Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 128, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 October 1933 Edition 02 — Page 2

PAGE 2

LODGE TO HOLD LAST RITES FOR LOUISJEORGE Miss Valentine Klusmann, 74, Dies: Was Member of Pioneer Family. Logan Lodge 575, F. At A. M., will have charge of funeral services at 2 Monday for Louis H. George, 2947 North Delaware street. Mr. George died yesterday in the Methodist hospital, after a long illness. His survivors are the widow, Mrs. Zella B George; his mother, Mrs. Phoebe George; a sister, Mrs. F D. Grayton. and five brothers, John, Richard. Edwin, Paul and Frank George, all of St. Louis. Survived by Brother Funeral services for Mis 6 Valentine Klusmann. 74, who died Thursday in her home. 2957 Guilford avenue. were to be held at 2 this afternoon in the Clyde V. Montgomery funeral home. The Rev. Jamea T. Tilsley, Broad Ripple Christian church pastor, will conduct the services. Miss Klusmann was a member of one of the pioneer famlies of Indianapolis. She is survived by a brother, Charles K. Klusmann, Indianapolis. Clary Services Set Funeral services will be held in Trinity M. E. church at 10 Monday for Alonzo E. Clary, 66, who died in Methodist hospital Thursday. Mr. Clary lived at 1809 Westview drive, and was proprietor of a pharmacy at 2136 West Morris street. He was a member of Indianapolis lodge 669, F. *A. M. He is survived by the widow, Mrs. Ida Clary; a daughter, Mrs. Margaret Parrish; three stepchildren, Mrs. Gladys Sexton and Mrs. Wilma Harrison, Indianapolis, and Gale Ashcroft, Detroit; a brother, O. E. Clary, Indianapolis, and a sister, Mrs. Henry F. Walsman, Batesville. Former Resident Dies The funeral of William E. Kelley, 65, former resident of Indianapolis, was to be held in the Roy J. Tolin funeral home at 2 this afternoon. Burial will be in the Greenwood cemetery. Mr. Kelley died Wednesday in his home in Paducah, Ky. Surviving him are the widow, Mrs. Mabel Kelley; two sisters, Mrs, William Kortepeter, Southport, and Mrs. John Lafkin, Indianapolis, and five brothers, John W. Kelley, Mobile, Ala.; Perry G. Kelley, Great Falls, Mont.; Joseph, Samuel B. and James B Kelley, Indianapolis. STATE'S BEER LAW IN •discard: says york ‘Not a Single Provision Enforced,’ Claims Anti-Saloon Chief. By Time* Special MONTICELLO, Ind„ Oct. 7. “Red-nosed bartenders are being supplanted by red-lipped barmaids.’’ E. L. York, superintendent of the Indiana Anti-Saloon League, declared here today in an address before the central Indiana conference of the Church of the Brethren. “Not a single provision of the beer law is being enforced,” Mr. York declared, “and once again we have the same old saloon, not only on the corner, but beside our homes, churches and schools. “The fallacy of drinking ourselves to prosperity is very vividly demonstrated at this time,” the dry leader continued. “Taxes are being raised to an alarming degree, citizens are calling mass meetings to cope with the situation and yet the people were promised that the income from beer would reduce our local taxes and wipe out income taxes, he said.

FORECAST WEATHER BY WHISPERING WELL Exhales Long Sigh When Storms Are Brewing Around. SEATTLE. Oct. 7.—Like grandpa's ache in his knee, residents of Belluvue near here are able to forecast the weather by a "whispering well." E. N. Sears, deputy county clerk, owns the well. He says it “exhales" with the sound of a long sigh when a storm is brewing and whispers news of good weather with a low “whee-eesh" as it sucks in air. The well is 135 feet deep and the lower levels are quicksand. COPS TRAP BOY. 11. ON BRINK OF CANAL Theft Suspect Threatens Leap Into Water; Act Is Prevented. An 11-year-old boy threatened to jump into the canal at West street and Senate avenue yesterday as police closed in on him after he had been accused of stealing a clock from a parked automobile. However, the boy was captured without a plunge into the water, and taken to the juvenile detention home. SHOW LICENSE AFTER CRASH. CHIEF ORDERS Motorists Without Driver Permits to Be Arrested. Morrissey Says. More trouble is in store for motorists involved In accidents as a result of an order issued today by Police Chief Mike Morrissey. Officers have instructions to de mand that drivers in accidents show driver licenses. If they can not, they are to be arrested. Number of each license shown is to be given in accident reports. PROMOTE MEDICAL AID Dr. C. F. Bayer Given Veterans* Post in Capitol. Dr. Charles F. Bayer, chief medical officer of the United States veterans' bureau in Indianapolis, has been promoted to the central office of the veterans' administration in Washington. Dr Bayer was commanding officer of field hospital No. 236 at Camp Sheridan. Alabama. After his discharge he entered the United States public health service in Indianapolis. He was transferred io the veterans' bureau in 1921.

