Indianapolis Times, Volume 32, Number 297, Indianapolis, Marion County, 21 April 1920 — Page 6
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RAP ‘CURBSTONE’ REALTY DEALERS Local Board Members Voice Protests at Luncheon. Complaints against “curbstone real estate men” were voiced at the weekly luncheon of the Indianapolis Real Estate Board today. Frank Carson, board president, said that seven complaints had been received regarding illegitimate acts of such dealers. The grievance committee was instructed to investigate these complaints. Alfred F. Toits. attorney, explain’® the purpose of the Indiana Real Estate Tax league, asserted that real estate has been bearing three-fourths of all expenses of the government, and that this is unjust. “The real estate business is the oniy line now represented in the legislature, and this is the reason every deficit of taxes is placed on real estate,” he said. Myers to Direct Architects’ Drive Clarence T. Myers, with Merriot Harrison, Board of Trade building, has been mimed by the executive committee of the Architectual league of Indianapolis to serve as chairman of the committee in charge of a membership drive. Other chairmen selected are Robert Daggett, annual exhii'otions; Herbert Foltz, architecture and professional relations; Otto Stark, painting: Clifton Wheeler, 'decorations; Mrs. Myra Richards, sculpture; W- B. Parker, public action and city planning; H. Roy Kelley, education and scholarship; Harold Haven Brown, house committee; William Forsyth, catalogs; Kurt Yonnegut, competition and awards; Fermor S. Cannon, current work; Edgar Hunter, auditing. Gaar Williams, cartoonist, was unanimously elected to serve on the executive committee in place of T. C. Steele, who has moved to Brown county. Wolcott Heads New Bankers’ Association Eben H. Wolcott, president of the State Savings and Trust Company, heads the Marion County Bankers' association, formed as a branch of the Indiana Bankers’ association. Other officers are: Vice president, George Bittler, vice president Merchants National bank: secretary, E. W. Rogers, secretary-treasurer Bankers Trust Company; treasurer, Charles P. Wright, cashier Broad Ripple State bank: R. E. Huffman of New Augusta, member at large to serve with the executive board, composed of officers. The meeting at which the organization was formed was held last night.
Marriage Licenses _ Harry M. Bridgman. ."6, salesman, Toledo, 0., and Emily li. Beam, 28, 528 North Pennsylvania street. Eugene H. Bridgins. 24, 1136 North Las-aiie street, and Josephine Hanna, 24. Soil North Alabama street. Earl J. Hibner, 23. operator, 20." North State avenne, f.nd Alice Helen O'Mara, 22. D56 East Sixteenth street. Harry G. Christ, 22, receiving clerk, 824 Tacoma avenue, and Flora F. Lit*, 20 2624 East'Eighteenth street. Julius Dobbins. 17, porter, 604 West Thirteenth street, and Nannie Jones, 17, 1710 Northwest* rn avenue. Henrv A. Ward, 26. civil service employ* "i% r street, and liera Klppy, 24. North Sliley avenue. Deaths Pearl Hart, 22, 424 West Sixteenth plu‘-e. pulmonary tuberculosis. Joseph .Tones. 73. 426 Parkway, chronic interstitial nephritis. Joan Hudson. City hospital, lethargic encephalitis. Alien G. Budd. 45, Central Indiana hospital, general paresis. Claretta Elier. McCabe, io months, 1022 Congress, cute colitis. Soba Ellen Horton, 63, 1904 Martindale, arterlo sclerosis. Infant Day, 2 days, 1317 I.ee, premature birth. Itoxie Stacer, 34, City hospital, hypostatic pneumonia. Sarah Boyden, 63. 2156 Avondale place. Interstitial nephritis. _ „ .. Margaret Alice Cochley, 4, 2161 Bellefontaiue. meningitis. William Sanders. 49, 11*44 Yandes. acute endocarditis. Isabelle Irene Henderlieder, 17 days. Long hospital, acute gastro enteritis. Boon: Campbell. 3 months, 978 West Maryland, iobr.r pneumonia. Ruth Howard, 17, 1034 Eist Georgia, pulmonary tuber- ulosis. Luvisa Lee, 79, 1210 North Tacoma, chronic interstitial nephritis. Robert H. Keller, 89, 747 South Meridian, intestinal obtruction. HUH Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets G at the Cause and Remove It Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets, the substitute for calomel, act gently on the bowels and positively do the work. People afflicted with bad breath find quick relief through Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets. The pleasant, sugar-coated tablets are taken for bad breath by all who know them. Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets act gen tly but firmly on the bowels and liver, stimulating "them to natural action, clearing the blood and gently purifying the entire system. They do that which dangerous calomel does without any of the bad after effects. All the benefits of nasty, sickening, griping cathartics are derived from Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets without griping, pain or any disagreeable effects. Dr. F. M. Edwards discovered the formula after seventeen years of practice among patients afflicted with bowel and liver complaint, with the attendant bad breath. Olive Tablets are purely a vegetable compound mixed with olive oil; you will know them by their olive color. Take one or two every night for a week and note the effect. 10c and 25c. Miller’s Antiseptic Oil, Known as Snake Oil Will Positively Relieve Pain In a Pew Minutes. Try it right now for Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Lumbago, sore, stiff and swollen joints, pain in the head back and limbs, corns, bunions, etc. Alter one application pain usually disappears as if by magic. Anew remedy used externally for Coughs, Colds. Croup, Influenza, Sore Throat, Diphtheria and Tonsiiitis. This oil is conceded to be the most penetrating remedy known. Its prompt and immediate effect la relieving pain Is due to the fact that It penetrates to the afTected parts at once. As an illustration. pour ten drops on the thickest piece of sole leether and it will penetrate this substance through and through in three minutes. Accept no substitute. This great oil Is golden red color only. Manufactured by Herb Juice Medicine Cos. only. Get It at the Haag Drug Company.—Advertisement. ECZEMASP Money back without question Jlif HUNT'S Salve fails in the treatmentoflTCH, ECZEMA. vjj RINGWORM, TETTER arf ether i t-iint skin diseases. Try * i| • 75 cent bo* at our risk. tit i HOOK TVTMTO COMPANY.
Mrs. Maggie Bracken, 38, 573 West Jones street, is under arrest, charged with cutting Chris Vincent, a roomer at the tame house, -with a pocket knife. William Shakespeare’s birthday anniversarv will go unnoticed in Indianapolis schools. It is April 23. The United States bureau of education requested that it be observed. E. O. Heuser of th® National City Bank of New York, who has been in Russia as a representative of the National City bank, will tell members of the Indianapolis Credit Men’s association at their luncheon tomorrow of conditions in that war-torn country. The Parent-Teacher club of the William McKinley school held the monthly meeting at the school this afternoon. Two compositions from each grade were read in order that the parents might be better acquainted with the English work of their children. Mrs. Emma Wheatley, 918 Eaurel streil, left today for Browns, 111., where she will make her home with her son. Seventy-five young people of the Edwin Ray M. E. church attended the Epworth league social at the church lgst night. Emily R. Beam, 528 North Pennsylvania strset, and Harry M. Bridgeman of Toledo, 0., were married last night at the First English Lutheran church by Rev. Walter C. Davis. They left today for Toledo, where Mr. Bridgeman is in the automobile business. Dr. Alfred Henry, president of the Marion County Tuberculosis association; E. Q. Laudeman, executive secretary of the Indiana Tuberculosis association; Miss Mary A. Meyers, executive secretary of the county organization, and Arthur J. Strawson, region secretary for the Mississippi valley anti-tuberculosis societies, will attend a meeting of the National Tuberculosis association at St. Louis tomorrow, Friday and Saturday. Th® Irvington brunch library, in the future, will be open from 12:30 p. m. to 9 p. m. daily, and the reading room will be open from 2 to 6p. m., Sunday, as part of the program of expansion for the branch library, it is announced. During the temporary absence of Miss Mabel Warren, librarian, due to illness, Mrs. Francis Payne, an Irvington resident, will act as librarian. The conference of library delegates from central states to discuss an enlarged program of the Amer.can Library association, scheduled for the Hot*! Sev-
“DANDERINE” Stops Hair Coming Out; Doubles Its Beauty. A few cents buys “Danderine.” After an application of ‘Danderine” you can not find a fallen hair or any dandruff, besides every hair shows new life, vigor, -rightness, more color and thickness. — Advertisement. After you eat —always use FATONIC fePC?OH~VbU* SfOMAOfS SAkO —one or two tablets—eat like candy. Instantly relieveslleartburn. Bloated Gassy Feeling. Stops indigestion, food souring, repeating, headacheaad the many miseries caused by Acid-Stomach EATONICI3 the best remedy, it takes the harmful acids and gases right out of the body and, of course, you get well. Tens of thousands wonderfully benefited. Guaranteed to satisfy or money refunded by your own druggut. Cost a trifle. Please try it!
