Indianapolis Times, Volume 35, Number 239, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 February 1924 — Page 6

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SHORTRIDGE CLUB PRESIDENTS WILL TALKTOPARENTS 'How New Pupils Are Taken Care of to Be Told by Miss Sullivan. Presidents of all Shortridge High School clubs will talk at the ParentTeacher meeting at the school at 3 p. m. Tuesday. Mrs. Della M. Thompson, dean of girls, has charge of the meeting. "How New Pupils Are Take Care Os," will oe told by Miss Mary P. Sullivan of the Commercial department. Miss Maja Brownlee, Girl’s Debating Club president, will introduce these other presidents: Press Club, Josephine Henderson; Math Club, Waide Price; True Blue, Elizabeth Fletcher; Big Sisters, Ruth Darnell; Booster, Hazel Miller; Senate, George Clayton; Radio, Walker Knotts; Physiography, Edward Wilson; Girls’ Discussion Rour, Marcella Lennox; Crescendo, Robert Winstead; Art Appreciation, Eloys Meyer; Roman State, Fred Parsons and Martha Wood; Fiction, Catherine Allen. Junior Drama League, Irma Roller; Girls’ Band, Hilda Miller; Boys’ Rooters, Elmo Ritchie; R. O. T. C. Boosters, Philip Reed; Officers’ Club, George Whiteman; Girls’ Debating \Club, Frances Kelley; Girls' Pep Club, Lois Axline; Shortridge Camp Fire Girls, Rosamond Hovey; Organized Play for Boys, Abe Thatcher; Organized Play for Girls, Margaret Hurt.

JOHN L. PARTLOW ON WAYTO PRISON X Sentence to Be Served After ' Four-Year Legal Battle. After a legal battle lasting more than four years, John L. Partlow, president of the Partlow-Jenkins Motor Car Company, started for Michigan City today to serve a sentence of from one to fourteen years for receiving stolen goods. fartlow was indicted Aug. 5, 1919 on a charge of receiving stolen automobiles. He was convicted in Criminal Court Nov. 26, 1919. In October, 1920, the Supreme Court affirmed the decision. The case was then held up by two petitions for vehearings. Partlow was accompanied by Carlin Shank, former county commissioner and now a business associate of the prisoner, who was made a special deputy sheriff. FATE OF TAX BILL RANGSIN BALANCE i Progressives and Republicans in Conference. By Untted Press WASHINGTON. Feb. 18.—The fate of the Administration’s tax reduction plan today hinged on a final conference between Republican and progressive leaders. If the eleventh-hour compromise efforts of the Administration fails, the Democratic leaders predicted the passage of the Garner plan with 44 per cent maximum surtax rates and normal income taxes cut in hajf. * Asa final concession to win progressive votes that would insure the adoption of a "Republican tax bill,” Republican Leader Longworth agreed to accept 33!£ per cent as the surtax maximum. He had previously declared 35 per cent was the outside maximum he would accept. 1 ‘Y’ DRIVE PROGRESSING Final Membership Reports to Be Made Wednesday Evening. Final reports from team captains working in the Y. M. C. A. seven-day drive for 1,000 new members will be made Wednesday night at a buffet luncheon in the lobby. Advance reports indicate that the drive will be successful. Over 700 applications have been turned in.

Look out for the thief that steals M away health— chronic constipation. a For effective relief, eat bran 1 each day. ™ Post’s Bran Flakes with Other Parts of Wheat is bran in palatable form. A natural laxative food—crisp, delicious and nourishing. POSTS Bran Flakes ngo ||g : |j a laxjttvc rooi> ila.%

Candler Domestic Wreckage Laid to Pursuit of Twilight Romance

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TO THE LEFT. ASA CANDLER, A GED GALAHAD AND (BELO*W) MRS. ONEZIMA DE BOUCHEL. TO THE RIGHT: MRS. CANDLE R AND W. J. STODDARD, WITH WHOM SHE WAS ARRESTED.