200,000 MEN SEEK GOLD IN WEST

President Is Urged to Grub Stake Workers in Fields

The flirt world-wide gold ru*h In history U on today in every land and clime. This la the last of a series of articles describing the rapid progress of events and their economic implications. BV EARL SPARLING Times Special Writer ENTER the Grub Stake Plan, put forward as a doublebarrel way of getting Americans out of the bread line and expanding American currency and bank credit. At least 200,000 men are already at work in the placer fields of the West. More than a million—perhaps several millions — could be put to work, asserts Randolph Walker, author of the plan, if the federal government would take charge of the spontaneous movement and grub stake every man willing and fit to go. "These 200,000 little fellows have shown what can be done,” explains Mr. Walker, who grew up in the Colorado gold country and who himself prospected all the way from Denver to the Jackson Hole country in Wyoming. “They have demonstrated that a man willing to work can get by. “Many other countries have resorted to some form of grub stake since I began agitating for it in the United States. Canada resorted to it this summer cents a day for prospectors. Chile, New Zealand, Peru. Australia and Brazil are grub staking prospectors and placer miners. I am informed that Mexico may adopt the plan at any moment. “Many prominent men here In the United States have approved the plan during the last year. It has been approved by men with such varied interests as William Green, president of the American Federation of Labor; August Hecksher, who made a fortune out of mines; Norman Thomas, the Socialist leader. When a capitalist, a labor leader and a socialist can get together on a plan, there must be something to it. ana THE Grub Stake Plan is simple. The federal government would provide each man with pick, shovel, pan, grub and 25 to 50 cents a day cash and would transport him to a placer region where it has already been shown that 50 cents or more of gold can be recovered a day. In addition, each man would be given a short schooling on the spot before he started off to find gold. In submitting his proposal to President Franklin D. Roosevelt, whom he has known intimately for years, Mr. Walker suggested that the United States Army might easily take charge of transport and commissary. “That's all there is to the plan,” Mr. Walker smiled with contagious optimism at his home on East Forty-eighth street. “There is much more than that to its results. Every dollar of gold recovered by the grub staked miners would, if minted, allow nearly two dollars of sound currency to be put into circulation. Or ( looking at it another way, every dollar of new gold would allow bank credit to be expanded $lO to sls. “There are millions of acres of ground in this country which will yield 50 cents of gold a day per man. The 200,000 men who went out on their own this summer have proved it. They have averaged 50 cents a day without direction, with only desultory help from mining and geological bureaus, without organized commisary or transportation. And they averaged 50 cents a day when gold was at a fixed price of $20.67 an ounce, which means about sl6 In the field. New gold can now be sold at the free market price. Given this benefit, and aided and

DEATH DRIVER GIVEN LENIENCY 8Y COURT Fled Through Fear, Youth Explains to Judge. Driver of an automobile who fled after the car struck and fatally injured a pedestrian on Aug. 10, was given leniency yesterday by Criminal Judge Frank P. Baker. “I was scared." Harold Duthridge, 23. of 644 Collier street, explained regarding the accident which cost the life of Charles E. O’Neil. 63. of R. R. 12. struck at Washington street and Hamilton avenue. The defendant said he had intended to surrender himself. “I believe your statement that you were scared.” the court said, "inasmuch as the accident was one for which no blame could be placed upon you.” Fine of SIOO and costs was imposed and a penal farm term of one year suspended. The court took into consideration Duthridge's previous good record and the fact that he is employed steadily.

