Indianapolis Times, Volume 40, Number 5, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 May 1928 — Page 3

MAT 17, 1028.

POLAND’S FIGHT FOB LIBERTY IN ; 101? IS BARED Paderewski Unveils Secret With Story of Motes Given Wilson. Bji T ii it ril Press •v NEW YORK, May 17 —Historians were considering today the latest stirring chapter of world history, the beginning Poland's fight for independence in 1917. as disclosed by Ignace Jan Paderewski, Polish statesman and pianist. Paderewski told how Poland came to be included in the “fourteen points” by President Wilson. “I have never before felt myself free to answer that question,” the pianist said at a dinner given in his honor Wednesday night. “Tonight, for the first time. I shall tell.” He recited how on the eve of a tecital in January, 1917. Colonel House came to him and asked for a memorandum on Poland. But the pianist said he rvever couid hold a pen in his hand before a recital. “Colonel House insisted,” Paderewski continued, “and I returned to my hotel and spent four hours planning my recital. After the recital I spent thirty-six hours writing the memorandum. It was taken to Washington and a few days later Colonel House reported i that the President was immensely j pleased.” Scon thereafter, he said, President | Wilson “fired the first gun” for Polish independence when he said in a messagq to the Senate that all nations should recognize Poland’s! independence. CALL BUILDERS SESSION Invitations Sent to 400 for Annual Election Saturday. Officers of the Indianapolis Builders’ Congress will be elected Saturday night at the Indianapolis Athletic Club. The executive committee mailed 400 invitations to the dinner, which : Will precede the election. Architects, engineers, contractors, | builders and financial leaders will compose the congress. Robert D. Kon, William O. Ludlow and R. G. Wagenet, New York, j will speak. The congress was formed here j several months ago and is the first j in Indiana. The body is designed I to bring together building interests, j JELLS MURDER STORY Fight Over Money Led to Shooting, Negro Confesses. An argument over money led to the murder of Sephas “Fat” Clark, 40, Negro, 927 Fayette St., by Justis Mcßeynolds, Negro, 25, proprietor of a pool room at 409 Indiana Ave., where the shooting took place late Wednesday, police said. Mcßeynolds ran from the scene, but surrendered later. He said Clark won money from him in a craps game early Wednesday and then told him to keep some of the money in the cash register. Later he could only give Slark part of the money as he had spent some, McReynoids said. He said he shot Clark when he saw a gun protruding from Clark’s pocket. ZONING BOARD UPHELD Appeal for Gasoline Station Is Denied. City board of zoning appeals was Upheld by Circuit Judge Harry O. Chamberlin, Wednesday in an appeal from its decision brought by Harry B. McNeely, who sought to erect a filling station on the northeast corner of Forty-Sixth and Illinois Sts. McNeely shewed a filling station already is located on the southeast corner, residents answering that they received no notice of such plans or they would have protested it. BIOS ON PAVING OPENED /Indiana Asphalt Company Low on E. Sixty-Third St. Project. Indiana Asphalt Paving Company today submitted the low bid sos paving and widening of E. SixtyThird St., between College Ave. and Monon railroad. City Engineer A. H. Moore indicated the contract will be awarded to the low bidder whose price is $8.31 a lineal foot. American Construction Compare bid $9.99 a foot for the improvement. The contract provides for &n asphalt roadway of fifty-one feet. I I. U. Trustees to Meet. BLOOMINGTON, Ind., May 17. A meeting of Indiana university trustees will be held here tonight for further consideration of the university heating plant which is to be remodeled. The annual university budget will also be taken up. The Eleventh Infantry Band will broadcast its last concert in the interests of enrollment for the Citizens’ Military Training Camps tojpight, at Ft. Benjamin Harrison tonight from 8 to 9 over WFBM.

Horace Dodge Is Married in London Church

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Mrs. Horace Dodge

B/i I'iiitrd LONDON, May 17.—Horace Dodge of Detroit, was married at the Bayswater Presbyterian Church today to Miss Muriel Dorothy Sissman. A fashionable congregation attended. There was a reception later at the Park Lane Hotel. RUNAWAY GIRLS TO BE RETURNED HOME TODAY Parents Go to Trenton, 111., for Pair “Hunting Adventure.” Parents of Maxine McMillan, 2527 N. New Jersey St., and Alice Oland of 1439 N. New Jersey St., were at Trenton, 111., today to return the

girls, both 14, from the quest for adventure on which they started Monday. Dressed in boys’ clothing and with only a few dollars the two Shortridge High School freshmen, started out to seek adventure. Their journey ended when they were arrested at Trenton for questioning about a bank robbery there. Trenton' authori-

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Maxine McMillan

ties believed them to be boys. A Trenton banker became interested in them and called Mrs. Oland, but did not know the runaways were girls until told so, by Mr. Oland. HEADS BANK SYNDICATE Fletcher Company Places California Bonds on Market. The Fletcher Savings and Trust Company has become manager of a syndicate of banks which will place on the market $2,000,000 worth of bonds of the California Joint Stock Land Bank of San Francisco, it was announced today. The Guardian Detroit Company, Detroit bank, has purchased $1,000,000 of the issue. The Fletcher Savings and Trust Company and the Detroit bank each will retain $500,000 of the issue for their clients and the remaining $1,000,000 will be offered to investment banks. The bonds will be sold to yield investors 4.55 per cent. Collier, Inc., Wins Suit Judgment of $4,575 was awarded Barron G. Collier, Inc., against Mrs. Mabel Sipe, widow of J. C. Sipe, jeweler, by a jury in Federal Court late Wednesday afternoon. The verdict followed the third trial of the case, which concerned alleged violation of an advertising contract.

