Indianapolis Times, Volume 35, Number 166, Indianapolis, Marion County, 21 November 1922 — Page 7
NOV. 21, 1922
NMKILLS NIFE Al HERMQTHEfi Jealous Husband Surrenders to Police Aster Doublé Killing at Kokomo. BABY SON IS WITNESS Abe Phillippy Says Mother-in-Law Continually Interferred With Family Affairs. By Times Special KOKOMO, ind., Nov. 21.—Angered because .lis wife refused to leave her henne and come and live with him, A* Phlllipp)oy, 30, went to thè home of nis wife’s parente last evening and ehjt hls mother-in-law, Mrs. Ellen Barnes, 51, who died instantly, and fatally wounded hls wife, Frances, 23, who died at a locai hospital ai 5 o'clock thls morning. Mrs. Philllppoy toid Prosecutor Foresi Harness last evening that her nusband was Jealous of her and had often threatened to kill her She said he blamed her mother for much of their domestlc trouble and killed her becauae he said she had “nosed in too much." About half an hour aster thè shooting, Philllppoy surrendered at thè centrai police Btatlon here. He had ev&ded an emergency squad sent to thè scene of thè shooting. The mother-ln-l&w was sound Inside thè house with a bullet hole In her forehead. The wife was on thè front porch. She had been ehot in thè chest. Edmund Barnes, 16, a brother of thè wife, was drlven from thè house by Philllppoy, lt is said. Police state that thè killing was premeditateli. They have sound that Philllppoy purchased a revolver at a locai panwshop early in thè afternoon. Philllppoy will be charged with flrst degree murder, Prosecutor Hamers said today. CLINGTO ROCK PILE 36 HOURS IN LAKE MENASHA, Nov. 21.—Thirty-six hours on a wave-swept rock pile in Lake Winnebago, marking thè location of a dlsmantled Government Ughthouse off thè mouth of thè Menasha River, while suffering from cold and exposure, was thè experlence of James Williams and Gerald Smith, Menasha hunters. Tlìe men left on a hunting expedition and failed to return. Aster twenty-four hours had passed, relatives became alarmed. Capt. John Arft. Menasha boaUnan, piloted a motor boat out on thè lake in thè face of a heavy gale which lashed thè water lnto white-crcsted rollers and aster a search located thè men, who were signaling with flashlights. High seas prevsnted thè men from getting off thè rock pile and into their skiff, The rock pile is only a few feet above water and afforded little more than a foothoid for thè men. SODA WATER TREAT PAVES WAY FOR DIYORCE ACTICN
DETROIT, Xov. 21.—Three ice cream soda.', representing an outlay of 33 cer.ts, proved thè rock upon which foundertd thè romance of Dorothy Gale, 18, she told thè court, and was gi ven a divorce front Henry Wood, 26, on thè gTOunds of desertion and non-support. "Aster we were married in May, 1321,” Dorothy related. "Henry pavé nte S2O to buy a dress and a pair of shoes The change was 33 cents and T sperit it for sodas for my sister, my'lf and a friend. “Henry said it was unforgivable ex- , ravagance an dthat he would never give me another cent. He kept his word.” U$E JAP CENSORSHIP TOKEEPOUT U. S. FILMS OSAKA, .Tapan, Xov. 21. —The imperiai tax of sls a thousand feet imposed on lmported filma having failed to check thè lmportations from America, lom# prefectures have decided to Impose a strider censorshlp. Among fhe subject* to be bar.ned are those eonsidered lmmoral, which includer ’.crve-maklng scenes. revolution* and partlcularly a plcture of thè war In which thè former Kaiser !s thè hero. An thè big American film companies are tncreasing tfielr business here. In thè porta there are numerous cinema! showing American fllms exclusively, whtle In thè country towns thè theatera generally put on a mixed program of American and Japanese filma. VIKJNG WARSHIP OT3OO B. C. FOUNDIN DENMARK OOPEXHAGEX, Xov. 21.—A war hip of thè Vlkings, dating back to about 300 B. C., wlll soon be on view here at thè Xational Museum. It was sound In thè bog of Hjortspring. la Slevig. Bhileleds, spears and swords sound wlth thè vessei, aUo wlll be on ▼lew. The ship is 42 H feet long 6t4 feet iride and was propelled by ten are. On arrivai lt wlll be assetti bled and exhibited In thè state In whioh it sali ed thè seas.
