Indianapolis Times, Volume 35, Number 268, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 March 1923 — Page 11
± UEISDAi , MAKOfcL 20, 1923
TELLEGEN PLAYS > DON JOAN ROLE IN REAL LIFE, 100 Divorce Witnesses Tell How ‘Fires of Genius' Were Fed, BLOND AND BRUNETTE AID Geraldine Farrar Seeks Freedom From Broadway 'Matinee Idol,’ By f'nited Xcirs NEW YORK. March 20—Lou Tellogon. the Ton Juan in a Broadway drama two summers ago, Kept inspiration alight by playing the ro!e in real life as well as on the stage. Two comely actresses —one a blonde, the other a decided brunette —aoetted his oil-hour devotion, evidence in Geraldine Farrar’s divorce suit against Tellegren revealed. L.,” a member of Tellegen’s comf any. fed the fires of his genius by accompanying him to her Riverside apartment after theater. She would 6end him home with a rapturous good-night kiss. But Lou wouldn’t go straight home, what with the night still young, and moonlight flooding the North River and the spirit cf necromancy abroad in the land. Awaits in Vestibule Calling a taxi he would pull up with a merry clatter before the ThirtySeventh St. apartment of Miss Lorna Ambler, who would be awaiting him In the vestibule. Long walks would follow, pauses in the shadow of trees where love played hide and seek with private detectives hired by Geraldine. Then the vestibule again, and “soul kisses” lasting from ten to twenty-five minutes —beside which the kisses of ‘S. L.” were but an amtable foretaste. From these embraces Lou would taxi, refreshed, to the Rita Carlton for a night’s well-earned repose. The shrill pavements, the lowering tenements, the squalor, the tinsel of the metropolis did not stifle the glowing ardor of the ‘ Great Lover.” Romance, giddy and alluring. Lou discovered everywhere. He found It, witnesses said, in hotel elevators, In Italian spaghetti houses, in Childs restaurants, in dives on the Bowery. In a summer cottage at Ix>ng Beach. All these he visited with Miss Ambler, Ktho is described as “an actress with leasing English accent, eyes that ..ash, fingers long and slender and a fine figure—a very fine figure."
Beach Cottage Figures The beach cott ,ge figures prominently. Lou was said to have indulged in a high state of temperamental plaisar.ee there with the actress. She got his breakfasts for him, went fishing and boating with him. swam with him in such a bathing suit. Nor was the pretty “S. L.” forgotten during these rapsotlies in sea and sand. Lou went back to her, ; went back to such an extent that re- i porters were barred from the hearing for ten minutes while sleuths told what took place between them on a ; Riverside park bench one night in September. "This testimony,” Samuel j Untermeyer. Geraldine’s lawyer ex- j plained, “is not fit for the public ! prints." One other woman was mentioned ks partaking the actor's favors. She was referred to as “Miss Clifford of San Francisco.” but she was rather incidental. Lou’s lawyer. Arthur K. Schwartz, walked out in the middle of the hearing. Referee Mahoney said he would postpone further testimony until Friday to learn whether Schwartz intends contesting the action. It is believed he does not. TWO MINERS ARE KILLED Rescuers Fight Way to Four Others _ After Explosion. B>< f cited Pn - bodies of two entombed shot firers in the Carlisle Coal Company’s mine who died in an explosion, were recovered late last night by rescue workers. The dead are: Richard Eddleman and Bert Fredericks, Carlisle. Foul air in the mine impeded the progress of the rescue parties. Four men wen rescued shortly before the workers got to the bodies of the two men who were killed. The cause of the disaster is unknown. FIRE THREATENS TOWN Kirkpatrick Has .Second Disastrous Blaze in Six Years. By Times Special KIRKPATRICK ♦ind., March 20.