Indianapolis Times, Volume 32, Number 228, Indianapolis, Marion County, 31 January 1920 — Page 3
GAS IN FUTURE WARS WILL BE • PAINLESS KIND British General Asserts There Is No Objection to Such Vapors. AIRCRAFT GREAT THING By GEX. SIR LOUIS JACKSON, LONDON, Jan. 31. —It It quite clear that we are on the eTe of the most extensive modifications in the art of war known to history. The changes made In the recent war were only the beginning. It is necessary to develop new arms with the knowledge that the nation which best does so will have a great advantage in the next war. There are people who were crying for a reduction of armaments and who del clare that another war is an Impossibility just as, six years ago, they declared Ajrar with Germany was an impossibility, future wars we shall be exposed to tjjuch greater dangers than In the rec®Jt war. Germany has not refrained from saying that she hoped for revenge some day. I believe that one of the greatest developments in the art of war will be brought about in mechanical transport. The tank was a freak which was called into existence by exceptional circumstances which are not likely to recur, and which if they do recur can be dealt with by other means. The outstanding feature of the tanks has been that they made mechanical transport independent of the roads. That is going to influence mo6t deeply the tactics of the future. If the whole of the transport of an army is carried by vehicles with caterpillar wheels it will be independent of the roads. There would be no long columns of transport. An army could advance in open order on a broad front carrying guns, munitions, supplies and men. At the same time fast cars and motorcycles would be useful for sudden blows at long distances. GAS HITMAN E IN SOME CASES. With regard to the use of gas in future wars, there is no more reason to forbid its use than to forbid the use of rifles. There are gases which kill painlessly, and it Is easy to conceive cases in which it would be more humane to use gas than explosive shells. It might be possible to come to some agreement that no gas should be used which would cause unnecessary suffering. Commercial progress and prosperity in the twentieth century will depend on chemistry, and chemical productions mast have a great effect on all future warfare. We need not trouble ourselves yet with flying destroyers, or fiving coucrete forts, hut in twenty years’ time the air forca estimates may be the most important part of our preparations for war. Bombtug and reconnaissance machines will be developed by commerce for the machines used In commerce can easily be adapted for war purposes, and civilian pilots ran be taken over with the machines. For fighting machines special types are required, and highly specialized military training is necessary for the personnel. One result of a return to open warfare probably will be that bombers will not have th“ same targets near the front of the armies and will secure better results by going farther afield ane bombing the centers where munitions nre manufactured, stores are accumulated and troops trained. WIRELESS TO BE IMPORTANT THING. Wireless telegraphy will be the principal means of communicating with r.lr-_ craft and a development of the electrical listening posts used in trench warfare; n ground wireless system will become the standard means of communication between advanced Infantry and the headquarters controlling them. I believe also that smoke and light signals, a pillar of clou 1 by day and a pillar dt-Are. by night will be used by troops to show the positions they reach. There has never been a war before in which such an extreme variety of weapons were employed. The long rifle has seen its day and should be replaced by a short carbine which would be accurate up to 500 yards. Each man should also carry a good dagger which might be made attachable to the carbine like a bayonet. I do not think the automatic pistol will survive, and I am not sure that the grenade will not also go. If assumed that in future we will have open warfare. The artillery must be of a character that it can be brought to the required position in the shortest possible time. Caterpillar traction should be employed, and if we allow for a daily advance of twelve miles, the guns must be capable of on effective barrage up to IS.OOO yards. The soldier of the future must be absolutely different from his predecessors. 'The days have gone by when initiative was considered not only unnecessary but dangerous. In addition to his rifle, the soldier should be able to handle a Lewis or machine gun, and to help the artillery. He should know’ something of explosives, have a knowledge of fnses, understand signalling, and be capable of handling a ground wireless set. He should receive intensive training and really good Instruction. IRISH TROUBLES HAUNT PREMIER LONDON, Jan. 31.—“ The history of Lloyd George with regard to the Irish question is somewhat peculiar,” says T. P. O’Connor, member of parliament, in the London Star. “It must always be remembered that for some years after his entrance into the house of commons Lloyd George did not care for it; he felt himself out of place there; he did not like the house, and did not thiuk the house would ever like him. He regarded himself then as a fervid propagandist to whom the platform would be much more acceptable than the legislature; he came to the house after long intervals, and spoke rarely. “Two things drove him back to the house and to a prominent share in its proceedings. The first was the influence of that wonderful old uncle who was more than a father to him. * “The second influence which brought bb m If yon are troubled Nervousness.:: ■ ™ Excitability, Irritability, Restlessness, wakefulness, insomnia, nervous breakdown, mental strain, hot Bashes, effects of overwork and anxiety, Spasms, certain forms of vertigo and diztlness, get a bottle of Roszell’s Sedative restorer. Sample S-oz. bottle, $3; Pints ° THE ROSZELL LABORATORIES, 802-4 Ind. Trust Bldg., Indianapolis, Ind For Constipation Indigestion, Sick Headache, Biliousness, Bloating, Sour Stomach, Gas on the Stomach, Bad Breath or other con* ditiona caused by clogged or irregular bowels, take FOLEY CATHAIITIC TABLET! A wholesome and thoroughly cleansing physic—mild and gentle in action. B. B. Haward, UnadlHa, Ga.: “I find Foley Cathartic Tableta give me quicker relief troa constipation than anythin* 1 ever tried.”