ACUTE INDIGESTION SOON RELIEVED Arkansas Lady Says She Was In a Serious Condition, But Promptly Recovered After Taking Thedford’s Black-Draught. Peach Orchard, Ark.—Mrs. Etta Cox, of this place, says; “Some time aero I had a spell of acute indigestion, and was In a bad fix. I knew I-must have a laxative, and tried BlackDraught. It relieved me, and I soon was all right. “I can’t say enough for Thedford’s Black-Draught, and the great good it did for me. “It is fine for stomach and liver trouble, and I keep it for this. A few doses soon make me feel as good as new. lam glad to tell others the good It did.” Acute Indigestion is a serious matter and needs prompt treatment or dangerous results may ensue. A physician’s help may be needed, but a good dose of Thedford’s BlackDraught will be of benefit by relieving the system from the undigested food which is the cause of the trouble. Thedford’s Black-Draught is purely vegetable, not disagreeable to take and acts in a prompt and natural way. So many thousands of persons have been benefited by the use of Thed’ord’s Black-Draught, you should have no hesitancy in trying this valaable, old well-established remedy, for most liver 4nd stomach disorders. Soli by all reliable druggists,— Advertisement.
erin tomorrow, has been postponed until April 28, according to City Librarian O. E. Rush. Library representatives from Illinois, Ohio, Indiana, Kentucky, Michigan and West Virginia are expected to attend. The now program contemplates a fund to provide “books for everybody.” MEETINGS. w. C. T. IT., central division, will meet with Mrs. W. W. Reedy, 1332 Beliefontaine street, Friday afternoon at 2 o'clock. Mrs. Luella Cox of the state industrial board will be the speaker. Mrs. , Frank Doudican will give the lesson in citizenship. Capitol Avenue M. E. Aurch has organized a Calendar club among women members, who met for .the first time this afternoon in the Sunday school of tbx ladies’ Auxiliary to Brotherhood of Lo. comotive Engineers, division 128, will give a card party tomorrow afternoon at 2:30 in Saks hall. , , Arrius Dancing club will give a dance at P. H. C. hall, Michigan and Last streets, tomorrow night. Young Men’s class of lleath Memorial Methodist church will give a pie social at the home of George Miller, 1549 Arsenal avenue, tonight. The Y. P. B. will meet at the home of Miss Esther Sullivan, 2043 Hazel street, Thursday night. _ St. Elizabeth's Guild will meet at St. George's Episcopal church on lhursday morning. Births James and Caroline Dawson, 901 Belmont, boy. „ John and Mery Barbee, 423 West Iwen-ty-fiftb. boy. , „„„ _ Hal and Katherine Mlley, 101 South Noble, boy. v „ .. William and Cora Moorhouse, 900 North Garfield, boy. .. , Cecil and Edna Gibson, 234 Bakemeyer, b0 Roy and Mary Rhude, 1439 East Raymond. boy. , Walter and Margaret Garvin, City hospital, girl. Lawrence and Loretta Plaske, City hospital. girl. Rankin and Margaret Tomlinson, 1734 Lockwood, boy. . , Armor and Clara Ends, 1510 Harlan, boy. Frank and Blanche Despot, 200 Minerva, boy. D. P. and Helen Childs, 522 North Illinois. boy. Frank and Elizabeth Eastwood, 3451 West Michigan, boy. Montgomery and Helen Lewis, Long hospital, girl. John and Ethel Jackman, Methodist hospital, boy. Albert and Nellie McAllister, 1132 Kentucky, boy. Emil and Georgians Scofield, 805 North LaSalle, girl. Glenn and Celia Crist 1024 Bellarleo place, boy. Otlia and Bula Lawrence, 314 West 11cCarty, girl,