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READ ALL ABOUT IT TOMORROW A Wonderful Event at 131 .W.* Washington

FATHER FEARS CHILD MURDER Police Asked to Find Wife After Threats. A Franklin (Ind.) father today asked Indianapolis police to help him find his wife and prevent her from carrying out her threats to kill herself and her three children. The father, William Newcomb, told police that his wife, who has been ill left their home at Franklin with the children Wednesday while he was at work. He believed she came to Indianapolis. Since her illness, she has threatened to kill herself and the children Naomi, 6; Emmett, 4, and Betty. 3, he said. Mrs. Mae Rice, 1620 S. Meridian St., told police that her son, William, 17, disappeared Wednesday with s2l she gave him to pay the rent. A friend is with him, she believed. Mrs. Leslie Coffman, 563 W. Jones St., reported that her husband has been missing since Tuesday. Mrs. Sarah Zink, 38, of Clifton, is missing, and probably is in Indianapolis, her husband, Dr. Zink, phoned local police. Mrs. Zink failed to arrive here at the home of relatives she was to visit, after attending a convention at Muncie, Ind., he said. PLAN CHILDREN’S CAMP Nutrition Center Will Be Maintained This Center. Final plans for the children’s nutrition camp near Bridgeport this summer were completed by the Marion County Tuberculosis Association today at luncheon at the Lincoln. Thirty underweight and undernourished children will be cared for this season. The camp will open shortly after the close of school, June 15. C 0 MPILE CITt REC 0R D Index Will Contain Data on Official and Employes. Anew index file of the 2,500 city employes is being compiled under City Controller Sterling R. Holt. Frequently changes the past two years have made the original record obsolete. The index being compiled by Miss Carrie Bowers and Mrs. Ira 800, stenographers, will contain the name, address and position of all city officials and employes.

BLOOD PRESSURE 200 Watch your blood pressure 1 If it's 180 or 200 instead of 120, it’s a sign to be careful. High blood pressure cuts years off one’s life. Heart palpitation, dizziness and difficulty are symptoms of high blood pressure, the result of our modern abnormal habits of life which put too great a strain upon the liver. The liver becoming sluggish fails to cleanse the blood of the toxic poisons formed in food waste, which then permeate the whole system, affecting heart, blood pressure and blood vessels. The liver needs a little help occasionally. Nothing better for this, as medical men know, than a little ox gall. Ox gall is a remarkable natural stimulant for the human liver, promoting its normal active functioning, so essential to real health. Dioxol tablets are genuine ox gall in dainty and tasteless form, each tablet representing 10 drops of pure ox gall. To be sure of getting the genuine ox gall, be sure of getting Dioxol. They cost less than 2c each at good druggists, and a f£w soon tell. CrflO Tppf 1 Take this ad to the llwv I 601 druggist named below and he will give you a free sample of Dioxol tablets. Try them yourself. See the splendid, quick results. One trial of Dioxol and you will want a full package! Special Agent: Haag Drug Cos. —Advertisement.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Washington Seniors in 4 Neighbors ’

“Neighbors,” a one-act play, will be presented by the above group of the George Washington High School senior class Thursday at 3p. m. in the school auditorium. Left to right: Thelma Ogdon, Helen Mary McLeod, Lucille Forley, Robert Spangler, Thelma Foster, Martha Leonard, and Mary McElwee.

PLAY CENTERS READY Plans for the opening of city playgrounds June 16 are being completed by the park department, Jesse P. McClure, recreation director, said today. * Playgrounds have been put in

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good condition by the recreation force. Schools will close June 15 and playgrounds will be ready the following day. About 200 recreation department employes will be selected to operate the playgrounds. Mayor L. Ert Slack and Superintendent Walter Jarvis have received about 250 applications for recreation jobs which

will be passed on by the park board before June 1. McClure Beach, Twenty-Sixth St. and White River, which was closed last season because of stream pollution, is expected to be open. Refinance your auto payments now on easier terms. Confidential and quick. CAPITOL LOAN CO., 141 >4 E. Wash. St.—Advertisement.

MOTORIST HELD FORFIST FIGHT Attack After Collision of Cars Is Charged. Ancel Williams, 3015 Kenwood Ave., was arrested for assault and battery today after his aui.o collided with a taxicab in the 2100 block N. Capitol Ave. Police said a fist fight followed and Williams struck the cab driver on the nose. Williams’ machine ran into the side of the taxi, according to police. Miss Nellie Young, 2314 College Ave., a passenger in the cab, was cut on the face. Eugene Newton, 4, 1743 Dawson St., received minor injuries when run down by a car driven by Norman Hollowell, 1717 Dawson St. Norman Traub, 20, of 2021 Mansfield Ave., faces involuntary manslaughter charge in connection with

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MENJOUS IN LONDON liu l ii it ill Press LONDON, May 17.—Adolphe Menjou and his bride, Katherine Carver of the films, started a honeymoon tour of London today. The two arrived here Wednesday from Paris, a few hours after their marriage, and were greeted by a crowd of 5,000 people at the Victoria station. the death of June Hughley, 7, Negro. 881 W. Pratt St., who was killed on Wednesday afternoon by Traub’s auto at Blake St. and Indiana Ave. Mrs. Elizabeth Whitehead, 66, of 1317 N. Keystone Ave., is recovering from facial lacerations and body bruises in city hospital after being struck Wednesday night at Massachusetts Ave. and Alabama St., by a car driven by Robert Davis, Jr., 16, of 719 Woodlawn Ave.

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