Indianapolis Times, Volume 34, Number 227, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 February 1922 — Page 2

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NEW PACT PUTS POISON GAS IN OUTLAW CLASS ' Ruthless Submarine Warfare Also Tabooed by Agreement of Powers. TREATY fS BRIEF ONE WASHINGTON, Feb. I.—A treaty between the great powers of the Washington conference, abolishing the use of poison gas in warfare and virtually making it impossible for a submarine so attack and sink a merchant ship, was presented an* adopted today ,in open session. The treaty is expected to form anew chapter in international law and other rations will be Invited' to adhere J.O the pledges which the five great powers niaktr' in it. Today’s agreement on ‘‘'humanizing warfare," was the direct outgrowth of the Root resolutions, agreed to earlier in the conference. The treaty was comparatively short, CITY TELEPHONE RATES INCREASED Page One.) uses a telephone filly moderately also nray-fise limited service. In discussing measured service the commission says it believes its establishment is a step in the right direction. It points out that it is obviously unfair to require the subscriber who has only two calls a day to help pay the cost of handling the fifty calls of his neighbor. SHOWS HOW Pt’BLIC UTILITY IS DIFFERENT. , A public utility, the commission holds, should be allowed *a fair return on its investment. It points out that the utility business is different from others in that it is regulated and in that it cannot cut expenses when times are hard. •"Petitioner in this case is in the business of selling telephone service," the order continues. ‘‘lt can not tlx the price Os the tiling it sells at a figure will yield to it the cost of production and a fair profit, and it can not indefinitely continue to operate at a loss. Neither can Jt cease to operate, nor in any wise curtail its business. Consequently, it must appear before the body created by law to ask for relief. The petitioner in this case is entitled to an increase in rates. The evidence is perfectly plain. There Is no mystery about any phase of the business. Every important fact has been established, not only by petitioner’s evidence but also by the independent investigation of the agents of the State. Petitioner in this case is entitled to sufficient revenue to meet Its operating expense and pay at least V p*w cent return on the value of Its property. “Nevertheless, the ’commission will not authorize the schedule of rates proposer! by petitioner. The rates hereinafter authorized, on the basis of operation for the first ten months of 1921. will yield to petitioner not to exceed 2.9 per cent. “The schedule authorized wiil result in an increase of revenue of *410,000." * The commission cites the following reasons why a 7 per cent return is not now given in the order. 1. The company is suffering the consequences of unwise management. 2. The traffic will not bear the increase asked. 3. A considerable loss of subscribers „.would adversely affect service and hamper the-"development of the city. 4. The company's revenue will be 'ncreased through normal development. 5. The commission is of the opinion the work of unification has increased operating expenses., -

HANDOVER COST IS SUSPECTED. 0. Tljere is evidence some deferred maintenance may have been included in the maintenance account for the first ten months'of 1022. 7. The commission's audit indicates economies may be practiced in the com- ' pany's business. 8. The revenue to be derived frpm measured service is uncertain. 9. Kates included in proposed schedule j are not believed to be just and reasonable. j In discussing the relationship of the j Indiana Bell Telephone Company and j the American Telephone and Telegraph j Company, the commission says it is cer- j tain in recent years the parent company j has not received any dividends the ! stock owned in the Indiana company. “There is no mystery about the Bell | system," the commission says, “nor about i the American Telephone and Telegraph j Company, nor about the Western Elec j trie, nor about the Indiana Bell, nor. about the relationship of one of the corporations to the other, nor about the contracts and business betw-een the cor porations. All these things are of roe- , ord in this ease, as they have repeatedly : been investigated and disclosed, and ev ery possible phase has been minutely ex ! amined.” Indiana, the commission says, does | not make a profit for the American company, and, with one other State, is being carried by the Bell system as a whole. It contends this Is not the fault of the commission, the puhlic or the company, but of circumstances. CHIEF RATES ARE REVEALED. I® addition to the increases for residence and business telephones, the following are some of the more important new rates put into effect, in each cas< the increase being approximately propor tionate to the increases already set out. Business Coin Collector. Individual line (guarantee five messages per day) $ 7.50 Additional messages (each) 03 Suburban Unlimited. Business $ 4.25 Resident , 3.00 Rural Unlimited. Business S 3.25 Residence 2.25 Private Branch Exchange—-IMisl n***.n Unlimited—Cord Switch hoards. Minimum equipment—switchboard, not exceeding thirty jacks, operators set, two trunks and two stations. Cord board (each) $ 400 Trunks (each) 13.50 Stations (without dials) 1.50 Stations (with dials) 1.75 Additional jacks per strip of ten... .75 Cordless Switchboards. Minimum equipment—switchboard, operators set, 1 and 2 stations. Cordless boards (each) $ 3.00 Trunks (each) 13.30 Stations (without dials) 1.50 Stations (with dials) 1.75 Intercommunicating Unlimited. Minimum equipment (1 trunk and 4 stations). ‘Stations with switching device (without dials) 2.25 Stations with switching device (with dials) 2.50 Trunks (each) 13.50 Private Branch Exchange—Business Measured—Cord Switchboard. Minimum equipment charges, switch, board not exceeding 30 lacks, operators set, 2 trunks and 500 messages. Cord board Jeach) 4.00 First trunk (250 messages) 8.00 Additional trunks 2.00 Stations (without dials).., 1.00 Stations (with dials) 1.25‘ Additional messages (each) 03 Cordless Switchboard. Minimum equipment charge—switchboard operators’ set, two trunks and 500 messages. Cordless board L $ 3.00 First trunk (250 messages) Six* Additional trunks 2.00 Stations without dials 1.00

