Indianapolis Times, Volume 36, Number 125, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 October 1924 — Page 6
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DR. SMITH NAMED RILEY HOSPITAL SUPERINTENDENT Executive Committee Also Names Other Staff Members, Appointment of Dr. Samuel E Smith Os Indianapolis, as superintendent of the James Whitcomb Riley Hospital for children, has been announced by the Riley Memorial Association executive committee. Dr. Smith is medical provost of Indiana University. He will be assisted by Robert E. Neff. Long Hospital, administrator, who will become administrator of the Riley Hospital. Edward Rowlands of Evansville will assist Neff. A medical committee composed of Drs. John H. Oliver. Lafayette Page and John F. Barnhill has been appointed. Two resident internes. Dr. Charles F. Thompson of Indianapolis and Dr. Gordon W.‘ Batman of Mitchell, will be retained following the opening. Miss Lute Trout of Belleville, 111., dietician at the Long Hospital, will be the chief dietician at the Riley Hospital. Miss Nora Molby of Chapman. Kan., will be housekeeper, and Fred C. Carpenter of Indianapolis, engineer. Miss Veronica Stapleton will superintend nurses. Miss Stapleton comes from the lowa State Hospital for Chiidrep. Two additional SSOO and two SI,OOO subscriptions have been reported to the hospial building fund. Five new SIOO subscriptiyis were reported. E. U. Graff superintendent of city schools, announced the seventy-fifth anniversary of the birth of James Whitcomb Riley will be observed on Tuesday, with exercises in all the schools. Principals of schools will inspect the Riley Hospital Saturday at 10 a. m. TIPTON'S GRIEF OVER Paving of Conde St. Ordered After Fifteen-Year Squabble. By Times Special TIPTON, Ind., Oct 2.—This city has sighed with relief. The council has ordered the pawing of Conde St. \ Conde St. is the thoroughfare which has caused many a councilman to think of resigning during the past fifteen years. The mayor in a recent statement aroused when some citizens started a movement to halt the pavement again, suggested that an old-fash-ioned corduroy road be built. “That road would last until judgment day, find afteb that no one would care about any road,” he said .
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Red Lantern Graveyard Marks Drivers ’ Carelessness
ijpp. *
THOMAS QUALTER LOOKING OVER A PILE OF BROKEN WARNING LANTERNS AT CITY YARDS.
Red warning lanterns mean* little to Ynany motorists. Every night from six to twelve lanterns, placed around repair projects in city streets, are broken, officials at the city yards say. Thomas Qualter, 542 Traub Ave., Is shown here looking over the "wrecks’’ brought in by an inspector. In the pile are nearly 200 broken lanterns, gathered within the past few weeks. Each lantern cost the city sl, showing where some of the taxpayers’ money is invested. In addition to knocking over and breaking lanterns, motorists run into wooden trestles and barricades. it was said. The city* has huilt 200 new trestles this year. “We hope that some automobile owners get punctures when they hit these lanterns and break the said Qualter, “hut that glass is pretty thin, and I guess they just go on their way.”
And to complete the condition, other lanterns just naturally disappear during the night, as some
OIL STOVES ARE BLAMED Explosion Does $5,000 Damage to Four Homes. Coal oil stoves used to ward off cold were responsible for fires Wednesday, officials said today. A oil stove explosion ir *he home of Leonard Ramsey, colore 1, 517 W. Seventeenth St., caused $5,000 damage to the homes of Richard Coward, colored. 519 W. Seventeenth St.: Mrs. Lulu Ferrell, colored, 529 W. Seventeeth St., and Carl Allen, colored, 527 W. Seventeeth tit., Wednesday. A $75 damage was suffered at the home of C. McCann, 22S XV. Fourteenth St., Wednesday. Fire of unknown origin caused a $l5O damage at the home of W. L. Gregory, 2125 Howard St., early today. A, short circuit in the projection room of .the Gem Theater, 225 \V. Washington St., caused a S2O damage.
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
"night owl” picks one up to find his weary way through dark streets.
Good-by Alibi Ky Times Special WINDFALL, Ind . Oct. 2. Thomas Day has completed an Invention that will stop all the stories about how the big ones got away, liis invention is a double hook so constructed that when the fish gets his mouth over it to nibble, the linoks which are compressed together on a hair trigger spring are released and he is hooked in both sides of the mouth. There is no getting away and the fisherman can take off his prize at leisure, reset the spring and resume fishin g. Plans tire being made to manufacture them.
K. OF C. RITES MONDAY William M. Madden to Install New Cabinet Officers. District Deputy William M. Madden of the Knights of Columbus will install new cabinet officers for the Indianapolis Council No. 4117, at the clubhouse, Delaware and Thirteenth Sts . Monday. Smoker and entertainment will follow. New offi cars: Timothy 1\ Sexton. Grand Knight; Harry E. Callund, Deputy Grand Knight: William P. Holmes, Chancellor; Thomas Jones, Treasurer; Herman P. Kirkhoff, Financial Secretary; Cletus J. Kruyer, Recorder; Leo X. Smith, Advocate; Frank Monahan, Warden; Peter Hickey, Inside Guard: John Kelly. Outside Guard; Joseph v Wade, Outside Guard; Dr. John F. McCool, Trustee. CORNER STONE LAYING Masons to Dedicate New Temple at Warsaw Saturday, fly United Press WARSAW, Ind., Oct. 2.—-The corner stone of the new Masonic Temple here will he laid with special ceremonies next Saturday. A number of State officers of the Masonic fraternity are expected to be present. The building is to cost about $75,000 and will be ready for occupancy by the first of the coming year. EIGHTEEN DIE IN CRASH Trains Come Together in Tunnel at Mayence, Germany. fly United Press BERLIN, Oct. 2.—At least eighteen persons were killed whe.n a train telescoped four coaches of an express train in a tunnel at Mayence Wednesday. Smoke and complete darkness made rescue work difficult. Bodies still were being brought out today.