1 SOLVES TRAFFIC ACCIDENTS
WASHINGTON, Jan. 3*). —Police authorities have a novel way of trying accident cases. In the traffic court miniature models of all sorts of vehicles which use the streets help officers and witnesses to demonstrate just how accidents occur. Picture shows George N. Seriven and Otto G. Manschild, traffic experts, assigned as assistants to the commonwealth attorney in traffic accidents.
back Lloyd George to the house was the presentation by the government of a rating bill —to which Welsh liberal nonconformity vyas vehemently opposed. It happened that as a young apprentice in a solicitor's office Lloyd George had learned all about rating; he was able to bring to the discussion of the bill this knowledge of bis early days. The house listened to him discoursing on rates, as it always listens to every mau who evidently knows his business, and as the house took to Lloyd George. Lloyd George took to the house. So began his rise. “In the negotiations of 1916 Lloyd George, as Is known, took the leadin'* part. He had promised to resign if ills scheme was not adopted by the government; the scheme failed of adoption, and Lloyd George did not resign. “When Lloyd George became prime minister it was hoped he would again tackle the question, the seriousness and urgency of which he felt. But he stood in awe of Sir Edward Carson and of the break-up of his ministry, which that formidable politician might, -he thought, at that moment have been able to consummate. I do not think myself that Sir Edward Carson could have done it. If Lloyd George had then taken his courage in both hands we might have had already for two years a liberated and a tranquil Ireland. Instead, he made a rancorous speech which brought him into immediate conflict with the Irish members. "Then came the convention —Lloyd George's own proposal. “In March or April, 1918, Sir Horace Plunkett presented to him the report of the convention. Two months previously Sir Horace and the convention had received a letter from Lloyd George in which there occurred this passage: “ ‘At the same time it is clear to the government, in view of previous attempts
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at settlement, and of the v deliberation of the convention itself, that the only hope of agreement lies in a solution which, on the one side, provides for the unity of Ireland under a single legislature with adequate safeguards for the interests c-f Ulster and the southern unionists, and, on the other, preserves the well-being of the empire and the fundamental unity of the United Kingdom.’ “Buoyed up with the hope which such a letter justified. Sir Horace Plunkett handed in his report from the convention ; instead of a measure of home rule, Lloyd George on the very afternoon of that day presented his very different proposal for conscription In Ireland — with consequences the world knows. “But even yet the hopes of Ireland were not entirely dashed, for at the very moment Lloyd George was proposing conscription, in the same speech he committed himself again ind again to an immediate proposal of home rule. He declared that Justice involved to Ireland ‘that principle of self-determination for which we are ostentatiously fighting in every other country.’ It ’wjs one of the principles for which we entered Into the war. It is a principle we shall be enabled to force at the peace conference.’ Again: 'I am certain of this, that nothing would help more in the present juncture to secure the full measure of American assistance than the determination of the British parliament to tender to Ireland such a measure of self-govern-ment. as will satisfy reasonable American opinion, and I believe we are going to do that. We know now that that pledge, so solemnly given—at the moment when our fortunes were darkest and wheu the German push was apparently carrying all before it—was forgotten within a few weeks. It remains still unfilled.’ “What will Lloyd George do in the ftuntumn sittings? Who can tell? I am ifraifl I must answer that Lloyd George will do exactly what suits him."
