Indianapolis Times, Volume 36, Number 206, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 January 1925 — Page 12
12
CONFERENCE ON HICKEY BILL IS ASKEDBY HOUSE Grand Jury Scope Change Proposed to Smooth Out Objections, . By C. A. RANDAU. Times Staff Correspondent. WASHINGTON, D. C., Jan. V.— Objecting to some of the Senate amendments to the Hickey bill providing for two Federal judges for Indiana, the House of representatiyes had asked for a conference on the bills. Conferes representing the two branches are expected to meet either late today or Thursday to iron out the conflicting points. Jt is now proposed by the House that the grand juries may be drawn front any part of the State in criminal cases in the discretion of judge and that grand juries sitting in one of the seven newly > created judicial districts may carry on investigation of a state-wide character. These changes are thought to be sufficient to overcome the objections that have been raised by those who feared it would be Impossible to get liquor case convictions in Gary and labor convictions in Terre Haute The Senate late Tuesday confirmed appointment of Judge A. B. Anderson of Indianapolis to the bench of the Circuit Court of Appeals at Chicago. Confirmation of appointment of Judge Robert C. Baltzell of Princeton, Ind., to succeed Anderson is before the Senate Judiciary Committee. Unless the cqmmittee meets specially action is not expected until Monday. Senator James E. Watson said he has not picked a man to succeed Homer Elliott, Indiana district attorney, whose resignation was submitted months ago. Fireman Killed In Wreck Bv Timet Svecial MICHIGAN CITY, Ind., Jan. 7. The fifth fatality in the last ten days on the Michigan, Central Railroad near here, was recorded today with the death of Frank Doyle, of Joliet, 111., fireman. He leaped when his locomotive crashed into a stock train. Engineer Edward Glossenger of Niles, Mich., was injured. AH! TASTELESS EPS! SALTS World’s .finest Physic now Pleasant as Lemonade o o Pure Epsom Salts has no gquaj j n medij EG, = cine for • constipation, j = biliousness, sick head- \ = n|Uj 5 ache. Doctors and • i Hit Mai nurses depend upon it ! | Mji v; because no other laxa;i I *| | tive acts so perfectly, ; i so harmlessly on the : \ like \ bowels. It never Li = gripes or overacts. * E psonade Salts” is pure Epsom Salts made pleasant with fruit derivative salts—nothing else. It tastes like sparkling lemonade and costs only few cents a package at any drugstore. Try It! ‘‘Epsonade Salts” is guaranteed by the American Epsom Association.—Advertisement.
SOME MIDDLE-AGED WOMEN ARE AILING ALL THE TIME Mrs. Ackerman and Mrs. Mayer Tell Women How Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound Helped Them at This Trying Period v
S'Nw. | iMRS. ELSIE ACKERMAN CONVOY. OHIO “Luring the Change of Life I was weak and run down and could hardly do my work. By reading your advertisements I found out about Lydia I£. Pinkhgm’s Vegetable Compound and it has straightened me right out and made me feel like a new woman. By the time I had laken eight bottles ! was ■!' • ould do my housework on the farm withoijt trouble. I recommended it to ml daughter-in-law after lei second jP>.by was bom and it difiL her a ■ pro Cur ..Id^fw^hl^had
A Puzzle a Day
irci —r.-vj i.'. i "iSiTHpyj —r&rTsa •••:: y.v ■>,. r.-: d‘W; rrr. *- 4 * ■rrr. ror 1 - rrr i‘--i t&l fM hif-lEa£.‘ Most checkerboards are 8 by 8. This one is 13 by 13. It is not intended for a game of checkers. The problem is to cut it into 11 smaller squares. The smallest may only contain one square, but, of course, the cuts must be made along the dividing lines between the squares. Can you produce the 11 squares? Yesterday’s answer: GRC CRT If the latter “E” is Inserted among the letters shown above, the following country and its 'dependent island will be revealed: GREECE—CRETE. RAILROAD VETERAN DIES Richard J. Shaw Succumbs to Long illness at Home Here. Railroad men today recalled years of association with Richard J. Shaw, 65, of 5641 Broadway, who died Tuesday following a long illness. He was general yar dm aster of the L. E. & W. Railroad seventeen years, and before that was with the Big Four Railroad. Mr. Shaw organized the Indianapolis Yardmasters Association, and was a charter member of i the Knights of Pythias Lodge. Surviving are the widow; two daughters, Mrs. Grover C. Robeson of Brooklyn, N. Y., and Mrs. J. Rex Copeland of Newark, N. J.; one son, J. A. Shaw; the mother, Mrs. A. D. Shaw; a sister, Mrs. Emma Maxwell, and a brother, Charles A. Shaw, all of Indianapolis. Funeral will be on Friday morning. BACK TO LEGISLATURE Marion County May Lose Blind School Site as Result. Location ot the State School for the Blind will be referred back to the General Assembly, which opens Thursday, Governor Eemmett F. Branch has