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4 ASHBY BARRAGE SLOWS UP QUIZ ON CAR SERVICE (Continued From Page One.) ,■— —i and the demands of the city street car system will be greatly increased, and “Whereas, the matter -bf street car service in said city has been before the public service commission of the State of Indiana for many months without any intelligent progress, having been made toward a solution of the situation, and “Whereas, no plan has been sug j gested which, in the Judgment of the common council, will properly solve the difficulties; “Now, therefore be it resolved. That in the judgment of the common ! council of the city of Indianapolis, j the Public Service Commission of the-,, | State of Indiana, be and they are i herdby requested to proceed without j further delay to devolve some im- j mediate plan of relief that will, as • far ss possible, enable the Indtanapo lls S 'Stjieet Railway Company to pre pare for the performance of Its du-- | ties during the pomlng winter; and, j “Be it further resolved, That if any increase of fare is found to"*be neces sary, definite provisions should be made tor the deposit of a specific portion of each fare in a special de pository, such portion to be used for the sole and only purpose of ei- j tending the lines and improying the tracks and equipment of the com- , pany.” This resolution was the work of both President Schmidt and Mr. Carneflx, it was explained by the latter, who spoke briefly upon it. “I understand that there are two fac tions in the management of the street railway company, one wanting To see the company perform its duties to the public lu a fair and adequate way. and the other combined with certain local financial interests for the purpose of wrecking It,’’ said Mr. Carneflx. RESOLUTION SEEKS TO BLOCK WRECKING. “If this latter faction gains its ends then we will haye no better service or extensions this winter, and this resola* tion is for the purpose of startiug some thing which may bring out the real trouble so that the people may know about it." Further discussion along lines which undoubtedly must be uncomfortable for the gentlemen whom the councilmen be lieve are trying to wreck the company gave the corporation counsel an oppor tunity to unbuckle bis sword and fly to the head of the “bridge.” With a few preliminary flourishes such as any "chanyilon of the people” might be Justified in making, Ashby launched into a defense of the introduction of the “servlce-at-cost” plan, which up to this time had not been mentioned, asserting that Indianapolis has a lower fare than practically all other American cities of ■ her class, and that In spite of this the street railway company U showing a net of S2<W,OOO for the first eight months of ,1920. * “Reference has been made to the con tending factions," | the counsel said. ‘That’s the first Information that I've had that there was any plan to wreck the company.” When President Schmidt wanted to know why the city did not get service and what had become of the $200,000, Mr. Ashby replied that he didn't intend ’to say “that we are getting the Service we ought to have, but I do say that we are getting as good service as any other city In the country,” and that the $200,000 was net income, out of which gome fixed Charges had to be met and the remainder deveted to dividends. President Schmidt attempted to get Im mediate' consideration upon the resolu tion, but after several councilmen ex pressed the desire - that it take the regu lar course it was referred to the commit tee od public works, of which Council man Lee J. Klrsch Is chairman. Mr. Ashby did not fully unlimber until President Schmidt popped the gas ques tion, which the lawyer had been sum moned to point a way to solve. In words s follows: "VTe want to know what action to take to make the gas company live up to Its franchise. “I realize that the public service com mission has the right to fix the price, but the city has the right to fix quan tity and quality." Thereupon. Mr. Ashby, instead of out lining the procedure whleb the council head had called for spent a quarter of an hour, giving eloquent. If not con vincing; reasons why the council should stop bothering the downtrodden utility, whicif only made more money In the last six months than It ever made be • 1 ore, from the attorney , eon admission in one of his few unguard* and moments. ' Properly under way Mr. -Asnby de clared : “i regard the ga 3 situation as the most serious thing facing the city of Indianapolis so far as the comfort of citizens is concerned for something like 65.000 homes ore using gas for cooking. “The domestic cooking consumer ought to be served first, the heating con sumer second and the Industrial con sumer last,” Mr. Ashby said, ‘ but there Is no such thing as the power to give the gas company immediate greater manufacturing capacity.” “What do yon mean ‘capacity'?" Coun cilman Willson Inquired.