Works for Blind

"--V ' 4

Lord Richard Nevill, who Is in America in the interest of the Pearson me- j mortal fund for the blind. All English j speakiffg nations are supporting the i movement. . j Stations with dials 1.25; Additional messages (each) 031 Intercommunicating- Measured. Minimum equipment—one trunk and ■ four stations and 500 messages. Trunks (200 messages) 8.00 Additional trunks 2.001 Stations with switching device (without dials) 1.50, Stations with switching device (with dialsl 1.75. Additional messages teach) 03 Private Branch Exchange—Hotel s teas- ■ nred. : Minimum equipment - switchboard not exceeding- 30 jacks, operators f j set huxl 15 stations. Cord boards $1.99 'Messages (each) 05 i Private 'Branch Exchange Machine K\\ itching Equipment—Ciilimlted. Board $4.00 J Stations L 75 Trunks 13.50 i Connectors 2.001 Selectors 1.50! Tie lines 300 j Attendant dial trunks , 75 ; Power plant equipment 15 00 * The company will use nr> measuring do- , vices for measured service, according to ■ the testimony.. The user of measured , service will be required to give his num- j her’ to the operator each time he makes a call. The operator will note the call j on a ua soon as it is completed. 1 No charge ’•i.l bo mail' for "wrong; numbers" or for Incomplete call*. Solves CryingBaby Problem LOS ANGELES, Feb. .. —The manage-j ment of a motion picture theater in a residential district here has solved the j pjolilem of what to do with crying babies : and still be able to collect adfhissions ! from tired mothers or nurses. The solu- 1 tiou is— A crying parlor. In the balcony has been installed a i room about ten-.feet square. About the: walls are painted elephants, giraffes, J tigers, dogs and all manner of animals, j There are little canvas swings and many . playthings to amuse babies. The front of the roorq contains a large plate-glass window. The whole Inclosure 1 is sound-proof so far as the audience out- j side is concerned. And It is in this cozy , lirtl# inelosurff* t hat mothers take their babies, and let the youngsters howl as much as they ilke while the fond par- ! ents watch the "tnovie” heroes and her- ; oines through the plate-glass window The experiment Is declared to be a I great success.

Would Get Married On Hunting' Permit CHICAGO, Feb. I.—Just as Judge 11. ! Pomeroy Sterling, in Marriage . Court j was about to tie the knot. William Taylor, 42, a nimrod, produced the license. “Why, this is a hunting license!” exclaimed, the Judge. Virginia Ross, the br!de : to-be, stalked out of court, big tears trlekiing down her cheeks. Finally, after apologetic explanation, Taylor got her to return. "It wag this way,' said Taylor to ths Judge, ‘when I went into the clerk's office X saw two signs. One said 'Maraage Lincenses,' I thought to myself, rve been hunting this woman for three years before she'd marry me—a hunting licenses is what I need. American Wants an English Wife FOLKSTONE, England, Feb. I. Somewhere In the United States is a mining engineer who has received about 1,000 letters In response to his appeal to the Mayor of Folkstone to find him nn English'wife. He described himself as follows: College graduate; nonsmoker 4 does not gamble; never bQen drunk; has a good business and a Sizable bank balance. The wife of this good fellow must be healthy, of goon morals and of a loving disposition.” His name ig withheld by the mayor. Freight Plane Will Carry Three Tons LONDON*, Felb. I.—The first pantechnicon of the skies is shortly to be launched. Designed solely for the purpose of freight carrying, it has an especially spacious fuselage cabin, and it wit! be*capable of carrying nearly three tons of freight at a cost of less than 4® cents a mile. Appropriately enough the machine is to be called the Tramp and is a threedecker, fitted with four engines, developing a total of 960 horse power. The machine will be slow in relation to the speed which aircraft usually attain. SEURO GETS POST. WASHINGTON*, Feb. I.—Arthur J. Froe, West Virginia colored lawyer, has been chosen recorder of deeds for the District of Columbia on recommendation of Senator Elkins of West Virginia. FAMUOS INN* IS BURNED. LONDON, Feb. I.—The Rose and Crown Inn at Sudbury, which was the "Towns Arms” mentioned by Dickens when describing the Eatanswill election in "Pickwick Papers,” has been destroyed by fire Headaches from Slight Colds. Laxative BKOMO QUININE Tablets re lleve the. Headache bv curing the Cold A tonic laxative and germ destroyer. The genuine bears the signature of E. W, Grove (Be sure you get 8P.0M0.) 30c. i *

