Indianapolis Times, Volume 35, Number 65, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 July 1922 — Page 11
BOARD APPROVES JEWSCHOOLSITES Two-Room Portable Buildings Will Be Erected —Fix Salary Basis. Locations for new two-room portable school buildings recently purchased by the board of school commissioners were approved by that bady Tuesday night. The. locat'ons had been selected by the committee on buildings and grounds. The buildings will be erected at the following schools: No. 75, Fourteenth St. and Belleview PL; No. 72, Troy Ave. and Carson St.; No. 62, Shelby and Sanders Sts.; No. 47, Ray St. and Warren Ave.; No. 42, Ray St. and Twenty -Fifth Sts.: No. 37, Baltimore Ave. and Twenty-Fifth St.; No. 14. E. ; Ohio St. and Hamilton Ave.; No. 4, on j ground recently purchased on Max- ! well St. The old portable now at No i 5 will be moved to No. 63, Elliott and Riley Aves. _ Raise in Salaries Recommendations of the instruction i committee, Dr. Marie Haslep," chair-! man, that principals of one-two and three-room buildings be paid salaries I of $2,100 a year and principals of, four, fire and six room buildings j $2,200, were accepted. In the past, i salaries have been based on $2,0401 for one-room buildings with an in-1 •ease of S4O for each additions.Lxootn. * Add Force of Workmen F’ifty-five painters, carpenters and ! laborers were added to the force of; George H. Rickes, superintendent of; buildings and grounds. iSilEis HELD UP 4 HOURS Brooklyn Lines Congested by Power House Fire During Russ) Period. By United New* New YORK, July 26.—A1l subway, elevated and surface lines of the Brooklyn Rapid Transit Company system In Brooklyn were completely tied up for four hours Tuesday night | as the result of a fire in the power house. Fully three hundred thousand Brooklyn residents, returning fromi their work in Manhattan, were unable to reach their homes. Lights out. but guards turned on j emergency bulbs, and prevented a j panic. Busses owned by the city took stranded across the bridges. FUND GROWS List of Contributors Announced by 1 Finance Committee. Announcement has been made that j thirty-three Indianapolis persons and j business firms already have contrib-1 uted to the $20,000 fChd to defray the I expenses of the Prosperity day* celebration to be held at the State fair-1 ground Aug. 22, under auspices of the Indianapolis Chamber of Commerce. Money for the celebration is being - raised by a committee of fifty members of the Chamber of Commerce, of which Walter T. White Is chairman. Among the contributors thus far announced are: International Machine j and Tool Company, B. A. Worthing- i ton, C. D. Brackett, Van Camp Hard ware and Iron Company, Diamond j Chain and Manufacturing Company, I Central Supply Company, Indianapolis j Star, C. W. Wells, International Print- j ing Company, C. P. Lesh Paper Com- j pany. William F. Johnson Lumber | Company, James L. Keach, William H. Armstrong, Capitol Lumber Company, j Real Silk Hosiery Mills, the Udell j Works, Hamilton-Harris Company, In-i dianapolis News, Louis G. Deschler Company, Maas-Neimeyer Lumber 1 Company, the House of Crane, Thomas | Madden Son & Cos., Washington Bank j and Trust Company, Yuncker Bottling Works, -John J. Madden Manufacturing Company, Brannum-Keene - Lum- j ber Company, Stewart-CSarey Glass Company, Polar Ice and Fuel ComKny. Klefer-Stewart Company, Staf•d Engraving Company. Arthur Baxter, Sawn-Myers Company and Paper I’ackage Company.
P RAPE-NUTS is a regular ‘‘three It '? ' x 'J' bags full” of the best food quali- . > ties of whole wheat flour and malted barley, carefully mixed and slowly baked — To develop all their appetizing flavor, To preserve all their wholesomeness, And to provide nature’s that keeps the digestive system spick and span. There’s not a bit of artificial sweetening in Grape-Nut9 —it just becomes sweet of its own accord in the long baking. And that enticing flavor—how good it is with good milk or cream! Fruits, too, fresh or cooked, add to the delight of a dish of Grape-Nuts, morning, noon or sundown. It is a compact, ready-to-eat food —no cooking needed. Why not try it for tomorrow’s breakfast? “There’s a Reason * Postum Cereal Cos., Inc., Battle Creek, Mich.
