Indianapolis Times, Volume 37, Number 145, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 October 1925 — Page 3

SATURDAY, OCT. 17,1925

DEVELOPMENT OF FARMS LONE FLORIDA HOPE Toilers Must Replace Speculators If State Is to Attain Greatness.

_j NION printers have . JI been warned not to go . 1 to Florida by Stuart Shull, president of the Miami Typographical 'Union. In a wire to all unions he said: “Papers laying off men. No jobs available, but men walking streets. Living quarters can’t be obtained at any price. Embargo on freight makes material scarce and mechanics can’t get work in other lines.” James M. Lynch, International president of the union, has asked locals to transfer no more cards to Florida.

Note: This is the eighteenth of a series of articles telling the truth of conditions in Florida as found by a representative of The Indianapolis Tunes. By Harold Keats mF FLORIDA is to attain greatness, she must seek it in her soil. Honest efforts of home /builders and farmers must displace wildcat speculation and prices must be deflated to the point where a living can be made off the land. It is significant that from 1910 to 1920 Florida led all States in percentage of new farm land improved annually. When the movement switched from agriculture to speculation, less and less new acerage was brought under the plow until during the past few years there has actually been an annual decrease instead of increase in amount of land cultivated and crop output. With ample moisture, warm sun and a year-round growing season over fhuch of the State, and winter markets only forty-eight hours away, Florida eventually will rank as one of the foremost producing States. But this is a slow process, estimated to take many years. Before it can gain headway, prices of land must come down to reasonable limits. Bests Are Thiele The man whdv.wishes to take part in this agricultural development should bear in mind that there are always more crop pests in a warm than in a colder climate —ticks which ruin cattle, ffungus and worms which attack plants. It takes patience to overcome them. In some parts he must be prepared to drain in the rainy and irrigate in the dry seasons and to fertilize the soil of which there are more than 109 kinds, from sweet to sour, from wonderful to worthless. The man who would farm should obtain a soil survey of the land offered him, learn how it lies and whether the frosts, which sometimes come to the lowest part of Hendry County, considerably south of Palm Beach, are apt to touch it. The boom . however, must subside before labor can be obtained to make farms pay. Canneries and a marketing system must-be established and transportation arranged to make the year-round produce profitable. This will take years perhaps to accomplish, but until then there will not be enough producing country behind Florida's little towns to make values come up tp prices now puffed beyond sense by speculators. Picture Forbidding Our picture of Florida today is a forbidding one, but certainly any sane observer of the land boom must see that: 1. Living conditions are bad, prices of food, clothing and lodging exorbitant, more than making up for high wages paid labor. Schools are crowded and undermanned, hotels and lodging houses crammed and charging outrageous prices for uncomfortable accommodations. Sanitation is neglected and the hospitals filled with many unable to receive treatment. For many months of the year heat, rains and insect pests all vie to make life miserable for the unaeclimated. 2. Poorly constructed houses bring rents and prices out of all proportions to their worth, sometimes renting for 100 per cent of their value per year. 3. Crooks are operating everywhere, within and without the State, selling worthless land or no land at all to the unwary. 4. Thousands of low-priced lots are sold throughout, the country which never will be used. The improvements promised for them will never be made. Probably thirty times as many high-priced lots are hold by speculators as there are persons who can ever afford to use them, income tax records indicate. These lots will he unloaded by the speculators this winter. No Easy Money 5. The promoter seldom spends his own money on his development. He usually spends the investor’s, taking a profit and devoting the rest of he buyers’ money to putting in improvements which will show him more profit, as long as the boom 'asts. 6. There is no more easy money In Florida. Land selling and buying has become in most cases a mere gamble. Only those who can '.Ford high stakes can stay in the game. The little fellow will be trimmed and frozen out. 7. Employment is scarce for any except skilled and unskilled labor. Unless you have a psition lined up 'n advance or enough money to pay he high living costs for six months while you are looking for one, stay iway, Write the Chaihber of Commerce in the town you select to live -nd learn the opportunities for employment before you go. Financing Expensive 8. No man can tell how much a given,piece of Florida land is worth.

