Indianapolis Times, Volume 41, Number 157, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 November 1929 — Page 9

Second Section

$200,000 SET AS GOAL FOR HEALTH FUND -.Christmas Seal and Bond I Sale to Begin Thanksgiving. ENTIRE STATE COVERED All of 92 Counties Now Organizing Against Tuberculosis. Thousands of volunteer workers in each of Indiana's ninety-two counties during November will perfect organization of local community groups to carry on the annual sale of Christmas seals and health bonds starting Thanksgiving day. A total of more than $200,000 worth of the health emblems has been allotted Indiana, according to Murray A. Auerbach, executive secretary of the Indiana Tuberculosis Association, which is sponsoring the sale. A total of 65,000.000 seals, which are used on Christmas mail and packages very generally throughout the world now, has been received at the Indiana headquarters of the state association in Indianapolis, and millions of the seals are being shipped dally to counties. The National Tuberculosis Association, with which the state and local organizations are affiliated, expects $6,000,000 this year as the sum to be derived from seal and health bond sales. This sum will be applied throughout the nation to the educational struggle against the white plague. In a score of years the death-rate from the disease has been cut down in Indiana and the nation by this organized fight by more than onehalf; and for more than a dozen years. Indiana has held an important place in the nation-wide effort. Scope of Work Shown Accompanying each shipment of the seals, is a bulletin emphasizing the small price at which the seals are distributed a hundred—and the important effect they have had on public health within two decades. The bulletin points out that more than 100,000 lives annually now are being saved by the health emblems. He says further: "Six hundred million pennies—each of them meaning little by itself, but enlarging into a vast network of tuberculosis clinics, public health nursing, educational programs among children, the general education of adults and children in methods of disease control—are needed this year to fight the foe. $200,000 at least must come from Indiana citizens if the state is to continue the forward strides it is making against the disease. "The finest thing about this continuing battle is that it has proven conclusively that tuberculosis is in many instances can be prevented or cured. In twenty years from Maine to California, and from Seattle to Miami, death rates have been cut in half by the intelligent nationwide campaign for better living. Death Rate Declines

"In a dozen years of organized effort against the disease in Indiana, the death-rates have decreased approximately one-half annually. This has been due in very large part to the preventive and curative financed by the Christmas seal sala each year. What will the next twenty years of this struggle produce? Those who know say that by that time—if citizens continue to buy Christmas seals generously —tuberculosis will have to take its place in the back rank of diseases of the human race instead of being man's most dreadful enemy as it was once. “Every community in Indiana is preparing to start the 1929 Christmas seal sale, which begins Thanksgiving day and continues through December. This is the opportunity of every Hoosier citizen to, take his little part in the fight to save his children and himself from the ravages of the white plague. It is confidently hoped that $200,000 will be raised through the Christmas seal sale to carry on the 1930 fight against tuberculosis in Indiana.”

KROGERS GET SHIPMENT TnvinJoad of Heinz Products to Be Distributed by Firm. What is said to be one of the largest movements of canned goods this year Just rei°ntly has been shipped from Pittsourgh and other plants of the H. J. Heinz Company to the Kroger Grocery and Baking Company. The purchase consisted of a solid trainload, about fifty cars of Heinz merchandise. The Kroger company will distribute these foods in one week's time from more than 5.000 stores. HOLDS DEATH ACCIDENT Perry Reris Dies From Fumes of Gas Water Heater. Carbon monoxide gas. said to have been generated Jsy a water heater, today was held responsible by Coroner c. H. Keever for the death of Perry Revis. 22. in the bathroom of his rooming house at 6420 Cornell avenue. Saturday. Revis was an employe of the Maxwell Gravel Company. The body was sent to city morgue pending funeral arrangements. His mother lives in Norwood, O. Mad Dog Bites Si~ Bu Vnitfil PrrA NORTH VERNON, Ind.. Nov. 11. —Six North Vernon residents will take the Pasteur treatment, following announcement from state alboratories that a dog which bit them was rabid. All dogs running at large will be killed.

Full Leased Wire of the United Press Association

‘ Mums!’- M-m, Yum, Yum

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"Yes, mum!” When ‘mums” can draw prizes like this three days before the National chrysanthemum show, what are we to expect when the display opens Tuesday in the Riley room of the Claypool? The smilinig young woman is Mrs. Dorothy Carothers Munier of 3443 North Illinois street, and the mums, if there’s any use going into that, came from Irwin Bertermann, Indianapolis florist, who has proven why he was selected to head the State Florists Association's publicity committee for the show.

