Indianapolis Times, Volume 36, Number 160, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 November 1924 — Page 3

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3 PERSONS HELD ON CHARGES OF MURDERING TWO Man and Woman, Both Colored, Are Shot to Death, Two colon?,! persons, a man and woman, are in the city morgue today, murdered. Two men and one woman are held at the city prison without bond chanted with murder. Whisky is held responsible for both deaths. lieutenants Schubert and Jones anil Sergeants Tooley. Volderauer, Partlett and O'Connor and squads spread a dragnet over the northwest section of the city and cleared up the murder of Mrs. Ovie Hartwell, colored, address unknown, but thought to be 314 X. Senate Ave„ according to Willard (Willie* Butler, 27. of 314 X. Senate Ave., charged with murder, and Alexander (brother! Butler. 35. of 314 X. Senate Ave.. charged with accessory to the murder. Two men and six women, ail colored, are held as vagrants for witnesses. Police said Miss Hartwell, asked her sister. Hortense Hartwell. 22, colored, 325 KUsworth CORNS Lift Off-No Pain! Doesn't hurt one bit' Drop a little "Freezone” on an aching corn, instantly that corn stops hurting, then shortly you lift it light off with fingers. Your druggist sells a tiny brittle of "Freezone" for a few cents, sufficient to remove every hard corn, soft corn, or corn between the toes, and the foot calluses, without soreness or irritation. —Advertisement. STOP ITCHING ECZEMA Penetrating. Antiseptic Zemo Will Help Yon Never mind hew often vert have tried and failed, yon ran stop burning, itching K< zema quickly by applying Zemo. In a short time usually every trace ..f Eczema. Tetter. Pimpies. Ka“h. Blackheads and similar skin diseases will be removed. For '-Faring the =k!n and making it vigorously healthy, always tme Zi-mo. the penetrating, antiseptic liquid It is the one dependable treatment for skin trout,les of a!! kinds. Trial hoftle. ."„v : large sire. Zemo Soap, antiseptic and heaiing, 25e. All druggists—Ad vertinenient. Fine for Lumbago Mnsterole drives pain away and brings in its place debb-ious -<>. .thing comfort. Just rub it in gently. It is a clean, white ointment, made with oil of mustard. It w ill imt blister like the old-fashioned mustard plaster. TO MOTHERS: Musterole is also marie in milder form for babies and small children.

A-k for Children'** Mutterolr. BT> & Bsc In jr.rs & tubes; * hospital size. 53 Bottfr Than a Mustard Plaster —Advertisement Had Lest All Hope eg Ever Being Well Read story cf the fight for health and final fTpaßSgf' victory as told s Wt^by Mr*. James A. Hall, Box 31, Nor- ,*if ris City, Illinois, I J! afej “About twelve years ago my health failed. I could not eat anything without suffering. I had heartburn, sour stomach, palpitation of the heart, smothering spells, pains in my back and sides and a cough almost like consumption. Nothing helped me. I grew worse and was able to sit up only part of the time. I had lost all hope of ever being any better when someone gave me a Pe-ru-na book. The book described my case so truly that I began to take Pe-ru-na. After two and a half bottles I could eat without suffering and improved from then on. I took eight bottles and felt like anew person. That was fourteen years ago. So many diseases are due to catarrh that I think Pe-ru-na the greatest family medicine in the world.” For more- than half a century Pe-ru-na has been doing just such work as this. Send 4 cents postage to the PE-RU-NA COMPANY, Columbus, Ohio, for a booklet on catarrh. Pe-ru-na is for sale EVERYWHERE Tablets or Liquid

Baby’s Tooth Aches

fiOBEHT ELLER. STRONG-ARMED ATHLETE FORMERLY OF GEORGETOWN VNIYMSITY TEAMS. IS PULLING AN ACHING TOOTH FOR "FRITZ." JaBY HLE PH AXT APPEARING IN WASHINGTON (D. C. > THEATERS.

