Indianapolis Times, Volume 36, Number 215, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 January 1925 — Page 3

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FEAR NOT RIGHT KIND OF EGOTISM, PASTORTELLS US Rev, Philputt Gives Good Advice to Young Folks, C 1 OXTENDING that “a certain amount of egotism, self-es-h__J teem and respect is essential to character,” Dr. A. B. Philputt, pastor of the Central Christian Church, Sunday delivered a sermon of interest to young people. "The fellow who hasn t self-re-spect, esteem aajl who don’t think much of himself, doesn’t amount to much,” Dr. Philputt said. Continuing, he said: "I have too much respect for myself to do certain things and to go with certain kinds of people. The Bible say?, ‘Let not a man think too highly of himself than he ought to think.’- I believe that the feeling of self-pride is a barrier to vice. I feel that I can’t afford to certain things. "Young people, think of yourself as well as others.' You have certain rights—self-respect, the right to guard and guide yourself. ‘The reason so many young men are failures is that they Just don’t think anything of themselves. They choose questionable companions with no thought of themselves and they get into trouble. “The winning virtue is the right kind of self respect. I like to see young men and women have a certain pride, not egotism In the accepted- sense of the word. “Man must think of himself before he can think of others. If I have no respect, no principle of life and no idealism, what good can I do for others?” “Dr. Philputt asked. Harmon Official Sqjls A. R. Heiskell, vice president of the Nordyke & Marmon Cos., today was aboard the S. S. President Roosevelt en route to London and Paris, where he will confer with Frank Hambly, foreign representative of the company.

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COURT BILL DRAWN UP Bar Association Takes Step to Relieve Crowding of Docket. A committee of the Indianapolis Bar Association, including Senator Thomas A. Daily and Representative Charles E. BtLinger, is drafting a bill designed to replace the present city coi>rt with four municipal courts, judges to be appointed by the Governor. Marion County Legislators Saturday night were guests of the association at a dinner at Indianapolis Athletic Club. The city judge now handles 32,000 cases a year. “Promiscuous arrest of persons and their alleged trial in city court is an infamous crime and a disgrace to civilization,” said Attorney William L. Taylor, in an address.

