Indianapolis Times, Volume 33, Number 203, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 January 1921 — Page 2

PINCHOT AND CRAVATHTALK WITH HARDING Cabinet Posts Believed Discussed at Today’s Conference at Marion. MARION. 0.. Jan. 3 —Warren G. Harding once expressed the conviction that one of the hardest jobs in the world was to listen v/tth every faculty keyed to close attention. If/that Is so, he has a lot of hard work before him this week. Dozens of men and women with whom he wishes to consult will come to Marion In the next few days. Gifford Pinchot, close associate of President Roosevelt, was the first visitor to arrive today. Mr. Pinchot never has relaxed his interest in conservation and irrigation problems since he was chief of the forestry service and was counted on to speak authoritatively on eertaia phases of the work of the interior department. Paul D. Cravath, prominent member of the New York bar. also arrived today and is believed to have placed before the President-elect a review of conditions in some of the great basic industries, with the probable affect on production, employment, prices and markets. He recently has been in Europe and is thor- , onghly famiiiar with economic and trade conditions abroad. Both Pinchot and Cravath. it i believed, discussed with Senator Harding the filling of certain Cabinet posts. Senator Charles Curtis of Kansas, Republican whip the Senate, was consulted concerning the progress and fate of legislation at this session of Congress, and Representative Horace M. Towner of lowa, member of the House Insular Affairs Committee, added his opinions on congressional matters. ROUMANIA GETS READY FOR WAR Six New Bolshevist Divisions Reported on Front. VIENNA, Jan. 3. —Military prepara- j tioua were made today by Roumania after the high command identified six new Bolshevist divisions on the Dneister frent. King Ferdinand mobilized the ••lasses of 1033, 1914 an d1915 and mill- j tarized Roumanian railways. Assignment of .Bessarabid, former Russian territory, to the allies was looked upon aa a patise for possible military action by the Bolshevists.

MAN STUCK UP BY 2 YEGGS IN FRONT OF HOME (Continued From Page One.) street, reported that his home had been robbed of Jewelry valued at $l5O. Mrs. Ilazei Wood, West New York street, reported that she had been robbed py a man who sold her a bushel of coal. As she was about to pay him, she said, he grabbed her purse containing >4, jumped on his wagon and drove away. Three roomers at the home of Harry Simons, negro, 1632 Arsenal avenue, reported that clothing valued at $l5O had . been stolen from their rooms. Even the police were not exempt. The home of David Moriarty, S3O South Capitol avenue, a member of the department, was visited while he was asleep and robbed of $1.50. The thief turned on the burner of a gas stove and the house was filled with gas before Moriairy awakened. O. E. Hoy, 5051 East New York street, reported that the “east side” burglar, ' who has been busy for the last threw days, bad called at his home and had carried away $lO, silverware worth $25, and a revolver. It is believed the same thief entered the residence of H. F. Hamilton, 520 Bancroft avenue. One dollar and a ring valued at $lO were taken. Jewelry valued at $l2O was taken from the home of H. F. Weitzman, 5016 Norway drive. William Roberts' dry beer saloon, 1419 North Senate avenue, was broken into and $7 taken. A panel was cut from a rear door. Others visited by burglars were: Frank Sostarich, 716 Haugh street; Mrs. Mary E. Gibbons, 317 Wallace avenue, and S. T. N'itchum, negro, 1551V4 Martindale avenue. At the home of Sostarich the thieves took everything from window shades to pillow cases. Otto C. Ross, 615 East Forty-Fourth street, reported his home entered by a burglar, who stole a black traveling bag and a small bank book containing SB. Hersbell Webb, negro, 1926 Alford street, attended church Sunday morning at the Johns Baptist Church, Martindale avenue and Seventeenth street. At the Close of the services he found that some person had stolen hie overcoat and gloves. Texas City Chosen by Latnbda Chis . Dallas, Texas, will be the entertaining city for the national convention of Lambda Chi Alpha, next December. The fraternity men who held their national session here during the last week selected that place Saturday, after which they were entertained at Butler College .and the Irvington chapter house. , Bruce H. Mclntosh, alumnus of De Panw University, was re-appointed administrative secretary. Hi* office will be in the national headquarters in the When building. Bank Celebrates 50th Anniversary Special to The Times. COLUMBUS, Ind., Jan. 3.—lrwin's bank celebrated Its fiftieth anniversary Saturday. The surplus was increased from i $50,000 to SIOO,OOO of the full amount of the capital stock in honor of the event. ! The bank was founded by Joseph I. Irwin I in 1871 and r.ow hag deposits of more than $1,500,000. Mr. Irwin came here penniless in his early manhood. When he died ten years ago, his estate was estimated at $5,000,000. Funeral Will Be at Darlington Th4* body of Mrs. Margaret Graham, 22, who died at her home, 1558 Shelby j street, Saturday noon, has been shipped to Darlington, Ind., for burial. Surviving her are her husband, W. J. Graham, and a niueteen months' old daughter. Dorothy. Arrangements for funeral services ■which will take place at Darlington, have not been completed, pending the arrival of relatives from Canada. Bain Nominated to Head Mines Bureau WASHINGTON, Jan. 3.—The President sent tc the Senate the nomination of Foster Bain of California to be director of the bureau of mines, vice Frederick a. Cott.reß..reigned. ~.„w .