AUTOMOBILE THEFTS AND MURDER LINKED

Truckload of Eggs Stolen Bu Times Bnrcinl PLYMOUTH, Ind., Nov. 11.— Earl Deer, truck driver for the Schlosser Bros, poultry and dairy products firm here, was robbed of a truck load of eggs at Chicago, which he obtained to bring back here. He was about to start for home when the bandits took charge, and compelled him to drive to a little-frequented spot. He was bound and then thrown from the truck, in which the bandits fled.

FIVE KILLED AS VIOLENCE TOLL One of Twin Sisters Dies in Straw Stack Fire. Violence caused the death of five persons in Indiana over the weekend. Inez Decoursey, 3, was burned to death and her twin sister Irene is not expected to recover, as the result of firing of a strawstack in which they were playing at the home of their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Everett L. Decoursey, four miles south of Franklin. Addison Wiggs, 44, was killled in a coal mine at Princeton when a loaded car passed over his head. The body of Fred Konenkamp, 55, Chicago, was found in a ditch at Hammond. He had been slain by being struck on the head with some heavy instrument. Police are without clews to the slayer or motive. T. A. Hunter, 75, Elizabethtqwn, died while at the wheel of his automobile. His wife, unable to drive, sw'erved the car from the road and it struck a pole. Neither she nor another passenger, Maudie Lucas, 11. were injured. Paul Anchor, 17. Petroleum, was killed when struck by an automobile driven by Francis E. Brady of Muncie, while riding a bicycle. PRISON CHANGES UP City Council to Consider Ordinance for Fund. City council tonight will consider an ordinance providing $17,000 for repairing and building an addition to city prison at the police station. City Controller Sterling R. Holt has recommended the expenditure. Councilman John F. White has been working for three months with the works board and building commissioners department to get plans for the improvement. Conditions at the city jail have been declared a •‘disgrace” by city officials. An ordinance regulating the weight of trucks on city streets will be up for passage.

SLEUTHS GUARD RARE JEWELS WORN BY CHICAGO OPERA PATRONS

BY MERTON T. AKERS Initrd Frets Staff Corresixuident Chicago, nov. n.— Jewels which once flashed from the crowns of now deposed European rulers glitter these nights from the “diamond crescent" of the new salmon and gold skyscraper home of the Chicago Civic opera. They represent a sum of money whose total runs into the millions. Mingling unobtrusively in the background, two squads of city detectives are the guarantee of the

The Indianapolis Times

Slain South Bend Man Believed Hijacker of Stolen Cars. Bu Times Boecial SOUTH BEND Ind., Nov. 11.—Belief that Christ Tonneff, slain in the doorway of his home two weeks ago, paid with his life for hi-jacking stolen automobiles is now held by authorities. A theory that stolen slot machines were involved in the affair has been discarded. Harry S. Taylor, prosecuting attorney, will present the case to the St. Joseph county grand jury which will convene a week from today. No arrests have been made in the case, and authorities admit it is the most baffling murder mystery here in recent years. A suspect taken into custody in another case gave the first clew to form a basis for the stolen car theory. He told authorities of the wide scope of automobile thefts and said that heavy profits were soon followed by trouble. Taylor proposes to lay before the grand jury a picture of automobile theft operations, hoping to find some place in it in which Tonneff will fit.

