Indianapolis Times, Volume 34, Number 96, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 September 1921 — Page 3

UNIONS PLAN' PARADE HERE ! ON LABOR DAY Addresses Will Be Given at Tomlinson Hall in the Afternoon. HOLD DANCE IN EVENING A parade in the morning, followed by | addresses in Tomlinson Ilall by John P. Frey, editor of the official journal of the International Holders* Union, and Frank T. Hawley, former labor commissioner, and a dance in the evening in Tomlinson Hull, are the features of the program of the Marion County Labor Day committee for the celebration of Labor Day next | Monday. The parade, which will form at NortJ Meridian and St. Clair streets, will start at 9 o’clock in the morning, marching south in Meridian to Monument place, to | the right in Monument place to Washington, west in Washington to Senate ave- j nue, countermarch In Washington to | New Jersey street, countermarch in Wash- I lngton to Alabama street, north in Ala . batn.a to Market street, west in Market into Tomliuson Hall, where the addresses by Mr. Frey and Mr. Hawley will then be delivered. C. G. MeCalllster will be graud marshal for the parade; Albert Ginsberg, assistant grand marshal, and Wayne Williams, Clem Hubble, W. McMacken, Ralph Biddy and Paul Kesterson, bicycle aids. The parade will consist of seven divisions and will form as follows: FIRST DIVISION. Earl II Irk man. Commanding. Forms on Meridian street at St. Clair. Band. Typographical Union No. t. Typographical Union No. 14. Mailers’ Union No. 10. Electrotypers’ Union No. .10. Stereotypers’ Union No. 38. Photo-Engravers’ Union No. 11. Band. Pressmen's Union No. 17. Pressmen's Union No. 37. Press Assistants’ Union No. 39. Bookbinders' and Bindery Girls No. 53. Leather Workers Union No. 35. Garment Workers Union No. 127. Garment Cutters No. 118. Letter Carriers No. 39. Tostal Clerks No. 130. Band. Theatrical Joint Conference Stage Employes No. 30. Moving Ticture Machine Operators No. 194. Rill Posters No. 7. Musicians No. 3. SECOND DIVISION. H. E. Goodman. Commanding. Forms ou West North Street, lacing Meridian. Band. Railway Carmen No. CO. Railway Carmen No. 75. Railway Carmen No. 95. Railway Carmen No. 615. Railway Carmen No. 586. Railway Carmen No. 647. Railway Carmen No. 830. Railway Carmen No. 1070. Railway Carmen No. 1188. Railway Carmen Helpers No. 2139. Switchmen's Union No. 146. Freight Handlers’ Union. Railway Clerks No. 51. Railway Clerks No. 81. THIRD DIVISION. Patrick Maloney, Commanding. Forms ou East North Street, Facing Meridian. Band. Sheet Metal Workers Union No. 449. Sheet Metal Workers Union No. 348. Boiler Makers Union No. 10. Boiler Makers Union No. _sl. Blacksmiths Union No. 145. Blacksmiths Union No. 261. Storeroom Workers Union. Electrical Workers Union No. 784. Maintenance of Way No. 914. Maintenance of Way No. 1241. FOURTH DIVISION. Wm. E. Holmes. Commanding. Forms on East Michigan street, Facing Meridian. Band. Iron Workers Union No. 22. Shop Men Iron Workers No. 335. Plumbers Union No. 73. Sheet Metal Workers Union No. 41. Bricklayers Union No. 3. Hoisting Engineers No. 103. Stationary Engineers No. 51. U. A. Stenmfitfers No. 440. Band. Painters Union No. 47. Paper Hangers Union No. 912. Sign Painters Union No. 1012. FIFTH DIVISION. 11. B. Smith. Commanding. Forms on West Michigan street, facing Meridian. Ba nd. Carpenters Union No. 75. Carpenters Union No. 69. Furniture Workers No. 524. s Hardwood Floor Layers. Band. Hod Carriers Union No. 120. Asbestos Workers No. 118. Cement Finishers Union. Plasters Union. Wood and Metal Lathers Union. Roofers Union. Elevator Constructors Union. Electrical Workers No. 481. SIXTH DIVISION. H. I- Wright. Commanding. Forms on West Vermont street. Facing Meridian. Band. Holders' Union No. 36 Holders' Union No 17 Mulders’ Apprentices Foundry Employees Metal Polishers No. 171 Stove Mounters' Union No Partem Makers’ Association Tailors' Union No. 157. Barbers’ Union No. 247. Sawsmiths' Union No. 1. Cereal Beverage and Soft Drink Workers No. 150. Cigarmakers' Union No. 33. Boot and Shoe Workers’ Union. Broom and Whisk Broom Makers No. 17. Stenographers and Bookkeepers No. 11497. Retail Clerks No. 1. SEVENTH DIVISION. William Peacock. Commending. Forms on East Vermont street. Facing Meridian. Band. Machinists’ No. 161. Machinists' No. 511. - Machinists’ Helpers No. 910. ~ Drop Forgers' Union No. 553. Btret Car Men No. S4o. Milk Wagon Drivers' Union No. 242. Teamsters’ Union No. 240. Chauffeurs. Bakery Wagon Drivers' No. 250. Electrical Workers No. 368. Glass Bottle Blowers No. 133. Meat Cutters and Butcher Workmen. Bakers' Union No. 18.

