Indianapolis Times, Volume 34, Number 66, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 July 1921 — Page 3

SEES HOPE FOR MORON MINDS IN OSTEOPATHY Philadelphia Physician Says Injury to Neck Causes Many Defectives. CURES OFTEN POSSIBLE Special to The Times. CLEVELAND. July 28.—Thousands of children become mental defectives from injury to the neek at birth, said I'r. KayBond W. Bailey, of Philadelphia, in a paper read before the pediatrli-s section of the national osteopathic convention here today. All of these cases <an be cured by osteopathic adjustment of the neck, he declared. In these particular cases nothin* else can cure them, as no other treatment could remove this cause. Osteopathic clinics for the free treatment of these cases are to be established all over tbe country, announced the speaker. The osteopathic organizations expe. t In this way to save thousands of defective minds and restore them to efficiency. in explanation Or. Bailey void: “It is of paramount important to each of fpu to be convinced of the Merit of osteopathy in the reclamation of mental defectives and to become Instantly concerned therewith, because of the high percentage of good results to be obtalmd, the momentous stride forwarl to your individual careers, and the ultima'e sue- ! cess of osteopathy in fields so entirely and uniquely helpless by the efforts of the older branches of the healing art." PROPOSE TO REBUILD THOUGHT PROCESSES. “I come here to emphasize th> Importance of what is to be done in one phase of purely physieal corrections. !e iding to reconstruction of thought process that Is impaired by reason of traumatism, outside of the brain proper. "The handling of the feeble-minded child is the chosen work of the osteopath, If there ever has been any particular branch of humanity's Ills that any ' school had claim to. We are eminently more fitted to take up this department of the sufferings of humanity than we are to drift along in a general practice way. and thus establish in the lay mind the fact of onr spe-ial fitness and their sub- . sequent duty where the case exists, that If any traumatic cause can be found, we alone can be of service and all is not done until osteopathic care is given. “I pan assure you that your reputation cannot suffer, if you will ally yonrs-lf to the great big opportunity that Is be- j fore your very eyes, knocking at your j door, waiting only to place you on record as one important unit in the invasion of a field of work among children where a percentage of those destined to remain eternally without the realms of common understanding only to know the glimmer of the distant light of intellect by what you may term mimicry. You 1 hold the key in your ten fingers to bring within the cates of knowledge from 15 to | 40 per cent of thos~ blank minds from all causes. Is it not time you took the j human view of your chosen calling and exercise more than a slack concern in this problem that it increasing with tin- I thinkable rapidity and inadequate means \ to prevent it up to the present time? It : Is the opportunity, as I see It. to make ourselves indispensable to the rest of ■ humanity. RETROGRADE MINDS* EtKR ON INCREASE. “\ou have before you. no matter how! small your town, an ever-increasing army of retrograde children, conditioned In their school work—a portion of which by stri'-t mental survey, have been found to be only high-class moron or borderline aments, whose ability to learn ceases at the twelfth year or thereabouts and whose status Is traceable to the misplacement of two upper sections of the spine In the neck. These displacements in the beginning bad nothing to do with heredity or constitutional disease, but If allowed to proceed may be productive of new lines of hereditaiv influence and carried forward in the weakening of en dowed structure.”

POSTOFFICE TO LOWER EXPENSES Conferences Held With Idea of Switching Clerks. In accordance with the recent proclamation of Will 11. Hays, Postmaster (ieneral, asking postmasters throughout the country to use the utmost economy In administering their offices without causing any deterioration in the quality of service given, R. E. Springsteen, postmaster, has been holding conferences with fortyone supervisors of the local postoffice and heads of departments. Asa result of these conferences it is probable that In the future as little use is possible will be made of substitutes from the auxiliary service and clerks will be shifted around during rush times In in effort to avoid expenditures for extra help. “It always has been the aim of this office to give a maximum of service at l minimum of expense." Mr. Springsteen said today. ‘As an example of how well we have done in the past. Just look at the figures for the Lust fiscal year, when in the face on an increase of $--'>o,ooo in the business of the office, we turned back >8,155.33 unexpended from the appropriations given us ”