By CARJj TAYLOR XEA Staff Correspondent TLA NT A, Ga., Feb. 18—The spirit of the chevalier flouri___J ishes in the old heart of Asa Candler. Those near to him will tell you that is why tragedy broods over the closing years of his life. Seventy-three years have passed Candler by. He has accumulated millions upon millions in the manufacture of Coca-Cola. No man gains millions without contact with the stern realities of life. Few such men escape the world’s cynicism, its hard-boiledness. Yet romance glows in the twilight for bid Asa. Having lived his threescore and ten he still believed the Grand Passion possible for him. But the glow in the twilight seems to have been only a will-o’-the-wisp. Just a scant week after the CocaCola king sat In Federal Court and hear.} his love letters to Mrs. Onezi-

i ———Weekly Book Review Lonesome Little Jael Is Forced to Wear Suffering Cloak of ‘The Pitiful Wife’

By WALTER D. HICKMAN mAEL spoke to her husband: “I’m the poorest of things, Richmond. I’m the deceived wife. Jokes are made about me, and songs sung of me. I’m mocked and held for the laughter of fools.” These are the words of a wife when she learns that all of her husband’s kisses have not been for her. Realizing this, poor little .Tael permits the cloak of pity to fall upon her shoulders. Jael’s aircastles have crashed. Her dreams of cobwebs have become bracelets of cold steel. How could her husband do such a thing to hpr? This is the climax of'a dramatic cyclone written under the name of “The Pitiful Wife” by Storm Jameson. Here is a rare novel. It is going lo upset the literary world as well aR the inhabitants of the great world who read only for pleasure and a thrill. Is man of the modern day blind and deff to the sacredness of his marriage bed? Does the husband of today enjoy to frolic in sexual vacations with other women? Should a wife vacate when she discovers that she is just a pitiful wife? Does man value lightly the gift of purity of a good woman? These burning questions of modern married life are met honestly and fear-

ma De Bouchel who was suing him for 3500,000 damages for alleged breach of promise, read to an eager public, his bride of less than a year was arrested by the police of Atlanta and charged with being an "occupant of a dive.” She was found in company with W. J. ("Bill”) Stoddard, prominent Atlanta man, and president the National Dry Cleaners’ Association, and another man, in an apartment on the fashionable north side residential district of Atlanta. A whisky bottle, nearly empty, was found on the table beside them, police declare. "We were only having a little party, what’s wrong in that? And besides, there are other people besides the Candlers in Atlanta,” Mrs. Candler Is quoted as saying after the police broke in. And now the wags of Atlanta are whispering the old man once more

lessly by Miss Jameson. Do not get the wrong impression of this book- It is not sentimental filth. It is not mental dirt, but an honest attempt to get at tho vgry bo.tom of the trouble modern marriage. You do not have to blush if you carrv this book home with you on a street car. It is only a symbol of honest thinking on the part of a courageous author. Tho trouble with so many authors today who tackle the marriage problem is that they shy at the real Waterloo or they dirty tho mental waters with weeds and cheap sentiment. Not so with Storm Jameson. She will challenge you and while her brain child, Jael, is fighting the battle of life, she drives home a lesson. It is more than good literature, ij Is honest. It is not cheap. Powerful Contrasts Used by Autor to Build Her Story Tho cold wind of the moorlands of Yorkshire, England, greet you on the very first Pjige. The shadows of the moor and the wind soon become a