Appoints Self Dan Cupid*s Aid CHICAGO. Jan. 3.—Wilbert Glenn Vnliva, overseer of Zion City, is going to plHy Cupid in 1921. Marriages lu Zion City last year totaled only thirty-five and Voiivi says he is "disgusted with this average." There are more than 5,000 people in the town. “I am preparing n list of marriageable young men and of girls of marriageable age." Voliva said. “I have arranged monthly social functions and expert to see all the young folks there regularly. I won't have any young folks in Zion City living a lone, sdflsh life.” Voliva made it clear that he does not require any assistance in Ms ro’a of Cupid by warning the “elder ladles against interfering with matrimonial matches.”

OFFICERS SLATED FOR FARM BOARD Politics Play Prominent Part in Election. I With the slate practically made out ns ; far as officers of the board are concerned, and with contests looming In ! the fight for membership on the board i in two districts,, politics was humming | about the State Board of Agriculture office today. It was practically agreed that Thomas F, Grant, ex-state senator, of | Crown Point, will he named president and S. L. Taylor of Boonvlile vice-presi-dent of the board. Charles F. Kennedy, present recording secretary. William F. Jones, Fairmount, j financial secretary and treasurer, and I Robert G. Porter, Edinburg, superintend- ! ent, are slated for re-election to their various positions. Mr. Grant, if elected, will succeed Samuel J. Miller of Ini dtanapolls, as president ! RIGHT TO VOTE j QUESTION RAISED. J Much interest and controversy is exj pected to develop regarding who shall | have the right to vote for members of the board from the various districts. At I the last meeting it was suggested lhat i changes in the law he made in order ! that fair associations that do not meet ; certain set requirements, be banned from ! voting. It was requested that credentials of all fair associations be sent to the : board of agriculture offices not later than j Dec. 28. j However, not more than 50 per cent of j the associations responded with thetr credentials. Members of the credentials committee were busy going over the credentials of the various associations, and it was said that no until about five minutes before the time for election would it be known who would be allowed a ; vote. , Contests for membership on the board have loomed in the Fifth and Thirteenth | districts. In the former Walter L. ! Breaks of Crawfordsville, A. E. Carter of Danville, former member from the Eiev- ; enth district, and E. J. Barker of Thornj town, an official in State and National ! Berkshire Hog Breeder’s Associations, are ' contesting for the honor of representing ! the district on the board, j THREE IN RACE i FROM THIRTEENTH. William It. Risk, Newcastle; J. E. | Green, Muncie, and C. L. Smith, Montpelier, are making a spirited race for membership from the Thirteenth district. The Montpelier man is now the representative from this district and Is a candidate for re-eiectlon. Walter L. Breaks is running for reelection in the Fifth district. Linn Wilson of Fairmount, Grant County, an old county fair man and prominent farmer, is unopposed for membership on the board from the Eleventh district, succeeding Mr. Carter, who moved from the district and who Is now a candidate in the Fifth district. M. MeCoffing of Covington is slated for election to the board from the Seventh district, succeeding S. F. Max Puett, present member, who is not seeking re-election. The officers of the hoard will he elected following the election of the district representatives on the board.

