Indianapolis Times, Volume 35, Number 234, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 February 1923 — Page 2
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WAR BETWEEN FRANCE AND BRITAIN PROBABLE, SAYS SIMMS
COURT EXPOSE OF HOUSE OF DAVID RITES THREATENED Two Girls Are Pushing Their Suit of SBOO,OOO Against ‘King Benjamin,’ By United Press PAW PAW, Mich., Feb. 8 —Secret rites of the “House of David” at Benton Harbor were threatened with exposure by court action today. Judge Robert Des Voignes will rule Feb. 8 on a motion to prevent questioning of “King” Benjamin Purnell in a suit for SBOO,OOO damages brought by two of his girl followers. Suit filed by Ruth Bamford Reed, 17, and Gladys Bamford Rubel, 19, charges Purnell with immoral practices carried on under the cloak of religion. Purnell in 1904 went to Australia and persuaded George Bamford and his wife and daughter Gladys to join the sect at Benton Harbor, according to the petition. Bamford died, but a second daughter Ruth was born to his wife. Ruth in an affidavit declared she was subject to the will of “King Benjamin” from birth. She says she was 10 years old when she first received the “call” to appear alone at the house of the king. From that day until 1920 she was forced to do the bidding of Purnell, she says. At 15 she was ordered to marry Robert P. Reed, but managed to put off the wedding two years, she alleges. The couple was sent to Johnstown, Pa., in a penniless condition, the suit charges. Gladys declares she was 13 years old when she was first called before Purnell. She asserted the king told her love was a religious rote and could only bo performed by him. Benjamin Thomas Rubel was selected as her husband and she was forced to marry him. according to the affidavit. LAWYERS OFFER CHANGES Two amendments to the constitution of the Indianapolis Bar Association, proposed at a dinner in the Chamber of Commerce Wednesday night, were before the members today. One creates a permanent committee on legal ethics, tne other changes election procedure. Wagon I'psets; Man Killed By Times /Special KENDALLVILLE, Ind.. Feb. 8 Albert E. Strater suffered a fracture of the skull when he was thrown to the ground by the overturning of a load of hay on which he was riding. He died before reaching a local hospital.
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Butler Senior Wins High Favor as Actress and Dramatic Coach
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Here is a young miss who is going to make Ethel Barrymore look to her laurels, her friends believe. She is Miss Helen Brattain, 5728 College Ave. Her acting in high school and college dramatics has won much favorable comment. Miss Brattain, who will receive her degree from Butler ir, June, originated the idea of monthly presentation of one-act plays by the Butler Dramatic Club. She. has been appointed by Prof. Rollo A
MANY OBJECTIONS FILED TO KAPPES GASRATERULING Exceptions to the findings of William I*. Kappes, master in chancery , in the gas rate case, were filed by the public service commission of Indiana in Federal Court today. in Kappes’ rej>ort, findings were made that a 90-cent rate was confiscatory, and that reproduction value less 15 per cent for depreciation should t-“ taken as the basis for valuation of physical property of the company for late-making purposes. No recommendation was made ms to the rate to le charged, but $1.33 was fixed as a “reasonable” rate on a basis of figures used. The master erred, the commission's bill said, in the following particulars: In selecting a period from May 1, 1921 to April 30, 1922, as the basis for his findings.
In finding what gas rate was reasonable. He should have passed only on the sufficiency of a nlnety-cent rate. In excluding from consideration in determining valuation of the property of the Citizens Gas Company, the book value, original cost, and appraisement figures for a ten-year period from 1911 to 1920. In taking into consideration reproduction value only. In setitng the valuation of tho ; physical property of the company at j $16,249,517.85, this amount wad excessive. In assigning a value of $1,624,951.78 to intangibles, this amount was excessive. In finding a rate of $1.20 reasonable : for the period from Sept. 1 to Doe. 1, 1922. j In finding this period was a normal i one; it was the most unfavorable in fthe history of the company.
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MISS HELEN BRATTAIN
Talicote, instructor in public speaking and dramatic Interpretation to coach these plays. Miss Brattain made her theatrical debut In the Shortrtdge senior play of 1918. She played the lead in “It Pays to Advertise.” She has played leads in "The Witching Hour” and “Lady Windemere’s Fan.” This year she portrayed Mrs. Faulkner in the Dramatic Club presentation of “Come Out of the Kitchen.”