ININA SCHOOLS IN FOURTH PLACE State Jumps From Seventeenth Rank, Indiana now ranks fourth in education in the United States, according to an article by Donald Du Shane, Columbus, Ind., in the Indiana Teacher, issued today. The State jumped from seventeenth place in 1918, according to Du Shane, who quotes from the-Unitad States Bureau of Education statistics as modified by Leonard P. Ayres, noted educator.’ California ranks first, New Jersey second and Ohio third, according to the statistics. Points of comparison included statistics on attendance and on per capita expenses and other expenditures. \ According to Du Shane, Indiana’s rise was due to three “carefully planned laws”—the school attendance lattf, the minimum wage law of 1920 and the Johnson “homcv rule” law providing a financing system. MANY TAKEN IN RAIDS Five Men Charged With Keeping Gaming Houses. Raids on alleged gambling houses raised week-end arrest totals considerably. Police Lieutenant Hudson and squad led list of arrests, with thirty-four men charged with visiting a gaming house and five charged with keeping gaming houses. Alleged gaming house keepers are Mort McConnell, 42, f 509 W. Vermont St., alleged to have been in charge of a game on the second floor^it -4 45% W. Washington St.; Euge'e Maftie, 36, of 722 Fayette St.; Hamilton White; 22, of 803 Vi N. Senate Ave.; Grafton Blankenship, 42, of 712 N. Senate Ave., and Lawrence Allen, 27, of 517 N. Senate AVe. All except McConnell are colj ored. Besides the gambling arrests, 114 I men and ten women were slated and | two boys were taken to the deten- | tion home on various charges. - INSURANCE MEN GATHER “Get Together” Dinner Tonight tp Open Celebration. More than 1,000 Insurance men are expected to attend a “get acquainted” banquet tonight at the Claypool, preliminary to the celebration of “Indiana Insurance Day,” Tuesday, when various companies will hold meetings. "To demonstrate the contribution of insurance to business, banking and industry, and its relation to the public,” is the purpose of the celebration. Various luncheon clubs will have special programs. Several prominent insurance men will speak. Insurance men from all over theState will participate in activities Tuesday. FRUSTRATE BOMB PLOT Battleships Aim of Six, British Police Charge. By United Preta I LONDON, Jan. 19.—Five men and a woman, charged with being Sinn Fein extremists and involved In a plot to blow up British battleships at Portsmouth, were under arrest here today. Five were later charged under the “official secret act.” Motive for the alleged plot is-belie ved to have been the stirring up of trouble between Great Britain and the Irish Free State. Arrests followed interception of letter; between various suspects. GUN SHOTS KILL WOMAN John Ridley Charged With Murder of Bessie Ferguson. Miss Bessie Ferguson, 22, colored, 1412 Earhart St., died Sunday at city hospital from bullet wounds in her left side. John Ridley, colored, 31, same address, is under arrest charged with murder. Miss Ferguson told police that when she went home early Sunday, Ridley arose from his bed, pulled a revolver and shot her twice, both bullets taking effect. Ni> motive was given. ", MUNCIE PRINTER NAMED State Typographical Union Elect? . Officers at Conference, Asa S. Freel of Muncie, Ind., was elected president of the Indiana j State Typographical Union at a conference Sunday at the Severin. Other officers are: George D. Mayer of Evansville, vice president, and Wil- J liam F. Enslen of Marion, secretary treasurer. Conference went on record as favoring the legislative program of the State of Labor. FOUR CHILDREN DIE Bu United Preta \ WATERBURY, Conn., Jan. 19. I Fire Sunday night'ln the home of ( Mr. and Mrs. Harry Loomis took I the lives of four of the children I while the Loomis’ 9-year-old son Al- I van and their parents, Mr. and Mrs. I Charles Loomis, sat downstairs lis- I tening to the radio. j

LAST RITES SET FOR FIRECAPTAIN Granted Wish to ‘Die With Boots On.’ Funeral services for Fire Captain David A. Gresh, 64, of 20 McLean PI., who died Jn city hospital ambulance early Sunday after being overcome by smoke while fighting a fire in a storeroom %t 2944 Clifton

111 l . Jvk rJmmme Nil Wmm mmmm . MSm DAVID A. GRESH St., will b® held 9 a. m. Wednesday at SS. Peter and Paul Cathedral. Burial in Holy Cross cemetery. Captain Gresh, who had been ill for some time, returned to work Thursday. When the blaze at the

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storeroom looked as though it might be serious, he entered the building. Old rags and refuse in the basement caused a dense smoke and Gresh came out of the building and sapk to the ground. Artificial respiration by firemen and hospital attaches was in vain. When Gresh was seriously ill Christmas he told his family he “wanted to die with his boots on and not go like this." Gresh was a first cousin of Mayor Shank and was one of the best known fireman in the department. Besides his wife, a brother, three sisters and two grandchildren survive. SCOTCH ✓ MIN-ERS DIE —k— * Two Make Heroic Attempt to Save Companions. By United Frees KILMARNOO, Scotland, Jan. Isle —Five Scottish miners were killed today in an explosion in the,Portland Collerie Works, two of them dying in a heroic attempt to rescue the others from a pit 420 feet deep.

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AGED COUPLE ROBBED Two Youths Questioned fey Sheriff—s9s(s Taken From Pillow. Bu United Preat NASHVILLE, Ind., Jan. 19.—Two young men, Noah Hamblen and Arthur Tracy, were held here today in connection with th<? brutal, robbery of James Richardson and his wife, an aged couple, near here SaturdSy night. * Mrs. Richardson, 70, was beat in the face by the assailants who forced her to ted the hiding place of $950 in a pollow case. Merger Move Encouraged Movement to merge the Indiana Dental College with the Indiana University School of Medicine received impetus today when a certified audit was made public showing the dental school to be making an average annual profit of $24,008, The audit was to be laid before Governor Jackson.