Kolyma River Viewed by American Trades JUN'EAC, Alaska. Sort 1— Points more than 500 miles np the Kolyma Hirer or northern Siberia, which ha'd not been visited by traders for fonr years, were reached last rummer by a party ot American traders, headed by Capt. S. K Gudmundson, master of the trading schooner Polar Bear, according to word received here. The Bear left Nome, Alaska, June ITT, I*2o. sailed around the Siberian coast and East Cape into the Arctic and arrived at the month of the Kolyma Aug. 4. The schooner was worked up the river 120 miles and anchored while the traders took a small boat 3SO miles farther up. "We were still 400 miles from the head •Hsf the river,” Capt. Gudmundson said in Writing of his trip to a Juneau friend. "We found trading very good, as no boat had visited that vicinity in four years, and we soon disposed of our wares and loaded up with the goods of the country. Last winter the Polar Bear and Its company was frozen In at the mouth of the Kolyma, having failed In an attempt to reach Nome before the ice came.

Qre at pearling Qrounds

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Pearl shell Is gathered by divers operating frojn small craft known us luggers. Tile pearl fisheries of the northwest coast of Australia, for n distance, of 800 miles, furnish at least half the world’s supply of shell. A lugger Is f about fifteen tons burden and is manned by seven men, one of whom is white man to act as opener of the shell In the search for pearls. The latest figures show about two hundred and forty luggers engaged off Northwest Australia and 3,000 divers, mostly Asiatics. The photograph shows pearl shell being unloaded on the beach at Broome, Northwest Australia.

