Indianapolis Times, Volume 36, Number 116, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 September 1924 — Page 7
MONDAY, SEPT. 22. 1924.
COUPLE INJURED WHEN STRUCK BY POLICE MACHINE Trafficmen O'Sullivan and Dowling Figure in Accident, Miss Daisy Van Leet. 28. and Harry Altsman. both of 1210 E. Washington St., are suffering today from injuries received Saturday when struck hv a machine driven by Trafficman Eugene O'Sullivan, 243 Parkview Ave., at Highland Ave. and Washington St. Trafficman John Dowling. 21S X. Randolph, riding with O’Sullivan, and numerous witnesses told Sergeant Tooley and squad the machine was traveling eighteen miles an hour. Mrs. Edna Mills, 20. of 960 Udell St., is in a serious condition at the city hospital from a severe nervous shock ar.d possible interna! injuries after she was struck by a machine driven by W. J. Lambert, 3027 W. Michigan St., at Belmont Ave. and Washington St. Lambert was arrested. Owen Quigley Injured Owen Quigley, 61, of ISOI W. Morris St., is suffering from injuries re ceived Saturday when he was struck by a machine at Senate Ave. and Georgia St. William Crampton. 1!?2 Kentucky Ave., driver, was arrested. Edward Mayer, R. R. E., Box 107, is suffering with a broken collar bone received when he was struck by a machine driven by C. Leon 127 Oxford St., near Stop 4 on the Madison Rd. Chester Surface. 1633 V.'. Market St., is suffering from cuts about the head received Saturday when the machine in which he was riding with George Trester. J2<2 Finley Ave., crashed into the "silent policeman” at Fall Creek Blvd. and Me ridian St. Trester was charged with drunkenness and operating a machine while intoxicated. Surface was held for intoxication. Four Charges Faced Harry Montgomery. 746 Roaehe Ave.. will face charges of drunkenness, operating a machine while intoxicated. blind tiger, and transporting liquor after police say they found him driving his machine while intoxicated, Saturday, at Seventeenth St. and Central Ave. Phil Morton, 4433 Baltimore Ave., was arrested on a blind tiger charge after police say they found a halfpint of mule in his possession when his machine was struck by h street car at King Ave. and Tenth St., Saturday. Andrew Reynolds. 4. of 930 W. Walnut St., is suffering from head injuries today received Sunday when he was struck by a machine while playing in front of his home. William Jonhson. colored, 564 \V. Walnut St., driver, was arrested on charges of speeding and assault and .battery after witnesses tr%d police that he was going at high rate of speed. SCOUTS HEAR RALSTON Senator Speaks to Boys Camped on His Farm. "Live not unto thyself alone. Leave society better than you found it; or the efforts of your parents and the Government will be wasted. Obey the law and rub elbows with the best fellows.” This Is the advice of Senator Samuel M. Ralston to Boy Scout troop No. 82. The Scouts, under leadership of Scoutmaster Merle Miller. hiked to the Ralston farm 1 Saturday night to camp. The Senator was an unexpected 1 visitor at the Sunday school services j conducted by Merle Carver, presi- j dent of Buffer y. M. C. A. A strip of beech bWk carved in shape of Indiana with initials of the twenty- J five boys, was presented the Senator. '
RIVERSIDES CLAIM TITLE A. A.s Down Keystones at Pennsy Park, 1 to 0. The Riverside A. A. claims the Marion County baseball champion ship after defeating the Keystones. 1 to 0. Sunday in the decisive contest of a three-game series. Lefty Gillum shut out the Keystones for the second time and knocked in the wnining run. Gillum has not been scored on in the last twenty-five i nings. The Riversides hqve victories over the T. M. S., Spades, Indiana Travelers, Indianapolis Cardinals. Beech Grove Reis. Ben Davis and Keystones. Xext Sunday the Riversides play the Brazil Elks at Brazil. COUNT QUASHING ASKED Attorney Alleges Only Men Can Compose Grand Jury Legally. By Time* Special MOXTICELLO. Ind.. Sept. 22 .Men only may indict, according to a plea entered here to quash indictment of murder against Edward Johnson of Wolcott, charged with killing Marshal Kr-rt Cowgill, Aug. 6. Johnson was indicted by a grand jury composed of three men and three women. Kis attorney says there is no law authorizing women grand jurors. Two Charges Faced Charles Andrews. 2154 Columbia Ave., is held today on .charges of vagrancy and unlawful possession of an automobile after police say he was found attempting to start the machine of Charles Bergerman. in ; front of his home at 2144 Church mann Ave., Saturday. Herman Berenman Missing Mrs. Herman Berenman. 1210 Fletcher Ave.. has asked police to search for her son, Herman, Jr., 12, whom she reported missing from home since early Saturday.