COPS OF FUTURE TO USE AUTOS Police Department Conducts Convincing Experiment. Following an experiment conducted by the police department last night Mayor Samuel Lewis Shank today predicted that the days of the walking patrolman are numbered. In a year or so, Mr. Shank said,' policemen will cover their in Indianapolis in automobiles. _ The experiment resulted In demonstrating that three patrolmen and a sergeant In a light automobile can get around the beats in five police districts oftener than ten patrolmen afoot. Five districts in the s<mtlieustern part of the city were covered by both the motor squad and patrolmen with the "motor squad covering the most territory last evening. If riding squads take the jtlace of foot policemen it will be possible to cut the force considerably, Mr. Shank pointed out. The department now has 470 active men. Not more than half that number would be needed on patrol duty if the department were completely motorized. Fart of the remainder of the force could be assigned to traffic and other special duties and the balance could be dispensed with, Mr. Shsviik said. BROKERS OPEN BRANCH OFFICE Thomson and McKinnon to Have Muncie Agency. The firm of Thomson McKinnon, brokers, with offices on the third floor of the Fletcher American National Bank Building, today opened anew branch office at Muncie in the recently completed Roberts Hotel. A. W. Thomson of this city, senior member of the firm, and H. L. Winters of the Chicago‘office of the firm, Vc.it to Muncie today to attend the formal opening of the office. The new branch will be equipped with the same wire uul board service"'as the local office and it is said that many of the leading busciness men of Muncie have taken a groat interest In its opening. The firm of which the newub ranch is a part are members of the leiiclng stock exchanges and boards of trade of the country, with main offices In Chicago, New York and Indianapolis and branch offices in Minneapolis, Saint Paul, Kansas City, South Bend. Evansville, Fort Wayne, Lynchburg, Vs., and Muncie. O. C. Delgjney, recently of Get rot, where he was engaged in the brokerage business with a large house, und formerly of Muncie, is manager of the new branch. URGES WHIPPING AS MORON CURE Judge Cites Successful Use in Canada. CHICAGO. Feb. t. —Whipping posts lor morons! This is the recommendation of Judge Marcus Kavanagh of Superior Court. “In Canada." said Judge Kavanagh. "so-called morons are sentenced to serve a term of years in the penitentiary. One' month after they enter prison they are given twenty lashes on the bare back with a cat-o'-nine tails “One month before they are discharged the lashing is repeated The second whipping is called a ‘refresher.’ . “The punishment apparently 'works, because there are very few morons in Canada." Judge Kavanagh said that last April the I' laware Legislature authorized the whipping post for hold-up men, and there since have been practically no hold-ups in th* state. Three Bankruptcy Petitions Filed Three voluntary petitions In bank rupicy were filed in Federal Court today by citizens of tills state. William Gunning, farmer, R. F. U. 7, Shelbyvilie, scheduled liabilities ~f $23, 240.11 and assets of $24,755. Cary L Shaffer, aufnuiobile salesman of Muncie, listed" liabilities of $3,423 and assets of S9OO. Liabilities of $4,531.16 were admitted by John J. Jom-iu prop/4etor of a bottling works at Terre vluutc, as against assets of $1,270.

Name Stotsenburg for U. S. Senator Sp-’clal to The Times. LA PORTE. Ind . Feb. I.—A movement to bring K. B. Stotsenburg .>f New Al- , bany. former attorney general for Indiana, into thr Democratle race fnr ! United States Senator, was taking forth in the northern part of the State today. Stotsenberg for several years vv%s Democratic leader of the upper house of toe Legislature. He was legislative leader during tlie administrations of Governors Marshall and Ralston. ‘Driink as a Sailor’ Should Re Banned NEW YORK, Feb. I.—The expresion "Drunk as a should be banned, officers and friends of the navy insist. A movement has been started here to eliminate such expressions from newspaper nrticles and what has passed at times for literature. _ The Congressional Record, containing remarks by Senator Nocjris. and a recent story by Earl Derr Bigger*, author of "Sevan Keys to Baidplate,” are the subject of complaint. Fortune in Radium Not Weil Protected PARIS, Feb. I.—Three million francs worth of radium, part of which is the gift of America to Mme. Curie, is at the ! mercy of any enterprising element worth | the taking. The three grams of radium lin the Curie Institute are locked in a I lead box each night. This lead casket (is then locked in an ordinary safe. Edij tprials in the Paris presg suggest that i greater precaution® should be takpn to ■ safeguard the treasury, which has been | gotten together with such difficulty. WII-L MEET IN KOKOMO. [ A conference of State attendance j officers in the Kokomo district will he j held Feb. 7 and 8, Blanche Merry, in charge of the State attendance officers, j announced today. The conference, which I is to be held In conjunction with the vnI rational training conference, is for th*. I purpose of instructing the attendance and vocational training officers. ‘TIGER' KEEPER FINED. I Oscar Ping, 311 West McCarty street, | was fined SSO and costs in city court to- | day on the charge of operating a blind ! tiger. Charges of keeping a gambling i house and gaming against ping and nine other men were dismissed. MISS THAYER GIVES TALK. * Miss Laurel Thayer, probation officer j of the city court, addressed the Parent- ! Teacher Association of School No. 31, 307 | Lincoln street, this afternoon on “Types of Gifts in City*Court and Causes of their Delinquency.” I. C. RAILROAD FINED. Fines aggregating S3OO today were assessed against the Illinois Central Railroad Company 111 Federal Court when attorneys for the railroad admitted liability in three cases charging violation of the safety appliance act.