New Books Await You at Library New books of fiction at the Indianapolis Public Library include: “The Red-blood,” by H. H.Armstrong; “Captured,” by John Galsworthy; “Tappan’s Burro apd Other Stories,” by Zane Grey; “My Fair Lady,” by Louis Hepion; "Labrynth,” by H. R. Hull; "Heart’s Blood,” by E. M. Kelley; ‘ Grey Wethers,by Mrs. V. M. (S.-W.) Nicholson; “Fighting Blood,” by H. C. Witwer. New books of history, biography and travel Include: “The Eight Paradises,” by Princesse G. V. Ribesco; “Indianapolis, the Old Town and the New,” by Lee Burns; “Java and the East Indies,” by F. G. Carpenter; “Algeria Today,” by Gordon Casserly; “Theodore Roosevelt,” by G. R. B. Charnwood, first baron; “Adventures in Journalism,” by Sir P. H. Gibbs; “In Quest of El Dorado,” by Stephen Graham; “From Pinafortes to Politics," by F. J. (H.) Harrimon; “Present Government of the Philippines,” by M. M. Kalaw; “Connecticut Beautiful,” by Wallace Nutting; “Hill-towns of the Pyrenees,” by Amy Oakley; “An Indiscreet Chronicle From the Pacific,” by B. L. Simpson; “Federalism in Jlorth America,” by H. A. Smith. New books of (sociology and religion include: “The Open Door Doctrine }p Relation to China,” by M. J. Bau; “The Understanding of Religion,” by E. T- Brewster; "A Rib?e Primer for For•“H**l*-" F -

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is going to be left alone with his millions in his mansion in the city's most exclusive residential subdivision —that he shortly will begin divorce proceedings against the pretty stenographer he married last June. Whether he intends to bring a divorce suit against his wife, ho will not say. Next month his eldest son, Walter Candler, will defend a 3100,000 suit for damages brought against hljn by Mrs. Clyde Byfleld, beautiful young Atlanta woman, who alleges he assaulted her -while she was a passenger on the S. S. Berengaria bound for Europe. Asa Candler is a bent and broken old man. His hair is snow-white and his shoulders stooped, and his face Is wrinkled and gray. But'Some who know him say he believes romance Is waiting just around the corner for him.

background of a great drama- Into this atmosphere is born a man by the name of John Trude. He is flrßt blessed with strong arms and the body of a giant. AU of his strength is given over to evil. Even marriage fails to break the chains of evil. Their first child is a daughter, Jael. When the second child, a son by the name of Judas (cursed with the name of tho man who betrayed Chrict) was born, John Trude celebrated the event with a debauch so revolting that his; wife walked out in flier nightgown to greet the death-giving wind of the moor. She died. John Trude then became a human beast. Jael and her brother grew up in the great desolate manor. John Trude lived on in the great hall. He found time to injure for lifq one of the limbs of his own son. Time passes. Daily tragedies arrive. Jael becomes a woman while her own fat her becomes a horrible hermit in his own grand hall. Her only companions were strange women who attended Trude. Her real friend was Richmond Drew. The picture of their wooing is ono of grand charm and even a hint of grief. They marry. Jael gives all to him. He takes all. Nothing is left. The years go on. The war come3. Richmond goes to war. John Trude becomes more and more a terrible fiend. Jael has a son. Richmond looks in another direction. Then ho finds a plaything in the form of a woman. And then the tragedy of it all.

Jameson Shows Her Strength in the Logical Ending The author proves her value by giving us a logical ending. Man may stray away from the fireside, but if the real love is really there, he returns. That’s the price and the glory of being a pitiful wife. As Jael said; “It makes me just a fool of a girl who became an ordinary wife and was deceived in the ordinary way.” Here is drama in literature and in life. This book invites your honest attention. I havo read “Tho Pitiful Wife” carefully and I am going to place it on my little bookshelf among my other treasures —Walt Whitman, Shakespeare and the others. Received my copy of “The Pitiful Wife” from Alfred A. Knopf, publisher of New York, on the suggestion of Percy A. Beach of the Beach Bookshop of Indianapolis. Electrician to Talk C. L. Fortesque of the Westinghouse Electric and Manufacturing Company, Pittsburgh, Pa., will address the Indlanapolls-Lafayette section, American Institute of Electrical Engineers Wednesday night at the Lincoln. Bile wifi talk on “High Ten* slop Transmission.” The meeting Is

