Indianapolis Times, Volume 38, Number 111, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 August 1926 — Page 12

PAGE 12

MUSIC FOR FAIR WEEK IN CHARGE OF M GROUP 'Old Melodies’ Concert to Be Given —Allegro Club Will Entertain. During Indiana State fair week, musical programs will be In charge of a committee of the' Indiana State Federation of Music Clubs. This committee, appointed by Mrs. J. P. Reed Stbele, federation president, includes the following: Miss Mary , Moorman, chairman; Mrs. Arnold Spencer, Mrs. Robert Blake. Mrs. R. Walter Jarvis, Mrs. Charles Fitch, Mrs. Everett Johnson, Mrs. Verma Sterling and Mrs. Noman L. Schneider. Mrs. Henry Shurmann is sponsoring the preparations. An ‘‘Old Melodies" concert will be given early In the week. Mrs. Robert Blake, soloist, and Mrs. Arnold Spencer will be the soloists. The program is as follows: "An Old-Fashioned Town,” and "Believe Me If All Those Endearing Young Charms," Mrs. Spencer; "Drink to Me Only With Thine Eyes," “Codin’ Through the Rye," Mrs. Blake; "An Old Romance,” "Dixie,” Mrs. Spencer; “Swing Low, 'Sweet Chariot,” “Annie Laurie,” Mrs. Blake; "Love’s Old Sweet Song,” “Sweet and Low," duet by Mrs. Spencer and Mrs. Blake. The second concert of the series during the week will be given by the Allegro Clujs, anew Oi-ganiza-tlon, composed of fifty members from 14 to 25 years of age. Carter Helton of Bjitler University is president Miss Gladys Whiteman is nist. Mrs. Frances Johnson, a member of the faculty of the College of Music and Fine Arts, is director of the club.

lArgMt Trust Company In Indiana

A COMMERCIAL BANK of Large Resources Interest Paid Monthly on Checking Accounts Personal and Commercial Capital and Siirplus $2,500,000 Member Federal Reserve System t jffetctier Sabinas anii Crust Corapanp YOU WIILD FIND THE FLETCHER TRUST BANKS AT N. W. Cor. Penn, and Market 6235 BeUefontaine 1533 Roosevelt A ve. 2969 N. Illinois 458 E. Wash. St. 1541 N. Illinois 5t.2812 E. Wash. Sfc. 1125 8. Meridian 1233 Oliver Ave. 2122 E. Tenth St. 474 W. Wash. St.

DRESS-UP ON Liberal Credit THE HUB t 'V WA■- H tNOTOI'J • ST.

Men 1 Take the'' Easy Way. Buy yonr Clotce* on Traugott’a. 10-PAY PLAN Traugott’s 215 W. Wash. St.

Reduced Prices On Tents, Cots, Camping Supplies Diamond Salvage Cos. 44 South Illinois St.

MEHAFFEY’S CAMERA SERVICE 8633 Went Michigan Street Developing and Printing, Kodaks and Films. Phone. Mnont tt7fc ..CSJifIV