It’s a Pipe Knife Briar - Cleaner Routs Bandits.

Thomas gritton, 60, of 1106 South Belmont avenue, has a knife ha's proud of. It's the best pipe cleaner In Southtown and last night it served in the new role of bandit chaser. Gritton, seated on the front porch of his home cleaning the cake from his briar, was approached by three young men. They sought to purchase a sec-ond-hand stove. Gritton. a used goods dealer, discussed stoves as he cleaned his hod. The three attempted to seize him and demanded money. Gritton quit slashing pipe cake and sliced at one of the bandits with his knife. The bandits ran. Gritton finished his pipe reaming. He loaded it up. He drew a deep breath of the fragrant briar and called police. The bandits could not be found. Banana oil contains neither bananas nor oil; It Is composed of equal parts of amyl acetate, acetone af* Knr>.irn . ■mifK - tittle pyrox i '

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directed by the federal government, each man ought to be able to average a dollar a day, or even better." . tt a tt / T'HE great merit of the plan, according to its author, Is that It Is self-liquidating. He points out that the government has spent $22,000,000 building permanent reforestation camps. The same amount of money spent to grub stake placer miners would be returned to the government ten-fold in expanded bank credits, he contends. “It would take leas than two months for a million men, averaging 50 cents a day, to produce $22,000,000 of gold,” he argued. "That $22,000,000 of gold, if added to the nation’s monetary stock, would be equal to at least $22,000,000 of bank credit for American business men. Once the grubstaked panners learned where to find the gold and how to recover it they would be self-supporting.” The plan has been approved by the committee for the nation, and many prominent men, including Senators Key Pittman, E. P. Costigan, Bronson Cutting, D. S. Igelhart, president of the Grace Line; E. L. Cord, the motor manufacturer; Thomas E. Regan, representing the H. P. Whitney estate; R. E. Wood, president of Sears-Roe-buck; Judge Ben Lindsay, Newton Baker, Governor C. Ben Ross of Idaho, Governor Eugene Talmadge of Georgia, Governor James Rolph Jr. of California, etc. William Green is attracted to it because it might help to remedy unemployment among coal and metal miners, about 70 per cent of whom are out of work. The coal and metal miners would be especially fitted to dig for gold in the placer regions. “This plan,” states Mr. Green,

Not So Blythe Now Hendricks, State Library Archivist, Finds He’s Relegated to ‘Static’ as Job Fades. LITTLE JACK HORNER who sat in a corner in nursery tales could only pull a plum out of his pie. but Blythe Q. Hendricks, radio announcer, found some archives In his political salad and thereby hangs this taie. Hendricks today was no longer on the state pay roll. Salad Archives, as served up ii. the Indiana statehouse. resulted in the static defier ending his service under the regime of Governor Paul V. McNutt. „

The salad is made up of the following ingredients: Take one radio announcer like Hendricks, put him in a pan of publicity by naming him director of publicity of the state highway commission, then boil the highway department down and baste by giving Marc Waggoner of Franklin the job held by Hendricks, then season Hendricks by giving him a sprinkle of archives and baking him in the state library pot as an archivist. Now an archivist is a job that consists of inspecting state libraries and the inspection of cul-

Damage Suits Totaling SBO,OOO Filed in Court

Indianapolis Railways, Inc., Sued in Behalf of Injured Child. Five suits asking damage of SBO,OOO for personal injuries alleged to have been suffered in traffic accidents were filed in Marion county courts yesterday. Largest sum sought in the suits is for $25,000 asked from Indian- | apolis Railways, Inc., in behalf of Frank Fletcher, Jr„ 3, whose right | leg and a portion of his right hand were severed by a street car March 9 The Bates Motor Transport Lines, Inc., was sued for $15,000 by Guy F. Spinning. According to the complaint. Mr. Spinning lost several j teeth and the vision of his left eye : was impaired in a collision of his automobile and a truck operated by the defendant on State Road 41 near Schneider. Ind., July 16. Another trucking company, the Smock Motor Express Company, was named defendant in a $15,000 suit brought by Beatrice Toops, who alleges her righ£ leg and left jaw were fractured in a collision with

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

HgjS■Kh&'Y Hr * U 'sH * ml

Randolph Walker, father of the Grub Stake Plan.