112 MiHUn r_ P'HIS is the potential iTlllllOn 1 mileage supplied daily to the people of the Middle West by wy the Standard Oil Company (Indiana). Thousand In arriving at these fig- — mum mill ures we have taken ten _ miles per gallon as the <tl performance of the avnißeiKmn mm erage car, and multi- > plied it by 600,000,000, |j the number of gallons of gasoline marketed by this Company last year, and divided the . result by 365. The task confronting the Company is a dual one. Not only must it maintain this flow of gasoline at all times, but it must so plan its activities as to keep pace with constantly increasing demand for fuel, whether this demand be normal or abnormal. That, in a word, is the job of the Standard Oil Company (Indiana) and the Company is as big as its job. % Every resource, every ounce of energy, and all its equipment are at work %o keep pace with the insistent demands for gasoline and other products. The management recognizes its responsibility to the motorists of the 11 states the Company serves, and every effort is being made to meet this responsibility. % Standard Oil Company v (Indiana) 910 So. Michigan Ave.. Chicago, QL
INDIANA DAILY TIMES, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 21, 1920.
GIRL’S SLAYER PREYED ON TOTS (Continued From Page One.) fate at the hands of the field In the vicinity of Brookslde park Saturday morning. The negro appeared at Sheldon, and Sixteenth streets at 10 o'clock, halting Helen McCaffrey, 12, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Henry McCaffrey, 1610 Roosevelt avenue. He told Helen he was a Janitor and had some clothes for her If she would accompany him. She said she would have to tell her mother and the negro told her he would wait until she returned. Mrs. McCaffrey decided to accompany Helen and when daughter and mother reached the corner where the child had met him he was gone. It was only a few minutes later that the same negro met Myrtle Robertson, 12. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Robertson. 1602 Arsenal avenue. He told her the same story. The child ran home and told her father she was going with him. He was busy und paid little attention to her remarks, as he gave his consent. Mrs. Robertson heard of Myrtle’s mission and became alarmed. She started out in search of her daughter. “I had a presentiment of evil,” Mrs. Robertson said today. She then told how she had seen Myrtle being led by the negro at Roosevelt and Seventeenth street. She took after them. “I followed as fast as I could to Valley avenue and the negro, evidently seeing me, .walked faster and hurried Myrtle through a vacant patch and across the Big Four railroad tracks to Hazel street and Massachusetts avenue. "I gained ou them and Myrtle heard me call. “She jerked loose from the man and ran back to me. 0 “He hurried away as I called out to him.” Mrs. Robertson said she met no one in her pursuit who could help her to catch the negro. Descriptions given by both the McCaffrey and Robertson girls correspond with that of the man who killed Martha Huff. The detectives also hare reports that the same fiend attempted to lure several girls in the neighborhood of Blake and Gelsendorff streets last week. The slayer Is described as being about 22 to 25 years old, slender face, five feet seven Inches tall and was wearing a dark
cap, overalls .and a blue Jacket, faded almost white In the hollow on the west side of the new boulevard levee flood wall is the Huff home, a dingy-looking gray cottage, poorly furnished. Neighbors have offered their assistance to the Huffs, who only recently came to
OH! MY FACE ■ -''A ~ vTf'’'"' People who have impur< or impoverished blood should be careful to taki ' rna<^e roots and 4b ar ks such as Dr. Pierce’} \ Golden Medical Discovery i jV ;■Da * s baa been for 50 years. Ingredients printed to take this reliable medi\st I j cine, impure germs and / H Wg" accumulation begin to 6eparate ' blood and are >s S riarry^^, , v- .vrfrl ties, the arteries and veins £_jj gradually get fresh vitalized blood and the action jjgipgß ■ of this good blood on the * skin means that pimples, boils, carbuncles, eczema, • If you want vim, vigor, vitality, try this Spring tonic of Dr. Pierce’s. This is the time of year to put our house in order —cleanse the system and put fresh blood into your arteries. Get Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery to-day at any medicine dealers, in tablet or liquid form, or send 10c for trial package to Dr. Pierce’s Invalids’ Hotel, Buffalo, N. Y.