RJffJTFÌiW—- ! se. ièlk iP ■ W l ‘Fine forMll ,\\ B^gàl g J Irai COLDSand MA' GRIP” asà si L The opinion of Mr, J. O. Sexton. R. F. D. 32®% • No. 2, Orassy Creek. Xorth Carolina. He 1 a W itys: “I bare nsod Pe-ru-na for thè last Affi % A 1 M two yeara end receired groat benefit. It le . 1 m fine for colde and grip. I can fstsS/.- aCm troeommend Po-ru-na moni Just a few doaee of Pe-ro-na 1 J eoon aster exposnre or tirai M manifestatlon of trouble will lljf usuali! break a rold or dissi- /v/w paté a persUtent cottgh. Ju f Two tener at lori! have known ISaA ; Peri na in ita aalonuhinr min- Vtfw islratton to catarrnal dùeasea KpygìuF' Wjlj TABLETS OR UQUID
Pershing Goes Duck Hunting
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The leader of thè A. E. F. Is an expert with a ten-gauge shotgun. Here Gen. Pershing is shown duck hunting at Pass a Loutre, La. Up to thè Urne thls picture was taken, thè generai had made elght stralght kllls.
Bootlegger Hires Substitute to Serve Prison Sent enee
WASHINGTON, Nov. 21—Substltules are hlred for $lO a day to serve thè sentences of bootleggers In Cleveland. Ohio, President Harding has learned when thè case of a Clevelander. convicted of flnancing thè substitution operation, was brought to thè President’s attention. The President has asked thè Department of Justice for all thè ree-' ords in thè case and will cause an lnvestigation of thè sltuation in Cleveland. if there is evidence that thè practice is wldespread or is belng earried on with thè connivanco of oftlcials. The case is that df Manuel Biskind, a Cleveland jeweler, whose appeal for roview of his conviction recently was dismlssed by thè Supreme Court. Friends of Biskind. who is under sentence of six months in- jaii and payment of a SI,OOO fine, took thè case up with Mr. Harding to obtain executive clemency. Biskind was convicted of conapiracy for hiring Walter Beattie to serve a sentence of thlrty davs in thè Cleveland Workhouse imposed on Adam T. Meyer. Meyer was convicted of bootlegging liquor. The price paid Beattie wàs S3OO, or at thè rate of $lO a day, which. thè President was in-
Modem Gallants Spring to Rescue of Distressed Maid MILWAUKEE. Nov. 21.—Knightl>ood‘ can't be said precisely to be in full blossom In these baleyon days of honeycombed hose and finale hoppers, butto Nora Kuransky, 18, two champions stepped from out thè darkness as opportunely and as gallantly as eyer did Count Glsmond or Slr Gallahad. Nora was on her way home from down town and had been followed by Peter Biscos. The are light was only dlmly functioning and, as - Nora crossed thè Street, Peter became bold and accosted her, graaping her arm. The girl resented thè act. Raymond Stoeldt, and Rolan Mueller, riding by, noted thè Incident and leaped from their car. Peter, affrighted, made off. The girl was almost hysterical and one of thè rescuers walked with Nora to her home a short distane© away, while thè other followed Peter in thè automobile ntil, he sound a policeman, who arrested Peter. Judge Page in District Court fiped Peter $25 and costa on a charge of violating thè mashing ordinance. PYORRHEA Try This New Treatment for Pyorrhea, Bleeding, Receding Gums With Loose Teeth —At Our Expense. Broad rninded doetora and dentista who have given MOAVA DEIJTAL, CREAM—a hlgbly concentrated formala for thè treatment of Pyorrhea—a trial ire aetonlsbed at thè rapld resulta obtalned. It seoma almoat unbelievable but lt is a fact neverthelese that a few treatment* aver a perlod of one or t'&o days makea thè guma feel better and reduce thè •oreneas. Used falthfully for one week, a dedded improvement ia aeen. Continuo for a few weeks untll thè guma are Oealthy, thè apongineaa and aoreneaa al) gene and thè teeth are finn and Irnmovtble. All druggiate who sell MOAVA TOOTH PASTE are authorlzed to return thè purchase price to any one who cannot aee a decided improvement aster He use. Pearton Drug Co. can supply you.—Advertlsement.