announced. The Blirfd School site committee and Branch have been unable to agree on any of the sites suggested. It is probable that the same pressure will be brought that was exerted in the last session to locate the school In some other part of Indiana outside Marion County. CHILDREN ARE SOUGHT Mother Seeks Four Left in Indianapolis Asylum. Bv Timet Svecial BLOOMINGTON, Ind., Jan. 7. Mrs. Froney Perclfield Fitzpatrick, 930 N. Jackson St., here, has issued a State-wide appeal for aid 'in finding he* four children, from whom she has been separated for thirteen years. The children were placed In an Indianapolis orphan asylum. Since then trace of them has been lost. Their names are Lizzie, Andrews, Bell and Bari Perclfield. THREE SEEK CLEMENCY Local Persons Among Thirty-Nine Wanting Pardons. Three Marion County cases are among thirty-nine new applications for executive clemency to be heard by the State .pardon board at Its meeting next week. Five old cases will be reopened. , Marlon County cases: Frank Frolke, four months, State Farm and $1 and costs, conspiracy to defraud; Frank Pierce, five to fourteen years, robbery; Carl White, rive to fourteen years, robbery. Held Up by Three Men George Speckman, 1039 W. Michigan St., told police that three colored men held*im up at Bright and Michigan Sts., about 7 p. m., Tuesday and took |3, keys and a Watch.
taken one bottle she said to rne, ‘You won’t have to pay for it! It is helping me wonderfully!’ And she took three bottles of it. You can use my testimonial if you wish.”—Mrs. Elsie Ackerman, Cbnvoy, Ohio. Mrs. Mayer’s Experience Litchfield, Conn.—“l have given your medicine a fair trial (I am on my fifth bottle) and can truthfully say that it has helped me. lam at the Change of Life and was not able to sleep nights, had indigestion, palpitation of the heart, pains in my right and left sides (more so if I hurried), had a rapid beating in my left ear and dreaded to see night come. I felt smothered if I lay on my left side, I had gas dreadfully, at times felt as if someone had me by the throat, had hot waves through me and sometimes I would shake in spells of nervousness. I am taking Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound and I cannot praise it enough. I can say it does all It claims to do and I can recommend it to my | friends. I can sleep much better, the pains in niy sides are gone, I am not .so nervous, my digestion is mucs better and I very seldom have the hot waves. I must say that the Vegetable Compound is the best medicine for women's ills and I will answer letters from women asking
POLICE HUNT LOR 1 DRIVEROF AUTO Mrs, Albert Welchel Suffers Injuries, Police searched today for the driver of an auto that struck Mrs. Albert Welchel, 35, of 132 Vi W. Washington St., at 2200 E. Washington st., Tuesday night. Mrs. Welchel was sent to Deaconess Hospital with injuries about the head and body. Charles Tucker, 54, of 1517 Martin dais Ave., a city employe, was injuwd when struck by an auto at Meri<fflan and Washington Sts., when he was cleaning away snow. Mrs. Elias Schloss, 40, of 3829 Central Ave., driver, was charged with assault and battery. William Moore, 27, of 516 Keystone Ave., was cut when his auto was struck by one driven by Lions McCabe, 3402 Newton St., at Southeastern and State Aves. McCabe was charged with assault and battery. Mrs. Anna Barskin, 42, of 1342 S. Meridian St., was slightly injured when struck by an auto driven by Herbert Zufall, R. R. F, at Meridian and Washington Sts. Zuafll was charged with assault and battery. PEDESTRIANS INJURED Auto Driver and Motorman Arrested After Accidents. Dan Vladd, 24, of 10 S. West St., was under arrest today on charges of assault and battery and speeding. Police alleged his automobile struck and injured Joe Perkins, 2037 W\ Washington St., Tuesday right in the 1200 block in W. Washington St. Carl Nteman, 4039 Southeastern Ave., was slightly injured today when struck by an automobile driven by A. D. Lasley, R. R. P., Box 357 D. pieman was taken home. O. E. Pettit, 1749 S. Talbott St., motorman, Is under an assault and battery charge. A southbound Illinois street car, in his charge, struck Isaac Hall, 65, colored, 519 Muskingum St., today In front of 812 N. Illinois -St. Hall, injured about the head and body, was taken to the city hospital.ARGUMENTS CONTINUE Heh-s of James Gray Seek to Acquire New Trustee. Argument on the petition for an accounting by Will W. Gray, trustee for the $2,000,000 estate of James Gray, deceased, Evansville cross-tie manufacturer, continued before Charles Mart%<3ale, master In chancery of Federal Court, today. Heirs, Mrs. Margaret Gary, widow, and Mrs. Margaret Gray Patterson, daughter, both of Evansville, claim the trustee handled the estate Improperly. Petition asks that he be removed and another trustee appointed.