INDIANA DAILY TIMES, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1922.

'ownship Candidate

- I t Zp' . ' j 111 ~ Ellas W. Dulberger, 2921 Dark avenue, today announced his candidacy for the Republican nomination for Justice of the peace for Center Township. I*u 1 - beeger is a wejl-known attorney with offices at 20(5 Public Savings Building, lie was an enthusiastic worker for Mqyor Samuel Lewis Shank In the last campaign. He was graduated from the Indiana University law course and has been practicing law here since 1912.

LOCAL MEN IN FILM COMPANY New Organization Formed for Distributing Motion Pictures. Filing of incorporation* papers with the Secretary of State by’ the Natioh.il Cinema Corporation today disclosed plans for anew national motion picture distribution organization The corporation is capitalized at $230,000, which, it is understood, will tie materially increased as the concern develops. Theodore Vonnegtlt and E. H. Matthews of Indianapolis are among men Interested in the venture. None of the stock in the corporation is for sale. Mr. Matthews is president, Mr. Votin' 1 gut. vice-president and W 4 E. It thermal, Chicago, w holes ile coal dealer, treasurer of the con-oration. The corpora'lon plans to open twentysix film exchanges. Including one in Indianapolis and in ea h of lwen?\j£ve other stragericaUy located cities. Marriage Licenses Norm l Noici, iHI W. Twenty Eighth. 49 k’.t.’.atn'th Langston, DV J -3 Ashland live 59 Harry IV i, 1828 N New Jersey st... 27 Helen I'oehler, 1120 Dawson >t 22 i loot ge Sibbaok. 523 Kentucky are 2"Frances Krit cli, I 1 Vi Ewing si 21 John Untuning. 349 Sanders 5t....... - ' Nellie Tobin, fi“S 8 New Jersey *t. . ■ 2' 1 llarrv S< hiolzhauer. Jr, city 27 Label M Gowan_ Spink Arms 2i Itirths Harold and Ade Mate, Clark Blakeslo* Hospital, toy Stanley and Grace Vahi, 2905 Cornell, boy. llary and Mary Evartl. ilO Last Twentieth, boy. Charles and Madeleine Sallee, 53 South Holmes,* girl Cato and Lilly Stevens, 1012 West Mor ris. bov. j, ~ph and Blanche Zimmerman, 2743 Caroline, 1 v. —. 9 Walter and Stella Whylaud. 1525 Cruft, girl i,. tnd Gertrude (’hike, 2734 North Jam. s. girl. Willis and Ilallie Rollett, Sl4 West Twelfth, boy. William and Currln* Rice, 1142 East Sixteenth, boy. Ilmnno-r and Halite Floyd. 23fiflV4 North Western, boy. Jeff uud Willie Nelson, 8(1’d Indiana, girl. Walter and Shirley Scott, 3111 Fender gust. boy. George and 1. >"i!t'ti Wilkinson, 997 North Pennsylvania, boy. Paul and Hattie De Pew. 9Z3 Chadwick, In y. 1 John and Nunolaria Peronia, 534 East Merrill, girl, l.irt and **.irole lloss, 1527 Weft Morris, girl Harvey ami Sylvia Morgan, 1153 South Capitol, girl. Henry and Helen Mearllug, fid Schiller, giri. Pete and Myrtle Hatler, 824 South East, boy.