CUMMINGS LAUDS M’AOOO AS LIBERAL STANDARD BEARER Former Democratic National Chairman Declares Fate of Party at IssueBit United Press CHICAGO, Feb. 12. —Liberalism or reaction is the chief issue to be settled by the McAdoo “availability conference,” Homer L. Cummings, former chairman of the national Democratic committee declared today in the keynot address to the supporters of William Gibbs McAdoo gathered to decide whether he is still available as a Democratic presidential candidate. McAdoo represents liberalism; President Cooltdge represents reaction, Cummings declared. ‘‘As I see it, we are discussing not only the fortunes of an individual but We are considering the fate of a cause,” he said. Cummings charged the Administration with hanging up a record of disastrous failures, spotted with scandals, and culminating with the amazing Teapot Dome disclosures. ‘‘During the past few months the forces which are to contest the political field next November had been gathering.” Cummings said in part. "I think it is fair to state the reactionary groups are those who instinctively prefer a static state of public affairs and which for many years have controlled the politics of the Republican party have determined upon the nomination of Coolldge with every likihood they will prevail, in their party contention. Is Undoubted Choice ‘‘On the other hand the party forces of liberalism have been gathering about McAdoo who toduy stands as the undoubted choice of the great masses of the Democratic party. Those who believe in progressive democracy welcome such an alignment. They conceive the struggle which began In 1912 to free American Institutions from the thraldom of special privilege has nat ceased, but still continues. “Tho reforms accomplished and other policies inaugurated were consistently fought by tho same forces which today ar*> for. ir.g the nomination of the present chief executive. 'To those who have been governing America since March 4 1921, we put tho pertinent inquiry 'what b?va |ou done with America since her affairs wee confided to your keeping?’ Record of Failure “At every point at home and abroad there has been a consistent record of failure. Disastrous as these failures have been they were overshadowed today by the recently developed history of corruption which has been fostered by Republican officials with a reckless disregard of public rights appalling In Its consequences. Scandal affjjr scandal has been unfolded. Beginning with tho Newberry scandal, progressing through the debauchery of the evterans and culminating In the Teapot Dome disclosures, the record has bden one which brings humiliation and shame to all who love America. We are under the high necessity of making a complete and sweeping change In the management of our Government.” The attempt to connect McAdoo with tho oil scandal Is a desperate attempt by tho Republicans to divert attention from their own derelictions and to destroy the “one man about whom the forces of progressive Democracy have instinctivly assembled,” he declared.

Own Future Inconsequential McAdoo in a communication to the conference stated his own political future was of no consequence beside the greater Issue of the Teapot Dome scandal. The question before the people, he said. Is whether corruption shall continue In Washington. His availability is up to the conference, McAdoo declared. In case the conference decides It Is to the best interests to the party that he do so, he said he would gladly step out. Cummings was selected temporary chairman of the conference. HEAVY SENTENCE GIVEN Spring Valley Man Convicted After Raid by Fort Provost. William Stanley, 40, Spring Valley, Ind., was fined S3OO and costs and sentenced to 120 days at the Indiana State Farm in city court today as the result of a raid at Spring Valley by Lieut. H. V. Browfli, Ft. Benjamin (Harrjson provost marshal, and Dep.ity Sheriff Roland SniJer. According to testimony, Stanley was found operating a blind tiger and gambling house. Amorg the habitues were two soldiers absent without leave, Lieutenant Brown said. Slot machines and liquor were seized. CHECK FORGERS TRAILED Fifty Penmen Alleged to Have Gotten $200,000 From Cliicago Bank. By United Press CHICAGO, Fel). 3 B.—Police today were on trail of a band of fifty check forgers, said to have fleeced Chicago banks of more than $200,000. Three men are under arrest. The band, headed by Aaron Mossiek, Known by detectives as an expert penman, is said to have operated through bootleggers’ syndicates. Fraternity to Hold Convention Theta Xi fraternity will open a twoday convention at the Severin Friday. A dinner will be given at the Indianapolis Athletic Club Friday night, and a banquet at the Severin Saturday. W. D. Harnerstadt is president of the Indianapolis Alumni Club. Mac Manus Will Speak Seumas MacManus, Irish poet and story teller, wijl appear before the St. Agnes Alumnae Association at St. Agnes Academy at 2 p. m. Tuesday. He xylll gddress Rie Rotary Clfli) Tuesday noon ft the Claypool. He will go to Inditing University Wednesday