Northern Trappers Work Alone Seven Months Each Year to Bring, Milady Her Dainty Furs
Brave Trackless Wilds in Search of Animal Pelts Women Wear, By 808 DORMAX R" IIGOLET, Labrador, Sept. 22. —This is the month that sees the gathering of the fur trappers of the Xorth; those men who bring out of the frozen lands of the Arctic, the soft, warm furs that adorn the beauty of the women of more favored places. What is the life that these men lead in their pursuit of the wild animals whose pelts they seek? Let Walter Baikia. 28, tell you. Ever since he was 14 he has followed the trackless paths of labrador in pursuit of fur. Canoes and Boat "Generally we leave Rigolet on the 25th of September,” he narrates. "We go by water in canoes and motor boats up Hamilton Inlet to Lake Melville, then up the Xasakaupi River to where it is joined by the Northwest River, up which we proceed, each man to his own particular hunting ground. "Each man picks out his own place and returns to it year after year. Ilis right to it is not questioned by others. It is the unwritten code of the Xorthland. ‘Far up the Xorthwest River, some 2uo miles from Rigolet, I have my main camp. "When I arrive I cache my winter supplies. If you don’t, roving bands of Indians or Eskimos are apt to steal them, which might mean starvation. "Then I set out on my trap lines. "For twenty-seven miles on the river front, fourteen one way and thirteen the other, I put out 106 fox traps, as it is along the river that one is most apt to find foxes. "Then I go thirty miles Xorth of the river setting out 250 traps. "Then fifteen miles to the south of the river, where I place 150 traps. "This makes seventy-two miles of traps that T must cover. “Then begins my regular routine of winter work. Eleven Days “Usually by Oct. 15 the ground is covered with snow. "I make the round of the river traps first. This takes five days. "Then I cover the ground to the north of the river, taking up four days. The trip to the south occu pies two days, making eleven days in all necessary for a round of all the traps “Evening is spent in skinning and pegging out the day's take. "In January we usually come in for supplies to Rigolet and to bring in the fur already taken. 'The final return to Rigolet is made April 15. “The traps must be covered in all kin is of weather. Usually there is at least one blizzard a week, but one must go ahead. Sometimes, though, you have to lay in shelter for several days because ,*f the impossibility of finding the way in the thick snow storm. Then, too. loneliness is appalling. For seven months one hardly ever sees another human being. "If you get sick, you either get well or die. “Last year Willie Montagu stag gered into my camp. But the next day he was helpless with paralysis. I gathered thirteen other trappers and we fashioned a sled on which we dragged hint into the hospital at Rigolet. "It took us fourteen days traveling sixteen hours a day. “And then Willie was burned From Far and Near Through streets bristling with machine guns, rifle? and shotguns, the Xew York Federal Reserve Bank Sunday moved three billion dollars to vaults in its new treasury in the Monolthis Bldg., Maiden Lane and Xassau St. More than 260 armed men were employed in guarding the money loaded in thirty-seven armored autos for its trip of less than four blocks. The first witchcraft trial in Ger many in perhaps a century has just taken place in Berlin. A peasant woman whose livestock became sick charged a neighbor woman with casting a spell over them. The neighbor sued for slander and the defendant. still maintaining witchcraft had killed her stock, was fin< ’ $3.