“could be put Into Immediate operation. It is an individual operation and if properly and honestly directed will, I believe, not only support placer panners but lead through prospecting to the open-ing-up of our vast natural gold resources.” tt it TY . M. ATWATER JR., former president of the New York Mining Exchange, has considered the problem and has spoken pertinently on the question of whether there is still gold in ‘them thar hills.” “It is not true,” says he, “that our gold mines and gravels have been exhausted. There are gold veins and placers in Arizona, New Mexico, Nevada, Colorado, California, Oregon, Idaho, Montana, Washington, Wyoming, Alaska, and even in the southern states

tural. literary, and historical matter. Something went wrong. Hendricks stuck in his thumb for his regular pay-check and pulled out nothing but archives. Yesterday, Louis Bailey, state librarian, announced that Hendricks had quit his post and that’s why no paycheck was forthcoming—only archives. S. J. Kagan, secretary of the McNutt Club, was given his post. Hendricks could not be reached today regarding the merits of the political salad he had been served.

a Smock truck at Arlington avenue and Brookville road, April 6. Alleging both legs were broken when he was struck by a United Cab at St. Clair street and Massachusetts avenue, April 24, 1932, ! Arthur Jones asks damages of $15,000 from the United Transportation j Company. Suit for SIO,OOO was filed by Mary Powell against Anthony Poparad, j operator of Tony's Safety Coach i Line between Indianapolis and Ben Davis: Albert Heffern, a bus driver, and the Madison Insurance Company of Indiana. The complaint alleges the plaintiff suffered pefmanent injuries when thrown from the bus, Aug. 17. The insurance company wrote liability insurance for the bus line, j according to the suit. Head Hurt by Coal Lump Frank Mushrush, 45, of 1233 West New York street, suffered a slight scalp wound last night when he was struck by a piece of coal while walking under a track elevation at the Vandalia tracks and South Warman avenue. He was treated at the city hospital and taken home.

An unemployed married couple panning gold dust in San Gabriel Canyon, near Los Angeles, Cal.

of Alabama, Georgia, North and South Carolina and Virginia; and there are gold occurrences that have produced handsomely in the past and should be vigorously revived at this time. “There are at least 50,000 miners out of work, men laid off at the copper, lead and zinc mines. Every one of these men is capable of producing gold if put to work.” Albert S. Konselman, a Tucson (Ariz.) mining engineer, made an illuminating experiment this summer to determine whether grubstaked panners could really average 50 cents of gold a day. His report follows: “We located 160 acres of ground (near Prescott) which had heretofore been tested and found to be gold-bearing. We placed a man in charge whose duty it was to haul water, issue rations at the rate of 50 cents a day and instruct persons in the work. Our present population is seven men, seven women and six children. Besides these there are six single men who have either moved to their own ground or who work on our ground intermittently. “In all, the first twenty-seven days, including 107 shifts, yielded 3.41 ounces of dust, which at sl6 an ounce brought $54 cash to the workers. About SIOO had been Issued in grub. On the last day eleven men were actually mining and seven rockers were in operation. The average recovery was 51 cents a day of five hours. During the next two weeks following the weighing, the workers have averaged, slightly more than 50 cents a day each in gold. They averaged this, of course, with gold at cnly sl6 an ounce.” The End.

