Indianapolis Times, Volume 35, Number 87, Indianapolis, Marion County, 21 August 1922 — Page 3
AUG. 21, 1922
AML REUNION OF SPANISH WAR VETSJSOPENED Indiana’s 160th Volunteers Hold Twenty-Fourth Meeting at Logs an sport. COL. GUNDER ATTENDS Memorial Services for Deceased Comrades Held After Business Session. By Timet Special LOG AX SPORT, Ind., Aug. 21. Sp&nsh War Veterans, members of the 160th Indiana Volunteer Association, opened their twenty-fourth annual reunion In the Cass Memorial Home here this morning. This regiment of Indiana volunteer Infantry saw service during tho entire Spanish War period, and afterward was assigned to duty with the .Army of Occupation In Cuba, Col. George Gunder of Marlon, who commanded the regiment, and many members of his former staff are attending the reunion. . The program arranged includes a business session and memorial services for deceased comrades afterward. A banquet will be held tonight. Other entertainment has been earranged for the day. HOOSIER BRIEFS PRINCETON—‘Take it offn me,” shouted a negro boy when a large tarantula leaped upon him from a banana truck, but he was unharmed. FT. WAYNE—WhiIe one of his feet was caught in a traction frog, Marshall Comincavish was run down and Injured by an automobile. FRANKFORT —Golf players are de nying a report here that they went around T. P. A. park links so fast j they set the grass on fire. BLL'FFTON —Circus life interferes | with your sleep entirely too much, so Edward Pierce of Ft. Wayne left ' the show here and went back home. KOKOMO —Wildcat’s odors disturb slumbers—that is Wildcat Creek, ; which flows through the heart of the city. COLUMBUS —“Go to birdies, daddy,” said Charles Johnson. Jr., 2, as he tried to climb back into the cockpit after his first airplane ride. BLOOMINGTON —A masked holdup man who at break of day awakened a bunch of poker players here ! to the fact that he needed money has been identified at Martinsville. GREENSBURG —"Keep your eye on your adventurous son when a cir- j cus comes to town,” said James Hall j of Champaign, 111., here looking for his 16-year-old boy. BLL'FFTON Fearing robbers might take advantage of the darkness : of a storm. Lloyd Cowens, bookkeeper, i Tlocked the Wells County bank and i pulled the shades. SHOALS—CIyde Archer, shot from ambush here last week, was the sixth Archer to die with his boots on, the ■ killings starting in 1882. LAFAYETTE —There was no evl-! dence Liebert Collins sold liquor, he merely gave it to his friends but was fined nevertheless.
LAFAYETTE —A penal farm sentence was given ’William Strickland for inducing his uncle's wife, who Is mother of five children, to live with him. BLUFFTON —Harry Young of Decatur claimed circus men robbed him of SBO but the showmen said he lost it gambling in the side show. BLOOMINGTON —Golfers here arc Joyous since finding that a brand of ten-cent balls are as good as the dollar article. MARION —TotaI of 5,078 bushels of wheat, 14,088 of oats and 105 rye were thrashed by seventeen members of the Big Brotherhood ring. EVANSVILLE —Six big broken down locomotives were pushed into the Howell yards by a wheezy switch engine. PRINCETON —His left ear struck a cross-arm and was tom off when Arba Luhring, wire chief, fell off a telephone pole. WABASH — Helen Louise Hollingshead is recovering from a broken left leg sustained when a tombstone toppled over on it. ANDERSON —An automatic food server, Invented by M. A. High, for restaurants will take a steak back if not done, and after the meal clear the table. KOKOMO —Forty-five men In a poker game at Russiaville were claimed to be members of a gambling ring who travel from town to town. FRANKFORT —Eighteen skeletons of Indians were unearthed on the banks of Wildcat Creek six miles west of here by Harry Hall. CRAW FORDS YILLE — A dozen people knew where*a Jug of moonshine