— 4 The second fire within the past six years virtually wiped out the business section last night. Fire fighting apparatus from Colfax and Clarkshill, were called to help check the blaze. The fire started in a grocery owned by Earl Gray. ALLEGED SLAYER ON TRIAL Jury to Try Samuel T. Walk is Near Completion. By Times Special MARTINSVILLE. Ind.. March 20. —Selection of a jury to try Samuel T. Walk, farmer, charged with the killing of Ford Haase at the Mt. Zion Kburcb two months ago. was expected to be completed today. It was In dlcated in the questioning of the Jurors that the defense would be selfdefense. Auto Upsets; Mail Killed By limes .Sr" mi SOUTH BEND. Ind.. March 20. Joseph Strycliai. 35. of Eagle Lake. Mich., was killed and John Babinski was injured when the automobile in which they were riding overturned near Edwardsburg. t
Kidnaper of Baby Blights T”oo Homes — Nation- Wide Hunt Pushed
By NEA Service \T ICKSBURG. Miss., March 20. ' ■—A woman with bobbed reddish locks, her coat collar turned up high to conceal her features. not long ago boarded a train with a baby in her arms and headed north for an unknown destination. The woman, according to charges made to the police here, was a kidnaper. She was leaving in her wake the broken hearts of a mother and father and a disrupted home and disillusionment for her own husband. This woman—she is 30, five feet six inches tall and of sallow complexion—is the central figure in the most unusual true story of love, motherhood and human hearts ever known in this region: The story: Mrs R. C Graham. Cybur. Miss., gave birth to the child in a hospital at Natchez. Miss Her husband, whose business as a saw mill man required his almost continual absence from home, at the time was in California. Mother Becomes 111 The mother became seriously ill. Hospital attaches to T d her she could not leave the institution for many weeks Time dragged. Mrs Graham had no friends in Natchez So no visiters came. Finally came one. A friendship developed. Her visits became more frequent. The visitor called herself Mrs. Gibson. She said she lived at Vicksburg and her husband owned a plantation. "Why don’t you let me take your baby home with me?” the new friend finally asked. "I’ll care for her until your husband returns and you are well.” The mother was reluctant. Then she decided, innther-like, to consider self last and let the baby go where it could have better care. Days rolled on and Graham came back from California, eager to gaze for the first time at his first born. Can't Find Woman With his wife, now recovered, he went to Vicksburg to obtain the child. But no Mrs. Gibson could be found! The police were called on. They were powerless. Private detectives were hired. Advertisements were inserted in newspapers. After weeks of disappointment a clew led the parents to Cary. Miss. There they found the woman who had taken away the baby. She was. according to a complaint filed with police. Mrs. T. M. Jenkins, wife of a Ingoing man. Mrs. Jenkins explained, according to the Grahams, that she had taken the child that she might tell her husband it. was her own, born while he was absent. She refused to yield the child until Mr. and Mrs. Graham would go
BODY OF GODIN LIES J STATE All Greencastle Citizens Will Be Honorary Pallbearers. Bn Tint’S Special GREENCASTLE, Ind., March 20. Hundreds of telegrams of mourning and eulogy of Dr. Hillary A. Gobin, vice president emeritus of De Pauw University who died Sunday, pouted into the home today. Indications were that the funeral Wednesday morning would be the largest In the history of this city. Dr. Gobin was known as the “grand old man of De Pauw.” Dr. George R. Grose will be assisted by Bishop Frederick D. I-eete, Indianapolis: Dr. D. Tillotson, superintendent of the Methodist Hospital. In- | dianapolis; Dr. H. C. Clippinger, the Rev. J. E. Porter and Dr. Salem B. Town® of Greencastle. Honorary pallbearers will be citizens of Greencastle. Active