Mary Batt, 8, of Chicago, is in a hospital in a critical condition with a bullet wound in a lung. John Barnhart. 7, accidentally shot her while they were playing burglar in his home. A too friendly stranger cost R. G. Royal. IS. Texas University student, S2O. Royal, passing through Chicago on his way from th*=> intercollegiate rifle matches at Camp Perry. Ohio, loaned the stranger S2O to make a telephone call. He never came back. % POLICE IN FINE SPIRITS Said They Had Alcohol “Shower” in Raid on Southside Home. Members of Police Lieutenant Anderson's squad today told of an alcohol "shower" they said they received when they raided the home of Ballhaser Hoffert, 1437 S. Meridian St., Saturday night. They alleged Hoffert and his wife threw' three gallons of alcohol on them and then threw disinfectant in their faces. Mr. and Mrs. Hoffert were held on blind tiger charges. Woman Pedestrian Bitten Anna St. Clair, 1776 Morgan St., wu- sevcrly bitten by a .log belonging to Russell Hiatt, 1458 McClain St., wnile she was walking in Howard St. near Belmont Ave. Mrs. St. Clair said tivo little girls were leading the dog when he suddenly broke loose and rushed at her, biting her on the foot and tearing her shoe The dog was ordered held for observation
WALTER BAIKIA. TRAPPER OF THE XORTH WOdhS, IX HIS WINTER HOME (UPPER RIGHT); WITH A COMPAXIOX (LOWER RIGHT). BOTH DRESSED IX THEIR “WORKING CLOTHES.
alive in a fire which destroyed the hospital the week after we got him there. "The average earnings of a season is SI,OOO. The most T have ever taken in in fourteen years is SI,BOO in a season.
Dust and Shaving Collectors and Piping Phone 41 Kentucky Ave. JOSEPH GARDNER
The Times Pink for Late Sport News
Electric Light and Power J A /service V I MERCHANTS * j Heat and Light Company j The Daylight Corner j* £ > The Company Service Built \ L
W. J. HOLLIDAY & CO. KfetuhlKherf 1856 IRON-STEEL—SUPPLIES Distributor* of Moor#* Ditwiler Steel Dump Bodie* for Fords, and the leading lines of r*‘p!u<-finet>t part* for nil cars. Branch Store, 426 N. Capitol Ave.
Run down this week-end ? ® RUN DOWN TO French lick Springs Hotel THE HOME OF ** PLUPT© WTSF?. i9 Just a short Tide from Indiampdis - Come ba£ anew ftxm 0
RIDE THE STREET CARS Indianapolis is forging ahead. Its car system must keep abreast of this growth. Ride the cars —it’s cheaper—and help keep Indianapolis to the front.
THE GLOBE PRESS Printers With Kelly Press Service. Color Work and Commercial Printing. 316-18 E. Ohio St. Phone, Lincoln 4107
SPINK-ARMS HOTEL 4m North Meridian Si. A Reality of Convenience INDIANAPOLIS’ NEWEST AND FINEST HOTEL. Unexcelled Transient Service—s3 and up. Onp, two and three room furnished apartments with kitchenette. SIOO per month and up. L'nfurnished apartments in our new iddition, SSO and up: unexcelled afe service: Table d'hote luncheon, 75 cents: Table d’hote dinner, $1.25. also service ala carte.
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
“This means that I have to work with the fishing schooners in the summer, as the cost of supplies is so high. I have paid as high as SSO a barrel for flour with other supplies in proportion. “But I like this life. 1 am free
Regain Your Health Through Chiropractic Adjustments John J. Bibler, D. C. Mabel F. Bibler, D. C. Graduates of Palmer School of Chiropractic 906 State Life Bldg. 9th Floor Phones—Office MA in 5090 Res. WA shington 3394
and independent. Xo man is rny boss I can come and Igo as I plea.-,e. It is healthy, too. Some day I suppose, I will pass out. But that doesn't bother the trapper of the north.”