SECOND CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST LESSON SERMON DOCTRINE OF ATONEMENT Delaware at Twelfth St. SUNDAY SERVICE 11 A. M. AND 8 P. M TESTIMONIAL MEETING Wednesday evening at 8 o'clock. FREE READING ROOM 910 Continental Bank Bid?.. 17 N. Meridian. THE PUBLIC cordially invited to attend theae services and to use the readmit rooms. SUNDAY SCHOOL FOR CHILDREN UNDER 20 YEARS, at 9:30 and 11 A. M. , This church is a branch of Thi Mother Church. The First Church of Christ. Scientist in Boston Massachusetts 4

She Couldn’t Make “Ends Meet”

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Dining a husband on seven-course dinners lor $7.50 a week is impossible, Mi's. Elsie Ottoline, 18, of Toledo, has found. He criticised her meals in a divorce suit, cliarging neglect and cruelty. She came right back with a divorce petition, and says any man who gives his wife only $7.50 a week and then expects seven-course dinners Ls worse than cruel. Ottoline says he is of royal lineage and was a German officer during tlie war, , Values cannot be determined until the land is used. General opinion is that with few exceptions all classes of property are highly overpriced. Florida banks will not lend money on personal valuations nor accept new mortgages as collateral. 9. Financing is expensive and the law permits interest which is three times greater than the usury limits of other States. 10. High taxes for improvements and bond issues will burden many cities for generations. Many bond issues for impracticable harbor and similar projects which cannot pay will be repudiated or break the towns issuing them. 11. Every questionable method ever devised has been used by the unscrupulous land salesman. Properties’ advantages are exaggerated, profits are "guaranteed” with no method of making good on the guarantee, and unethical tactics are employed. Titles Confused 12. Titles to land are hopelessly confused. 13. Florida can never become a summer resort because of the heat, oppressive humidity and pests. Most authorities say this, and the fact that there is no diversity of scenery makes practical production of moving pictures impossible. Remember, too, there is no oil anywhere in Florida. . 14. The State has been thrown on the defensive and has already begun an advertising campaign to offset the stories of losses and discomforts told by those who are on the way home after a fruitless search for riches. 15. Unmistakable signs point to a break in the boom, which will come not as a sudden drop in prices, but an exodus of buyers and buskers. Prices will hold for a time, with no buyers in sight, and then drop gradually as owners fail to meet their payments or tire of holding. Conclusions These signs are: the withholding of credit from Florida merchants and builders with threats of receiverships: speculators unloading already or planning to get out from under by January or February: high pressure sales methods which always result in a slump; mortgages coming due on many properties for which no sale can now be found at inflated prices; promise of prosecutions ag3inst crooked dealers whifch will make the public shy from all dealers; the nervousness of the people generally, even in Florida, who are asking how long the boom will last. The above are the main conclusions drawn after careful study. Nothing has been said in this series of articles which has not been substantiated by leading Florida business men who see in the boom a menace to their permanent Investments, a check to legitimate development, a danger to prosperity and a blot on their reputations. There are, of course solid enterprises in Florida. There are some subdivisions mostly suburbs of the larger cities, which have real merit and will some day he worth the money asked for them. These may weather the slump which is due. BUTLER CLASS ELECTS Harrison Collier Chosen as Leader of Sophomores. Election of Harrison Collier as president of the Butler University sophomore class was announced Friday night. . Others elected were Margaret Elrod, vice president, and Jane Ogborne, secretary. The junior class election will be next week. Marriage Licenses Chester Stevens. 47. 1110 Brooks, finisher: Gertrude Carter. 44. 1110 Brooks, laundress. Clyde R. Penderprast. 23. Lupsle. Ind.. farmer; Cleola 1. Cralt. 10. 731 W. ThirtyFirst. Stanley S. Green. 39. 5154 E. Miehipan. engineer; Ariine G. Webster. 20. 131 Bosart. Windsor T. Waits. 24. 4244 N. Capitol, g-arage business: Cordelia A. Pearce. 20. 3015 Broadway, secretary. Clark E. Gordon, 25. 1347 N. Tuxedo, sign painter: Thelma Baxter. 25. 343 N. Beville. Ernest H. Knnster. 24. 2735 Barth, eler - Harriet W. Hofer. 20. 1003 Hoyt, teacher \_ Robert S. Pry. 22. 2014 N. New aersr. bookkeeper: Helen M. Wanghtel. 19. 1005 Villa stenographer. Virgil W. Potts. 20. 319 E. Fiftieth, merchant: Alice M. Holleran. 24, 1520 Ashland _ _ Walter Minger. 22. 1820 E. Twelfth, credit man: I.outse Kline. 21. 1814 E. Twelfth, typist. Lean Cross. 53. Spring-field. Ohio, salesman: Elizabeth Bechtel, 45. 429 N. Arsenal. domestic. O. Adams Naehoar. 32. Morton Hotel, secretary: Ruth Holtz. 27. 130 Euclid. David F. Swain Jr.. 21. 1903 N. Delaware, agent: Mary E. Riley. 22. 1701 N. Capitol.