pallbearers will he personal friends of Dr. Gobin. A representative from each fraternity and the unorganized groups on the i campus, will act as ushers. The special guard of honor, while the body lies in State, will be the Beta Theta Pi fraternity, of which Dr. Gobin was a member. Hoosier Briefs GRANDVIEW—A barge carrying 6,000 bushels of coal was overturned during a windstorm. GARY—Mike Halwaska knelt and ! kissed his wife’s hand before taking the witness stand on a charge of wife beating. Judge McLaughlin fined him $35 to aid in his repentance. GREENSBURG—The first baseball casualty of the year was reported when Delbert Snow. Burney High School j student, was brought to the hospital ; after being struck on the head with a I ball bat which slipped from the hands of a playmate. BEDFORD —Fifteen head of cattle were killed when high winds demolished a barn on the Kern-Armstrong ! farm. SOUTH BEND —An electric percolator and toaster were the only things stolen from the home of F. H. Hoenk while the family attended a theater. SULLIVAN—WiII IT. Hays, pre.si
Concrete Any reader of this paper in- and other valuable Information on terested in concrete construction how to work in concrete by filling work can now obtain from our out the coupon below and sending Washington Bureau a complete the required postage to our Washpamphlet of instructions, tables ington Bureau: Washington Bureau. Indianapolis Times. 1322 N. Y. Ave., Wash., D. C. I want a copy of the pamphlet CONCRETE WALLS AND BASEMENTS and enclose herewith a loose 2-cent stamp for same: NAME .' STREET & NO CITY STATE
TOP TO BOTTOM: MRS. T. M. JENKINS, R. GRAHAM AND MRS. GRAHAM. to the hush !id and explain the deception. They rushed to Vicksburg and secured a writ of habeas corpus. But when they returned— The woman was gone and, with her. the baby! Hunt Is Started So a nation-wide hunt was started. The parents are distracted. They arc being aided by Jenkins, husband of the alleged kidnaper.
dent of th:. Motion Picture Producers and Distributors’ Assocaition of America, contributed half the purchase price for anew moving picture machine for the Sullivan High School, of which he is a graduate. MARION—When a thief who was ransacking a dresser drawer at the home of Charles Case, city fireman, found a SIOO bill he- looked no farther. Case said a surprise was awaiting ti e robber when he attempted to cash the bill, as it was "stage” money. EVANSVILLE Porter Meredith, 38, was killed while cutting timber In Posey County when a tree fell on him. TERRE HAUTE—A modem theater building Is to be built at Twelve Points at an estimated coat of $40,000. CRAWFORDS'VILLE Tbe Phi Gamma Delta Fraternity of Wabash College is completing plans for the building of a $50,000 home KOKOMO—A reunion of mother and son. who had been separated eighteen y'-ars. took place at the home of Floyd Ritncr. when his mother, Mrs. lohn B.tner, came from Detroit. LOOANSPORT The Lngansporl Fanciers' Club will have Us next an ruial poultry show Jan. 15-13, 1924 Invitations to clubs in northern Indiana have been sent out. SEYMOUR —Anew pipe organ has i been purchased for the Lutheran Church. Albert Wilde and Carl i Droege have completed arrangements i with a Chicago firm. CATHOLIC SISTER DIES Mother Mary Josepha Is Victim of Pneumonia. By Times Special LAFAYETTE. Ind.. March 20. Mother Alary Josepha, 74, national leader of the Catholic Order of Poor j Sisters of St. Francis, died at St. ; Elizabeth Hospital late Monday of | pneumonia. She was bora in Ger- | many and came to America in 1877. She was made head of the nurses order in 1900 and actively superin tended the organization until her death. Firemen Rescue Women ANDERSON. Ind., March 20.—Mrs. .T. C. Bullington, 42, an invalid, and Miss Esther Keener, 40, a nurse, were rescued from an upstairs room at the home of Joseph Sobel after they had been overcome by smoke.