Tea Hound Edict Is One of Minister's Commandments Not Thing Itself That Is Objected to, but the Attendant Ills, He Says. CLEVELAND, Jan. 3.—Warning against the tea hound was issued by the Rev. P. S. Fritch. pastor of the Hough Avenue Congregational Church here, in his ten commandments for young men. The Rev. Fritch leads off his list with the injunction: “Thou shalt not be a tea hound; neither shalt thou be a lounge lizard.” It is not the tea drinking that he objects to, but the idleness and its attendant ills, be said. The other striking commandments are: “Thon shalt not be a weak sister; thou shalt not sow wild oats; thou shalt not wear soiled collars and cuffs; thou shalt not have any graven images of actresses, movie stars nor former sweethearts in thy possession, and thou shalt not be a quitter.” Says Italy Will Quit Immigration to U. S. WASHINGTON, .Tan. 3.—ltaly Is prepared to suspend all Italian immigration to this country. Senator Colt (Rep.), Rhode Island, chairman of the Senate Immigration Committee, announced at the outset of a hearing held today by the committee on the Johnson immigration bill, passed by the House recently. ‘•ltaly will not do that for six months j at least, was the rejoinder of Representni tive Johnson (Rep.) of Washington, author of the bill. | Mother bf 9 Children Is Seeking; Divorce EVERETT, Wash.. Jan. 3.—Marie Elaeth, mother of nine children, has entered : suit for divorce here against her husband I Anton Alseth. She allpges extreme cruelty, nonsupport and intemperance. The 1 children are aged 18, 10, 15, .11, 11, 10, ;9, 7 and 5. Spanish Ship Wrecked LONDON, Jan. 3. —The Spanish steamship Santa Isabel has been wrecked off Salvera Island with heavy loss of life, said a dispatch to Lloyds today. The ! Santa Isabel was a vessel of 2,500 tons hailing from Barcelona. HABEAS CORPUS WRIT REFUSED. Judge T. J. Moll of Superior Court, j Room 5, today refused to grant a writ | of habeas corpus to George S,. Bowman, j who la wanted at Newcastle, Ky., on a charge of issuing a fraudulent check for ?25. Bowman was arrested by the city authorities on receipt of a telegram from the officials of Newcastle. The court ordered him held in the custody of Sheriff Oeolle Snider until removed io Keu-

I NAVAL AIRMEN SAFE IN WILDS OF FAR NORTH Balloonists, Missing Since Dec. 13, Swept Into Cold Regions of Canada. NEW YORK, Jan. 3. —Somewhere in the blizzard-swept reaches of northern ' Canada, the three United States navy balloonists who left Ilockaway, Dec. 13 and disappeared are today traveling by ! dog team toward Cochrane on the Na- ; tional Transcontinental Railway, where I they expect to entrain for home. Word that the three missing airmen were safe was received at the navy air I station at Rockaway Point in the form ■of a telegram signed by the three and dispatched from Mattice, Ontario! It I said: “Driven by storm Monday 12 and 113 west by northwest at lower Hudson ; Bay; formed to land 2 p. m., 12-14 ten ! miles north by east of Moose Factory, j Ontario; latitude 01.50, longitude 81.00. i Lost in forest four days. Crew safe at | Hudson Company post. Will leave on j first available means of transportation to j railroad which is by dog sled and wilt ■ take about nine days. Leaving here | Monday, Dee. 27." | INDIAN PROBABLY 'carried MESSAGE. ! Mattice is several miles west of Coebj rane on the Transcontinental railroad. ■The messuge JfT believed to have been de | livered there by an Indian runner. The i three aviators were Lieut. Walter Hinton. Lieut. Stephen A. Farrell of New ! York and Louis A. Gloor, Jr., of New j Orleans, a reserve pilot ! At the Rockaway Point station the belief was expressed that the runner probni bly left Moose. Factory immediately after the officers arrived there, indicating he v, as on the trail nearly two weeks. It was pointed out that if an Indian required that long to make the Journey the officers would need at least throe weeks, which would bring them to Mattice or Cochrane about the middle of the present month. The distance from New York to Moose Factory, In an air line, is about 800 miles. This establishes anew record for a balloon flight. WIVES NOTIFIED. When the balloon left Rockaway Point shortly before noon, Dec. 13. the three aviators were equipped with three days' rations and had for-lined garments equipped with electrically-heated warmer*. After ninety-six hours had passed without report from them, fear was exI ressed for their safety and authorities in northern New York State and in Can ada were asked to search for them. Two Army airplanes later were sent from Mitchell field to Albany to direct the search Mrs. Farrell and Mrs. Hinton were promptly notified by the naval authorities of their husbands' safety. Both women had been confident that, the aviators would be found. Mrs. Farrell and her children prepared a Christmas tree for the lieutenant, believing he would Join them by that time. The women were Planning to meet their husbands in the north if it were found feasible.

