Indianapolis Times, Volume 34, Number 226, Indianapolis, Marion County, 31 January 1922 — Page 12

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We Will Help You to Save Safely Jflctrbtr &atomg?3 cnD Crust Company TWO HELD FOR PETITJLARCENY Women* Accused of Shoplifting, Taken by Detectives. Two women accused of being shoplifters were arrested yesterday by QuigleyHyland agency operatives and are charged with petit larceny. Ono of the women, who gave her name as Mrs. Edna Halcomb, 37, 1649 North Alabama street, was taken In custody after the detectives said she had taken a beaded girdle vauled at 95 cents. The other woman gave her name as Mrs. Anna Johnson, 26, 920 High street. She said she had been here only about three weeks, having come from New Jersey. She was arrested after a pursuit down Washington street in which she left a trail of discarded articles which, the detectives say, we re stolen. The loot, the officers said, consisted mainly of ■doilies. SERVICES FOR AGED DENTIST Dr. Oscar F. Britton Will Be Buried Wednesday. Funeral services for Dr. Oscar F. Britton, S4, who died Monday from pneumonia at his honA\ 2022 North Meridian street, will be held at the residence Wednesday afternoon. Both funeral and burial In Crown Hill will be private. Dr. Britton practiced dentistry at 601 Hume-Mansur Building until early last week when his fatal illness developed. He wa sborn on a farm near Crawfordsville and part of his early education was obtained at Waveland Academy. He moved to Champaign, 111., In 1882 and two years later went to California for two years' service as a special examiner for the pension -bureau. Coming to Indianapolis in ISB4 Dr. Britton started his dentistry practice. Dr. Britton was a prominent trapshooter, having been active In the Indiana Trapshooters’ Society and the Indianapolis. Gun Club. The widow and one son Charles O. Britton, local attorney, survive, WILLIE CAREY ARRESTED AGAIN Damaged Auto Leads to Investigation and Charge. Once again Willie Carey has been arrested, this time on a charge of operating a motor vehicle while under the Influence of liquor. The police received a call shortly before midnight last night from 224 Gelscndorff si reet saying that three men had pushed Willie Carey’s automobile up the street and had cut the tires to pieces. Police who investigated found Carey, Herbert Francen, 224 Geisendorff street and James Maley, 917 Leuiel street working over the machine which looked as If it had been In a smash-up. All three were arrested, Carey on the charge stated above and the other two for drunkenness and vagrancy. SUFFERS BURNS FOR WIFE’S SAKE Thompson Fears Alarm Would Excite Sick Mate.

Rather tha nalarm his wife, who was confined to her bed with Illness, Ray Thompson suffered severe burns to his hands In extinguishing a fire In their home at 5020 University avenue, yesterday. Thompson, who works at night, was aroused from sleep by his wife’s call that she smelled smoke yesterday afternoon. On investigation he found the kitchen had caught fire from an oil heater. Fearing the arrival of the fire department would alarm his wife, Thompson attacked the fire single-handed and extinguished It after about $225 damage had been done. Tha loss Is covered by insurance. Goes East to Boost Rail Meeting Here Robert I. Todd, president of the Indianapolis Street Railway Company, left today for Boston where he will be the guest tomorrow night of the New England Street Railway Club. Mr. Todd • formerly headed a New England Company, the l'rovidence Street Railway Company. He will speak n the development of traction systems In the Middle West and will also boost the meeting In Indianapolis, Feb. 28, of the American Street Railway Association of which he is president. Fireman Injured When TankJSxplodes Henry Wbitlnger, a member of pumper company No. 2, Roosevelt avenue and Sixteenth street, was severely injuQpd yesterday afternoon when a three gallon hand chemical tank he was operating exploded while he was on the roof of a house at 1102 Lewis street. The force of the explosion knocked him from the roof. Maurice <2ombs, substitute fireman of the same company, was slightly injured by the explosion. Defective chemical apparatus Is believed to have been the cause of the accident. Attacked, Drugged, Placed on Rails MT. CLEMENS, Mich., Jan. 31.—Helen Sthovan, pretty young Detroit girl, was in a critical condition in a hospital here today after being drugged, attacked aud placed on an interurban railroad track in front of a speeding ear. The motormnn jammed on the brakes and brought the car to a grinding stop on the frozen rails within inches of the girl’s body. Princess’ Betrothal Unconfirmed in Rome • ROME, Jan. 31. —The report from Belgrade that the Princess Yolanda, eldest daughter of the King and Queen of Italy, has been betrothed to King Boris of Bulgaria, was without official confirmation today. Recently It was reported an engagement of marriage might be arranged between the Princess and the Prince of W ales.