THE J N THAN AEOLUS TIMES
TWELVE CHICKENS AND A BACKYARD GARDEN BY WILLIAM R. BEATTIE Extension Horticulturist, United States Department of Agriculture. THERE is a growing tendency among people living in towns and in the outlying sections of cities to keep a few chickens. Twelve hens are about the right number from the standpoint of cleaning up all waste food materials from the household and twelve hens have been known to supply practically all the fresh eggs required by the family—but why the combination of twelve hens and a garden? All nature operates according to the law of compensation and, so with the household, the hens and the garden. Consume Waste Food In the first place, the hens conseme the waste food that would otherwise go into the garbage pail and be lost and in- turn lay eggs for the table. The hens produce fertilizer which, if properly saved and used on the garden, enriches the soil and makes possible the production 'of bumper crops of vegetables. The garden in turn often grows weeds in spite of reasonably good cultivation and the weeds, together with the thinnings and the waste fiorn the vegetables themselves, make excellet green feed for the chickens. An average hen, of one of the general purpose breeds weighing about six pounds, will produce In the neighborhood of two pounds of manure each week. One half of th's amount will ordinarily be saved on the propping board beneath the roost. This would be fifty-two pounds per hen or 624 pounds from the twelve hens during the year. Getting More Fertilizer By sweeping the floor of the house, and the small wire enclosure in which the hens are kept an additional amount of fertilizer for the garden will he secured. Where a little of straw Is kept on the floor of the chicken house this he : , om - br< : • n inn time an<l has mixed with It cons: ierable quantities of the droppings of th<* poultry. As the poultry house is swept out and new litter supplied from time to i time, the old litter can be spread up- I on the garden plot and worked into the soii. Poultry manure Is very concentrate'! and must lie used Intelligently or the plants may be Injured. Poultry manure should be stored In a dry place under cover and no lime mixed with It. as lime drives off the precious ammonia or nitrogen. land plaster or j sand ntny be used as an absorbent In J yho poultry house, but not lime. Next: Taking the kinks out of back of backyard gardener.
SHRMERSPLAN MINSTREL SHOW Committees Named to Work Out All Details, Platts for the minstrel show to be given by the Murat Temple Nobles during the week of April 23 are nearing completion. Funds obtained from the production are to bo used for the pilgrimage fund to send members to the imperial council session in Wash ington D. C. in June. Carson G. Harris Is general chairman <'f tlie committee In charge of the production. Paul Richey is writing the hook of the play in the form of a musical revue. Horace Mitchell, dramatic director of the Shrlno Is to have charge of staging the production. Each performance 1s to bo followed by a public dance in the now ballroom. Committee chairmen: Carson B. Hatris, general chairman: George O. Jack son. vice chairman; Charles S. Barker, secretary: Charles F. Meyers, treasurer; Arthur Wilson, advertising; Harry Pell, program; O. A. Haller, tickets: Horace Mitchell, director minstrels; \V. S. Mitchell and Arnold •Spencer, music; Robert Elder, stage manager; George O. Jackson, dance; William Anding, refreshments, and li. K. Stormont, press. MISSING GIRL RETURNS Mrs. Esther Carpenter Messham Had Evaded Searchers Four Years. Hu Time* Special HARTFORD CITY, Ind., March 20. —After successfully evading all efforts to locate her for four years, Mrs. Esther Messham, 22, has returned to tlie home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Carpenter. Mrs. Messham said she ran away because she wanted to be married and thought her parents would object. Wallace Lee Booster Wallace Lee was booster for the meeting of the Gyro Club at the Lincoln today. Miss Grace Axtell was speaker. Relieves Rheumatism Musteroie loosens up stiff joints and drives out pain. A clean, white ointment, made with oil of mustard, it usually brings relief as soon as you start to rub it on. It does all the good work of the oldfashioned mustard plaster, without the blister. Doctors and nurses often recommend its use. Get Musteroie today at your drug store. 35 and 65c, in jars and tubes; hospital size, .$3.00. Better Than A Mustard Plaster —Advertisement.
