Indianapolis Times, Volume 40, Number 95, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 September 1928 — Page 3

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MAINES VOTE TOD AY IS FIRST TEST OF BALLOT TREND

0. 0. P. CHIEFS SAY MAJORITY TOLARGE Campaign Orators Plead for State to ‘Point the Way ’ for Nation. PARTY LINES CROSSED Mixed Issues Make Outcome Impossible to Estimate, Say Leaders. By KENNETH G. CRAWFORD United Press Staff Correspondent PORTLAND. Maine. Sept. 10. Maine voters lined up today for the first official count of Republican and Democratic noses since Herbert and Alfred E. Smith became party standard bearers. Although going to the polls primarily to chose a Governor, Senator, Congressmen and other State officials, Maine was epected to show, by the size of its Republican majority, which way the political wind will blow in November. “As Maine goes, so goes the Nation,” is an adage long attached to State elections. Maine is the only State that clings to its early September election, originally intended to keep State and National politics separate, and the outcome invariably is interpreted as an indication of ihe national political trend. Point Way to Nation Campaign orators in both parties have pleaded with voters this year to “point the way” for the Nation, and some candidates have stressed national issues in their platforms. “I have never seen the State so interested in an election,” said United States Senator Frederick Hale, Republican, who is running for re-election against Herbert Holmes, Democrat. “The issues have caused such a crossing of party lines that no estimate of the outcome is possible,” said E. C. Moran, chairman of the Democratic State committee. Privately, most Republicans predict a very comfortable majority. Democrats say it will be no larger than 25,000, although the normal Republican margin is about 36,000. Insull Is Issue The present Republican Governor, Ralph O. Brewster, received a majority of more than 36,000 in 1924, when ne was opposed by William R. Pattangall, considered until this year one of the State’s strongest Democrats. Pattangall and his wife, a former Democratic national committeedeserted their party this year as a protest against Smith’s nomination. Edward C. Moran Jr., Democratic | gubernatorial candidate, has made j “control by the Insulls of Maine’s | water power,” the outstanding issue of today’s election. Moran has asserted that one of his reasons for urging the retention of Maine’s water power is that regulation of electric rates by the State public utilities commission would be impossible once power was sent beyond the borders of the State. Colonel William Tudor Gardiner, his Republican opponent, has declared himself for limited export of power. identifTed as bandit Identified by two persons as the bandit who robbed several persons in the northwest section of the city recently, using a razor as a weapon.. Robert Kelley, Negro, 25, of 222 Blake St. is held at city prison under $5,000 bond. Sergt. Frank Reilly, who made the arrest, reported that Ethel Reed, Negro, of 438 W. Wabash St., and Will Hurt, Negro, of 436 W. Wabash St., both positively identified Kelley.

Gone, but Not Forgotten

Automobile reported to police as stolen belonged to: Arthur Kennedy, 1024 W. ThirtyFirst St., Ford roadster, T 87-001, from Meridian and Court Sts. Edwin H. Luedeman, 1148 S. State St., Oldsmobile coach, 21-742, from garage in rear of 1148 State St. George Kafader, 1941 Ludlow Are., Essex coach, 9-134, from Liberty and Washington Sts. Robert Roell, 18 Shiller St., Essex coach, 40-418, from rear of 15 Shiller St. Lawrence Dain, 900 N. Phillip St., Kokomo, Ford roadster, 413-350, from Ohio St. and Capitol Ave. Charles J. Stewart, Box 233, Ford tudor, 546-848, from Maryland and Illinois Sts. William Schutte, 902 Woodlawn, Ford coupe, 648-784, from Market and Alabama Sts. Chester McCauley, 940 S. New .Jersey St., Moon roadster, from Market and Delaware Sts. Carl Jacobs, 448 E. Adams St„ Franklin. Ind., Ford touring, from Georgia St. and Capitol Ave. Lora Forkner. Rural Route No. 1, Sharpeville, Ind.. Ford roadster, Trom 211 W. Georgia St. Fred Seim, 1125 Cottage Ave., Dodge roadster, from Riverside Park. Garland Monks, 705 W. Sixth St., Harrison, Ind., Ford roadster, from Walnut and Liberty Sts.

BACK HOME AGAIN

Stolen automobiles recovered by police: State Automobile Company, 535 N. Capitol Ave., Chevrolet Coupe, found at Illinois and Sixteenth Sts. Ford touring car, 658-757, found at Ray and Riesner St. Ira Englelow, Rural Route No. 29, 2015 S. Meridian St. Lawrence Dain. 900 N. Phillip St., Kokomo, found at Senate Ave. and Pearl St.