MOVE STARTED TO MAKE ILLEGAL SALES FELONY Senate Passes Bill l > Cut Down 'Good Behavior’ Bonus. Conversion or sale of property !>ought on title clause contract is made a felony instead of a misdemeanor In a Mil the Senate passed today, 31-9. The bill of which Senator Perkins is author, is aimed at sale of automobiles bought on payment plans. Senator Durham's bill to cut down the “good behavior” bonus for prls- ■■ .•••■ o- t:.■ * .i.tt.a State Farm at Putinanville passed. 42-0. Senator Beardsley's resolution providing the Leg! iature shall meet Matty dn> and re- mvene for thirty days advanced io third reading, and ordered engrossed. TRADE MADE IN PHILUPSSEARCH Pacific Coast Criminal Arrested in Mexico. H’/ United press FREEPORT. Texas. Feb. B.—Phil j Alquin, Pacific roast criminal, was ar- i rested today when th- steamer Freeport Nosed arrived here from Tampico. j Alquin, held in chains aboard the vessel following his deportation front Mexico, was turned over to Freeport authorities pending arrival of police from Los Ant'i-h's, who want him on a charge of murder. The arrest of Alquin was believed the key to ihe apprehension of Clara Phillips, “hammer murderess,” who escaped from a Los Angeles jail. The men held by Los Angeles police will b> released as a result of Alquin’s arrest, it was understood, and as part of the agreement the hiding place of Clara Phillips will be revealed BUTLER PRAISED FOR AMERICANISM Feuerlicht Addresses 300 at Founder’s Day Dinner. "Butler University is the best fortress and rampart of Americanism against ignorance.” said Rabbi Morris M. Feuerlicht Wednesday night at the annual Founder's day dinner at the Claypool. Representing the city's ! civic organizations, he addressed approximately 300 students, alumni, members of tiie faculty and friends. Rabbi Feuerlicht declared Indianapolis had responded nobly to the university's needs, and predicted for it a great future. Other speakers: Arthur V. Brown, representing the board of trustees; Charles E. Coffin, city administration; Dr. Howard E. Jensen, faculty; Dr. David M. Edwards, president of Earlham. Richmond; Wendell Brown, seniors, and Miss Caroline Dunn, student body. Dr. Robert Judson A ley. Butler president, was toastmaster. Drainage Code Proposed < odifiention of all State drainage laws was asked today in a bill introduced by Senator Steele. It is sponsored by the administration. It was referred to the committee on swamp lands and drains. Eleven bills were introduced In the Senate, making the total 311.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Fear of Trade Loss Is Cause of England’s Break With Re-public-Industrials o f Empire Frightened at Prospects. By WILLIAM PHILIP SIMMS. WASHINGTON, Feb. 8. —The breach between England and France is far deeper and more serious than tlie public has boon allowed to see. War between France and England is not only a possibility, but a distinct probability unless the snarl can be untangled. Such a war would shake the world. On the surface France and Britain split over France’s so-called harsh treatment of Germany, particularly in the Ruhr. The real reason for the split was, '
something entirely different. Lloyd George himself, you will remember, four years ago as prime min- j ister of Britain, said he would "Hang | the Kaiser!’ 'and "Make the Germans j pay the costs of the war to the uttermost shilling!” It was Lloyd George who, at the Paris conference, boosted the amount of German reparations from $15,000,000,000 —which the American delegation said Germany should pay—to $33,000,000,000. It was Lloyd George who insisted Germany must pay the allies’ war pensions when France had been perfectly willing to accept reparations for just the actual damage done by Germany during the invasion. Lloyd George Shifts So Lloyd George's shift from Hang the-Kalser to Treat-'em Gently was due to an influence far more jwwerful than any mere waning of a desire for revenge. For Lloyd George has always been the first to deny he ever entertained any such desire. The real escret of the Franco English split is trade. England fears the i loss of her trade to France. England Is essentially an industrial i nation. Her trade must be kept up \ else she will die. The backbone of I this trade is iron .steel and coal. ! In 1887 the pig iron output of the | United Kingdom amounted to 7,681,0u0 ! tons; Germany, 4,024,000 tons, and | France, 1,668,000 tons.
Iron Output Doubles In 1912—before the World War—the United Kingdom's output had grown only to 10,033,000 tons, ns against Germany's 15,574,000 and France’s 4,411,000 tons, an increase of 387 per cent for Germany, 281 for France and a mere 30 per cent for the British Isles. Together, Germany and France had doubled England. In the steel trade the discrepancies were even more marked. Os the known coal deposits It is calculated that Germany has coal for 1,000 years, France, 500 years, and the United Kingdom for only 300 years. Os the known iron deposits, it is estimated that Germany has 3,878,000,000 tons; France, 3.300,000,000 tons, and the Unied Kingdom 1,300,000,000 tons. France I!a.s Upper Hand Now it so happens that most of this great wealth, as well as the great iron and steel industries themselves, are In the Ruhr, the Saar, Lorraine and northern France—all in French hands. The great Industrials of Britain are up in arms. They are frightened. They see a deadly rival to themselves and to British commerce In French control of these districts. Hence Lloyd George’s stupendous somersault. lit: sees the bugaboo, too. too. And if Lloyd George by any chance should bo right, and France stays, there will be trouble, unless by International conference, or otherwise, France and England are induced to drop their quarrel. CONTRACT IS LET FOR AUTO SHOW Management Strives for Beauty In Decorations, The contract for decorations of tho Indianapolis automobile show in tho Ktate Falrgronud. March 5-10, has been let to the Reed Scenic Company, John B. Orman, manager of the show, announced today. “We shall have stage effects in decorations, and lighting will be used in la visit manner,” Orman said. | “Automobile men who have visited ' the shows in Now York and Chicago I agree that our slogan, 'The most beau I tiful show In America' Is not farfetched.”