Indianapolis, and about th little home stand groups of women and children, sympathetic and kind-hearted. Big lumps of sorrow have choked the step-father, Hugh Smock, a laborer at Klngan's, for he loved his step-daughter dearly. The mother Is grief-stricken.
The Cold That Hangs On This is No. 5 of a series of advertisements, prepared by a competent physician, explaining how certain diseases which attack the air passages—such as Pneumonia, Influenza, Whooping Cough, Measles or even a long continued Cold— often leave these organs in an inflamed, congested state, thus affording a favorable foothold for invading germs. And how Vick’s VapoRub may be of value in this condition.
A cold is simply an inflammation of some part of the air passages—throat, larnyx or bronchial tubes—just like a sore is an inflammation of the skin. A long continued cold means constant inflammation and this constant inflammation frequently weakens the air passages so that thev become an easy point of attack for invading germs of more serious diseases. A “cold that hangs on,” therefore, is simply nature's “red flag” indicating that there is “trouble below,” and this warning should never be neglected. Nightly applications of Vick’s Vapoßub will aid nature to clear up that inflammation. Because Vicks acts locally by stimulation thru the skin to draw out the inflammation, attract the blood away from the congested spots
60c m# mm. Bodyguard 9120 WVapoßubw A s ainstColdt Jigp' More Than 17 Million Jars Used Yearly
Don’t Be A Victim of “Spring Fever”
You Can Easily Avoid the Depressing Effects of the Changing Season Why la it that bo many people, as spring approaches, find themtelvei gradually losing the appetite, and are soon overcome by a lack of energy, and a listless, all rundown feeling seem* to take possession of their whole body?
Spring is the great renovating season when nature throws off the accumulated impurities and prepares the system for the change which it must undergo before merging into the coming 3ummer.
Naturally this decided change mast necessarily be felt by the human system. Os course, where every organ of the body is performing its functions perfectly, there Is little or no interruption caused that la noticeable. But where Impurities have accumulated, and have not been thrown off promptly, and where the waste and wear of the severe winter season have not been promptly restored, nature's work la being combatted With very noticeable effects. Your body has brought yon safely through the severe winter season, and the voyage has taxed yonr strength. There has been considerable wear and tear which must be repaired. The energies relax, and an unspeakable languor pervades the entire system, giving that worn-out, good-for-nothing feeling, ao commonly called “spring fever."
Aid Digestion Keep your stomach sweet —relieve dyspepsia and indigestion and their resultant acidity by using, after meals, Stuart’s Dyspepsia Tablets They supply the alkaline effect just at the stomach does when in health. ( Thus you may eat whatever you like best without fear of indigestion. Sold by almost every druggist in U. S. and Canada at SOc a box.
TELLS ABOUT*A CHRONIC. TROUBLE Mr. John O’Brien, 659 North 15th St., Philadelphia, writes: “I had been troubled for years with chronic constipation, until my whole system seemed poisoned, and I suffered with headache, languor, depression and general impaired health. I began taking Sulpherb Tablets and got immediate relief. I am, after many months* still regular In habits, and thank you, and hope they will become known to thousands, etc.” If your blood is bad, tongue coated and you are constipated, with stomach and bowel Irregularity, get a tube of Sulpherb Tablets of your druggist right away. They are made of sulphur, cream of tartar and herbs — so don’t accept ordinary “sulphur" tablets.—Advertisement.
and relieve the cough. In addition, the medicinal ingredients of Vicks are vaporized by the body heat. These vapors are breather in all night long, thus bringing the medication to bear directly upon the inflamed areas. Vicks should be rubbed in over the throat and chest until the skin is red —then spread on thickly and covered with hot* flannel cloths. Leave the clothing loose around the neck and the bed clothes arranged in the form of a funnel so the vapors arising may be freely inhaled. If the cough is annoying, swallow a small bit of Vicks the size of a pea. Samples to new users will be sent free on request to The Vick Chemical Company, 235 Broad Street, Greensboro, N. C.