PAY FOR FIRE TRUCKS Insurance Company Seeks (My Aid in Farm Fires Bv Timet Special Fire trucks in the towns of Hamilton County will be paid for runs to the country, according to a resolution adopted at the annual directors’ meeting of the Fanners Mutual Insurance Company Tuesday afternoon. Annual report of ML. Cardwell, secretary, showed 1924 Are losses were largest in the history of the company yVINONA TO SEEK SCHOOL State Normal to Be Asked From Legislature. Bv Timtt Special WAFISAW, Ind.. Jan. 7.—Authorization :for anew State normal school for Winona Lake will be sought from the coming session of Legislature, according to a committee of business men here. The committee, composed of v J. E. Headley, James E. Blue, E. A. (fast, C. L. Knauss, J. O. Motto and John A. Sloane, has completed a survey of the educational situation in Indiana, and will make special inducements, it is said, to obtain a normal school for the northern part of the State. , BANQUET FOR GREEN New A. F. of L. Head to Be Honored Here Tonight. A banquet in honor of William Green, retiring secretary treasurer of the United Mine Workers of Aifterica, who was elected president of the American Federation of Labor to/ succeed Samuel Gomperp, will be held at the Claypool tonight, Thomas Kennedy of Hazelton, Pa., president of District No. 7, who will succeed Green Saturday, also will be an honor guest. Tailor Shop Robbed Henry Brown, tailor, 1564 College Ave., today reported $215 worth of clothing and trinkets stolen from his shop Tuesday night. Home Robbed A coat and gun, valued at S3O, were taken from his home Tuesday night, Guthrie Donahue, 822 Bates St., reported to police today.
FIGURE THIS OUT IF you are constipated— AND have not found relief— NOR permanent cure— VIUNA TONIC THE VEGETABLE BUILDER Is the Answer Its mild and yet complete action, often resulting in permanent relief will be ■ a pleasant revelation to you. AT YOUR DRUGGIST Constipation is cause ,oi
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
I ■ CHILDREN OF THE JAZZ AGF? NEW FREEDOM FOR CHILD OF TOD A Y
By MRS. WALLACE REID
This La the first of a series of six articles written by Mrs. Wallace Reid, wife of the Tate film star, on the problems confronting young people—and their parents—today. mHEY have called it the Jazz Age. Into this endless turmoil of pleasure-mad years are thrust our children. Can they find themselves amidst all this confusion? And what are they doing with their lives? In my recent nation-wide campaign against the drug traffic I discovered many remarkable things about the young people of today. Sitting on the bench with Judge Helander in his Morals Court in Chicago, I saw young girls and young boys brought before him—fine looking, most of them, and in many Instances from good homes. I heard them plead guilty to all sorts of serious charges, and I wondered what malign influence brought them before the law. In the Kansas City Reformatory I talked with other young people who were in trouble. Similar experiences in other cities led to the determination to try to get to the bottom of this whole question of our modern young people and the new freedom that has been given to them since the World War. Is there really a laxity in the morals of young people now? Is the situation becoming more serious? Who is to blame, the children themselves? The parents? Evil associates? I think It is generally agreed that there has been a radical change In the conduct of both adults and children in the past few years. Anew viewpoint exists today In respect to freedom of thought and action. This is expressed in the modern styles of clothing, hair-dressing, and In other, ways—mannerisms, words, conversation, attitudes toward life. The entry of women Into business has much to do with It. The so-called Jazz music and the swift-, moving automobile maV be blamed for many other changes. And all these changes affect children and young people as well as adults. There was once a well-known word in the English language that. Is seldom heard now. It Is “chaperon." Can you imagine a young couple nowadays going for an auto ride and taking along a chaperon? This Is just as ludicrous an idea as that of young girls of twenty years ago appearing in public In one-piece bathing suits. I cite these instances, not at all in a condemnatory way, but as examples of the change that has come upon us, and particularly upon our children. How are we to meet these changes, that our children may grow to splendid manhood and womanhood? I want to discuss this question, particularly with mothers, in the light of my recent investigations, and to give my conclusions, whether they may be right or wrong. fl believe that the crux of the whole problem of this “Jazz age” as it applies to children, can be given in a single sentence:
PAZO Ointment A Guaranteed Remedy FOR ALL FORMS .OF PILES Tt hi n xnr pot tip in collapsible tubes with detachable pae pipe making it very easy fcxapply. JoS/Rfi DRUGGISTS refund money if it J MWm sto P any f° rm piles. fifßSrW Special directions enclosed with each ? package. Your druggist will order it. (Also pot up in old style Tins, 60c.)