Test Answers Here are the correct answers to the questions appearing on Page 7: 1 — Marion Talley. 2 E Plurlbus Unum. B—Ohio.8 —Ohio. , 4— Switzerland. 6—New York. 6 A king of Persia. 7 William Tyler Page. 8 — New York' City. . 9—Jefferson City. 10—Fostering mother. ' TWO KILLED IN FOREST BATTLE Captured Moonshiners Are Guarded Against Violence. By United Press EAGLE RIVER, Wis., Aug. 14. A heavy guard was thrown about the county jail here today to prevent violence to George Brandenburg and Charles Boring, wounded moonshiners, who participated In a battle near Winegar, southeast of here, in which George Rutherford, local constable, and William Stanley, Kentucky moonshiner and fugitive from justice, were killed and Elmer Monk, a deputy sheriff, was wounded. The battle occurred when Rutherford went to Boring's forest hut to arrest him on a desertion charge. He found Stanley, whom he had arrested for a Kentucky murder last spring and who escaped. Stanley killed Rutherford. Mrs. Rutherford, awaiting for her husband at the edge of the forest, heard the shot and drove to Winegar, gathered a posse. Stanley was killed by a woodsman after he had shot Monk through the eye. Boring and Brandenburg were captured after being stalked five hours, and after hundreds of shots were fired. BOUND OVER TO JURY Man Alleged to Have Fired Antes Is Held. Mike Scope, 159 Douglas St., alleged to have set fire to one automobile and damaged another a few days ago in a fit of Jealousy, in municipal court today was bound over to the Marion County grand jury under SI,OOO bond, on an arson charge. Police say Scope burned the machine of Miss Nellie Daly, 936 Union St., and cut and hacked the auto of Arthur Souders, same address. He had been a roomer at Miss Daly's home, it was said. Mike Drigo, rooming with Scope, was fined $1 and costs In municipal court today. He Is alleged to have stolen from Kingan & Cos. salt sacks used by Scope in firing the machine. Both are employed at Klngan’s. MORE DIE IN BEER WAR Detroit Police Challenged by Wave of Killings. Bv United Press DETROIT, Aug- 14.—Detroit police today were challenged by a defiant bootleg war. Three men have already been killed and three others, Including a woman, are in hospitals, als as result of four shootings in as many days. Early today two hl-Jackera shot and killed George "The Rat” Lewis, alias "Crip” Kaplan. Late Friday a battle was fought between two speeding automobiles. So far as police learned, no one was Injured. PURDUE TRUSTEE RENAMED Purdue University alumni have chosen Palmer R. * Edgerton of Marion as a member of the board of trustees to succeed himself, Governor Jackson has been Informed. The term is for three years, beginning July 1. Edgerton’s commission was Issued today. PROHI MEETING TUESDAY County convention of the Prohibition party will be held at 2:30 p. m. Tuesday afternoon. Stafford E. Homan, county chairman, said candidates for county offices will be indorsed and nominated. ABANDON BUS LINE The Ft. Wayne, Van Wert and Traction Company was authorized to abandon its bus line from Ft. Wayne to the Indiana-Ohio State line, by the public service commission. Winds are produced by difference In atmospheric pressure in ' various locations.

Is Matching Dollars GAMBLING?

Now 4% On Savings

Continental National Bank 17 NO. MERIDIAN

ESCAPE FROM INDIA DESCRIBED B Y GIRL Chicago Co-ed, Facing Death, Returns to United States, Where She Divorces Husband-Prince.

This is the last of a series of five articles written for the United .Press by Betty Kurlow, Chicago co-ed. in which she na9 recounted her experiences as' tho wife of Abani Kumar Bose of Barodi. East Bengal. India. By Betty Kurlow (Written for the United Press.) CHICAGO, Aug. became disgusted at my refusal to give him more money and sent me to Darjeeling, a fashionable summer resort in the Himalaya Mountains. I wondered at his kindness, until I learned that he was sending me to a kind of sanatorium where he could put me away, I suppose, forever. In charge of friends of Abani, a Hindu dentist and his family, I was given a cottage not ai nice as my father’s Chicago garage to live in during my stay at the Darjeeling sanatorium. I was again forced to eat native food, was not allowed to leave the building without some member of the dentist’s family with me, and was made to function as nurse maid to the dentist’s ever increasing progeny. Worst of all, a servant slept in my room every night to see that I made no attempt to escape. , • The food and the constant confinement mad@ me ill once more and I wrote Abani asking him to let me come back to Calcutta. I got no answer from my husband. My illness was getting worse and, as I think of it now. I believe my mind was even becoming affected. So I fled from the sanatorium one day with the heTp of a friend I had met irt Calcutta, and put up under an assumed name at one of the leading Darjeeling resort hotels. Had I attempted to register as Mrs. Abani Bose, I would have been refused a room because of the English discrimination against natives. Abani at last answered my letter, but instead of sympathizing with me, he reproved me for not doing just as his dentist friend had ordered me. And that would have meant being a virtual slave. My illness and Abani’s he* rtless letter made me desperate. I wanted to end it. I took a large orverdose of sleeping tablets before retiring one night, with the hope that I would never awaken. But I had not taken

666 It a Prescription for Colds, Grippe, Flu, Dengue, Bilious Fever and Malaria It kills the germs

USED PIANOS $1 A Week And Up Pearson Piano Cos. 128-139 N. Penn. St- Est. 1873.

