Indianapolis Times, Volume 35, Number 222, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 January 1924 — Page 3

TUESDAY, JAN. 29, 1924

MING WORTH {1 MEN FROM DOWNTOWN SHOP Robbers Cross Roofs From Apartment House to Enter Tailoring Company, Clothing valued at S3OO was stolen from the Leon Tailoring Company, 131 E. New York St., owned by Leon Ettinger, Monday night. Ettinger discovered the theft when he opened his shop today. A cash register had been opened, but had contained no money, he said. Entrance was gained through an upstairs window, according to* police, after the robbers had crossed a roof from the Cordova Apartments next door. Loot Recovered Robert Winslow, 28. giving his address as 315% X. Delaware St., and Robert Bonner, 23, of 1101 X. Holmes Ave.. were under arrest today on charges of burglary and grand larceny. \ Police said they recovered clothing, -w by and bonds, valued at $1,500 to '■.’*oo. after trailing the automobile h: v. ich the men were riding, from Thirty-Seventh St. and Central Ave. to Pennsylvania and Ohio Sts., when it failed to display a tail light. Part of the loot was identified as that stolen from the home of W. D. Fitzpatrick, 5411 Central Ave., officers >aid. Bonds worth SSOO, in the name ,f John Keller. 5111 Broadway, were found in Winslow’s room, police said. Footprint Clew A footprint on the kitchen floor was left by a thief who obtained clothing ?:nd jewelry valued at $lO9 from the 1 ornc of Mrs. Ora Huntington, 69 N. Tremonl Ave. ■ >Lhei robbery reports: {fax Keef, 1109 X. Dearborn St., s.■lß, from coat pocket, on street car. William H. Block Company, suit clothes valued at $55. from truck parked at 402 X. Meridian St. Mrs. A. F. Donadio, 2173 X. Meidian St., dress valued at $55, from automobile parked in X. Illinois St. fiRON HUNTED ASSLAYER Pretty Victims Found Beaten and Choked, r ■; VALPARAISO. Ind.. Jan. 29—A moron was hunted today for the murder of Minnie Brooks. 15, in a bake shop at Chesterton. The girl, pretty, and large for her age, was killed some time last night, police said. A woman found the body in the rear of the store, where Minnie Saturday ml evenings had been working. The girl bad been beaten and choked, police state. FREED OF KILLING MATE oroner's Verdict Justifiable Homicide; Says Wife Fired in Self-Defense, v inited Fret* SOUTH BEXD, Ind.. Jan. 29. Justifiable homicide” was the verdict returned by Coroner Crumpacker after nvestigating the shooting of Michael 7opoi. who died from a bullet wound nflicted by his wife. The coroner said Popoi was intoxiated and attempting to attack his vise with a club when she fired in self-defense. ANDERSON STORE BURNS Women Shoppers Overcome by Smoke in $30,000 Blase. •ft/ ( nlt'i Press AXDERSON, Ind., Jan. 29.—Fire ->t unknown origin destroyed the Spurdepartment store here yes;erday with a loss estimated at $30,000. Several women shoppers were overcome by smoke and carried down ladiers to safety.

$ 1.000,000 posse School Opened Titr* * Special :: ANSVILLE, Ind., Jan. 29. Classes are today being held in the . 1 11 •* Benjamin Bosse high school memorial to the late mayor of the city. The building was opened for the first time Monday, the beginning of the second semester. Completion of the building Is being rushed and plans for a formal opening within a few. lays are being made. Lumber and Coal Dealer Dead By Times Special CRAWFORDSVTLLE, Ind., Jan. 29. —William Q. Sconce, 59, widely known lumber and coal dealer is dead at his home following an illness of two months. His widow, a son. Hubert, of Indianapolis and two sisters, Mrs. Anna Lemon, of Blcknell, Ind., and Mrs. Githa Lemon of Florida survives. Burial will be at Edinburg, Ind. Retired Farmer Is Buried By Times Special NOBLES VILLE. Ind., Jan. 29. Wilbur F. Wright, 74, was buried today in the eastern part of Hamilton bounty. Among the children who survive are Mrs. Roy Millikan and Emerson Wright of Indianapolis. Mr. Wright taught school forty years! He then became a farmer until he retired a few years ago. Speech Regained After Four Years By Times Special NOBLESVILLE, Ind., Jan, 29. Four years ago Miss Lottie Tilson lost her speech as result of an operation for the removal of a goitre. In the last ten days she has been able to talk in a normal manner. Auto Ablaze; Man Arrested Len Yore, Plainfield, Ind., is in city prison charged with intoxication. Yore was arreerted after his car was found in flames at Naal and W. Washington Sts

View of Wyoming Oil Field and Why They Call It ‘Teapot”

HERE'S WHY THEY CALL THE NOW FAMOUS WYOMING OIL FIELD “TEAPOT DOME.” PICTURE AT THE RIGHT SHOWS THE PECULIAR ROCK FORMATION BROUGHT ABOUT BY EROSION, FROM WHICH-THE DISTRICT DRAWS ITS NAME. ABOVE IS A PANORAMIC VIEW OF THE OIL FIELD WHICH IS NOW IN THE LIMELIGHT AS A RESULT OF THE SENATE’S PROBE OF THE CONDITIONS UNDER WHICH THIS PORTION OF THE NAVAL OIL RESERVE WAS LEASED TO PRIVATE INTERESTS. THE TEAPOT DOME FIELD IS IN CENTRAL WYOMING, MAINLY IN NATRONA COUNTY.