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School Boys and Girls! Get Your Buttons Each Button Bears School Number —You Will Be Proud to Wear Them Also a blotter for use in-your school work —both in an envelope containing a circular, which please give to your .parents. Be sure to get your envelope promptly at the proper store. Call at the store listed opposite your school number—

School No. Nun* of School 1 Hyde Bchocl, 2 Benjamin Harrison, 3 Luoretla Mott, 4 George “A. Merritt, 5 McCulloch, 6 Auatln Brown, 7 Jefferson, 8 Calvin Fletcher, 9 Clemens Vonnegut, 10 Ashland and 13th 11 Lew Wallace, 12 Robert Dale Owen, 13 Horace Mann, 14 Irving, 15 Thomas O. Gregg, 16 Bloomingtpn & MkL Sts., 17 Booker T. Washington, 18 Lincoln 19 Frederick Douglass, 20 1125 Bpruce St., 21 Florence Fay, 22 Nebraska Crops/, 23 Chas. Sumner* 24 McCoy, 25 Katherine Merrill, 26 1400 Martlntiaic, 27 Charity Dye, 28 Longfellow, 29 O. P. Morton, 30 39 N. Elder, ~ 31 307 Lincoln, 32 Wallace Foster, 33 Whittier, 34 Wade ams Boyd Ave., 35 Garfield, 36 Franklin, - 37 26th and Baltimore, 38 Audubon, 39 McKinley, 40 Robert Gpuld Shaw, 41 Geo. v W. Sloan, 42 25th and Rader, 43 Jas. Whitcomb Riley, 44 Riverside, 45 W. W. Woollen, 46 Wibster, 47 Warren and Ray, 48 Sliver Ave. and York, 49 Wm. Penn, 50 Nathaniel Hawthorne, 51 Lowell, 61 Walnut and King, • 63 4SB Ketcham, 54 Brookslde, 56 Washington, 56 Francis W. Parker, 57 Irvington? 58 Ralph Waldo Emerson, 59 Indpls. Orphans' Home, 60 Wm. A. Bell, 61 1233 Shelby St., 62 Calvin Kendall, 63 Wendell Phillips, 64 Harriet Beeeher Stowe, 65 15th and DeQuiney, 66 Henry Coburn, 67 Walnut and Rochester, 69 Keystone and 30th, 70 46th and Central, 72 Troy and Carson, 73 Robert Browning, ' 74 Theodor© Potter, 75 1251 N. Belleview Place, 76 College and 30th, 77 Wilson and North, 78 Sherman Dr. & Verm't St, 79 1247 Vandeman, 80 Marion Ave. and 63d St., 81 17th and Rural, 82 English and Emerson, 83 Kappes and Miller, Broad Ripple High School,

