Indianapolis Times, Volume 41, Number 113, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 September 1929 — Page 22

PAGE 22

JOB OF FINDING NEW HUSBAND NOTJO EASY Mrs. Mabel Wilman Corey Admits Troubles: May Take Maharajah. BY PRINCESS ALI FAZFI. l tilted Prt Staff Correspondert PARIS, Sept. 20.—Mrs. Mabel Gilman Corey, disappointed but far from discouraged with her failure to marry into the royalty of Europe, has turned her eyes toward India and its princely maharajahs. The former wife of William E. Corey, American Steel magnate, said *he was not sorry over her failure to marry Don Luis De Bourbon, prince of the Spanish ruling house “I saw him recently, and he really is a disagreeable character,” she said. Then Mrs. Corey admitted she was contemplating a trip to India to look over several eligible maharajahs. “But, I haven’t quite decided whether to go to India or not,” she said. “You know, India is so far away.” The task of finding anew husband as good as her former one is a mast difficult one, Mr*. Corey said. “After all,” Mrs. Corey declared, “Mr. Corey was a very clever man, a man who could have been president of the United States. "I gladly would remarry, but I want companionship, regardless of nationality. My failure to marry Don Luis did not make me feel sorry. In fact, I am rather glad the marriage did not materialize.” Mrs. Corey, a one-time musical comedy star, has spent the summer

This Bank’s } Administrative y Personnel — Is compoeed of men who have proved themselves in respective lines of endeavor, and are capable of rendering dependable counsel on masters of finance and business. This bank is proud of the yardstick which has been used by an appreciative clientele who are responsible for its steady growth. They have recognized Service and Administrative Personnel. OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS f Arthur TV Ayres, Dick Miller, Capitalist President H. J. Barnard, Dwight A. Murphy, Retired Manufacturer Vice President William F. Fox Sr., James M. Ogden, National Fraternal Attorney General of Representative State of Indiana H. O. Garman, J. Dwight Peterson, Consulting Engineer _ Manager Bond Dept. Alfred Henry, Physician J Earl H. Richardson, Aisistanf tm C. Milton Kelly, Tice President ■$ John T. VanZaDt, Manufacturer*' Representative | J City Trust Company BWH 108 East Washington Street /fly

ASH BASKETS Two-way corrugated galvanized jffijßßlS V. \ ‘^3 *l 79c , Register Shields They deflect heat Into the 14-Bushel, £ and 4 A room and keep walls clean. Special Priced 85t* to $3.50. Phone Order Accepted Furnace Soot ASBESTOS FURNACE Catchers AND STOVE CEMENT Fits over pipe opening I An excellent repair material that below register. Nonoften saves the cost of putting inflammable and does in anew furnace bowl. Odorless. not interfere with heat, indestructible, fire and acidproof. Priced 45<* to $2.50. Will not shrink or crack. Special ___________________ prices lor Saturday only. i-u. I-. Mk is, PORTABLE " IZC c ” 3Z ° HEATERS T? 2C cH 4 , 2C Weather Strips FIREPLACE Stove Supplies FIXTURES VONNEGUTS 120-124 E. Wash. St.—Est. 1852

Here's a Hefty Catch

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Whoever baptized Eel river near Worthington, didn't know his name plates. For in the above photo, shown left to right, are: Charles Moore, 1206 West Eighteenth street; D. A. Crosswell, 731 South Sherman drive; George Gruber, 1812 Sugar Grove avenue, and W. G. Horning, 1801 Dexter avenue, who came back from a fishing trip with fins other than the eel variety. Moore is holding a twenty-eight pound buffalo in his hand. The party caught thirty-two perch, catfish, and buffalo, with a total mess poundage of 150.

chopping roads on her castle grounds near Versailles. She is planning to spend the autumn season in London, then to return to Paris for the winter, to resume her elaborate entertainments for .which she was famous during the years following the war. i RETURN TO FACE TRIAL William B. Roberts, alias William Wilson, and John Rauscher, alias John Becker, were returned from the county jail at Williamsport, Warren county, to Huron, S. D., today, their extradition having been approved by Governor Harry G. Lesie. They will face a $4,000 robbery charge. The men were being held at Williamsport as suspects in the Marshfield bank robbery.