Broome, northwestern ausTKALLA.—“How long is the coastline of Western Australia?’’ I asked an enthusiast from that state who was telling me about it. “I'm blest if I know,” he admitted, so X set to work to dig it out for myself. Having looked up the books on Western Australia and asked the question a dozen or more times I am convinced that the only way the correct answer can be obtained is to go and measure it. In a British admiralty chart, that Bible of those who go down to the sea in ships, I found a rather significant warning. It was to the effect that masters of vessels should be careful when navigating the northwest coast because “it has not as yet been surveyed or charted.” It struck me there must be a wonderful country behind -this unsurveyed and uncharted coastline. I find that those venturesome explorers who have traversed the northwest have brought back reports that point to it as some day being one I of the most valuable assets of the state, ' that day apparently being far distant I still, because only when people settle ! there in large numbers will It become | productive. Not even along the western coast, ; before you round Northwest Cape and ■■ pass through the Dampier Islands to the true northwest coast, has the settler : yet made a large stand. Yet that land j is as rich as one can ask, prori led common sense is used in tilling It. Take the case of one man who lives near Carnavon, near where the Gascoyne River empties into Sharks Bay. The Gascoyne is a surprising river. The first white men who visited it reported its bed as dry and sandy. Later explorers did the same thing. Then someone discovered that while its bed might be dry, beneath it the river was flowing merrily along and that for at least a hundred miles back from its mouth this was true. What more easy to do than was done by this man I mentioned. He bored into the ground and struck water, great quantities of it, at a depth of twentyfour feet. He sank other wells and today gasoline engines and windmills are pouring upon bis acres a money-pro-ducing flood. He found that 200 pounds of superphosphate and a half ton of lime to the acre was all the fertilizer need* 1 -s farm produces alfalfa that yields six crops a year, fruits and vegetables, and he ba9 a nice income and mony in the bank. STILL FEW WHITES HAVE SEEN REGION. What he did to blaze the way others have done, too, yet between the Murchison River and the Ord River In the far northwest and In the Kimberley gold mine district, a wide expanse of territory more than a thousand miles long and extending back 20(1 miles (from the coast there are today scarcely 7,000 white persons. There Rre more than twenty rivers of varying sizes in this district and they drain a coluntry that is rich with the productive red soil that is typical of all Australia. Quite different from "the miserable country” that Dampier found when he discovered it. Like many others who followed him that adventurer reported things as he saw them without taking Into consideration the fact that what may have been true during the summer when he was there was not necessarily true all of the time. There are mineral riches In the North west, too- iron and silver and lead and copper, which are In the ground in paying quantities once a way is provided to get it out of the country. Between Derby and Wyndham. small towns on the coast 527 sea miles apart and 400 miles from each other as the crow flies, there is believed to be some bay or harbor v hieh can be developed into a port from i which all the wealth of the Northwest can be shipped. What finds Its way to the two ports already mentioned goes out almost without exception in small vessels to Singapore, India, and from there to Europe. Freemantie, the one big port that Western Australia boasts, is n thousand miles away. That is why an exploring party has been ordered by the Western Australian government to seek for anew port. The Northwest has a regular rainy season and regular rainfall and already It has been demonstrated that the land will produce almost anything that is planted and that sheep and long-horned cattle, the latter now being the principal export, can bo raised there. When Western Australia gets the population she will do things. There is no more romantic spot in Australia than Ninety Mile Beach, on the northwest coast, the place where a great part of the world’s supply of pearl shell Is gathered. Broome Is the port. Its small population is more suggestive of Asia than of a European nation, for the

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Left—From December to March the pearl fishing boats usually are laid up to avoid the unnecessary risk of •‘willy willies,” or hurricanes, which toss the light luggers around like corks. However, wireless and weather reports now play a big part in the pearl fishing industry and seldom is the fleet caught out in a storm with the damage and loss of life of other years. The tide a)so has

West by Southwest New Zealand, Australia and South Sea Islands BY W. D. BOYCE. Organizer and Loader of the Old Mexican Research and African Big Game Expeditions, author of “Illustrated South America,” “United States Colonies and Dependencies’’ and “The First Americans—Our Indians of Yesterday and Today.”

white man does not make a good diver. He gets aches and pains and surfers greatly under water and usually a few months is enough to convince him that he must quit. That is why the Filipinos, the Malays and the Japanese outnumber tue whites and of them all the Japanese divers are the best. The p“arl industry at Broome is worth between *1,500,030 and $2,000,000 a year to the commonwealth. If Australia ever enforces her “White Australia” policy to the full nround Broome, the pearl industry is going to have a setbacK for a while. Today it is customary to let the off-color races, which are so indispensible to the indnsary, have a pretty free sway around Broome and that is why there so often are racial riots there with some bloodshed. In the past it. has been the custom to recruit colored divers around Singapore and bring them to Broome under , three years' contract at about $7 J a month with a bonus on each ton of ! pearl shell brought up. A good diver

