Indianapolis Times, Volume 36, Number 134, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 October 1924 — Page 6
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ANOTHER CHAPTER IN WALB-BENTLEY DISPUTEJ’ENNED Bob’s Chairman D( nies Settle Will Mail Out La Follette Circulars, A. F. Bentley, La Follette State chairman, Is one letter ahead of Clyde A. Walt), Republican State chairman in the Walb-Bentley-Settle controversy today, regarding Settle, Indiana Farm Bureau president political affiliations. Bentley answers Walb again: Your letter to me concerning my relations -with President William H. Settle of the Indiana Farm Bureau Federation misrepresents the facts. I think you know this. Your actions seem to me a deliberate insult to Mr. Settle, to every officer of the Indiana Farm Bureau Federation and to every member of it. "It is not true that Mr. Settle has consulted me. Denies Circular Story "It is not true that I will have, in any respect whatever, the aid of the Indiana Farm Bureau Federation in distributing circulars. "I propose to get these circulars distributed all over the State by the aid of our splendid and complete organization in every county in Indiana of volunteers for good government against a party of misrule and misrepresentation, of which your letter is a fair example. Tribute to Settle "I have known Mr. Settle for a long time. I admire him greatly. I think he is at the present date the most influential man in Indiana on account of his high purpose and selfsacrificing work in the interest of our national prosperity. But, despite my personal acquaintance and regard for him, I have only seen him three or four times since I came to Indianapolis in July for this work, and that only for a moment or two In the most casual way. He has avoided all contact with our political activity as an obligation to his office. "I again thank you for your continued favor in giving publicity to the breadth and solidity of the La Follette movement in this State." COUNCIL AT WEST BADEN Indiana To Be Hostess For MidBiennial Meeting. The Indiana Federation of Women’s Club is beginning work on the program for the mid-biennial Council of the General Federation which will be held in West Baden in June 1925. The Oklahoma Federation, whose Invitation for the mid-bienial meeting had to be withdrawn, will make an offer for the 1928 meting it was said by Dr. Margaret Sanger, State president of the Oklahoma Federation.
Gone, but Not Forgotten
Automobiles reported stolen belong to: Joe Frank. 927 Union St., Ford, from 825 S. Meridian St. Oscar Dale Robertson, Bloomington, Ind., Ford, from Market St. and Senate Ave. Fred A. Goebbs. 1622 S. Delaware fit., Ford, from Georgia and Maryland Sts. W. G. Proctor, 2634 Cornell Ave., Ford, from Capitol Ave. and Washington St. Frank Carlson, 220 W. North St., Ford, from Senate Ave. and North St Roy Anderson, 346 N. West St., Ford, from West and Vermont Sts. W. E. Dakefield, Bridgeport, Ind., Ford, from Allejgheney and Muskingum Sts. Schultz, 171 W. Arizona St., Ford, from Georgia and Maryland Sts. i Charles V. Sears. Danville, Ind., Hupmobile, from Illinois and Ohio Sts. BACK HOME AGAIN Automobiles reported found by police belong to: Earl A. Yeager, Lincoln Hotel, Ford, at Walnut St. and Capitol Ave. Uoyd Gray, 2607 Burton Ave., Ford, at 24 Kentucky Ave. Charles Root, 411 E. Thirty-sev-enth St., Wills-St. Clair, In rear of 632 N. California SL Dudley Gallehue, 5838 E. Washington SL, Hudson, at Valley Ave. and Hazel St. H. C. Eastes, Lafayette, Ind., Ford, at Rural and Washington Sts. Bernard Swails. 1543 Spann Ave., Oldsmobile, at 610 N. Illinois St. Business Man Dies By Timet Special ATTICA. Ind., Oct. 13—Funeral services will be held Tuesday for George A. Pence. 50, business man. who died suddenly Saturday. HOLDS Break a Cold Right Up with “Pape’s Cold Compound” tTake two tablets every three hours until three doses are taken. The first dose always gives relief. The second and third doses completely break up the cold. Pleasant and safe to take. Contains no quinine or opiates. Millions use "Pape’s Cold -Compound.” Price.) thir-ty-five cents. Druggists guarantee it. —Advertisement.
