Indianapolis Times, Volume 37, Number 284, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 March 1926 — Page 2

PAGE 2

AGENCIES GET $162,625 FOR THREE MONTHS Community Fund Makes Report on Distribution of Funds. Tniiii ~f $J 62,620 was dist . ibulod by a;_-r:>cies connected with the Indinnai "iis (‘onnnunii;. Kund during the* thi(( months pcr'nd ending dan. 31. it was announced today. Repent showed *22,2110.30 more money was distributed as compared to the same period ending dan. 31. 1925. Expenses of conducting the 1U26 campaign for funds were less by $1,203.21 than 1 lie 192a campaign. Agencies and amounts received by them: Camp Eire Girls SIUO.UO ATnha Horn*- Ase< lation 000.00 Ameriran Settlement A.*soe..i lion 1 ..‘>oo.oo boys’ Club Association 1.095.78 l*oy ScOuts of America . . . 4 !•>•*>*-> Camp Girls I ii'id on Catlioli <’(rnm nit\ (‘enter . i>.000.00 CathoM WomenV Association. 025.00 Colleue Settlement \e.soH-ition. Dispci isar.v Aid Association... 1.4<52 • Faith home •i’50.00 Family W liar - Seoict.x . sS.f>‘?7.s* Planner iionsc 4.550 00 Florence Crittrntoii home . . . 1.892.50 G:rl Sec uts. In* 1 550.00 Hawthorne soeial vo-vic- lions" 1.102.75 Tndor*er nl ptmtoniavs 100.00 Day Nursery Asso -i.ition * 5.251.00 Flower Mis-nnt 5.550.00 Home f or* Atatl Women 1.057..S >iuo*anr StM it tv 700 00 tndianapolis orolu.ii asylumn. 0 7.” .00 Travelers’ Ait! 990.25 Jewish Federation 5.000.00 Old Folks’ hone- 500 00 Public Health Nursing Association .... 6 500.00 Tied Cross, Indian, polls chapter 1. .101.00 Salvation \rm> 8.982.00 Society of the Good Shenherd . 750 U 0 Social pcrviee. Church Fetk ration 1.575.00 Volunteers of Ann lie i 1,005.15 Wheeler City K'st tir Mission. 1.575.00 Woman s Tmprovcmrnt Club 040.00 V. M. C A 20.071. I S V. M. < . A t colored> 1.525.00 y . w. r \ i5.u00.0u Mivihs Wheatley branch. V. W C A 5.125.00 Total * *102.025.70 There wa re no defieits in any ol the organizations Jan. 51. it was announced.

jj^^^^fchapped I '' or reddened skin quickly responds to the Resinol treatment. Ihe purity and soothing qualities of Resinol Soap tend to prevent dryness-—the .most frequent cause ol chapping. But where exposure to sun or wind has already roughened and burned the skin, the healing touch ol Resinol Ointment relieves the tense, drawn feeling, stops the smarting and helps to restore skin health. Many women have found it invaluable, also, for ridding the skin of pimples, blackheads, rashes, etc. Ask your druggist today for

Resmol EAGER SHOPPERS THRONG STORES Salesgirls Dread Bargain Days T ,ot isa was tired. From morning until night, she had been on tier feet in the busy dell jL 'l® throbbed and her % feet,ached. Week after week, she ZW A&fc. fp Tt her strength Ts %. ebbing until she lkirMllr„ ln^i,Z' nor tit to work. “My mother suggested that T try T.ydia B. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound,” she writes. “I took only three bottles and it brought me about all right.” Through the Vegetable Compound, she found better health to do her work and she told the other girls about it. That was several years ago. Louisa is now Mrs. L. J. Van Dyke of 1246 Spring St., Morrell Park, Baltimore, Md. She is the mother of three healthy, active children. She says that she found the tonic effect of rhe Vegetable Compound helpful to her during this entire period. Every working girl knows that to do her work properly and easily she must have good health. She can not afford to lose time from her work. Girls who suffer from a run-down condition should try Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. —Advertisement.