JACQUA PLEA DEFERRED Decision on Liberty Fight Held l’p by Judge Slick. Bii tutted Press SOUTH BEND, Ind.. Oct. 17. Action on the petition of Frank Jaqua of Portland, Ind., for probation was deferred today. Jaqua is under prison sentence tn the Hawkins y Mortgage Company mail fraud case. No decision will he rendered until Judge Slick has conferred with Albert Ward, district attorney. The petition is the second Jauqa has filed. The first was denied by Judge Slick. TRIANGLE ENDS IN TRAGEDY (Continued From Page 1) answered angrily. He had'got very bossy and critical of everything she did.” “I wouldn't have believed he would have done this—never!” Stroud broke in.. "I trusted him.” “Have you noticed that, as Doris says, Peterman was unsettled lately?” he was asked. “Well I can’t say I have. He has always loved her. I knew that; all these years. We both loved her; we were both jealous. Between those two, the love was on his side only. She loved me.” “But you couldn’t get rid of him?” “I didn’t want to. I trusted him to act right.” “But mother wanted to get rid of him,” Doris said. “Father didn't know that, perhaps. Mother told me again and again that she knew ‘Shorty’ oughtn’t tp be here. Only a couple of days ago she said; ‘Doris, sve simply must find some way to get him away from here. We just must.’ “About two weeks ago, when father was at a clambake ‘Shorty’ quarreled awfully at mother, told her he didn’t like the way she was acting, and that she went too much. Mother said: ‘lt’s none of your business, and I won’t pay any attention to you.’ He seemed s awfully mad at that time and mother was terribly worried.” “He was wonderfully good to my wife,” Mr. Stroud remarked. “He did everything for her, took her places, bought her things— ’’ “And you didn’t mind?” he was asked. The husband shook his head. “I wanted her to be happy,” he said simply. "Shorty” bought, me things, too —lots, especially the last year. He was trying to win me over to his side,” Doris remarked. Funeral services for Mrs. Stroud probably will be held at 2 p. m. Monday at Tabernacle Presbyterian Church, Thirty-Fourth and Central Ave. Burial will be in Crown Hill Cemetery, according to present arrangements. Dr. D. A. Dunkel, pastor, will officiate. Peterman’s body will be sent to his former home, New Market, Ontario, Paul D. Lucas, funeral director, 923 N. Pennsylvania St., said. Short services may be held here. Coroner Paul F. Robinson began his inquest today. Sister Is Witness Miss Mary Rongsted, 20, sister of Mrs. Stroud, witnessed the tragedy. Miss Rongsted said Peterman was at the house when she returned from mailing a letter about noon Peterman admitted her and asked “Where is Mrs. Stroud?” "She is downtown and will be soon,” Miss Rongsted replied. Peterman nervously read a magazine until Mrs. Stroud returned. “Where have you been?” asked Peterman when Mrs. Stroud arrived in a taxi. “I have been downtown to see my husband.” Peterman grabbed her following an argument and tried to choke her. “I am going now, I have something to attend to. I will be back shortly,” Mrs. Stroud said as she started toward the kitchen. “No you aren’t, you’ll never leave (Ills house alive,” Peterman said. Mrs. Stroud fell above five feet from the rear steps as she was fired on. Peterman is said to have fired twice over her dead body. Miss Rongsted fled to the home of neighbors, who called a doctor. SOUTH OBJECTS TO M.L UNION Possibility of Church Unity Is Remote. Bu United Pres* CHICAGO, Oct. 17.—Civil War wounds that caused a split in the Methodist Episcopal Church in 1861 have not healed. Prospects of uniting the southern and northern branches of the church are decidedly remote, the United Press learned today. Figures compiled at the church's headquarters here show the northern branch is overwhelmingly in favor of uniting with the southern members, but the churches below the MasonDixon line are just as strongly opposed to the merger. Individual conferences of both the north and south branches, have been voting on the proposed merger for the last year. The vote in the northern conferences now stands 12,203 for the union and 595 against it. The southern vote, although not as large, is approximately in the same proportion against the merger. A two-thirds majority is necessary for ratification in the north and a three-fourths vote is necessary in the south. Officials here said they believed the union could not possibly be consumateffbeCone 1928, when a national conference Will be held and attempts to bring an agreement will be made. NEW social secretary Mrs. Edna Kuhn Martin of Indianapolis has been appointed social secretary of the Indianapolis Athletic Club. The office is anew one. Mrs. Mffrtin will have charge of all the women’s activities. She will direct the i women’s entertainment programs beginning with Captain 'Amundsen’s lecture at the club, Oct. 23.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