Social Activities ENTERTAINMENTS WEDDINGS BETROTHALS
r_ 'I R. AND MRS. MYRON D. TAYLOR, 2132 Park Ave., l iTA l invited guests for three tables of bridge Monday night, honoring Miss Eleanor Taylor and William G. Albershardt of Tipton, Ind., whose marriage will take place Wednesday at the home of the bride's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Carl A. Taylor, 1000 Park Ave. Guests were Miss Taylor, Miss Mae Albershardt, Miss Elsie Brandt, Miss Louise Wills, Mr. Alberschardt, James George, Heber Williams and Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Williams. Mr. and Mrs. Carl A. Taylor will entertain Tuesday night at dinner for their daughter and Mr. Albershardt. * * • Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Edwards Peckham, Pittsburgh, Pa., are visiting Mrs. Peckham’s mother, Mrs. O. A. Woody, Canterbury apartments. * * * Mrs. Warner L. Schmidt of Cincinnati, Ohio, is the house guest of Mrs. W. H. Blodgett, 2127 N. Capitol Ave. • * • Mrs. Oscar Sputh of Chicago is visiting Mrs. Carl B. Sputh, 532 E. Thirty-Second St., for a week before going to Cincinnati for a visit. ♦ * * Mrs. Blanche G. Williams, 2854 N. Talbott Ave., will be hostess for the Writer's Club, Tuesday night. Cornelia Bell will lead the discussion of an original story by one of the members. * • * The art department of the Woman’s Department Club opened the season with an exhibition tea Monday afternoon at the clubhouse. Mrs. Floyd White is general chairman of the monthly exhibits. Mrs. H. B. Burnet was chairman of the C'*ober exhibit. • * • Members of the Indianapolis Woman’s Rotary Club met Monday for luncheon and a business meeting at the Claypool. * * * The opening of the year for the Monday Club was marked with a tea Alonday afternoon at the Caroline Scott Harrison chapter house, 824 N. Pennsylvania St. Mrs. O. M. McAlexander, president was hostess.
One of the pretty fall weddings was that of Miss Rosina Kistner, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles C. Kistner, 2424 Broadway, who married James E. Maxwell Saturday night at the home of the bride’s parents. The Rev. H. C. Winders read the double ring ceremony. Miss Florence Jeup, violinist, accompanied by Miss Dorothy Frazee of Rushville, played the bridal music. L. Duncan Lloyd of Chicago sang. Ribbon bearers were Misses Harriett Rutherford, Oakland, 111.; Miss Minnie Adams of Auburn, 111.; Miss Mary Maxwell. Plainfield; Mrs. Karl Kistner, Miss Justine Pritchard and Miss Jean Dodds. Mrs. Willis Vermillion and Miss Louise Prichard of Champaign, 111., were bridesmaids and Mrs. L. Duncan Lloyd, Chicago, matron of honor. Miss Harriett Kistner, sister of the bride, was maid of honor. Ushers were Karl W. Kistner. Charles Maxwell, L. Duncan Lloyd and Willis Vermillion. Keith Holloway of Colfax, Ind., was best man. The bride was given in marriage by her father. She was gowned In white flat crepe beaded and fashioned in straight lines with a court train from the shoulders over which hung a tulle veil. She carried a bride’s bouquet of roses and valley lilies. Mr. and Airs. Alaxwell will be at home after Nov. 1 at 2410 N. Talbott Ave. * * # Miss Gladys Marie Blake, daughter of Mrs. James, 4348 Park Ave.,- became the bride of Ambrose A. Gasper Saturday with the Rev. Morris O’Connor, officiating at the St Joan of Arc Church. Mrs. Joseph Gallagher .organist played the bridal music and accompanied Aiiss Cyrilla Tuite, soloist and William Thorp, violinist. Attendants were Miss Ruth Blake, sister of the bride, maid of honor. Miss Violet Topniiller, Aiiss Helen Houppert, Aiiss Edna Stucker and Aiiss Loretta Thale, bridesmaids. Little Miss Frances Holies, was flower girl. Ushers were Matthew Samulowitz, Gene Thale, Lawrence Verbarg, LeClouser and the 4 best man was Herbert Gasper. Air. and Airs. Gasper will be at home after Nov. 15 at the Seville Apts. • * Air. and Mrs. Stephen S. Yoemar, 527 E. Thirty-Second St., have started on an a round-the-world trip. * * • Airs. Charles S. £rosley, 1437 N. Delaware St., accompanied by Miss Fcrba AlcDaniel, are in Atlantic City for several weeks. • * The Indiana School Women’s Club will meet for the annual breakfast Friday morning at the Severin. Reservations may be made with Miss Josephine Bauer, 713 E. TwentyFirst St. • • • Queen Esther Auxiliary to the O. E. S. will have a rummage sale Tuesday in the 900 block on Indiana Ave. Donations may be made through Mrs. Maude Huey. * • • Aiiss Estella Farrell will be hostess for the Alpha Sigma Delta Sorority Wednesday night at the home of her sister, Mrs. Ambrose Hornberger, 1129 E. Kelly St. * * * The George H. Chapman W. R. C., No. 10, will leave early Wednesday morning for Greencastle to attend the Second District convention of the Woman’s Relief Corps. * * • Lodge. No. 297, Auxiliary to the B. R. T. will have a public card party Tuesday afternoon in Trainmen’s Hall, 1002 E. Washington St. • * * The Tuesday Eucher Club will meet Tuesday in the hall at 216\i N. Meridian St. The Druids announced a card party for Monday night in the hall, 36 W. Washington St.