Confirmed as Oil Lease Prosecutor OWEN J. ROBERTS Owen J. Roberts, Philadelphia, Republican, was confirmed by the Senate today as prosecutor In the Teapot Dome oil scandal. He succeeds Silas Strawn, Chicago, who was opposed. PETITION OPPOSES NEW HIGR SCHOOL Colored Taxpayer Seeks to Restrain Board, A petition seeking to restrain the Indianapolis school board from erecting a separate colored high school, was filed in Superior Court today by Archie Greathouse, colored, proprietor of a soft drink parlor at 329 Indiana Ave. The petition, filed by Greathouse as a taxpayer, declared the city now maintains three high schools open to all students. The city plans to erect anew unit for white students for $1,000,000, and a separate colored unit for $150,000. The colored unit could not provide equal advantages at this sum and the school board has no legal right to expend the citizens’ money in this way, the petition contends.

Lunch Time Frivolity Used to Speed Up T. B. M.’s Digestion

The worjd laughs long ants loudly. Taxes, high prices, prohibition, the speed of the day cannot rob man of his greatest means of relaxation —a hearty, boisterous laugh. People laugh to forget, but never forget to laugh. Meal time is one of the greatest moments for laughing. Miss Dorothy Guntz. lunchroom cashier for H. P. Wasson & Cos., says people know it aids digestion. * "Believe me.” says Miss Kuntzz, “the DR. JABEZ BALL FUNERAL IS HELD Services for Butler Professor at Downey Ave, Church. The funeral of Dr. Jabez Hall, 28 S. Irvington Ave.. Butler University professor, was held at the Downey Avenue Christian Church at 2 p. m. today. The Rev. Joseph D. Armlstead, pastor, assisted by several other ministers who were close friends of Dr. Hall, officiated. Burial was In Crown Hill. % Honorary pallbears were Hilton U. Brown, Demarehus C. Brown, Urban C. Stover, W. A. Sweetman, Dr. Robert J. Aley, W. H. Burgess, Thomas C. Howe, William Irwin, George E. Brewer, Dr. W. F. Kelly and Profs. R. C. Friesner, J. W. Putnam, E. N. Johnson, Elijah Jordan and H L. Bruner. Aetlv4 pallbears, ministers who were former students of Dr. Hall: The Rev. David Rloch, Rev. R. Melvin Thompson, Rev. Elvin Daniels, Rev. Charles O. Lee, Rev. Elvert Moorman and Rev. Milo J. Smith. DOG MAKES 'IMPRESSION’ Police mail Has Lingering Reminder of Arrest of Couple. “See the dog. The dog loves Its master.” Patrolman Alklre remembered primer lessons of years ago, today. A dog owned by Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Barton, 953 W. Washington St., loved Its master so well that, when Patrolmen Alklro and Shea arrived to arrest Barton on charges of driving under the influence of liquor, the dog attacked Alkire. City hospital attendants said his wounds were not serious. Asa result of the canine's affection, Barton, who is 30, was slated on additional charges of harboring a vicious dog and resisting an officer, and his wife, Anna Barton, 35, on charges of harboring a vicious dog, and resisting arrest. CAMPAIGN IS REVAMPED Mayor Shank to Resume Speaking Tour Next Week. Mayor Shank will resume his active campaign for the Republican nomination for Governor next week. The death of Mrs. Shank Feb. 1, caused cancellation of all capnpalgn plans. They now are being rebuilt from the bottom upWill K. Penrod, oempaign manager, announced the campaign w'lll be resumed with speeches in the Southern part of the State. The speaking campaign will work gradually Northward, Jury Fails to Agree. Bu Times Special GREENCASTLE, Jnd„ Feb. 17. The juiy ip the case of Augustus Rankin, colored, chajsged with an attack on Mrs. Mary Adkins, disagreed after deliberating eighteen hoars. The