THE INDIANA TRUST CO. Pay 4% Savings JKIKJ; $2,000,000

BUY UNION TRACTION COMMUTER TICKETS 12-ride—^lo-ride and MUYt* money—crowd on BUSSES OR INTERURBAN CARS operated ly X Ask A ifent.

Accused of Burning Two to Death

Thomas Hill. ‘>o, is held at West Inion, Ohio, charged ivilli first degree murder and arson. Hi 6 crippled wife and her blind mother dird when bis farmhouse burned. He is aceuseil of hilling them in the tire because he was tired of caring for them. Photo shows the ruins ol the larmhouse, with an inset of Hill.

SEVENTEEN BILLION IS FARMERS’ LOSS

Decline. However, in Land Values From Wartime Peak Is Ended, Commerce Department Believes.

Bn Timex Special WASH I NOTON. March 30. The fanners have lost more than seventeen billion dollars in the last five years through declining land values. In 1020 the farm lambs of the .Nation were 'allied at $54.529,-'>63,059. In 1925, according to figures just anGone, but Not Forgotten Automobiles reported stolen to police belong to: Robert Greebel, Elks Club, Chevrolet. M-l 15, from Meridian St. and Monument PI. Harriet Campbell, Peru. Ind., Oldsmobile, from Peru. Ind. BACK HOME AG AIN Automobiles reported found by police belong to: Florence Field, Anderson, Ind., Ford, at 130 Fulton St. Lonnie Hartap. 3339 Arlington Ave., Chevrolet, 543-566, at Pennsylvania and New York Sts. Chevrolet truck, license M 13. in rear of X. Meridian St. COIN FLIP TO ELECT Bipartisan Agreement Made at Warsaw. nii Timm Special WARSAW, Ind.. March 30.—The flip of a coin is to decide the nomination and subsequent election of certain candidates whose names will appear on the ballot at the primary election in Kosciusko County in May. A bipartisan arrangement has been entered into in some townships for the election of township trustees, assessors and members of the advisory boards. Under the arrangement Repub- | lieang will nominate the trustee and one member of the advisory board and the Democrats will nominate the assessor and one member of the advisory board. For the third member of the advisory board a coin will decide the selection. ASSAILANT IS SOUGHT Man in Hospital After Receiving Blow on Head. Police sought Walter Creekbaum, 43, of 1?62 \V. Washington St., on a charge of assault and battery with intent to kill. He escaped police after he is alleged to have struck and seriously injured David Moore, 43, of Boggstown, Ind., who rooms at the Washington St. address. Lieut. Walter Claffey said Moore believed Creekbaum shot him. He was taken to Methodist Hospital. Moore refused to talk to police, j Mrs. Creekbaum said her husband accused Moore of taking her to a show. She said when Moore came in the Creekbaum restaurant Monday night, Creekbaum obtained a gun and club. He is said to have struck Moore with the club but did not shoot.

/ Tbm orrowl i I Alright I LB 8 mild, vegetable laxative to I I in relievo Constipation and BUI— I I ousneas and keep the digestive and I | I I eliminative functions normal. k 125 c. averJ j Chips off she OW Block ni juniors- \\ jpg# Littlo NR a 11 One-third tha regu- E I S'* lar dose - Made of MM a same ingredients, MM II then candr coated .MM I m For children and adults. J I BY YOUR DRUGGIST,^