Ruby and E(lnd Wlekens, 313 Parkway. boy. Floyd and Pearl Collins, 220 East St. Clair, boy. Charles and Mary Gill, 6001 2 ' F.ast North, boy. 1 otto and Minnie Decker, 0(9 Buchanan. I girl So] and Bessie Sentlo, Methodist lios 1 pitnl. boy, * John anti Hilda CadJe, Methodist Hospital. boy. Kenneth and Edith Glass, Methodist Hospital, boy. Richard and Mary George, St. Vincent Hospital boy. Claud and Vera Best. St. Vincent Hospital. girl. John and Sophia De Boer, St. Vincent Hospital, girl. George and Edna Jackson. St. Vincent Hospital, boy. Thomas and Anna Feeney, St. Vincent ; Hospital, boy. I Harvey and Teresa Catterson, St. Viaj cent Hospital, girl. ; George and Margaret Clark. St. VlnI cent Hospital, girl. “ j Miles and If el. 11 Noggle, 1910 Ilovt, boy. Deaths Harriett T. Clark, 75, city hospital, hypostatic pneumonia. Minnie B. IMssler, 57, city hospital, cerebral hemorrhage. Phillip G. Schmidt, 78, Deaconess Hospital, lobar pneumonia. Amy H Groom, 29. Methodist Hospital, | septicaemia. Helen Molnar, 35. 759 Concord, acute | rnilliary tuberculosis. Earl W Adams, 1, 114 West McCarty, | double lobar pneumonia. Otto H. Roemler, 52, 1209 Marlowe. ! acute dilatation of heart. Oscar F. Britton, 84, St. Vincent Hos- | pitai, broncho pneumonia, i Caroline Achgill, 63,' 827 Cottage, acute j nephritis. | Emma Florence Sayers, 69. 10.31 North | New Jersey, chronic interstitial nephritis. !, Frank IT Wiegmau, 52. 2437 Yatides, acute nephritis.'*'' 1 Ivn Kathryn McKislck. 10 months, 2217 East Michigan, diphtheria, j Infant Whitelow, —, city hospital, preI mature birth. j George T. Adamson, 51, Methodist HosI pitai. fractured skull, accidental. '■ Lillian Kerr, 64, 301 East North, car- ; einoma. I Mary Green, 40, city hospital, chronic ! myocarditis. Susan J Wilson, 74, 2047 Mabel, chronic ( myocarditis. i Orin Drake, 66, 14 Adler, chronic ne- | phritis. Lena M Rehm, 5 months, 1530 Linden, strangulation, accidental. David Duncan Negley, 86, 2.330 Adams, broncho pneumonia. Mabel De Ha van, 34, city hospital, chronic cellulitis. Delia Garbodett. 66, St. Vincent Hospital, acute dilatation of heart.

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COUNTY BONDED DEBT, $25,762,528 Auditor Issues Call for Council Session Feb. 10. The total bonded Indebtedness of Marion County, iifcluding every municipal division, at the-present time amounts to 525.7(iH.528, according to County Auditor Leo K. Fesler, who furnished the information today in calling the Motion County Council in special session on Feb. 10. , ' According to Mr. Fesler, the bonded indebtedness of the county, the city, the school city and other divisions are as follows: - County $ 4.1(58.000 Indianapolis City 8.8211.500 Indianapolis School 5,850.500 Beech Grove 58 000 Broad Ripple , 44.000 Township 3-mile Roads 3,045.855 Township- Schools .801,873 Total ...< $25,702,528 “The county paid off last year $300,o<o of the old courthouse bonded debt, and in addition nearly SIOO,OOO more of other bonds, but we sold SBOO,OOO new bonds as’thy report shows,” Mr. said.' Quart of Rye Heads To Big Damage Suit SCRANTON, Pa., Feb. 1. An unusual suit for damages ns a result <>f the enactment of the prohibition law was filed in Federal Court in-re by Mrs Irene Dauberman of Lewisburg, I’a. Hepolit Samtowiez of Milton, Pa., is the defendant. Mrs. Dauberman charges that last in ist her husband, Clareut e- D man, purchased a quart of whisky from the wife of the defendant and then lost tintrnl of Ills reason and, shot Sheriff Itemior >■( Lewisbtirg in tlm wrist, ami John P. Tegmehii in the chest. Daui-cr-man laior was convicted and sentenced to six years in the penitentiary on charges t of assault with in’ent to kill. Mrs. Dauberman asks for $30,909 damages from Szutowlcz because of the humiliation and disgrace brought upon her and for being deprived of the society and financial support of her husband. Would Ask Congress to Handle Traffic Congressional regulation of automobile traffic so that all States will have a uu; form law governing the travel of the motorist, s the dream of A. L. llcrii.-telu. general counsel of the Automobile Club of New York, who lias been in the city several days. He la staying at the Hotel Severin. Mr. fflernstem, in a conference with loading local nmtojists, including M. E Noblot, secretary of 'he Hoosier Motor Club, said. ••42,1 get what ws wtint we must arous* public sentiment, Just as your mayor led Id.iso peoyple to the Stjitehuuse the other ’‘day in a protest to she Governor." Mr. llefnsteiu says New Y rk has 21.990 motorists, all tuembers of thr- State club, i who are keen f< r u drive for more satisfactory laws. New York which has spent, $).->,900,900 on highway improvement in the ius( year, U willvftg to lead lift movement, Mr IL-rnsteiti says Texas Captain Says 2 Shot at Is-Sur-Tille WABHING I'D.N, Feb. t Two Ano-rl- ! can soldiers were shot death at Is ■ Bur Tille. France, by a mob of an-, ry ?i! . v .Mi-rs, C.-*[)t Willi (111 W. Miller, 4- . Vlre t.la • r -ci, Dallas. Texas, t-stl-i fie l t lay b( f >re* the special committee Irn ---.t! gating charges W-'Ught by Senator Watson, Georgia, of alleg->l killings iin the A E. F. Miller said the soldiers .re a-.-eiis.-d of aaaultiug two aged j French women. Movie People Invest LOS ANGELES. Feb. I.—A census completed hy -i real estate firm shows that motion p. - stars, directors and proluiii's have *ivet*?<i sS,(x>u,oo<J In bo men In this city. Tln*se homes range lu value from |15,000 to $200,000. TWO NEW IIINKS GET CHAKTKKS. Two new banks wore granted charters “Tiy the Stiate charter boanl in session here today. A charter was granted to the Citizens Trust Company of Jasonvllle and to tiie Citizens State Bank of Blcknell. The capital stock of fmth banka Is S2‘s,'kK) Anew charter was granted to 'the Citizens State* Bank of Bloomfield The charter which was Issued in I!*2 expired Feb. 1.