LABOR SITUATION IN INDIANA SHOWN TO BEHOVING Director of Employment Service Sees Gradual Betterment. The employment outlook in Indiana is optimistic, despite slowing down of activities in factories and building trades this month, according to Thomas A. Riley, director of the Indiana free employment service, with six offices in the State. Cold weather has resulted in cessation of numerous road and outside construction projects, Riley said. Steel mills are increasipg production slowly, while practically all employers resort business gradually is recovering from the after-holiday slump. Conditions in various cities: Indianapqlis—Some slowing down of factories and building; automobile plants gradually increasing forces. Surplus of Workers Reported Ft. Wayne—Surplus of workers, particularly common labor. A $60,000 garage under construction and a college to cost $350,000. SOUTH BEND—Studebaker plant, employing 11,000 men, has resumed operations after a three-week shutdown. Conditions generally good. Evansville —All plants running; furniture plants part time, affecting 1,500 employes. Kokomo—Surplus of automobile workers. Church to cost $150,000 under construction. All plants but automobile factories running. Shortage of Farm Labor Newcastle—Slight surplus in woodworking and machine industries, due chiefly to influx from other cities. Y. M. C. A. building under construction, employing 125 men. Anderson —Two schoolhouses and orphans’ home under construction. Shortage of farm labor. Muncie—Masonic Temple and large college gymnasium, to cost $250,000, under construction. All plants running with full quota. Marion —No noticeable unemployment.

I amount some men eat should require Ia laughing spasm. Tho women are I not noisy laughers at all, but the men ! are. Men will remain and smoke and ! engage In telling jokes. They must be good, judging from the laughter.” At the theater a person pays for his ! laughs. The polite laugh of the woman attending the matinee Is often drowned by the wild whooping of little Freddie, or shrieking scream of sister Florence as the hero mops the floor with the villain. Ushers say audiences are as interesting as the films. “Every person laughs differently,’’ says one fair usher. “The audience is deeply interested in a picture. Suddenly someone willTurst out laughing at some move or Incident that struck him as funny. There always follows a ripple of laughter over the audience. Many times they are not laughing at tfle show, but at the person who Is laughing. Persons will jump up and down, squirm In their seat and go through ridiculous motions, unconscious of those about them, when they are tickled at what transpires on the screen.” MRS. HELEN GODWIN DIES Funeral Services to Be Held Wednesday With Burial in Holy Cross. Funeral services for Mrs. Helen Godwin, 26, who died Sunday at St. Vincent Hospital, will b© held at 9 a. m. Wednesday at her home. 521 Woodlawn Ave., and at St. Patrick’s Catholic Church. Woodlawn Ave., and Hunter St. Burial in Holy Cross cemetery. Mrs. Godwin had bee t ill five months. She lived in Indianapolis alj her life. She was a member of the Young People’s Club and Ladles’ Auxiliary of tho Indiana Firemen’s Association. Surviving: The husband, George C. Godwin, retired, city fireman; a daughter, Agnes Jennett Godwin, 6, and her mother, Mrs. Agnes Appleget. BOYS, 12 AND 13, GONE James Weller and Ralph Batty Reported Missing Sinee Friday. James Weller, 12, of 6120 Park Ave., and Ralph Batty, 13, of 6732 Cornell Ave., have been missing from their homes since Friday noon, according to police. They were last seen headed downtown. Police have been asked to locate Mrs. LUe Kavatls, missing from Danville, 111., and Ross Stackhouse, 14, who escaped from the Crawford Industrial School near Zionsville, Ipd., Friday. “SKINNY LIKE A SCARECROW” Don’t Let Fotjks Say This About You —R’s Easy Now to Rut on 10 or 20 Pounds of Firm Healthy Flesh Since Science combined health-giving vitamines with organic iron, lime salts and other valuable nutritious into the simple tablets known as Mastin’s Vitamon, millions have used this easy, economical way to gain weight and strength. Mastin’s Vitamon sharpens the appetite, relieves constipation, helps digest what you eat and turns food into “stay-there” flesh and rich red blood. While astonishing results are reported for nervousness, skin troubles, generally weak, run-do\vn conditions and lack of vitality, it is chiefly recommended as a flesh-builder. So If you want to quickly bring your weight up to normal and look and feel 100 per cent better, Mastln’s Vitamon is just what you need. Recommended by doctors, druggists, athletes, successful vigorous men, healthy attractive women and used by millions. Insist upon the name—MASTIN’S VITAMON. Success guaranteed or your druggtot will give- you baelp tfie little It