TOWER WORKER IS HURT The first accident on the Circle Tower, Indianapolis’ prospective skyscraper, occurred today, when Oscar Samuels, 30, of Trafalgar. Ind., a stone mason’s helper, suffered severe bruises when a wheelbarrow of bricks overturned and struck him on the head. The wheelbarrow was on the second floor of the structure and Samuels on the first floor. He was taken to the Methodist hospital.

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

AUTOACCIDENT TOLL IN CITY IS4JJURED Blinding Lights Blamed for Overturning of Automobile. Four persons were injured Thursday night in traffic accidents. Henry Compton, 1137 Cornell avenue, suffered bruises and cuts, when a car driven by Lawrence Davis, Negro, 339 West Fifteenth street, collided with an auto driven by Elisha Dillard, 2336 Shriver avenue, at Sixteenth Place and Northwestern avenue. Blinded by auto lights, Major P. Harrison, 40, of 2035 North Meridian street, suffered cuts and bruises when his car overturned at Burdsal boulevard and the canal. Eugene Rouse, Negro, 35, of 2407 Park avenue, was bruised and cut when his car crashed into an auto driven by Frank Miller, 38, of 1139 East Washirtgton street, at Nineteenth and Ruckle streets. F. C. Williams, Negro, 2725 Boulevard place, was cut on the head when he ran into an automobile driven by Charles W. Rollinson Jr., 18, of 1308 North Pennsylvania street, on North Delaware street, Thursday. David Ware, 26, of 44 South State

avenue, today faced drunken driving chajgej, after 4 is .automobile collided with a parked car owned by Frank Day, 2240 Central avenue, who was conducting evangelistic services at Cadle tabernacle, Thursday night. Condition of Mrs. Bertha Cox, 34. of 964 King avenue, who fell fifteen feet down an elevator shaft in the Ober building, 116 East Maryland street, Thursday, was fair today. MINE UNION APPROVES OUSTING OF OFFICERS Executive Board Upholds Action Against Illinois County Heads. Approving deposing of union officers in Franklin county, Illinois, by international officials, the sessions of the international executive board of the United Mine Workers of America ended Thursday afternoon. The meeting lasted ten days. Following the meeting’s close, John L. Lewis, international president, gave the gist of the sessions as: Hearing of appeals, grievances, and discussing the legislation in congress which seeks to stabilize the coal industry. Approving a campaign of reorganization in southwestern Kentucky. Giving an official vise on the action of international officers in ousting officials of sub-district 9 in Illinois. If you don’t find what you are looking for in the want ads today, it may be advertised there tomorrow. Read Times classified ads daily.

OLYMPUS MAY - BE MADE PACK Greece to Ttfrn Home of Old Gods to Public. B'j Science Service WASHINGTON, Sept. 20.—Mt. Olympus, majestic abode of the old Greek gods, may be turned into a typical twentieth century institution, a national park. Advocates of the national park idea in Greece are stressing both the aesthetic and economic value to their nation in the creation of such a reservation. Since the national park has be-

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come a typically American instlt-u----itioF. United StAtas.pprk officials here are pleased at the farflung spread of a movement they foster. The area proposed to be set aside would include the entire mass of Mt. Olympus with its great crags, cascades, springs, grottoes and venerable trees. The mountain, which seemed to the ancient Greeks a fitting home for the dieties that ruled their world, still is impressive in an age that has seen almost everything. From the shores of the Aegean sea the mountain mass rises to a height of almost ten thousand feet. Its highest peaks are snpw-crowned during the greater part of the year. In addition to Mt. Olympus, the park area would include such histori? points as the gorge of Tempe. the Byzantine fortress of Platamona, a beach strip, and the slope of-Sco-

GLOBE—33O-334 W. Wash. St.

.SEPT. 20, 1929

tonas with the Callipeucian fores*. The park would be largely wiWerncss comparable to tne Git at smoky mountains country in America. In spite of the renown of Mt. Olympus, the region still almost is unknown to all but the hardiest of explorers and mountaineers. Yearbook Artist Announced GREENCASTLE. Ind.. Sept. 20. Frederick Polley, Indiana painterand etcher, will draw sketches of the De Pauw university campus for the 1930 Mirage, yearbook of the university.

Every Financial Service tfieiibrt £tust iianfes