Indianapolis Times, Volume 35, Number 198, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 December 1922 — Page 12
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GERMAN OFFER Oli REPARUTIONS ISIROADGAUGED Annual Payment of Billion Marks and Foreign Loan Outstanding Feature. FEAR FRENCH REFUSAL Teuton Press Makes No Commtnt on Borah Proposai for Conference. By United Yetcs BERLIN, Dee. 28.—Germany’s new reparations offerto thè allies, it has been disclosed. is thè broadest gauged one ever made. The eubstance of thè scheme, as revealed to thè United News, follows: 1. The payment of 1,000,000,000 gold marks annually beginning in 1924 — thè total payments to be adjusted subsequently. 2. A foreign loan which will enable Gennany to meet these disbursements thè first four years. 3. Guarantees for thè payments to be given by thè industrialists and also backed by a loan to be raised internally. Despite thè fact that Chancellor Cimo vi e \vs this as a very concrete proposai, there is much uncertainty and gloom in govemmental circles, which are obsessed with thè idea that France will hearken to no proposai without first trying out one of her Ruhr theories. The new German prò posai probably will be forwarded Jan. 13. Chancellor Cimo has received thè allied note, finding Gennany guilty of nonfulfiliment of wood deliveries. The communication demands that thè payments be met in gold and kind. The propòsal of Senatòr Borah of thè United States that a world economie conference be ealled appeared for thè first time in tVednesday’s press. There was no coniment. GIRL TH'NKS DIAMOND PERFECT, BUT FINDS OUT Sweet Young Things Discuss Flaws in Gems. Two sweet young things stopped in front of an Illinois St. jewelry store. “Oh, but mine is perfect,” one of them remarked as she drew thè glove : from her left hand displaying a j ùiamond ring on thè third finger “Those in thè window are cheap ' because they have flaws. I knovv mine hasn’t any.” "You never can teli,” replied her friend sceptically. j “Well let’s go inside and find out,” said she of thè diamond. And in they went —•' BURGLAR ATTEMPTS TO ENTER POLAR ICE CO. Night Watehman Hears Glass Break —lntruder Disappears. A burglar broke thè glass in thè door of thè office of thè Polar Ice ani Fuel Company at Twentieth St. and Northwestern Ave., at 3 a. m. today Rufus Maxey, colored, 1809 Northwestern Ave., a watehman, was in thè basement and heard thè glass break. He ran to thè office but thè burglar heard him and diseppeared. Nothing was stolen.
FIFTEEN-YEAR-OLD GIRL CHARGED WITH FORGERY Poli ce Say SIOO False Check Was Passed on Store. A 15-year-old girl was arrested yesterday by detectives on a charge of forgery. The police say thè girl'3 mother had an account at thè Shelby Furniture Company, 1115 Shelby St., and that thè girl went to that store and presented a check for SIOO. The check was signed “H. W. Muse.” The girl said she would pay $2 on her mother’s account and, it is said, received S9B in cash. The detectives say thè check was a forgery. CITY OFFICIALS VVILL HAVE BANQUET TONIGHT Groninger Cliief Speaker at Affair for Municipal Employes. Officiala of thè city administration will attend a dinner at 6 a. m. today at thè Columbia Club. It is expected that between 150 and 200 heads of city departments and municipal employes, with their families and guests, will attend. Taylor E. Groninger, city corporation counsel, will deliver thè principal address, which will outline thè work of thè administration for thè past year. Mayor Shank and others will speak. MOOSE TO GIVE ANNUAL XMAS PARTY TONIGHT Children Pian Program for Fete at Tomliuson Hall. Children of members will give thè program at thè annual Christmas party of thè Moose Lodge in Tomlinson Hall this evening. The party is for members, their families and frlends. William A Mackey, who resides at thè Moose Club, will play Santa Claue. PROWLER ESCAPES Ora E. Jolley, 1325 Reisener St., heard some one attempting to get into his home at 2 a. m. today. He telephoned thè police. The prowler had disappeared, but thè emergency equad sound thè would-be hurglar had removed thè putty from thè window of Jolley’e kltchen.