WARD ASKED FOR CARE OF INSANE Health Secretary Scores Treatment of Patients. Establishment of a psychopathic ward at the city hospital In which all insane patients awaiting commitment to Jnll etta Insane Asylum or the Central Indiana Hospital for the Insane or In need of temporary treatment would be confined Instead of In the county Jail, a* at present, is confempiated hy the board of public health. At a special meeting of the hoard today Dr. Herman G. Morgan, secretary, was instructed to meet with the county commissioners and offer them the use of th' ward. The commissioners would I bear the expense of remodeling a wing of one of the hospital building* and pay ing for the upkeep of the ward, under ! the board's plan, since they are charged with the duty of caring for the insane. Dr. Morgan stated that the board's action is based upon a recommendation of I)r. Ilenrv Wright, an expert from the Bellevue Hospital in New York <'itv, who condemned conditions at the county Jail following an inspection made a year ago, and of himself. He said be has thought the plan of caring for insane patients tefore commitments to hospitals in Marlon County to be nothing less than "damnable" for the past six or seven years. If the ward is established It will be placed in charge of an experienced psychiatrist, Dr. Morgan said. The city has such a man available in Dr. John Lyman, formerly of the staff of the Central Indiana Hospital for the Insane and of the psychopathic ward staffs of the Boston City Hospital, the Bellevue Hog pitai, the Massachusetts General Hos pital and other Institutions. The position has been tentatively offered to him. “There undoubtedly should he such a ward for the confinement of nil insane cases before they are classified and sent to the various institutions." said Dr. Morgan. “In the case of many temporary mental breaks it is possible to effect many cures if the patients are under the proper institutional care in time. However, to place an insane patient in jail under physical conditions as they are in the local institution is to absolutely destroy the hope for such a cure In most cases. To throw aimentnlly sick man in Jail is to make him worse, and yet this is Just what we have been doing year after year. “The psychopathic ward ought to he established for the additional reason that it would prevent the stigma of going to Jail, which at present attaches to innocent Insane patients. We have no right to place such a blot on the reputations of persons just because they become ill. The city hospital will afford an excellent place for solving the problem.” It Would cost approximately $2,060 to fit up the ward and not more than $4,000 per year for Its administration. Dr. Morgan believes. The supplies of food, drugs, clothing, etc., could be purchased with the city hospital supplies at comparatively low cost, he said.

YOCKEY TO BE ADVISER FOR SAFETY BOARD (Continued From Page One.) threatened by the crime wave now sweeping over the country. Mr. Yockey’s long experienee ns prosecutor of the city court fits him especially well for his new duties. “Mr. Yockey will be glad to consult citizens who have evidence in various police cases. It will he part of his dntj to cooperate with the public.” Before a meeting of captains and majors of the Citizen's Police Reserve last week Mr. Taggart declared that the city could be policed more efficiently with a police department of less numerical strength thau Indianapolis now has if there were assurance that law violators would bo vigorously prosecuted after the police captured them. The appointment of Mr Yockey is regarded a*s part of a concerted drive to break the f-’ct- wav-.

INDIANA DAILY TIMES, MONDAY, JANUARY 3, 1921.

Found Fever Bug IR. 11. NOGISHI. Dr. H. Nogushi, Japanese scientist of the Rockefeller Institute, is said to be the first to discover the cause of yellow fever by obtaining the germs and making a serum. He now touring the United States, sp i before leading medical l aud scientific bodies. PROSECUTOR IN HAMON CASE OUT Retires From Office, hut Retains Evidence. ARDMORE, Okla., Jan. 3. -The Clara Smith Hamou case, in which she is j charged with the murder of Jake L. rtamon, multi millionaire oil magnate, ! was without a prosecutor today. Russell B. Brown, farmer county at- J torney, who Instituted criminal proceed-, ings against Mrs Hamon, following the fatal shooting of the 'oil king" in their hotel apartment here, wont out of office He turned over the keys of the county office to J. 11. Mathers, who was elected last November. Mathers, a member of the law firm of Coakley & Mathers, which has been retained as defense counsel hy Mrs Hamon, I is eliminated by law from handling the prosecution. The case is awaiting the j appointment of a special prosecutor by ; District Court Judge Thomas W ('ham- , pion. Judge Champion recently stated i he “had no objection” to naming Brown | to continue as special prosecutor and his I appointment Is expected within the next ■ few days. When Brown went out of office he retained possession of all evidence and ! papers in the Ilainou care. “I intend to ! hold the Hamon papers until a special prosecutor Is named,” he said. Brown, who broke into prominence when he first charged Mrs Hamon wltn slaying the oil magnate, in tbo face of Hamon's own statement that he "had shot himself,” will return to his private practice. He/' denied he had refused, to , handle the Hamon prosecution. "It has not boon offered me," was his only comment.

