Indianapolis Times, Volume 32, Number 254, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 March 1920 — Page 5
THREE IN RACE AS BUSH QUITS G. 0. P. CONTEST McCray Expected to Benefit Most by Lieutenant Governor’s Withdrawal. LETTER CITES EXPENSE Those Left The following republican candidates remain in the race for the nomination for governor: Warren T. McCray of Kentland. James W. Fesler of Indianapolis. Edward Toner of Anderson. Considerable speculation as to which candidate would be benefited followed today the withdrawal of Lieut. Gov. Edgar D. Bush from the race for the republican nomination for governor. It was rather generally believed that Warren T. McCray would probably receive much of the support of Mr. Bush's friends. The latter were for the most part farmers and the opinion was expressed that they would turn to McCray, with whom they would be most sympathetic. Mr. Bush did not withdraw in favor of any other candidate. He save as his reason the fact that a candidate of moderate means can not make the race for the nomination for governor. BISH'S STATEMENT ON WITHDRAWAL. Mr. Bush's statement follows: "I have decided to withdraw from the race for the republican nomination for governor of Indiana. I have made up my mind to do so primarily for the reason that I am not financially able to continue the fight. Under the present primary system it is impossible for a man in moderate circumstances to effect an organization aod secure proper publicity in every county In Indiana. I have spent all the money that I can afford to spend In Jnstice to my family And my farm is very much in need of supervision. "I am deeply grateful to my many friends In Indiana who have stood so loyalty by me. Especially d~ T wish to express my gratitude for the loyalty of my home county of Washington, under tiie leadership of James C. Brown, county chairman of Salem, and for the support of my congressional district and the efforts of my district chairman, M. Bert Thurman of New Albany. PLEDGES SUPPORT TO NOMINEE. *T have every reason to believe that the next state platform will contain the principles that I have fought for so consistently. And it is hardly necessary for me to state that the republican nominee for •governor, whoever he may be, will have my loyal support. "Tta* unfair statements that have been published in certain metropolitan news papers in reference to my candidacy is added reason for my withdrawal from the race for governor. The repent publlcatiots stating that the governor and I have had recent conferences are absolutely false and were published for the purpose of prejudicing the popular mind against my candidacy. I stand exactly where I always stood on all state issues. I believe that the tendency to centralize and consolidate the powers of government In appointed boards and cornmis sions is destructive of sound American principles of government. I furthermore believe that the tar law should be amended, and will be amended, by limiting those features which confer autocratic power on the state tax board at the expense of the people's right to spend their own money and determine their own local affedrs in their own way. "I will use my best efforts in the future to see that the republican party remains true to the doctrine of Abraham Lincoln.” DECISION FOLLOWS CANDIDATES’ MEETING. The decision to withdraw from the lace was said to have been made by Mr. Bush following the meeting of candidates with Gov. Goodrich last week. At that time the campaign assessment for candidates for governor was fixed at SSOO. Mr. Bush declared last summer that he oould be a candidate for governor. He has been in the race longer than any of the other candidates, having campaigned quietly among his friends for several months prior to opening headquarters here. His platform was based on oppo s tion to Goodrichism and he took every occasion to express this opposition. Mr. Bush expressed the opinion that the next s ate republican platform will contain the principles for wbieij he lias been tightiug.
Graff Will Address Kiwanians Luncheon The Kiwanis club has Invited Superinf< ndent E. U. Graff of the Indianapolis schools, to deliver an address at Ihe dub's noon luueheon at the Hotel Srrerlu Wednesday. Mr. Graff, who has recently returned ! fiom a meeting of national educators at Cleveland, will tell -the club bow hr arranged a program for TOO speakers, as lirad of tlie superintendents' division. Besides Superintendent Graff, Joseph IC. Bell will speak and Dr. M, M. House will give the oral boost. Thomas S. Gatlin Is silent booster. WAX GOOD FOB OILCI-OTH. Oilcloth for the kitchen table may be made more durable by rubbing it occasionally with liquid wax, after the usual cleaning. Following the application of wax, it should be polished with a soft flannel. i
Home Office Monument rises Indianapolis, Ind. ESTABLISHED 1899 DIRECTORS If KRBERT M. WOOLLEN, r __ President of Company. GEORGE E. HUME. FRANK W. MORRISON, President Ilume-Manour Cos. President Indiana Title and o^o* GREENLY V. WOOLLEN, anty Cos. Medical Director of Company. f. DM AHD A. MEYER, M. V. BELISLE. . S : t ' r V,r^w/v o>.mPany 0 >. mPany - Vice President of Company. President Central Supply Cos. EVANS WOOLLEN. RUSSELL T. BYERS, President Fletcher Savings an.l Manager Loan Department of Jvust Cos. Company. DAVID A. COULTER, H. It. HORN BROOK, President Farmers Bank of Frank- Smith. Remster, Hornbrook Jk fr ‘- __ Smith. H. W. BUTTOLPH, Actuary.