Thousands Are Nervous Wrecks Cross, Crabbed and Care-worn From Weak, Thin Watery Blood without ever suspecting the real cause of their trouble

A New York Physician savs that MORE THAN ONE HALF THU POPULATION OF AMERICA PERISHES BEFORE MIDDLE AGE and that one of the chief contributary causes of this terrible waste of human life is the devitalizing weakness brought on by lack of iron in the blood. THERE ARE 30.000,000,000.000 RED BLOOD CORPUSCLES IN YOUR BLOOD AND EACH ONE MUST HAVE IRON. An enormous number of people who ought to be strong, vigorous and in the prime of life are constantly complaining of weak nerves, headaches, pains across the back, disturbed digestion, shortness of breath, a general "run-down" condition, melancholy, bad memory, etc., when the real cause of all their suffering is IRON STARVATION OF THE BLOOD.

The proof of this Is shown by the fact :hat when organic Iron is supplied to :heir blood, that all their multitude of ivmptoius often quickly disappear and .he very men and women who were 'ormerly io complaining now become strong, healthy and vigorous, with even dispositions and sunny, cheerful natures Nature put plenty of iron in the husks of grains and the skins and peels of vegetables and fruits to enrich your blood, but modern methods of cookery throw all these things away—hence the alarming increase, in recent years, in anaemia —iron starvation of the. blood, with all Its attendent ills. If you are not wiring to go back to na ture then yon should eat more iron-con-taining vegetables as spinach aud carrots and reinforce them by taking a little organic iron from time to time. Hut be sure the iron vnu take is organic iron and not metallic iron which people usually take. Metallic iron is iron Just as it comes from the action of strong acids on small pieces of iron and is there-

lIIIVATCh IDny enriches the blood-gives HUAMI El/ iru/n you new strength and energy

Tfewc astle she Pittsburgh o/-/\>ustralia

Ne w c astle, NEW SOUTH WALES, Australia Iu 1757 several Rri i ish convicts, wb l had been deporte.j to Australia from England, escaped from the penal settlement near what is now the city of Sydney and lied north along, the coast. In pursuit of them went Lieut- John Shortland and a detachment of soldiers in

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a small boat. A hundred miles north Shortland believed he was ahead of the fugitives and turned his boat toward the shore with the intention of landing and heading off the convicts To his surprise what appeared to be a solid cliff proved the entrance of a beautiful harbor and, guiding his boat over the bar at the mouth, he anchored and'Went ashore. On the beach he and his men found a large number of black nuggets which they recognized as coal and investigations convinced Shortland he had stumbled upon a rich deposit. Later liis superiors investigated his report concerning Port Hunter, ns he named his discovery, and found he had surmised correctly and that there was a rich coal field almost at the very surface of the ground. This was the tieginning of Newcastle, third largest port of Australia and, in the matter of tonnage cleared, seventh among all the ports of the British Empire. During 1920 ships to the number of 1.G23 visited Newcastle. They brought imports to the value of five billion dollars and carried away exports of almost equal value. Before the European war the average was five thousand ships a year. The tonnage cleared was a grat deal more and reached a climax iu l'J 3. Since that year there has been a decline, which appears to have been checked. There is one thing which always has held Newcastle back the depth of its arbor, whi.-h is only twenty-three feet uud six Inches at the bar at Its entrance. At least thirty feet is required by the big ocean going vessels of today and it Is planned to dredge to that depth as soon as the state government will appropriate the money. In spite ot the handicap of shallow water Newcastle leads all the ports of the com monwealth in the shipping of coal and last y*ar more than four and one-quar-ter million tons, valued at sls,UOO,<ilfl, were s-mt out by ships from Port Hunter. For tie state of New South Wales. In which Newcastle is located, has the most important coal fields or Australia and

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Ore dressing plant of the Broken II ill Proprietary Company. It take* more coal than It does ore In the making of steel, so the company located Its great works at Newcastle, where the coal is to he had, and brings the ore In its own ships to the Pittsburgh of Australia.