ADDITIONAL SKY BALL DEALERS ARE LISTED Contest Enthusiasm Seen in Suburban Areas. Additional dealers of Sky Balls for use in The Times-Em-Roe contest are listed today. The following are located in suburban sections of Indianapolis: James R. Walters. Mars Hill; T. R. Brown. 1800 Lyndhuist drive; Tim Dadv, 4301 West Washington street; Merz Pharmacy. 5750 West Washington street: Teeter's Pharmacy, 6301 West Washington street; A. L. Payne. 4427 Rockville road; Devartz Pharmacy. 3515 Rockville road; Zink’s market. Speedway Citv; Clermont Pharmacy. Clermont; C. W‘. Jackson. Flackville; C. Sattler, 3652 South Meridian street: Ray's service station. 4100 Bluff road; J. H. Jarvis, Longacre Confectionery. 5001 Madison avenue; Southport Pharmacy. Southport; E. Humston, Beech Grove; William C. Lehnert lunchroom. New Bethel; C. Wier. 4360 North Keystone avenue; Carl Plummer. Lawrence; Shadeiand grocery. Shadeland road and Pendleton pike; Koehler Bros., Thirtvfourth and Arlington avenue: Claghorn. grocery, 6500 East Tenth street; Washington market. 7912 East Washington street; H. C. Wray. Cumberland, and D. Fallender. 3529 Prospect street. SPEAKS BEFORE PUPILS Dr. Charles P. Emerson Advises on Career of Medicine.. “The Choice of Medicine as a Career” was the subject of a talk given by Dr. Charles P. Emerson, former dean of the Indiana university school of medicine at the assembly at Park School, Cold Spring road. Friday morning. Dr. Emerson’s talk was the first of a series dealing with vocations to be given under the auspices of the Father's club.

Skyball Contest Entry Blank Name Address Last Birthday MARK X. YOUR AGE, CLASS Junior Class Intermediate Class Senior Class 6 to 10 inclusive 11 to 14 inclusive 15 to 19 inclusive Using Washington street as the north and south dividing line and Meridian street as the east and west dividing line. Mark X in the section in which you live. Southeast Northeast Southwest Northwest Hold this blank and give It to the official In charge of contest on the day of contest. Tournaments in each section 9:00 a. m. Saturday, Oct. 14th.

—Conservation — FLOOD CONTROL PROPOSAL AID IS STATE NEED Support of Plan Should Be Stressed During Year, Expert Says. BY WILLIAM F. COLLINS Time* Special Writer There are 33.009 acres of land in the flood plain of the Wabash and Whiter rivers in the state down and over which rampaging waters rush with distressing frequency. Within this area alone the annual crop of foodstuffs is estimated to be worth $1,250,000 in which the farmer profits more than 40 per cent. Within this flood plain area lie farmlands and building valued at more than $11,000,000. Do not confuse this flood plan with the vastly greater area drained by these two rivers in which is 80 per cent of the farming land in the state and in which the land and building values approach, even under present market conditions, $125,000,000. Within this greater area, things that the public has bought and paid for in the way of bridges and roadways are destroyed at the rate of more than $2,250,0000 a year. This destruction is caused by llood water. Forty-two dollars a minute is a considerable Item of expense, but that is just the state's share of the burnt offering to satisfy this great god. “Flood.” What the people pay out annually, daily or by the minute is something else. You may rest assured the amount is very large and is growing larger with each succeeding year. Citizens' Aid Needed I know this article would be read with better understanding if we now were confronted with one qi our annual floods. Americans find it difficult to concentrate on anything unless we are standing in it and that applies to floods, as well as depressions. Writing flood articles at the end of the dry season with the world series competing for attention is not so hot but you can not fight the floods of next spring or the spring after that with loud clamor raised on the spur of the moment. Some one has to pioneer any project. Representative Virginia Jenckes has been pioneering flood control for eight years, and now, with her leadership, it behooves the people of this state to line up behind her and push this business of flood control to a successful conclusion. The opportunity to obtain federal aid in controlling the Wabash and White rivers may not be presented again within the lifetime of the reader, your failure to write to her and tell her how you stand on this question counts you out when the rain starts falling and the snow begins melting in 1934. Floods Are Costly The conservationists of this state are not asking for just another appropriation of federal funds to accomplish a theoretical and hairbrained experiment. Any wild scheme that contemplates the use of tax money just because it happens to be available should be jumped on with both feet. Flood control is not an ephemeral fantasy. Flood control is a hard-bitten fact and, like poor relations, always is close at hand. Flood control is a self-liquidating project if ever there was one. From the standpoint of government the control of flood waters in such a highly populated area as Indiana makes it easier for the inhabitants to pay taxes and from that point of vantage the government should be interested in what we have to say. I was one of the thousands in this state who lost money in the spring flood this year. I felt the dig of that loss when I paid my spring taxes and I still feel it. Half of the amount lost would have paid my fall taxes and I could have used the other half very nicely to make a down payment on a gasoline chariot I admire so the government could collect another $22 by the federal tax on automobiles. Government’s Job Being federal rivers under the control of the war department, both the Wabash and the White flood problem very properly should have the attention of the government. There is too much at stake, there are too many human lives endangered each year and there is by far too much property damage to permit this project die for lack of interest on your part. We spent 29,000,000,000 to make the world theoretically safe for democracy, it will take only onesixteen hundredth part of that amount to make Indiana actually safe for her Inhabitants and those are the people in whom we are interested. CLUB TO HEAR M’NUTT Governor to Address Rotarians on Taxation and Relief. Governor Paul V. McNutt will speak before the Rotary Club at the weekly luncheon in the Riley room of the Claypool next Tuesday at 12:15 p. m. The subject of his address will be “Taxation and Poor Relief.”

