Indianapolis Times, Volume 38, Number 51, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 July 1926 — Page 12
PAGE 12
SILVER BANTAM CORN AT WET Homegrown Apricots Replace Shipped Variety. New silver bantam corn appeared ( on a few stands of the city market today for the time this year at 75 cents a dozen. Home-grown apricots replaced 'the shipped variety and sold at four pounds for 25 cents. Home-grown asparagus sold for 25 to 75 cents a bunch. Hens were slightly higher at 42 cents a pound; cabbage was down to 4 cents a pound, and sugar pears were lower at 15 cents a ppund. Frying chickens were 55 cents a pound, and butter, 53 cents a pound. Other prices included: Transparent apples, five pounds for 25 cents; strawberries, 35 cents a quart; homegrown corn, two ears for 15 cents; shipped corn, five ears for 25 cents; beans, 15 cents a pound; wax beans, 15 cents a pound; pease, 10 to 20 cents a pound; green onions, three bunches for 10 cents, and California rose potatoes, 10 cents a pound. Large sweetheart watermelons, $1.50; other watermelons, 80 cents to $1.10; red raspberries 20 cents a pint; black raspberries, 15 cents a pint; blackberries, 20 cents a quart; homegrown cherries, 20 cents a quart; curants, 25 cents a' quart and peaches, 10 cents a pound.
FANTASTIC HORROR IN S-51 SEEN Correspondent Describes Body Search in Submarine. Bv United Presi NAVY YARDS. BROOKLYN, N. Y- July 10.—Scenes of fantastic horror were revealed Friday night as a United Press Correspondent inspected the interior of the Submarine S-51, while seaman comrades searched the slimy passageways and compartments for the bodies of the sailors who lost their lives when the undersea boat sank months ago. Through a round hatch the reporters decended a tiny steel ladder, landing in the cavernous depths of the craft as she lay on blocks in dry dock No. 5 electric lights had been rigged within to aid in the work of the search parties. In the cluttered gangways between compartments there was barely room to squeeze past the rusted bulk of machinery find gears. Toward the end of one passage they were forced to * stop and brush under the body of man hanging from a pipe. Denim clad legs and rough shoes dangled grotesquely. “This poor fellow climbed away from the water as it poured through the submarine,’’ commander Edward Ellsberg, salvage officer, said. “He climbed as high as mortal man could climb in this prison. But it wasn t high enough.” The unidentified body of which he spoke, there in the battery compartment passageway, was the last to be removed. The efforts to close the hatches had been demonstrated when searchers came upon the body of Lieut. F. D. Foster of Nutley, N. J., who was found dead at his post—with one hand reaching for the control valve. Two other men were found huddled’ near a pipe to which they had struggled in the hope of finding air spaces.
Gone, but Not Forgotten
Automobiles reported stolen to police belong to: Frank L. Hanney, 847 N. Rural SU Essex, 546-900, from Washington and Illinois Sts. W. E. Bean, Lincoln Hotel, WillysKhight, 294-610, from Kentucky Ave. and Washington St. William M. Hodges, 5949 Beech•wood Ave., Chevrolet, 526-829, from Delaware and Market Sts. Lawrence Scott, 708 E. New York St., Ford, from New York and Noble Sts. Floyd Cline, 915 N. Illinois St., Ford? 502-228, from 840 Virginia Ave. Robert E. Hall, 3736 N. Pennsylvania St., Ford, from 136 E. Market StGuy p. Warnack, 1702 N. Illinois St., Ford, 380-710, from Washington and Delaware Sts. Oscar Barnhill, 556 Drover St., Ford, 565-592, from Georgia and Pennsylvania Sts. H- D. Willcutts, Haverstick Park, Oakland, 543-974, from Market and Delaware Sts. J. E. Morrison, 410 Lemce Bldg., Moon, 538-425, from Market and Delaware Sts. Jacob Segal, 2620 N. Capitol Ave., Buick, 21-592, from Capitol Ave. and St. Clair St.
BACK HOME AGAIN
Automobiles reported found by ponce belong to: Otto Maddox, 517 W. Henry St., Ford, found on Madison Ave. * Ford, touring model, license 550212, found at Chester and Thirtieth Sts.
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Puzzle a Day
BRAINAGRAM Time limit, 9 minutes Below is a series of groups of apparently unrelated letters. Each group when rearranged will spell the name of a well-known flower. Write the correct name on the dotted line after each group. 1. SOER SYAPN 3. TWPAEEE UATUTNSIRM .. ; 6. TEOIVL NNOIARACT ....; 9. SOMEI RRP 10. SRUCCO 13. PUILT .. ; 14 CHLESEUN KYO ; 15 LBBLLEEU • Brainagram answer:
WORDS CONTAINING * A and e: MARK 1 A and R m 2. E and R " 3 A, R amo T H 4 E.R AMO T •* 5 A.E.R anoT “ <5
A perfect answer to yesterday’s brainagram is given below. Such an answer is unusual if all directions were obeyed. Ardent —6; star —4; direction —5; archway—2; seam—l; loquacious—; slatternly—6; derivative—6; invade —1; prolong; waster —6; earnest —6; machine —1; pert—--3; mature —6; start 4; provisa—; memoir—3; plane—l; gland—; strain —4; treatise —6; turbid —; virtue —5; crate —6; sneer—3; excerpt—s; part—4; what —; refer —3;* steer—s; welcome —; played—l; depart—6; greet—s.
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Let Mr. Fixit present your case to city officials. He is The Times representative at the city hall. Write him at The Times. Rubbish left by the contractors who paved S. Dawson St. will be removed at once, was the promise a representative of the •firm made to Mr. Fixit today. DEAR MR. FIXIT: The residents of Dawson St., south of Minnesota St., would like very much for you to use your influence toward getting a contracting company to remove thfe rubbish left there. The space between the curbs and the edge of the walks is cluttered with pieces of paving and graVel, thereby preventing regular cultivation of grass. If this is to be the City Beautiful, such hindrances should be taken care of immediately. L. E. SMITH, 1833 E. Minnesota St. You should reecive prompt relief. TO BUSINESS MAN: There is no city ordinance compelling you to obtain a license for an awning. However, there is a regulation that awnings shall be eight
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
feet above the sidewalk and shall not extend nearer than eighteen inches to the curbing. DEAR MR. FIXIT: Todd Stoops says that driving is a state of mind or something like that. If Todd would only go to Chief Johnson and demand that the laws be enforced, a lot of drivers would quickly get a state of mind. A truck this morning at Kentucky Ave. and Senate Ave. went right past the stop signal fifteen miles an hour. HOOSIER TRAVELING MAN. Police Inspector Lester Jones collected a few dollars last month from motorists caught. Os course, it’s hard to catch all of them, with the small number of motorcycle men available. SISTERS ARE BUSY TODAY The Kaye Sisters in anew act, and the Franklin Sisters in another, are two new attractions which will be seen in Keith-Albee vaudeville soon. Alex Gerber is the producer.
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FREE! --Everybody Come—* FREE! Big Balloon Ascension Daring Triple Parachute Drop# At the intersection of West Washington Street and Morris Street, 5 miles west from the Monument. Sunday Afternoon July 11th, 1926 4:00 P. M. PLENTY OF PARKING SPACE! Sunset Park
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