had been cached which caused arrest of three bootleggers by Sheriff Luddlngton. PERU —"In 1916 the Indiana tax average for each voter was sl7, in 1921 it was $40,” asserted Walter Chambers, Democratic State chairman, in a political speech hero. MARION —Police Captain Jake Campbell brought back pictures from Old Lake showing him holding a string of fish to back up his fish stories. SHELBYVTLLE —Four guardsmen from Staunton fired twenty-six rounds at a dodging rabbit In the road ahead of their truck but missed It. MARION —C. C. Mays of the painters' union is watching the work of
INDIANA BOYS GET COMMISSIONS AT CULVER
LEFT TO RIGHT—C. H. BARNABY JR., ROBERT FLEMING AND RALPH POLK
Announcement has been made of the appointment of three Indiana boys to cadet offices in the summer schools at Culver. Ralph Polk of Greenwood and C. H. Bamaby, Jr., of Greencastle are cadet sergeants in
painting the court house dome through a field glass to see that its properly done after heing denied admittance. FT. IVAYNE—Sixty years of age and stranded in a strange city was the experience of Chris Cassidy of Chicago, strike breaker. TO ELUTE OIL ON SEMIRFICE Conference Called to Save Coasts From Damage Due to Ejectment. By United Freer WASHINGTON. Aug, 21.—An in- | ternational conference of the principal ; maritime nations of the world will convene here this winter, at the Invitation of the United States, to consider measures to be taken to rid the world seacoasts of the menace to fisheries, property and migratory j birds in the increasing pollution of coastal waters by oil ejection from ! steamships. President Harding, acting In compliance with legislation enacted recently by Congress, has authorized Secretary of State Hughes to issue invitations to the conference, and in interdepartmental committee representing the Departments of State, | War, Navy, Commerce, Interior, and Agriculture and the shipping board is at work determining which nations will be invited and formulating agents for the conference. Representative T. F. Appleby, New Jersey, in whose State are some of the finest bathing beaches on the Atlantic coast, notably that at Atlantic City, Is the father of the conference. He Introduced and secured passage by Congress of a bill authorizing President Harding to call It. It is intended that the result of the conference will be an international agreement whereby each nation will pledge itself to see that masters of ships flying its flag will exercise every precaution in the ejection of oil from their ships and in no case will eject it where it will drift shorewards. Because no nation has jurisdiction on the high seas beyond the three-mile limit, an agreement is the sole manner in which the object can be attained, domestic legislation being Inoperative. BUILDING PERMITS Josephine J. Larue, reroof, 1722 Cornell. $l5O. George J. Taber, reroof, 3241 Graceland, $136. Mary Burk, garage, 411 S. Randolph, SBO. Mary P. Graham, garage, 2018 N. New Jersey. S3OO. Otto F. Hauelsen. reroof, 1404 N. Pennsylvania, $247. Louis Beck, double, 4123 College. $8,500. William W William*, addition, 1249 Roosevelt, 51.200 M M. Miller, dwelling, 4301 Cornelius, $3,000. Bert C. McCammon, apartment. Maple road and College. $35,000. John Wyman, reroof. 1358 Fremont, $l2O. j John Yunga, repairs, 1007 W. Vermont, 1 SIOO. Christian Griebelbauer, garage, 1843 Singleton. SIOO. George W. Brown, reroof. 3214 Nowland, S2OO. Fred W. Henschen, garage, 70 N. Holmes, $l6O. George Curtis, remodel. 2451 Sheldon, SIBO.
Don’t Pay More than out prices for shoe repairing, or you pay too much. Only the beet of materials and workmanship. Work done while yon wait. If you wleh. MEN’S HALF SOLES.... WOMEN S HALF SOLES SO RUBBER HEELS 35^ THRIFT SHOE SHINE.. 54 TLIDirT SHOE 1 iUaIT 1 STORE Merchant* Bank Bid*., Downsteln Waehlnitton and Meridian Ate.
