Indianapolis Times, Volume 35, Number 82, Indianapolis, Marion County, 15 August 1922 — Page 3

AUG. 15, 1922

WRECK ISPROBED NEAR REELSVILLE ■rEKTUMU Freight Train Crash Causes Tying Up of Traffic at Terre Haute. By United Press TERRE HAUTE, Ind., Aug. 15. — Pennsylvania railroad officials here today were conducting an investigation Into the cause of the wreck of west- i bound freight train No. 281 near j Reelsville, twenty-three miles east of j here, shortly before midnight last night. The crash tied up traffic between Terre Haute and Indianapol s for seven hours. No one was reported Injured. Five box cars were derailed. A wrecking train, manned by fore- i men and bosses, went to the scene and i had cleared the tracks by 6:30 this I morning. HOOSIER BRIEFS TERRE HAUTE Formaldehyde and the board of health were called upon to stem an invasion of red ants in a local theater. PENDLETON—Bathers at the city ! pool were mystified at hearing an alarm clock until two fair Marion swimmers explained they did not want to miss their car. COLUMBUS —Two runaway boys. John Green and Jamesc Carter, assumed the height of affluence by riding in a coal car. SOUTH BEND —While Joseph Gindelsparger lies at a hospital recovering from knife wounds inflicted by William Reilly his wife is defending | Reilly. GAS ClTY—Merry-go-round music has tired the ears of city councilmen and they're preparing to bar street carnivals here. TERRE HAUTE—MuIe found in milk bottle by police—not so Impossible as It sounds, white mule of course. WASHINGTON—His wife’s affec- \ tions are worth $16,000, Milton Davey j alleges In a suit filed here against John Cleveland. MARlON—There's a caddy here showing them how to play golf, Everett Nutter, who has won a place in the city championship semi-finals. KHF.I.RVVTLLE—A stranger under inspiration of moonshine, drove his car through a fence and front yard before he found the right road. DARLINGTON—WhiIe fleeing from a swarm of bumblebees closely pursu ng him. Harry Martin. 14, stumbled and fell, breaking his left arm. VINCENNES —Jesse Lefler, 19, of near Petersburg, had never seen a p.cture show until he arrived here recently. DECATUR —Automobiles are too too common, so Floyd Bibersteln, 17, ; distinguished himself by taking a horse and buggy, resulting in his arrest. EVANSVILLE —'Twa slove at first sight when Mrs. Robert Buck first saw her husband on a troop train, but now she wants a divorce. VINCENNES —"That's worse than being sent to the penal farm.” said Or- j lan 'o Dutton when told by Mayor j Grayson that for six months he must not get drunk, he must not ride in STOP ITCHiNG ECZEMA Penetrating, Antiseptic Zemo Will Help You Never mind how often you have tried and failed, you can stop burning, Itching Eczema quickly by applying Zemo furnished by any druggist for , 35c. Extra large bottle SI.OO. Heal- ; lng begins the moment Zemo is ap- ; plied. In a short time usually every trace of Eczema, Tetter, Pimples, j Rash, Blackheads and similar skin diseases will be removed. For clearing the skin and making It vigorously healthy, always use Zemo, ! the penetrating, antiseptic liquid, j When others fail it is the oue depend- j able treatment for skin troubles of all kinds.—Advertisement. WORKING GIRLS - j LOOK HEBE Read what Mrs.LucasWrites Concerning Her Troubles, which May he Just Like Yours St. Louis, Mo. —“I had troubles th at j all women arc apt to have, with pains , "nHl!l , HllUP ,, M'Tl’ nra y hack,weak, jl tired, nervous |i feelings and a all 11 weak stomach. I : i had been this way | about a year and n was unable to B "pPfljgj work or stand on > JL my feet for any h ***• &HI length of time. b* " 1 My husband’s I[| v; aunt told me how ; $ ' i| much good Lydia j s *IF. Pinkham s | Vegetable Compound had done her and begged me to try it, so 1 did. All my pains and weakness are gone, my stomach is all right and I do my work at home and also work for Swift’s Packing Company. I recommend your Vegetable Compound to my friends and you may publish my letter as a ! testimonial/'— Mrs. Lulu Lucas, ; 719A Vandeventer St., St. Louis, Mo. j Again and again one woman tells another of the merit of Lydia E. ! Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. You who work must keep yourself strong and well. You can t work if you are suffering from such troubles. Mrs. Lucas couldn’t. She tried our Vegetable Compound and her letter tells you what it did for her. Give it a fair trial now.