Physcician Devises Camp Trailer Containing Novel Improvements
For the long-distance tourist who enjoys camping along the way here is a trailer de luxe. It was planned artd built by Dr. Carroll Behymer of Cincinnati. Ohio, a physician who enjoys auto touring, camping and fishing, yet wants some comforts of home on the trip. It took Dr. Behymer all spring to this trailer. Now he is on a ! long motor trip with his auto camp trailing on behind. The trailer weighs 600 pounds and. I Dr. Behymer says, can be pulled j easily by the lightest motor car. j
Easy Oil Filler When you go on a long trip it is advisable to take along a gallon. -of oil. For this purpose, an old oil can can be cut as shown so as to make a i handy filler. No oil Is wasted with j I this form of can. Brighter Headlights Brighter headlights are promised with the use of a small reflector which i can be attached to the regular bulb j i socket within the larger headlight re-j [ flector. At the same time the reflector is made so aB to comply with all headlight laws, says its inanufac- j turersIlandy Control Switch \ .Vx Horn button and Y\ \ light switches are i j aA®, vi placed together on | BaK. * a control device h I can bo at- ! ~ tached to the right UfKK \ side of the stcerjnf ing wheel. This! : J \ eliminates the ne ! i cessity of reaching to the dash to I dim the lights and makes operation of these parts much easier. All the driver has to do is press the button with his thumb without moving his hand from the wheel. AUTO NOTES , Steering wheel that can be swung aside and locked has been invented. Desert roadways in Arizona and California are marked off’ by posts
| When it is opened up a tent, which it carries, is erected over it. A fireless cooker is built into the front. The tent, when not in use folds in even with the top of the cooker. In the trailer also are four single springs which can be stretched alongside the trailer and held up by iron stanchions. When the beds are out a table can be formed of boards hinged to the rear. Camp stools, tdols and cooking utensils fill in the rest of the space. The top of the trailer is in the form of a “John boat’’ and rne.isures a little over eight feet in length when the two removable ends, forming luggage boxes, are bolted into place. Even an ice box is provided. This ! is in the rear of the trailer under the ! bed. Dr. Behymer says this asbestos- | lined box will keep ice for a week. Dr. Behymer is shown standing i alongside his trailer. He says he can j set it up and assemble it in fifteen j minutes.
and chains so the tourist won’t lose his way. Automobile whistle is made to play any tune desired. English firm has put out an aluml num guard for tall lamps. Tire tubes are being corrugated tc prevent overheating, sticking anct pinching. Serving table is being marketed for attachment to automobiles for tourists. At a recent auto show a team of three men took down a truck motor in fourteen minutes. Basement of large new Los Angeles office budding is used as a garage for parking tenants' autos. Use an ordinary Insect powder gun I to spray Fuller’s earth on clutch or ! brake linings. New kind of auto lock shuts off | the exhaust and prevents operation ; of the engine Auto tire chain just patented has vacuum cups attached to help the chain grip the ground firmly. For slippery dirt roads, a, metal rim has been Invented to be put on | tires, like chains. Western man has devised a system of stenciling house numbers along curbs, so motorists could see them. Automatic Jack installed at each is operated by engine power and controlled from the driver's seat. SIGN GETS BUSINESS i Soft Drink Parlor Has Novel Way io Drum Trade. "A drink on the house if we don’t say thank you,” reads a sign in a soft drink place on Ohio St. “That sign certainly is a business getter,” one of the clerks said. "It seems to appeal to the innate desire of the ordinary human being tp get something for nothing. I have seen ; fellows stand around here and drink i three or four bottles of pop or soda trying to slip one over on us, and sometimes they get away with it for it is mighty hard to thank every one when a rush is on.” COLLEGE NEEDS SHOWN Butler Trustees Tell Plan Body Removal Requirements. Were Butler College moved to Fairview Park, street and street railway approaches should be bettered, a delegation of Butler trustees told the city plan commission. It was suggested Forty-Sixth St., from Meridian St. to Fair view, be widened to 100 feet and the plan to | make Sunset Ave., along the east 1 edge of the park, an extension of Riviera Blvd., now ending at the canal and the north end of the park, carried out. The commission took the sugges- j tions under consideration.
Presentation of Comedy Realizes Life's Dream, Says Stuart Walker
When “The School For Scandal” was presented at the Murat, Monday night, Stuart Walter fulfilled the dream of his life. During a curtain speech Mr. Walker said, “I hope you like it better than ‘Here Comes The Bride.’ It has been the dream of my life to present ‘The School For Scandal’ and I am offering it this week in honor of my mother’s birthday. I have been able to realize this dream, with this splendid company.” “The School For Scandal” Is at the Murat, all week. / -J- -I- -ITeat Daltpns Play a Success A crowd estimated at 3.000 persons laughed convulsively at “Uncle John,” HUS PUTS PEPPED WITH HIS VIRTUE New Boss cf Movies Rushes j Among Producing Lots to j Preach Reform. By United Xetcs LOS ANGELES, Cal., July 25. j Hollywood fairly exuded virtue and | righteousness Tuesday night. | Film vamps were seen on bungalow I porches sedately knitting and thorugLout movieland lights were out early. Will Hays, the St. Paul of the flick-1 | ering shadows, had come to town and j j whirled from studio to studio spread ! I ing his program to regenerate the i industry at so dizzy a rate that even i Hollywood, accustomed to speed, was tired out trying to follow him. “To entertain and instruct, to bring understanding between man and man, Nation and Nation” Is to be the goal of the Cinema from now on, Hays told all hands throughout the day. Beats Keystone Cops He was escorted by a train of auI tomobiles led by a squadron of traffics cope going at the rate of fifty mites an hour and he covered more ground than any Keystone cop ever did. Work was stopped temporarily at each studio visited by Hays and he spoke briefly and with considerable ; pepper on placing the Industry on a : I firmer and better basis. His appeal | | was the same on the comedy lots as I it was In the interior studios actors i and actresses in costumes and grease i I paint listened intently and cheered ; their "big boss” without reserve. BILLY OUT OF LUCK Creditors Attack Compromise in Trust Fund Case for 523,600. By United Press ! CHICAGO, July 26.—William C. j (Billy) Camp may never get the $150,-1 | 000 received in the $350,000 Campj Thorne Montgomery Ward stock trust j fund case. j Creditors stormed the doors of Mn Katherine C. Thorne, Camp's former wife, when It was reported a settle-, j ment had been effected. The attachment was made by Lej Jand & Cos., brokers for $23,600 ac ! counts defaulted.