Hollywood?. Hull! Here’s Real Surf Rider 2IIURT IN AUTOlMifl' WOMANBARES CRASH HELD rJBBK PLOT TO SLAY bile accident at Warman Ave. and ' J|.., ; asked when the Henry County granc Washington St., Sunday. #' t jury convenes in special sessior A machine driven by Check ca- f I heret oday. reened into the curb and turned over | 1 The confession of Mrs. Irern several times when it sideswiped a # % - Moyer. 24, of Terre Haute, will b( car Check was attempting to pass. / ■■■■■*, > used at the State hearing in asklrq Check was charged with speeding, a nrst-degree murder indictment a; reckless driving assault and battery , | the first step in sending Beasley U and Phelps with vagrancy. • the electric chair for slaying Mrs U it m Jt C v Ur J7’ A r c l erSo £ In , d ” i S ; - , Miller near here Aug. 31. at Methodist Hospital with a fra - .r? , 3 - . Since the couple was captured lr tured skull said to have been re- r* *** -v * ~ ■ T Mrs. Moyer has show* ceived when a TANARUS., H. I. &E. traction j , . car struck a machine parked on the * ‘ tracks at Cumberland Sunday. nutted being a witness to the crim<

2 HURT IN AUTO CRASH HELD Other Serious Accidents Reported. John Check. 25. of 2843 MacPherson Ave., and Scott Phelps. 28, of R R. 6, Bx. 342, injured internally, were held in the city hospital detention ward today following an automobile accident at Warman Ave. and Washington St., Sunday. A machine driven by Check careened into the curb and turned over several times when it sideswiped a car Check was attempting to pass. Check was charged with speeding, reckless driving, assault and battery and Phelps with vagrancy. William Curry, Anderson, Ind., is at Methodist Hospital with a fractured skull said to have been received when a TANARUS., H. I. & E. traction car struck a machine parked on the tracks at Cumberland Sunday. Melvin Thacker. 35. of Frankfort, Ind.. is at city hospital seriously injured as result of an auto collision at Northwestern Ave. and Thirtieth St. with Clarence Gilstrap, 643 Congress Ave. Herbert Shaw, 326 Linwood Ave., received a broken arm when his machine collided with one driven by Henry Bridges, 34. of 2040 Olive St. at Southport and the Bottoms Rd. Six persons riding with Shaw were cut and bruised.

STORE BLAST PROBED Fire Chief Starts Inquiry Into Explosion. Fire Chief Harry E. Voshell today conducted a personal .investigation to determine the cause of an explosion at the McCrory 5 and 10cent store, 19 E. Washington St., which wrecked the front of that store at 3:20 a. m. Sunday. Voshell said he believed the blast was caused by sewer gas. The explosion apparently centered in an engine room underneath the sidewalk. The sidewalk was bulged and cracked and in the basement thin walls blown down. Damage to the State Life Bldg., in which the store was located, was estimated at SIO,OOO. Tiling was blown from the first floor wall of the building corridor. James Wilson, 503} Park Ave., manager of the store, refused to estimate damage to the stock until a representative of the company arrives from New York today. The store was open for business today, with the exception of a few departments. WATER MAINS GET 0. K. Ten Miles to Be Laid Before End of Year. Plans for laying 10 miles of water mains before the end of the year have been approved by William C. Mabee, Indianapolis Water Company chief engnieer. During the past eight months 12 miles of mains have been put down in an effort to provide additional fire protection to various parts of the city and to care for anticipated growth.

| WHAT IS LIFE? WHY IS DEATH? SCIENTIST MAY HAVE KEY TO MYSTERY

BY KEITH JONES United Press Staff Correspondent London, sept. 10.— Prof. a. V. Hill, noted physiologist, apparently is on the threshold of solving important features of the age-old mystery of life and death, the Evening Standard’s correspondent telegraphed today from Glasgow, where the British Association for the Advancement of Science is meeting. The statement said Professor Hill, by studying the muscles and nerve cells of the human body, had reached startling conclusions about the difference in sources of energy between human beings and machines, as well as varying reasons for the disintegration of

Those charming bathing girls you see in the movies performing on surf boards, have nothing on Miss Emma Klotz, 13, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Klotz, 2820 Ruckle St. Miss Klotz can equal all their feats. She is shown above riding on the shoulders of Lieut. William Senges, Ft. Benjamin Harrison flier, while her father steers the motor boat. Below she is doing a little solo “surf boarding.” Miss Kloiz has ridden a surf board for four years. Her parents have a summer cottage on White River at SixtySeventh St