an automobile and his pay will be turned over to his wife. EVANSVILLE —Her husband stole her engagement ring, Mrs. Katherine Williams charged in her divorce trial. i SOUTH BEND —A police diot call j was sent in when a hundred women : threatened to attack Pennsylvania rail- | road guards. CRAWFORDSVILLE—What's the i cost of producing pork, is a question ! being studied on 6ixty farms by G. G. Buford of Purdue. COLUMBUS Barbers here dispensed someth.ng bes.des conversation when they passed out cold glasses of lemonade to each customer. SOUTH BEND —Charges that bodies ■ are buried under paths and graves are I dug into at Cedar Grove cemetery are i made in an injunction suit. COLUMBUS—A garage boy's eyes i bulged when a stranger threw $350 In a roll at him In payment for a can of gasoline. KOKOMO —John Osborne of Oilton, ! Okla., visiting here, attributes his da- | feat for county treasurer to refusal to i join the Ku-Klux Klan. ' MUNCIE— After Levi G. Saffer, 92, | had gone up 2,000 feet in an airplane he said he had not had such a good time since a team of oxen ran away with him when a boy. LOGANSFORT — A fish bait trust exists in northern Indiana, returning fishermen declared. MARION —A wireless message to ! Fred Guss at a local bakery tipped j h:m off that the police had found a still at his house. TERRE HAUTE —Vigo County could hardly be called provident, it spent $44,661.21 more than was collected in : July. MARION —Peeved at being awak-! ened too early—3 a. m.—by two burglars, W. J. Bryant grappled one and then fired two shots at them. MUNCIE —A Ft. Wayne firm sent | Robert Squires out to sell Jewelry, ! but he appropriated it to his own use, it has been charged.

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Olive Tells Peggy Her Opinion of Flappers, and Their Actions

By ZOE BECKLEY (Continued) For the first time, Peggy did not bear up under Olive’s withering look. The shock of Lee’s kisses, the realization she had been nearly the cause of Injury or death to two, her sense of ; guilt and the sobering reaction from j her high-strung pace of the evening had shaken her. She returned Oliver’s glance with answering defiance —that was all. Olive began speaking, slowly and with careful self-control. “Ted and Bobby, both you boys, want to l.ck Lee. Why? Because he kissed Peg'-y. You did kiss her, didn’t | you, Lee?” [ “Yes,” he answered sullenly. “Now stop that!” Olive’s cry was to j Ted as he made a lunge toward Lee. i “Neither of you fellows would make a move if the other tried to kiss me and I protested, would you?” The b.tterness in her voice stung them. “But Peggy,” the g.rl went on. “Ah! She is another matter. .She’s —she’s fhmily. She comes of the Deans—the Lenox Deans. “But what kind of a girl is she really! What can a decent boy make of her—and I want you to know Lee is as deceht a boy as you are. Bobby. “You needn’t glower. I’m not saying it because I’m his sister, or be- : cause I want to insult you. I mean j it; and I respect you. Bob. But Lee works hard for a living. He puts work and career before everything else. “And please don’t think that be-1 cause he is an actor he’d hurt a girl, i one whit sooner than you or Ted. But to get back to Peggy. “There are two kinds of girls you I boys know—the kind you marry, and j ; the kind you play around with. How’s | a man to tell? What was Lee or any j j other man to think of Peggy tonight? j “Here she came all brooksied up, I ! nothing missing from the classy \ clothes to the fancy face, and ready | to roll her own and lap up all the ; liquids. “She dances well—and she dances j close. She Is ready for a strolling ; party and she plays on Lee to make ; Bob Jealous. She carried on wilder ; than I did. “To cap the climax, she breaks I

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

down the car and stalls us here an hour. What for? I don’t even know. But I do know Lee didn’t have to abduct her to the place we found them. “She didn’t scream any while she “YOU’RE ALL WRONG, YOU FLAFPERS.” was leading him off. You all saw it, didn’t you? Well—?” Olive knew she had got her audience, and her query left a long pause, awkward for Peggy. The girl knew the danger of a renewed fight wa3 over. But she was not yet through with Peggy. She turned to her, the anger entirely gone from her face. In its place was a pity so sincere that Peggy dared not resent it. “I tell you you’re all wrong, you flappers,” she went on. “You’re try , ing to play our game and you can’t do it. Nowadays we’ve all got to be one thing or another. “A girl who wants a decent boy to marry her has got to be a straight-