Diamonds on Credit One dollar opens an accopnt. Balance small weekly payments. DEE JEWELRY CO. 18 N. 111. St. Claypool Uotel Bldr.

SMART APPAREL On Easy Terms PURITAN CLOTHING STORES 131 W. Washington 8t

WHITE Furniture Cos. Jake Wolf Tom Quinn “The Home of Real Furniture Value." 243 to 249 B>ht tVa.hln.rton Bt.

_*\vo>i K ,‘j \4 CLOTIHNa ■< li i > ii ii

GULBRANSEN PLAYERS CHRISTEN A-TEAGUE PIANO CO. 237 N. Penn. St.

The Price of Safety Rent a Safe Deposit Box Year and Up Protect Your Valuables

Aetna Trust & Savings Go.

ROSS H. WALLACE, Pres. 23 N. Penn. St.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

quite enough. I wotye up delirious several days later. A Colonel Proctor, who, bes Mes being a physician, was also a member of the governing council at Darjeeling, treated me. He told me that If I didn’t leave India at once I would die—that it wasn’t necessary for me to commit suicide. He gave me a great deal of fatherly advice and I thank God that I took it. I went back to Calcutta and I told my husband that I was going to leave him and return to America! He refused to let me go and declared that If I tried to quit Calcutta he would kill me. And he said it would be —no one would know abou it, and if they did —no one would care. Grasping me about the neck, he chocked me until I screamed, merely to demonstrate how simple it was. x When nobody answered my screams, he exclaimed: “Now, do you see?” I saw I was what it would mean if I did not get away from Calcutta. I determined to leave at any cost. /e But during the next day my husband had another one of his peculiar changes of character. He told me that hS would let me go and with these words in my eers, I Immediately rushed out to make my sailing arrangements before he changed his mind again. His last, last words before I left were: “I know you are coming back.” But I shall never leave the United States again. (Miss Kurlow took n steamer for America, landing at San Fransico in January. 1925. After a yeHr’s residence, she applied for a divorce in Chicago jand the decree was granted to her by Judge Joseph Sabath. last month. Miss Kurlow is now living with her parents in Chicago, where she is studying music.)

Mortgage Loans First and Second Indianapolis Real Estate Columbia Securities Cos. Lincoln 6354 152 N. Delaware

QUALITY TIRES AT CUT PRICES INDIANA TIRE SALES CO. *o* Capitol Are. Riley 2381 At Point of Indiana and Cap. Are*.

50r h Uffk 137 W. St.

Payments as Low as $1 a Week THE UNION TIRE CO. Geo. Medl&m, Pres. MAln 6273 Cor. S. HI. and Georgia St. Open Till 8:00 p. m.

i Your \ Husband \ , as the husbands of * some of your friends. |We But that doesn’t, matter if yoi/are helping him by / intelligently planning your finances. Hflvc Careful spending means opportunity for saving. The wise wife looks ahead to a home of her own—an education for her children—and many other 6 . things that, can be had only by saving. She knows, (jy too, that the 6% dividends, compounded semi/Q annually this association has always paid, is a safe, * BUre to make her savings grow rapidly. Help your husband with an account here at Celtic. Drop in any day and let us talk it over with you. D! tti d A^ o uX U sor ed . r AiseUovep 1 No Entrance Fee Sera, s “ y for l $9,500,090 JNo Paid Solicitors Savings & Loan Association 23 West Ohio Street

FIRST CONCORD GRAPESJPPEAR Few Shipments Received by Market Standhqlders. Shpiments of Concord grapes were received by a few city market standholders today, the 'first of these grapes to reach 'lndianapolis this summer. A five-pound v basket sold for 60 cents. California peas, at 20 cents a pound, were another new arrival. Home-grown strawberries reappeared and were scarce at 60 cents a quart. Tomatoes were higher at 10 cents a pound. Other prices included: green beans 10 to 15 cents a pound; home-grown tip top melons, 40 to 60 cents each; Malaga grapes, 15 cents a pound: seedless grapes, two pounds for 15 cents; blackberries, 20 cents a quart; pickles, 60 cents to $1 a hundred, and Michigan cherries, 25 to 30 cents a quart. Choice Transparent apples were five pounds for 25 cents; beets and carrots. 5 cents a bunch; crabapples, 10 cents a pound; sugar pears, 10

3}: \B Ifnit S'* TirfJ ~ f nPiClic service Tire li. y Iiat.iyiWYDRKST.

