Indianapolis Times, Volume 34, Number 263, Indianapolis, Marion County, 15 March 1922 — Page 5

LLOYD GEORGE MAY QUIT POST, LONDON REPORT Refusal of T)ie-Hards* to Give Confidence Vote Brings Crisis. SESSION IS STORMY LONDON. March 15.—The death knell j of the coalition government and the impending resignation of Lloyd George is seen by the British press today In the breakdown of last night’s Conservative party meeting, at which Chamberlain and Balfour failed to win the “die-hard" element over to the support of a vote of confidence in the government. After a stormy two-hour session a meeting which had been called to have a “show down" with Sir George Younger j and his little group of ultra-conserva-tives. ended in a fiasco, without the proposed resolution of confidence in the government being passed. Conservative members of the Government will attempt to explain to Lloyd George the meeting was without significance, it is said, but the situation created by the adamant stand of the ) “die-hards" is admittedly most em- j barrasslng to the ministry. The Daily Chronicle, Lloyd George's paper, said today: “It Is a plain fact the conservatives swung in their sympathies toward the ’die-hards’ in viewpoint and now look toward establishment of a straight conservative ministry.” The Daily News. Liberal, said: “The Tory rank and file has given the coalition notice it has quit by refusing to support the Government when party solidarity is endangered.” DOCTOR ORDERS PREMIER TO REST CHICCIETH, Wales, March 15. j Though there are rumors in London that Lloyd George's retreat to these Welsh mountains was due to “diplomatic ill- | ness,” it is learned on the highest au- | thority the Premier’s physician advised unless he took a complete mental rest he was in danger of suffering a complete breakdown as a resolt of his years of hard service. The Premier Is suffering from nerve strain. He is a victim of severe head- j aches and his blood pressure is unsatis- ; factory. His wife and secretary are try- j lng to prevent him even from answering his correspondence. A great deal of Lloyd George's time is spent in gardening. He points proudly ; to the stony garden patch “that we worked from necessity fifty years ago.” j He is friendliest of all with villagers. | who at first are somewhat awed by his presence, but lose their bashfulness when he converses freely with them in their native Welsh. BTH DISTRICT OFFICIALS MEET Action Taken at Muncie to Increase Efficiency in Enforcing Law. Special to Th“ Times. MUNCIE, Ind„ Marhc 15.—City and county officials and persons interested in law enforcement work in the Eighth Congressional District met here today to discuss means of increasing efficiency its stamping out liquor-law violations and other forms of lawlessness. I? was r-ported there have been more ■ robberies and hold-ups in the district during the last six months than was ever known before. The meeting, held under the auspices of the Anti-Saloon League, was addressed by Dr. J. C. Quick, mayor of Muncie: B. J. Horne, mayor of Anderson: ; E. M. Dunn, prosecuting attorney of Union City; Alonzo Bales, judge at Win- j Chester, and E. S. Shumaker, superintendent of the Anti-Saloon League.

BRANCH SHOE , STORE OPENED New Firm in Basement of Merchants’ Bank. Anew shoe store opened today in the , basement of the Merchants Bank Build- I lng at Meridian and Washington streets.! It mark3 an addition to a largo chain j of atores and is known as the Thrift j Ehoe Store. The basement of the build- j Ing has been remodeled and an elaborate | lighting system installed. In addition j to a large retail department there is a repair department and a “nickel shine" j is being featured. The store occupies 7,000 square feet of floor space with a seating capacity of 0 and is said to be the largest shoe i •tore on one floor in Indiana. In keeping with the idea of making a "daylight j basement,” the store has been finished ; in bright colors with white overhead, j The furnishings and ail woodwork are ’ finished in mahogany. Store entrances . •re in Meridian street and the lobby of the bank bnilding. The policy of the store has been an- j Bounced as in opposition to special cut- | price sales. The business is conrueted i on a small margin of profit, according! to the management, depending upon tV ! volume of sales attained through its large j Chain of stores. THEY MET A “FRIEND.” NEW YORK. March 15.—Two New 1 Jersey youths who came over to “see j New Yojk" reported to the police that chance companions, genial at first, had ! stripped them of their money, watches, j overcoats, coats and vests. RHEUMATIC TWINGE MADE‘YOU WINCE! USE Sloan's freely for rheumatic aches, sciatica, lumbago, over- j worked muscles, neuralgia, back- ! •cbes, stiff joints and for sprains and •trains. It penetrates without rubbing . The very first time you use Sloan’s Liniment you will wonder why you never used it before. The comforting warmth and quick relief from pain will delightfully surprise you. > Keep Sloan’s handy and at the first •ign of an ache or pain, use it. At all druggists—3sc, 70c, $1.40. !loarts inimentra Dwfifiofing facial eruption* ull : cuic.-Oy healed by Dr.Hobson'e Eczema b Ointment. Good for pimply faces, IS eczema, acne, itching akin, and all a j other skin troubles. One of Dr. Hobson’, !M Family Remedies. Any druggist i B DrUobson’s I

Bride-to-Be, 100 , Left at Altar by Sensitive Groom KANSAS CITY, Mo., March 15. Mrs. Emma McMahon, 100 years and four months old, wont back to her embroidery worlt and crocheting today. She was decidedly miffed. She expected to be a bride, but the groom-to-be, Sims (Toots) Berry, a robust youth of 80, walked ont on the wedding . party Just as a judge was ready to tie the matrimonial knot. It was a Jilt not to be taken lightly even by a bride of only 100 summers. Berry had joined with the assembled friends and relatives In the jollity of the occasion. Then a group of newspapermen ar-ived. Some had cameras. Berry balked. He didn't want to “get into the papers." They didn’t do such things sixty or eighty years ago and he didn't care for the new idea. The reporters pleaded with Berry to be a good boy and not spoil things. But Berry got downright mad, grabbed his hat and coat and left the party flat. They waited for him to return, bnt he didn't. The wedwas off. “So b.' it,” said Mrs. McMahon. “No one can rifle with my affections. I’ll not take him back now.”