I A pearl valued at 830,000 was found off Broome lighthouse In what is known as a blister of mother-of-pearl. Opening, paring and extvnilning Is tedious work end, so far hs j blisters are concerned, is fruitless i more often thou not. The shell ' cleaner who had this job was dlsf cou raced by his curly efforts and wanted to quit. Continuing, however, ha was rewarded by finding a pearl of surprising size and value. The photograph shows a diver going down off Broome to pick up pearl shell. and consistent worker can make from $750 to SI,OOO a year working in water of from twenty-two to twenty-three fathoms in depth. Thirty-five years ago when naked blacks were the only divers there they used to work In deeper water, but the death rate among those who went down was so high that today the Olivers stick to the ’osier depth, nltho much pearl shell is to be found farther out. If some way can ba found to bring r it to tho surface in quantities tho pearling Industry will go ou a boom. Off the coast are numerous islands around which the waters abound in pearl shell. It has been suggested that when the “White Australia” policy compels the keeping off of colored divers tho lug- ! gers might go to Java, re register as Dutch shipping and work the coast and , the islands on the sly. Australia would i have to keep several men of war in tho I northwest to keep them away. ! WHITES AND JAPS ; MAKE DOUBLE TOWN. | Broome is in reality a double town. ; One section of it is white and has at best but a few hundred people. The other section is a bit of Japan transplanted. There the visitor will find everything typically Japanese and it is the Japanese shopkeepers who really get the money which the pearlers spend. The Jnpanese even go bo far as to send to their native land for the clothing which they wear. The white men who live around there usually act as checkers on the divers and I have no doubt that this has re-

to be taken into consideration. At Broome, it rises and falls more than thirty feet and often vessels are left high and dry for a time. The photograph is of a camp In the pearling districts The luggers are put up and the small boats which often can be used in shallow water, are covered up for the stormy season. Bight—. Settlers In the tropical northern territory (Australia s only territory) have two pests to contend with—ants and 11} ing insects. They foil the former by building their homes on stilts and Inserting tin between the piling and the floor of the house. Insects are kept out and the houses kept cool by making sides out of reeds native to the country, fastened to light l wood frames. Koofs, as elsewhere in Australia, are of corrugated iron, and yon will And the inevitable water tank of the same material.

INDIANA DAILY TIMES, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 1921.

