Indianapolis Times, Volume 37, Number 72, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 August 1925 — Page 9

WEDNESDAY, AUG. 5, 1025

BELT SAID TO BE PLANNING FOR SUBWAYS ► Officials Say Track Elevation Should Come Soon. Indianapolis Union Railway engineers are said to be drafting plans for subways for Pratt, Tenth and Thirteenth Sts. to pass under the elevated Belt Railroad tracks, an indication that track elevation is imminent, according to city officials. Board of works members are considering the proposed opening of eleven streets which were not included in original plans for the south side elevation project from English Ave. to W. Washington St. At a public hearing, it was decided to announce a decision Friday. Board members are said to have declined to open Bethel Ave., which Otto Ray, south side councilman, says leads direct to Beech Grove, because the plans open other stjjeets in a short distance affording little traffic inconvenience. It is believed the board will open one street in the half-mile between .Shelby St. and State Ave., blocked nder the plan. Either Linden or Draper St., may be routed through x subway. Prospects for opening Richland St., at request of southwestern Indianapolis citizens were said to be excellent. SUICIDE HELD CAUSE i Sister Declares Dead Woman Was Unbalanced. Bu United Press MATTOON, lil., Aug. s.—Not murder but suicide today was the prevailing opinion as to the cause of the mysterious death of Miss Cora Stallman, whose body was found Sunday in a cistern on the farm of her sister, Mrs. Anna Seaman. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Se.amau, brother-in-law and sister of the former Ohio teacher and Deputy Sheriff Shirley are firm in this opinion. Mrs. Seaman told State’s Attorney Fletcher that her sister had been unbalanced for a long time. GRAND JURY GETS CASES City Court Orders Investigation of Stabbing Cliarge. John and Charles Cloyd, brothers, colored, both of 318 W. Thirteenth St., were bound over in city court to the grand jury today under high bonds. John Cloyd was charged with assault and battery with intent to kill. He is charged with stabbing Hillis White, colored, 811 Lock St., Saturday, and Charles with carrying concea’ed weapons. James Cloyd, anotner brother, was killed in 1923 sci what police claimed was a feud between the White and Cloyd families. Others bound over were Joseph nd Raymond Sutton, 2309 Station Bt., vehicle taking; Carl Wickse and T’jarlss Holmes, both of Chicago, neiatlng liqour law; Charles Allen, 1 102 E. Seventeenth St., and James Garrett, 15(9 Cornell St., burglary charges.

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TWENTY-FOUR LESSONS IN PIANO PLAYING-SIXTEENTH LESSON: D MINOR

SECOND SERIES Copyright, 1920, by AV. Scott Grave. Scranton, Pa. Lesson No. 16 This lesson, according ty Grove’s simple series of home instruction for the piano or organ, presents the next step in the mastery of the fundamental principles of music. If you have become proficient in the previous lessons you will find this one easy.

Key of D Minor relative of F Major. jjj, ®B B Baß Bdß fB m BHBSIi OTEJI

COLLINS WANTS HIS COURTROOM FOR SEPTEMBER Criminal Judge May Hold Up Plans for Making Alterations. Marion County commissioners confronted a serious problem today when Criminal Judge James A. Collins Court informed Donald Graham, architect employed to draw plans for five additional courtrooms, that he will not permit any alterations to his courtroom unless an adequate substitute room is provided. Judge Collins declared that beginning Sept. 1, his court will plunge into one of its biggest dockets. He said on Sept. 14, the trial of John J. McNamara, union iron workers’ head charged with blackmail, is set to open. Bids To Be Opened Commissioners announced that on Aug. i3 they will open bids on the $190,000 temporary loan authorized two weeks ago by the county council. This loan includes $43,000 for the new courtroom add SII,OOO for proposed repairs at the county infirmary. Bids on the five courtrooms and asylum repairs will be opened Aug. 20. According to Graham, the creation of a room over Criminal Court will give the present room a twelve-foot ceiling and the upper one about fourteen feet. The room now has a thirty-foot ceiling. Might Postpone Court Graham said his only remedy would be to postpone opening of one

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IXSTRCCTIOX'—PIace chart open the keyboard of piano or organ so that the little overllned D at the bottom of each chart corresponds into position to Dos the keyboard. Each chord is composed of a triad with a note in the bass, and the notes of each triad are numbered 1. 3. 5. Note that in every chart the upper chord is “built" on the keynote, or tonic, and is called the tonic chord: the second is the subdoininunt, “built" on the subdominant or fourth tone of the scale; the

Lightning Takes Away Speech Bu Times Special ARCADIA, Ind., Aug. s.—Although Mr. and Mrs. Andrey Whetstone are slowly recovering from a shock of lightning which struck them Friday, they .have been unable to talk and it is thought their vocal organs will be permanently affected. They were working in a chicken house on their farm during a thunderstorm. The lightning leaped from a windmill, struck the chicken house and stunned them. Their daughter, Frances, 11, also struck by the bolt, is believed to be out of danger.