RETIRED COAL DEALER IS CLAIMED BY DEATH Michael J. Barrett Kelly Will Be Buried Wednesday. Funeral services for Michael J. Barrett Kelly, 50, of 5165 North Keystone avenue, retired Indianapolis business man who died Sunday, will be held Wednesday morning. Services will be held at 8:15 a. m. Wednesday at the home and at 9 at St. Joan of Arc Catholic church. Burial will be in Holy Cross cemetery. Mr. Kelly was a life-long resident of Indianapolis and retired from the coal business several years ago. He was a member of the Catholic church and the Knights of Columbus. Survivors are the widow, Mrs. Nellie Kelly; his mother, Mrs. Mary Kelly; five daughters, Misses Esther. Mary Clare, Agnes Catherine, Helen Joan and Patricia Kelly; a son, John Thomas Kelly; a stepsister, Mrs. Rosa Hteyes and a stepbrother. John F. Barrett, all of Indianapolis. FIGHT ‘BUCKET’ CHARGE Seeley & Cos. Employe Files to Quash Court CaseAttorneys for Harry Latimar, attche of Clinton L. Seeley & Cos., alleged bfleket shop, today were preparing briefs to submit to Criminal Juflge James A. Collins on a motion to quash a bucket shop charge against the defendant. Oral arguments on the motion were heard Saturday by Collins. Latimar is one of eight former employes of the Seeley company who face the charge, growing out of an investigatioh by Prosecutor Judson L. Stark. The others will be tried in criminial court Friday.

wealthy patrons that gem thieves won't make the haul of their lives. Diamonds that Napoleon gave to his Austrian queen. Marie Louise, when she bore him an heir, and a diamond necklace which dazzled the court of Czar Nicholas sparkle from the boxes of Ernest R. Graham and Mrs. Edith Rockefeller McCormick. The Napoleonic gems had their new world debut on opening night Graham, architect who designed the opera house, presented them

INDIANAPOLIS, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1929

WOMAN HELD IN DEATHS OF TWOCHILDREN Admits Illegal Burial, but Declares Both Killed Accidentally. SKELETON FIND IS CLEW Pianist-Nurse Also Likely to Face Charge of Blackmail. Bu f'vitrr] Press CAMDEN, N. J., Nov. 11.—Mrs. Gladys Parks, 35-year-old cabaret pianist and jazz singer, today was taken by Camden county and *tate police authorities over the route which marked her alleged murder of the two children of Allen Rogers, Woodbury (N. J.) insurance man. She first was taken by District Attorney Clifford A. Baldwin and Detective Chief Lawrence T. Doran to Absecon. N. J., where the body of 20-month-old Timothy Ablen wai found four blocks from the Absecon state police barracks Sunday morning, after she furnished authorities in Trenton with details of how to find it. Later she will be brought back here to the house where the alleged murder of Timothy’s 5-year-old sister, Dorothy, occurred. Authorities will then take her to the spot near National Park, N. J„ where the quicklime-covered remains of the little girl were found by two school children en route to church the morning of Nov. 2. Meanwhile, police are Investigating the disappearance of four other children believed to have been under the woman’s care at one time. Authorities in other cities have been asked to check their reports of missing children for several years back. Detectives Doubt Story Detectives were frank In saying they doubted the story of the woman who surrendered in Newark Sunday and subsequently was brought here and put in jail on a charge of murder. The woman denied killing Timothy, and insisted he died from a fall downstairs. Dorothy, she said, died after being slapped. Questioning in Newark and later by police here failed to shake Miss Parks In her story. She gave an emotionless recital of the developments since Allen N. Rogers, an insurance agent of Woodbury, gave her the children to care for after his wife died last April. Cousin of Mother

Miss Parks is cousin of Mrs. Rogers. Two other persons—Anthony Baker, Miss Parks' common-law husband, and George W. Parks, her father—are being held here as material witnesses. Detective Sergeant Louis Shaw indicated that today's questioning would seek to determine whether charges of attempted blackmail against Miss Parks could be substantiated. “Four well-known Philadelphia men and three from Atlantic City have told us of her game,” Shaw said. “We will not reveal their names because the men need not be mixed up in this affair. She used their children (Timothy and Dorothy) and others to confront the men she was trying to blackmail. She would tell them the children were theirs.” Miss Parks was unmoved in describing the death and burial of the children. She said she was afraid she would be charged with murder if she told police about what she apparently considered the accidental deaths of Timothy and Dorothy. AGED MINISTER, 93, DIES Oldest Living Reformed Church Pastor Passes After Long Illness. Bu United Press TIFFIN, 0., Nov. 11.—The Rev. Samuel Z. Beam, 93, oldest minister of the Reformed church of the United States, and oldest living graduate of Heidelberg college, died here today after a long Illness. The aged minister and his wife recently celebrated their sixty-fifth wedding anniversary. Mrs. Beam and two sons. Dr. Henry L. Beam of Heidelberg and Dr. Albert J. Beam, Nashville, Tenn.. survive. CITY GETS CONVENTION Girl Scouts Will Hold National Sessions Here in 1930. Girl Scouts of America will hold their 1930 annual convention in Indianapolis next fall. Indianapolis was chosen as tlje convention city at New Orleans, where the 1929 session closed Saturday. More than 600 delegates will attend. Henry T. Davis, convention bureau manager, will aid in arrangements.