RISBERG STATES HE’S IN FINE TRIM Carpenter Declares Tan 1a c Quickly Overcame Indigestion and Run Down Condition. "Since taking Taniac, X can climb and bend and hammer all day without feeling tired out.” was the character j istlc statement made recently by Olof j Rlsberg, 4216 Alcott Ave., East Chi cago. Indiana,-well-known contracting carpenter. “That shows what fine working trim Taniac puts a man in. Why. tnree bottles, or just hajf the full treatment, has made me feel Just like I wanted to feel. “For months I had been in a nervous, run-down condition, unable to sleep right at night and so weak through out the day I hardly felt like pulling my saw. I was mighty hard hit by my loss of appetite, indigestion, head aches and dizziness and my body was just a bundle of excited nerves. “Well, Taniac was just what my system needed and T picked up in quick time. Now, the indigestion ind nervousness have left me entirely and I’m eating, sleeping and feeling fine.” Tanlao is for salo by all good druggists. Over 35-Million bottles sold.—Advertisement.
WAY TO EVADE POLICE BAN ON CAROS IS SOUGHT Poolroom Proprietors Plan to Obtain Club Charters — Warning Issued, in an effort to foil Police Chief Rikhoff's ban on card playing In cigar stores and poolrooms, proprietors plan to obtain charters and open clubs. They point out to police that no effort is made to halt card playing in leading clubs. But police officers have warned the proprietors of cigar stares and poolrooms that club charters would not halt arrests and enforcement of the chief’s order. Wednesday police warned William Collier, 610 E. Washington St., who operates a club for colored men, under a charter, not to permit card play--1 ing, even in the club rooms, It was learned. While police said the order . has been complied with during the last few days, they admitted numerous I questions have been asked as to what j action would bo taken if charters ; were obtained. At Riley s cigar store, 727 Massachusetts Ave., Lieutenant Clifford Richter declared charters would not stop arrests. Police Captain Herbert Fletcher on Wednesday night visited the Golden West Club, 622 Indiana Ave., operated jby Harry (Goosle) Lee and Archie Young, prominent colored political workers. The captain said he found thirty colored men. 11- gave orders to patrolmen and remained at the club I until all the members had left.
CATHOLICS WILE FIGHT OREGON LAW Plan to Raise SIOO,OOO for Battle Against School Statute. By United Press I WASHINGTON', Feb. B—Catholics i throughout tho country today were I asked by the National Catholic Wel- ! fare Council to raise a fund of SIOO,000, to carry a legal fight against the Oregon anti parochial school law to the Supremo Court. The Oregon law, adopted by a popu lar vote In the last election, would abolish private and parochial schools for children between the ages of 8 and 16. It Is to become effective in 1926. The money raised would bo called "the Catholic educational defense fund,” and the appeal was sent to all members of th.. hierarchy in the United States. It was signed by Arch bishop Hanna of San Francisco, Bishop Muldoon of Rockford. Arch bishop Downing of St. Paul. Bishop Schmmb of Cleveland, Bishop Walsh of Portland, Bishop Gibbons of Albany and Bishop Malloyj of Brooklyn.
