Union Official, Declares International Body Isn’t Responsible. WOULD PUNISH GUILTY Organization to Conduct Inquiry Into Massacre, He Asserts. Representatives of the United Mins Workers of America likely will be sent to Williamson County, 111., ths scene of the recent mine riots, William Green, secretary-treasurer of the international organization, said today. Mr. Green made a statement in which he said the uprising was local and that the international organization was in no way responsible. This sentiment was expressed by John L. Lewis, international president, several days ago. Mr. Lewis is not in the city. “Those responsible, no matter who they are, should be punished,” Mr. Green declared. “The international union will make an investigation for the purpose of trying to determine who was responsible for the deplorable affair.”
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