HERE’S THE TEAP OT DOME TEAPOT

WOMAN SUES CITY .Vsks $5,000 Damages for Injuries Received in Fall. Mrs. Fannie Weissman, 3027 Central Ave., has filed a suit for $6,000 damages against the city and Abraham Rabinowitz, standholder at city market in Superior Court, alleging personal injuries. Mrs. Weissman alleges she slipped on the wet pavement around a drain where Abraham washed his vegetables, and which the city “negligently allowed to be done,” on Nov. 1, 1923. She also charges she broke her wrist. BRIDE AND CHUM 1 SWALLOW POISON Young Women Commit Suicide While at Movie, By I nited Press CHICAGO, Jan. 29.—Mrs. Mary Osborne Block, 21, bride of a month, and Miss Bernice Hiiiman, 20, a bride-to-be. swallowed poison in a movie theater late Monday and died last night. Despondency, brought on by separation from her husband, caused Mrs. Block to take the poison. Miss Hinman either took poison on a dare or also was despondent because of her chum’s misfortune, police hold. After seeing "A Self-Made Wife” they swallowed the poison and Mrs. Block staggered into the arms of the theater manager and collapsed. §he died in a hospital. Miss Hinman was found unconscious in the restroom and she died a few hours later. Fleecers Are Sought Police are attempting today to locate a man and woman, posing as husband and wife, who attempted to procure money from John M. Hearn, Edgewood, Ind., by threatening him with arrest Monday. Hearn was told he was wanted on an assault charge. After attempting to extract funds from Hearn at the point of a gun, the couple left. Hearn liberated himself the following morning.

yil home or on the, road M DR. CALDWELL'S PEPSIN 'djfesfaeiLl /'Kccts him in good health Clogged-Up? Here’s Quick Aid

NEVER mind what you are using now for constipation. For all you know there is a better remedy! The next time you are clogged up try Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin, a laxative sucessfully used for 30 years, the largest selling liquid laxative in the world. Mrs. John A. Goins of Butlerville, Ind., constipated all her life, her stomach injured from years of pill taking, is now functioning daily since taking Syrup Pepsin; and Mr. David O'Connor of Canton, Ohio, suffering steadily for three years, got relief after a few doses. The list of successful users of Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin is naturally large as over 10 million bottles are sold annually. Formula on Everjn Package Get yourself a bottle at a drug store, the cost being less than a cent a dose. Take a spoonful at bedtime for a few nights and

we guarantee that the most chronic constipation will be relieved, or refund your money. A few doses in succession soon train the stomach muscles to act for themselves. Many, however, take it ©nee

C.L.U. DENOUNCES I CABINET Os FICERS Labor Body Demands Den by and Daugherty Resign, Asa result of the Teapot Dome | cil scandals. President Coolldge is i going to receive a letter from the Central Labor Union of Indianapolis ! demanding immediate dismissal of Attorney General HaiTy M. Daugherty j end Secretary of the Navy Edwin Denby. The United Mine Workers of America today were to be “tipped off" by the C. L. U. to the fact that certain local “hash houses" have been j attempting to dupe them. They have i been displaying window cards showing j they were employing union cooks and waiters. There is no local cooks' and waiters’ union, according to President John Smith of the C. L. U. BOY COASTER MAY DIE Newcastle I .ad Seriously Hurt When Car Strikes Sled. /: ■■ R. r,i„} NEWCASTLE, Ind.. Jan 29.—Al- | bert, 10. the son of Mr. and Mrs. Mar- ■ tin Barlow, today lies probably fatally | injur (1 as the result of being struck by an automobile while coasting. He suffered a fractured skull. Her- j schel Roof, driver of the car that j struck the sled, said he did not see j the boy until too late to avoid hitting ! him. Roof was freed of blame. Vet Given Military Burial By Times Special MARTINSVILLE, Ind., Jan. 29. ! A squad from Compeay A, Indiana! National Guard, fired a salute as the | body of eGorge W. Grubbs, Civil War veteran, was buried here Monday. Mr. Grubbs died Saturday following a long illness. “She Wouldn’t Cook,” Hubby Says Because, he said, his wife "refused to cook or keep house and came in drunk sometimes,” William H. Griswold, a production foreman, J 17% N. Illinois St., has filed suit for divorce In Superior Court, from Mrs. Audra M. Griswold.

a week and in that way keep the bowels regularly open. Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin, unlike harsh physics such aa calomel, “candy cathartics,” ealt waters and powders, is a simple vegetable laxative composed of Egyptian senna and pepsin with tasty aromatics which are entirely harmless. This Remedy Guaranteed It has been accurately proven that a constipated person is only 75 per cent efficient. It slows you up; makes you dull and lazy. Take Syrup Pepsin the first day you do not have complete bowel movement. Take it, guaranteed, for constipation, torpid liver, dyspepsia, biliousness, sour stomach, headache, lack of appetite. A spoonful at the first sneeze or sniffle will kill a cold overnight. Half the ailments of winter start with constipation followed by a cold.