I suited in a greater number of pearls oeing reported. At certain seasons of the year “willy willies,” or tropical hurricanes, wreak great havoc among the fishing flepfs, and in one memorable storm thirty luggers went down with all hands. East of western Australia and between if. snd the great state of Queensland lies the northern territory, a vast tract of 523,620 square miles with a white population of less than 2,500. It lies between 11 and 26 degrees south of the equator and not much more is known of it today than was known in 1870 when south Australia built a telegraph line between Adelaide and Port Darwin, capital of the territory and the only town of any size which It boasts. That telegraph Hue, connecting at For; Darwin with the cable to Java and thence to Europe, is the real reason for the existence of Fort Darwin. In 1825 the British government established a military post on Melville Island, fifteen miles north of where Darwin now stands, but the black natives proved so troublesome that the post was removed to the mainland. At that time and until 1863 the state of New South Wales, tie first Australian state, held title to Northern Territory. Then the British government annexed the territory to the iitate of South Australia with the provision that it might be tuken away at any time, a provision that never was enforced. In 1900, when the commonwealth of Australia was formed. South Australia voluntarily gave up the territory and Its oue north and south railway line to the federal government on condition that the debt incurred on behalf of the territory be taken over and the railway line lie extended to Port Darwin. Talk of riulldlng the line is being revived now, twenty one years after the pledge was given. However, it will be many years before tt will be built. DATES BACK PRIOR TO W HITE AUSTRALIA. in the days when South Australia had the territory, when each colony made its own laws and had no ties with other colonies, a law was passed permitting the importation of yellow and black labor into the territory because it had been found impossible to get white men in any great numbers to labor in the tropics. Several hundred Chinese thus came in and some of them are still there. Hut the “White Australia" policy stopped that and today Northern Territory remains a Taat, Httie known, uncharted region with largo tracts of virgin territory which never have been explored- a land of great distances, silent and lone. Os its 333,116,800 acres not a thousand are under cultivation. Within its three straight sides (1 970 miles long) are forests, hills and plains and rich lands watered by good rivers which are eminently suited to pastoral purposes. So far that Is the only real industry which has been developed and at Port Darwin there are freezing works which no doubt are the forerunners of many more to come In the future. The native black boy is a good rattle herder. There is one struggling railway line, running 145 miles between Port Darwin and Pine Creek, where once It was believed minerals in great quantities were to be found. A little locomotive with two cars drags over tbs rusty rails twice a week , Port Darwin itself Is a typically sleepy tropical town. In the Asiatic quarter there are 600 people and an equal number are iu the European quarter, of whom 100 are women. For 1,500 miles on either side of Darwin along the coast there is not so much as a village. Its only callers by soa are a few trading vessels and poHrling luggers from the Torres Straits. It Is a lonely place where a few officials and the necessary storekeepers are hold-' Ing on to things against the day when Australia can put tho territory to some use. And what is the land good for. you may well ask. It Is good for anything which the tropical part of Queensland, its neighbor on th east, is good for. Like Northern Queensland, It will produce all of the fruits and vegetables of the tropics, it will grow rice and sugarcane, rubber, cotton and tobacco. All of these things have been tried and have proved successful. It is likely that for many years to come Northern Territory, however, will remain a pastoral country, a country with vast possibilities, but which cannot be opened up until other States, already well on the way to prosperity, have hail their chance at the settlor first. Next week Mr. Boyce takes his readers south, to Adelaide, capital of the State of South Australia. Everybody will enjoy visiting this picturesque city of interesting people.

LAWYERS SAY AMENDMENT 8 IS NECESSARY State Attorneys Claim It Would Safeguard Rights. URGE ITS ADOPTION

Arguments in favor of the proposed amendment to the State constitution ! which would give the Legislature pawer to fix the qualifications of lawyers were advanced today by a committee organized for the purpose of bringing about the adoption of the amendment. The State committee is composed of R. S. Williams, S. C. Cleland and E. D. Sturgis, and the headquarters la at Bloomington. The committee made public statements from various persons as follows: Charles M. Nelzer, Attorney, Fort j Wayne—“ The provision relating to qualifications to practice law, as contained in our present constitution. Is very unfortunate, both from a viewpoint of the lawyer, and the State. The present requirement that the applicant must he of good moral character is very essential, but there are other requirements which should be Imposed, but cannot be imposed under our present constitution. “We boast that wo are a Nation of written laws; that our liberties and obligations are defined by written laws; that this is the foundation and basis of our free institutions, and, In a sense, distinguishes us from other systems of government. The simplest course of reasoning Impels the conclusion that those who seek to teach and interpret our laws should be Intellectually trained for that purpose.” Burton B. Barry, Judge of the Twentyllrst Judicial Circuit, Fowler—" The proposed amendment to our State constitution giving tho General Assembly the power to prescribe qualifications of applicants for the practice of law, ought by all means to be approved by the people of the* State. “The need of an enlightened, educated and trained bar increases eacy year. The necessity of trained lawyers, is as great as that for trained physicians and sur j geons. An Ignorant, unqualified lawyer is as great a menace in a community, as an ignorant, untrained physician or surgeon. The cost of this ignorance, if It exists, i must fall upon the public.” John S. McFadden, Attorney, Rockville—" Professional men all should be i required by examination to prove they I are qualified before being lieens-1 to prac tice. No more reason exists for a physician, a dentist, a veterniary surgeon to taka an examination than for a lawyer Indiana stands oukalone ns the only State In the union which permits any citizen to practice law upon showing a good moral character only. “Education is essential in the law, not only for the good of the profession, but for the protection of its clientage and their persona! and property rights. It does not follow that when qualifications are required that a law school education will be required; but it will follow that a man who holds himself out as engaged in the practice of the law will be required to have at least a good fundamental knowledge of the law and be in some degree competent to advise a9 to correct principles of the law. “4 legal education should be required and the profession should not have in Us membership men who do not possess suffleent legal knowledge to ba safe counsellors and atlrlsors. Adam E. Wise, Attorney, Plymouth—- “ There can be no good reason advanced why the constitution of the State of Indiana should not be amended, fixing qualifications for admission to the bar. “Since qualifications make toward efficiency, there can be no good reason advanced why tho constitution should not be amended. The more proficient an applicant is in the law, the greater will be his chances to become a successful practitioner in the law.” Estal G. Blelby, Attorney, Lawrenceburg—“l earnestly believe it to be the. duty, as well as to the best interests of taxpayers, aud especially to litigants, to vote ‘Y'es’ on Amendment 8, authorizing the General Assembly to provide for qualifications of persons admitted to practice law in the State of Indiana.”

