Indianapolis Times, Volume 37, Number 218, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 January 1926 — Page 9
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STATE TO BE REPRESENTED AT MEETINGS Governor May Name Commission to Attend Conferences on Agriculture. Governor Jackson intends for Indiana to be represented at conferences of agricultural leaders for recommending the kind of legislation Congress should enact to lift farming from its economic despondency, it was made clear at his office today. If invitations to the State are received from sponsors of any of the contemplated conferences within the next month, Jackson will appoint a commission of farmers to officially represent the State it was said, The Governor will make no effort to attend personally. Jackson has had many conversations with men in touch with the farmers' plight in Indiana, but has not yet decided on the personell of the commission. It Is likely Indiana will be invited to participate in the corn belt conference to discuss corn surplus disposition, at Des Moines, lowa, the last of this month. Governor Jackson is undecided whether he will name the commission from the officers of thfc tesaamnt organizations, or pick its ■members on recommendations of his friends. KINCADE CASE NEAR END Jury Expected to Get Fate of Noblesville Man Thursday. Bv United Press TIPTON, Ind., Jan. 12.—Indications today were that the case in which Lee Kincade is charged with murdering his father, James Kincade, 78, would reach the jury late Thursday. The State rested its case late yesterday and the defense immediately began the presentation of Its evidence.
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T. R.’s Chauffeur Now Composer
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A. W. E. Austin, once chauffeur tc President Roosevelt, lias turned composer. He has had published a march entitled “The Music Master,” dedicated to Victor Herbert.
BARBARY COAST WILD NO MORE Danny Deever Makes Long Trip in Vain. Bv Times Special SAN FRANCISCO, Jan. 12.—The famous Barbary coast has lost its wickedness. None is more keenly aware of the fact than Danny Deever, who came all the way frpm Alaska for another fling among the lights of folly, only to And the Journey had been futile. Danny, thin and stooped from years of toil in the Arctic, was all eagerness wheta he stepped ashore from the slow\ old craft on which he had worked his way southward. He smiled as he thought of the Thalia, the Red Mill, the Tivoli, Bella Union—gay palaces of pleasure. • Once the Thalia bloomed In a dazzling glitter of painted women, shrieking bands and riotous abandon. All Danny found there was a somber front of unpalnted boards. A policeman approached. His footsteps soimded like the trump of a triphammer in the silent street. Once there had been cflsy little booths about the dance floor at the Tivoli. Danny let his thoughts recall the scene—bright and warm, with the clink of glasses and pie laughter of girls. But Danny's eyes saw merely a dingy battery shop. One may buy root beer at what used to be the only Hippodrome. But the rest of the places are tenantless. They are like the "ghost towns” in the mother lode country, shorn of life.
SUPPLY DEALERS MEET Indiana Building Materials Association Holds Convention. A “dealers’ district school,” breakfast at the Claypocl, at which trade problems were discussed in a general way, today started the second day of the Indiana Builders’ Supply Association's convention. John Suelzer Jr., Ft. Wayne, presided. E. Stanley Story, South Bend, led the discussion. Gerhardt If. Meyne, Illinois Contractors’ Association president, was to speak on “Contractor—Dealer Relationship,” at a noon luncheon to be presided over by Everett E. Dubbs, Indiana Harbor. Dan W. Simms, lAfayette, will speak tonight on “Inspiration and the Constitution,” at a final banquet. LOSES SAME WIFE TWICE Princeton Enoch Arden Divorced by Mate. Bv United Press PRINCETON, Ind.. Jan. 12. George Keaghley, Princeton's Enoch Arden, today found himself without a wife for the second time within three months. Returning home after an absence of twenty years last November, Keaghley found his wife w-ed, oil the assumption that he was dead. He immediately had the msxriage annulled. Yestehday Mrs. Keaghley obtained a divorce and rewed her second mate, Claude Lynn. PUBLISHERS TO BUILD >— Bobbs-Merrill Company Purchases New Site on E. Michigan St. Bobbs-Merrill Cohipany, publishers, bought thp property at 114*22 E.- Michigan St., on which a new' building will be erected in 1927. The consideration on the site was |63,500. The property has P frontage of 115 feet in Michigan St. and is 125 feet deep. The company is located at 18 W. Vermont St. now, but will vacate within the next year to make way for the War Memorial Plaza. The new site was bought from the Union Trust Confpany.
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FRATERNITY TO HAVE MEETING Delt Northern Division Conference Here. More than 350 members of the Delta Tau Delta fraternity are expected to attend the fraternity’s northern division conference Friday and Saturday at the Indianapolis Athletic Club. Attendant festivities include the annual State banquet, moved up to Jan. 16 from May, to be held at the tlaypool, and the annual bride’s ball at the Columbia Club. Alvan E. Duerr of New York, national president, will be one of the guests of honor. Others are Roy O'. West of Chicago, chairman of the board of trustees of De Pauw University; Bishop Edwin Holt Hughes; Thomas C. Howe, ex-president of Butler University; Edgar H. Evans, trustee of Wabash College: Dr. John H. Oliver and Frederick B. Schortemeier. Secretary of State. Samuel Runnels Harrell of Indianapolis Is conference chairman. Ray Ankenbrock is president of the local alumni association. MUSEUM OPENING HELD More than 200 persons attended the opening of the children’s museum in the shelter house at Garfield Park Monday. Stewart Springer, Butler University student and former woodcraft instructor at Culver Military Academy, is curator.
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800 TO ATTEND MEETING Hardware Association Will Sponsor Exhibit Jan. 26-29. About 150 manufacturers and jobbers will participate In a display at Cadle Tabernacle Jan. 38-23 in connection with the twenty-seventh annual convention of Indiana Retail
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Hardware Association at the Claypool. Problems of the hardware men will occupy attention of the 800 members, according to G. F. Shelly, secretary. Harry E. Magee of Winchester Is president. ✓ A number of authorities In the trade will speak.
TO VOTE UNION’S STOCK Johrt Smith, president of the Central Labor Union, Monday evening
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MAin 5241
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