■■■■■'lf You Want to Try It Free Before Buying*■•—■ ! “Prynp Pepsi*," 517 Washington St., ! Monticeilo, Illinois. I need a fmad laxalite and would like lo prose what • vou say about Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin by aciual test. S Send me a free trial bottle. Address to ! Name [ Address ( t t ■ Not more than one free trial battle to a'family _

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

PETTIS DRY GOODS CO. THE NEW YORK STORE—ESTABLISHED 1853

Ajl’Ls I 6,212 Pairs Fine and New From America’s Foremost Maker —At ABOUT HALF PRICE I Vlllfl 1,500 Pairs, ‘lnsulated’ Silk nc,-jyum oi Hosiery—New Spring Shades! | SVSjKS Price y 55C Guaranteed/ * n Mock-seam hose, with fine mercerised lisle top and foot. Factory censored of this famous brand that / J J appearance or aerv Mila as first* at SI.OO a pair. New spring shades of black, beige, tan bark, oriental pearl, bearer, pol% V j/ II hoae, are aet gray 82, log cabin, alredala, Havana, Russian calf and nude. Sale price, R 5& a pair. & ’ 400 Pairs Pure Silk Hosiery In JjffiijA jS 'BPJ; With Self-Embroidered Clocks! f ; .W % Pur* silk, mock Beam, self-embroidered clock stockings, highly mercerised, lisle top and foot. IrregM .f'c-e % * r * of the <Pi*ltty In black, Arlxona, silver, gray 32 and piping rock. Sale price, 68<5 a pair, C| p | f nr 600 Pairs Pure Silk Chiffon Hosiery Full Fashioned New Spring Shades! Children, too!! Sale Every Pair 1,000 Pairs of Three-Quarter Price Guaranteed/. and Full Length Stockings ™ * Guaranteed chtffon hosiery, nur* silk, fuli fashioned, fne mercerised lisle top and sole in new spring shades of nude, bearer, guumetal, log cabin and black. Irregulars of the regular $1.95 quality—every pair Sale “ While carries the liberal Pettis guarantee to give satisfactory wear. Sale price, 94d a pair. Pri**e They Last , Choice of fancy or plain cuffs—long stockings are fine mesmerized lisle in wanted Pa II*C pllll p O cTt lOFftpH HoClAt*V ribbed styles; % length are fibre and wool—and cashmere—most of them are first wv/V Jl ® * VIII A tAol&IV/alV/Vt Lyiala, A At/olVl Jf Suality or the regular 60c quality, and a few are factory censored of the 76c quality. . _ _____ __, ~ , __ __ _ __ __ _ lack, cordovan, buck, camelhair, white and heather mixtures. Sal* price, a pair, 29 9. j\nSO I\ f tOl T IK.S TT - 300 Pairs Children’s Full Length Sale SII .55 Every Pair tTICC * i**i |H \JitICLTCLTttS€Ci + Stockings— —New Colors Pure ailk. full fashioned, absolutely first quality stockings. We are not permitted to use the makacfii Full length mercerized and- fibre plaited—this is a beautiful 4xl ribbed atockiug. name in thia sale because of the low’priee here quot-d. but we regularly sell this same stocking every day Factory censored of the regular SI.OO quality—every pair guaranteed. Black, cordovan, for $2.00. In colors of black, gray 32, beaver, log cabin, tatvn and Havana. Sale price, $1.55 a pair, white, deer and gray. Sale price, a pair, 59f. —OPettis hosiery, street floor. —Petti* hosiery, street Boer. mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmrmmr**" Pettis Dry Goods Dry Goocfs Co.mmbhhmbbk

JUDGE NAMES MRS. KERN Woman Given Place on Board of Children’s Guardians. Airs. John W. Kern has been appointed to the board of Children’s Guardans by Juvenile Judge Frank J. Lahr. Her term is two years. Other members are Evans Woollen, president; Thomas C. Howe, Demarchus C. Brown, Mrs. Louis Levey and Mrs. John J. Madden. The board has charge of orphans and other children made wards of the court and placed in homes. It administers the mothers’ pension fund established last fall by the county council. Opinion on Tax Asked To decide the question of exemption from the State fire marshal tax on insurance companies, Thomas S. MeMurray, State insurance commissioner, has asked an legal opinion from Attorney General U. S. Lesh. Briefs were filed late Monday by State mutual flee insurance companies claiming exemption.

DANNER DISCUSSED IN GOVERNOR RACE Business Man May Be Jewett . Candidate. Henry R. Danner of the William B. Burford Company, printers, was being discussed today as possibility In the race for the Republican nomination for Governor. It was said he may become the candidate of the Jewett-Lemcke faction, In case Charles W. Jewett, former mayor, does not make the race. Jewett, however, has not given up the idea of becoming a candidate, according to reports. There now are five avowed candidates.

3