PEDESTALS FOR BRIDGE LIGHTS ARE REQUESTED Mr. Fixit Also Asked to Have Street Car Tracks Repaired. Do You Know? Councilmunic action to allow an equal number of Republican and Democratic election Inspectors is doomed through lack of votes. Let Mr. Fixit help present your case to city officials. He is The Times representative at the city hall. Write him at The Times. . Pedestals for lights on the Illinois St. bridge were requested from the city by a correspondent of Mr. Fixit today. V DEAR MR. FIXIT: Why can’t we have lights placed on pedestals for the N. Illinois St. bridge the same as other bridges across Fall Creek Also the strefet car track from the' bridge to Twenty-Eighth St. should be repaired so patrons would not be tossed from one side of the car to the other. READER OF DAILY TIMES. The board of works will investigate your proposals, Mr. Fixit was informed. DEAR MR. FIXIT: The street light on the corner of Sixty-First St. and Cornell Ave. has been out for almost two months. We haye called the light company and city officials several times but nothing has been done. Can you help us? A READER. The city’ plans to place new street lights in your district soon. Your complaint has been referred to J. H. Hensley, electrical engineer In charge of street lighting. Concerning Arlingtoh Ave. and Pleasant Run Blvd.: The holes are partly out of the city limits, it appears. However, the street commissioner’s department is investigating through Frank Reid, Inspector. DEAR MR. FIXIT: When can I appear before the board of works about a street Improvement? The board of works meets Monday, Wednesday and Friday of each week at the city hall. Public sessions are held at 2 p. m. DEAR MR. FIXIT: It’s a rocky road on Tibbs Ave. from Michigan St. to Washington St. What can be done? BADLY SHAKEN. Repairs are under way now, Reid told Mr. Fixit. Grading is In progress. MARKET GETS NEW ARRIVALS Several New Vegetables and Fruits Appear. Several fruits and vegetable* appeared for the first time today at the city market. Among them were Imported English hothouse grapes at $1.25 a pound, dates at 20 cents a pound, hothouse cucumbers, 15 and 20 cents each; Florida oranges, 75 cents a dozen, and navy beans, 2' pounds for 25 cents. Green beans at 20 and 25 cents a pound were higher. Other prices included: Cranberries, 20 cents a pound; tomatoes, 10 cents a pound; California oranges. 60 cents a dozen; head lettuce, 20 cents each; green onions. 10 cents a bunch; celery, 10 cents a bunch; limes, 60 cents a dozen; lemons, 40 to 60 cents a dozen, and lima beans, 60 cents a pound. Butter was cheaper at 55 and 59 cents a pound: eggs sold at 50 and 53 cents a dozen; chickens were 40 cents a pound; Country Gentleman corn and sugar corn, 50 cents a dozen; sweet potatoes, five and six pounds for 25 cents; Jonathan and Grimes Golden apples, five pounds for 25 cents; Winesap apples, six pounds for 25 cents, and bananas, 20 and 25‘ cents a dozen. Gone, but Not Forgotten If you see any automobile* bearing these license numbers call the poltce or The Indianapolis Times. Main 3600. The owner may be able to do the same for you some time. Automobiles reported stolen to police belong to: Earl Southerland, 737 E. Minnesota St., Ford, 400-559, from California and Washington St, Albert Jeffers, 2164 Park Ave., Ford, 129-604, from 317 E. Vermont Street. Harry Hassewinkle, 421 N. Arsenal Ava., Ford, from Nor;th and Illinois Sts. BACK HOME AGAIN Automobiles reported found by police belong to: Ford Sedan, 503-297, at Raymond St., and Pleasant Run Blvd., badly damaged. Charles Clark, R. R. B, Box 298, at East and Washington Sts. Ernest Miskell, New Castle. Ind., Chevrolet at East and Washington Streets. Charles Allen, 705 N. Rochester Ave., Overland, stripped at Sixteenth St. and Emerson Ave. 'NUISANCE’ IS ENJOINED Judge Pro Tem. Milner Gives Order Against Two Men. Judge Pro Tem. Joseph M. Milner of Superior Court Five, today perpetually enjoined Jeffle S. Davey and Frank P. Davey from maintaining a public nuisance at 551 W. Wilkins St. The complaint alleged that,the defenders kept and sold Intoxicating liquors at the address on Wilkins St. GAS BLAST FATAL Bu Times Snecial KOKOMO, Ind., Oct. 17,—Burns received when a light bulb exploded in a sealed gas tank at the Kokomo gas plant, proved fatal to Omar Haynes, 36, a workm .n.

