Indianapolis Times, Volume 37, Number 132, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 October 1925 — Page 23
FRIDAY, OCT. 2, 1025
CHICAGO ROAD TO BE OPENED AHEAD OF TIME Indianapolis Blvd. Will Be Ready for Traffic Next Sunday. By using lumnite, a fast curing cement, the Wolf Lake bridge gap in Indianapolis Ave. into Chicago will be opened to traffic Sunday, nearly three weeks sooner than had been expected, it was pointed out in the State highway commission’s weekly traffic bulletin today. Indianapolis Blvd. will provide a sixty-foot paved entrance for Gary and northern Indiana traffic into Chicago, and carry traffic off four Michigan Rds., from five Indiana roads and several Ohio trunk lines. Surface condition on roads entering Indianapolis are set forth as follows: No. 1 (New Albany. Indianapolis. South Bend. Michigan line)—Detour from two mile? north of Edinburg to Franklin, account paving. Follow old Staate ltd. 1 south ol Crothersvtlle. One-way traffic, four-ton maximum load, allowed on Kelly Ave. bridge being repaired in Peru. No. 3 (Richmond, Indianapolis, Terre Haute)—Bridge run-around at six miles west of Richmond. Bridge run-around at Pershing. Short detour at 4.5 mtlc-8 east of Terre Haute account paving on bridge. No. 6 (Madison. Greensburg, Indianapods, Lafayette. Oxford) —Side detour one and one-fourth miles northwpst of Thomtown. Short detour one mile farther norL'twest and a detour marked at eleven miles south of Lafayette, through Stockwell. No. 15 (Indianapolis, Logansport, Michigan City)—Closed for six miles south of Logansport, account construction: good uetour marked. Closed in north edge of Indianapolis, account city sewer construction. _ No. 22 (English. Paoli. Bedford, Bloomington. Martinsville, Indian. ;olis) —Closed between Martinsville and Blc -mington and from English io .'-aoli for paving. (Through traffic between M .rtuitv'Jie and Bloomington go via Spfn -or over Rds. 12 and 32. There is a passable detou. in dry weather between these -it.co. put it is thirteen miles long, six n iles being earth, impassable in wet weather. Detour road aJso is narrow and two vehicles cannot pass in many places. Closed at new biidgo 4 wo miles south of Bedford. Detom- east m Bedford on State Rd. 3. thence southeast on a b. : ninous macadam road via Riverdale to fn, °2 at Mitchell. This detour is thirteen a-d one half miles long, all over excellent improved road and has no £rade crossing. Local traffic can use e itherwood Creek detour, but must exercise care at two narrow bridges ovpr Leatherwood Creek and at a Moi.cn grade crossing. From Paoli is a comity rock road to Grantsburg via Marengo and English. Avoid south of Grantsburg account construction and no detour road. No. 37 (Indianapolis. Anderson to Munde)—Pavement open from Fortville to the junction of 37 and 11. tv.-b miles south of Pendleton from one miV north of Pendleton and Anderson opened to traffic for a short time, is closed for two weeks to permit building shoulders. Ts closed, use old marked detour to east. Drive carefully between Anderson and Muncie. where wrokmen are finishing shoulders. No. i> (Indianapolis. Rushville, Brookville, Ohi'. line) —Closed between Julietta and Hawthorne (Marion County) for pacing. East-bound traffic follow- marked detour to outh of 30. West-bound traffic detour over county road, meeting National Rd. near Cumberland, thence on National Rd. to Indianapolis. Run-around at bridge construction three miles south of Cedar Grove. PARSONAGE St. John’s Evangelical Church Buys Home l’or Pastor. The St. John’s Evangelical Church has purchased anew SIO,OOO parsonage, according to an announcement by the Rev. Ernest Piepenbrok, pastor. The present parsonage adjoins the chur-h and will be used for Sunday School purposes. A SIOI,OOO campaign for the erection of anew church will start In the spring.
One Day Only, SATURDAY PLAYER PIANOS liSi This Fine Player, Handsome Bench, $lO Worth Music Roils—All for Only $195 Only Here! Can You Find Such Bargains I The player pianos in this sale are all in first-class condition I and ready to give many years of satisfactory service. We | have assembled them here for quick disposal at a sacrifice I price. There are a good many people who will be glad to I snap up a good player at such a saving. Not an instrument in the lot that is not worth double the money. Various makes and finishes. : OPEN SATURDAY EVENING j MANUFACTURER’S OUTLET PIANO STORE 225 N. Pennsylvania St. MAin 2687
Star Student Wins Harvard Course
Irving Colpack, a Boston newsboy, enters Harvard University this fall without expense to himself. By making the highest grades of any of those who took the entrance examination, he won a scholarship offered by the Boston Newsboys’ Protective Union. LEADERS TO LAGRANGE Republican leaders and State officials, including Governor Jackson, Senator James E. Watson and State Chairman Clyde A. Walb, will go to Lagrange Saturday to attend the annual corn show in that cty. The visitors will be given a breakfast by Mr. and Mrs. Walb. There will be a reception for the Governor at noon at the Lagrange M. E. Church.
Satisfying When topped off with a delicious home-made pie from our ovens, you are ready to admit the repast has been a complete success. You’ll enjoy our cakes, too —of equally higli quality. C. De CROES 215 E. Ohio St. and 427 Mass. Ave.