FRENCH GENERAL IS IN CONFERENCE Commander in Germany Appears at Headquarters. PARIS, Jan. 3.—De Gouette. rom- | mand-er of the French army of occupa-! tlon in Germ oy. arrived todav from j Ma yence, headquarters of the French' army of occupation, for a conference in , the dlsnrmaraen situation in Germany, i It was understood tentative plans for! the occupation of the Ruhr district were ' to he discussed, although it is not yet certain the alli.s intend to put into execution their threat to extend occupation of Germany to the Ruhr valley. In official circles tfe treipi is against hasty action. . Gustave IJerve, writing in the newspaper Victoire. advises the French to proceed carefully because of the danger of plunging Germany Into Bolshevism. “Whatever legitimate rancors France may have against Germany, tills country has no right to assume responsibility for delivering a great civilized nation in the hands of barbarism," wrote llerve. Masonic Lodge Hoids Memorial Services Memorial services for the ten members of the Mystic Tie l odge. No. 398, F. and A. M. who died last year, were held at the Masonic Temple this afternoon, l’aat j Master Edson F. Folsom was eulogist nt ■ the service for the ten men. The list fol 1 lows: Edward Everett Barry, Louis A.! Thomas, 'Valter Thomas-Tate. Horace J. j Eddy, Salon E. Lee, Jean Christian j Charles Schlee, James M. Lamed, Chariest E. Ilarmm, Dandridge IT. OUrer nut! i Hurry A. Porter. Salon E. Lee and Dan ! dridge 11. Oliver were past master of ' Mystic Tie, while James M. La rued was 1 an affiliated past master of Boston, Mass, j The Itaper drill corps of Raper Com t tnandery No. 1, Knights Templar, will j hold its annual electlou of officers on I Thursday evening. Preceding the business session a dinner will he served. Bill Would Restrict Treaty Ratification| WASHINGTON, Jan. 3.--Elimination of the League of Nations covenant from the treaty of Versailles is provided In a resolution by Senator King, Democrat, of Utah, proposed to the Senate today. The resolution would restrict ratification of the treaty by the Senate to those provisions not included in tlie covenant.

“They WORK while you sleep” Yon arc bilious, constipated, headachy, l full of cold, unstrung. Your meals don’t i lit- breath is bad, skin sallow. Take one oi two Uascarels tonight for your liver and bowels and wake up clear, rosy cheerful. Nv> griping—no inconvenience. Children [love Casearets, too. 10, ’■c ‘ 1 •<

CONGRESS TO ■ GIVE TIME TO TARIFF ISSUE Omnibus Bill, Passed /by House, Will Be Taken Up in Senate. WASHINGTON, Jan. 3.—The tariff, that moot and intricate subject about j which so many eventful chapters of | American political history have been i Written, is to engage the earnest attention of Congress again this week. The Senate Finance Committee, of which Senator Penrose of Pennsylvania is chairman, is scheduled to begin tomorrow consideration of the omnibus tariff bill passed by the House recently. Opposition to the measure by Republican Senators from manufacturing centers, led by Senator Penrose, and by Democratic Senators from the "solid South,” led by Senators Underwood of Alabama and Pat Harrison of Mississippi, has become so pronounced that its defeat, in its present form, at least, is freely predicted. On Hie House side, the Ways and Means Committee will begin Thursday a series of far-reaching hearings on the entire subject of proposed tariff revision which are expected to last until the middle of February. PURPOSE TO SOUND OUT BUSINESS. The hearings will be for the purpose of sounding out business, agricultural and other interests, as to bow they consider a rewriting of the present tariff laws may l est be accomplished by the new Congress, which President-elect Harding is expected to call in special session soon after he assumes office on Mar 'h 4. The conflict of interest developed by the pending emergency tariff bill is regarded as certain to be renewed on a more extensive scale when the ways and means hearings are begun to pave the way for the drafting of a general tariff bill for introduction in the new Congress. It is believed by Republican and Democratic leaders alike the tariff question will hardly lie disposed of by Congress before the latter part of this | year t CONFIDENTIAL DATA SUBMITTED. Confidential data concerning the naval programs of th>- principal nations were laid before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee when it took up the Borah disarmament resolution. Admiral Room*, chief of naval operations, outlined to the committee the naval plans of Japan, Great Britain and France. Information concerning the land forces , probably will be requested from the War Department, by the committee, indications are; that no action will be taken on th.* resolution for so mo time. Com inlttee members said that KoonU' testimony indicated disarmament would prove a complex problem Koontx denied to the committee that President Wilson or the State Department had consulted him concerning a call for u world conference bn disarms ment under the authority of the Daval act of 1916. Koontz said that so far us he wag aware, nothing had ever been doue and nt> official of the Government was considering action under that provision, which suggested that the Press j dent invite other nations to send repre i tentative* to a disarmament conference in Washington. Noblesville Civil War Veteran Dies Special ta'The Time* NOBLESVILLE, Ind., Jan. 3 —Levi Holliday, 85, is dead at hts home north east of NoblczviHe. He served In the < tvil war as a member of Company E, Ll7th Indiana Infantry. The children who survive are Mrs. Joshua Webb, NobPs villa; Mrs. Goldie Smith of Miami. F'a ; Frank Holliday. Martinsville, and Henry Holliday, Anderson. Jesse Holliday, '■2, the. only surviving brother is critically ill. the result of a stroke of paralysis which lie suffered on the same day that Ills brother, Levi, was stricken. ‘Mystery Man’ in Murder Surrenders NEW YORK, Jan. 3. Jeremiah Bohan. 35. walked into the sixteenth branch detective bureau in Brooklyn today and surrendered to Capt. Daniel .1. Carey, j who announced that Bohan is the "'mystery man" sought in connection with the murder of “Monk” Eastman, ex gangster anil war veteran. No form a] charge was entered against ' Bohan. Ho was taken to Manhattan police j headquarters for examination. Picks Team for Drive Miss Alma SCckler, president of the ! Inxllanapolls League of Women Voters, i announces her team for the January membership campaign: Mrs. Maude E Anthony, Mrs. t'arrlc Lombard. Miss Helen Thornton, Hiss Beulah Brier, Mrs. George Bartlett. Mrs. May Shipp, Mrs. Grace Julian Clarke, Mrs. Ovid - Butler Jameson and Mrs. William J. Hamilton. The remainder of the teams will be j named tills week.