I the Newcastle, or northern district, has been worked the most. The New South Wales coal district extends for 200 miles , along the coast aud is 100 miles across at its widest point. At three diiferent spots the scorns appear at the surface, ! that around Newcastle being n seam thirty feet thick, which is worked at a depth of between 200 and 300 feet. CALLED PITTSBURGH OF AUSTRALIA. Its immense coal business and the fact that it Is the location of Australia's greatest steel works and allied industries have earned for Newcastle the nickname of the "Pittsburgh of Australia." Hut If you should go to Newcastle with the expectation of seeing a cit v iike l’lttsj burgh you would be keenly jisappolnted. i Per Newcastle has a pop’ >atlon of only j 16,020 and at least one of its suburbs,

fore an entirely different thing from organic iron. Organic iron is like the iron in your blood and like the iron in spinach, lentils and apples. it may be bad from wour druggist under the name of Nuxnted Iron. Nuxated Iron represents organic iron in such a highly condensed form that one dose of it is estimated to be approximately equivalent lin organic iron content) to eating one half quart of spinach, one quart of green vegetables or half a dozen apples. It s like taking extract of beef instead of eating pounds of meat. Over 4.000.000 people annually are using Nuxated Iron. It will not Injure the teeth nor f’isturb the stomach. A few doses will often commence to enrich your blood and revitalize your wornout, exhausted nerves. Your money will be refunded by the manufacturers if you do not obtain satisfactory results. Heware of substitutes. Always insist on having genuine organic irou—Nuxated Iron. Look for the letters N. I. on every tablet. At ail drugglct* in tablet form only.

Above—Coal mines near Newcastle, which Is the third largest port of Australia and the greatest coal port south of the equator. Its immense coal business and the fact that It Is the location of Australia's greatest steel works and allied Industries, have earned for It the nickname of the Pittsburgh of Australia. The South Bales coal district extends for 300 miles along the coast and is 100 miles across at its widest point. At three different spots the seams appear at tbe surface, that around Newcastle being a snun thirty feet thick, which is worked at a depth of between 200 and 300 feet. Below —The sailing ship has not entirely vanished from the sea, as the picture of a dozen vessels, mostly American, taken at Newcastle, shows. These ships bring soft woods from New Zealand to Australia and carry coal buck to new Zealand from Newcastle.

CessnocU, has.eclipsed it in the matter of size with a population of 20,000, for at Ossnock, some twenty miles away, is one of the big coal mines of the northern district of New South Wales. However, Newcastle is the center of that district and its port and, with the suburbs, caters to the needs of 80,000 persons. Alighting from a train at Newcastle 1 was surprised to liud so important a

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A panoramic Tlew, looking west, of the great steel works at Newcastle. New South Bales. The works had not been completed when the World Bar broke out, but were quickly put into operation, and, while the conflict lasted, kept the railroads and other Industries in Australia going by making all the iron and steel needed.

place so dingy and dreary. Its railroad -tHtlon is a small two-story brick structure. flanked by wooden sheds. The brick structure is used for baggage and the sheds for passenger*. The street upon which it faces is scarcely paved at all. Across from the station a block of low buildings, houses, shops and various kinds and a hotel or two. Down the center of the street runs the street railway

operated by the New South Wales government. Its street railway service Is a tender spot with Newcastle. Antiquated steam engines, from the stacks of which dense coal smoke pours to mingle with the smoke of Its manufacturing plants,

The Great Lockhart Mill-End Sale Will Begin Next Monday

YOU who have been watching and waiting for news of this great money-saving event —a merchandising movement as unique in conception and execution as it is profitable to thrifty buyers, will lie glad to learn that the date of the opening of this important economy opportunity lias been set for next Monday, August Ist. We are sure the thrifty folk of Indianapolis and the country round about who remember the remarkable economies of former Mill-End Sales will be glad to welcome Mr. Lockhart back to the Hoosier Capital and will give him the greatest reception lie lias yet known. He himself—his jests and his homely philosophy—are well worth coming for, not to speak of the money lie will save. you. Mr. Lockhart will be with us in all his glory next Monday when the big Mill-End Sale will start off with a bang. He says he expects it to be the greatest event of his whole career.