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DON’T GET UP NIGHTS Thin Symptom Tells Von There I* Danger Ahead. J 11. Horton Relieved at Seventy. J. H. Dorton, W. Graham, Va., says; "I whs told that getting up nights was a disease that belonged to old people. I have found different. 1 have taken Lithiated Liuehu (Keller formula) a short time and now 1 am normal. I had to get up 7or 3 times a night. I huvo been troubled for 40 years. Will gladly tell auy one personally.” Lithtuted Bucbu (Keller formula) acts on the kidneys and bladder like Epsom Salts on the bowels. It cleans them out, relieving the bladder of many abnormal deposits. These tablets cost L’c apiece. This price makes it possible to place in fl>“ formula several drugs which are us--fnl for relief. The formula is on the I ackage. It is not likely you have ever t iken anything similar. Try a few tablets for backache, scalding, scanty or high colored urine, and frequent desire at night. Be sure to get the Keller formula Uthlated Buchu at all drug stores, or write Keller Laboratory, Mechanlcsburg, 0., or locally at Hook Drug Stores.—Advertisement
BAXTER PROPOSES HEME TO HELP TANGLEDFINANOES Bill Would Legalize Transfer of State Money Between Funds. In an effort to straighten out the tangled financial condition of the State, Senator Arthur R. Baxter of Indianapolis introduced a bill today providing for the transfer of money from one State fund to another. The administration at present finds itself with a deficit of approximately $2,500,000 in the general fund and an excess in some funds. Under the present law the • oney cannot be transferred. The bill stipulates the money must be returned at the next bienniel tax collection. The situation over State finances continued tense and Democratic leaders declared <:hey had not ended their fight for complete information. Some of the members intimated they had facts which, if made public, would cause a profound sensation. Near Fist Fight The fight, which almost became a physical encounter Wednesday afternoon. resulted from an effort of Senator Joseph M. Cravens, Democratic fioor leader, to file a protest against the failure of the finance board to comply with the demand of the Senate for Information cn State finances. When t h-> smoke had cleared away Republican members awoke to the realization that ('ravens protest had been written into the journal despite his having : oeen overruled by the chair and by the Senate.
Cravens was given permission to protest against the action of the Senate in refusing to permit him to protest against th>- finance board. In his protest against the Senate's action he included the text of his protest against the finance hoard. Cravens and Senator Thomas Daily n. arly < ante to Mows during the debate over the question of whether (’rave:.- should tile his original pro test Daily demanded to know why the Democrats did not bring the Democratic auditor of State. Robert Bracken, before the Senate and demand an explanation of the State finances. ‘The Senator will not do it because he is a coward,” Dally said. "Who is a coward?” Cravens shouted, jumping from his seat and making a lunge for Dally with his lists dou- | hied. A number of Senators seized him •nd doorkeepers rushed to the floor. During the remainder of the debate a doorkeeper stood between Cravens and | Daily. During Daily's talk Senator John <\ Crosby of Huntington protested on the ground that Daily’s remarks were insulting. POLICE HERE HUNT FOR MISSING 80Y Knightstown Teacher Erroneously Reported Gone. Luther Short, superintendent of the Soldiers 'and Sailors' Orphans' Home at Knightstown, Ind., today announced that Miss Myrtle K.tts, a teacher at the home, was not missing, as reported Wednesday. Miss Kitts notified Indianapolis police Alonzo Laymen. 17, had run away from tho home two days ago and might be in Indianapolis. Miss Kitts was erroneously reported by police as the person missing.
T.oosrns Phlegm H Heals Membranes ' Use BALSAMEA Now
THIS LITTLE BABY GIBL Was Benefited by the Good Her Mother Got from Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound Pittsburgh, Pa.—“l took Lydia E. Pinliham's Vegetable Compound be-
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Little Tot Greets Every One With Smile
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ISADORE LEVEY “I’m Isadore!” That's this young fellow’s greeting to any person he sees whether he knows them or not. He is one of the many tots who live in tho neighborhood of the Jewish j Communal building and who attend the Jewish kindergarten. The Public Health Nursing Association cares for them when they are ill and takes those who need regular treatment to the city dispensary each week. Isadore makes himself loved, just as he makes himself known, by his friendly smile and his emphatic “I’m Isadore!" EIGHT-HOUR BILL RILLED .Miss Rainey Votes Against Labor Legislation. Miss Elizabeth Rainey, Indianapolis, only woman member of the Legislature, was on record today against a bill of Representative Louis C. Schwartz. Indianapolis, to make employment of women in industry more thrin eight hours a day or six days a week a felony. The bill was killed when the House struck out the enacting clause.
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CIGARETTE SALE IS BAROMETER OE BRISK BUSIMESS Financial Wizard Declares increase in Consumption Is Sure Sign. By JOHN CARSON WASHINGTON, Feb. B.—Prosperity is here—tell it by cigarettes. Joseph S. McCoy, Government actuary since the McKinley Administration and recognized wizard on all problems of finance and revenue, insists the sale of cigarettes is the best business barometer.
Reasons, McCoy does not attempt to give. It may be that smokers puff to the last draw in bad times. McCoy says the minute business picks up, that minute sales of cigarettes increase. During the last six months of 1922 the Government collected $10,500,000 more in taxes from cigarettes than was collected in the comparative period for 1921. Likewise, it collected $400,000 more taxes on playing cards, $10,000,000 more on automobiles purchased, SIOO,000,000 more on pictures, statues and other art objects, but a little less cn theaters. WABASH, Ind., Feb. B.—A resolution favoring passage of the Memorial day bill by the State Legislature was unanimously adopted by the local American Legion post here.
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