HAAG’S CUT PRICE DRUGS TWO DOZEN 2-GRAIN QUININE CAPSULES FOR 25c Everything Fresh, Genuine, of the Purest and Beat Quality. Price* Subject to Change Without Notice. Another Big Cut in the Price of Drugs. A SAMPLE OF DIFFERENCE IN REGULAR AND HAAG’S PRICES

”5c Aleock's Porous Plasters 75e Alopben Pille. 100 SI.OO Aibolene Oil 36c Analageslc Balm 75c Analgnealc Balm Bengue SI.OO Aspirin Tablets, 100. 5 gr 45® 25c Bellans 76c Bella ns 25c Belladonna Piaster SI.OO Bttro Phosphate ...850 25c Beech am Pills l“ c 35c Borden's Eagle Milk *7c, 3 for *®o 30c Bell’s Pine Tar and Honey 24<i $1 00 Bliss Native Herb Tablets 740 25c Burkhardt's Veg. Tablets 18e 80c Bromo Seltzer t 9 00c Bromo Seltzer 480 40 Castoria, Fletcher’s 2S>c $1.25 C’adoniene Tablets #Bo 35c Caputline ~..290 25c Calomel Tablets, 100 any sire...loc 50c Cascara Aroin. Sweet, 3 z 25c 50c Cascara, Bitter, 3 oz Sse 50c Cascara Cathartic, Hinkle's S4e 25c Celery Vqure io 50c Celery Vescc sue SI.OO Celery Vesce 740 15c Carbolic Acid toe 25c Carter's Little Liver Pills ic 35c Corega z&<? 50c Clayton's Mange Remedy e 50c Clayton’s Dog Remedies 3e 35c Castor Oil, Kellog’s z3,. CiOc Castor Oil, Kellog's 3<> ( . 50c Cuticura Ointment 50c Camphorated Oil 50c Camphor Spirits 2He 75c Q-Ban Hair Color Restorer 35c Egg Preserver ].gsc 25c Colorite, 12 Colors, each 19,

HOT WATER BOTTLES, FOUNTAIN SYRINGES AND COMBINATIONS AT CUT PRICES SI.OO BOTTLE GENUINE ASPIRIN TABLETS, 100, FOR 45£ HAAG’S Drug Store, 156 N. Illinois St., is only 6 doors north of Terminal Station HAAG’S DRUG STORE, 101 W. Washington St., is in the Point Room of the Lincoln Hotel. HAAG’S DRUG STORES, 27 and 53 South Illinois St., are on the first square south of Washington St., on the way to the steam Union Depot. The other 3 stores are located at 114 North Pennsylvania St., 55 Virginia and 802 Massachusetts Avl, corner of College.