- “Why. er, all things have a limit,” Mr. Ashby replied. “That's the same argument the gas rompnny brought up two yeais ago," Mr. Willson said, reviewing the history of the company’s plea for an increased rate in 191 Sand asserting that the utility was so busy making coke it did not give the proper attention to making gas. POINTS COKE AUXILIARY MEANS CHEAPER GAS. “We've got to remember.” Mr. Ashby said, “tbut if the gas company didn't run coke plant our gas would cost us twice as much anil we want to remember that vre’vd"got the cheapest gas in the world. “If you compel the contpany to put on all the pressure demanded In abnormal times you would wreck the plant in a few days, for the pipes would be emptied and it would take sixt/ / days to refill them. “We must: realize that we are limited to g fixed plant for this winter and that •e*n If someone would give the company Oe $2,500,000 needed for Improvements we couldn’t get them completed in time. “What the peop/e need is more gas, bu/ there is no way In the world to get it this winter, so the question now is to distribute what we already have in the best way.” By this time Mr. Ashby had every body so spellbound they had forgotten that be had been asked to outline % pro cedure by which the gas situation m-gbr be investigated, not discussed, and fur ther lengthy argument fonml Mr. Schmidt 'and Mr. Carnefix stating that, according to Information they had, some big in dustrial plants, including the Nordyke & Hannon Company, the Prest-O-Lite Company and the Indianapolis Drop Forge Company were sometimes using ah high os 1,000.900 cubic feet of gas each per day Instead of the small amount indicated by gas officials who declared that the total industrial consumption Is only from 6 to 7 per cent of the total dally output. The kontinued argument also found Mr. Willson stating: “The administration has been asleep on the job for two years, for that long ago we heard the same statement from the gas company; we haven’t got the ca pacity, and we haven’t any more ca pacity today. “Why didn’t the board of works call in the gas company officials at that time and say to them yon do something with in the next Eixty days. “I belleTe that the city has more power •tiiij In spite of service com* mission, to see that we get extensions and improvements.” “Why they have the power,” Mr. Ashby said. BATB SECURITIES ARE HARD TO SELL. ✓ •*Theu why haven't they done some thing?” Mr. Willson asked. When Mr. .Ashby said that She gas company is hampered by inability to sell securities because of the nation-wide pref erence for investirfents of more profitable industries. Mr. Willson pointed out that other utilities in thh city, worse off than the gas company, appear to hare little difficulty in selling them. Councilman Miller suggested, that per haps the majority of citizens might be willing to pay as high as 75 cents, if they were sure of getting plenty of gag of good * quality, to which Mr. Ashby re 'plied: “That might be true, but any official has to deal with thd law as It is and the gas company’s 60-eent rate is the law.” “But hasn't about every law we have been set aside in emergencies here lately?” the councilman persisted. After more of this Mr. Carneflx re marked : “It’s a peculiar thing that officials elected by the public to protect and represent them have their hands tied on a matter like this.” “Well Mr. Carneflx,” President Schmidt said, “I’m not going to take it for granted that this Is a hopeless case. “Great minds differ and I don’t agree with Mr. Ashby.” After the committee to confer with the utilities commission had been appointed and has victory won. Mr. Ashby said he would be willing to go “to any limit” to find ont if it In true that industries are using a far greater percentage of the gas production that