nounced by the Department of Commerce. the value of farm lands is estimator! at $37,774.056,-167. This shows the drop in farm values since the boom days following the war. Prices then wore inflated, due partially to speculation, as result of the optimistic belief that agricultural prices would remain high. It is believed that the pendulum of values has swung to the other extreme. Although latest figures show the price still is dropping, the rate of decrease has slowed to such an extent it is believed the bottom soon will be reached. Apart from the speculation angle, these values reflect, fairly accurately, the decline in the market value of agricultural products. Farm lands tend to be valued by their productive worth. The postwar land boom, caused chiefly by easy credit and poorly-grounded optimism, caused inflation. Nevertheless, to a considerable extent, tne high values of 1920 were based upon -economic laws, as has been the decline. While delegates from agricultural States storm Congress for relief leg lslation, asking farmers be protected from foreign competition, as is industry, a contrast between the wealth of the two classes can he seen in the farm census. While land values have dropped to such an extent, the buildings on the land have gone up in worth. This is partially due to additional build ing. But buildings*tend to be valuqd according to the cost of replacement less depreciation. EGG HUNT TO BE STAGED Elkhart Children to Take Part in .Municipal Affair. • I', u Time,* Special ELKHART, Ind.. March 30—A municipal Easter egg hunt will he staged in Elkhart Saturday afternoon. All children 10 years of age or younger will be permitted to participate. A crowd of 3,000 is expected to take part.

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

MAID, 15, FOUND SLAIN IN HOME Evidences of Struggle With Murderer Located. Iln Time* Special BUFFALO. N. V.. March 30. Pauline Fokolowski. a pretty 15-year-old maid at the home of Fletcher Burke in a high class north side residential section, was found murdered there late Monday. She had been shot three times through the chest. There also were evidences, police said, she Had been criminally attacked. The girl had been alone in the house since noon, when she got the Burke’s 5-year-old son ready for kindergarten. The hoy's mother had left earlier in the morning on a downtown shopping tour. The father is out of town on a business trip. There were evidences of a struggle in the paxlor of the home and numerous blood spots on the floor. BILL’ MAY GET SACK IN GAME Armitage Planning to Enter Candidates, Is Rumor. That William H.-Armitage, Shank administration political director, is preparing to rise from the political dead by entering a number of candidates in the county primary race was the word today from the politicians. One of the candidates mentioned was William 11. Freeman, former board of works member, said to he considered ds a candidate for the Republican county treasurer nomination. If Freeman enters the race, it will affect the fortunes of Clyde E. Robinson, hacked by Mayor Duvall and his associates for the treasurership. INMATES ARE SOUGHT Three Men Escape Prom Central Hospital for Insane. Police today were-asked to search for three men who escaped Monday from tlio Central Hospital for In sane. Charles .T. Burns, 44. wearing dark clothing: Sanford Metcalffe, 38, formerly of 847 W. New York St., and Arthur Dickey. 50, formerly of Howard County, all trusties, who had access to the grounds walked away. lIOOSIER PASTOR DIES Bn Time* Special FT. WAYNE, Ind.. March 30. The Rev. ,T. H. French, 52, pastor of the Methodist Church at Poneto, died in a Ft. Wayne hospital from pneumonia. He Is survived by a widow and six children.

-at most grocers (and from the Polk wagons) PGLS&jQnamed COTTAGE®IIEESE Frisco Style ~fhatstjijsdHfferenc£ Never before have you tasted cheese like this! 3, *\,o Made from sweet milk enriched with pure cream.

MR.JFIXIT Lack of Transportation Facilities Bemoaned,

Let Mr. Fixit present your case to city official:*. He is The Times' representative at the city hall. Write him at The Tun s. Northeast Indianapolis people need bus transportation, but the public service commission has refused to permit operation of a bus line, a correspondent informed Mr. Fixit today. DEAR MR. FIXIT: After several weeks of waiting several hundred families in this section are wondering why they cannot get bus service. We petitioned for service by the* Peoples Motor Coach Company, which readily agreed to give the same if authorised to do so. This sectioi of the city is growing rapidlj and numerous houses are being built. Put lack of transportation is preventing us from being 100 per cent built up. Why we should he denied this service, after this company is willing to give the same is more than vve can understand. The route would he Keystone Ave. and Thirty-Eighth St. W’e hope to he well represented when Indianapolis becomes a million strong hut we must have transportation first. A. L. W.. 2417 E. Thirty-Fourth t. The ways of the public service commission arc difficult to comprehend. but Mr. Fixit will present the matter to that body. ARBOR DAY PROCLAIMED Replacement of Trees anti Slirtil>s April 15, t'rgvd. Urging the replacement >,f an> tree or shrub destroyed during the year. Governor Jackson has issuen a proclamation designating April Iti as Arbor day in Indiana. Attention is called in the proclamation to American Forest week April 18-24.