Welly Well! Brazil’s New Envoy to U. S. Is Quite. Chappie NEW YORK, March 2.— Here is Brazil's new ambassador to the United States —Augusto Alencar. He arrived in New York a few days ago aboard the liner Kaiserin to take up his duties here. He visited England, where bis son and daughter are being educated.
SOVIET PEACE AIDS ESTHONIA Former Official Says Prosperity Follows Signing. March 2.—Esthonla ha! already begun to derive benefits from the recent peace that was concluded with soviet Russia, it was declared today by Anton Pippe. former foreigu minister of Esthonia. He said Rerai is rapidly becoming the chief port for lnternatlanal trade with soviet Russia. Esthonia was the first of the Russian border states formally to conclude peace with Moscow. •'Esthonia considers the new allied policy toward Russia the only true policy," declared Dr. Hippo. "There is no other course left open now. The bolshevik! are not merely a political party, but constitutes the governing power In Russia at present. “They (the bolshevik!) have been obliged to abandon their political (ramble more or less and. to some extent, introduce a realistic policy. “I can say (hat 1 am glad a state of peace exists between Esthonia and Russia. It has had a beneficial effect. Esthonia is now prepared to develop trade, chiefly the transit of commerce between tiie nllies and soviet Russia, as we have little to export ourselves. Rcval is becoming the chief port for international trade with Russia." TRUST RULING RAISES ISSUE What’s to Be Done With Steel Corporation Now? WASHINGTON, March 2. —Government officials were perplexed as to what furtiier "trust, busting" steps should he taken by the department of justice In the light of tiie supreme eourt decision holding that the United States Steel Corporation was not a combination in violation of the anti-trust laws The belief of some of the leading law yers of the department of justice was that the deeision virtually ruillfled the Sherman anti-trust law, under which wo big dissolution decrees, those of th>* Standard till and the American Tobacco Companies, had been ordered by the supreme court. This was the view expressed by the justices dissenting front the opinion. A statement as to the future action -■f the government is expected to be made by Attorney Genera' Palmer shortly. The government attorneys were keenly disappointed at the deidslonr, particularly since they believe bad the full court considered the case the gov eminent would have won, and this be, lief complicates the fututro action of the department. Music Publisher Stabbed; Wife Held NEW YORK. March 2.—Jules von Til /.or, music publisher and brother of Har ry yon Tilzer, song writer, is suffering today from a stab wound in the back, inflicted while lie was asleep. Ills wife, Estelle, is in Jail, charged with attacking him. Mrs. von Tilzer, according to the police, admitted she stabbed hpr husband with a sharpened table kuife. "I'm sorry I did not kili him," she told the po lice. Von Tilzer's wound is not serious. Watch Ankles for Stolen Stockings CHICAGO, March 2. Police were watching ankles today. Burglars stole S7O-> worth of silk stockings.
Centennial State Event-Governor What the Indianapolis centennial celebration in June will mean to Indianapolis: By JAMES P. GOODRICH, Governor of Indiana. The coming Indianapolis centennial celebration is of interest not only to the people of Indianapolis, but to the whole state. Our capital city has grown and prospered consistently as the state has grown and prospered, and is today not only one of the finest cities in America, but a measure and mark of the success and progress of the entire state.
PUPILS TO EARN BETTER PAY THAN THEIR TEACHERS New Bricklaying Class at Arsenal Tech High School Gives Comparison.