Blackburn’s UtmriWi tascaßfeaiPiULrr. ! IS DOSE* . 1k law — i aa'ji'Tr i— mam tan*
the summer cavalry school, and Robert Fleming of West Lebanon is a senior lieutenant in the naval battalions. Fleming is an expert oarsman and was coxswain of the crew that won the Inter-division crew races
RICH MEN ARE OPPOSED TO COMING OF BABIES
By United Prer* CHICAGO, Aug. 21.—A battle between Gold Coast millionaires and orphan babies was waged here today following announcement by St. Vincent's Orphanage that It would build a newhome in the exclusive North Side residence section. Philip K. Wrigley, Edward A. Leight and others prominent on Blue Book pages w-ere declared to be planning to ‘‘resist the invasion" of the restricted districts. According to Sister Mary Raphael work on the new home for orphans and abandoned waifs will be started START CONSTRUCTION Workmen Begin $35,000 Store Building on North Side. Construction began today on a $36,000 store building at the northwest corner of Maple Road and College Ave. The lower floor of the building will be divided into three storerooms, while the upper floor will consist of five apartments. The corner storeroom will be used as a drug store by Bert C. McCammon. An ornamental flower garden will occupy the twenty-flve-foot apace between the building and Maple Road, which la required by the city zoning plan.
J Aids digestion— V good for teeth-™ quiets nerves—you’ll like it! Beeman’s pepsinGwn American CUekCa
Steamship Tickets Rates, reservations and tickets to all parts of the world LETTERS OF CREDIT FOREIGN EXCHANGE Full information for the traveler TRAVEL BUREAU Steamship Department MERCHANTS NATIONAL BANK FRENZEL BROS.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
at Culver last year. He was also a member of the heavy cutter crew last summer, and this year he Is a member of the eight-oar shell crew Polk won the 1921 summer school rv->dal for the best record In studies.
immediately. The Institution will also include a maternity hospital for poor mothers. KLAN GIVES $1,200 Emmanuel Baptist Minister’s Pica Followed by Strange Visitation. United Freer CHICAGO, Aug. 21.—More than 500 klanjmen, masked and wearing the white robes of the order filed into the Emmanuel Baptist Church here last night and donated $1,200 for the erection of anew spire. Rev. Johnston Meyers, pastor, had just finished his sermon, asking that the congregation contribute for a spire to replace the one deetroyed during a etorm several months ago. PROVES INNOCENCE Woman Says She Would Have Used Bigger Gun Had She Meant to Kill. By United Pref NEW YORK. Aug. 21—" Oh. daddy, don't die! If I’d wanted to kill you I’d have used a bigger gun.” With these words, Mrs. Sarah Berlin. divorcee, flung herself upon Moses Schneider, unmarried, whom ■he had just shot because he wouldn’t support her child, she told police today. Schneider will recover.
VISITOR FINDS CHURCH WITH WARM GREETING Old-Fashioned Hospitality Extended to Strangers at E. Tenth St. M. E. Church. FIREMEN ARE GUESTS Over One Thousand in Sunday School Classes Sermon on Spiritual Bankrupts. By TUB VISITOR Discovered —A more pleasant place than a front porch on a warm Sunday night. It Is the East Tenth St, M. EL Church. The Visitor accepted the challenge after readiqg an advertisement to t H .e effect that one could have a more j pleasant time there on a Sunday night than on a front porch. This church more than made good. In the first place electric fans which are kept constantly going made the auditorium cool and pleasant. Although the fans radiate a pleasant coolness, the church members take care that the atmosphere does not get chilly. The Visitor was made to feel at home. The thing I liked about my reception at the Eat Tenth Street Church was that the greeting was not over done but was a practical, honest, homespun hospitality. A stranger to a church welcomes a quiet and sincere greeting. In other words, this church congregation and pastor doesn't make one feel he is a stranger. Big Morning Class At the beginning of the service, the Rev. George S. Hennlnger connected the Interests of the Sunday school with the church organization. A total of 1,020 attended the Sunday school yesterday morning and number many city firemen and their families were special guests. "There are bankrupts in this world,” j Dr. Hennlnger declared In his sermon, "Some Held-Over Liabilities." "There are churches that are bankrupt, not financially but spiritually. I know a church that has a membership of 2,000 and only seventy-two were present this morning. Another church