of the other Superior Courts and hold Criminal Court in it until Judge Collin’s quarters are completed. Judge Collins said his understanding with Russel Ryan, county attorney, was that work on the courts was to be started about Aug. 1 and completed when courts convened a month later. Graham said the rooms will be ready by Jan. 1, 1926. The new rooms are to house municipal courts provided for cities with population over 100,000 in a bill which takes effect Jan. 1. FREIGHT IS DERAILED New York, Central Train in Wreck Near Richards (©.). Bu United Press RICHARDS, Ohio, Aug. s.—Five cars on a New York Central freight train were derailed here today tearing up four main line tracks and necessitating rerouting passenger rains. None was injured.

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

MAYOR WORKS ON BUDGET CUT General Fund Levy to Be Reduced Again. As Mayor Shank and Joseph L. Hogue, city controller, toiled behind locked doors today on the city’s budget for 1926, a keyhole announcement came from the mayor that the general fund probably would be reduced four cents from Tuesday's slash. Shank said he hoped to reduce the general fund total to 60 cents, which would lower the total tax levy from $1,175, where It stood after the pruning session Tuesday when $975,000 was cut from the budget, to $1,135. The general fund levy was 58 cents for 1925. Shank and Hogue retreated to the mayor’s office early and refused to see visitors. Captain Roy A. Pope, Shank’s aid was dispatched for noonday refreshments and the session was scheduled to continue this afternoon. WOMAN "DRIVER HELD Charged With Striking Four-Year-Old Boy—Denies Knowledge. Miss Lucille Hoffman, 22, of 1033 N. Belle Vieu PL, was charged with assault and battery Tuesday night after police said they traced an automobile from the scene of an accident, at Eleventh St., and N. Belle Vieu PL, to her home. Harry Douglass, 4, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Douglass, 1115 N. Belle Vieu PI., was struck as he crossed the street. Miss Hoffman said if her automobile struck the boy she did not know it. He tvas slightly injured about the legs and body.

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(GROVE’S MUSIC SIMPLIFIER) third or dominant chord is “built" on the dominant tone, the fifth of the scale. Note that the note on which each chord Is “built" is repeated in the bass. Remembering this, you may experiment by rearranging the triads, putting the lower notes an octave higher, hut always keeping the fundamental in the bass. Always think of a triad as ill 1. 3, 5 order, no matter in what order the notes are actually written. AVhen you are playing accompaniments, each chord you strike should (in general) contain the

The Land of Opportunity Right here at home is your lnnd of Opportunity. Here and now is your chance to lay the corner stono of future independence. Remember, the sun shines just as bright in Indiana as anywhere on earth. Milestones are not the guide posts to success. Action—immediate anil continuous—is the only thing that ever will get (he things you want. Action, plus imagination and little cournge, is all you need. There is always someone in your own home town who wilt help you. Day after day your opportuniiy is presented and help offered in the Real Estate section of Times Want Ads. Live, progressive Real Estate dealers who have the best interests of Indianapolis at heart, have made it possible for you to own your own home. Read their ’offerings today in the Want Ads. Phone MAin 3500.

G. W. PIGMAN CALLED Widely Known Attorney of Liberty, Ind., Dies in Hosiptal. Bu Times Special LIBERTY, Ir.d., Aug. s.—George W. Pigman, 60, widely known attorney, died late Tuesday in the Pewish Hospital at Cincinnati. Mr. Pigman was know in Indianapolis, where his brother, Charles J., and nephews B. F. a id Jess Pigman reside. Funeral services will be held at 2:30 p. m. Friday in the Presbyterian Church here. BABY BURNS TO DEATH Children Fire Home Playing Witli Matches. Bu United Press MILWAUKEE. Wis., Aug. 5. Trapped in their home which they had fired playing with matches, Irving Buliewick, 20 months old, was burned |to death here, today and his sister, Amaftda, 8, was so badly | burned that her recovery is doubtful.

notes of tho melody that Is sounded with the ehord. You can. study this out from the chart, but few persons should need more Instruction on this point than the ear itself cun give. Persistence is necessary If you are to learn much from these lessons. You must play the chord over and over, first with the chart before you and then without, until you have committed it to memory. Commit to memory also the names of the keys that make up the different chords. This should give you sufficient knowledge for pla.-Ing uceoinpanlments. If