TRADE REVIVAL PARLEY MAY BE HELD IN CITY National Prosperity Bureau Confers With C. of C. and Mayor. The Chamber of Commerce and Mayor j Samuel Lewis Shank, have been requested by National Prosperity Bureau, with 1 headquarters in New York City, to com- ! ment upon a plan to hold a national industrial convention In some centrallylocated city in the next few weeks to discuss ways and means of putting national business upon the upgrade to stay. Letters to the chamber and mayor indicate Indianapolis is under considers- j tlon as the site of the convention and headquarters of an organization for carrying out the plan worked out by the ' delegates. The tentative plan suggested by the 1 prosperity bureau Includes the issuance i of invitations to national associations of j retailers, wholesalers, manufacturers, j bankers, economists, industrial engineers, advertising men, traveling salesmen, j credit men, labor, farmer and consumer : organizations and others to send delegates. Briefly, the plan contemplates a convention of all American industries to consider plans for a unified, cooperative, j business-building campaign to extend ' over a period of not less than three i months, utilizing all the most effective I media of advertising and publicity with a well-organi" program of morchandls ing in every y and town, the bureau states. 38 PERSONS IN HEROIC RESCUE HOBOKEN, N. J., March 15— Police and firemen rescued thirty-eight persons, including fifteen children, from a burn- ] ing apartment house here today. The apartment and the Flsher-Sweeney Bronze Works, occupying almost an entire block, were razed. The loss is estimated at SIBO,OOO. Occupants of the house were asleep when the fire, which started in the Bronze plant, spread to the house. Patrolman Paul Hennessy, the first officer to arrive, gave the alarm and rescued a woman and three children, trapped in their rooms. Same of the occupants of the house were overcome, but none was seriously hurt

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BRUNEN LETTER SHOWS HIS FEAR OF BEING KILLED Writes Sister ‘Doty Is Figuring to Do Away With Me/ Sheriff Says. RIVERSIDE, N. J., March 15.—Arrest of a suspect In the slaying of John Brunen, circus proprietor, in his home here

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INDIANA DAILY TIMES, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 15, 1922.

last Friday night, was imminent today. Prosecutor Kelsey announced. A report that the fatal shot was fired in response to a signal from the window of the Brunen home directly above the one before which the circus man was sitting when he was slain, was given to a representative of the prosecutor’s office today. A woman Jving directly behind the

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Brunen home said she saw the figure of a woman appear at the window shortly before the report of the gun on the night of the shootihg and wave a cloth, which sfce took to be an apron. Authorities regard her story as one of the most important pieces of evidence ’unearthed in the investigation.

JVf Thei'e’s Ilealtli in. m] { QUllta^n Valleij Water fll Urinary Calculus {stone) V. ✓ “In It* early stages the condition usually presents itself in the form of gravel shown by passage of numerous very small gritty particles, like small grains v , 11)11111, A ' ©f Cayenne pepper.” jgf Wit l! —The New International Encyclopedia bicAv Ll. /J WARI JlN G~the steady and frequent /j appearance of gravel is a warning of the possible formation of calculus (stone) in the gall bladder—one of the most painful diseases from which mankind suffers. At Hot Springs, Ark. where physicians send many sufferers from bladder trouble to drink the healing waters of this most famous health resort, 90 % of these sufferers drink Mountain Valley Water. 800 feet abot>e sea level in the Ozark Mountains, the home of Hot Springs, Mountain Valley Water bubbles up crystal clear —a delicious, refreshing, health-giving water. Hundreds can testify to its beneficial effedts in diseases for which it is recommended. “Bottled Health ** now at your disposal # Mountain Valley Water is nou) offered to the people of this city in bottles or metal Prescribed by casks. The advantages of using this water cannot be overestimated. It is prescribPhysiciana ed by physicians not only in Gravel but in cases of Bright’s Disease, Diabetes, Rheumatism, High Blood Pressure, Hardening of the Arteries, Excessive Uric Acid, Stomach, i Liver, Kidney and Bladder Trouble. Mountain Valley Water is also used by many families as a table water and a preventive of disease. There’s health in every drop of Mountain Valley Water. Call Circle 12 99—or write us today. Let us tell you what Mountain Valley Water has done for others. Upon request we’ll gladly send you the Mountain Valley Water booklet together with analysis, price, and any further information you desire. Come in and sample Mountain Valley Water—no obligation . no expense. Mountain Valley Water Cos. Indianapolis, Indiana 911-13 Massachusetts Avenue Telephone: Circle 1299 Served In bottles at leading hotels. By the Kahn Cafeteria and Francis Pharmacy. By the glass, bottle or case at Wm. H. Block Cos,, Columbia Grocery and Wm. Buschmann Cos., 927 Fort Wayne Avenue.

Kelßey had in his possession a letter written by Brunen to a sister, Mrs Elizabeth Jeske, on Feb. 20, in which he expressed fear that his wife and 17-year-old daughter Hazel, were plottln against him ann tbit his wife would murder him for bis money. Mrs. Jeske brought the letter from

Carey, 111., when sha came for her brother’s funeral. “I think Doty is figuring to do away with me,” Brunen said in the letter. “She thinks she can get free, for she talks about it all the time. In case anything happens to me, sister, X want you

to come and take full charge of everything.” Brunen said his wife shot at him on Christmas day and would have killed him if he had not “dodged and grabbed” the gun. He also deplored the fact that his daughter Hazel was being taught “nothing but the fast life of this world.”

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