Indianapolis Times, Volume 35, Number 75, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 August 1923 — Page 3
WEDNESDAY, AUU. 8, 1928
FOUR HURT WHEN CAR TURNS OVER AFTERCOLLISION Girl’s Condition Critical — Brother of Injured Man in .. Second Crash, Two persons were in a serious condition at the city hospital today, two others were sufter-
ing from cuts and bruises and one man was under arrest, as the result of an accident at the Big Four tracks and the Lafayette Pike*threefourths of a mile north of Flackville at 11:45 p. m. Tuesday. A- touring car driven by Harold
AA Person* JI I have been ■ill kiltod in UU a u tojpobile accidents in Marion County this year. 1055 IS sic aecidents. It is your duty to make the streets safe.
Parker, 26, of 837 N. Dearborn St., side-swiped a hog truck driven by Jesse Wetherald, 39, of Thorntown, Ind. Parker, who was cut and bruised, charged with speeding and operating a motor vehicle while under the influence of liquor. Tha touring car turned over, pinning the occupants underneath. Girl Badly Injured Miss Sylvia Patrick, 20, of 2304 N. New Jersey St., suffered severe cuts about the legs, injuries to her back and internal injuries; Fred Lang, 26, of 431 N. Illinois St., broken right arm and bruises about head and body. Both are at the city hospital. Mss Patrick’s condition is critical. Miss Sarah Kimberlin, 18, of 2304 N. New Jersey St., suffered cuts about the face and bruises on the head and body. While on his way to the hospital to see his brother today, at 3:10 a. m., Hubert F. Lang, 431 N. Illinois St., narrowly escaped injury when his car collided with one driven by Jacob Shulmeyer, 1125 E. Thirty-Fifth St., at New York and New Jersey Sts. Lang's car was damaged. With him was Mrs. W. R. Moore, 2304 N. New Jersey St. Train Crew to Rescue The crew of a Big Four freight train stopped and rescued the injured from under the Parker automobile before Sergeant Dean and the emregency squad arrived. The touring car was a complete wreck. F. S. Flannigan of Thorntown was with Wetherald. The springs of the truck were broken. Parker, his head covered with bandages, stood in a cell at police headquarters today. “At supper my mother, brother and I were talking about accidents,” he said. “1 had a feeling something would happen. I was not drinking and no one in my car had been drinking. We had been to a farm northwest of the city/’ Lad Injured Frederick Wright, 14, of 1923 Hovey St., was in the city hospital suffering from cuts on the knee, a sprained ankle and bruises. He was riding a bicycle without -a light, it was said, when he was struck by an automobile driven by Carl Cokran, 814 Greer St., at St. and East Sts., Tuesday night. Ray Wells. 19. of 214 Fulton St. suffered a dislocated shoulder and a severe" cut'on the shoulder when an automobile driven by Louie Zollman, 1953 Hovey St., skidded and the rear fender struck Wells’ bicycle, at Massachusetts Ave. and Samoa St. Hay Wagon Hit Dayton Carter, 24J9 N. Alabama St., suffered a slight cut from broken glass when his automobile collided with a car driven by Charles Rodgers, 933 S. Missouri St., at Meridian and South Sts. late Tuesday. A load of hay was turned over, the wagon wrecked and dn automobile damaged at 3300 N. Sherman Dr. at 9:30 p. m. Tuesday. An automobile, driven by Robert Stivers, 1834 Parker Ave., collided with a wagon owned by Lee Nelson, 2705 N. Oxford St. Nelson was arrested on a charge of having no lights on his wagon. * , Three Autos Damaged Three automobiles were damaged in an accident at Michigan and Ogden Sts., at 10:30 p. m. Tuesday. A car driven by Earl Jacks, 1056 Oliver Ave., was struck, he told police, by an automobile driven by a man who gave his name as Walter Edwards, and then left. Police say the license on the car was issued to Walter Williams, 1036 N. Talbott Ave. Jack’s car Was knocke 1 into an automobile owned by William Martin, 4345 Guil•“rd Ave. No one was injured. Injured in Fall Downstairs Charles Pierson, 59, of 331 N. Blackford St., today was in the city hospital suffering from injuries received hen he fell down a stairway at his ome Tuesday. Several ribs were broken and he suffered severe cuts on the side of his face and left arm.