The important thing, therefore. Is to put your system in tip-top condition so as to be able to resist the common ailments so prevalent in smmtr. Ton must bnild up the waste tissue, and repair the wear and tear that the has undergone. A splendid plan that has been followed by many ia to take a coarse of 8. 8. B. regularly at the approach of every spring, and in this way thoroughly cleanse the system of all accumulated impurities. S. B. S. is a thoroughly reliable blood purifier and tonic that promptly Improves the appetite, and sends anew supply of rich, red blood coursing through the veins. This fine old remedy will restore your lost rigor and strength which the demands of winter have used up, for it is without question on. of the best tonlc 9 and system builders ever made*. Ask your druggist about 8. S. 8. He has sold it for years, and will tell you that it is a thoroughly reliable and honest old remedy, having been on the market more than fifty years. Buy a bottle and begin taking it today, and thus prepare your system for the changing seasons, so that you will be in condition net only to enjoy the beauties of springtime, but also to so tone up and strengthen the system that you need not live in fear of th. many ailments so prevalent in summer.
A thorough cleansing and toning up of the entire system is absolutely necessary just at this season when the strength is depleted and the vitality is naturally at a low ebb.
Special medical advice can be had without cost by writing to Chief Medical Adviser, 181 Swift Laboratory, Atlanta, Ga. —Advertisement.
BAD COUGH; NIGHT SWEATS; LOST WEIGHT Mr. Coleman thought his time had come. But he’s well now. “I was taken with a dry, hard cough about < months ago. Finally I got ao sore across the chest I could hardly breathe; had night sweats so bad everything would be wringing wet, and coughed continually until I thought It would kill me. Had no appetite, spent over SIOO on doctors and medicine*, and was worse off than when I started. “The first bottle of Milks Emulsion.did mo more good than all the 9100 spent for other treatment. It soon gave me a good appetite, my cough left me, end 2 have regained the fle6h and strength I had before I was sick.”—Arthur Coleman, Bex 381, Helena, Ark. You need an appetite, a good stomach, and some real strength if you want to fight off disease. Give Milks Emulsion a trial at lta maker’s risk. Milks Emulsion is a pleasant, nutritive food and a corrective medicine. It restores healthy, natural bowel action, doing away with all need of pills and* physics. It promotes appetite and quickly puts the digestive organs in shape to assimilate food. Asa builder of liosh and strength, Milks Emulsion is strongly recommended to those whom sickness has weakened, and Is a powerful aid in resisting an’ft repairing the effects of wasting diseases. Chronic stomach trouble and constipation are promptly relieved usually in one day. This is the only soltd emnlston made, and so palatable that It Is eaten with a spoon like ice cream. No matter how severe your case, yeu are urged to try Milks Emulsion under this guarantee—Take six bottles home with you, use it according to directions and if not satisfied with the results, your money will be promptly refunded. Price SOc and }1.20 per bottle. The Milks Emulsion Cos., Terre Haute, Ind. Sold by druggists everywhere.—Advertisement. COULD NOT BEGIN TO TELL ALL “I could not tell you ail the benefits 1 had from the use of Foley’s Honey anil Tar,” writes Miss Rose Florke, Hawkins Ave., N. Braddock, Pa. “I had a cold in my chest and fearing it would cause pneumonia I tried Foley’s Honey and Tar and it was not long till I 9lt relieved. I hope otthers suffering from severe colds will try It.” Many such letters have been written about this timetried, reliable family medicine for coughs, colds, croup and whoctylng cough. Sold