TRIED TO WISH ANOTHER KIND OF LICENSE ON HIM it \ ,r as a General Case of Misunderstanding All Around. An absent voter’s application or a ballot for the* constitutional amendment election Sept, 0, nearly wrecked the fiituro happiness of Charles William Overton, a negro butcher, when he appeared nt the county clerk s office In pursuit o fa marriage license. Miss Margaret Mahoney, a deputy clerk, understood Overton to ask for an absent voters application. Overton looked over tho application and filled out tlia paper, but failed to aeo what It had to do about getting married. Flndiug no place for the name of his prospective wife, Overton placed her name on the application. ll® then was directed to see lieputy Clerk A. C. Bogemior in the rear room. “I have moved to 2158 Highland Place,” said Overton. “Then you vote at your new place?” said Sogemier. Overton looked puzzled, still holding on to the application. “You intend to be absent from the city next Tueg'lay?" asked the deputy clerk. ‘‘Xo, boss, I am goln’ to be right here,” answered Ovtron. The plot deepened as Sogemier attempted to explain that to vote on an absent voter’s ballot the voter had to make application for the reason of being absent. “Say, boss, I done understand all ’bout tliis voting business, but what has this all got to do ’bout gettln’ married?” asked Overton. Then it dawned upon Sogemier that Overton had received the wrong tpplicatiou i.■ • ■'V.-T?— \ Adler-i-ka Again! “I had stomach and bowel trouble for three years and found no relief until I tried Adler-l-ka. Now I sleep good at night, have a good appetite ai.d good digestion and feel like anew man." (Signed) Neal Taylor. Adler-l-ka acts on BOTH upper and lower bowel, removing foul matter which poisoned stomach. Brings out all gases, relieving pressure on heart and other organs. EXCELLENT for gas on the stomach or sour stomach. Removes a surprising amount of foul, decaying matter which you rover thought was In your system and which nothing else can dislodge. Tends to CURE constltuatlou and prevent appendicitis. Adler-l-ka surprises those who have used only ordinarystomach remedies. H. J. Huder, druggist, j Wash, and Ponn. Sts.—Advertisement.

REPAIR BRIDGE ON PARK ROUTE Concrete Approaches to Be Installed by State. The bridge department of the Slate highway commission is preparing plans and specifications to repair an old covered bridge in Farke County on State road No. 9, the Indianapolis to Chicago route via Rockville and Turkey liun State park. This bridge spans Sugar Creek at the foot of a steep hill, aand is only a short distance from the “narrows,” where Salmon Lusk, the first white settley of the region and the former owner of what is now Turkey Run State Park, built a flour mill. The old I.usk home, situated

