Indianapolis Times, Volume 35, Number 127, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 October 1922 — Page 2
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IMIJSIG TEACHERS OF INDIANA WILL BE ENTERTAINED Plans Are Announced for State Convention Next May at Bioorhington. CHORUS IS ORGANIZED Public School Children Will Give Annual festival at Meeting. By Timet Special BLOOMINGTON, It'd.. Oct. 6. Elaborate plans for the' entertainment of members of the Music Teach- , ers’ Association at next May ■were announced byre today by members of the Friday iNjusicale, Mrs. Louis Becovitz, president A large women’s chous is being organized from the membership of the Friday tuusicale, the May music festival by Bloomington school children will be given, x and special features of the progran will be furnished by the various musical organizations of Indiana University. Professor Birge Directs Professor E. B. Birge. former supervisor of music in the Indianapolis schools, now of the Indiana University school of music and president of the State Music Teachers’ Association, will direct the chcrus of the Friday Musicale and also the chorus of several hundred voices } made up of supervisors of music in the public schools of Indiana at the State Teachers' Association convention at Indianapolis this month. The musical program of the Friday Musicale, consisting of eleven numbers to be given during the season opened today with a recital by the Orloff Trio, of Indianpolis. Hoosier Briefs MAKION—PauI Gotschall claimed he sold a still for S2O to a woman on time, having faith that the place would not be raided. NEWCASTLE —In an endeavor to make this the “Rose City” of Indiana, the Rotary' Club has ordered 2,000 rose bushes for distribution. PACKERTOX—Read this and then weep—James Priser, near here, raised 1,800 bushels of onions this year on an acre and a half. KOKOMO—Although the court may have believed George Fritz that he kept whisky for his "asthma,” he nevertheless was fined SIOO. FRANKLIN Johnson County Pythians are elated over election of D. E. Farr of Edinburg as grand outer guard by the Indiana Pythian grand lodge. GARY —Seven city councilman will wear gold stars at $23 each, white eight aldermen will wear ten-cent store badges. VINCENNES —That his wife sat In the rear seat of the car ■with a pair of scissors and threatened to Jab him If he opened his mouth was the divorce charge of Alfred R. Powell of Bicknell. GREEXSBURG His association with clairvoyants, he says, enabled George H. Dunn. local theater manager. to pick out a stranger’s wife in an audience. PORTLAND—That the “sick man” of Europe should be kept In a perpetual state of convalescence was text of a ministerial association resolution protesting Turk atrocities. FRANKFORT —A cherry tree owned by Lee H. Crawford of Miehigantown has the habit, it's blooming the second time and did the same last year. SOUTH BEND—In order to avoid hitting a child playing in the street. T. G. Uynegar wrecked his car against a tree and injured himself. FRANKFORT Postal Inspectors are on the trail of the burglars who robbed the Rossville postoffice of SSO in cash. SILVER LAKE—When a practical Joker txk the school hack, six teachers had to stay out all night and 200 Lake. Township pupils had a vacation. LA PORTE When his truck heavily • loaded with liquor skidded. Herbert. Haas bumped against a SSOO fine and.sixty days on the penal farm. WARSAW —Found, a perfect hubhard squash, at the Kosciusko County fair, by S. B. Williamson, of Goshen, horticultural expert. GARY Paul Worthy, colored, testified he was ‘‘Jes’ playin’ ” when he fired three shots at his wife. FT. WAYNE—Andrew Kertesz Is charged with entering his home at midnight, threatening his wife with a revolver, and kidnaping their baby. EVANSVILLE— Fred Hohenberger, has given away the secret of why
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STATE CAMPAIGNING Latest News of Political Whirl
Tax Records Criticized By Timet Special RENSSELAER, Ind., Oct 6.—Tux records of the last two Republican State administrations were criticized severely by former Governor Samuel M. Ralston, Democratic candidate for United States Senator, in a speech here today. “In 1915 under a Democratic administration there was collected in taxes from the people of Indiana $51,980,948.65. Under the Republican administration immediately following, taxes in 1921 reached $114,641,524.32,” he said. “The last Democratic administration, with its lower tax levy, put Indiana out of debt for the first time in eighty-two years and left a cash balance of $3,700,000 in the State treasury.” \ Fess Makes Address By Times Special LEBANON, Ind., Oct. 6.—Simeon D. Fess, Representative in Congress and the Republican nominee for Senator from Ohio, made his first speech in Indiana during the present campaign here last night. Senator George H. Moses of New Hampshire also was a speaker. In his address, Mr. Fess praised Indiana's delegation in Congress and urged the election of Beveridge to the Senate. “Indiana has ever been in the front line in the battle for good government,” he said. “Her position before the nation in this respect has been steadily advancing.” During most of his address Fess outlined the achievements of the Rebrewers are sad these days to wit: near-beer must be brewed twice. MENTONE—The Rev. A. J. Bachman of the Christian Church believes everybody should work and to that end tills a fifteen acre tract and carpenters.
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publican Administration. Senator Moses attacked the Democratc and iheir Administrations. Urges Relief for Farmers By Times Special RENSSELAER, Ind., Oct. 6.—Albert J. Beveridge, candidate for Senator on the Republican ticket, made an address at the county fair here Thursday afternoon. "Although a Republican Congress passed remedial laws, and thus saved the farmers of America from bankruptcy with which they were threatened by unwise legislation of the Wilson Administration, the tillers of the soil must be given further relief,” he stated. “Every one was hit hard by the unwise legislation, with the exception of certain groups of union labor men, and the farmers were hit the hardest of any group of American citzens.” Loses Speaking Voice By Times Special EVANSVILLE, Ind., Oct. 6. —An attack of bronchitis has caused William E. Wilson, Democratic nominee for Congress in the First District, to lose his speaking voice. He has been forced to give up his campaign tempo rarily. Favor International Topic By Times Special RICHMOND, Ind., Oct. 6. —Politicians today discussed the plan employed by former Governor James M. Cox of Ohio, who addressed the largest Democratic meeting in eastern Indiana in years here Wednesday night, when he introduced anew element in campaigning. He ascertained by dircet inquiry, exactly what the audience wished him to discuss. Ho gave the choice of domestic questions or domestic questions in-so-far as they were influenced by the international situation. Every person in the audience arose in evidence of the unanimous verdict in behalf of the international topic.
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
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OCT. 6, 1922