StL for money she owed her. Hortense refused. Willie Butler, sweetheart of Hortense. beat Ovie over The head with a gun and others interfered. Alexander Butler warded them off with a knife, police said, when Miss Hartwell was shot. Deputy Coroner Tooles. colored, said she was shot in the head. Willie Butler told police the gun was accidentally discharged. One witness told police he was at the house before the shooting, but because whisky was used he sensed trouble and left. Wife Kills Husband Police said Mrs. lrena Walden, it*, colm-ed, 2422 Parker Ave.. killed her husband. Hersehel. 2*l. because h* tried to force her to sell liquor. She said he came home and began to beat her, when she told him she had not sol 1 any liquor. She and her daughter went to her father's home <; 2430 Parker Ave. Her husband followed her and broke the front do ,r in. she .-aid. Mis. Walden said he had a knife and cried. "1 am going to kill all of you." She fire,! one shot, which struck him in the head. Police sod .ill details of her story cheeked up, and when Coroner Paul F Robms ui investigated he found h<- knife clutched in Walden's hand. Woman Is Sought Search is l>eing made for a colored woman who is alleged to have stai U and Robert Flenoigh. 22. colored, 516 Myrtis S r . Martin Douglas, colored. 621 Indiana Ave.. told police Flenoigh run to him on Blackford St,, near Michigan St., and said he had been stabbed. He took him to the Providence Hospital, 769 Indiana Ave. Flenoigh told police he met th- woman and had an argument. EXPLOSION FATAL

TO THREE PROBED Nine Others Seriously Hurt: in Blast at Postoffice, 81l I nitr<l PrfKS GRAND RAPIDS, Mich., Nov. 13. —Postal inspectors ar* en route hero i today t<> investigate explosion at the ; local postoffiee late Wednesday, in [ which three persons were killed. ; nine seriously injured and a score 1 bruised. The explosion was on the loading docks of the building and authorities ' believe a dynamite Ismih was used betters and parcels were strewn | about and several mail trucks d<stroyed. One truck was lodged on | top of a three-story building All j victims were postal employes. TWO YOUNG GIRLS GONE Mother of One Relieves She PLas Eloped With Youth. Mrs. Marfa Walters, 1428 Blaine Ave, told police she feared her daughter, Hazel Walters, 15, missing from ht?r home, ran away with a | young man. Mrs. Walters wants j both arrested if found. She said her I daughter has blue eyes, light hair and a fair complexion, and was wearing a brown hat and sweater. Mamie Eastres, 16, of 904 W. I Tenth St-, is missing. Ernest Eas- ! ires, the father, said the girl left home Wednesday morning for TechI nical High School. She was angry, he said, because her mother had whipped her Tuesday night. BIBLE TO BE SUBJECT Men’s Huh Will Hear I)r. E. J. I iood.speed. Dr. Edgar J. Goodspeed will speak i on his translation of the New Testaj ment following a dinner given by | the Men’s Club of the First Presby- ; terian Church. Delaware and E. Six- ; teenth St., at 6:30 p. m. Friday at 1 the church. Eecture will be free to j the public. Dr. Goodspeed had more than 4,000 I old manuscripts to draw upon in his j translation while translators of the i King Janies version had about forty. Testament is written in modern lanj guage. Some famous old Bibles and j manuscripts will bo exhibited. Garbage Collector Hurt Charles Payne, Belmont Ave. and Morris St., helper on a city garbage | train, was seriously injured today I by Tin auto driven by Charles Mc- | Oarty. 2516 Southeastern Ave., when I he walked out from behind a trailer ! at Keystone and Southeastern Aves. j McCarty was slated and Payne was | sent to the city hospital. OVER 69 YEARS OF SUCCESS

DRIVE FOR MERIT SCOUTS leaders Want to Exceed Court of Honor Record. "Every first-class scout merit Scout by December,” is the slogan adopted bv Indianapolis scoutmasters. East court of honor this year will be held Dec. 10. "We need 164 rfo equal the total last year, which was 1.738. and expect to exceed that by at least 100,” said Scout Chief F. O. Belzer. Monthly scoutmasters’ meeting will be held Tuesday night at troop No. S2, headquarters. North Park Christian Church, Kenwood Ave and Twenty-Ninth St.

j cially prepared for Infants in arms and Children ail To avoid imitations, always look for the signature of directions on each pack are. Physicians everywhere recommend it.