PICK 6.0. P. ADVISOR Mine Union Head Chosen for Labor Committee. Harvey Cartwright, Terre Haute, president of District 11, United Mine Workers, has been appointed chairman of the advisory committee on labor, announced by Eliza O. Rogers, Republican chairman, Saturday. , Committeemen were chosen at large and from the various congressional districts. Those chosen at large are: Charles W. Kern, Bernard Johnson. Louis Hart, Lafayette; Thomas Dexter. William Haight, Joseph Bastian, Evansville; Guy Ackerman, Spurgeon P. Meadows, Theodore Perry, Robert Richardson, Mrs. Mabel Lowe and K. L. Dresser, Peru. District appointments are: H. L. Messick, First district; Charles Foncannon, Bicknell, Second; George Hottle, New Albany, Third; John Hager, Columbus, Fourth; Ora Garaway, Brazil, Fifth; Clyde Pierce, Seventh; Alexander Martin, Anderson, Eighth; A. C. Vincent, Kokomo, Ninth; Ray Abbott, Hammond, Tenth; M. L. Ray, Peru, Eleventh; Dave Lewis, Ft. Wayne, Twelfth; Frank B. McCoombs. South Bend, Thirteenth. The Sixth district representative is to be announced later. Rogers said. Former Hoosier Electrocuted WASHINGTON, Ind., Sept. 10.— Herman Alsman. 27, formerly of this city, was electrocuted at Lexington, Ky., Sunday when he touched a high tension wire.

the body and death. Details of the discoveries are to be revealed shortly. The correspondent forecast “a scientific sensation” when the details are disclosed. He said it was extremely probable that the discoveries of Hill would, lead to as great a conflict of opinion as Darwin's theories aroused. The announcement of Hill’s supposed discoveries came just as Britain was engaged in a renewal of the recent national discussion of life after death. The subject was brought to the fore in two addresses made Sunday by the two students of spirit-

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WOMAN BARES PLOT TO SLAY Jury Will Get Murder Confession Today. Bjj Times Special NEWCASTLE, Ind., Sept. 10.— Indictment of Charles Beasley, 34, Terre Haute, for the murder of Mrs. Myrtle Miller, 36, of Muncie, will be asked when the Henry County grand jury convenes in special session heret oday. The confession of Mrs. Irene Moyer, 24, of Terre Haute, will be used at the State hearing in asking a first-degree murder indictment as the first step in sending Beasley to the electric chair for slaying Mrs. Miller near here Aug. 31. Since the couple was captured in Terre Haute Mrs. Moyer has showed a willingness to talk. She has admitted being a witness to the crime in which Beasley killed Mrs. Miller for her jewelry. Anew confession has revealed that Homer Patterson, who she says witnessed the killing, had plotted with her several weeks ago to kill her husband that she migth collect $4,600 insurance. The plan fell through, Mrs. Moyer said, when her husband was thrown out of work in Terre Haute and went to Detroit, where he is now employed. Beasley has not been connected with the plot, and no action will be taken until after the murder trial here. Patterson escaped from detectives in Terre Haute when Beasley and Mrs. Moyer were captured. 24 SITES SUBMITTED FOR CITY AIRPORT Committee to Inspect Locations Tuesday. Twenty-four possible sites for the proposed municipal airport has been submitted to the site committee at noon today and more were expected before nightfall, according to C. L. Harrodfi, industrial commissioner of the Chamber of Commerce. Today was to be the last for sit filing, but it is possible that proposals wul also be received Tuesday. The committee will meet at that time and set dates for furthr inspections of sites. Eight have been inspected thus far, Harrod said. Tri-County Lodges to Meet PERU, Ind.. Sept. 10.—A tricounty meeting of Odd Fellow Lodges in Cass. Miami and Fulton Counties will be held in this city Sept. 25 under the direction of J. F. Robertson, president of the county associations.