PETTIS DRY GOmS CO. the M e:w vopk est. i&

INDIANA DAILY TIMES, THURSDAY, JULY 28, 1921.

bump and* thump along, dragging behind them passenger cars which the residents declare it is torture to ride. A! though the Newcastle lines carry 15.000, 000 passengers a year, those who can avoid riding tnem do so. which probably is the reason that last year the state lost $200,000 on the thirty five miles of tracks, the greatest loss sustained on any of the lines iu the state, (iu the other baud,

motor busses do a capacity business. On the main street, n block away, you will begin to sec that Newcastle must do a tremendous amount of business because you find one bank after another and where there are many banks there is much business. And a check of 'he list j of the principal industries located lu or near the city reveals plants for the uianuj facture of axles, wheels and springs for , railways, galvanized iron, nails, tin plate. I silica brick, glass bottles, boilers and big I sulphide works. The steel works, of j course, are the biggest thing, but it and ail other industries are dependent upon the coa! around which the commercial life of Newcastle centers. For It is cheaper for these factories to lo ate where the coal Is than it is for them to locate elsewhere and bring the coal there. It was this fact that brought to Newcastle the steel works of the Broken Hill Proprietary Company and gave birth to one of the commonwealth's industrial romanaces of the great war The Broken Hill company, it might be mentioned, operates one of the world's greatest silver mines, located in New South Wales, almost on the border line of South Australia. Twenty years ago, purely ns the basis for possible future use, it obtained control of two mountains, iron Knob and Iron Monarch, in South Australia, which proved to be exceedingly rich in iron ore. But it was not until 11*13 the company decided to take up iron mining a* a side line to its silver mining. Then It began to look around for a suitable location for its steel works. Newcastle coal was the deciding factor. It was splendid for making into coke and Port Hunter offered a good harbor into which to bring the iron ore for smelting. It takes more coal than It does ore in the making of steel, so it was up to the company to

locate where coal was to be had and bring the ore to it. This it does in its own ships. There was one unfavorable thing to contend with the land upon which the company must build to be alongside deep water for its ore ships was nothing but mudflats. Twenty thousand piles, driven into the mud to a depth of between eighteen and thirty-five feet, was the solution. Over the piling was piled sand dredged from the bottom of the river alongside the plant until what haa been a low-lying mangrove swamp only two feet above flood level was twelve feet above tide water. Upon this the company began the erection of a plant estimated to cost about $18,000,000. Then came the great world war! And the infant steel plant, not really completed until almost a year after the Kaiser had plunged the world into war, proved the salvation of Australia in supplying it with the iron and steel which it was prevented from getting from other countries because war had taken all the shipping. PLANT GIVES BORK TO 6,000 MEN. Today the plant, which employes 6,000 men, is being doubled with a view to making for Australia and New Zealand all the iron and steel which these British possessions can use. If there is any left over a bid for foreign trade will be made. Just now the lack of a tariff on iron and steel which will prevent the United States, Japan and India from competing with Newcastle steel is the one thing which stands in the way, but that will be remedied this year. B’ith both coal and steel available other industries which must have both are locating at Newcastle. I was told there Is net a foot of suitable land between Newcastle and Port Waratnh, where the steel plant is located on one side of the harbor, which has not been snapped up as the location for future Industries dependent upon steel. So Newcastle, already the greatest coal port south of the equator, may become the greatest steel port as well—the Pittsburgh of Australia. You will hear in Newcastle mutterings that the city is held baea by the Jealousy of Sydney, capital of New South Wales, and the largest city of the commonwealth. Sydney, they say in Newcastle, controls the state government by