INDIANA DAILY TIMES, SATURDAY, JANUARY 31, 1920.
MOTHER LOVE HIDES HATRED, SAYS EXPERT Parent Child Slayer Often Swayed by Biological Antagonisms. OLD PLEA CAMOUFLAGE ¶ NEW YORK, Jan. 31. —Mother love, customarily regarded as the strongest and most steadfast of human emotions, may become, under the influence of a natural biological antipathy between the parent and the child of the same sex, a passion of jealousy and hatred that would lead a mother to slay her female offspring. This, at laast [least], is the opinion of Dr. Smith Ely Jelliffe, noted psychoanalyst and mental expert of New York. ¶ Psychologists have advanced the theory that it was love that impelled a mother recently to murder her 10-year-old daughter. Dr. Jelliffe is convinced that it was a biological antagonism, inborn and older than the centuries; a passion of sex jealousy that not even the "mother love" instinct could overcome. ¶ “The instinct that prompted the mother’s act in slaying her daughter is an expression of the racial instinct dating back one hundred million years," he declared. LOVE CREATIVE, NEVER DESTRUCTIVE. ¶ “A natural biological antagonism exists between a parent and a child of the same sex. This dwells in the unconscious mind and its various manifastations are often incorrectly labeled as love. Love is creative, never destructive. \ ¶ “The race instinct that is in us all tends to evolution. The new generation must be different and better than the old. The old feels a bitter inferiority, and justly so. ¶ “The mother watches her young daughter grow and approach woman's estate. The mother sees her own authority and her life ebbing. Like us all, she wants to live forever. ¶ “Antagonism, even hate, is shown, ¶ “Mother is antagonistic to daughter basically, father to son. ¶ "Father loves his little daughters and the woman dotes on her sturdy men children. ¶ “Of course, manifest evidence of the underlying antagonism is seldom seen in average people. Only when very unusual conditions bring pressure upon this weak point of humanity does it become released to work harm. The savage displays his feelings without attempt at concealment. The civilized person has these instincts so deeply repressed that rarely does a serious manifestation of them take place. RACE INSTINCT LEADS MATING. ¶ “The actual race instinct needs an object. Man needs woman and woman must choose her mate. They follow instinct in seeking, and instinct is always right. ¶ “Sometimes instinct gets blocked, and then all sorts. of complications ensue. ¶ “The mother does not understand the full meaning of the Bible words —‘you must lose your life to gain It.’ ¶ “The infant daughter would remain within the protecting arms of the mother and of the home. But if she is to found a home of her own and to aid the race to progress, some sort of instinctive machinery must be set in motion to ‘leave father and mother' and to cleave to the husband. This is the function of her future which comes in conflict with the comforts of her past, her past associations, her past beliefs, her past ideals,
her past lollypops. If she is to lead a new life these must rearrange themselves about a new future. Here the old instinctive, unconscious antagonism to the same sex parent starts to separate the child from the home. When it works to advantage it makes the future more valuable than the past and thus assists evolution. Its opposite leads to destructive wishes which are often camouflaged under the guise of great love of devotion. MATERNAL LINE ONCE HELD SWAY. ¶ “One reason the race antagonism is more often felt but less often expressed originates in the old days when descent by the maternal line held sway. ¶ “Inheritance and the family name came down through the mother and the women were the dominating factors in the race. ¶ "This rule is found in modified form In this country among our North American Indians. In most races history shows a survival of a period in which children take the mother’s name instead of the father’s and whereby property descends through the female line. ¶ “Bernard Shaw was right when he sald every English girl hated her mother, but he should have added, this is often, most often, purely unconscious and unknown to many. ¶ “When the mother kills, as in the case in question, she must compensate for her hate and say it is ‘love’ that caused the deed. She tries this ever-compensating camouflage of pasting another label on the act, calling it by another name. ¶ “She does not subject her feelings to sublimation! She is infantile in her outward expression of hate. DWELLS TOO MUCH ON SELF-PRESERVATION. ¶ “It was the state of her own feelings to her own mother, and so she knows only too well how the daughter feels toward her. ¶ “The murder expresses the mother’s craving for what the daughter approaches —the happiness and beginning of her own invidual [individual] life. The mother wants this state to continue in her own life and wails over its departure. She dwells too much on the self-preservation idea—the