BULLOCK IKES PLEAFOR LABOR Attacks Compulsory Arbitration on Wages, Bn Times Special ELWOOD, Ind., Oct. 2.—“ln my opinion, and in the opinion of the Democratic party, compulsory aroi tration of labor disputes would be one of the most cruel and in just policies ir. industry.” This wag the statement of Dr. Carleton B. *McCulloch, Democratic candidate for Governor in a speech at a Democratic mass meeting Wednesday night. The nominee declared his party always been a friend of labor and declared that attacks on labor had always come from Republicans. “Why should any man be con>eplled to submit to the diecision of a third party the question of how much he shall receive for his labor? Labor is the only thing the workingman has to sell. It is his stock in trade. He has a right to determine for himself what pri-e he will sell it for.”
ESSAY CONTEST OPENED All Pupils in Secondary Schools to Take Part. Bn r nite<l Tress BLOOMINGTON, Ind., Oct. 2 —An essay contest, open to all pupils in the secondary schools, will be.* held soon tinder the auspices of the extension division of Indiana Unlive*’, slty and the Indiana Society for Vocational Education, it was announced today: The subject of the essay is to be "How to Choose and How to Prepare for My Entire Future Vocation.” Manuscripts submitted must not be more than 500 words in length. The best essay will be selected from each county by the superintendent of schools for competition in a congressional district contest. The contest closes Nov. 14. Prizes will be given. Essays should be mailed to Z. M. Smith, Suite director of vocational education, Indianapolis. ODD FELLOW REUNION laical Lodge Will Journey to Greensburg Sunday. Homecoming and reunion will be held Sunday at the Odd Fellow home at Greenshurg. Charles O. Thomas of Bloomington, grand master, will speak. A picnic dinner will be served at noon. Marion County Odd Fellow and Rebekah lodges will go to the home in an automobile caravan forming at Senate Ave. arid Washington St., at 8 a. m. The procession will move east on Washington St. and south on the Brookville Rd. The band will head the procession in a truck. DRAIN GOES TO CAPITAL New Legion Commander to Attend Indication There. James A. Drain, new national com mander of the American Legion, with his wife, left today for Washington, D. C., where he will attend rdicatlon of a memorial to the Ist Division of A. E. F. Saturday. Drain was ordnance officer In this division in France during the World War. Drain will meet with the board of directors of the American Legion Weekly In New York Monday, and will be back in Indianapolis Tues day. Mrs. Drain will remain in Washington for several weeks, closing her house and arranging to estab lish her home here.
DAWES WILL SPEAK G. O. P. Candidates to Make HalfDozen Talks in Indiana. fly United Press CHICAGO, Oct. 2.—Charles G. Dawes, Republican candidate for Vice President, will deliver* a halfdozen speeches in Indiana Wednesday on his way back from Missouri. His train is due in Terre Haute at 11:20 a. m.; In Brazil at 11:55; Limedale, 32:30; Crawfordsville, 1:30; Lafayette at 2:30 and Ft. Wayne at 5:45 p. m. All except the last will be rear-platform speeches. At Ft. Wayne Dawes will address a theater meeting. RARE RUG EXHIBIT OPEN St. Louis Collector Displays PropHrty at Aft Institute. An exhibit of 106 oriental rugs, property of James F. Ballard, collector, St. Louis, opens to the public today at the John Herron Art Institute. Members of the Art Association of Indianapolis attended a private showing Wednesday at which Ballard gave an, account of the collection. He left immediately for the Orient on another collecting tour. The collection will be on display for several weeks. None of the rugs are for sale. Drug Store Fired on Police have failed to obtain a clew to the firer of the shot that crashed through the transom, struck the wall and dropped at the feet of Norman H. Dean, druggist, while he was filling a prescription at Sixteenth St. and Central Ave. Burglar Takes Shotgun A burglar used a pass key to enter the home of C. J. Roach, 2712 N. Meridian St., and took a shotgun valued at SSO and an overcoat. Within two weeks thieves have taken fifty copper bath trays used by chemists at 902 E. Market St., according to Edward F. Wagner. He valued them at SSO. Speed Blamed for Crash A warrant charging speeding was filed by Edward H. Young, 45, of 5429 Hibben Ave., who alleges that his auto was struck and overturned onto the sidewalk at 5260 E. Washington St., when struck by a truck driven by Ben Lowden, 30, of 62 Coffey St.
SCHEARER IS SENTENCED Judge Anderson Gives Tell City Cashier Five-Year Term. Alphonse Schearer, 32, former cashier of the Tell City, Ind. National Bank, will be taken to Leavenworth, Kan., soon to begin his fiveyear term in Federal Prison for embezzling about $30,000 in cash and Liberty bonds. Schearer pleaded guilty Judge A. B. Anderson late Wednesday and was sentenced to five years on two counts in the indictment, to run concurrently. Schearer took the money in September 1921, and was a fugitive three years. He gave himself up Sept. 3 to United States Marshal Linus P. Meredith.
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CHINESE TOWN BURNED Four, Charged With Starting J’ire, Captured and Shot, By United Press LONDON, Oct. 2. —Incendiaries Tired -and partially destroyed the village of Lotien on the Liuho front, according to the Daily Mail’s Shanghai correspondent. Four of the incendiaries were captured and summarily shot. i Chekiang headquarters attributed the outrage to agents from Kiangsu province. A lull Jn the fighting was reported from all fronts today.
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THURSDAY, OCT. % 199
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