Blissless Bu Times Special MUNCIE, Ind.. Sept. 10.— Married, deserted and suit filed for divorce is the record set here by Mrs. Olin McAdow. Four days after her marriage, her husband told her he had another girl in Lima. Ohio, and boarded a train for that place. Soon after he left the city she filed suit for divorce. The couple had been married once before and were divorced. They have one child.

ualism in England—Sir Oliver Lodge and Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. n n n LODGE, in a scientific sermon at Wellington Church in Glasgow, affirmed his belief in life after death and in “one single mind” that controls the universe "It is a most solemn thought, but I believe it true," he said “We cannot go out of existence even if we wanted to. The material body returns to the er.rth while we ourselves, as souls or spirits or identities, continue. "How do I know we persist after we have left the body? I know by direct experience. What I have as-

SWEDEN'S DRY LAW SUCCEEDS, POUGEJISSERT Chief Says Drunkenness and Crime Fall Greatly Under System. Sweden tried prohibition. It failed.. Non’ a rigid system of State control is being tried, successfully. William Philip Simms. Scrlpps-Howard foreign editor has made an intensive study of the plan, and herewith persents the fifth of a series on the workings of the system. BV WILLIAM PHILIP SIMMS Foreign Editor, Scripps-Howard Newspapers STOCKHOLM. Sept. 10.—Nobody knows better than a policeman how a nation’s liquor laws are working. So I called on Erik Hallgren, Stockholm’s acting police chief. “Strictly as a police officer charged with maintaining law and order,” I suggested, “which regime would you rather work under, the old saloon, out and out prohibition, or your present system of liquor control?” "In all candor,” Chief Hallgren replied, “there can be but one answer to your question. Our system is much better than any other I have heard of. The police of Stockholm and all over Sweden never have had less to do than they have now. Drunkenness steadily is declining and so is crime. “During the war we had virtual prohibition trust upon us,” he v ent on. “So I can speak from experience. In those three years crime just about doubled. After the war, when our control system again became operative, both drunkenness and crime fell off greatly.” American Situation Cited fc “Something of the kind seems to be going on in America right now,” I injected. “I mean a crime wave. Our murders, holdups, gang-wars and underworld doings seem to be causing considerable comment abroad.” Chief Hallgren did not change expression at this as I expected. I have discovered that foreigners are inclined to smile when the subject of Chicago and other rum war fronts is mentioned, but here was a man who seemed to regard it all from a purely professional point of view. “That seems the universal experience in prohibition countries,” the chief resumed. “It was so in Norway. in Russia, and elesewhere. “Take Finland for example, just across the Baltic. It has prohibition In Helsingfors, the capital, a city of about 260,000. the police average about sixty arrests a day, whereas here in Stockholm, city of almost twice the size, we average only eighteen or nineteen.”

Few Drunkenness Arrests “Our population,” the chief continued, "is about double that of Finland. Our arrests for drunkenness have dwindled from 58,909 in 1913 for all Sweden, to 29.000 for 1927, a 50 per cent decrease. “Temperance among women and young people, those between 15 and 20 years of age, has shown an especially happy trend. From an index average ot 100 Representing drunkenness among women during the three years preceding liquor control, the figure has dropped to 32, while for young people of Stockholm the decrease has been from 100 to 17. “Making use of index figures all along, drunks coming to the attention of the Stockholm police have decreased under the control system from 100 to 33 and for all Sweden from 100 to 51. “Cases of alcoholism treated in our hospitals have diminished from 100 to 26 and those privately reported by physicians’ from 100 to 31. “Deaths from chronic alcoholism have fallen from 100 to fourteen for all Sweden and from 100 to sixteen in Stockholm. The yearly average of alcoholic • insanity has dropped froin, 100 to thirty-three. “There is no comparison between the present order and the old. From the policeman's point of view, or from the wider one of a citizen desiring the best possible conditions of law and order, the liquor control ous improvement. “The policeman’s job has been made comparatively easy.” Next: A trip through Sweden’s liquor store. HEIRLOOMS ARE STOLEN Attic of Vacant House Ransacked, Fixtures Taken. Heirlooms and other household articles, valued at S2OO, were taken from the attic of a vacant house at 5825 College Ave., according to report to police made by Mrs. Earl Brattin, Hooker. Okla., owner. The thieves also took out the electrical fixtures. Charles W. Trevler, 221 N. Tremont Ave.. was away from home Saturday night long enough for burglars to ransack his home and take guns and jewelry valued at $75. Gypsy thieves in Serbia put their own blood into the food of any one whom they suspect knows of their offenses; they believe this prevents him from betraying them.

certained in this connection is that those whom we call dead are not dead, but just separated from the bodily mechanism. “I have been in touch with the minds of certain people who have parted ‘ from their bodies,” continued Doyle. "How can the mind get in touch with us when it has no material body? It borrows some material form, but that does not mean that spirits have no bodies. They have substantial bodies, not made of matter, but, as I think, of ether. My experience after fifty years is that this is the truth. “People who have parted from their bodies demonstrate that ttey