Rent a Safe-Deposit Box! Avoid disappointment, inconvenience ... save time, OPEN TODAY and assure complete protecUNTIL 1 P. M. tion for all your valuables • • > those things' you can not insure. Rent a Safe De- • posit Box! A fn NORTH ‘P9RWW6TCVAXIA INDIAKAPOIvIS j§% IC.. ■ . 1. - .atMBBg.,-* paipo \

SAVE! T'HE importance of saving a certain amount of your weekly earnings cannot be too strongly emphasized. It will protect you against future adversity and help you to take advantage of opportunity. If you are not planning for the future, you better arrange to open a savings account at this bank. Remember—--1 ' We Pay 4 1 / 2% on Savings ' TheMeyer-Kiserßank 128 E. Washington St.

cents a pound; Bartlett pears, three pounds for 25 cents: peaches, three and one-half pounds for 25 cents; currants and huskleberries, 25 cents a pint; lima beans, 45 to 60 cents a pound, and Golden bantam and silver corn, three ears for ftF cents. Christianity wag first carried into Japan by Xavier, in the sixteenth century. *

CORNS W~Ti Quick relief from painful T(i .sf 1 corns, tender toes end I V pressure of tight shoes. Df Scholl's Xino-pads

“A Good Place to Bank” Marion County State Bank 139 East Market Street

CABLE Pianos—Players—Grands Ma music Fo. M Jf3 C. Washington Si:

Pure, Soft Water from Hard Water Faucets! THINK of simply turning the old hard water faucet for an unlimited supply of crystal- * clear SOFT water—softer-even than the dirty, discolored cistern water we all used to regard as the only “soft” water. Imagine the pleasure and convenience of having modern, scientifically softened water for the kitchen, laundry and bath “on tap” always. The Stover One-Valve Water Softener makes this possible in any home. You merely connect the Stover with your regular water pipes. The city water flows into the tank and comes out velvet soft instantly. No taste —no odor—no sediment of any sort. The Stover purifies as it softens—safegueyrds health by removing all minerals and foreign matter.

i mk BMpMI

Central Supply Cos. 210-238 South Capitol Avei INDIANAPOLIS We extend a cordial invitation to visit our showroom, where a complete line of plumbing fixtures and heating supplies are on display.

MILLEMOHL I '^COMPANYt;, — %

TRY A WANT AD IN THE TIMES.

\V*Sk

IT COSTS BUT 28c to ask 200,000 people if they found your dog. Certainly that is a small cost for such a service and undoubtedly you’ll get him back. Your “Lost and Found’' ad in The Times will be looked for by the finder of your property. If you lose anything never give up hope, until you have made an attempt to recover it through a Times “Lost and Found” ad. Just phone MAin 3500 A courteous clerk will gladly help you word your ad and you can charge it. The bill will be mailed later. , , - 1 —i .. .au.uM The Times Want Ad Headquarters

AUG. 14, 1926

The Stover One-Valve Water Softener is simple in construction and nothing to get out of order. The onTy attention it requires is the simple turn of the valve once or twice a month. The Stover does not reduce or affect your existing water pressure in any way. If you are building a MODERN home you MUST have the Stover. If you are using water from a cistern the safe, practical thing to do to abandon it and let the Stover snpply you with PURE, soft water. The cost is moderate. See the Stover at your dealer’s or at our showrooms. Priced at S2OO,

/V Poultry Fee§ £vf \ 3 i b - 82.75: 60, IvV 1 J 81.40. Egg Mash, 100 f A 1 „ *3-00; 60, 3 4 81.00; Cracked Corn J Z/MA ’ •1-80: 50 k rftZITM 81.00- Delivered. A *jrJSX Everything for poultry. Phone MAln 4740. tUftege! Everitt’t Seed Stores 227 W. Washington. 5 N. Alabama