Best Materials&Worßrnanship Quality Shoe Repairing at Lowest Prices in the City! Men’s Half Soles .75 c Women’s Half Soles .... 50< Rubber Heel3 35e While You Wait Service if Desired THRIFT SHOE STORE MERCHANTS BANK BLOG.-DOWN STAIR* Meridian and Washington Streets

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BANDITS FAILED ’ IN BANK ROBBERY AT STILESVILLE | Police Here Watch Roads for ! Men—Safe Resists Torch._ —No Booty, While information leads to believe .that bandits who entered the lloo- ; sier State Bank at Stllesville. Ind., headed west instead of east, police here are watching roads into this city for trace of the men. Elovd McClelan, bank cashier, noi titled police at 4 a. m. that the | bandits had broken into the bank, land with two acetylene torches j burned the combination off of the j safe. They failed to gain entrance ‘to the inner compartment, and left without loot. While Edward McGuire, 4010 Coli lege Ave.. and family were away, ! thieves entered the house and took jewelery valued at $l3O and $5.5*) in I money. | Miss Myrtle Nicholson, 334 X. RanI dolph St., told police a thief entered her room by way of an alley window land stole a coat valued at SIOO. j The O'Brien Motors Company, 1037 jX. Meridian St., reported a bolt of [upholstering valued at sls taken | from a washroom. | Twenty-five gallons of nil. valued !at S2O. was stolen from the garage of Eugene Sheehan, 2‘Jll X. Delaware St. A brief case was reported ’stolen from the auto of F. M. Scheid, 3541 X Capitol Ave . parked at Virginia Ave., near Washington St. Russell Adams, 1539 Barth Ave., parked his auto Nov. 11 at Butler College campus and an overcoat valued at $25 was taken from it

CORN CONDITION POOR Noblesville Milling Company Holds I'p Price Fixing. By Times Special NOBLESVILLE, Ind., Nov. 13. The Noblesville Milling Company, one of the largest bu/ers of grain in the central States, has not yet fixed a price for new corn on account of the wet, chaffy condition of the crop. Manager C. B. Jenkins does not believe the corn will be ready for the market before ten days or two weeks. LIGHTS OUT ON CAR Motorist Charges Interurban Operated Without Warning. An interurban running without lights was blamed today by Frank Brofluf, 2839 N. Talbott Ave., for the accident in which his car was badly damaged at Thirteenth St., and College Ave., Wednesday night. Brofluf said he did not see the interurban when he drove across the tracks. Ben Harold, 537 E. Eleventh St., motorman, is said to have admitted to police the headlights on his car were not working and had been flashing off and on. He was slated. Brofluf was sent to the city hospital with arm injuries.

FRIDAY BARGAIN DAY! No Phone, Mail or C. O. D . Orders on Friday Items

The Greatest Dress Event of the Season — Our Sale of Silk and Wool Dresses

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♦Lamp Department Specials

30 Bridge Shades Silk bridge lamp shades in gold, blue and rose; r„T 30 <£9 QC each 12 Boudoir Lamps Ivory boudoir lamps, complete with art glass H*:,.*4.25 25 Bridge Shades Decorated parch ment bridge shades in a number of good - rj Pk, SI.ZS

SI.OO Sateen Costume Slips Women’s costume slips of good quality sateen in black and a number of the wanted colors; deep pleated flounces i trimmed with contrasting colors. Excep- m 3& ~ tional values. if (Goldstein’s — Second Floor.)

Children’s Lace Shoes for Friday \ * \\j Children’s servI iceable brown lace Ip j| .1)5/ I shoes, with heavy I stitclidown sewed JL soles and rubber heels; wide, comfortable toes; /V sizes 8% to 2, Womens Felt Slippers Women’s felt house slippers, in colors, with heavy \ rSllMiSllft padded moccasin 4P* a s trimmed, with pom S Sizes 3 to 8. (Goldstein’s —Street Floor.)

INTERURBAN CAR KILLSFOUR MEN Hunters Die When Auto Stalls on Crossing. Bp United Press BRAZIL, Ind., Nov. 13.—A speeding interurban car struck an auto near here Wednesday night, killing four men instantly. The dead: George Fared, 60, Carl Fared, 28, John Penman, 32, William Yocum, 21. All lived near Brazil. The men were starting on a coon hunt and were driving down a private road. It is believed their auto stalled on the crossing. The interurban was behind schedule and was speeding nearly sixty miles an hour it is said. It hurled the auto 100 feet. Yocum’s body was caught beneath the wheels of the interurban and so badly mangled, identification was difficult. Five hunting dogs in the auto were killed. Traffic was held up most of the night while a wrecking crew cleared the tracks.