POLICE ARREST 160 DURING WEEK-END

Liquor Charges, Gaming and Vagrancy Account for Most Cases. One hundred and sixty persons were arrested during the forty-eight hours ending at 6 a. m. today. Os this number thirty were charged with vagrancy, 38 with drunkenness, eight with operating a motor vehicle while under the influence of liquor, and 21 with operating a blind tiger. Twenty-three were arrested on charges of gaming, four for traffic violations and nine for speeding. Lieut. Patrick O'Connor and squad broke up an alcohol party at McDonald and Superior Sts. on Sunday night. Three men who were in a car and said to have been drinking were arrested for operating a blind tiger. They were Estell Snell. 24. of 624 N. Capitol Ave.; William McDonald. 39, of 610 N. Pine St., and Cecil Lynch, 24, of 432 S. New Jersey St. Liquor Found Edward Jordan. 24, of 2024 N. Capitol Ave., was arrested on the charge of operating a blind tiger. Harold Wright, 25. of 1105 S. East St., and Clarence Rieger, 23, of 510 Prospect St., were held on vagrancy charges. The police say they found seventy quarts of home brew on ice and twenty-four gallons brewing; 381 empty quart bottles: two cases of malt, a capper, a sack of caps, and some whisky bottles. Police say Johnson admitted running the N Capitol Ave. place three months. Louis Niedling, 30. of 1352 W. Twenty-Sixth St., was arrested for operating a blind tiger. Niedling is alleged to have been serving a drink of whisky in a restaurant at 2719 Northwestern Ave.. when Sergt. Frank Reilly entered. The officer secured a half pint bottle half filled with liquor. He also said he found two full pints and a pop bottle full in Niedling’s car. Flora Melton, 30, of 2002 N. Capitol Ave., owner of the restaurant, was arrested. Held for Gaming Harry Kaiser, 4341 English Ave., was arrested on charge of operating a blind tiger. Three bottles of home brew were found at his residence, the police allege. Ruby Upp, 1442 N. New Jersey St., was held on a blind tiger charge. The police say they found twelve quarts of gin and a half gallon of alcohol. % Mike Lolioff, proprietor of a poolrm at 1442 N. Senate Ave., was arrested on the charge of keeping a gambling devise and having no poorroom or restaurant license. Sergt. Leßoy Bartlett arrested Joe Price, 638 Charlotte St., on the charge of keeping a gambling devise and gaming. Eight men, caught in the raid at the Charlotte St. house, were charged with visiting and gaming.

SOCIETY TO EXPAND McGuffeyites Plan National Organization. Plans for organizing a national McGuffeyite society with the Indiana society as School 1, and the mother chapter, were discussed at the annual meeting of the McGuffeyities of Indiana at the Denison Saturday afternoon. Two hundred attended. Louis Ludlow, Democratic candidate for Congress from the Seventh District and first paid member of the organization, spoke. He told of the value of the old McGuffey readers in development of character. J. Frank Mann, Muncie, was elected president. Other officers are B. M. Ralston, first vice president; Winfield Miller, second vice president; the Rev. T. N. Hunt, third vice president; Mrs. Pearl D. Mercer, corresponding secretary; Mrs. Stella Friday, recording secretary. and R. O. James, treasurer. HONOR TO NOVELIST Governor and Mrs. Jackson to Attend Porter Memorial. Governor and Mrs. Ed Jackson will attend the “Limberlost Day” celebration at Decatur Tuesday when a fifty ton boulder will be placed in the courthouse yard as a memorial to Gene Stratton Porter, Indiana novelist, who died two years ago. Mrs. Porter made the “Limberlost” forest near Decatur the locale of many of her novels. ACE UP FOR FRAUD Commander Douglas George Jeffrey, 42, ex-British naval officer who came to Indianapolis several weeks ago declaring he was here to raise funds for an airplane expedition to the Antarctic, was to face a charge of issuing a fraudulent check to the Columbia Club before Municipal Judge Paul C. Wetter this afternoon. The commander spent the weekend in city prison when he was unable to raise $5,000 bond.

preserve their memories, characters a(nd affections. Their love continues and they only hope that we will not grieve for them unduly.” \ tt ft Sn lODGE said that the light from some stars takes 140,000,000 years to reach us. “Althought we are looking at the far distant pa.4t,” he continued, “our eyes see masses wherein the same atoms exist, which contain the same chemical elements and which are obedient to the same laws. What does this show? It shows that the whole universe, is maintained by one single mind which brought it into existence."