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Radio Programs Tuesday

Chicago, lII.—KYW (Central, 536) 11:35 A. M.—Table talk. 2:35 to 3:30 P. M.—Studio program. 6:50 P. M. — Children’s bedtime story. 7 to 7:33 P. M.—Dinner concert. 7 to 7:30 P. M.—Orchestra. 8:20 to 8:45 P. M.— “Some Business Aspects of Farmei Organizations,” “Dairy Industry and Its Relation to National Health,” 8:45 P. M. —Musical program. Schenectady, N. Y.—WGY (Eastern, 380) j 7:45 P. M. —Music. Louisville, Ky.—WHAS (Central, 400) 4 to 5 P. M. —Orchestra. 7:30 to 9 P. M.—“ The Bohemian Girl.” Cincinnati, Ohio—WLW (Central, 309) 4 P. M. —Topics of Interest to Women. 10 P. M.—Concert. 10:45 P. M —Double quartette. 11 P. M.— Orchestra; *The Air Is Full of Mystery. Davenport, lowa—WOC (Central, 500) 12 M.—Chimes. 3:30 P. M.— Jaundice. 5:45 P. M.—Chimes. Detroit, Mich.—WWJ (Eastern 517) 9:20 A. M.—“ Tonight’s Dinner.” 9:45 A. M.—‘ Ironing Day.” 3P. M, —Orchestra. 7 P. M. —Orchestra.

CATDOM LIKING FOR NEWLAURELS Additional Prize Winners Ara Named as Show Closes. The aristocracy of catdom today was lo king about for new laurels aft* er the poultry and cat show which closed Sunday night in Tomlinson Hall. Additional Indianapolis prize winners* Miss Marjorie Ailing’. 2060 “4 Buckle St.j O. F. Heslar. 34 N Addison St.; Harry Gar. ber. 1407 Churchman Ave.; Mrs. F. M. Rude, 40 N. Oakland Ave.; Mrs. J. F. Herr, m-.nn, 932 E. Market St.: Mrs, Mary Thia*. 1 <25 Howard St.: Mrs. Charles Robarda. JBl Spencer Are.: Mrs. O. F. Heslar. 34 N. eddison 8t : Catherine Murdock, 824 N, Rcral St.: George Holmes. 3370 W. Tenth St.: W. C. Lancaster, 1501 E. Nineteenth St. Mrs. O. P Withers. 1266 Ollv-r Ave.; Naco Motley, 141 S. Burges St.: Sirs. Claude Webb. 2456 N. New Jersey St.; Hoosier Cattery; Mrs. H. L. Archer, 3827 N. Capitol Ave. Mrs. Charles McGuire. 1711 Alton Ave.; Dr. N. l.a Bonte, 1318 Ashland Are.: Mrs. P. C. Thomas. 332 W. Fortieth St.: J. C. Miesel, 1046 N. Warman Ave.: Dr. M. 3. MeGintv, 829 E. Washington St.; Mrs. Ltd a Denham. 908 N. Capitol Ave.: Elizabeth Wyper. 365 Massachusetts Ave.: Mrs. Albert Hcrbster, 1707 Lambert St.: Mrs. Corinne Colby. 525 Davlon Apts.; Miss Ellntr Warner. Carrollton Ave.: Mrs. J. N. Stewart, 8306 Prospect Bt. Th *> Hewes, manager of the show, will eave Indianapolis this week for Cuba, where he has been invited bx the government to direct a show in 1925.

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