STREET WORK MAY CONTINUE Walker Attempts to Win Council Votes. Cessation of cleaning of streets in the residence districts, proposed by John F. Walker, street cleaning superintendent, because of city council's refusal to authorize a $3,000 transfer ordinance for team hire, w'lll be postponed until possibility of a special council session Is settled, Walker said today. Meanwhile, Walker is attempting to win votes of three councilmen whose opposition resulted in lack of a constitutional majority for the ordinance. Ben H. Thompson, council president, said he would call a special meeting, if he were sure enough votes could be obtained to enact the ordinance. William E. Clauer, Democratic councilman who voted against the ordinance, said today he would favor it if street cleaning is endangered. Clauer’s vote would insure passage of the ordinance. BUILDING COLLAPSES Five Killed, Nine Injured, When Walls, Floors, Crumple. Bu United Press KANSAS CITY, Mo., Aug. 6. Investigation was started today into the collapse of a three story building here late yesterday which took a toll of five lives. Nine others were injured. The structure was being remodeled w-hen its walls and floors crumpled without warning, carrying into the wreckage workers and roomers in the building.

DESPONDENCY, MELANCHOLIA This is an indication of a weakened condition of the female organism for which the Vegetable Compound Is a famous remedy. WEAK, RUN-DOWN WOMEN This indicates mal-nutritlon, blood > poverty and general weakness. The Vegetable Compound is of untold value in such cases.

you wish to go further In the study of the piano or organ, learn the fingering of the srule. mioh n In upper left hunil eorner of eneh chart. Three ehord* follow the eealee. Compare them with i he chord* shown In tlic main chart*. Every triad In black letter i- marked I. 3, 5. .41way* read It so, no mutter In wh-it vertlenl order th note* may he written. Xote thut the simitl letter l> with a daub nhove It must not he played, NEXT LESSON —Key of It Ehit Major, which I* the relative of the key of (J, Minor.

PERMIT FOR ADDITION Baking Company Petition Granted; Others Withheld. The city plan commission Tuesday granted the City Baking Company a permit to construct an addition 50x70 feet to their present structure at Sixteenth and Bellefontalne Streets. Permission for a filling station building at E. New York St. and Jefferson Ave., was refused, and decision or. permit for a filling station at Twenty-Second St. and College Ave., postponed. BROWN DEFENDS BOARD Says Tax Increase Order Not Subject to Injunction. John J. Brown, chairman of the State tax board, today declared an injunction suit against the commission’s recommendations for tax valuation charges would be ‘‘an absurdity.” * ‘‘The present communications from the board are really only equalization recommendations,” Brown said, “and are not subject to injunctive action." INSTITUTE AUG. 24-28 ! Date of Marion County Teachers’ Session Announced. The annual teachers’ institute fa.’ Marlon County teachers outside oi Indianapolis will be held, at the courthouse from Aug. 24 to 28, Lee Bwails, county superintendent, announced today. Dr. H. N. Sherwood, State superintendent of public instruction, and Albert Stump, attorney, will be among the principal speakers. Swails said all county township schools will open Sept. 7. BOOST BOOSTER WEEK Mayor Shank today sent letters to business organizations and large retail stores urging that sales be held during Greater Indianapolis Week, Aug. 16-22, and that merchants decorate their places of business with flags and draperies. Shank also suggested that delivery trucks be mobilized and floats be prepared for the Week's parade Wednesday.

MYERS CLl'B TO OPEN Headquarters of the Ninth Ward Myers for Mayor Club he opened tonight at the northwest corner of Michigan St. and Eastern Ave., Edward J. McGovern, president, announced today. Hendricks Kenworthy will speak. Club officers expect to enroll 2,600 members.

■ Special Comet Outfit $24^2 B-fiat cornet with quick change to A; highly polished brass, pearl finger tips, complete with square case, and specially priced at $24.00. Carlin Music Cos, 143 E. WASHINGTON

Rare Bargains —IN— Used Pianos and Player Pianos All of these instruments in fine playing conditioh. Many of them refinished and rebuilt. Pianos, $85.00 and Up Player Pianos, $275.00 and Up Terms Low Rapp & Lennox Piano Ce. 245 N. Pennsylvania St.

DEMANDS m OF BRIDGE Kit Charges Hurled at Highway Commission. Charges that tho State highway commission made illegal payments of more than $19,000 to contractors on tho Attica bridge over White lilvor are contuinod in u letter from Merle A. N. Walker, Indianapolis attorney, to Lawrence F. Orr, chief examiner of the State board of accounts. Walker, representing an unnamed taxpayer, demanded an investigation of the deal. Ha said a recovery suit would be brought against the contractors and tho commission if tho accounts board does not act. The payment .amounting to $19,108, was made to Rtandish and Allen, Chicago contractors, who built the bridge for Fountain County on what is now state Rd. 10. Walker charged. The State had no right to finance county improvement!, Walker alleged. Walker first referred the charges to Attorney Genera! Arthur L. Oilllom. who advised that it bo taken up with the account:) board.

PEARSON PIANO COMPANY Indiana's Largest nml Must Com pleto Music Store. 128-130 lvnn. si. R*t, is*. One I’rlc-e to Kverj body

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