• means of its tremendous population and ’ has for years blocked any legislation , that would make Newcastle any greater ias a port. Still this opposition, real or I fancied, has done a great thing for New- [ castle. It has welded its business interests into a Chamber of Commerce that ! is always fighting hard to keep the city | progressing. It was largely through this j body that the government of the com- ! monwealth was Induced to locate on j Walsh Island, in the harbor of Port HunI ter, a plant which builds steel ships for I the commonwealth's own line of government owned but not operated steamers. So far the ships turned out at ths j Walsh island yard, which employs 2.500 men, have been 5,500 tons, although Im- | provements now under way will permit of the building of ships of almost double f that tonnage. I Newcastle has attained Its place only iln the last’few years. Its first coal mine i was opened in IST4, but It was a small * affair, operated by convicts from the settlement ut Sydney. B'ork was desultory and the mine not profitable, so In IS2O the authorities turned over the coal rights to the Australian Mining Company, which worked the mines until 1947, when the government took them over again. But even iu 1861 Newcastle had a population of only seventy five hundred. Six years , later a short railway line was opened between Newcastle and Maitland and that | began to attract settlers so that in the course of a few years the northern secj tlon of New South Wales began to de- | velop Into a dairying land, as well as a i mining center, and Newcastle began to grow. Today ships take away from its wharves frozen meats, coke, copper, lead, iron, rails, fishplates, timber, sleepers, pitch,

•/ ’ C: L, t v IO K fjfP’ 'w r ' V fPif

The Great Lockhart Mill-End Sale Will Begin Next Monday, August Ist.

West by Southwest New Zealand, Australia and South Sea Islands By W. D. BOYCE, Organizer and leader of the Old Mexico Research and African Big Game Expeditions, author of ‘‘lllustrated South America,” “United States Colonies and Dependencies” and ‘‘The First Americans—Our Indians of Y'esterday and Today.”

tar, superphosphates, disinfectants and other by-products of the coal and steel industries. It Is the port at which most ships which come to the eastern coast of Australia, call In ballast to get their fuel, even though they be going to some other port for a cargo. It is the port at which the lumber ships call to discharge soft wood from New Zealand and to load up with Australian hard woods for the dominion in exchange. All modern machinery is employed at the wharves at Newcastle. Great hydraulic cranes load and unload ships. They seize a car of coal, lift the body from its trucks and dump the coal into the holds. These cranes can handle twentyfive tons at once. Huge grab buckets unload ore for the steel plant. The wharves, each 7,000 feet long, are lighted by ninety big are lamps and wmrk in the busy season goes on night and day. The Hunter River, w r hich flows into the sea at Newcastle, flows through a rich agricultural and dairying district and both it and its navigable arms, the Paterson and Williams River, bring down to Newcastle each year great quantities of form and dairy produce, much of which is shipped abroad, although coastal vessels carry some of it to neighboring cities. Newcastle, too, is a railroad center, as the lires which go to Brisbane, in the State of Queensland, along the coast Itself and across New South Wales, center there. Moreover. It is a place from which tourists and vacationists leave for outings In some of the picturesque spots of New South Wales. Newcastle has Just begun to climb toward the apex of its development. It will not reach It In a year or in several years, but a quarter of a century from now It will be one of Australia's best. The production of the mines of New South B'ales have for seven years averaged fifty million dollars in value, exceeded only by the value of its pastoral, agricultural and manufactured products. Outside of coal the chief mines are the silver-producing Barrier Mountain ranges, owned by the same Broken Hill Proprietary Company, which operates tho Newcastle steel plant as a side issue. Millions in silver ore have been taken out of the workings, which are world famous, and it is a wonder that one of the many explorers who walked over the surface out-cropplngs before 188.3 did not realize what lay beneath. B’ith one possible exception no other discovery of metal or mineral wealth In Australia has a more romantic attachment. On the crest of the ridge or broken hill from which the mines were named and which long since has disappeared. huge bowlders of manganic iron challenged the passerby not to lie attracted by their shining surfaces, polished bright by the feet of thousands of kangaroos, which made the range

By Jimmy it's so!

cant be copied. Chesterfield CIGARETTES Hava yoa Men the net* AIR - TIGHT tine of SOT Liggbtt & Mybej Tobacco Cos. ,