company offi cials have stated heretofore. Mr. Willson, chairman of a committee of the whole to whom was referrea President Schmidt's street car loop ordi nance, taking the cars off of the con gested downtown streets and putting them on others farther away from the business center, announced that a public hearing on the measure will be given next Monday evening. Drama League to Give opetting Program Longfellow's “Elizabeth” in patomlme will be the feature of the opening pro gram of the Drama League, which will be given Monday night in the Public Library. Dr. George Savary, pastor of the First Congregational Church, will give an illus trated talk on “Plymouth and the Pil grims,” an anticipation of the Pilgrim terceniury by the league. ■Under the direction of Miss Ruth O’Hair, chairman, the educational com mittee Is outlining the plan for the lo cal Pilgrim celebration. In accordance with the general scheme of the Drama League of America. Junior Drama League centers are be ing reorganized In the high schools, with Miss Lola Perkins of Manual, Miss Eev lyn Kieetzing of Technical and Miss Flora Love of Shortridge as censors. i Woman Is Found After 30 Days’ Hunt SOUTH BEND. Tnd.. Oct. 6.—Theresa Nagy, S3, a emented woman who wandered away from her home here Sept. 9, has be a found on the batuc of the St. Joseph River, along which her wanderings have led her for nearly thirty days. She states that she slept many nights beside the river, even during a severe cold snap. She subsisted on food obtained by begging. = ======== Sander & Recker’s~- Fifty-First Anniversary Sale Truly a Sale of Splendid Furnishings FOR THE HOMEY HOME Exceptional §, H| ||l Dinind .Bloom o rcyj^t Regular hale Price*. Price*. Antique mahogany Queen Anne dining room suite, 10 pieces ...$1,325.00 $895.00 Antique walnut Hepplewhite dining room suite $1,325.00 $998.00 Antique walnut Italian Renate sauce dining room suite, 10 pieces $1,585.00 $1,087.00 Antique mahogany William and Mary dining room suite, 10 pieces $603.00 $452.75 English oak side or con sole table $38.00 $19.00 Walhut side or console table $55.00 $27.50 Walnut Louis XVI console table $37.50 $18.75 Antique/ manogany 48-inch colonial dining table $85.00 $42.50 Bargains From Our Drapery Department 525 pairs novelty curtains, made marquisette, with band borders, trimmed with braids and lace edges; also some perfectly plain. Up to $2.75 values; white, cream and ecru; sale price, pair Sander & Recker Meridian and Furniture Company Meridian and -Maryland \ Maryland Tbe Home of Quality _ Jmmk FIRE BUG WORK SEEN, IN $175,000 | LUMBER BLAZES! (Continued From I‘age One.) wood were stored in the dry kilns, and this appears to be a Jotal loss. The fire was discovered shortly after! 31j>'clock, inf the east part of the build- i ing, in the dry kiln on the first floor. _ j Mrs. William C. Kemker, 1121 East 1 Thirteenth street, first noticed the blaze ! and almost at the same instant Kufus ' Morgan, 1240 Udel street,, night watch; man at the Tatyje Mahogany plant, saw it and sent in an alarm. She flames were confined to the east part of the building, where about 55,000 feet of veneered lumber was stored. Firemen declare there were no signs of fire when left the building Rt 2:16 o’clock and they had dragged hun dreds of bundles-of veneered lumber from the dry kiln and soaked It with water. Morgan, the night watchman, how ever, declared the firemen did not com plete their work and that the second fire started from the first. SAYS HE HEARD SECOND FIRE. He said he heard the noise of the see- j ond fire while he was in the boiler room and that the flames spread so rapidly he had difficulty in escaping from the build ing. Firemen, however, assert that the fire which started after 3 o’clock this morn ing wag in the center cf the building hnd not in the east part of the building, where the first fire was dlseoeverd. The light veenered lumber made ex cellent fuel for the flames and the fire could be seen from a great distance. As the flames mounted skyward the second Door, supporting thousands of; feet of lumber, gnve way. The heat caused the 45 foot steel smoke- ; stack on the roof of the boiler rooms to fold over and crash to the ground. The officers of the Talge Mahogany Company are John H. Talge, president; Charles L. Wlehl, secretary; Peter Stin son, treasurer, and Charles E. Ilenshaw, vice