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Colds Toothache Earache

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f/f/m How glorlona you will feel, mother, when your rheumatism Is all |n. Let 8. S. 8. do U. It will build you up, too !

CENTER PHONE POPULATION IS NEAR THIS CITY 4 Facts About Indianapolis / Published by C. of C.,iAre Interesting. That the “center of telephone popula- j tUm" of the United States Is w’lthin a 1 short distance of Indianapolis is one of the interesting bits of information contained in “Facts About Indianapolis” as' supplied by. the Chamber of Commerce each month to its members. The imtlginary point—on the map at which the "center of telephone population" is located is determined by an elaborate series of calculations similar in priniple to those used to determine the actual center of of the country. This center, acording to the 1920 census, is located near Indianapolis. ' Ihe Chamber of Commerce “Facts About! indianap dis" are pithy sentences, each containing an interesting point about the industries activities of the cii.v. Chamber members have these sentences typed-nt the bottom of their business letters, and hdusandg of letters leave I toil aua polls offices every day bearing one second adverlseiuents of the city, for destinations in ail parts ofHhe coiiin ty.tj Tiie following '•Facts’’ have been released to Chamber members for their February letters: 1921 building permits 20 per cent ahead of 1920. I .venty fourth semi-annual auto show. March c ii. Cent.-r of I nited States telephone population" gear here. 1-iity carloads of shoe polish shipped IDOllt nly by <Di* Ilnu. i< it raili<.al connects Keren teen i*oarl dlvisluys. Contains one of the country's largest tile factor;*-. " ", Important wholesale dental supply center. Added houses and apartments lu 1921 for 9.000 peojile. Twenty-fourth semi-annual auto show. March tl-jl. Seventeen furniture factories. Great porg and beans packing center. Sixteen wholesale grocery houses. Y eueer plants’ product valued at S2 400 - 000 annually. Grfido crossings eliminated in central city. Six wholesale confectioners. Makes metal-working machines used throughout the world. Tw'-nty fourth semi-annual auto show, .March >6 11. , 1 Ina-c iiiaaufacturing uiilliners employ 1.000 people. 8i v*-nt,-.-n wholesale Jewel*-rs. Makes ladders for the world. Drug products of $20,000,00 retail value p -r year. Fourteen wholesale tobacconists. l‘-',i dwellings, 41 apartments built In GUO telephone for every Twenty fourth semi-annual auto show March fi 11. Important center in quartered oaa veneer industry. Thirteen Inter,irban lines reach three- ■ fourths of r nti-'e population. Takes Place Under State Accounts Board \V. il Gild Well, field examiner of tie _Btat,. hoard of a.i-uints, will fill temporarily the vacancy of Walter J. TwYna.'ne, who accepted the post as btislticss ttiai of the Indianapolis school board, Jesse E. Es*h Mich, chief examiner of tin- board, annouicajl today. An examination P-r field examiners of the board will li L > held within a short ttne, Mr Esefibacb ■-aDt. There are at pr scut more Democratic field examiners on tie State board than Republicans. Ih. iaw r* quires shat tiie examiners be paired according to their political faith. State Urged to Put Men on Job A committee of three members of the Central Labor Union called on Governor Warren T. McCray yesterday and requested that the Governor use his influence in putting to work all the unemployed men which the State could use. Til** Governor said today tTia"t he had written to Lawrence Lyons, director of ttio highway commission urging him to start the construction work as soon as he deemed it possible under the weather conditions.