lolls THERE Is a reason for everything that happens. Com-mon-sense kills misery. Commonsense also stops boils 1 S. S. S. is —s. the common- / \ sense remedy / \ for boils, be--1 cause it is I .jmtornffl I built on rea- / son. Scien- \ \ \r ties admit its \. power! S.S.S. builds blood¥>wer, it builds red-blood-cells. hat is what makes fighting-blood. Fighting-blood destroys impurities. It fights boils. It fights pimples! ( It fights skin eruptions! It always wins! Mr. V. D. Schaff, 557 15th street, Washington, D. C. t jmtes: “I tried for years to get relief, from a bad case of boils. Everything failed until I took S. S. S. 1 am now absolutely cured, and it was S. S. S. that did it"
S. S. S. it sold at all good Jf drug stores in two sizes. The larger size is more economical, P^CC^WorUisßcst k " r
President Coolidge and Escort at Church
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PRESIDENT AND MRS. COOLIDGE LEAVING THE FIRST CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH AT WASHINGTON ON THE FIRST SUNDAY AFTER HIS ELEVATION TO THE PRESIDENCY. IMMEDIATELY IN BACK OF THEM ARE FRANK W. STEARNS, THE PRESIDENT'S MOST INTIMATE FRIEND, AND MRS. STEARNS. MOST OF THE OTHERS IN THE GROUP ARE SECRET SERVICE MEN.
ORPHANAGE WILL HOLD ANNIVERSARY Music by Murat Chanters to Feature Program, Music by the Murat Chanters and the Reed band of the General Protestant Orphans’ Home of Cincinnati and speeches by Phillip Klein and the Honorable James A. Collins are features on the all-day program of the fifty-sixth annlversay of the General Protestant Orphan Association to be observed Sunday. Aug. 12, at the orphanage, 1404 S. State St. Church services will be conducted in the morning by the Rev. R. H. Benting, pastor of St. Mark’s Lutheran Church, who will deliver the sermon. Dinner and supper will be served by the ladies’ auxiliary. In the afternoon, the program will consist of musical selections by the Murat Chanters, the Cincinnati hand, and a male chorus and choir from the orphanage, with the address of welcome by President Phillip Klein and the festival address by the Honorable James A. Collins. AGED PATIENT IS DEAD Mrs. Melvina Robinson, 87, Succumbs After Five Years in Hospital. The body of Mrs. Melvina Robinson, 87, who died Tuesday at St. Vincent’s Hospital, will be taken to her former home .at Campbellsburg, Ind., for services at 2:30 p. m., Thursday. Mrs. Robinson had been a patient at the hospital for five years. Mrs. Hazel Chapman. 237 N. Keystone Ave., is Mrs. Robinson’s granddaughter.
k^^Drink CRAPE BOUQUET A beverage that in taste and color resembles a sweet red wihe —fragrant, sparKling and refreshing—at all fountains or .by the case from your • grocer. Delicious as a flavor for •frozen ices and other desserts —or mixed with - ca fresh fruits, a delightful summer punch. C) lOc per bottle fgl 5c per glass v ANHE.USER-BUSCH lfn a 7 st._lc.uis * In - Anheuser-Busch Branch j Wholesale Distributors § V . Indianapolis, Ind.
Boston Merchant Will Be Advisor and ‘Colonel House ’ to Coolidge
By HARRY B. HUNT, NEA Service Writer. WASHINGTON, Aug. 9.—A stocky and broad-shouldered man In a square-cut business suit, ruddy of face, gray of hair, with a bristling gray mustache shading rather thick, full lips and with keen, gray eyes shining through heavy-lensed glasses, is Calvin Coolidge’s righthand confidant and counselor. During the press of events crowding his first days in office the new President has conferred with Cabinet members and public officials concerning the arrangements for President Harding’s funeral, and on routine matters of administration that have had to be met. But whatever conferences he has held with respect to administration policies and the course he is to follow as chief executive of the Nation, have been not with the politicians and Cabinet officials, but with the broad-shouldered, gray-haired Boston business man—Frank W. Stearns. Stearns is one of the few men who really know Coolidge-—who have broken through the crust of silence and reserve which encases this silent President from New England. And he is the man to whom Coolidge looks, more - than any other, for sane, disinterested, nonpolitical advice. College Bpirit is back of this friendship. Although Stearns is 67 to Coolidge’s 61, they were first drawn together by mutual love of their alma mater, Amherst College, from which Stearns graduated in thfe class of ’7B and Coolidge in ’96. For years the bigger New England colleges had monopolized Republican officeholding in Massachusetts. Stearns, as an active and ardent Amherstlte, and as an Amherst trustee, didn’t like it. He looked abou*~for an Amherst man who could break the ice and he
THE INDIANAPOLIS . TIMES
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FRANK W. STEARNS. found Coolidge, then a member of the Massachusetts Senate. Stearns already has been labeled the "Warwick," he "Mark Hanna," the “Colonel House” of the Coolidge administration. But he doesn’t mind it. He's putting Amherst College on the map. STATE QUAKERS CONVENE By Times Special RICHMOND, Ind., Aug. B.—The one hundred and third annual session of the Indiana Yearly Meeting of Friends opened here Tuesday at the East Main Street Friends Church and will continue until Sept. 2. Indiana Yearly Meeting, in the more than one century of its existence, has been noted for its temperance work and prison reform, which is the chief purpose of the meeting.