Hostess
fKifiyjak V' ,■:&r *-< Wm7 3
MRS. E. AIAY HAHN Mrs. S. May Hahn, 2258 N. Capitol Ave., is president of the Alarion County chapter of American War Mothers, who with the Founders’ chapter, will be hostess for the State convention of War Mothers of Indiana Tuesday and Wednesday at the Spink-Arms. Baptists Meet By Times Special ANDERSON. Ind., Oct. 13.—Preconvention conferences of pastors was the activity of the ninety-second annual convention of the Indiana Baptists’ Association which formally opqns here Tuesday. Attendance at the convention is expected to reach 1.000.
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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.
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
c hngle^
LETTER FROM JOHN ALDEN PRESCOTT TO SYDNEY CARTON, CONTINUED my dear boy,” continued my father-in-law, “I would not think qf saddling my great business on Karl Whitney. It would absolutely submerge him. He couldn’t possibly swim out. It would shorten his life as well as make it unbearable as long as he lived. ' “You, John, are different. You like to achieve. You’re aggressive, arid a little bit vain and conceited. You’re apt to think that your way is trie only way. You will take up the responsibilities that I am handing over to you and glory in them. "I have made you the executor of my will, and named you as manager of the steel plant. Because of this I have arbitrarily fixed your salary, until the death of my wife, at least, at fifty thousand a year. To Alice, my wife, will be given the income of one-third of all my .investments. The home is already hers, as is the camp in the Adirondacks. “The other two-thirds will be divided into thirds, one of which will go to Alice, one to Leslie, and onethird to little Jack. Alice really does not need any of my wealth, as Karl has probably settled a million dollars on her —he told me he was going to when he asked me to give him my youngest daughter. However, that seems to me to be about the best arrangement 1 can make now. “Os course, you understand 10 per cent of my income has always been put aside for charity, and this will go on, as long as the business is held in trust, which will be until the death of my wife. “My boy. I am asking a gTeat deal of you. I am asking you to work for your wife and your child —or children, I might say—because
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at the death of my wife, her share will be distributed between my grandchildren.” There, Syd, you see it’s all cut out for me, and I think it is something much better than I deserve, for of course I shall accept it. I wrote you in my last letter that I would not take over the management while Mr. Hamilton lived, but the whole thing has a very different aspect now. Mr. Hamilton certainly showed his ability to judge men. He knew I couldn’t work with Karl Whitney. He says Karl Whitney is even a better man than I, and I think perhaps he is, but if he had put us both on as executors it is very probable Alice would have influenced her husband to hamper me on every side. I know the less I have to do with that young woman the better it will be for all concerned. I’m very glad to have Mrs. Atherton with me, for you know she worked for Mr. Hamilton and practically did his advertising. I will put her in charge of that part of it when I am manager. It looks as though I were just waiting for dead men’s shoes, Syd, but I know I am only doing what Mr. Hamilton would wish me to do —preparing for what he as well as I know is inevitable. I’ll close this letter now, however, and write you again after you have told me what you think of It all. JACK. , (Copyright, 1924. NEA Service, Inc.) NEXT: letter from John Alden Prescott to Mrs. Sally Atherton. John W. Stroll Dead. Indianapolis friends today mourned the death of John W. Stroh, 83, retired lumber dealer of Crawfordsville, Sunday. Mr. Stroh was widely known here. Funeral services will be held Tuesday at 2 p. m.; at Crawfordsvllle. Burial there.