NEW CLASS HEAD

MUm

Joseph M. Howard

New president of the senior class of Benjamin Harrison law school Is Joseph M. Howard. Other officers are John M. Kelly, vice-president; Faris Deputy* treasurer; Madge W. Kretsch, secretary, and Harold K. Jones, advisory board member.

ROOSEVELT TO PROBE STRIKE a Schedules Conferences on Mine Violence in Pennsylvania. By United Press WASHINGTON. Oct. 7.—President Roosevelt planned to confer with three leaders of the steel fhdustry at the White House today in an attempt to settle the Pennsylvania captive coal mine strike. He acted at the request of Governor Pinchot of Pennsylvania, and Recovery Administrator Hugh S. Johnson, who represented to him that the strike situation, which already has flared into violence, was becoming increasingly serious. Those scheduled to confer were Myron Taylor, chairman of the board of U. S. Steel; Nathan L. Miller, counsel for the iron and steel institute, and Charles M. Schwab, chairman of the board of Bethlehem Steel. In the event the latter is unable to attend, Eugene Grace, president of Bethlehem, was scheduled to attend.

NEW YORK ST, IS DEDICATED Mayor Sullivan and Father Are Honor Guests at Ceremony. Residents of east Indianapolis staged a celebration yesterday at the opening of East New York street, recently widened and resurfaced. A parade which was headed by naval reserves and lasting an hour and a half opened the ceremonies, which included the dedication of a huge boulder at the west end of Highland square. Guests of honor were Mayor Reginald H. Sullivan and his father, Thomas L. Sullivan, who was mayor of Indianapolis from 1889 to 1893, when East New York street was, by admission, “pretty terrible.” Mrs. Mary Durbin, president of the consolidated east side committee, introduced the mayor, who introduced members of the board of public works and the city engineers. Other speakers included Ernest C. Roepke, president of the city council; William Herschell, Indianapolis newspaper man; Paul C. Wetter, president of the Indianapolis Federation of Community Clubs, and Floyd E. Williamson, state auditor.

Journey’s End ‘Railroad Jack/ Lifelong Rider of ‘Rods,’ Dead.

Bn United Press COLDWATER, Mich., Oct. 7. Railroad Jack, 79, vagabond historian, is dead. The vagabond, whose real name was Harry Cooper, was found dead yesterday in a small house behind a gasoline filling station here. Heart disease caused death two days go. Railroad Jack, known throughout the United States for his ability to recite thousands of historical dates, won his picturesque nickname “riding the rods” of freight trains as a boy, youth and grown man. SUSPECT IS ARRESTED IN THEFT OF GOOSE Charles Mattingly, 42, Jailed on Complaint of Owner. Charles Mattingly, 42, of 1725 Blaine avenue, was arrested today by police on a vagrancy charge following a report of Mrs. Stella Leonard, 1747 Blaine avenue, that a goose had been stolen from her home. A neighbor of Mrs. Leonard said Mattingly had been at her home last night with a goose.