Baby Mine 1F POP AN’MAWTPAIN J ME IN THE WAY I SHOULDj GO THEY WILL HAVE TOGO SOME. 4 V ~ 2. C Wouldn’t Like Company Verona had returned from a visit to her aunt in thè country and thè first thing she said to her mother was: ‘Oh, I’m so glad to be home. Aunt Efiie sound fault with me all thè time. I teli you. mamma, I’d Just hate to he Aunt Effie and have to live with myself all thè time." —K. S. Was Losiug Out Bobby was thè first child and had been thè pet of thè famil> .(U uiree years, when one morning there carne a girl baby, in whom all thè loving attention and interest seemed centered. Bobby stood it for three days, then, going to his mother, said: “If that baby is going to stay at oui house I wish it would bring its own inuvver.”—K. M. K. Roys Will Ih' Boys Willie teased to visit hls cousln, who lived in thè country. His father objected because they were never together without gettlng into a tight. “Well,” thè boy argued, “that won’t hurt anything. It’s just human nature for boys to tight.”—E. F. ED JACKSON TO APPEAL FOR NEAR EAST ORPHÀNS Will Address Churches of Hancock County. An appeal for orphans of thè Near East will be made at Fortville Sunday by Ed Jackson, secretary of State, whose addresses will feature field day observance by thè Near East Rellef in thè churches of Hancock County. The secretary of State will speak in thè Christian Church at Fortville Sunday morning and at thè Methodist Church in thè evening. Greenfield churches will also observe field day. A new Near East relief picture, “Seeing Is Believing, or Uncle America Sees It Through,” will be shown during a watch party at thè Methodist Episcopal Church in Greenfield Sunday night. New Palestine, ville, Wilkinson, Shirley and Char. lottsville will observe field day.
TEMPORARY ORDER ISSUED AGAINST BEDFORD HOUSE Hearing Jan. 15 on Tetition Stopping Operation of Place. A temporary restraining order forbidding operation of an alleged blind tiger at Bedford was issued by Judge Albert B. Anderson in Federai Court late yesterday. Stanley Torpy, Pat Torpy, Da ve Torpy, Claude Greathouse and William Tuggle were named defendants. The petition, filed by Homer Elliott, United States district attorney, asked that a building at 1410 N. 1 St. In Bedford be declared a nuisance. Judge Anderson set thè hearing on temporary injunction Jan. 15. OLD-AGE PENSION BILL TO COME UP ONCE MORE Measure Would Gire SI a Day to Persoti in Stato Over 70. A proposai for an old-age pension will be placed before thè Legislature once more when it convenes next week. The proposai would prò vide that every person over thè age of <0 would recelve 81 a day from thè State. The incomes of persons who have incomes would be deducted from thè amount of thè pension and, in casco whcyf incomes exceed thè amount of thè pension, no pension would be paid. The old age pension commisslon of Indiana is behind thè movement. Otto P. Deluse is head of thè organization. JANITOR WHO ONCE SWEPT CHIEF’S OFFICE ARRESTED Blind Tiger (iiarges Placed Agallisi Former City Empioye. Otis Fisher, 24, colored, 242% N. Illinois St., formerly thè janitor who swept and dusted thè office of thè chief of police, today was locked in a cellroom at police headquarters. Fisher is charged with operati ng a blind tiger. The police alleged thè ex-janitor had a bottle of "mule” on his hip.
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THREEMENFIGHT IO WINFREEDOM Prisoners Charged With Being Fugitives. Three alleged robbers arrested by police at thè Roosevelt Hotel Nov. 24, on vagrancy charges, continued a legai battle for freedom today. An additional charge of being fugitives from justice was placed against thè defendants in city court late yesterday. They are Ermal and Olin Mullins of Lawrenceville, 111., and James Hill, North Vernon, Ind. John Hendricks, Cooper Ave. and Sixty-First St., testified thè three men were members o£ a party of five who held up him and another man on a road in Parke County n ore than a month ago, shooting him in thè hand and robbing him of $5.80. Eheriff William J. Pearer of Rockville said he held warrants for thè men charging robbery, and that he had been in Indianapolis four times in attempts to get possession of thè men for trial in Parke County. Special City Judge Fred R. Bonifield discharged Ermal Mullins and took cases of thè others under advisement. DISABLED VETS GET PART PROCEEDS OF BALL GAME Landis Divides Receipis of World Series Tie Contest. A check for $20,352.10, to be used for thè relief of disabled World War veterans, has been received frorn Kenesaw Mountain Landis, commissioner of organized baseball, by thè American Legion national headquarters. Similar checks have been sent to thè Veterans of Foreign Wars and to thè Disabled Veterans of thè World War, accorcìing to a lotter received by Alvin M. Owsley, national commander of thè American Legion. The gift of thè organization represents one-half of thè proceeds of thè tie game of this year’s world series. Do You Feel Tired Aster Eating? A tired, nervous feeling may he a sign of poisons in your System which prevent proper digestion. Food turns into more poison and gas, making you nervous and weak. Simpìe huckthorn bark, giyceritio, etc., as mixed in Adlerika, expels poisons and gas feotn BOTII upper and lower howeì. Removes old matter you never thought was in your System which poiBOned stomach and made you tired and tiervous. Adlerika is EXCEI.LENT to guard against appendicitis. il. J. Huder, druggist, Washington aud Pennsylvania Street.—Advertisement.