formed, is "thè regluar price” obtained by thè sentence-servlng substitutes. The money was said to have been advanced to Meyer by Biskind in thè | form of a loan. Authorities dlscovered thè hoax aster Beattie had servecl virtually all Meyer’s time. GEOLOGISTS CLAIM POT HOLES FORMED BY EDDIES CHICAGO. Nov. 21.—The lieautifully rounded and smoothed pot holes which abound along thè rocky shores of Lake George and which, geologists say, were formed by the boring action of hard bowlders driven round and round in water eddies when the glaciers that once covered the Adirondack region were melting away, are called by thè country people "Indlan kettles.” They think that the Indiana | hollowed out these holes. which vary from a foot to several feet in dlame- ! ter and depth, to cook soup In. The heat, they assert, was produced by 1 dropping red-hot stones into the ' holes. While the Indiana did not ! make the holes, lt ia not lmpoaslble that they may occasionally have utllized them In the way deseribed. ‘BEAUTS’ IN SEARCH FOR MATES AT RESORT BEACH BIARRITZ. Frane©. Nov. 21. Women here are obsesaed with unusuai frankness which they express in “digns.” Julia Bachelor, fammis beauty, who has divorced four husbands, but la "without incumbrance” at present, wears a figure “4" set in diamonds to indicate she is ready to try agaln. Helen de Llancon, another beauty, went bathing with a beauty spot two inches above her left knee. She said it was the insignia of the “bcaheiorettes," and symbolized a husband hunL
CUTICURA HEALS LARGEPIMPLES Ai! Over Face. Red and Festered. Burned Dreadfully. Face Disflgured. “Several montha ago my face broke out with pimplea. They were large, reti and festered, and were acattered all over my face. The pimplea burned dreadfully at time*, and my face waa dlsfigured in ao m e place*. "The trouble lasted about two montha. I uaed other remadle* but without succeaa. I reati an advertlsement for Cutlcura Soap and Ointment and purchwied some, and aster using them two weeks I was hoaled ” (Signed) Miss Martha Palmer, R.F. D. 2, West Salem, Ohio, Jan. 3,1922. For every purpose of the toilet and bath, Cutlcura Soap, Ointment and Taleum are wonderfully good. SupUlwk Ttut bvandl Addrm: "Ctlw.li. .ntariw, Set n. M.ldca 48 Mw ' lM emnon Sw.a. ÓintiaMtlt .adMt. Tlewn2e. 129'Cutkiir. Swp ilutm wkk.ut ma*.