RATE INCREASES ASKED Two Telephone Companies File Petitions With Commission. Two telephone companies have filed petitions to increase rates with the public service commission. They are the Southern Indiana Telephone and Tellegraph Company in the Brownstown and Vallonia exchange area, and the Hope Independent Telephone Company in Elat Rock, Cave. Hardsville and St. Paul. The Interstate Public Service Company petitioned to purchase the New Albany Street Railway Company. SMALL TRADERS SURE TO SUFFER Banks Soon to Close In On ‘Little Fellows.’ Bu I’nited Press CHICAGO, Oct. 17.—A multitude of inexperienced speculators, with bank-rolls not large enough to cover their almost certain losses, are largely responsible for the heavy trading of stocks on the New York Stock Exchange, J. C. Johnston, stock manager of Jackson Brothel's, said today. "The little fellows—the men in factories and offices —are flooding the brokers with orders to buy stocks.” Johnston said. “The banks always on the safe side, will start to unload their stocks rapidly once the inevitable price break comes,” he pointed out. “Then it will be that these small traders will suffer. They will lack capital to back up their purchases and they will be wiped out.” G. 0. P. LEADERS HOLD MEETING Deny They Discussed New U. S. Senator. • Republican leaders today denied reports an Informal gathering of State chieftains at the Columbia Club Friday afternoon to discuss the appointment of a successor to the late Samuel M. Ralston In the United States Senate. Participation in the funeral sex-v----ices for Senator Ralston was the purpose of the gathering, it was said. Among those who were in and out during the afternoon were: Clyde A. Walb, State chairman, and Harry Fenton, secretary; Joseph B. Kealing. Republican national committeeman for Indiana; John C. Ruckelshaus, campaign manager for John L. Duvall, Republican nominee for mayor; Governor Jackson and Lieutenant Governor Van Orman. -

Be Indiana’s Greatest Bargain Day Will Be Greater Than Ever!

Greater Quantities! Greater Assortments! Greater Values! Greater Facilities!

PLAN APPEAL UPON SEARCH WRIT RULING Attorney General Aids May Take Matter to Supreme Court. Ralph Spaan, deputy attorney general to prosecute liquor cases In Marlon County, today announced that he and the three other deputies have arranged a meeting with Attorney General Arthur L. Gilllom to consider plans for appealing to the State Supreme Court a ruling made Wednesday in Criminal Court by Special Judge H. B. Pike, in which the court ruled that search warrent Issued by a justice of peace was void and illegal if served in any township other than the one in which it was Issued. Judge Pike also ruled that issuance of search warrant was a civil and not a criminal process. Should Remember In Criminal Court Friday afternoon, Judge James A. Collins discharged Sarah Vanderwood, colored, 515 N. California St., when she ap pealed on charge of blind tiger. Lieutenant Eisenhut testified he had a search warrant, but forgot where he obtained it. “Well, you ought to remember.” said Judge Collins. “I think I’ve made it very plain that officers can’t enter a home without a search warrant properly obtained,” Judge Collins said. Lieutenant Eisenhut testified he searched the house after he saw several men enter and leave. • Might Be Justified “If you saw some well-known bootlegger coming out of the place, there might be some justification for suspicion,” said Judge Collins. Mrs. Vanderwood denied possession of one-half pint of alcohol confiscated, saying it belonged to one of her boarders. Cases of blind tiger against Salvatoree Azzarello, 615 Stevens St., and Sam Davis, 322 Fulton St., were passed in order to give officers an opportunity to get the search warrants used which they said are on file with Justice of Peace Henry H. Spiher in Wayne township. Fine of SIOO and costs and a thirtyday jail sentence given Miss Blanche Hicks, colored, 638 Blake St., In city court, was sustained. LAKE COTTAGES BURN Btl United Press ROCHESTER. Ind., Oct. 17.—Cottages belonging to Mrs. Charles Haag and the Byrum brothers of Kokomo, at Lake Manitou, were destroyed by fire. Loss was put at SIO,OOO.