WEEKLY Business and Industrial NEWS
COZY GLOW’ HAS VARIETY OF OSES Two Types of Heater Fill Family Needs, Cozy Glow has become the popular type of heater in thousands of homes because it is for every member of the family—grandma in heA easy chair, for the children's play room, baby and his bath, for drying mother s hair —and many other uses such as sick rooms and for the bath. Wherever there is a chill to be chased Cozy Glow will do It. Its perfect distribution of widening heat rays covers a tall person six feet away. Cozy Glow is a portable heater sold by Merchants Heat and Light Company. Cozy Glow Jr. embodies the same general principles as the Cozy Glow except that) it is somewhat smaller —and lighter in its construction. Both types are provided with decorative bronze finish base, which harmonizes with every room in the homo. They are light in weight and can be easily carried to any room in the house.
AMATEURS KNOW ‘SMITTY’KNOWS Knowledge of Sports Gives House Its Reputation, The Smith. Hassler & Sturm Cos. sporing goods store has claim to the majority of the amateur trade of Indianapolis. The reason Is that the amateur athletes of Indianapolis like the policy of the Smith, Hassler & Sturm Cos. and their salesmen. Always congenial, first-class service is given by salesmen who know their business. Smith, known to the boys as “Smltty,” Is always ready to give patrons the best service in his power. Carl Mattern, the football specialist of the store, sells i equipment while he discusses his experiences while visiting different | football camps throughout the qountry. , Hassler and Sturm, the other I owners, also take an active part In i the selling of the store’s goods. Any amateur can tell you about I “Smitty’s.”
Buying and Selling a Business of Any Kind Groceries and Rooming Houses and Restaurants CONSULT US Your best interest will be protected. * O. E. TREACE 510 Lombard Bldg. MA in 6280.
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JV/Tartha Lee’s Column
Youthful Sweetheart Dear Miss Dee: I have been going with a girl 15 years old for a year and a half. I love her very much, and think she loves me a little. She has been acting rather qneerly. T do not think she is betas ’treated right at home. We used to go to shows anu other places of amusement, but she does not want to any more. I would marry her in a minute if she would consent and was at the proper age. I have money enough to give her a home she will be proud of. X would be, too. because my home was broken up by a man. This girl has a girl friend who does not like me and tried to get her to sow “wild oats,” but my girl uses rood judgment. Wouldn't you prefer to have this girl as your wife, if you were in my place? A WANDERING BOY TONIGHT. Your wanting to protect the girl you love is very beautiful. But don’t let it lead you into an unwise marriage. It is better for you to watch over her as best you can, under present conditions, and wait for several years before thinking of marriage. Fiancee Acts Strangely Mrs. Lee: For the past three-years I have been keeping steady company with a girl I dearly love. Circumstances compel me to work away from home and I see her very little. She has promised to marry me in not many months: yet every time I see her I notice a change in her attitude. I am at a loss to understand this. JACK. Ask your fiancee what is wrong, and offer to release her from her promise of marrlagfe. From her answer, whether she accepts or rejects your offer, you can tell whether you are merely imagining tilings or her attitude really is changing. TROUBLE: Three chances are enough for any man. Your husband has had these, and has shown you his words of repentance were forgotten almost as soon as uttered. Besides, the influence of such a stepfather over your daughter cannot be good. So I think your “brighter future” lies away from him.