Plays Cruel Joke on Chicago Police CHICAGO, Jan. 31.—“ More than a hundred dead at Clark street and Lawrence avenue” came an excited voice over the phone to police headquarters. Patrols, fire apparatus and ambulances found a cemetery.

i MUNCIE PLANS WAR ON PHONE RATE INCREASE Will Oppose Proposed Boost in Test Case Set for Feb. 16. Special to The Times. MUNCIE, Ind., Jan. 31. —The preliminary skirmish in the approaching rate contests between the Indiana Bell Telephone Company and the communities In Indiana served by that company will be outlined tonight at a meeting of the Muncie Chamber of Commerce by Fred B. Johnson, special counsel for the city of Muncie. The petition of the Bell Company for an increase of telephone exchange rates at Muncie has been set for hearing beginning Feb. 16 at Muncie. Similar petitions, affecting Anderson, South Bend and other Indiana cities already have been filed by the Bell Company, and other petitions are yet to be filed. It is understood the Muncie case Is to be the leading, or test case, and will be presented as completely as possible by the petitioner, and vigorously contested by the city, the city attorney, Arthur D. McKinley, being associated with Mr. Johnson in the defense. SAYS CASES ARE CARE FILLY PLANNED. “The Beil Telephone Company builds up and'presents its cases in rate matters more expertly .and thoroughly than any utility that eomes before the public service commission of Indiana,” said Mr. Johnson, who speaks from his knowledge as a former commissioner. "Their experience is ns broad as the United States. Their legal, engineering and accounting experts, upon whom they rely, all are trained in their particular line of presentation and have at their finger tips, not only the definite knowledge of all of the special facts In the particular case that is being tried, but definite knowledge of all of the facts In the background—the exact relationship between the Muncie exchange and other exchanges in the State; the Indiana overhead costs charged to Muncie; the relation that Muncie bears to the American Telephone and Telegraph toll lines, the backward reaching relation between this parent company (A. T. & T. Cos.) and the Indiana Bell and the Muncie exchange. Tlmy know in a way more complete than the respondent city can ever know, how and upon what basis the Western Electric Company, a manufacturer of electrical supplies and another subsidiary of the A. T. & T. Cos., comes Into the picture.” SAYS CITY LACKS MEANS OF DEFENSE. The speaker outlined graphically many of the complications incident to the defense of the city's side of the case, including a lack of real knowledge as to the background of the many inter-re-lationships and wheels within wheels, all entering as factors in the Muncie case. “Inadequate as respondents’ knowledge is, it Is the intention of the city of Muncie vigorously to contest this position— not by demagogery, but by a dignified but forceful defense,” concluded Johnson. “We realize this case is of immense importance, not only to the 7,000 subscribers of the Bell at Muncie, but to all of the 125,000 subscribers' In Indiana. In these days of decreasing costs, higher utility rates are to with the closest care, and justified only when a petitioner has successfully and completely ail points In its burden of proof. The presumption is in favor of decreasing rates, not increasing rates—rates In this particular case that were established by the commission on presumably a proper basts two years ago—at the very peak, of labor and material prices and costs.”