POOR MAN PAYS BIGGEST SHARE OF INCOME LAX Little Relief in Sight for Persons Who Earn Salaries, % WASHINGTON, Aug. B.—Despite the political successesof the progressives, the possibility cl relieving the comparative poor of their burden of the Income tax is remote. Investigations made by government officials into the income tax statistics for 1921 show that the poor man carries most of the income tax burden. Without his taxes, the government would have to go to some other form of taxation. And the possibility of getting tremendous sums from the rich is also remote. The investigation revealed that total net incomes of $19,114,209,177 were reported for 1921. Os this total net income which was taxable, only $463,003,351 was reported by those persons with net incomes of SIOO,OOO or more. There were only 2.352 such persons while 6,661,191 persons with incomes of SIOO,OOO or less contributed to the government. Rich Are Few * To show how comparatively few are the rich income taxpayers and how many are poor, the statistics on 1921 were as folows: Total net incomes of persons having taxable in comes of nothing to SI,OOO were $6,260,000,000. Total net incomes of persons having taxable incomes of SI,OOO to $2,000 were $5,300,000,000. Total net incomes of persons having taxable incomes of $2,000 to $3,000 were $2,479,000. Total net incomes of persons having taxable incomes of $3,000 to $4,000 were $1,262,000,000. Total net incomes of persons ha ving taxable incomes of $4,000 to $5,000 were $637,000,000. Little Fellow Pays Most Thus, $15,928,000,000 of the total in comes of only $19,000,000,000 wera from persons who had taxable incomes of $5,000 or less. The Government estimates that approximately $20,000,000,000 of Income is obtained by persons who are not subject to the income tax or who have less than SI,OOO of income a year. Suggestions, therefore, that the Government should exempt all In comes of $5,000 or less would mean, RADIUM IS RESTORING HEALTH TO THOUSANDS The wonderfr.l curative power of Radium has been known for years. However, the benefits of this precious healthgiving substance have in the past been only within the means of arsons of wealth. Since the Invention of Degnen'a RadioActive Solar Pad, any man woman, poor or rich, can afford this treatment which offers so much relief i'om suffering and disease. I)egnen's Radio-Active Sr'ar Pad Is worn next to the body day and night. It pours a constant stream of radioactive energy into the system while you work, play or sleep, helping <o build up weakened nerves and tissues to a strong, healthy condition. It creates a vigorous circulation of blood, thus removing congestion, which Is the real cause of most diseases. To prove Just what this remarkable treatment can do for you, we will send our appliance on trial with the understanding that we will not charge you a cent 1$ It falls to give satisfactory results. This 'offer Is open to any person who has pain of any kind, nerve weakness, high blood pressure, stomach, kidney or liver complaint, bladder trouble, of disease of the lungs or heart. 'So matter what your aliment or how long you have had it, we will gladly let you try the appliance at our risk. Write teday for free literatura giving complete information. Radium Appliance Cb 1522 Bradbury Bldg., Los Angeles, Calif.—Advertisement.