president. TALGE ONLY LIVES HERE Mr. Talge is the only officer of the company who lives In Indianapolis, Wiehi and Stinson liva at St. Joseph, Mo., and Henshaw lives In Wisconsin. The company employs 125 men and of this number seventy-five work In Jhe building destroyed by the fire. Detectives assigned to Investigate the Talge fires today believe the blaze was started by the fire bug who set fire to the William P. Jungclaus mill and lum ber yard at 825 Massachusetts avenue. Sept. 23. where the loss was SIOO,OOO. and on the same night set fire to the lumber yard of the Otto J., Stiesz'Transfer and Storage where the damage was stnall; and to the Talge Mahogany Company's plant the same night, the fire on that occasion be- ! ing put out with a slight loss. Seven mysterious fires have been found ’at the Talge Mahogany plant recently, . firemen say. fin the occasion of the Snesz lumber yard fire the, firebug was seeu by Mrs. ' W. B. Goss, 921 East St. Clair street, who said the man ran north. EXPLOSIONS PRECEDE LUMBER YARD FIRE GRAND JUNCTION, Colo.. Oct. fi Fire which started In a lumber yard ! herq late last night was raging early ; today and the entire west end of the I c^t> was threatened. I All available fire equipment was In use and volunteers were aiding firemen. Several railroad cars loaded with coal were blazing In the ynrds Coal piles along the tracks were afire. \ Regular Bi*le Price*. Price*. Fumed oak 48-inch mission dining table SWB.OO $29.00 American walnut Tudor period dining room suite, 9 pieces $430.00 $348.00 Antique mahogany Queen Anne dining room suite, 8 Pieces $365.00 $292.00 Solid mahogany Chippendale dining room suite, 9 pieces $975.00 $748.00 Fumed oak 4S-inch William and Mary dining table $85.00 $42.50 Jacobean oak 54-inch Adam period dining table $75.00 $37.50 American walnut,Tudor period china cabinet $98.00 $49.00 Cretonnes, in all the new color effects; . many patterns to select from, birds, flowers, stripes and check designs. Up to 90c values; sale price, yard... Another lot of cretonnes, up to $1.35 values; sale price, yard 75£ IINDIANA DAILY TIMES, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 5,192 U. Weds Boston Man Phi % " / hS' lfW i MRS. GOODWIN 8. ELKIN. A marriage which came as a surprise to a number of friends was that of Miss Maida Watkins, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. O. L Watkins, and Goodnyu Sapp Elkin of .'.tlantA, Ga., which * place very quietly In Muncle, Sept. v_, the Rev. Father Day of the Episcopal Church of ficiating. Mrs. Elkin Is a graduate of Shortridge High School and of Wellesley and a mem ber of the Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority. She had recently accepted a position las Latin instructor in the Muncle High School, and she will complete her term j before going East for residence. | Mr. Elkin attended the University of i Virginia and is now connected with the I United Drug Company in Boston. Th,ey will make their home In Boston after January. Police believe the fire was of in cendiary origin. The baze was discovered following two j explosions. Sen. Harding Unveils War Heroes Memorial FREMONT, Ohio, Oct. s.—Tribute to | the soldiers who fell in the world war was paid by Senator Warren G. Harding, who unve'ied a bronze tablet In their honor at Spiegel Grove, near here, yes terday. Approval of recent, speeches by Senato, Hiram Johnson, which contained Indorse ments of the party platform and Senator ' Harding's Interpretation of It was ex j pressed In a statement by Senator Ham j Sng. Harding added he has been grentlj : /leased with the speeches of Senator ! Borah and said he knew he would be i pleased Just as much by those he will I make In the future. Harding said he was assured ilorab would continue speaking. Sullivan Man Is Hurt When Train Hits Auto Special to The Time*. SULLIVAN, Ind., Oct. s—Raymond Snapp, 23. son of Kd Snapp of Knoi County, was injured seriously Monday I when a C. A K I. train hit a truck in ' which he was riding at Carlisle. The truck was demolished and Snapp was thrown fifty feet, suffering a broken arm, a leg broken in three places, four ; broken ribs and a wound la the chest. NEW ANTI-SOVIET RIOTING IN RUSSIA Trotsky Finds Power Waning —Poles May Halt Advance. A LONDON. Oct. s.