Legion Notes Four years behind In h!s reuding, Henry Hustenden, German farmer of Manorville, L. i., has just run onto the battle of Chateau-Thierry, and now he's so excited he can't work. Jn the summer Hustenden raises berries, in the winter he sits and listens to his wife read world events from a chronological collection of German newspapers. Hts wife reads slowly, gmcl Hustenden (unablo to read himself) with stolid Teuton thoroughness has never allowed her to skip. "Didn't you know this country was in the war?” a member of the American Legion asked him. ♦ “Ja,” said Hustenden, “but I wasn't interested because I hadn't got to it yet In the papers.” “It’s all over now,” said the legionnaire heartily. “Ach, not for me!" replied Hustenden, returning to his wife and the pile of papers. A man who said he was Warren Gamaliel ILirdlng, President of the I nit States, was recently picked up on the streets of New York, the butt of promiscuous jokes. American Legion men took him aside and found him to be Lawrence Leedy, ex-soldier, suffering from mental disorders apparently due to injuries received In the service. They placed him under observation at Bellevue Hospital. Forty-eight posts of the American Legion were chartered during the week ending Jan. 20. Missouri led with seven posts, while Illinois and Wisconsin tied for second with six each. “Down with the Stars and Stripes.'' yelled C. E. Swazey at a meeting of the American Lefeion post at Marion, Ohio. Just as President Harding’s fellow-citi-zens were rolling up their sleeves they learned he was only mimicking the mating call of the Bolshevist. A light wine and beer bill “solely” to provide revenue for the payment of a soldier’s bonus is opposed by a Syracuse, N. Y., post of the American Legioon. Far-seeing friends presented rollingpins to two brides of American Legion men at initiation exercises of the Yistuu, lowa unit of the Auxiliary. Kings and tinkers and makers of books —all are out of a job. In one week three American Legion post adjutants applied for work at the municipal employment bureau in New York City. “O, please send ine a man!" pleaded a frenzied voice over the telephone. Rufus Bethea, American Legion's employment manager in Birmingham, Ala., seized a baseball *at and went. All fie had to rescue wa* a Persian kitten. Stephen F. Tillman, “youngest war veteran,” enlisted at 14 years. His story ■was reported by the American Legion I'ost at Washington, D. C., and witiiin a week lie’had received two offers t<r join the movies and had been elected fire marshal of Rainier, Md., his home town. The right of the Navy Department to make notation on a sailor s official record two years after his discharge has been denied by Assistant Secretary Roosevelt on appeal of the American Legion of New York. "Move the house and you can have It." With this Injunction, the Carbondale. Pa., post of thq, American Legion rolled up Us sleeves and became possessed of a large, commodious mansion for its clubhouse. It took fifty American Legion ex-sol-diers just twenty-four hours build a four-room and bath house in Los Angeles for a disabled buddy whose home was destroyed by fire. * Exception to the statement of Gen. Amos A. Fries, chief of the chemical warfare service, that poison gas Is “humane’ Is taken by William F. Deegan, head of the American Legion of New York. He cites X-ray proof to show that 50 per cent of the State's tubercular war veterans are victims of gas. Atlantic City, N. J., as the site for thl 1923 national convention of the American Legion is being urged by members of the legion post there. 3,000 MOROCCANS SIR RENDER. MADRID, £an. 31.—Three thousand rebellious tribesmen of Morocco have surrendered to the Spanish military authorities, delivering up their arms, 6aid an official dispatch from Mellila today.

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Raz Barlow reports he saw a man over at Tickviile the other day who still roaches his hair like a bar-tender and sells soda pop. •• * \ With the silent approach of spring within the next month or two Fletcher Henstep will assist nature, by gradually unstopping the cracks In his house and taking the pillows out of the window frames. • • • Slim Pickens has entered musical circles with his new French harp and played a love tune this morning In front of the residence of Miss Peachie Sims. FORTY MILLION DOLLAR HEIRESS TO WED CHEMIST Romance Follows Meeting Abroad During World War. PHILADELPHIA, Jan. SL—Anastase Vonslasky of Warsaw, Poland, a chemist employed at the Baldwin Locomotive Works here, will bo married on Saturday to Mrs. Marion B. Stephens, reported to be a $10,000,000 heiress, he said today. Vonsiasky, who l.s a clean-cut, clearcomplexirfned, well-dressed young man of 23, speaks English with a decided foreign accent and had considerable difficulty with the Interviewer’s questions. He spoke frankly of himself and of the marriage, saying he and Mrs. Stephens had been friends for nine months. He declined to discuss his courtship or the prospect of marryin'g wealth. Intimating that a gentleman would not do anything of the sort, and contenting himself with saying he and his bride would live In his home at ltldgaley Park. Philadelphia, after the ceremony. Vonsiasky lives at present In the Y. M. C. A. Mrs. Stephens was divorced by her husband Redmond I>. Stephens, a wealthy Chicago attorney In 1918* Stephens alleged his wife wished to “travel all of the time and wanted to be free.” Mrs. Stephens then entered war work and rnet Vensiatsky In Paris. He had served as an engineer with Gen era’ Kolchak in Russia and it was hts 1 stirring stories of adventures on various Russian battle fronts that first attracted Mrs. Stephens. He later came to America and began work as a laborer for the : Baldwin works. * Mrs. Stephens first wedding was a notable event in Chicago social circles In 1903. As the daughter of Norman U. Rhea in multi-millionaire steel magnate, she was one of the leading members of the younger social set of Chicago. Mr. and Mrs. Stephens lived together for fifteen years,, spending a great deal of time in traweling.