Do You Wear An Overcoat in Your Room? Have you ever tried to get through a winter living in a room with inadequato heat? If you have, you in&v have spent many an hour sitting in your room with an , overeoat or a blauket over your shoulders. You know, from evperience, that tliis sort of thing is mighty unpleasanL Resolve this winter to be in a comfortable, warni room. The rental ads of thè IN DI AN APOLIS TIMES will provide you with a complete directory of thè worthwhile locations. Turn to these rental ads riglit now and see how many verv attractive places are offered for rent. Read for Prosit Use for Results “Say It With a Times Want Ad” Cali Mairi 3500 Ask for Want Ad Taker
THE INDIAxNAFOEHS TIMES
SU TO Slum ZONEORDINRNCE / \ Long and careful study of the city zoning ordinance was planned by Mayor Shank today before he signs or vetoes it. He said he did not know which he would do. Aster three amendments had been adopted, millifying opponents of the measure, the city council last night unanimously passed the ordinane*, crowning a year’s work of the city pian commission. It had been ruie.ored earlier in the day the ordinance would not go through. The ordinance provides zones in which residence, business, church, ‘school# club or manufacturing buildings may Vie erected, requires ground area in thq various distriets coni nieiismate with health and comfort of thè population and fixes building height Umits. Aniendments Amendments passed were as follo ws: 1 raTisferring the block bounded by TwentySeventh, Pennsylvania and Merid.an Sts. and Fall Creek Blvd. fiom a district in which the he ght linnt was 85 feet to a district per ni-t big 120 feet for the benefit of G<- :ge ,J. Marott, who intenda to band a $2,000,000 hotel on the sq tiare. Transferring the southeast corner of Pennsylvania and Thirty-Fourth Sts. from a strictly residence to a business district. Addtng slaughter houses, packing plants and other Industries emitting offensive odors to the llst of Industries prohibited inside the city limita. Appropriation When it was explained thè city Street cleaning department has temporarlly disaiisaed several laborers and inapectors for lack of funds, the rulea were suspended and $3,000 appropriateti to the departmenfs salaries and wages fund. An appropriation of $13,000 for a new pier in the Harding St. bridge over White River was passed. With only Councilman Walter W. ! Wlse votlng “no," the ordinance ap- ] propriating $2,200 for the city's share of the cost of operating the free State and city employment bureau the rest of the year was passed. The bureau was operated a few months during the surnmer and closed up because the council refused to provlde the city funds. It will be re-opened immediately.
COUNTY SCHOOL HEADS T 0 DISCUSS PROBLEMS County school superintendents of northern Indiana will meet In Winchester Frlday and Saturday, to discuss several rnatters of interest to the teachors of publlc schools. Benjamin J. Burri, State supeiintendent of publlo instructlon, wil prealde at the meeting. Proposed revision of the high echool courne of study. teachor's training and hlgher educatlon in Indiana, waye to reduce school costa and provlde an efficient standard among high school pupiis, and severa! other topica will be taken up. Dlscusslon of the effect of the State educational survey report will be conducted. OUCH! LUMBAGO PAINI RUB BACKACHE AWAY Kidneys cause backache? No! Llstcn! Tour backache la caused by lurubago, sciatica, or a straln, and the qulckest rellef ls soothlng. penetratlng St. Jacobs Oli. Rub lt right on your palnful back, and instantly the aoreneaa, stlffneas and lamaness dlsappears. Don't stay crlppled! Get a mali trial botti© of St. Jacobs OH from your druggist and limber up. A moment aster lt In applled you'll wonder wliat became of the backache or lumbago paln. Rub old, honest St. Jacobs Oli whenever you have sciatica, neuralgia, rheumatism or sprains, as it la absolutely hamiless and doesn't burn the skln.—Advertisement.