Bloomington Police Get Death Threats Special to The Times. BLOOMINGTON, Ind., Jan. 3.-A comprehensive attempt to intimidate the Bloomington police in their es fort to quell the crime wave in this locality iB ginning in proportions. Anonymous letters threatening death are being received daily by members of the force. It is believed by department heads that the letters are tlic jvork of a gang of auto thieves operating here. A death trap, hidden in a stolen ear by the thieves a few days ago, nearly cost the life of Captain Stevens ot the Bloomington force, in recovering the machine. A shot gun, IdentiUpa as one recently stolen from n Bloomington store, was propped against the door with tiie trigger tied by cords in a manner calculated to discharge the gun when the door was opened. The barret struck Stevens in the chest, relieving the tension of the cords and the gun was not discharged. 8 J BANKERS TRUST TO BEGIN WORK Remodeling of Future Quarters to Take Up 4 Months. The work of remodeling the rooms nt 138-140 North Pennsylvania street, to serve as new quarters for the Hankers Trust Company, is expected to be begun this week. The bank officials hope the alterations will be completed in four month* The Starr I'iano Company, which has been occupying the rooms. iR moving to 49-53 Monument Place. The rooms 138-140 North Pennsylvania street are in what formerly was the Newton Clnypool Building but is now the Bankers Trust Building, the trust | company having secured a ninety-nine-year leas on the building, with a tenyear option to purchase. The new quarters of the trust company will have a frontage of thirty-five feet and a depth of 120 feet. Among the improvements will be two large vaults, the larger of which will be used exclusively for safety deposit pur poses. Both the first floor and basement are to be remodeled along modern banking lines and a building permit Issued today showed the cost to be $40,000. ENGLISH WOMAN DIES OF ANTHRAX Disease, Common Among Animals. Proves Fatal. Special to The Time*. ENGLISH, Ind., Jan. 8. .Mrs. Anna Longest. 48, wife of Larrnon Longest, residing three miles west of Ja -re. Is dead at her home of a disease which has been diagnosed as anthrax, or lump jaw, which is said to be common among animals. Mr*. Longest had been ill since last June, when a small growth appeared on her Jaw. Specialists at Louisville. Ky.. pronounced it as anthrax. It is thought that she contracted the disease through picking her teeth with a pin that had fallen on the floor to which germs of the disease had been carried from the stable. Mrs. Longest is survived by the liusI and. five small children and a daughter by a former marriage. Cashier Found Dead ST. LOUIS, Jan. 3. The body of Ross R Jones, cashier of tire*. People’s Bank of Desoto, Mo., missing several days, was found in a hotel here Sunday. There was n bullet wound in the head and k revolver beside the body. Jones' accounts were being investigated. v'Jii'* Ox ->W, \i, C.UL.DS "Pape's Co!d Compound” is Quickest Relief Known Don't stay stuffed-up i Quit blowing and snuffing! A dose of "Pape's Cold Compound” taken every two hours until three doses are taken usually breaks any cold right up. The very first dose opens • logged nostrils and the air passages of the head: stops, nose running; relieves the headache. dullness, feverishness. "Pape's Cold Compound’’-fosts only a few cents at drug stores, it nets with out assistance, tastes nice, contains no quinine- Insist upon Pape's— Advertisement.

HOTEL PURITAN Absolutely firaproot Rooms SI.OO to $2.50 Corner Market and Mew Jersey Sts. Weekly Rate on Application.

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JOBLESS CENSUS NEARLY FINISHED Capita! and Labor Eagerly Await Publication. WASHINGTON, Jan. 3.—Results of a nation-wide unemployment census being taken by the United States Employment Service today were awaited with keen interest by capital and labor alike. Director John Densmore plans to announce the result this week. One estimate, the largest yet made, is that it Will show three million. Others range as low as a half million. Publication of the official unemploy- j ment census is expected to have a far- ; reaching influence' in the industrial ■ world in connection with wage cutting and the movement to establish the open ; shop. Some of the nation's biggest employ- ] ers are expected to have something to i “ay about the situation at a congress ; of employers in Chicago Jan. 12, to j which Judge Gary and other employers; have been invited. This congress is being looked to by officials here as the first definite move in the campaign for the open shop. President Samuel ! Gompers and other official; of the American Federation of Labor are planning to keep in touch with it. D’Annunzio’s Forces to Leave Fiume Soon MADRID, Jan. 3. —Gabriele d'Annunzio's volunteers at Fiume, who have now been ; disarmed, will leave the city on Wednes- J day and Thursday, said a dispatch from j Flume today. D’Annunzio will leave at the same time, hut his destination has j not yet been disclosed. A special police force is keeping order j at Flume. ASPIRIN Name "Bayer” on Genuine Beware 1 Unless you see the name : “Buyer” on package or on tablets yon j ire* not getting genuine Aspirin pre- j scribed by physicians for twenty-one j years and proved safe by millions. Take ; Aspirin only as told in the Bayer pack- i age for Colds. Headache. Neuralgia, I Rheumatism. Earache, Toothache, Linn- | luigo, and for Pain. Handy tin boxes j of twelve Bayer Tablets of Aspirin cost i few cents. Druggists also sell larger packages. Aspirin is the trade mark of j Bayer Manufacture of Monoaceticacides- , ter of Salicylicacid.—Advertisement.