Grover R. Jasper Funeral Wednesday Regains of Grover It. Jasper, 32, prominent mechanical engineer, who was killed in a fall from a fourth story window of a Havana iGubm building, on which he was working, May 10, 1921, .have been returned to Indianapolis. The funeral will be held at Herman Bros.’ funeral parlor-; Wednesday morning at 10 o’clock. Mr. Jasper received his common and high school education in Indianapolis and worked on engineering projects here a number of years, lie was a “dollar-a-year” man with the Emergency Fleet Corporation at Philadelphia during the war. A slater, Miss Elizabeth Jasper, and a cousin, William F. Andiug, both of Indianapolis, survive. Prowler Attacks Girls at Vassar POUGHKEEPSIE, N. Y„ Jan. 31.—A prowler who has attacked four Vassar girls within the past two days is terrorizing the college campus. Following an attack by the marauder upon an instructor last night, police organized posses to hunt down the man, while college authorities are taking steps ’to protect the girls. New York Influenza Cases Shdw Decrease NEW YORK. Jan. 31— Health Commissioner Royal S. Copeland reported a sharp decrease in influenza and pneumonia eases here today. According to his statement there were only 332 influenza cases reported yesterday as compared with 475 for the previous day. Ninety-six cases of pneumonia were reported yesterday against 103 for Sunday, BOYS’ CLUB MEETING PLANNED. The quarterly meeting of the Boys’ Club Association will be held In Ayres’ tearoom tomorrow at noon, It was announced by Frank C. Jordan, president of the association, today. Plans for the Boys’ Club Federation will be discussed nt the meeting, Herman W. Ivothe. secrelary and treasurer, will read the financial report of the clubs. A report on the activities of the Boys’ Club will be given by Glen F. Kline, superintendent of the clubs. „

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INDIANA DAILY TIMES, TUESDAY, JANUARY 31,1922.

MASTER DEGREE FOR WORK HERE New Plan <?f University to Aid Graduate Student. Students In the Indianapolis Center of Indiana University will have an opportunity to get their master’s degrees in the extension divivsion late afternoon and evening classes, according to an announcement recently made. Formerly the university required at least half of the graduate work be done In residence, but under the new ruling all of It may be done in Indianapolis classes. Dean Carl H. Eigenmann visited the city Saturday for the purpose of conferring with the officials of the center In regard to arrangements for the second semester, at which time anew purely graduate course will be offered. The first purely graduate course will bo given this coming semester by Prof. John Rea, head of the English department of Indiana University', in literary criticism. Candidates for the master’s degree, who are doing full-time work in business or in the public schools will be limited to five hours of credit for any one semester's work. The new rule also permits teachers to gain the master's degree in three semesters in Indianapolis and two summer sessions in residence. FORMER CROWN PRINCE TALKS German Exile, However, Admits Opinion ‘Cuts No Ice.’ BERLIN, Jan. 31.—Frederich Wilhelm Hohenzollern, former German crown prince, recognizes the republican regime in Germany' as the legally constituted form of government of the country he once was destined to rule as emperor and king. The former German heir cow is an exile upon the Dutch Island of Wieringen in the North Sea. He still believes the monarchical system "does more for a people." But since a majority of the German people at Weimar chose a republic he accepts that as an iron fact in the face of which he admits his owu private opinion “cuts no Ice.” He opposes n coup by any faction, saying his countrymen “have suffered enough. The fatheyland must not be subjected to any fresh upheaval.”—Copyright, 1922, by International News Service. NEGRO WIELDS RAZOR ON WIFE Police Seek Willis for Alleged Attack With Steel. When Fred Willis, negro, 6-16 Johnson street, wishes to reason with Ids wife he uses a razor, police sqy, and because of overzealousness last nigh't his wife, Polina, 647‘a Bright street, is in the city hospital suffering from nn eightinch slash in her right shonfiler. The police are looking for Willis. It seems the course of true love In the Willis household has run jerkily for some time and the couple has been separated. Recently Willis called on Polina and while trying to induce her to return to the family nest, he drew his tonsorlal scythe, cut her clothing Into long, dangling ribbons without Inflicting any wounds on and after she had taken to her heels he proceeded to cut up all her belongings. Following this performance, Willis was arrested and the case was set for Feb .8 in city court. Last night Willis mado a second call on his wife to induce her not to appear in court against him, and when she refused he again attacked her, police 6ay. PoUna made a break for the door, nnd her departure was accelerated by the swish of the razor which caught her In the right shoulder. 5 Children, Woman Rescued From Fire BALTIMORE, Md., Jan. 31.—When fire broke out today in'a confectionery store on the first floor of a building on West Baltimore street, policemen forced their | way through flames and smoke and rescued a young woman and five small children from the second floor. Firemen were compelled to shovel the 1 way for their apparatus Through snow ' banks to reach a fire that destroyed the car repair shop of the Bethlehem Steel Corporation at Sparrow’s Point. The fire started from an overheated stove nnd caused an estimated damage of $50,000. Striking Packers Ask Old Jobs Back OM.\n.\, Neb., .Tan. 31.—Striking packing house workers were negotiating for their old Jobs today. The 1,500 employes who struck at the South Omaha plants nine weeks ago officially have called off the strike. FAVORS BONIS SYSTEM. Bonus rewards to employes of the Esterline Manufacturing Company will be I given as a means of stimulating product- j tlon, Donald Angus, vice president, announced at a meeting of the Sclentecb ; Club nt the Chamber of Commerce yes- ! torday. A shop committee to settle all disputes was appointed three years ago and has been a success, Mr. Angus said, j The bonus to shopmen lms proven the 1 best method of increasing production, ! he said. .Tost a few weeks until f Valentine .lay. Now Is The time to sit for the tine photographic por- \ W traits you'll want to -- distribute theu. DM n*r. liks *H4*.