their home. For years a shepherd camped nightly upon a bed of silver worth a king's ransom. Accidentally he found samples of lead ore which in the 1 hands of an assayer revealed traces of silver. ORIGINAL OWNERS MADE MILLIONAIRES. But the range lay 200 miles from a railroad and 150 miles from a road of any kind, the water supply was negligible and the men who staked it out, poor men unable to work it themselves, were turred down in their efforts to dispose of tie holdings for $1,500. The condition under which they could retain possession under the mineral laws was that they do a certain amound of work upon the claims and somehow they stuck it out, put down a couple of shafts and ran crosscuts without making a find that attracted any attention. But they were hopeful and managed to sell a few shares 1 and continue the work. And ore day J they came across the real lode, "abulj ously rich, and the original owners who | held on to the shares only because they could not be sold became millionaires. I B’hat must have been the feelings of | those Ajjstrlian and English mining men, ! who refused to touch the proposition | when a sixteenth share could have been ! bought for $3,000! How they must have | raged when the ntock markets of Auai tralia and London went crazy over the I trading Broken Hill shares and the six- | teenth which a few months before could I have been bought for $3,000 was quoted |at $7,000,000! The sanity of the owners j who hau been compelled to hold on to j the mine must have been sorely taxed by | their good fortune. Most of them are dead, but the mines are going strong—except when, as for two years, the miuS ers were on strike. j Before the war the Broken Hill mines ! produced a quarter of the world's lead i and a sixteenth of the world's silver in ; °ne year, not bail for a country which ! explorers dubbed the worst in the world. ■ Broken Hill has done more, however. It I has developed new processes and treat- ! tnents for ores, it has been the training j ground for world-famous mining en- ; gineers and metallurgists. B’e Americans i may take a small share of the Australian ! pride in Broken Hill, because it was American mining experts who first dedeveloped them after the lode was found. ' Today Broken Hill is as rich as ever, and will again be worked to full capacity when the world has settled down definitely from its spree of high living | and big wages. f ‘‘Australia is a whale of a country and has been only scratched,’* says Mr. Boyce. In his article next week he will give the facts on Australia’s wheat production and show that while the mere fringe of the continent has been exploited and a mere fraction of its area cultivated, yet it probably produces more actual wealth from the soil per head of population than any other country on the globe. MINISTER ASKS SALARY CUT. WORCESTER, Mm, July 28.—The Rev. Ellsworth W. Phillips, pastor of the | Memorial Church, Summer street, has re- i ' quested a salary reduction. The Rev. Mr. Phillips declared that he ! has noted that members of his parish j have been compelled to accept wage cuts ! I of from 10 to 20 per cent and therefore i ; he believes It is only fair for him to [ Phillips. “My work during the summer i i stand by his congregation. “I believe in a fair day's pay for a fair I day's work,” declared the Rev. Mr. ; ; months is much easier than during the ] winter months.”

FIRST chance you get prove it! Prove it to yourself—that Chesterfields do deliver anew kind of cigarette enjoyment something besides a delicious new taste —someth.ng besides a more pleasing aroma something you never did experience in any other cigarette —an enjoyment so entirely complete that only ONE word describes it “SATISFY.” Yes, sir, Chesterfields “satisfy” as no other cigarette ever has. It’s in the blend Turkish, Burley and other top-grade homegrown tobaccos blended as never before. A great blend! And it can't be copied. cant be copied

PRINCE EITEL’S ‘RIGHTS’ SHORN Hohenzollem House Rules N<j Longer Effective. BERLIN, July 28—One mo 1 of the prerogatives of the fallen Hohenzollerna has been thrown into tho discard. The Hohenzoliern “house laws" can* not ba taken Into account by the Germaa courts, it has been decided by a Dls trict Court in Potsdam, which ordered Prince Eitel Frederick, one of the for* mer Kaiser's sons, to deliver little Prineq Franz Joseph to the latter’s mother, who is the widow of Prince Joachim, another of the former Emperor's sons Prince Eitel assumed the custody of Prince Franz when Joachim committed suicide in Potsdam, basing Ms action on the Hohenzollem house laws. He claimed as he was the ranking member of the family in Germany he now was entitled to administer those laws, and that the young Prince, therefore, should remain under his care. The court, however, thought different in these times of a republican government. and imposed the costs of the actios, on him.

CORNS Lift Off with Finger** Doesn't hurt a bit! Drop a little “Freezoue” on an aching corn, instantly that com stops hurting, then shortly you lift it right off with fingers. Truly! Your druggist sells a tiuy bottle of “Freezone” for a few cents, sufficient to remove every hard corn, soft corn, or com between the toes, and the calluses, without soreness or irritation.—Advertisement.

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