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The Indianapolis Times
VALUABLE RING MISSING FROM FRENZEL HOME Jewel Set With Rubies and Diamonds Valued at $350. A valuable ring was reported missing today from thè home of Oscar F. Frenzel, 1338 N. New Jersey St. The ring, which had four rubies set in platinum and thirty amali diamonds, was valued at $350. DIIVESTARTSTO IBM IN Labor Would Put Monetary Protection on Unemployment. By United Press CHICAGO, Dee. 28—A drive to obtain legislation for unemployment Insurance was opened here today at thè annual convention of thè American Association for Labor Legislation. Wesley C. Mitchell, director of die national bureau of economie research, New York, gave some of thè resulta of a survey in 1921 of unemployment conditions. Methods to establish protection to avoid over-expansion in times of great activity and fimling market in times of depression was recommended by Mitchell. The government, he said, shoukl govern its purchases and expenditures for public Works to times of depression. Cost of unemployment insurance should ho placed on thè employers, he recommended, by a System of premiurns graduated with reference to thè volume of employment. Cor. Washington and Delaware Sts. Mer/s Regular Sizes $ “tf Khaki Coveraiis J[
APP L E S FROM MICHIGAN Another Big Carload Sale Thursday At Car Door, 230 Virginia Avenue Northern Spies, Goiden Russets, <*. jr r n Balrfwins, Wagners v I v 1 •3” All Hand Picked, per bu. basket A ——— Also Severa! Other Varieties. ARTHUR B.HAMILL„S‘SS„ t
GGDEN ARMIR ira DOWN Edson White Scheduled to Become President of Firm. jßy United Press CHICAGO, Dee. 28. —Retirement of J. Ogden Armour fro#a thè presidency of thè packing company with tho completion of thè purchase of Morris & Co., was forecast in ftnancial circles here teday. According to these reports, Arrnour would become chairman of thè board of directors and F. Edson White, at present vice president of thè company, will become president. Trading in thè $60,000,000 preferred stock of Armour & Co. of Delaware, organized to handlo thè Morris deal, was started on thè Chicago Stock Exchange today. Announcement of thè transfer is expected dolly. White has been with Armour & Co. many years and is la.rgely known for his selling ability REMOVES WHEEL John R. Jones, 2262 N. Capitol Ave., parked his automobile on Pennsylvania St., near South St., last night. A thief stole thè front wheel, rim and tire off of Jones’ automobile. f Nothing f/r. Holidays Than a “Partridge Ham” We Are INDIANA DI ST RIBUTORS “Correct Merchandising”
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Enroll This Week This is deeision time. If you have been wobbling a little, now’s thè time to qult it. Just at thè dawn of thè new year, you should make up your mind to a definite program. Deeision ts all-important first—then eomes action. Fear, tlmidity, age, lacfc of education. no funds, too much speculation—any of these— -Avill retard deeision. Whatever thè reai or apparent obstacle, now's thè time to assert yourself, claim your rlghts, and to start suecessward. Enroll this week, if possible. Make thè start Or. come right in New Year’s Day or Tuesday, thè 2nd. Enter during this opening week, or as soon as you can get your affairs arranged. Attend Indiana Business College at Marion. Muncie, Logqnsport, Anderson, Kokomo, Lafayette, Columbus, Richmond, Vincennes. Crawfordsville, Perù or Indianapolis. Chas. O. C'rlng is president, and Ora E. But, generai manager. Make thè right deeision now and by 1924 you'll be reaping resulta. Get in touch with thè polnt you prefer, or see, write, or telephone Fred W. Case, Principal. Pennsylvania and Vermont. First Door North T. W. C. A., Indianapolis-
HOTEL SEVERIN SA TURBA Y E VENING, DECEMBER 30th New Year’s Dinner and Dance Wp Wish Everybody A Very Ilappy New Ycar.
DEC. 28, 1922
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