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Highways and By-Ways of LiF OF New York (Copyright, 1922, by the Public Ledger Company.)

NEW YORK, Jan. 31.—1f the millionaires lived in their Fifth avenue homes, the movement to erect apartment houses along the eastern fringe of Central Park would have less importance to the many. But the wealthy do not live here. Their homes are boarded up in the spring, summer and autumn months and the short winter season constitute a chain of sumptuous dressing rooms, where madame and master change their clothes for the opera, the horse show and the theater. Occasionally a social affair is given in the avenue, but most always of late the stellar functions are held nt their LoDg Island, Westchester or New Jersey country places or at a smart hotel. *’ From Fifty-Ninth to One Hundred and Tenth streets, Fifth avenue is popularly known, through the greater part of its extent, as a “millionaires row." Here is where, from the top of a bus or a .sight-seeing car, visitors can look down Into the homes of Vincent Astor, Edwin Gould, William Rockefeller, Thomas F. Ryan, Robert L. Geery, Mortimer L. Sehiff, Robert Goelet, George J. .Gould, Adrian tselin, Jr., Harry' Payne Whitney, Judge E. H. Gary, Senator William A. Clark. Mrs. Herman Oelrlchs, James B. Duke and others, and into the stately abodes where once lived Andrew Carnegie, E. 11. Harriman, IT. C. Ilavemeyer and Henry Clay Frick. About two months ago the board of estimate ami apportionment, by resolution, restricted future building in Fifth avenue, .between Sixtieth nnd NinetySixth streets, to a height of seventy-five feet. That was a decision for the millionaires from the Ilylan administration, the mayor himself favoring the shutting out of the proposed apartment houses, and calling them “Chinese walls which would deprive the eastern portion of the city from the benefif of tho cooling breezes sweeping across Central Park.” Last week the corporation counsel de- ! elded, in nn opinion, that the restricI lion of the board of estimate was legal | nnd balding, much to the joy of those | millionaires who want to keep theii “Fifth avenue dressing rooms.” but to the wrath of others who desire to sell and those realty operators who had bought in there on the prospect of erecting huge apartment houses. The construction of thirteen apartment houses, costing about $8,500,000, bangs in tlie balance, perilling a hitter fight that has started restriction, which y 111 bp carried to the highest courts, if neeeatary. A curious feature in connection with “keeping Fifth avenue free from apartment houses.” is that one block east, In Madison avenue, apartment houses are allowed to a height of twelve storks and another block further eas‘. on Park avenue, they can attain n height of seventeen stories. A canvass of the property owners In Fifth avenue showed that the millionaires constitute “a house divided against Itself'—-spine want the rer.tcictinn removed nnd some want it maintained. To the great mass of citizens, the row is of small concern, except that apartment houses once established in Fifth avenue would give thousands of middle class families n living share In* the beauties of Central Park. a, F*w streets in this city of rapid changes can show such a. contrast as Fifth avenue within half a century. Be fore Central Pnrk was laid out it ran for three miles through a district so disreputable and poverty wrfiken that it had come to be known as the “Squatters’ sovereignty.” , It was a district of swamps and thickets nnd stagnant pools. The squatters lived in shanties constructed from boards and driftwood, gathered at the river front, nnd the, goofs of these shanties were patched with In. The estimated number of squatters at the peak of their invasion of the district was 5.100, arid the largest and foulest set tletnpnt was “Seneca Village,” near Seventy-Ninth street, on the site of the present Metropolitan Museum of Art. “Boss” Tweed, the Tammany chief who ended his days in Ludlow Street Jail, whs the driving force behind the creation of Central Pnrk. and the exclusive section in Fifth avenue, north of the Metropolitan Club, nicknamed the “Milllonalri s' Club.”, the white strue turn with halls of nnmidian marble nt Sixtieth street. Now that the rich have j pre-omptied upper Fifth avenue into a thoroughfare of palatial elegance, it is the same Tammany Hall that blocks j some of the wealthy from getting out from under and the fame , of the avenue in dollars for their park ! fronting lands. That is the paradox of the situation. In the death of Carl Henry Andrew BJerregaaril. chief librarian of the read Ing room of the New York Public I.i I brnry, the world lias lost a sculptor in j the embryo. Mr. BJerregaaril was in his | 77th year. At tho uge of 70 he taught himself painting, and produced several j hundred sketches nnd pictures In oil and water colors. He painted entirely 1 from memory, some of the scenes com- j ing to him In his dreams. At nn cx- i