Rheumatism Neuritis Pain, Pain

Headache Neuralgia Lumbago

S. S. S. Thoroughly Rids the Body el Rheumatism Impurities, Somebody's mother is suffering tonight! The scourge of rheumatism has wrecked her body; limping and suffering, bent forward, she sees/but the common ground, but her aged heart still belongs to the starsi Does anybody care? S. S. S. is one of the greatest blood-purifiers knowq. and it helps build more blood cells. Its medicinal ingredients are purely' vegetable. It never disarranges the stomach. It is, in fact, a splendid tonic, a blood maker, a blood enricher. It banishes rheumatism from joints, muscles and the entire body. It builds firm flesh. It is what somebody’s mother needs tonight! Mother, if you can not go out to get a bottle of S. S. S. yourself, surely somebody in ydur, family will. Somebody, get a bottle of S. S. S. now! Let somebody’s mother begin to feel joyful again tonight. Maybe, maybe It’s your mother! S. S. S. is sold at all drug stores. ,01 two sixes, larger else U the more economical.

FACES CHARGE OF VIOLATING NARCOTIC LAW Thompson Declares He Was j Trying To Cure Habit of Wife-to-Be.' • George S. Thompson, 437>4 Massachusetts avenue, charged in a Federal warrant with conspiracy to -violate the Harrison anti-narc*tic law, was released on bond of SIOO by Charles W. Moores. United tjtates commissioner, totay. The hearing w-as continued until Feb. 10. Thompson was arrested Sunday night after Clara All wood, his housekeeper, had been taken into custody suffering from (he drug habit. The woman is in the detention ward of the city hospital. Thompson admitted Miss Allwood had been receiving “dope*’ by parcel post from Detroit and be had gotten these packages at the postoffice for her. He insisted he had nothing to do with dope selrtrig and he was making an effort to cure Miss Allwood of the drug habit, after which, lie said, they intended to be married. - % Federal narcotic officers atjd police officials believe they have discovered a connecting link in tiie operations of a gang of Detroit dope sell* has operating in this territory. FINAL SERVICE FOR POPE. K**ME, Feb. 1. The final funeral service for I> -nedict XV was celebrated today in the Sistine Chapel with the most solemn ceremonies. __

FORMER BE. GAINS 25 LBS. TAKING VM “I Don’t Hesitate To Recommend It To A^yone Suffering From Stomach Trouble And Kin and red Complaints,” Spates Well Known Seattle Woman. I "After hearing so mush about Tanlae I bought a bottle thinking _>f it did others so much good—lt might help me, too. Well, F has not only helped me, but' I have actually gained twenty-five pounds since taking it and never felt ; better in my. life," said Mrs Marie J. H nurd, gr;i'i#ute nurse of Bellevue Hospital, 402 Westlake Ave., North, Seattle, Wash. "My appetite is good now and my stomach is in such splendid condition that everything I -‘at agrees with me. 1 used to be bothered a good deal by my kWneys and liver, but <w they both seem normal in every way. "My nerves are calm ami steady and I sleep like a child every night. I have bad a great deal of experience with medicine and 1 don't b*-sit.ve to recommend Tanlae to those who have stomach trouble and kindred complaints.’’ Tanlae is sold in Imlianapnlia by Hook's Dependable Drug Stores and leading druggist* everywhere.—Adv.