Start Work in Preparation for Indianapolis Day Celebration

Work in preparation of the Indianapolis side show and on the great variety of signs and posters in the State Fairground started this morning under contracts made by the Indianapolis day committee of the Indianapolis Chamber of Commerce. This work Is in preparation for Indianapolis day next Tuesday, Aug. 22. Following are a number of facts of qnusual interest about Indianapolis, which are being used on the signs: Second largest corn market In United States, Largest single hog killing plant in world, Seventeen railroads and fifteen interurban lines, Five-cent street car fare. No city has lower, Center of population of North America, Right In the center of the corn belt, Only sixty miles from coal fields, Most perfect belt railroad system In world. Garfield Park one of Nation's most beautiful, Two million persons within 100 miles. Twelve hundred manufacturers make 800 different products, Located in the heart of wheat belt, Industrial Income balanced by agri-

forward, home-building kid like Winnie there. When you go in for Jazz as an attraction, you fliv. You succeed only far enough to give boys like Bobby an appetite for—girls like me. “There’s nothing you can do as well as I can do it. You can’t dance.

* m TpEW of those who consume farm MbMs%3 'Wit products realize the extent to which the price of such commodies is affected by automotive JL etroieiim machinery -jp u The fact that the cost of fieldwork ri ls reduced by the use of tractors ; s W ell known. The fact that the w farmer’s time is conserved by the || use of automobiles is a matter of common knowledge. TMTiftoL-lfl-S n Now comes the National AutomoJL % Si Association in its Year Book of 1922 with the statement thatthecost of hauling products in horse-driven JLI & wagons from the farm to shipping * points averages 30c per ton mile for wheat and 35c for corn, while over ii the same roadsthecost of hauling by motor truck is only 15c per ton mile. That the intelligent farmer in the 10 states served by the Standard Oil Company (Indiana) realizes the efficiency of power transportation is shown by the fact that he owns and operates 1,112,203 automobiles and 46,582 motortrucks. These are distributed as follows: Motor Cars Motor Trucks On Farms On Farms Indiana - - - - 102,122 8,671 Illinois 189,090 6,154 Michigan- - - - 82,437 4,886 Wisconsin- - - - 98,825 4,044 Minnesota - • - 107,824 8,803 lowa ----- 177,558 9,910 Missouri - - - - 86,229 5,059 North Dakota - - 47,711 774 South Dakota - - 58,852 4,858 Kansas - - - - 111,052 8,928 These cars and trucks can be operated on the same basis as similar equipment in towns and cities because the Standard Oil Company, (Indiana) through its vast distribution system delivers its products into the farmer’s storage tank under the same conditionsas to the city dweller having similar equipment. In thus rendering a service to the # farmer this Company renders a service to every individual who consumes farm products. Siandard Oil Company ( Indiana ) 2si y 910 So. Michigan Ave., Chicago, CL

SPECIAL NOTICE! Extremely Low Round Trip Excursion Fare* Between Indianapolis and Ci rmel and Indianapolis and Noblesville Good returning one day after date stamped on back. Round trip fares— Indianapolis-Noblesville 90c Indianapolis-Carmel 50c Inquire of Agent for particulars. UNION TRACTION COMPANY OF INDIANA

culture. Known for years as “the panic-proof city,” Economic center of America for distribution. Population now 335,260; by 1930 wdll be 600,000, Leads world in making quality automobiles, Thirteenth city in retail sales though twenty-first In population, Sixty-five per cent of people own their own homes, $25,000,000 of new building this year. Two hundred fifty wholesalers sell goods throughout the United States, Has largest single telephone switchboard In world, Only city in world whose merchants were twice awarded Truth Trophy, Noted for lack of unemployment. Always plenty of work. Manufacturers have enormous business in foreign countries, Sixty million people within day’s shipping distance, Known the world over for the Motor Speedway, Nearly 20,000 transients in city every day on business, One of the prettiest cities in North America, Its water supply abundant and absolutely pure. Has 221 churches, seventy-three public schools, three high schools, Has twenty-five parks, seven golf links

sing or flirt In the class with me or any other stage girl. “And you aren’t home-builders like Winnie. You aren't anything. You fall down between the two of us. Am’ I right, Bob? Come, speak up!” (To Be Continued.) (Copyright, 1922, NEA Service)

and wonderful boulevard system, Has highest individual per capita buying power in country. Fifty-four cities of

'v* Yes, delightful—the tempting taste of old-fashioned wintergreen! Beeman’s pepsin Gum American Chicle Cos.

Important Reduction in Commuter Rates! 40 Aide books reduced to ,0165 c per mile. Anew 12 Ride Commuter Book, good for 10 days, at a rate of ,0175 c per mile. Theße fares are greatly reduced over what was formerly in effect. Inquire of your local ticket agent.. UNION TRAGTION COMPANY OF INDIANA

at least 30,000 population T Uhlß night’s ride. Growth not cut oft In 'nj direction by natural obstacles.

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