Teachers in the vocational department at the Arsenal Technical High school are instructing students who, on completing their courses, will step into jobs j far more remunerative than those, of the instructors. A bricklaying class of fourteen was started at the school a week ago on | request of the Mason Contractors >'- j socintloir. This course includes six forty- : minute periods of instruction in brlckj laying, one hour and twenty minutes | drawing, one hour aud twenty minutes applied mathematics and forty minute* instruction in citizenship per day, according to Milo H. Stuart, principal 1 the school. The class is open to ail young men between 14 and 23. COMPARISONS ON PAY RECEIVED. Students are paid a salary of $9 n week for intending the school in bricklaying. On completing a course they are qualified to accept jobs as brickmasons. The average pay for bricklayers lu the city is from $S to $8.50 per day. The four teachers instructing the classes, some of them having spent several years in preparing themselves as educators and paying for their learning, receive an approximate pay of $7,000 a year, or an average of $1.700 a year, which Is higher than the usual teach ers’ pay. The students in the brick masons class, on graduating after a comparatively short course of study, will be able to step into jobs paying S* per day. Ex eluding tlfty-two Sundays and twentyfive days making up rite Saturday bHlf holidays of the year, they will work 285 das per year, earning an approximate wage of $2,200 per year, or $5lO per year more than the teachers who gave them their instruction. teachers spend YEARS IN COLLEGE Teachers lu charge of the bricklaying course are Arthur Elaag, president of the brickuiasons union, teacher of trade sub Jects; H. E. Wlnsiow, Instructor In drawing; J. 1,. Jones, instructor in applied mathematics, and DrWitt Mogan, Instructor in citizenship. Most of these teacher* spent several years in college to learn how to Instruct paid students to go out into the world, after a few months bf Instruction, and procure jobs i lying better than their | trained teacher*. Burglar Leaps From Window 15 Feet High A burglar made a leap for life in the rear of the Central Wall Paper Com patiy's store, 357 Massachusetts avenue, last midnight. It was the first of the month and Karl D. Muttyan, bookkeeper for tin- com pony, was working late. He heard a noise in the rear of the store and went to investigate. He was In time to see a burglar jump from a rear window The window Is at leant fifteen feet above tiie ground. Munynn told Sergt. Bandmatin and tiie police emergency squad that the burglar “lilt running."
“A Mass of Sores —No Sleep— Unhappy Days” „ "•rttee f, D. Smith, ttth Shelby Street. Sandusky, Ohio. He eayii "I suffered terrible itching; body cove^ #o with awful sore* which caused me ffreat agony. When given up ee incurable. tiering epent over (too. I finally tried D. D. D. Prescription. Thi* remedy has mad* a well man of me.” Theusand* of grateful nsert of D. D. D. are fust as enthusiastic over it* wonderful result* •a Mr. Smith. The very first application alleys Vie Itching end burning. Just try* bottle of D.D.D. end convince yourself. Yonr money beck if the first bottle doe* not bring relief. She, Me find ti.ee. Try D. D. D. Soap, too. JL>. JLjP. i>. iiiL lotion for Shin Disease
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INDIANA DAILY TIMES, TUESDAY, MARCH 2,1920.
WOMAN’S HELP MAY SAVE LIFE Explosion Victim Rushed to Hospital in Her Auto. If Thomas A. Jones, 42, colored, 907 i Blake street, recovers from the burns j received In an explosion yesterday afterDoon at the Smith & Marrow cleaners j and dyers establishment, Twenty-third ' and Pierson, it will be due to the fact j that a woman rushed him to the Meth- ! odist hospital in her automobile. At ; that hospital he received first-aid | treatment. j The woman is Mrs. C. Fred Klee. 2322 I North Illinois street. Jones had jumped into a tank of water after his clothing was covered with the burning gasoline. Although the flames were extinguished he was wild with pain from the burns and ran into the street. Mrs. Klee, a spectator, put a big coat around him and rushed him to the Methodist hospital. Later he was removed to the City hospital. Physicians today said his condition is critical. > A two-story apartment house Just | completed at Evergreeu aveuue and j Thirty-fifth street, was destroyed by fire I yesterday afternoon. Firemen fought the ! flames for two hours. A fire started in the furnace to dry out. the building is believed to have caused the blaze. Frank E. Peters, the contractor, would not estimate the loss. Smokes Pipe in Bed; Hoosier Dies in Fire Special to The Times. HUNTINGTON, Ind., March 2.