CHANGE IN TIME BRTWEEN Indianapolis and Army Post Beglnning Sunday morning, Nov. 19th, full schedule of Et. Heniamin Ilarrison servlco will be lnstalled. Flfteen fraina daily ia each direction between Indianapolis and the Army Post in addltion to the regalar liourly servire of the infera rban linea. This will fornisti Et. Henjnmin Barrison the best traln servire tliat' has ever been given to that post. A.k Agrnt for fnfornmtloiu Union Traction Company of Indiana
“Marrier” Ties Knot for 1,602 Couples in 8 Years; Fin'ds No Mate for Self
Many are the people w r ho speculate about the elderly man dressed In black derby and black overcoat, who stands outside the west entrance to the courthouse in fair W’eather and inside by the radiator across from the office of the county clerk in inclement weather. He is there every day and has been there for every day the county clerk’S office has been open for the past several years. He appears to be looking for something.- He seldom smiles. He just waits and waits and vvaits. Whenever a couple leaves the office of the clerk sffler securing a marriage llcense this man accosta them; if they pass him by, he mutters, ‘‘They’ve aiready made arrangements.” He is a professional "marrier.” Eight years ago, he was admitted to the Canielite ministry. Since that Urne, he has married 1,602 couples, indù iing, he says, eight ordained minIsters of the gospel. Hls name, accordi ng to his card, is the Rev. G. E. Delting, “20% S. Delaware St. Cali at any time.” Above his name are two doves. Floating from their bills is a banner hearing the words "United.” When he was a boy, the Rev. Mr. Delting worked on a railroad. In an accident, he was struck in thè neck by a railroad tie and one of the ìeaders of his neck was strained. This makes him hold his head pecuiiarly. He never was In love, he declares, aa he never saw a woman w'honi he cculd picture as his wife. He seems to be of the opinion that most women are “money-chasers” and declares; "No one shall carry my potVktbook except myself." The Rev. Mr. Delting claims to hold reai estate in Tennessee va’.ued at $50,000. Desire for pleasure, he declared, reigns supreme in many wlves and causes the wrecking of homes Reluctantly he admitted that he thought married llfe the happier, but was skeptical about ever meeting ary one w'ith whom that fife could be pursued happily.
Whythe Standard oa Company* (Indiana) Business Is Successili!
3002
SIvETCHED BY TIMES STAFF ARTIST
The women stili have n chance as far as he is concemed, Judging from hi. conversation. A touch of pathos was brought irto
the Rev. Mr. Delting’s story when he told why he had no pulplt. "The churches nowadays want only young mlnisters,” he said sailly.
buy petroleum produets from thè Company which serves them best. The Standard Oil Company (Indiana) has succeeded notably because it has given notable Service. The desire to render maximum Service to the community has actuated this Company in every one of its undertakings over a long period of years. Proof that the Service is being adequately rendered lies in the Company’s sales sheets. Lines of effiriency radiate from the Board of Directors through every department of the organization to the ultimate consumer. First on the efficiency chart comes quality of produci To maintain this quality there has been organized modem Laboratories where every product is chemically tested for the Service it is designed to render. High quality once achieved is made a standard from which deviation is never permitted. Sales and distribution also are organized to produce maximum results at minimum expense. This assures the consumer a dependable supply, and it guarantees that when he buys a Standard Oil Company (Indiana) product he is paying only a fair and equitable price for which he receives full value. Every factor entering into the Standard Oil Company (Indiana) business, from the purchase of crude, its transportation to the Company’s refineries, its manufacture into a large number of useful produets, its distribution through an intricate network of main and substorage depots, tank wagons, and Service stations, is developed with a single eye to serving the public. Experience has proved that the most profitable business accrues to that organization which serves the public best. Standard Oil Company ( Indiana ) 310 So. Michigan Ave., Chicago, 111.
Every one who has had occaslon to enter the courthouse through the west door in the past few years haa seen thè forlorn, desolate man. He speaks to no one except “prospeets" and ha indicat.es that they will be thè only onesto whom he ever will speak.
For THROAT TROUBLES BUILDBYOU UP
BETTER THAN CALOMEL Thousands Have Discovered Dr. Edward’ Olive Tablets are a Harmless Substitute Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets—the substitute for calomel—are a mild but sur* laxative, and their effect on thè llver 1* almost lnstantancous. These little olive-colored tal'lets are the result of Dr. Edwards’ determinatlon not to treat llver and bowel complaints with caiomel. The pleasant little tablets do the good that calomel does, but have no bad aster effeets. They don’t injura thè teeth llke strong liquida or calomel. They take hold of tbe trouble and quickly correct tt. Why cure the llver at the expense of the teeth? Calomel somotimes play* bavoc with thè gums. So do strong Uquids. lt ls best not to take calomel. Let Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablet* take it* place. * Headaches, ‘‘dullness” and that laay feeling come from constipation and a disordered liver. Take Dr. Edward’ Olive Tablets when you feel ‘‘logy’’ and "heavy." They “clear" clouded brain and “perk up’’ the spirita. 13c and 30c.— Advertisement.
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