SUPREME COURT REPORT Fewer Civil Cases and More Criminal Ones Appealed. Increased number of damage suits with railroads settled outside of court, has been an important factor in reducing the number of civil cases appealed to the State Supreme Court, Zach T. Dungan. clerk, said today in his annual report. During the fiscal year ended Sept. 30, a total of 147 new criminal cases were filed as compared with twentytwo in 1918. Many of these were prohibition cases. During the year, the Supreme Court disposed of 343 cases. Os these 169 were decisions, forty-six were dismissed and seventyfive transferred to the Appellate Court. INDIANA POLICE PROBE MURDER Wisconsin and Ft. Wayne Slayings Similar. Bn United Press KENOSHA, Wls„ Oct. 17.—Search for a moron-bandit, who is believed responsible for several “Lovers’ Lane” hold-ups in the middiewest, was started today in connection with the double murder of Madalyne Latimer and her sweetheart, James Sears. The couple was slain in Sears' automobile early Thursday as it was parked near Kenosha. Just as local authorities felt they had exhausted every possible clew’, Walter Kavanaugh, Ft. Wayne, Ind., detective arrived by airplane to aid in the search. Kavanaugh was sent here, because of the simlliarity of the murder here with the slaying of Howard Fischer and Katherine Herbers, near Ft. Wayne May 6. It was revealed in the investigation at Ft. Wayne that a "bicycle bandit” laid in wait along roads used by “spooning couples” and woukj approach them and demand their cash and jewelry, threatening them with exposure if they resisted. Fearing such exposure, the victims failed to enter complaints, it is believed, and as the result, the man was able to continue his banditry unmolested by the law. HON OR RICH AR D LIE BE R Elected Head of Ohio Valley Slate I’ark Conference. Bu United Press MADISON, Ind., Oct. 17. Richard Lleber, director of the Indiana department of conservation, today headed the Ohio Valley State Park Conference. Tom Wallace, Louisville, was elected vice president. The next meeting will be held at Frankfort. Ky.

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EXPECT MANY AT CLOSE OF DAIRY EXHIBIT Discussion of 1926 Meeting Place Is Topic of All Groups. The closing day and evening of the nineteenth annual, National Dairy Exposition at the State fairground today are expeejed to see many Indianapolis and Indiana citizens and their families taking the last advantage of seeing the 1925 show, said by officials to be one of the finest ever staged. Children, accompanied by adults, are admitted free today. 1926 Discussed Discussion of the place for th 1926 show has been the topic of conversation ampng all groups the las! few days. Owing to the sesqulcentennial exposition at Philadelphia, Pa., next year, and the fact thal many manufacturers and exhibitori of dairy products will ho there, Philadelphia is looked on with favor by many groups as the next exposition city. Atlanta, Oa„ and Memphis, Tenn., are also contending for th honor. The selection of the exposition city will be made in Decembet at a meeting of the Nutlonnl Dairy Association In Chicago, when the International Livestock Exposition ia being held. Final judging of the Jersey breed of cattle took place this morning, and a horse show is to be held at the Coliseum this afternoon am) evening. Auction of Cows Fifty-two head of grade co\\m whose annual average production butter fat is 381 pounds, were stfl at auction during the week, brlngiiH a total of $7,417.50. Mrs. Carl Ulmer, North MaH Chester, Ind., only woman particlprH lng In the cattle judging conteiß won second place In the Holsteil Judging. Championship honor in thl senior bull contest was awarded tr* Johanna Rag Apple Pabst, owned by J. E. Pick, Hartford, Wls. _ Christian Science—New Generation INDIANAPOLIS BRANCH 1 THE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE PARENT CHURCH Os the New Generation Sunday Service II A. M.—“ Lincoln Room” 1 14th floor; LINCOLN HOTEL Subject; “TRANSLATION” Sunday School for Children up to the ait sixticn year*. 9 45 a m.. “Lincoln Room ' Thl* church I* not connected with thf organization now known as The Firth Church oj Christ, Scientist. In Boston Ma*s.

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