THE GREAT MOMENT By ELINOR GLYNN, Author of Three Weeks Will Visualize at LOEW'S STATE THEATRE SUNDAY SEPT. 4th WITH GLORIA SWANSON And An All-Star Cast Including MILTON SILLS

riMniini|i"i|nimim| in }|[jiin TT nrnii*pnniTnrjifriintrrf imc- —■ ” mill IfrTMffP How Many Objects in the Picture Start With the Letter “R”? 1 if (( The abova picture contains a number of objects beginning with the letter “R.” Take a good look at the picture IM jB M and you will find all kinds of things whose names begin with the letter “R." Nothing is hidden. You don’t even f§S II M need to turn tho picture upside down. Make a list of all the objects you can see and write them down. The gp *3 answer having the largest and nearest correct list of words will be awarded first prize ; second best, second prize, etc. §§§ & -S THFSF RITT COSTS NOTHING TO TR\ yj IXI f, IV > Sic hl LLN This picture puzzle game is part of our publicity plan to set more people ac- |Srjsi*i 1. Any pemon reaiding outside of St. Paul who quainted with the Minnesota Fountain Pro. Thousands o? folks are using £1 U not an employee, or relative of any employee of this pen every day. Now as school approaches, jour boy or girl will need a the Minnesota Pen Cos., may submit an answer. food fountain pen. Why not f*t them a Minnesota? Too and tho whole ya ; *3 It coats nothing to try family will have loads of fun working out the p.cture puaale, and If Tour ip&s! *JB}3 I. All answers must be mailed by Sept 24th. answer Is awarded first priw. well, you know better than anyone else what fai I , >"u could do with a thousand dollars. £§£? ffjtt’l S. Answers should be written on one side of the pnper only, and numbered 1, 2. 3, etc. Writs It ATT 14 T TVT 17*0 ArP 4 your full name and -address on each page in the |b/I I upper light hand comer. If you deaire to write XvJLJLJL NA. w JL-ikJ v/ X XjL yens tu l U o^ r wdrV!n!f P to*the Sl i£iitsh dictionary The Eay Writing Fountain Pen fill fm | will be counted. l)o not use obsolete words. Use a hettnr *n than tha t* . VffN WE Jgf £. Ut ,hro V- * nd ,7* ll A* the reasonable price we are selling * “ ulnot bt counMd - use it. you will never be without it TV* patented locking device on the trains Ifffij M 6 Word* of the me aneliine am h. nniv I '’ ,rer *• * n feature, and yon will appreciate the easy stew of the ink. Os JflK H mi f ever, any part of the object may also be named. Ur'DP TO UATI7 rrVN tittat Sm H fil ft. Do not use compound words, or any word nJulvJu lo JtliJW X\y W IJN tamed by the combination of two or more com- Get the whole family together tonight, and aee who can find the most -B“ B£ 3 {?•“ '*- ler * * aci * word hi iUeL Wordi. Theti after you hare found all the words cnd your lilt to u. If your 9I) H ** r • uject. answer is awarded first arize and you bare not purchased a Minnesota Town- Wsl Pon ' you . w4H win ♦ 2O 00 ' but ls * would kike to win more than $30.00. f|l toTnirtum ;irmi^n w< Lf” maklre **“ Wkwtof big special offer during our big booster and ad- SB B i , v U , tU, „, H v al 5* vcrU ing campaign to everybody who purchases a Minnesota Four.telE Pen. 1 I sty It’ “I* 1 and- ls r° ar list of "B” Word* Is awarded flrst prize by the Judges and you have Ply* wr i" ilfhf' al^ ri * upon deciding die w-nners. purchesed a JS.*O Vflnneaota Poimtaln Pen during this campaign, you will 8313 h *. e&nd-datos mu- <■ operate In answering toe win *300.90; 2nd prize *160.00. etc. W ipuzzle, but only one prize will be awarded to any Better stilL If vour list of Wn-ds l. v_ ev. . Eflßj to an b on r of' any 1 sror d' a u tilde of toe^famllj 0 where h * T * p ? rrt i“* d a *' 00 Minnesota Fountain Pen' during this you Ifffra too o“more Wtoktng ’**•" tod rec^i C?? MoK ** w ot *'■*****. TO*, gpl 9. In toe event of Uea. toe full amount of toe 1 C *“‘ 8 Word coflt °* L 10. Three well-known Lusluess men having no Mail Your List and Remittance Early connection with toe Minnesota Pen Cos., will Judge The earlier you mall your list of "B" Words and remittance for the pen the Eg*® the answers irubmUt*d and award t.*e prises. They better. When sending money, vw postofflse money order, bank draft, or per- fr* will U3 Wabater s New International dictionary §onal check when convenient. If you send currency, it ia beat and aafeat to SKiS! E as thfcr reference. Participants fisres u> aiwpt *cnd by registered mail. All orders promptly filled, and mailed by ineurad E&fpl Uue decision of tho Judges as final and conclusive. parcel post. > xe up your mind to win the $1,000.00. T<m haw a* good an Ilia following men have agreed to act as Judge* of opportunity as anyone. Start in now! this unique competition: Bank, st pa*™ 8 ' c * iWiC Produc * Be Sure to State Style of Pen Wanted fep f !>• O. Shephcred, Treasurer Oreve Adv. Agency. i? 1 ® MI nrol • t # * St Hecktoth, Firmer. Hudson Bu.dc St Paul ‘ THE PRIZES if < IS Nn a 11. All answers will receive the same consider- m f n -T te bofftiul Xi Ui A A^AAJAJkX ISI tion regardless of whether or not an order for a tHo „ Tr T# M fejf; Minnesota Fountain P*mi has been eeut In. *?>!• If no If one $3.00 If one $5.00 lil|| to^AeVr^uTr w££ II jFf £.■£,°^jrrcS n Uto C ° I Sch^.“SfiT Ist Prize_s2o.oo $300.00 $1,000.00 111 , fAi n, “ u irououlu Pea - to! 2nd Prize..- 10.00 150.00 500.00 FT urTV about two-thirda 3rd Prize 5.00 75.00 250.00 Iff X ’’ f GUARANTEE—We guarantee toe Minnesota Fountain the actual size. In p,;,_ r nn en nn vornn Ir**! \ / Ven to be perfectly .atisfactory. If you are not satte- r d?r in g state FrlZe— 5.00 50.00 125.00 | \/ led wheu it arrives we will ezchange it for one that whether you wish sth Prize.— 5.00 30.00 75.00 \l/ \ / a satisfactory. Positively no money refunded after ane - medium or R , p . _ * \ / u prize winners are announced. stub jxKnt, %>tn rHIC— o.QO 20.00 50.00 W MINNESOTA PEN CO SS SS SS • e w sVWn Afl A 9th Prize... 2.00 10.00 20.00 10th to 15th 2.00 10,00 20.00