according to Government officials, that some other source of revenue would have to be discovered. And with the probability that a soldier bonus bill will pass the next Congress, other sources of revenue will have to be found, regardless. "* Hope that the little fellow will dodge the Income is held slight in view of these figures. ‘UP THE MIFF TREE’ Complaining Church Members Ridiculed by Lecturer. By Times Special BETHANY PARK, Ind., Aug. B. “Up the Miff Tree” was the subject of an address given before the adult worker’s conference by John W. Marshall of, Orleans, Ind. “What is a miff tree?” Marshall asked. “It is a creature of my imagination, a tree which is nested by pouty, scratchy and complaining church people.” To illustrate his point he painted a miff tree, the limbs of which were covered with hens and roosters with feathered bodies but heads of humans. Each represented complaining church members. Crawling up the tree was a serpent, representing the devil. The tree grew beside the church, just from under the protective eaves. ATTORNEYS WILL FIGHT Counsel for Jourgen Olsen Prepare to Oppose Extradition. Attorneys for Jourgen Olsen, North Dakota financier, wanted in Indiana for alleged manipulations believed ret sponsible for the downfall of the Newburg and Beech Grove State Banks, today were preparing to fight anew request for Olsen's extradition to Indiana, dispatches say. H. A. Bippus, Warrick County prosecutor, presented Governor McCray's revocation of his previous requisition and introduced a new one. Governor R. A. Nestos of North Dakota called the hearing on Olsen’s requisition Tuesday.
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: ——“The Store of Greater Values” Thursday—/ Remarkable One-Day Uim|| Cbla miliv mßsmßm
An Event of Importance Bungalow Aprons Regular and Stout Sizes 83c Smartly Made of Quality Ginghams and Percales Thrifty women will anticipate their fall needs and buy them in half dozen lots. There are many styles to choose from, light and dark colors, rlck-rack and organdie trimmed. A remarkable Fair Store value.
Boys’ School SUITS fWith 2 Pairs of Pants fe to Double Their Wear Tweeds, \ A MUi fj Cashmeres f iT and Novelty i v Mixtures I Norfolk and Sport Styles for Early Fall $2 Wash Suits, 98c
m One Man Tells Another "It’s the triple blending” Overnight, practically thousands of discriminating men, tired of the commonplace, have * joined in welcoming Blue Boars. The reason is simple: we took a pedigreed tobacco, a 19 year favorite ’mongst pipe smokers, and instead of merely making it into anew cigarette, we spent 6 years and a fortune in discovering how to super-refine it into a uniaue, exclusive cigarette. W e blend the eight rare tobac--20 cos three times, instead of merely once. That is the difference be+J tween the commonplace and the . extraordinary. We ask you to judge—smoke \ your first pack of Blue Boars — \ s\ see how trtple blending gives you a new appetite, addea delight. A \ \\ BLUE \\BOAR English Type - Triply Blended
Store Open Saturday Until 9 P. M.
An Advance Showing and Sale of Wonderful NewWinter Silk Plush Coats, Elaborately Fur Trimined and Handsomely Lined, Priced at — The Fur Trimmings \ Muffolon JK® ■ Manchurian Wolf > i m Foxine i W Beaverette j W M i flk Sealine 1 ■■ I Smart Winter Models, combined with Kerami, Long ft Tube and Flare styles, also fine Capes are included in * Thursday’s Sale.
Women’s and Misses’ fife New Fall Dresses El Regular and Stout Sizes jjgif JAfm Satin Pleated Cantona £ Puffed SgMw. /y<Fr A T Crepes g Draped && Georgettes 8 m S Basque WSg A Mtgp, Etc., Etc. JKr Beaded H JHg Newest Frocks for Fall. Colors are If j 1 Black, Navy, Brown. Clean-Up Summer Dresses W | Linens, Swlsses, Da r k )51.95 ill \\m i Voiles. Organdies and Ging-1 J[ K !J|jS
Out of Respect to Former President Harding, We Will Close Friday at 1 P. M.
Knife Pleated Skirts ■ ugn . of Wool Crepe Mb S)i9 QC LJ fW White ) hd*UO * If! • 111 The popular model that has been !|g so fashionable for summer sport Hi jj!jf wear. Tan, Grey, White. 'hIH Sport Jackets Red, Blue and \ QC WP 1 Green. While \ * / •VO ni They Last— ) Ld=
Women’s Sleeveless Sport Sweaters Much Underpriced at $1 .98 Just received a special f | \ purchase—a huge ship- t I / I ment of those much J | | *s/J wanted sport coats. Knit / J mfc with fancy fronts In l J j many colors. Remarkably fegf Ei|ng • (fi lew priced. BBiWH
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