to his wife. Mrs. McCormick, looked upon as the mentor of the diamond crescent, wears the Riissian jewels which were sold after the revolution by the Soviet government. The necklace reaches to her waist. m m THE detectives are stationed here and there in the domed foyer where glittering crystal chandeliers light the promenaders between acts. Some of the detec-

100,000 PILGRIMS CROWD. WAY TO SHRINE; FIGHT TO BE ‘CURED’ AT GRAVE

Throng Shoves Policemen Aside at Resting Place of Priest. Bv United Press MALDEN, Mass- Nov. 11.—More than 100,000 pilgrims, hundreds of them nearly frantic in their quest for supernatural relief from afflictions, stormed Hedy Cross cemetery here Sunday and fought for a chance to touch the grave of a young priest. Reports of several alleged “cures” had Inspired hope in the thousands and they transformed the tomb of the Rev. Patrick J. Power, who died sixty years ago, into a virtual shrine. So eager and excited was the throng that swarmed through the cemetery gates that it pushed aside the rope barriers erected around the grave and left a special squad of fuorteen policemen helpless to handle the situation. Traffic was blocked for miles around the cemetery Sunday by automobiles filled with pilgrims. Some visitors came from distant points. Women fainted and children were trampled in hysterical attempts to get close to the priest’s grave. Some of those felled by the rushing crowd were carried away, but none required hospital treatment. What several persons called "cures” were reported Sunday. Florence Dimasco, 11, of East Boston, blind for the last three years, claimed to be able to see some small holy pictures after visiting the grave. Helen M. Hunt, 24, of Malden, victim of Infantile paralysis, was reported to have walked for the first time in many months. After praying at the grave, Rita Cholette of Manchester, N. H., suffering from lameness, said she was able to walk without limping. Frances Budkevechus of Brocton walked a few steps for the first time in ten years, she claimed.

Forgiving New Albany Mayor Not to Oust Board Which ‘Fired' Him.

Bu Times Sveeial NEW ALBANY, Ind., NOV. 11. —Charles B. McLinn, new mayor here, is in a position to discharge members of the school board which dismissed him two years ago, after he had served nearly a quarter of a century as principal of the high school, but declares he will not take such action. "I am trying to forget the whole school situation,” the mayor declares. “I am out of it. I hold no grudges. I have no thought of private revenge.” u m M’LINN, an educator forty years, had the support of 700 high school students when he was dismissed, and they went on strike as a demonstration for him. He persuaded them to return to their studies, thanking them for their loyalty and advising them that the strike was useless. The veteran teacher was dismissed, the board said, ebcause he “differed on educational policies.”

SIO,OOO LOOT TAKEN Alexandria Store Robbed of Clothing. Loot valued at SIO,OOO was taken in one of a series of robberies in Indiana over the week-end. It was taken from the R. L. Leeson department store at Alexandria. Bundles of clothing were lowered with ropes from a second story window. A small automobile from which the rear seat had been removed, seen near the store shortly before the robbery, Is believed to have been used in hauling away the loot. Two bandits robbed a restaurant at Franklin of $35 and escaped in an automobile. Ray Evans, Anderson, was robbed of his automobile by two bandits who drove away on Road 67 toward Indianapolis. PUPILS HEAR PASTOR Dr. Shellenberger Makes Armistice Day Talk at Shortridge. Dr. William A. Shellenberger, Central Christian church pastor, addressed pupils at Shortridge high school in an Armistice day program today. Principal George Buck gave a short talk concerning the Shortridge service flag, and read the names of Gold Star members. School was dismissed for the rest of the day following the program.

tives wear evening clothes, others business suits. All mingle with the crowds, on watch for thieves. On opening night last Monday, wealthy Chicagoans wore $15,000,000 worth of jewels and rare furs as the setting for Verdi’s “Aida.” Almost any night will see from $3,000,000 to $5,000,000 represented in jewels on the diamond cre*-°"t and the lower floor, onto which the rich patrons overflow. Elaborate precautions to guard the bejeweled patrons when they

Where Are the Sheilas?