“Monon Flyer” Train De Luxe To Chicago Leaves Indianapolis - 4:30 P. M. Arrives Chicago ( s 1w"0 9:10 P. M. ■■■ ' ■ ■ '■ — This famous train permits you to a finish a day’s business in Indianapolis enjoy a splendid dinner enroute—and reach Chicago in time for a good night’s sleep. It’s wonderfully convenient. flTOiiEKuni CHICAGO, INDIANAPOLIS & LOUISVILLE RY. Three other fast trains to Chicago daily each one as good as the best “The Hoosier” Leaves Indianapolis ... 7:45 A. M. Arrives Chicago .... 12:45 P. M. “Daylight Limited” Leaves Indianapolis • * - 12:00 Noon Arrive* Chicago .... 4:55 p, M. “Night Express” Leaves Indianapolis ... 1:00 A. M. Arrive* Chicago - - - * 7:10 A. M. SUepert ready in Union Station at 9 P. M. Alt Monon traine ate Dearborn Station, Chicago, only two blocke from the loop. When you travel on the Monon you are protected by Automatic Block Signals all the way — 1 Ticket Offices 114 Monument Place, English Hotel Block Telephone Circle 4600 138
Hours and 40 Minutes MB^CHICACO via jpagMSß The Sycamore Lv. Indianapolis 5:00 P.M. Ar. Lafayette 6:25 P.M. Ar. Chicago 9:40 P.M. Observation tartar Car Dtnins-Lounga Car | OTHER TRAINS L*. Indianapolis 12 >OO Noon 2:4SP.M. 13.01A.M. 13.40 AM. 2:33 A.M. Ar. Lafayette 1 >4O P.M. 4.35P.M. 3.27 AM. 2:55 A.M. 4ilS A.M. Ar. Chicago 5:35P.M. 8:05P.M. 5:50A.M. 7:05A.M. 7:50A.M. Fortticket,t t, reservations and detailed information, call or addreee CITY TICKET OFFICE 112 Monument Circle Phone Circle 5300 oSsnflggriPgMy Union Station, Phone Main 4567 J. W. GARDNER, Division Passenger Agent
with a membership of les* than 1,000, had fifty-eight present. These churches are mighty close to spiritual bankruptcy. "How can you talk to people about keeping sacred the Lord’s Day when they haven't any Lord In their lives? "I don’t know where we are going to, to ÜBe a popular expression. lam not a pessimist. I wish I did know where we are going. Prejudice Isn’t Fair “It isn't fair to have a prejudice against a man. Give him a chance. “Carried over from childhood 1* a beautiful spirit of love. I wish I could love like a boy and a girl. God help us to be true to the spirit of love. You owe everything to chidhood for the things that come down to you In the forties and fifties. “If you love, you learned to love when you were a child. If you hate, you learned to hate when & child. God help us to pay the debt of the days long ago. “Pay the debt you owe to childhood,” he urged. RECORD ISTMPORTANT Pastor Declares Man’s Character Left to Posterity. "Your record will determine your fate hereafter,” Baid Maj. Earle F. Hites, pastor of the Cadle Tabernacle, in a most impressive sermon before an audience of 2,000 people Sunday afternoon. Maj. Hites declared that “Our reoords will be left to posterity. We have the records of the remote past left for us in the stones of past tlmee. Your very thoughts will, today, be left Indelibly impressed upon your mind and in turn be transmitted to some character, be it your own or to some one else. Your thought and deeds make your real character. Character is what you are; reputation is what others think you are." ATTEND CONVENTION Thousand Worker* Will Be Preeent at Sunday School Meeting. At least I.COO Sunday School workers will attend the forty-second annual convention of the Marion County Sunday School Association to be held i at the Central Christian Church, Sept. 25 and 26.
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