SELL BUSINESSES 10 FIT CUSTOMERS Brokerage Company Deals Only With 'Going Concerns,’ Selling a business to fit the customer, just like you’d sell him a pair of shoes, is the secret of the business brokerage of O. E. Treace & Cos. June 20. Treace, celebrated the twentieth year of his business career. In that length of time, said Treace, “you get to knowing what people want.” There is no more use of a man keeping right on in a losing business than there is in a lawyer trying to mike a success at race track driving. A man, once he has the idea he wants a business with his name on the door, never just gets over it. In the month of April this company sold ninety-seven businesses. They deal only in “going businesses” not run down hopeless white horses. And they take a personal interest in the customer as well as the man who wants to sell. They have had the same persons come back as many as fifteen times to buy or sell or both. There are nine up and coming salesmen representing this concern in Indianapolis. The officers are in 510 Lombard Bidg.
Safe Deposit Boxes Bankers Trust Company
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SAFETY MEETING TO OPEN TUESDAY Public Invited to Grade Crossing Conference, More than one hundred railroad officials, State officials and representatives of civic and motor organizations will gather in the House of Representatives chamber, Statehouse, Tuesday morning for Indiana’s first grade-crossing safety conference, to last two days. Frank T. Singleton, public service commissioner, is in charge. Singleton Invited the public, but pointed out that, because of the magnitude of the assembly, discussion would come only from delegates. He said, however, that proposed resolutions might be presented by any one to the resolutions committee, composed of Dixon H. Bynum, chairman of industrial board; Arch V. Grossman, Rotary international board; B. C. Byers, general superintendent, New York Central Lines; James R. Riggs, Farm Federation Bureau; O. B. lies, Kiwanis Club; Mayor Ell F. Seebirt, South Bend, and Walter Pritchard, Hoosier Motor Club. Woman Dies From Burns Bu Times Special ANDERSON. Ind.. Oct. 13.—Mrs, John Davis, 31, is dead from burns received three weeks ago when her clothing was fired. She had been unconscious since the accident. He Bootlegs; She Sues By Times Special SHELBYVILLE, Ind., Oct. 13. Because she said her husband and his father bootleg. Mrs. Margaret T. Linville has sued for divorce.
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MONDAY, OCT. 13,1924
BROWN MAKES DENIAL Chairman State Tax Board Refutes Democratic Committee Statements. John J. Brown, chairman Statdl tax board, has issued a bulletin nying statements alleged to have been made by the Democratic State committee that the present tax board spent $75,250 "to make taxes high in 1924,” while it cost the Democrats only $15,000 "to keep taxes low In 1916.” Brown said 1916 tax board expenses were actually $25,193 and the 1924 expenses, $66,911. He said the present board’s activities were 1,287 per cent greater than those of the 1916 board. “Halloween Stuff” Frank Millikan, 2122 N. Delaware St., returned home Sunday and found “Go to ” painted on his front windows. He told police today he could assign no motive. Police are seeking Halloween prankers. J COLOR IT NEW WITH 4 “DIAMOND DYES” Beautiful home dyeing and tinting is guaranteed with Diamond {T\. J-/ V. Dyes. Just dip if ‘A in cold water to !\i tint soft, delicate ' WHRmJ shades, or boil to II llYri dye rich, per- Jr manent colors. Each 15 cent V i |£pl package contains : directions so sim- u Hl™"* pie any woman fl can dye or tint lingerie, silks, bons, skirts, waists, dresses, coats, stockings, sweaters, draperies, coverings, hangings, everything new. Buy "Diamond Dyes”—no other kind —and tell your druggist whether the material you wish to color is wool or silk or whether it is linen, cotton, or mixed goods.—Advertisement.
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