—Moro anti-sovlet iemonstrations ffaTe broken out in Rus ia, according to dispatches to the Post oday. Advices from Riga said there were riots n Tnmboff, Saternofi and Kazan. In sending soldiers to quell the rioters lie Soviet government was embarrassed ty the shortage of man power, due to the continued pounding of the enemy on he Polish and Ukrainian fronts. Leon Trotsky, head of the Russian War Hepartment, Is trying to lash his men on, •ecord'ng to quotations from the soviet paper Ishevta. All reports here today Indicated the Poles had made further advances against the soviet troops reported still In dis organized fight along their western front. The usual Moscow wireless commu nique was missing, but Polish statements told of their pursuit with the capture of thousands of prisoners and much valu able booty. A wireless dispatch from Warsaw, re layed through Berlin, said the view was held in some quarters that the Poles would cease their advance shortly and cling to the fortified Hue established In the'World War by the Germans. Detroit Citizens Aid Police in Crime Fight DETROIT, Mich., Oct. s.—Detroit’s po lice force tomorrow will be augmented j by 2,500 members of the Metropolitan, Club, composed of active and retired poi ltcemen, firemen and mail carriers and 20*' business men to help rl-.l tb’ city of j criminals, wsjo in the last few months have been committing hold-ups, robbei es and murders *o such an extent that the J police are unable to meet the situation. Plans will u made tonight for the work of this augmented force. Tentative plans are to send one civilian 1 with each policeman !n walking a beat, j Populations Given for Three States WASHINGTON, Oct. 5.--The 1929 population of Kansas is 1,709,385, an in crease since 1910 of 78,236, or 4 6 per cent, the census bureau announced today. Other population announcements were: North Carolina, 1920 population, 2,- 556,486; Increase since 1910, 350,199, oi 13.9 per cent. Aricoua, 1920 \population, 333.273; In- ; crease since 1910, 128,919, or 63.1 per cent. Bedford, Ind., revised figures. 1920 population, 9,070; increase since 1910, 300. or 4.1 per cent. Suspend Proposed Coal Rate Increase WASHINGTON. Oct. s,—The Inter- J state Commerce Commission today sus- i pended until Feb. 2 the proposed In- i creased rate* on coal from Kentucky, Tennessee and Virginia to northern and northwestern points. * 9 The children Just love BjSfr WRIGLEYS-and it’s good jggj for them. l THE FLAVOR LASTS Made under conditions of absolute cleanliness and l%pw| brought to them in WRjCLEY S g&fjfl ' seated, sanitary package. KiSSII SEALED TIGHT. KEPT RIGHT Satisfies the craving for sweets, aids digestion, ||3§|J purifies breath, allays thirst |b> jig and helps keep teeth dean. Eww/'' j CHEW IT AFTER EVERY MEAL Presbyterian Synod at Crawfordsville Special to The Times. CRAWFORDSVILLE Ind., Oct. s.—The ninety-fifth annual session of the Synqd of Indiana of the Presbyterian Church opened in the High School auditorium to day for a three days' session. Dr. Robert E. Speer of New York | will speak In the interests of foreign i missions Wednesday night. Large delegations from practically all I the prominent Presbyterian churches in the State are here. ~ ABSENTVOTERIS OBJECTIVE NOW Democratic Women Concen trate on Getting Out Vote. With the business of registration out [of the way the Democratic women are I directing their energies to getting the j women to vote, and are concentrating I special efforts on the absent voter, t \ Mrs. Alice Foster McCulloch, Demo | cratlc women's State chairman, has writ ; ten to nU the precinct commit tee women in the Stnte urging them to get the ab sent voters to cast their ballot, i “The result of this election may de ! pend on the absent voters.” she has writ | ten, “and it is essential that every Demo- I cratlc voter who expects to be away on I election day, or whose occupation may keep her or may be prevented | from going to the polls by reason of 1 sickness or. infirmity, should procure and I votp an absent voter'^.ballot. ! “The great danger of the situation is ; that voters will delay procuring such bnllots iiqtil It is too late and thereby I lose their vote.” I " Mrs. McCulloch instructs the committee women to see that every Democratic voter who will be unable to go to her [precinct and vote on election day pro cures and votes an absent voter’s ballot. [ "Slake an organization," urges Mrs. McCulloch, “that vylll guarantee that an