IPuriTai! t Malt , L RICHEST i g&. STRONGEST .SSI W BEST ® JUST TRY IT ® m ASK ANY J| K. DEALER

MAN WATCHES BURGLAR WORK Gunman Suspect Escapes From Official. Choosing to lay quiet rather than leap out of bed and grapple with a burglar, proved to be the proper course for Lester Kales and wife, Apt. 3, the Blaekstone, 4001 E. Washington St., Monday night. The thief left the apartment without loot. Eales told detectives he was awakened and saw the man ransacking drawers. A suspected gunman, escaped front C. W. Mitchell, C. I. & AV. railroad detective Monday night. Mitchell said he found the man in the railroad yards near Summit St. The man refused to tell his name and address. Mitchell found a gun on hint. Police failed to find any trace of a negro bandit who attacked Adolph Nazareth. 3019 Kenwood Ave.. in a vacant liou.se at 508 Fulton St. Nazareth said the man knocked him down, choked him and took a watch valued at $l5O. Leo Dorn, druggist. North St. and Massachusetts Ave., tried to capture a negro who presented a check for $22.50 to he cashed, but failed. GRAIN OPENING Bn I nit-'I I’rrxs CHICAGO. March 30.—Wheat— May, new. up %; May, old, up '4: July, off ■\; Sept., off L. Corn— May. unchanged; July off Sept., off Oats— May, unchanged: July, off Sept., off 'i. Provisions, lugber.

i Markets

TIT TTinm-TI Country Club j, m BUTTER “u i Lb. 44c CORN Tonmtoes 3 for 25jC 1% /ff W jjT Ts Country New Low Tall f \ lYllljrv, c,ub pHce $3 Cans fciOC Fresh Milk -* - 6c - 10 c 7 1 Genuine Holland 1 Layer Lake Herrin cr Salmon 2-Layer Heavy Iced it* i Tall Can Pink 35c Ea- JOS 95 c 2 f‘ sl ' 5 C 16c Ea : BREAD 8c -4c FLOUR - -•'* T. 25 9 A One can Babbitt’s Cleanser 4 A ■ IV7AM IiTAIT with each purchase of one B uiven Away 10c BEEF SHORT RIBS -14< PORK CHOPS J, n32c Pork Steaks i:;7 2S-, SLICED BACON at - 3% PORK SAUSAGE IN 24c BANANAS S 3:20c Anni 17 Cl A Cra “k Bal(lwins M®* lo w je*aps Ar rLLIJ 6 Lbs. for 21c 4 Lbs. f/or 22c GRAPEFRUIT,: 10c New Cabbage 6c Lb. Leaf Lettuc/e lOcLb. New Carrots Blanches 5c Celery Yellow Onions 2 Lbs. 9c Lemons s‘7 25c Dozen

FULLEN RULING APRIL 5 Charges Officer Struck Him With Mace Without Cause. Ruling in the case of J. StepheuFullen, 1031 Blaine Ave., charged with resisting an officer anti failun to stop at a preferential street, will be given by Judge Dan V. White in municipal court April 5, following the hearing of evidence Monday. Arrest of Fullen led to the suspension of Motorcycle Officer Miller who Fullen alleged struck him with his mace after arresting hint. Miller

M AlvCil ;iy2o

testified that he struck Fulllen after Fullen had struck at liitu. Fullen said he was struck while standing with his hands In his pockets. Fullen udmltted that he said "he whs going to get Miller’s buttons.” ( r Use it in Gravies LEA & PERRINS’I SAUCE 1 k Ask your proper Per t \