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Can Tuberculosis pjfo Be Cured? Positive proof has been established that tuberculosis is curable, by this inhalation remedy, in any climate, without return of the disease. The following letters are not especially selected, but just the average being daily received from many users. "Tucson, Arizona. Dear Sir: I havo fortunately come upon one of your patients over here, his name being and as I conduct a business here and have always kept my aliment a secret on that account, Id idn’t dare to say too much, but I talked to him, making him believe for another part y. He’s the finest looking T. B. subject that I have ever seen. I wouldn’t belive It when he told me what he had come here for. Ho Is going home the first. H e told, me everything about your cure and X can hardly take time to get this letter t o you. It makes my blood boll when I think of our System of G. and the Medlca 1 Prof, If things were discovered for our benefit I would of had your cure and well by now and hard earned money saved. Enclosed money order for your treatmen t. Respectfully. If I can go back to Illinois everybody will know of you. I’ll have it in the Chicago papers. I live in a suburb." “Tucson Arizona. Dear Doctor. It has been two weeks today that I have used your treatment and I notice a great impro ment already. I have used it every day according to directions and I read the lit erature often and I sure have all the necessary faith needed. I know you had th ®T. B. conquered as soon sa I eaw what it had done for J L here. He sure owes his life to you or your cure. I don’t cough when I go to bed any more and a very little In the morning and through the day. But during the night it loosens up and I cough some, but it don’t last long. Oh, I feel a great deal better. I don’t cough up much pus, either. I know I eat better than before. I used t o blow blood from my nose every day. That hasn’t happened the last two weeks. I sleep good and have no pain. Bo I guess there's nothing for me to inquire about. Will close, hoping you all the nieces s attainable.’’ (This user is now well upon the road to recovery.) My flies with letters being continuously received from scores of users, are open to investigation. Through courtesy, names are not published, but will gladly be furnished. For further information address THE T. F. GLASS INHALANT CO., Suite 512 Mason Building, Fourth and Broadway, Los Angeles, Cal.
first law of man—the law of savagery—and does not let herself realize that the antagonism is normal as an instinct for evolution, and that she must not revert to savage expressions of self-defense. ¶ “She does not realize that she must keep room for the future in her mind and go along with the new rising tide That is her only chance for happiness. ¶ “Her very antagonism is. after all, a constructive thing. It tends to drive out of the homes the young people to make homes of their own and to build for those who will succeed them. ¶ “Love for the race may take a symbolic form. Such love may create books, paintings, produce inventions—anything that will make the world a better home for the upgrowing race. The constructive men that establish great business houses are giving themselves up for the race ahead of themselves. The business man who tries to steal and cheat for his own ends is merely working for what he thinks to be self-preservation.” State Dry Law Still in Effect, Judge Rules ¶ The Indiana prohibition law is still in effect, despite the eighteenth amendment, the prohibition amendment to the constitution of the United States, according to a decision made in city court by Judge Walter Pritchard. ¶ Judge Pritchard expressed his opinion when he ruled on a motion to quash an iIndictment in the case of J. C. Miller, charged with keeping a “blind tiger.’’ He said the federal law did not supersede the state law and overruled the motion taking the case under advisement. Sergt. Bates and a squad of policemen arrested Miller when they found a quantity of corn whisky in his house, southwest of the city,. INJURED BY RUNAWAY TEAM. ¶ LOGANSPORT, Ind., Jan. 31.—Ross Carson, 21, lies at the point of death at his home here as the result of injuries received yesterday when be was struck by a runaway team. A fractured skull and injuries to the spinal cord are feared.