wm 1 - tja* imp’ll '"Where Special SALES Are Unknown Selling the kind of footwear we do—at prices any lower than these would quickly put us out of <— business. S‘2 3 4 I A* l *! a pew Specials, $5 Do you know that the Thrift operates on the smallest maril gin of profit of any shoe store in the city; that the buying gfe. I; power of our fourteen stores gives us a tremendous ads vantage; that our low operating expense is another reason / |t why we can save you several dollars on every pair of shoes I I you buy here? Thlrk it overt V ffn-* fey*. Ism Thrift Repainng ssn.ar.^r.-s: BLDQ.-QOWNSTA/R.3 * **’’•*l
"How can we arm our children so that they can handle this freedom, given them now at so early an age?” The second article of this series will appear Thursday. NEW LESSON FOR HER Student Goes to Speeders Court In- * stead of College. A lesson in law replaced the customary classes at Butler University today for Miss Marie Arens, 20, of 4823 Central Ave. Lieutenant Halstead charged Miss Arens was going thirty-five miles an hour when he stopped her at Emerson Ave. and Washington St. Miss Arens said she was in a hurry to get to class, but Halstead took her. back to police headquarters In his own car When he found, after slating her and notifying her to appear in &>urt Thursday, that Miss Arens had no way of getting out to Butler. Halstead loaned her 7 cents for carfare. Others charged with speeding today were Dallas Church, 30, R. R. D, Box 177, and Earl Burroughs, 26, of 1824 Broadway. I MRS. F. FALENDER BURIED Funeral Services for Jewish Worker Are Held at 2 P. M. The funeral of Mrs. Fannie Falender, 50. of 618 E. Forty-Sixth St., who died Tuesday following a year's Illness, was set for 2 p. m. today at the residence. Burial in the Jewish cemetery. Mrs. Falender, the wife of Louis Falender, had lived In Indianapolis thirty-three years. She was born in Poland. She was active In the Council of Jewish Women, Beth-El Temyle, United Hebrew Societies and Jewish Home for the Aged. Surviving are the husband; two daughters. Miss Tillye Falender and Mrs. Harry Lorber, and four sons, Archie, Benjamin, Ddvid a J Dr. Philip F'alender. Girl, Despondent, Ends Life Bv Timet Svecial TERRE HAUTE, Ind., Jan. 7. Ruth Bungard, 18. daughter of George Bungard, director of buildings and grounds of the city sihools, was dead today. Despondejit over ill health, she swallowed poison Tuesday. IF YOU HAD A NECK I* LONG A8 THIB FELLOW AND HAD SORETHROAT ONSILINE he National Sore Throat Remedy MOULD QUICKLY RELIEVE IT ALL DRUGGISTS
EXECUTION IS STAYED Alleged Murderer Was Sentenced to Die Jan. 16. Supreme Court has granted a stay of execution for Joseph Parker, Terre Haute, to May 29. He was sentenced to die Jan. 16 for tlie alleged murder of a Terre. Haute detective. Edward Barber, Terre Haute, convicted with Parker, is sentenced to die Jan. 16. No stay was asked in his case. Both have appeals in Supreme Court. BEWARE THE COUGH OR COLD THAT HANGS ON Chronic coughs and persistent colds lead to serious tr üble. You can stop them now with Creomulsion, an emulsified creosote that is pleasant to take. Creomulsion is i. new medical discovery with twofold action; It soothes and heals the Inflamed membranes and kills the germ. Os all known drugs, creosote is recognised by the medical fraternity as the greatest healing agency for the treatment of chronic coughs and colds and other forms of throat troubles. Creomulsion contains, in addition to creosote, other healing elements which soothe and heal the Inflamed membranes and stop the irritation and in-, flammation, while the creosote goes on to the stomach Is absorbed into the blood, attacks the seat of the trouble and destroys tile germs that lead to serious complications. Creomulsion is guaranteed satisfactory in the treatment of chronic coughs and colds, catarrhal bronchitis and other forms of throat diseases, and is excellent for building up the system after colds or the flu. Money refunded if any cough or cold, no matter of how long standing, is not relieved after taking according to directions. Ask your druggist. Creomulsion Cos., Atlanta. Ga.—Advertisement. Get Rid off Piles Now A box of Pyramid Pile Suppositories is your best friend to stop maddening jlain. put out the fire of burning soreness, relax protrusions and give you grateful ease and comfort. Thousands testify. Many say Pyramid averted operations. Step Into any drug store for a 60c box.