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She's smUing because she knows there's a box of candy on the way. This is Sheila Alice Mac Andrews, 1203 North Oxford street.

Where are all the Sheilas in Indianapolis? Must net be such a popular name, though you’ll have to admit it’s a pretty one, with all the fragrance of the "old sod.” The Times, in connection with its great serial story, “Sheila,” is offering a pound box of candy to every girl named Sheila In the city. A half dozen girls have submitted their proof so far, but there must be more. Let’s hear from you and don't forget to read this fascinating "Sheila” story.

INJUSTICE CHARGED BY CASH COAL MEN

City Ordinance Unfair to Them, They Assert in Statement. Charges of “bloodless racketeering” were hurled today against credit coal dealers of Indianapolis by officials of the Cash Coal Club, a recently organized group of twenty-two local cash coal merchants. A city ordinance, regulating advertising, sale, and distribution of coal in the city, was manipulated into the civic code by the credit dealers, and is directed at middleclass cash retailers, they claim. One of the cash dealers, secretarytreasurer of the Cash Coal Club, H. H. Page, faces charges in municipal court of substitution of a lower grade of coal for Pocahontas coal. Cash dealers assert they retail coal from $1 to $1.50 less a ton than the credit merchants. "A carload of coal was billed to me through the mails as Pocahonas coal. I unloaded the car here, and delivered it, and now I am charged with substitution of low grade coal,” Page said. “Under the ordinance I alone am to blame. “Moreover, as far as I know, the car was loaded with Pocahontas. The goverment has tried for ten years to define Pocahontas. How can the city coal inspector do so?” W. B. Smith, vice-president and general manager of the Cash Coal Club, pointed out recent machine gun racketeering In Chicago, where cash coal companies are underselling their larger credit competitors, and classified it with the local situation. “The city ordinance is unconstitutional,” he said. “It hits at the smaller, cash merchants. We organized to maintain our rights.” SCHOOL TEACHER - DIES Miss Roth Winemnv Was Graduate of Indiana University. Miss Winenow, 32, township schools teacher, died Sunday at her home, 3016 Ruckle street. She was a graduate of Broad Ripple high school and Indiana ui^ersity. Funeral arrangements are incomplete. Surviving are the parents, Mr. and Mrs. Fred H. Winenow. j

go from their north side homes to the building on the Chicago river are taken by police. Squads of detectives patrol the Gold Coast section from the time the patrons leave their homes until they are back, even if they tarry at after-theater parties. A list of box holders and the nights they attend rests on the desk of the police chief. He calculates the routes the limousines will take to the opera and out go the yellow squad cars to take up the patroL

Second Section

Entered as Second-Class Matter at Pos‘o(Tlce, Indianapolis

Agree Once, at Least Bu United Press EVANSVILLE, Ind., Nov. 11. —Both mayoralty candidates at Evansville felt immediate need of vacations when the election was over, so each laid his plans. Unknown to each other, their choice of vacation sites coincided much more closely than their political beliefs. Hence, both Mayor-elect Frank Griese, Democrat, and John Stuart Hopkins, his defeated Republican daversary, are at Reelfoot lake.

TRAIN VICTIM DIES Woman Who Threw Self on Tracks Succumbs. Mrs. Winifred Touhy, 34, of 525 North Denny street, succumbed early today in city hospital to injuries sustained when she dived beneath a Belt line freight train at Twentyfirst street and Sherman drive Oct. 15. Suffering from a nervous breakdown she disappeared from her home on that date, and, several hours later, was identified at the hospital by her husband, Joseph Touhy, and her father, William McMahon. Witnesses, including members of the train crew, told police that she sat on a switch block at the crossing and watched the train’s approach. As the fourth car passed, she arose and threw herself under its trucks. Her left arm was crushed and her head Injured. SIO,OOO Alimony Ordered Bu Tim pm Nnerial BROWNSTOWN. Ind., Nov. 11.—A divorce and SIO,OOO alimony have been granted Mrs. Bruce Jarvis from her wealthy and eccentric junkman husband. Only once in twenty years has Jarvis’ hair and beard been cut, and that was when the state gave him free barber service while he was j serving a thirty-day penal farm sentence in 1928.