~ ! Emanuel Kocher. 81, a paralytic, was I burned to death iti his home here late yesterday when coals from his pipe fired i the bed where he was confined. Mr*. Augustus l’holer, daughter of tlie ; aged man. with whom he lived, had been away from the house for the afternoon. Returning, she saw the bed in flames. She summoned neighbors and they extinguished the finmes, but hot until Kocher was dead. Four daughters and four sons survive Ail live in Huntington, except Mrs. Emma Leitcbcw, who resides in Ft. Wayne. } What for V [Wlpllli] • Pape's IMnpepsiu" by neutralizing the acidity of the stomach, instantly relieves the food muring and fermentation which cause* the nileery-niaking gases, heartburn. flatulence, fullness or pain in stomach and intestine*. A few tablets of "Pape's Dlapepaln” bring relief almost ns soon as they r\nch the stomach. They help regulate disordensl stomachs so favorite fond* can he eaten without distress —Costs o lit- j tic at drug stores. Advertisement. ASK FOR and GET 1 Horlick’s The Original Malted Milk For Infants anti Invalids Avoid Imitation* aod Soke t itok.s
**' Wednesday * Smart Spring Suit, BUY ON CREDIT Sport Coats I $42.50 Up Adams Credit Terms are open to all. $25.50 Up # Pay the small sums as convenient. We # r Charming Dresses Charge no more for credit than the cash Dainty Waists $25.00 Up ntnL ~1 $5.00 Up Men’s Suits Boys’Suits $35 up $8.50 P
Lowden Pays Visit to Childhood Home SUNRISE, Minn., March 2.—Frank O. Lowden of Illinois today began a four-
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day speaking tour of Minnesota with a visit to this village where he was born Afty-nine years ago. It was his first visit here in thirty-five years. The governor saw the blacksmith shop where his father worked; the swimming 1 hole where he nearly drowned when he
was trying, to imitate the “big boys,” and the old Lowden, home. Farmers came from miles around to greet the governor and his wife. The governor’s party left the railroad station at North Branch and proceeded overland to Sunrise.
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Nervous Terror Conquered These haunting fears of nervously ex hansted people can be overcome, as is evidenced by Ihe experience of Mrs. Watts: "My nervous system had been severelj shocked Doctors pronounced it nervoui prostration. 1 suffered extremely from nervous chlUs. and the least excitement would cause an uncontrollable terror, ai though a strong hand had seized my heart and I would die In a minute. Noise was torture; add to this sleeplessness anc my condition may be Imagined. The use of Wheeler's Nerve Vitallxer completely cured me of this trouble and today T am absolutely well.”—Mrs. G. K. Watts, Brandywine, Ya. Insist on \ beeior s Nerve Vltaiixer It is free from dope- does not contain al"o:>i 1 or narcotics. Safely and successfully used for 30 years. $1 10 per bottle at drug stores or by prepaid express. SAMPLE bottle for It cents to help pav cost of mailing. The J. W. Brant Cos., Dept. 762, Albion, Mich —Advertisement. Don’t live in Utter Miser) Many people endure pstn without complain t, believing there is no relief. Some g< to the other extreme, experimenting witt "ewe ana." Both are wrong. There la relief for every man, woman or child suflertin from kidney trouble and its consequence* In th# last forty years Dodd’s Kidney PilU have helped thousands to good health. They will help you. Your symptoms oan be quickly relieved by Dodd’s. Be sure you got the right remedy three D’s in the sams —and a flak round box. If your dealer can’t supply you. tend 80c. In stamps to Dodd’s Med£ cine Cos.. Buffalo, N. T. For ams id cathartic. Diamond Dinner Pilh Mid. harmless 'ust a gentle touch. - Bo Internal medicine wffl cnr* E-rsensa. o*9 by the spp^Sitionof CRANOIHSICuSmat external remedy, can the Eczema microbe bs destroyed. Prove th:s statement for yoereetf el oer expense. Write for free test treat* asevt; addreea MH2J Chemical Cos., Dept, IX. w *epe tike ■ Plow Bo i* "I 'goffered for 20 veers with Ecxeraa fn its worst form. Affected ad over th* body. CBAMOLENB left me es fine as whit* silk, *wl I eleep Ulce a plow boy."— J. Met. rackr:-.. ,St vl irmt stores. 35a as* *l. Meua/P—WOV Return*! If Not SatMlad' pggmanaag Sold and Guaranteed by ■■■■■ Haag Drug Cos., all stores in Indianapolis ; Danville, Thompson Drug Cos.; GreonBeld, H. H. Ztke, Druggist; Nobleeville, Gertler Wall Drag Cos.; Shelbyvllle, Conrad Schrader, Druggist. IMPOVERISHED MEN AND WOMEN Quickly Regain Health, Strength, Energy and Ability by Taking 3-Gra!n Cadomene Tablets. The Very Beet Tonic. Sold by All Druggists. —Ad vert I isoment.Bl
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