application for an absent voter's ballot will be supplied to every absent Demo cratic voter in your county at the very earliest possible date." Mrs. McCulloch says a close organiza tion means a Democratic victory In In diana. The women's department is sending out Instructions to the women regarding the laws concerning absent voters. Prest-O-Lite Go. , Uses f\r Reo Speedwagons Fisher Automobile Cos. 434 North Capitol Blvd. Main 3396. • Auto. 3447-11. MORE WOMEN TO AID IN WIND-UP Indiana Democratic Bureau Adds to Speakers’ Staff. • The wind-up month In the Democratic campaign will have three more women speakers 6ent out by the Democratic national committee Is the announcement of Miss Julia E. Landers, chairman of the wdmen’s speakers’ bureau, Mrs. Antoinette Funk of Chicago, for merly a member of the national commit tee of the Progressive party, now with the Democratic national committee, wUi speak in Indiana Oct. 11 to 14, inclusive. Mrs. Funk, who has been associated prominently with the Washington suff frage lobbying and who is a member of the National American Suffrage As sociation, will speak at Evansville Oct. 11, Muncle on the 12th, Bloomington on the 13th and Anderson on the 14th. . Mts. Justins Leavitt Wilson, who has been connected with die editorial de partment of her husband’s publishing company, the H. W. Wilson Publishing Company, will speak at Goshen Oct. 11, at Elkhart Oct. 13, at South Bend Oct. 13, at Auburn Oct. 14, at Angola Oct. 15, at Ft. Wayne Oct. 16. Mrs. Wilson Is known as the author of a series of new articles on “Questions of the Hour.” Miss Gerttrude Breslay Fuller of Pitts burgh will speak in Indiana Oct. 14 to 23,Inclusive. The complete schedule for the engage ments of Miss Chari Williams have been announced as follows: Oct. 11, Craw-, fordsvlile; Oct. 12, Terre Haute; Oct. 33, Greenciißtle. Lieutenant Frank McGlynu, who has gained national prominence in his im personation of Abraham Lincoln, is be ing sent to Indiana for a number of speaking engagements by the national committee. s $25 REWARD FOR EFFORT. MARION, Ind., Oct. s.—Yeggmen wrecked the safe in the office of the Farmers Cooperative Company at Rose burg, west of Marlon, and after taking $25 in currency, escaped in an auto. The safe was roUed from the office to the warehouse in the rear, where it was cov ered with grain sacks and an explosive used to blow off the doors. People near by were awakened by the explosion, but the robbers had departed before any one reached the place. - “CORNS" ; Lift Right Off Without Pali? t A TO ' I / ItjJJ Doesn't hurt a bit! Drop a HttM “Freesone” on an aching corn, Instantly that corn stops hurting, then shortly yo* Uft it right off with fingers. Truly I Your druggist sells a tiny bottle “Freesone” for a few cents, sufficient toj remove every hard corn, eoft corn, or corn between the toes, and the cal’usea* without soreness er Irritation.—Advert fcsemenr. j \ - Trust Your Complexion To Cuticura The majority of akin and scalp troubles might be prevented by using Cuticura Soap exclusively for all toilet purposes. On the slightest sign of redness, rough ness. pimples or dandruff, apply a little Cuticura Ointment. Do not fail to include the exquisitely scented Cuticura Talcum in your toilet preparations. 25c everywhere. SutefeSwtFmbylun AMae "OMast* lUldsa.lUM.” SoldßTtrr here- Soap 26c. OlnUnvat 2i sed Me. 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V TRY SULPHUR ON AN ECZEMA SKIN Costs Little and Overcomes Trouble Almost Over Night. t r Any breaking out of th# skin, even fiery. Itching eczema, can be quickly overcome by applying Mentho-Sulphui, declares a noted skin specialist. Be cause of its germ destroying properties, this sulphur preparation Instantly brings ease from skin Irritation, soothes and heals the eCzema right up and leaves the skin clear and smooth. It seldom falls to relieve the torment without delay. Sufferers from skin trou ble should obtain a small Jar of Mentho- Sulpbur from any good druggist 'and use it like cold cream.—Advertisement. Wretchedness OF Constipation Can Be Quickly Overcome by CARTER S LITTLE LIVER PILLS Purely rege ipADTCD'C table act sure I vMl\ I bit and gently on JPiTTLE I the liver. Re- ga | gr lieve bilious- £ pnj| a O ness, head- ] ache, dizzi- LBBOBBHBHL-J ness and indigestion. 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