WEEKLY Business and Industrial NEWS
■OPIUMS ADVISE FOLKS 10 BEWARE OF COLDS Drs, Bibler Remind Persons That a 'Stitch in Time Saves Nine,’ "A neglected cold." say Dr. John J. B;hler and hi- wife. Dr. Mabel F. Bibler, chiropractors, 906 state I.:fe building, “is the same old story of a ‘stitch in time. - "Folks who say. ‘Oh. I think I'll just let it wear off,' will prdhably let it just wear them and their families and everybody in the office out before they get relief. Colds are brought about by a lack of elimination of the poisons from the body, due to a. pressure on the nerve supply to the kidneys, causing the system to become weak or susceptible to the changes, and the body does not adjust itself quickly enough, hence the cold or some other abnormal condition. It will only take a chiropractic adjustment at the very beginning of a cold to put a sudden stop to It. "Occasional examination and ad ju-tment hy a chiropractor will bring about normal conditions, which will increase the resistance,” says Dr. Bibler. hollTdaylnch SERVES DEALERS Automobile Accesories May Be Had on Short Notice, A branch store recently opened by W. J. Holldiya & Cos. at 426 X. Capitol Ave. has for its object service at all times for dealers in any kind of automobiles. E. T. Holliday assures you of a complete line of every standard make of replacement parts and accessories. A full stock of the necessities of a dealer's agency or garage equipment of various kinds makes it possible for this branc to fill at short notice just about any kind of an order they are apt to receive. They are doing equally as much for the out-of-town dealers as they are for the local concern, and their effort is to accommodate them in the shortest possible time with the highest grade of merchandise.
WASTE PAPER We Buy All Kinds Main 6089 American Paper Stock Company Incorporated.
H. H. WOODSMALL & CO., INC. GENERAL INSURANCE—SURETY BONDS “We Insure Everything but the Hereafter.” FIDELITY TRUST BUILDING
MARION COUNTY STATE BANK 139 East Market Street Home of the Christmas Savings Clnb
SAILOR CAPTURES DRIVER OF AUTO Two Women and Man Hurt in Crash, Mrs. Mary Jennings was suffering from cuts on the legs, arms and face today received Sunday when an auto driven by her husband, Edward Jennings, 2103 S. Emerson Ave., was struck by an auto driven by John Miller, 28, colored, Beech Grove, Ind., at Emerson Ave. and Southeastern Ave. Mrs. Amanda Maloy, 814 Maple St., Mrs. Jennings’ mother, who was also in the car, was injured about the chest and left leg. Jenj nings was cut about the face. All were taken home. Miller left his car and was captured down the street by Lee Maloy, who gave his address as U. S. S. Wilmington. He was charged with assault and battery and failure to stop after an accident. Mrs. Elmer Kruse, 226 E. Michigan St., was slightly injured when an auto driven by her husband upset at Twelfth St. and Cornell Ave., after striking an auto owned hy George Hayes, 1244 Cornell Ave., parked at the curb. James Haley, 54, of 525 Blake St., was slightly injured when he was struck by an auto driven hy Leroy Wakefield, R. R. O, box 34 F., at California and Washington Sts. Witnesses said Haley walked in front of the auto. He was taken home. MAY BRING BODY HERE Body of Anton Herntschier, who died at the home of his daughter, Mrs. Marie Volz. Toledo. Ohio, will probably tie brought here for burial. He- formerly conducted a shoe repair shop at 946 Ft. Wayne Ave. He was the father of Harry Herntschier, 915 X. Xew Jersey St., buyer for Kiefer-Stewart Drug Cos.
TOURISTS RELYON GARAGE SERVICE Don Herr Company Established Enviable Reputation, A source of complete satisfaction is the Don Herr Cab Company, where tourists' mud caked, road worn cars may be left over night and greet them bright and shining in the morning Within convenient walking distance of the city’s leading hotels this very modern equipped automobile hotel fills the bill particularly well because of its infallible dependability. Intelligent mechanics will look it over and doctor it wisely, while conscientious men wash its face and make it look the respectable citizen j it was when it started its long jour- | ney. . The local folks can get the habit of depending upon this concern for parking space night and day, too. with perfect safety. Every bit of workmanship put on the car is of the very highest type and every promise made is kept. That is the* reputation built up hy many years of experience by Don Herr, one city’s veteran "service specialists." Elephant Kills Trainer Pll Time* Special ANDERSON. Ind., Sept. 22.—The body of Stephen A. Hancock, 70. veteran animal trainer was home today for burial, following his death when attacked hy an infuriated j elephant at Belle Center, Ohio. | Hancock was an elephant trainer j with a small circus. Safe Deposit Boxes Bankers Trust Company “The World Move*, So Doc* Niman” Phone*: Drcxcl 1155 and 1745 Night Call*, Irv. 2114. \Va*h. 0714 NIMAN TRANSFER & STORAGE CO. Expert Riggers Erectors of Stacks, Boilers and Heavy Machinery, Safe and Machinery Moving. Overland Hauling. Motor Trucks. 224-228 W. M’CAKTT ST. M. T. Nlman, Mgr. Indianapolis. Patterson Engraving Cos. lOPM6ILV IN P'AN A ILgCTPOTVPg CO. *23 "VVesf T'larijla.nd Sheet Indianapolis. Ind.