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hibition of his work last summer at the Hotel Majestic, Mr Bjerregaard told the writer he had taken up sculpture, teaching himself that art, as he had done painting. He had been connected with the public libraries of this city since he first found employment with the old Astor Library in 1879. He was born in Denmark. On the subject of mysticism he was an authority, and wrote several books on that subject, <e Trinity Church Cemetery extends from Amsterdam avenue to Riverside Drive, between One Hundred and Fifty-Third to One Hundred and Fify-fifth streets. It is a famous burying ground, among the notable* resting there being Audubon, the great naturalist; Gen. John A. Dlx, remembered for his historic phrase, "If any man attempts to haul down the American flag, shoot him on the spot;" Clement C. Moore, who wrote "The Night Before Christmas,” and Madame Jumel of revolutionary days. A little old man with a snow-white beard is the guardian of the cemetery gate. He has been there for fifty years or more; his name is James Murray, and he says he is 107. “I recollect when I was 7,” he said the other day. “That's a hundred years rgo. I came to America that year with my j arentß, from County Longford, Ire- ■ land. Later, when I came here I remember a dark, slim young gentleman, | with black, wavy hair, who used to , rile by once In a while, nnd occasionally ■ come in. He was Mr. Vanderbilt—Mr. ; Cornelius Vanderbilt. He could ride a , horse as n gentleman should. Then j there was a James Fisk, and someI times a Mr. Tweed, who was something | in polities, I forget Just what.” ! A little girl, Mr. Murray’s great grand- ! daughter, walks with him to and from his Job each day, the centenarian explaining; “'Tis not that I need the child. It's to keep her out in the air that her mother sends her.” MRS. ROBINSON TAKES DRUGGIST'S ADVICE And Is Quickly Restored to Health By Vinol. READ HER LETTER. Petersburg, 111.—“I was In a weak, rundown condition and had very poor blood, and was not able to work mu-’h es tho time. My druggist advised me to take Vinol, 1 did so and it has restored my strength and 1 have gained weight. I tiling Vinol is a wonderful medicine for such conditions.”—Mrs. L. It. Robinson, Petersburg, 111. Vinol owes its success In such eases to the tissue-building ami curative elements of fn-sh cods’ livers. without oil, aided by the blood nnd strength-creat-ing elements of tonic Iren and beef peptones, which It contains. Thus in a natural manner it creates a healthy uppetie, aids digestion and rnnkes rich, red blood. It Is only SI.OO per bottle and guaranteed. Henry J. lludcr, Druggist, Indianapolis.—Advertisement. HE DARKENED HIS GRAY HAIR —4 Tells How He Did It. Mr. J. A. McCrea, a well-known resident of California, who wa3 called Daddy and Grandpa on account of his white hair, and who darkened it with a homemade mixture, recently made the following statement: “Anyone can prepare a simple mixture at home that will darken gray hair, and make it soft and glossy. To a half-pint of water add 1 ounce of bay rum, a small box of Rarbo Compound and M ounce of glycerine. These Ingredients can bo bought at any drug store at very little cost. Apply to the hair twice a week until the desired shade is obtained. It does not color the scalp, is not sticky or greasy and does not rub off.” — Advertisement.

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