High Price of Booze Is Cause for Sorrow
DEAR GEORGE: There are a lot of fellows mourning around this town, Geoi-ge, because the price of booze has gone up. I heard a chap in the lobby of a downtown hotel telling about it. "It is a hard life," he complained. “The law seems to be after the bootlegger, and at last, I guess, they are getting kind of jumpy. "You know the Legislature met a while back and made the booze laws a lot stronger. These boot-leggers have got to go to jail for the first offense now. There's no other way out of it. They didn’t mind fines, but a jail sentence puts a crimp in the business. A fellow loses his clientele when he has to spend a month or two behind the bars. "Then there are other things affecting tlie market. That Gary con-
AITGRfiEY FEES IN FAIRBANKS ESTATE HELD AS TOO HIGH Reasonableness of $300,000 Claim Questioned in Suit Filed. Appointment of a master in chancery to determine reasonableness of a claim of SBOO,OOO for legal services for Miss Adelaide Fairbanks, daughter of Charles \V. Fairbanks, in the settle merit of her father’s estate, has been asked in Federal Court by Charles T. Hanna and Thomas Daily, attorneys. Attorneys of the firm of Hanna am Daily, recently were named as de fendants in a .suit tiled by Miss Fairbanks. At the same time, they filed a suit against her In Superior Court, Room 2. 'liie controversy grew out of the settlement of the Fairbanks estate. Miss Fairbanks charged in her complaint that the defendants, after being employed by her, Induced her sign an unreasonable contract for payment for services. She asked that the con tract bo net aside. According to figures submitted by Hanna and Dally, Miss Fairbanks’ share of her father s estate recovered for her by them amounted to more than $1,300,000.
GRENADE HURLED AT COP IS ID’ Sleuths Probe Attempt on Patrolman's Life. Detectives today were endeavoring to apprehend persons who threw a hand grenade at Patrolman Kubush on the Lake Erie & Western tracks near Nineteenth St. Monday. Shortly after four colored men were convicted of vagrancy In city court upon testimony of Rubush. officers encountered opposition when they attempted to stop theft of coal from cars in tho vicinity. Rubush patrolled the district. Passing a vacant house, Rubush heard a loud crash at his back. Investigating. he found a hand grenade, which had failed to explode He sent the bomb to police headquarters. Cnpt. Roy Pope assigned additional men to the district. STATE OFFICIAL RECOVERS William A. Guthrie Expects to Leave Sanitarium Soon. William A. Guthrie, chfftnian of the State conservation commission, will lie able to leave a sanitarium at Mar tlnsvllje next week and return to his home at Dupont, it was said today by Richard Lieber. director of the conservation department. Guthrie leaves the sanitarium after four weeks' illness brought about as the result of an accident last Novetn ber. He is expected to accompany the commission north when the dunes park la selected. Lieber said. Blizzard Halls Firemen By Times Special HAMMOND, Ind., March 20. —Fire developing In the plant of the Champion Rivet Company at East Chicago last night during tho blizzard did $15,000 damage before two fire departments could control it. If Files, Send For. Pyramid Pyramid Pile Suppositories Are Known Everywhere for tho Wonderful Itellef They Have Given. If you are one of those unfortunates struggling with the pain and distress of itching, bleeding, protruding piles or hemorrhoids, asl; any druggist for a 60 cent box at Pyramid Pile Suppositories. Take no substitute. Relief should coma so quickly you will wonder why anyone should continue to suffer the pain of such a distressing condition. For a free trial package, send name and address to Pyramid Drug Co--626 Pyramid Bldg., Marshall, Mich. ‘ —Advertisement.
case isn’t helping things any. It begins to look like the Government means business, the same as the Legislature. "I also hear rumors,” he rambled on, “about a bootleggers' trust. You know they have got anti trust laws in this State that do not permit milk dealers and poultry dealers and the Standard Oil Company and all sorts of things to go In cahoots. It seems the bootleggers pay no attention to this law. "Whatever the reason is,” he concluded. "it’s getting so it’s pretty hard for a poor man to get a drink.” I've got an idea, George, that these birds who make the laws had a notion in their heads that they were making it hard to get a drink. Yours truly, BILL.