on a steep bluff overlooking the bridge and wonderful panorama thereabouts, serve to make this section one of the primitive scenic spots in Indiana. Before the highway department took over this road someone engaged in road and bridge work in Parke County lowered the end of the bridge, probably to ease the approach. Surface water from nearby hills collected because of insufficient drainage and has caused the south end to begin to rot away. Plans being made by William J. Titus, department engineer, call for the bridge to be raised to its former level, new concrete approaches and an improved drainage system that will prevent collection of surface water. The bridge has a ninety-foot span. Cot sidering it is at least threequarters of a century old, it is in a remarkable statq of preservation, in the opinion of Mr. Titus.

Being Policewoman’s Husband Is Tough Job BIRMINGHAM, Ala., Sept. I.— TIM role of a policewoman's husband isn’t na easy one, as the hu.3band of Mrs. Hulda Newsome, Birmingham’s only feminina officer, can testify. Newsome was unable to come to polica court as a witness when R. L. Fayns and Joe Armstrong, arrested by his wife-,-appeared to face charges of disorderly, conduct, resisting an officer and 'driving? a car while intoxicated. Testimony showed that Mrs. Newsomd attempted to arrest the men and her husband got beaten up trying to assist her. A policeman came to the policewoman's assistance and helped to take the pair to jail.

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