LOAFERS NEAR CORNER CAUSE OF COMPLAINT Difficult for Women and Children to Pass, Says Letter. Let Mr. Fixit shoot a basket for you on the municipal floor. He is The Times representative at the city hall. Write him at The Times. Corner rowdies, who loaf near Merrill and East Sts., make it difficult for women and children to pass in the evening, according to Mr. Fixit’s mall bag today. DEAR MR. FIXIT—Have someone to look after sanitary conditions in the rear of and in gutters of E. Merrill St., just east of East St. It would be well for police to keep an eye on this corner for violation of the open muffler law and for rowdies who are always loafing there, mak-
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Do You Know? The park board proposes a bridle path on White River from Crow’s Nest to College Ave.? ing it bad for women or children to pass in the evening. Craps games are played on the street and in places around there. K. JASPAR. Mr. Fixit obtained the promise of the board of health and Capt. Barrett Ball for an immediate investigation. DEAR MjR. FIXIT: I am writing to you again in regard to the street and alley between Marland Ave. and Centennial St. on W. Pratt St. The street has terrible chuckholes in It and motorists are driving uj>on people’s lawns. We have about all the traffic from W. Tenth St., as that street is being paved. We people on this street are taxpayers and would like to have gravel or cinders put down so the traffic won’t ruin our lawns. The alley needs at-
tentlon as it is badly cut up and there are chuckholes. TIMES READER. FTank Reid, inscpector of the street commissioner’s office, will Investigate at once. DEAR MR. FIXIT: At Bloomingto. and Washington St. on Bloomington, we have mud holes almost impossible to get through. They have had water in them all summer. ONE WHO KNOWS. W. P. Hargon, clerk of the street commissioner’s office, will authorize an immediate investigation. DEAR MR. FIXIT—WiII you please see what can be done about the street car tracks at S. East and McCarty Sts? There is a large hole almost in the middle of the crossing and traffic going east has to drive to the left side of the street and this is very dangerous. M. MC. The department of Improved streets will place a red lantern at the hole pending permanent repairs.
CITY PARK LAND ORDERED SOLD Tract on Fall Creek to Be Platted. Emsley W. Johnson, park board member, today was preparing plans for platting a thirteen-acre tract of park land at the northwest, corner of Fall Creek and Northwestern Ave. Johnson, who was appointed by the board Thursday to dispose of the
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WANTED: STOREROOMS IN ALL PARTS OF CITY—NOTIFY OUR OFFICE SUGAR $ 59^ PEACHES-.15c5£22c POTATOES If 35 FLOUR HgjTg LUX of FAR 3125 c SOAP a 10s 35c BORDEN’S iEf 3 j 50c fyfSLK WILSON ’ s Q r coffee IVI I Ll\ Tall Can. V'V Jackson’s Special CERTBottle 25c B; s H|tßie^d ’Lb^,, 29c gs* Ohio 00 Country >0 Monon Golden jg mm Nepean 1 1 2V2C 1 jtC mpm 4 Hand- Large g* tom Tomatoes IQc sj abe (3& New Standard Ohio jfl 4% Quality ,ja r* Peas No P ?c;„ No S Tcan H if© !jC RAISINS, Sun-Maid, a a (PEANUT BUTTER, rfj" 15-Oz. Pkg. JXSX' || Cl Lb. 100 Joan of Arc tt Prunes, Sunsweet, (** _ Kidney Beans, Can | Q| 2-Lb. Carton Pancake Flour, Gold Q - . OATS, Quick Q + , Medal, Large Pkg. 05/3 C Style, Pkg. 0573^ Sristßii pk S . 8c I SA T L A M L u L N cir 12y,c Crystal White Large 4 Grandma Large SOAP CHIPS Pk &- lUU Soap Powder Pkg * |3C BSSBfa |aU| Over 150,000 Loaves Sold Weekly fSBt IJB fflJEfl Pa Hi TO Made in Our Modern Bakery fa _ lm gF Em 1 1 Big 16-Oz. Loaves jw£ V& MMiGa m3 TOl ctHf Wrapped—Regular 8c Value
property following halt in arrangements to sell it to the Indianapolis Athletic Association for use as a baseball park for the Indians, is considering sale of the lots by auction. The board ordered an investigation of the gradual filling of the Channel of Fall Creek at Northwestern Ave. with ashes from the Citizens' Gas Company plant, causing the stream to cut into park board property on the north bank. The board deferred action on a petition asking paving of Linden St. bridge across White River be held up until completion of a sewer along the creek.
SPIHER ISSUES WARRANT Sheriff Makes liquor Arreat at Home In Mars Hill. On a search war "ant obtfltmd from the court erf Justice of Pa&Cv! Henry H. Spiher, 3541 W. Michigan! St., Sheriff Otner Hawkins, Thursday night raided the home of Al-j bert E. Wornke, Mare Bill, and onflscated thirty-three five-gallon cans, of alcohol. Wornke'was tJate&aon a blind tiger charge. Hawkins was Assisted by Deputy Sheriffs Brown, Regan and BnII. Hawkins said Wornke reside* in Wayne township which xaade Spihcr'B search warrant valid.
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