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FROM THE AN! Men’s Win! HJnderwe Union Suits, $1.5fl Former prices $2.00 to j Choice of heavy w ribbed cotton, in ecru col! extra heavy weight, flat fl cotton in natural gray sizes from 34 to 46. Union Suits, SI.BE Former price, $3.00i Mens “Vellastic” I “Lambsdown,” extra j weight fleece-lined <1 union suits, especially I for men who work out of j All sizes from 34 to 44. i Shirts and Drawers Former price, SI.H Heavy weight ribbefl fleeced cotton undershifl drawers; ecru color. ■ shirts in sizes 34 to 48* drawers in sizes 30 to 44 Shirts and Drawers, i Former price, $1.50j Choice of “High Rockl “Lambsdown," extra I weight, flat fleeced cottol dershirts and drawers. I in sizes 34 to 46. Drawl sizes 39 to 44. j Shirts and Drawers, l Former prices, $2.00 to ] Heavy weight cotton i| shirts and drawers, in nl gray, tan and scarlet. ‘I ford Mills” and other stal makes. Shirts in sizes! 50. Drawers in sizes 301 ESiia

jnjfSiflilan All-Year fgfln Drawing-Room J&wj/A Sleeping Car to Florida fc ****v>J * Daily I Lv lacianapolis 4.10 a.m. ■ ArLoaitviUe 7.35 a.na. ■ ArKncxviiie 5.26 p.m fl Ar Atlanta 10.50 p. u. fl At Jacksonville 12. 10 n’a isl 2nd Day ■ Sleeping Car open in Indian. apoli*. 9.00 p.m. For tickets aruf particu* lari apply tcLvc,i! Ticket jJZ^fl Apmts, Consolidated YgtfWmm TickctOfficf'lie-ÜBno* j f fim lishßlock, Union Station, Indianapolis, or a-idress ,-C/xT C. C. Truth, Division Passenger Agent, lilO Kahn Building , Indian - IS#** apolii, Ind. ggjg Pennsylvjl and ' Louisville & Nashville R.i

Gas Oil Stomac |1 Adler-i-jgi “I had gas on the stomach HHH patlon for two years. Adier-f"** 1 the first day, and six botti* s Cl me." (Signed! E. H. Beeinau/®-Adler-i-ka acts on BOTH VhPed lower bowel, removing foul mailer j poisoned stomach. Brings out ail a relieving pressure on heart and I organs. EXCELLENT for cos oa stomach or sour stomach. Removes] prising amount of foul, decaying uj which nothing else can dislodge. I to CURE constipation and prevent al dieltis. H. J. Hnder, Druggist, 1v ington and Pennsylvania street ti sente at.

Coughing at Night%V| Can Be Bronchial coughs, hang on after recovery IfeJEg influenza or grip, coughs, coughs caused by fIBgBC tressing tickling in the throatthat cause one not only to loftW*, but to disturb the rest of such coughs can be relieved by Honey end Tar. v* c'V-j* The Experience of Two L. W. Day, 65 Campbell Ave., E, Mich., writes: "Foley's Honey and TA :tVft*v3| It relieves one with bronchitis very complaint in that line has almost gone fkMtiJf never to have it again.” Chas. Hoffman, Eagle Hotel, OneiAuGAg?.. writes: “I have been troubled with in my throat and cough for the past I con highly rocommend Foley's HonefiWTa* ■s a 60c and 35c bottle gave me relief Foley's j Honey and Tar COMPOUND f IS A TIME-TRIED REMHDY tnat can be relied upon to get rid o)F coughs end colds that lead to serious “illness if neglected Children like Foley's Honey and Tar. It contains no opiates, and will not injure a delicate stomach •

TUBERCULOSIS

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Dr. Glass has positive proof that he Is able to cure tuberculosis by inhalation In any climate. For further Information address The T. F. Glass t ti It a 1 r n t Cos.. Mason Bldg., Los Asfle> On).