■Repnol ■ If yoa have a friend suffering with eczema or other itching, burning eruption, what greater kindness could you do him than to say; “ Why don’t you try Resinol ? I know you have experimented with a dozen treatments, but I believe Resinol is different. It does not claim to be a 'cure-all' —simply a soothing, healing ointment, free from all harsh drugs, that physicians prescribe widely in just such cases as yours. Do get a jar today! ” Resinol Ointment is sold by all dr a .gists, ABOUTTO RETIRE FROM BUSINESS Well-Known Illinois Contractor Suffered Thirty Years— Tanlac Restores Health. “When I begin taking Tanlac I was so bad off I was about to retire from business” said Charles Stenstrom, the well-known concrete and excavating contractor living at 697 Fisbgate St., Peoria, 111. “For thirty years I have suffered all the misery that goes with stomach trouble, rheumatism and disordered kidneys,” ho conitnued. "My stomach was eo badly upset that it nearly laid me up altogether and after every meal I took tramping spells that sometimes were so bad I couldn't leave the house, for I was afraid I could not get back. T bloated up so with gas that I could not get a long breath. My legs pained me almost every minute of the day ano when the weather was damp my arms hurt me so bad it was agony for me to try to 'bend them. My kidneys were so badly out of order that I had pains all through my back and at night 1 was in such misery I could hardly sleep at all. Every morning my back was so stiff it was hard for me to get out ot bed aud during the day I couldn't think of doing any work. "But things are different since I got hold of Tanlac 3nd it has made such a remarkable change in m’e that I feci thirty years younger and if it was necessary T could handle a shovel and turn as much dirt a® any of my men. Everything I eat now agrees with me perfectly nnd I am never troubled in the least with gas or with cramping spells The rheumatism has nearly disappeared aud the pains and stiffness in my bach have all gone. I sleep sound every night and of mornings I get up feeling hale and hearty. I have given up all Idea of retiring from my business, as Tanlac has given me new life and strength and I am enjoying better health than I have for many years.” Tanlac is sold In Indianapolis by tho Hook Drug Cos. and Haag Drug Cos. under personal direction of a special Teniae representative.—Advertisement. K Mil Musterole Loosens Up Those Stiff Joints —Drives Out Pain You’ll know why thousands use Musterole once you experience the clad relief it gives. Get a jar at once from the nearest drug store. It is a clean, white ointment, made with the oil of mustard. Better than a mustard plaster and does not blister. Brings ease and comfort while it is being rubbed on! Musterole is recommended by many doctors and nurses. Millions of jars are used annually for bronchitis, croup, stiff neck, asthma, neuralgia, pleurisy, rheumatism, lumbago, pains and aches of tha back or joints, sprains, sore muscles* bruises, chilblains, frosted feet, colds of the chest (it often prevents pneumonia). 30c and 60c jars; hospital size $2,501 ESCAPED AN *' OPERATION By Taking Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com* pound. Many Such Cases. Cairo, 111.— “ Sometime ago I got so bad with female trouble that I thought I would have to be operated on. I had a bad displacement. My right side would pain me and I was so nervous I could not hold a glass of water. M any times I | would have to stop my work and sit down or I I would fall on the floor in a faint. I consulted several doctors and every one told me the same but I kept fighting to keep from having the operation. I had read so many times of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound and it helped my sister so I began taking it. I have never felt better than I have since then and I keep house and air able to do all my work. The Vegetable Compound is certainly one grand medicine/’—Mrs. J. R. MATTHEWS, 3311 Sycamore Street, Cairo, 111. Os course there are many serious eases that only a surgical operation will relieve. We freely acknowledge ' this, but the above letter, and many others like it, amply prove that many operations are recommended when medicine in many cases is all that is needed. READ THE TIMES DAILY.