U. S. NEGOTIATES TO COLLECT LOANS IDE HER ALLIES Refunding May Be Made Along Lines of British Debt. By United I’ress WASHINGTON, March 20.—New negotiations for payment of the remaining s6oo,Out).Out) the allied nations owe the United States will soon be undertaken. France. Britain. Italy, Czecho Slovaia and others may be informed that ais Governnien is prepared to prood further with the task of refundWhile there is no disposition to i i.-goruitions with nations which have not paid, numbers of the .• Hin ting comini -don declare Its ren lining debtors s noil Id be invited to negotiate on the basis of the British settlement or to suggest terms. There is every chance that some of the nations at least will accept this opportunity. I-'rance had con- . nded her financial condition was such she would be unable to pay immediately. A satisfactory settlement of the Ruhr situation might encouragp resumption of the negotiations. France owes $3,750,00.0000 and If the amount was founded, there would remain only a ilftie more than $2,600,000,000 outstanding. Secretary of the Treasury Mellon will place In the hands of the British ambassador today the final draft of the British contract. This will be communicated to London and then a formal final draft will be made as approved.
LENIN BELIEVED Moscow Without News From Premier's Bedside, By United Frets MOSCOW. March 20.—After two days without news from tho bedside of Premier I/enin, and with reports current In not entirely friendly news sources, such as Riga and Helsingfors. that his condition was worse, Moscow was believed today to read In the official bulletin that further improvement is noticeable. Lenin is able to move his paralyzed hand and foot with greater freedom; Ids afflicted speech is unchanged. Absence of a bulletin on Sunday was one to tho fact that Russian papers do not publish Mondays. LIONS STUDYING ABROAD NEW YORK, March 20.—Three young lions whoso education has been neglected In America sailed by the Hamburg American finer llansa to attend tho animal school of Hagenberk at Hamburg. After being graduated they will be brought back to New York and go on the road. JOY OF HEALTH WOMAH’S BIGHT Mrs. Evans Freed from Female Weakness by Lydia E.Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound Detroit, Michigan.—“l had female weakness with pains in my back, and llllllHlillililliilllon my feet for any IllMiflHM&il *°ngth of time. I was working in a lag factory but had to quit as I was too 1 HU' —' j* Jaf • much on my feet. T L j A friend reconi--111 idlil m( ' Lydia E. [, I Pinkham’s Vegeyfii to me > an< * * can itypi .i|ffsjhardly believo it 1 am well. Oh, it is a grand thing to have your health ! I feel well all the time and can go out like other women and not feel that awful torture. When I took your medicins first I thought it should cure after t.ie first bottle, but I am glad my husbund kept me at it. I have had nine bottles and now I am well.”—Mrs. Jenny Evans, 1604 Lafayette Blvd., Detroit, Michigan. If you are suffering from displacements, irregularities, backache, nervousness or other forms of female weakness, you should take Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. The reason is given in letters like these, and we have published thousands of them. You may expect that a medicine that has helped other women will help you. Try it.
RUHR EVACUATION MAY BE SUBJECT OF NEGOTIATIONS France and Germany Reported in Secret Conference. By United Press LONDON. March 20.—Unofficial but direct negotiations between France and Germany for evacuation of the Ruhr and resumption of reparations may have started secretly in Switzerland. Dr. Carl Bergmann, German envoy to the allied premiers' conference, re turned to Berlin today from Berne. At the Swiss city he Is reported to have had a private conference with Senator Dubois, former chairman of the reparations commission, who acted as unofficial representative of the French. Meanwhile French reprisals inflicted upon Essen where Private Schmidt, a French sentry was murdered Satuiciay, are reported to have stirred the wrath of the population. All French patrols were reinforced in Essen to day, especially in the vicinity of the railroad station. Reichstag member and two bank presidents are being held in prison until the city finds and delivers the assassin. British labor leaders, went to Paris today to confer with French deputies regarding accupation of the Ruhr. FURNITURE STARTS ROW Mrs. Laura Holder Faces Charges After Dispute Over Furnishings. Following an argument over diva lon of furniture Monday. Mrs, Laura Holder, 28. of 916 Athen St., today was slated to appear In city court to answer charges of unlawful possession of firearms, carrying concealed weap ons and drawing deadly weapons. Mrs. Holder is alleged to have drawn a revolver on her husband. Aupha. Ewing Sweat, colored constable. 943 Fayette St., took the revolver from Mrs. Holder. according to police. PIMPLY? WELL, DON’T BE
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