Only on one occasion in the thirty yegrs of opera here have private detectives been hired by an individual to guard jewels. When Mrs. E. P. Stotesbury of Philadelphia, a few years ago, attended the opera wearing $1,000,000 worth of jewelry, two private detectives followed her through the lobby and into her box. That, so far as Lieutenant Make Mills, until this year In charge of the opera policing, recalls, was the only time any one every brought her own protection.

STATE WAGES NEW WAR ON DMA MILL 'Foot Specialists’ Turned Out in Two Weeks Go Under Scrutiny. BOARDS JOIN FORCES ‘Sucker Institutions’ to Be Investigated, Action to Follow. New war on so-called "diploma mills” and "sucker Institutes" has been launched jointly by the state board of medical registration and examination and the board of podiatry examiners, it was learned by The Indianapolis Times today. Plans for the campaign were outlined at an executive session of the two boards at the statehouse last week. Effort is to be directed particularly at a Chicago institution said to have 362 installment plan, correspondence students throughout the state. When they complete their course and payment of an SBS fee, they get a podiatry diploma which is absolutely useless so far as being able to practice in Indiana is concerned, according to Dr. Dan R. Tucker, Indianapolis, president of the podiatry board. Investigate Foot School Another institution under investigation also has headquarters in Chicago. It deals In foot specialties and has a two weeks’ course for customers of the house, turning them out as “foot specialists” which term is not even permitted registered podiatrists under the Indiana law. Tucker said. Both institutions have been reported to the Better Business Bureau of Indiana cities and in Indianapolis the leading stores are co-operating in suppressing advertising of one of the places which may have been misleading, according to the board president. “No one can qualify to treat feet, under the Indiana law, through a correspondence school,”’ Dr. Tucker explained. "The law requires at least one year at a resident school of podiatry approved by the board. Approval only is given such schools as require a two-year course to graduate.

“The applicant for registration must be 21, of good moral character and have at least a high school education in addition to his training in podiatry.” Given Lavish Diploma Denton H. Higbe is the operator of the Chicago correspondence school, which, with 362 Hoosier students, would take $40,770 from the state, Tucker asserted. A letter from the American Medical Association gives Hlgbe’s record with various healing cult schools and socalled “diploma mills.” His present organization Is called American college, 54 West Illinois street. Chicago, After completing the correspondence course and paying the SBS the “student” gets a diploma from the ‘American College, Department of Pedopractic’’ and is entitled to be called a “Fedopractor,” but barred from practicing in Indiana. In sending out advertising of the school, a picture of the diploma is enclosed with the following comment: “Upon satisfactory completion of any of our courses in foot correction, the student receives this handsomely lithographed diploma certifying to his training and qualifications. This diploma is 16x21 inches.” The Scholl Orthopedic Training school Is the other under scrutiny. Dr. Tucker and Dr. William B. Davidson, Evansville, secretary of the state medical board, are probing alleged extravagant claims of educating “foot specialists,” in violation of the Indiana medical law, Tucker stated. Is Reputable Institution The institution charges no fee for the training and requires two weeks' residence at Chicago. It is supported by a reputable maker of Scholl foot specialties, Tucker explained, and said that the Scholl company is a reliable commercial institution, but the school graduates certainly are ineligible to practice podiatry here. The medical board is considering charges for license revocation of Dr. Grant S. Beatty, French Lick, Dr. Davidson anounced today. He was sentenced for liquor law violation at New Albany and is serving fifteen months in federal prison at Leavenworth. Kan. Saturday the board restored the license of Dr, J. W. Phares, Evansville, who recently returned from the same prison where he was sent for violation of the narcotic law.

HOME FIRE CUTS LIFE Aged Man Dies Shortly After Log Cabin Burns. 81l TimeA Hverial COLUMBULS, Ind., Nov. 11.— Worry over loss of his old farm home by fire three weeks ago hastened the death of John McIntosh, 76, at the home of his daughter Mrs. Charles Long. He had been In poor health for some time, but since the destruction of his home he had been bedfast. The home was a log structure more than a half century old, and had not been occupied for five years. It was consumed in a forest fire which swept over three counties. He leaves his widow, two daughters and a son—Mrs. Long with whom he lived, Mrs. James Jones, Kokomo and Charles McIntosh, this city.