Successful people are often referred to as “Lucky.” More likely they were successful because a plan of systematic savings had enabled them to have some ready money available when opportunity appeared. You can be lucky if you are prepared. This Strong, Old Company offers you the facilities to save and be safe. THE INDIANA TRUST JSS £KSiS $2,000,000.00 THE OLDEST TRUST COMPANY IN INDIANA

OCT. 7, 1933

10 INJURED. 3 SERIOUSLY. IN AUTO CRASHES

Rain During Night Given Blame for Several Collisions. Serious injuries were suffered by three of ten persons hurt in traffic accidents early today and last night, rain which fell fer about two hours after midnight having been responsible for some of the crashes. Suffering from lacerations and probable internal injuries, Ralph Seifert, 28. of 1609 Cottage avenue, is in a serious condition at city hospital. He was hurt when an automobile he was driving collided at Orange and Spruce streets with one driven by Elza Newby. 30. Mooresville. Two 16-year-old girls. Miss Margaret Young. 5509 North Illinois street, and Miss Rosalind Lahr, 4910 Washington boulevard, injured seriously in a three-car collision at Maple Road boulevard and Graceland avenue, were reported in good condition today at Methodist hospital. Girl. 4. Is Injured In the same accident. Mrs. Sherman England, 29. of R. R. 2. Box 407, and daughter, Janice June, 4, were hurt less seriously. Drivers were Mr. England, Stephen Clinehens, 52, 3960 North Illinois street, and Miss Young. Two persons were injured in two accidents at the same place, Twen-ty-ninth and Meridian streets. Miss Pearl Butcher, 18, of R. R. 2, suffered loss of several teeth when an automobile in which she was a passenger, driven bv Henry Hoffman. 23, of 2340 Omar avenue, collided with one driven by Miss Naomi Oliver, 19, of 5774 Washington boulevard. Drivpr Is Arrested Robert Hornaday, 39. of 1733 North Meridian street, owner of the car driven by Miss Oliver, was arrested on a charge of drunkenness, and she is charged with having no driver’s license. The other accident at the corner resulted in severe cuts being incurred by Carl Colbert, 35, Whiteland. Ind. A truck lie was driving collided with an automobile driven by Edwin Taylor, 47, Negro. Miss Mae Showengert, 24, of 131 McKirn street, suffered a severe cut over the right eye when an automobile driven by her brother Arthur, 22, struck the abutment of an overhead railroad crossing at Ringgold street. Suffers Fare Injuries Injury of the neck was sustained by Mrs. Pearl Drake, 416 Highland avenue, as a result of an automobile driven by her husband, Herman, being struck by a truck driven by John Burge, 20, of 337 South Keystone avenue. Police arrested Burge on a no driver’s license charge. Paul Beckover, 8, of 617 Dorman street, suffered injuries of his face when he was struck at Economy and North streets, by an automobile driven by William Smith, 28. Negro, 883 Fowler street, who was not held. LEGION AUXILIARY TO GIVE WIENER ROAST Games and Contests to Feature Party at Noblesville. Members of the Junior auxiliary and the Junior Legionnaires of Indianapolis Post 4, American Legion, will give a wiener roast tomorrow at Forest park, Noblesville. Games and contests will be features of the afternoon. Special guests will be Misses Mary and Alice Taylor, The committee in charge includes Mesdames Ralph Hesler, Paul Barger, Clarence R. Martin, and John Borwning. PROGRAM COMPLETED FOR ST. ROCH’S FETE Grand Bazar Will Be Held on South Side Oct. 8, 9 and 10. All arrangements have been completed by the various committees in charge of St. Roch’s grand bazar to be held Oct. 8, 9 and 10 at 3600 South Meridian street. The bazar will be opened officially at 11:30 a. m. Sunday with a chicken dinner. Monday afternoon will be reserved for the children's party, and a dance will be held at night. Tuesday’s activities will feature a card party and the general bazar. Woman's Purse Stolen Mrs. June Cotton, Bridgeport, Ind., R. R. 1, reported to police today that her purse containing $55 was stolen while she was in a stora near the downtown section. Evening* School Strong courses offered in Secretarial, Stenography, Accounting. Bookkeeping and kindred subjects. Spend part of your evenings in selfimprovement. Cost low. Central Business College Arrhftectft & Builders* Building; Indianapolis LEARN TO Evening Class I DRAW SEpTfsTH Tafiinger Studio Classes 46 N. Penn. Rl. 5883