OFFICER’S WIFE FQILSROBBEKY Hears Men at Filling Station —Three Arrested, Henry Sipes, 23, and Raymond Sipes, 20, of 2201 E. Washington Se., and Edward Murphy, 4 Woodland Dr., were held today under high bonds on vagranev charges while police are seeking a fourth in connection with gasoline filling station robberies Saturday and Sunday. When the wife of Patrolman Bert Walker, 6017 E. Washington St.,
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America’s Finest Electric DeLuxe Buffet-Parlor Car Service $ BETWEEN— Indianapolis and Louisville, Ky. Leaves Indianapolis 11 A. M. and 5 P. M. Arrives Louisville 2:45 p. m. and 5:45 p. m. Seat Reservations, Terminal Station - Main 4500 INTERSTATE , “The Electric Way” Seven All-Steel Dixie Fliers Daily C. B. MOWERY Supt. Dining Car Service.
If IBs for Your Office , We Have It HILLER Office Supply Cos. 28 S. Penna. St. Just Phone Cl role 0611
LEE B. SMITH 704 Fletcher Trust Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Cos. Educational and Income Policies
TOURS STEAMSHIP TICKETS LETTERS OF CREDIT FOREIGN EXCHANGE TOURS TRAVELERS' CHECKS Richard A. Kurtz, Manager, Foreign Dept. The Union Trust Cos. 120 East Market Street MAIn 1576, 2853
Smith-Hassler-Sturm Cos. 219-221 Mass. Ave. “A Real Sporting Goods Store'
Religious, Social or Fraternal Organizations Can Financially Increase Their Friends by Giving Skating Parties at the RIVERSIDE ROLLER RINK For Information Call Randolph 7322 or Call at Office in Park
“The Yellow Wagon ’ and 100 Teams ICE—COAL Polar Ice and Fuel—B Phones
heard a disturbance at the Indian Off Refining filling station at Arlington Ave., and Washington St., early Sunday, she called Walker who ran out and caught a man at the wheel of a waiting machine. As he was holding the man, two men who had uitered the station came out and fled when Walker fired. The man in the machine escaped! Tracing the license number of the machine, police arrested Murphy at his home. The Sipes brothers were caught at Sherman Dr. and Washington St. A man with the Sipes brothers escaped. Thefts of pay pnones, were reported from Standard Oil filling stations at Sherman Dr. and Washington St., Sheridan Ave., and Washington St., and New York St. and Gladstone Ave. The role of Captain Cook in the “Pageant of Empire,” at Wembley, England, was filled by a direct descendant of the famous explorer.
Foster and Messick Telephone MA in 6100 Surety Bonds and Casualty Insurance FLETCHER TRUST BUILDING
The Times Pink for Late Sport News
Automobile Glass Replaced While You Wait Building Glass of All Kinds Indianapolis Glass Cos. 1002 Kentucky Ave. Cir. 7727
Phone MA in 3057 THE WHITAKER PRESS Inc. Printers to the Advertiser Fifth Floor Print Craft Building, *223-25 North New Jersey Street
DON HERR GARAGE RIGHT DOWNTOWN Kentucky Ave. and Maryland St. Auto Laundry Greasing Station Free Crank Case Service Day and Night Parking Everything for Your Automobile.
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