Take Mastin’s Yiiamon Tablets to Renew The Vitality Yon Use Up Each Day Clear the Skin, Increase Energy and Correct Constipation • _____ _ All Three Vitamine* >? *"Y K - With True Organic Iron Xa?Y * and the Necessary* Lima j r Salts Concentrated in the \T* # fcs. Same Tablet / Easy and Economical to Take T • f Thin run-down folk* should find this S / m simple test wall worth trying: 'First ( * l . I weigh yourself snd measure vourself.v '■ ““ V_— £ Next take MASTIN'B VITAMON—two ... £ tablets with every, meal. Then wflgh 1 snd measure yourself again each week . _ ( , v vrr4?osJ nU * MAST IN’S bottled *kt-u fLb/’X vn AM ON regnlarly until you are , S’,*. maa umm c hn. XW satisfied with your gain Jny weight. > pop. energy and ImproveiFeppear- ; alckiv-leoklng far*7 • ™ h \ S l JS ’ S VITAMON TABLETS JuStwT’vCTAMON tlb££ contain highly concentrated yeat-viU- .u*. mines as well as the two Mother etlll more imfvortant vltsmtnes (Fat Sola- CL® ’ J." JI^I ble A and Water Soluble C) combined ,“ * and TV, ZIZ with true organic iron and the neoes- "Jf* Trr “ y sary lime salts, all of which Science “ •ays your body must hare to keep yon ' 111 11 11 —■- strong, vigorous, well-formed and fortified agains* the germs of disease. By Increasing the nourishing power of is*| what you eat MABTIV3 VITAMON \ W helps supply Just what your body '"“''vAcmmckc, needs to feed the shrunken tissues, /V /A strengthen Internal organs, clear the 1 \ USVitMa skin Rnd renew shattered nerve force I \skips without upsetting the tstomach or I V WkSv \ causing gas. Pimples, bolls and skin I j / J eruptions seem to vanish as if by \ ‘ J magic under Its healthful, purifying \ 'J'ZSSS. Influence. But it Is not only a que\\s jßfrr bhkA better yon look fc’Ws and feel, or.what your friends say V 1 1 J and think—the scales and tape mesuW vJ cre te l* their own story. A ri) | 1 1 / 1 ' two weeks’ tost will surprise you* oli IJ L J 1 Iu U INCMU, IJJ / ' \ | WARNING: Your safety and J amvu. \\/l \ / / askl 1 protection depend upon getting *MASTIN’S VITAMON TABLETS JAT —if it isn’t MASTIN’S it isn’t tha r, 4 Original and Genuine VITAMON ' w —the World’s Standard—now YOUR WEIGHT INDICATES YOUR U ..J u_ HEALTH. ARE YOU GAINING milhons. Beware of OR LOSING? frnitatioru, cheap substitutes or ;'„.Y. u ,h w; v!U.t c "5 r.l. ‘ Ann flesh “pep M which makes you MASTIN S. At all look and feel far better, just try t*k-; rood _ „ _ T ANARUS, ing two of MASTIN'S VITAMON ** *'•. nrli u Hssg Drns, TABLETS with each me*l for a short • ook * Dependable .-Drug Store*, time and watch tha truly amazing Huder’t, IVarfon’s, Stuckmeyer’s, results. j Goldsmith Bros. MASTIN’S-VITAMON TABLETS fully guar- ' anteed in cvcr y respect or genuine 1 V v ta a slet e moaay promptly refunded 1 uy*jj!ii u Mkj| ■ I ByHEBEBEBBBBI al S H i •tTiji

. Home-made Remedy Stops Coughs Quickly . \ Tbt bf#t CAtigh mwflHue y# ■fl+d. A fisW *ttppty Quickly V. Bfm about sl.

You might be nurpritei to know that the best thing you can use for a severe cough, is a remftay which is easily prepared at bomg in just a few moments. It’s cheap, but for prompt results it beats anything else you ever tried. Usually stops the ordinary xcough or chest cold in 24 hours. Tlstes pleasant, too —children like it—and it is pure and good. Pour 2>/ 2 ounces of Pinex in a pint bottle; then fill it up with plain granulated sugar syrup. Or use clarified molasses, honey, or corn syrup, instead of sugar svrup, if desired. Thus you make a full pintg-a family Supply— but costing no more than a“ small bottle of ready-made cough syrup. Aad as a cough medicine, there is really nothing better to be had at any price. It goes right to the Spot and gives quick, lasting relief. It promptly heals the inflamed Membranes that line the throat and atr passages, stops the annoying throat tickle, loosens the phlegm, and soon your cough stops entirely. Sp.endid for bronchitis, croup, hoarseness ana bronchial asthma. Pinex is a highly concentrated compound of Norway pine extract, famous for healing the membranes. To avoid disappointment ask your druggist- for “2V-> ounces of F'.r.ex with directions and don’t accept anything else. Guaranteed*to give absolute satisfaction or money refund**. The Pinex C®., Ft. Wayne. Ind —Advertisement pram KIDIEYSBBTHER Take a glass of Salts if your Back hurts or Bladder troubles you. No man or woman who eats meat regularly can make a mistake by flushing the kidneys occasionally, says a well-known authority. Meat forms urR aetd which excites the kidneys, they become .overworked from the strain, get sluggish aud fall to filler the waste and poisons from the blood, then we get sick. Nearly all rheumatism, headaches, liver trouble, nervousness, dizziness, sleeplessness and urinary disorders come from sluggish kidneys. Tbe moment you feel a dull ache In the kidneys or your back hurts or If the urir.* is cloudy, offensive, full of sediment, Irregular of passage or attended by a sensation of scalding, stop eating m-at and g*-t about four oun*-es'of Jail Salts from any pharmacy; take a tablespoonful iu a glass of water before breakfast and in a few days your kidneys will act fine. This famous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon Juice, combined with llthia. and has been used for generations to flush and stimulate the kidneys, also to neutralize the adds In urine so it no longer causes Irritation, thus ending bladder weakness. Jnd Salts Is Inexpensive and cannot injure; makes a deligh'ful effervescent lltbia-water drink which everywne should lake now and then to keep the kidneys clean and active and the blood pure, thereby avoiding serious kidney complications.—Advertisement.