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a farce comedy by Test Dalton, which is being shown at the 'municipal theater at Garfield Park. STUART WALKER. EPIBTH LEflir INSTITUTE OPENS Indicate Bethany Park Will Be Largest on Record. By FLORESCB HACKLUSIA.X Times Staff Correspondent. BETHANY PARK. Ind., Mon than 400 delegates to the Ep-wo'.-th League Institute, which opened last night and will continue throughj out the week, already have enrolled," | and indications are the attendance ; will be the largest on record. At the opening sessions W. E. M. j Hackleman delivered the address of welcome and Dean Freleand responded, outlining work of the Institute. Indianapolis leads in rhe number of delegates registered, with Bloomington second and Bedford third. The tent colony is proving mow than usually popular and numbers | more than fifty at present. The entertainment of the younger I children is in charge of Mrs. Baker Jof BrookvUie and a well equipped playground has been provided. Woman Faces Full Slate Inez Farley, £3, of 41S N. Delaware, j hailed into police court to face three ; charges of child neglect, vagrancy and disorderly conduct, was slated on a fourth charge, when John King, 638 N East St., claims she failed to pay ! him a sls tax! bill.
“Unole John” Is wholesome comedy, written to make you laugh and In that it succeeds admirably. It is full of clever lines and situations. We expect to hear more from this play later. Arthur J. Beriault, Eugene McDonald and Miss Florence Lewin, who have the leading roles, gave a creditable performance, as did the rest of the company, which includes Margaret Selkirk, Inez Wolfe, Frank Hawkins, Sidney Jerome, Anna Cogswell, Ray Porter and Earle Ross. During intermission the Micks Kawaina Troupe, instrumentalists and harmony singers, entertained with comedy songs' and selections on Hawaiian instruments. iIEEiHIESDEBT MANIFESTO Financial Agency Makes Clear Nation’s View of Obligations. By United Hews NEW YORK, July 26.—President Obregon of Mexico is not unwilling to
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SLEUTHING By United Press CHICAGO—Mrs. Florence Rice appealed for a divorce alleging her husband, Sigmund, marked the soles of her shoes in order to find our whether she went out or not. <s ratify agreements entered into in this city recently with creditors of that country, according to a statement issued here Tuesday by the financial agency of the Mexican government above the signature of Adolfo De La Huerta, secretary of finance. De La Huerta drew up agreements with creditors of Mexico’s external debt which would have the effect of stabilizing the credit and strengthening the International relations of the country. The committee of bondholders was headed by Thomas Lamont of the J. P. Morgan Company. TWO STRIKERS WOUNDED Two Negroes Believed Responsible for Stabbing of Two Workers. By United Xeics ■ DETROIT, Mich., July 26.—Two strikers were seriously wounded’in the first violence of the railroad strike j here Tuesday night in a fight with negro strikebreakers. Three negroes, employed in the Michigan Central shops, were believed responsible for the stabbing of Frank Such, 30, and Norman Mauerer, 39 . strikers, who were endeavoring to persuade them to quit work.
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RESOLUTIONS HIT STHIKETROUBLES Board of Trade Urges Mine Reopening and Condemns Rail Shopmen. Resolutions favoring the Immediate operation of coal mines In Indiana and condemning striking shopmen for failing to accept the railroad labor board decision reducing wages, has been adopted by the governing committee of the Board of Trade. The coal strike, the resolution states, is a serieus threat to general prosperity and is endangering the saving of perishable crops, as well as leading to excessive coal prices. Governor McCray is urged to use all tlawful means to see that Indiana coal mines are operated as soon as possible. Unemployment and business stagnation are due primarily to transportation rates, the other resolution states, and a freight rate reduction was ordered by the interstate commerce commission upon a reduction proportionate to that of the railroad era- ; ployes’ cost of living. The shopmen in refusing to accept the wage reduction are paralyzing ! transportation and eventually will throw other workmen out of employi ment, the resolution says.
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