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Nuie of Store ' 1 1 ©'Hair's Pharmacy, Craig Grocery, Rural Pharmacy, Hlder & Thomas Grocery, D, G. Popcheff Grocery, H. Neller Drug Store, Hejiry J. Houppert Grocery, C. M. Hammond Grocery, 8. Williams Grocery, Clifford Suite Grocery, Helder’e Drug Store, Rhodes Pharmacy, O. E. Gohmann Grocery, Mrs. Sowle, Drug Store, Harbison Drug Store, Indianola Pharmacy, Lobraico Pharmacy, Lincoln Grocery, B. J. Moore Grocefy, Wm. H. Smith Grocery, E. C. Branham Grocery, Wm. C. Koehrn Grocery, Sterling Pharmacy, L. V. Hlder Grocery, Eva Danna Grocery, Eureka Drug Store, C. Warman Grocery, H. H. Lehrltterr Drug Store, Bowles-Runyan Drug Store, Brown's Grocery, Pantzer's Pharmacy, J. E. Wilson Pharmacy, Stahlhute Grocery, E. A. Beckman Grocery, Madison Pharmacy, Dunnington’s Pharmacy, Sam’s Grocery, A. T. Fyffe Grocery, Facemlre Pharmacy, Lunder.man's Confectionery, Chae. Stiles’s Grocery, B. Irvin Grocery, K. T. Brock Pharmacy, .8. J. Bardsley Grocery, G. E. Maxwel, Druggist, L. W. Durbin, Druggist, L. W. Carnefix, Druggist, G. H. Coers Grocery, C. Gaussin Drugs, Geo. Peck Grocery, Roesch Pharmacy, Moroney Drug Cos., R. W. Bmlth Grocery, H. J. Borst Drug Store, Murphy’s Drug Store, Pearl Lebowitz Grocery, Milford’s Pharmacy, Fisher's Pharmacy, Snead Bros. Pharmacy, Barnhart Pharmacy, J. M. Carter Grocery, Rasico Pharmacy, T. B. Briggs Grocery, Rosieler German Grocery, Holloway Grocery, McCammon Pharmacy, Paul Bros. Grocery, A. Stafford Grocery, Mueller’s Pharmacy, Williams Pharmacy, J. C. Anderson Grocery, Harbison Pharmacy, F. W. Fancher Grocery, A. Hoffman & Cos., Druggists, R. 8. Rhodes Grocery, Merschat Drug Store, H. M. Flake-Grocery, C. A. Dressendorfer Grocery, D. H. Alfke Grocery, Chas. Dorn Grocery, Max Klazmer Grocery, C. A. Dressendorfer Grocery,

Address Cor. Mass. Ave. & Ala. 8t Cor. Delaware A Walnut Sts. 2802 E. Washington St 725 W. Michigan St. 561 W 7 Washington 8L 802 8. Meridian St 701 Bates St 612 Virginia Ave. 407 N. Davidson St Ashland Ave. and 11th St 1227 N. Illinois St 802 S. West St. 802 8. Buchanan St 1404 E. Ohio St Cor. E. Mich, and Beville Ave. 1402 W. Washington St. 1201 N. West Bt. 1602 Ringgold Ave. 1639 Draper St 1606 Prospect St. 2723 Southeastern Ave. 1320 S. Meridian 8t 1302 N. Senate Ave. 552 Blake Bt. 602 8. East St 1314 E. 16th St 607 E. 17th St. 1041 Fletcher Ave. 2158 College Ave. 33 N. Mlley Ave. 1601 8. East Bt. 2061 N. Illinois St 1128 Sterling, North 1602 Kelly St ' Cor. Madison and Raymond. 2802 N. Capitol Ave. Cor. 25th and Baltimore. 2037 Winter St 1702 Lexington Ave. 701 N. Senate Ave. 967 W. 30th St 2451 Rader Bt. 3800 N. Illinois St 2043 Dexter St. 2302 Central Ave. Howard and Relsner Sts. 1008 River Ave. 1405 Silver Ave. 1901 W. Morris St 200 N. Belleview Place. Roosevelt Ave. and Station St 2601 W. Michigan St. 3001 W. Michigan St 3229 E. 10th St. 1656 Roosevelt Ave. 2357 Martindale Ave. Cor. Wash, and Whittier PL 4306 jE. New York St 4034 E. Washington St 39 E. 34th St 1125 Shelby St. 4620 E. Mich. St 2002 W. 11th St. 1445 Perkins Bt, 496 E. 16th St. Maple Rd. and College Ave. 548 Rochester Ave. 1701 E. 30th St College Ave, and 49th St 2950 Carson Ave. 2959 Chester Ave. Cor. 40tli and Sterling./ 2528 W. 14th St. 30th St and College Ave. 602 Patterson St 3750 E. Michigan St 3601 Prospect St 836 E. 63d St. 1629 N. Rural St. 5136 Brookville Road Sheffield and Martha. 836 E. 63d St.

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