CuticuraSoap Pure and Wholesome Keeps Ik Ski Dear Soep, CHatmst, Tlwa wM nwjwlnw. ([fairyland) BEAUTY SHOPPE Mitrrrlllnf Manioarin* Hairdressing Shampooing PI.A2A HOTEL ROOF GARDEN New York St. and Capitol Ave. Circle 6138. Indianapolis Miss illanche Ross. Mgr. ■ . . . =J For FurnitureP^TntED All Makes Overhauled AMERICAN WRITING MACHINE COMPANY 9S 8. Penn. St. Phone IX 883* Call Citcle 2597 H Have Your Hat Cleaned and Blocked. We Call for and Deliver. First-Class Shop Furnace Repairs Wo have repairs for all make Furnaces. Kruse & Dewenter Cos. 427 E. Wash. St. MAIn 1669
Fugitive Charge Filed Charged with being a fugitive, Ed Mason, 41, colored, 412 Toledo St.,
MONEY TO LOAN ON CITY PROPERTY The State Savings & Trust Cos. 9 But Market Street
Quality Caskets —Nominal Cost This is a beautiful plain casket, high top and heavj base, covered with Jalack broadcloth or any color embossed plush; interior of Art Silk, lid crushed, shirring ip body, ruffled pillow, extension ■\ handles, end handles, plate if desired. Has sold for $285. MY PRICE, 9175. J JOHN F. REYNOLDS "Leader In Sensible Prices” MA in 0439. 950 N. Penn. St.
Did 1924 Show a Profit For You? If you had ten per cent of all the money you have ever earned, what would it amount to? Figure a little and see, but don’t be discouraged. - No man is a failure because he has failed—the failure is the man who has quit trying. Start today to save a definite part of your earnings (say 10%), put that amount each pay day into a Savings Account and 1925 will show a profit for you—so will future years if you follow this system. All deposits made on or before the 10th will receive Interest from Jan. Ist. We Pay 4%% On Savings Meyer-Kiser Bank 128 East Wash?hgton Street
—— The Service You Get Out of Dentistry' Depends on the Material and Workmanship the Dentist Puts Into It. * The danger you run in buying just dentistry lies in the tact that you take for granted that the material and workmanship is of the highest class. True, there is gold and teeth in all bridge and crown work, but gold varies greatly in thickness and from 22K down to the very lowest. We'do not only say in our advertisements that we take*pride in doing high-class work, but it is a fact that we do, and people in ordinary circumstances can today secure as high a type of dentistry as the millionaires. Compare our work and compare our prices. HANNING BROS. & WINKLER Southwest Corner Washington and Pennsylvania Streets, Booms *OB-4-5. Second Floor of New Kresge Bldg.
ITS A BARGAIN FOLKS! THREE-LINE WANT AD THREE DAYS IN THE TIMES 99 CENTS ' * Time* Want Ad* Work All Day Every Day SELLING RENTING ' HOUSES ROOMS SELLING RENTING * AUTO MOBILES HOUSES SELLING RENTING
WEDNESDAY, JAN'S?, 1925
■ was arrested today. Police alleged, he is wanted in Detroit, Mich., on a charge of receiving stolen goods. „
Main 3500 jw.ntAdD.pt.