Trial Opens

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Carl Skeen, 22, whose trial for the alleged murder of Mrs. Pearl Jarboe, was begun in Criminal Court today.

VIOLENCE TOLL EIGHT IN STATE Ninth Person Is Believed Drowned at Rochester. Violence claimed the lives of eight persons in Indiana over the weekend and is believed to have caused the death of a man missing since Saturday. The body of Walter David, 29, Kokomo mail carrier, is being sought in Lake Manitou, near Rochester, following the finding of his boat Sunday. His car was unmolested where he left it Saturday when starting his fishing trip. Dorwin Leighty, 18. Otterbein High School athlete, and Robert Burns, 15, freshman at the same school, were killed when an airplane in which they were passengers crashed at Otterbein Sunday. Donald Burgett, pilot of Chambers, Ind., was seriously injured. Mrs. Elizabeth Stewart, 78, of near Seymour, was killed when she stepped from a lane on to the highway near her home. The car was driven by Mrs. Dan Sutton of Seymour. Margaret Ely, 9, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Ely, 1732 Lambert St., died in city hospital Saturday, six weeks after being bitten by a dog. Will S. Smith, 60. Bluffton. ended his life by shooting at Bluffton. Worry over finances is believed the motive. One man was killed in a shooting affray in Indianapolis Sunday night, and a woman died in Methodist Hospital from gunshot wounds of July, v Henry West. Vincennes, was killed when struck by a falling beam. Indiana Man Killed B v Times Special MADISON, Ind., Sept. 10.—Fred Leach, of near here, was killed in an : uto accident at Callis Grove, Ky., Sunday. His son-in-law, Hugh Andrews, was Injured.

Ladies’ Jeweled In th ' s group we have ...h^. Only

42 West Washington Street

DIVISION CHIEFS FOR COMMUNITY FOND APPOINTED Prominent Citizens to Lead November Campaign Under Marmon. Five prominent citizens of Indianapolis who are to serve as division leaders in the army of 3.000 men and women to be recruited for the Community Fund campaign next November were announced today by Hugh McK. Landon, president of the fund. Walter C. Marmon. who led the sucessful campaign last year, again will act as general .'ampaign chairman. Herman P. Lieber will server as chairman of special gifts “A” division; Theodore (Pop) Meyers of special gifts "B” division; Almus GRuddell of the branch house division. and Mrs. Brandt C. Downey of the woman’s army. All havs taken active parts in the social service work of Indianapolis for many years. Additional division and group leaders will be announced soon, according to Marmon, who recently returned to the city to assume active charge of the pre-campaign organization work. Headquarters of the Community Fund will be maintained in the Meyer-Kiser Bank Bldg. Thirty - seven social service agencies in the city are to share in the funds raised next November. Each agency is in charge of a trained staff and all funds expended are closely audited and budgeted by the officers and directors of the Community Fund. These agencies include: Alpha Home. American Settlement, Board of Social Service at City Dispensary. Boys’ Club, Boy Scouts, Camp Fire Girls, Catholic Community Center. Catholic Women’s Association, Christamore House, Family Welfare Society, Flanner House, Florence Crittenton Home, Girl Scouts, Hawthorne Social Service House, Indianapolis Council of Social Agencies, Indianapolis Day Nursery Association, Indianapolis Flower Mission, Indianapolis Home for Aged Women. Indianapolis Humane Society, Indianapolis Indorsers of Photoplays. Indianapolis Orphan Asylum, Indianapolis Travelers’ Aid, Jewish Federation, Old Folks’ Home, Public Health Nursing Association, Red Cross, Salvation Army, Society of the Good Shepherd. Social Service Department of Church Federation, Volunteers of America, Wheeler City Mission. Woman’s Improvement Club, Young Men’s Christian Association and branches, and Young Women’s Christian Association and branches. Indianapolis is one of 315 cities in the United States having Community Funds. A meeting of executive budget committee of the Community Fund will be held Tuesday forenoon. J. W. Fesler, chairman, will preside. Other members of the committe Include Mrs. Brandt C. Downey, Mrs. T. R. Kackley, Mrs. Ronald C. Green, Eugene C. Foster, John R. Smith, Franklin Vonnegut, Dr. Cleon Nafe, John R. Welch, C. C. Winegardner, Mark V. Rinehart, W. H. Insley, Melville Cohn, Samuel Mueller, Marshal D. Luptori and W. R. Adams.

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