Our Former sls and sl9 Qualities Materials Are Colors Are Poiretsheen, Y Black, Navy, Silk Velvet, Brown,Cocoa, Wool Flannel, Penny, Rose - Satin Canton wood and and Hairlines Green YVo wish to emphasize the fact that these are HIGHER f FtK h!> DRESSES—not to lie confused with below standard basement merchandise usually sold at this price. Only through the eo-operation of several large manufacturers are we able to sell these dresses at so low a price—Sll— a price never before associated with dresses of this t.vpe. Scores of strikingly lovely dresses for your selection—dresses for every type of woman and for every occasion. Stunning tailored or elaborately trimmed models. (Goldstein's—Second Floor !

1 Desk Lamp Green leaded glass desk lamp that n r sold at $18; / U for Friday. 2 Desk Lamps Adjustable desk lamps, complete with mica shade; r'..,. $7.50 3 Mica Shades Genuine mica shades for table or junior lamps; reg--5^514.75

(Goldstein’s —Fourth Floor.)

FAULTY SEWER COSTLY La Porte Hotel Must Pay Singer for Damaged Gowns. By Times Special LA PORTE, Ind., Nov. 13.—1 t cost the Wolfe Hotel Company, operators of the Rumely Hotel here, just $1,650, exclusive of attorney fees.

BETTER THAN WHISKEY FOR COLDS AND FLU

The sensation of the drug trade is Aspironal, the two-minute cold and | cough reliever, authoritatively guaranteed by the laboratories; tested, approved and most enthusiastically endorsed by the highest authorities, and proclaimed by the people as ten times as quick and effective as whiskey, rock and rye, or any other cold |and cough remedy they have ever ! tried. All drug stores are supplied with i the wonderful elixir, so all you have | to do is to step into the nearest drug \ store, hand the clerk half a dollar for a bottle of Aspironal and tell j him to serve you two teaspoonfuls. I With your watch in your hand.

For Friday! Sale of HATS <Jk 79c jgmjL " r Velvets VP A special lot of women’s T and misses’ hats, taken from higher priced groups and marked for quick clearance. New, desirable models, while they last Friday 7UO (Goldstein’s—Second Floor.)

32-Inch “Red Seal” Gingham 32-Inch Red Seal dress ginghams in a large assortment of checks, plaids and g If Ifc plain colors; desirable mill lengths of our M regular 29c and 35c quality, yard, w

Quilt Batts Quilt batts, open in a sheet; of pure white fluffy cotton, special for Friday, a roll Li/L Outing Flannel Y'ard-wide light and dark outing flannel; lengths suitable for sleeping garments or comfort linings; 1 ii^ yard IHC

3-Pound Comfort Batts Open in one large sheet, size 72x90 inches; __ _ fluffy white cotton, sufficient filling for a V gg> large size comfort; special, roll, / (Goldstein’s—Street Floor.)

because a sewer backed water into the hotel basement and ruined fancy dresses of Mrs. Elizabeth Parker in July, 1923. The dresses were stored in trunks in the basement. The city of La Porte was originally a defendant in the suit, but was ruled out on a demurrer. The case will be appealed.

take the drink at one swallow and call for your money back in two minutes if you cannot feel the distressing symptoms of your cold fad* ing away like a dream, within the time limit. Don’t be bashful, for all druggists invite you and expect you to try it. Everybody's doing it. Take the remainder of the bottle home to your wife and children, for Aspironal is by far the safest and most effective, the easiest to take and the most agreeable cold and cough remedy for children as well as adults. Quickest relief for catarrhal croup and children’s choking up at night.—Advertisement.

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“Hope” Muslin Yard wide bleached “Hope’’ muslin,; every piece stamped with the "Hope” trade- -.i mark; Friday | /■■- only, yard 1 £2C Dress Ginghams In attractive plaid and check patterns; fast colors; useful dress lengths; 27 inches 4n 1 / wide; spe- | / l/n/ cial, yard. ■ iu /

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