WHY NOT RELIEVE THAT COLD NOW? Dr. Bell’s Pine-Tar-Honey is noted for its effectiveness YOU’LL find the small cost of a generous bottle of Dr. Bell’s Pine-Tar-Honey a sum well spent when you learn how promptly and efficiently and comfortably it helps relieve that lingering or new cold or cough. Its balsamic and healing antiseptic* are unsurpassed in promoting ease from distressed bronchial tubes, helping to loosen phlegm, congestion, and allaying inflammation. Children, too, like its pleasantness. Thousands everywhere use it the minute they feel a cold coming on. Get a bottle at your druggist's to-day 30c., 60c., $1.20. Keep the Family’s Bowels Open. The livers of the young ones and grownup* active, the bile flowing freely, their systems cleansed of ’mpuritles, with effective, comfortable Po-Do-Lax, the, natural laxative. Get HE AD NOISES? 4-DAY Treatments IF A \\ FREE i#Ln\ The pity of those sEsSisR &■ *1 Head Noises, those rearing —annoying jSLjZ-'' U sounds in your *3® *P; head! You have K 'M W thought at time3 Mr . W W that life was hard- F jp f Jim ly worth living. Jf Perhaps your S hearing Is already falling. Even if It A JT is still good, you J r have tha added K burden of knowing pU ujr that these Head Noises may be only the signals ot approaching Deafness. You may have the Noises in the head occasionally, or when you hare a cold, hut jou are in danger of a more serious development all the same. You need immediate treatment. Ear Specialist Sproule has studied and originated a method of treatment whicn has brought happy relief to man/ people troubled with Head Noises. This treatment has, in hundreds of cases, stopped the sounds and left the head clear as a bell. To show this method he offers a 4-day treatment. Free. GIVEN AWAY These introductory treatments are beiqjf offered Free. If you want one, write t—day. You may try for yourself this met - ', od. Y'ou can then see why it has succeeded. when slmc others failed. Ear Speeialist Sproule wants to help all who suffer from these Head Noises. Ho knows what misery those sounds of escaping steam —that bell ringing in the ear—that singing of crickets or insects —tho humming—the puffing—the buzzing—tho distant roaring—that dull heavy throbbing—means. He therefore offers a treatment. FREE, to all who write at once. Through this Method many sufferers. In place of those roaring Noises, now enjoy a perfect quietness, in which natural sounds are heard quickly and distinctly. Just sit down and write a postcard or letter request asking for a treatment— Free—for Head Noises. Sign your full name and address, and send It off NOW. The treatment will come to you by return mail, and will cost you nothin*. Don’t delay—Eend NOW. Write EAR SPECIALIST SPROULE, 253 Trade Building, Boston, Mast. DON’T BE WTHOUT SLOAN’S LINIMENT Keep It handy—lt knows no equal In relieving pains and aches. SLOAN’S LINIMENT has been told for 3S years. Today, it Is more popular than ever. There can b* but one answer—lt produces results. Applied without rubbing, it penetrate* to the afflicted part, bringing relief from rheumatic twinges, sciatica, eore, stiff, strained muscles, lame back, and other exterior pains and sprains and the result of exposure. It leaves no musslness, stain, clogged pores. Get a large bottle for greater economy. Keep it handy for use when needed. Tour druggist has it. Three size* —3sc, 70c, $1.40. ROBERTS MADE GAIN IN WEIGHT OF 23 POUNDS Local Man Says It’s Only One of Many Benefits Derived From Use of Trutona. “I’ve gained twenty-three pounds since June,” W. H. Roberts, 139 Morris street, Indianapolis, said recently when discussing with friends the remarkable benefits he has derived from the use of Trutona, the perfect tonic. “I had a spinal trouble which made It almost impossible for me to move at times and my back ached almost constantly," Mr. Roberts continued. “In addition to this my stomach was out of shape. My stomach often pained me all day long. Doctors had also told me that I had enlargement of the liver. I usually felt tired and drowsy and I gu/ss that was what caused it I had little appetite and when I’d eat I’d have to belch and sometimes vomit a short time afterward. “Well, sir, I came out of the hospital on June 18, after having been treated for my spinal trouble and most everything else, too, I guees. But I was not cured and I decided to try Trutona. One of the first benefits I noticed from Trntona was the discharge of bile from my liver, which had caused me to feel so sleepy and drowsy all the time. Then, my appetite increased and I soon found I could eat anything I wanted to without baring to belch up the former sour gases. I haven’t had the stomachache since I began using Trutona. I feel plenty strong enough to work now—l should, having gained 23 pounds—bnt I haven't gone back to work yet because I want to finish taking my last bottle of Trutona to make sure my troubles have been entirely relieved." Trutona is sold In Indianapolis at tike Hook chain of drug stores and at O. W. Brooks’ drug stors, Penntylvanla and Ohio streets. —^Advertisement.
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