Indianapolis Times, Volume 34, Number 278, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 April 1922 — Page 4
|||§ttl&ma STunes INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA. Except Sunday, 25-29 South Meridian Street. Telephone—MA in 3500. - „ f §/BERS OF AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS. SUHymn office* Chicago, Detroit, St. Louis, G Logan Bayne Cos. |j Birthday today starts on the second e-'-ntury of its existence as i.ut.dred ><-ars it has r'nur. at: svaunp ■HHantic history or the Building of the Middle West, the parmodern miracle. County was c-:;•.!>!:shed as a governmental unit therc|QßH||Htle row of cabins built of newly hewn logs, lining a strip of „•'* want of a better name, ar> >ad. Ino settlers at temp ed to HEHHHH from the soli between attuc ks of chills and fever. ®SBggflgH[ count\ has a population little more than 3.V>,000 and B|H||Hies of the State and the Mid.He West. The first hundred ■BBHflHhistory of Marion hen com; a red with progress gt-norali; , has o nr.mg of the railroad, toe the au'jniobile and tl .c.rph.ne met invis of travel; the developed telegraph and the mere recent wireless as nmuni'-wt t -.tn n, vw tl e ovine light, n-.u----wtffljen artificial lights, tho modem skyscraper and the modern ,e • Hli ding. With th, I • • f •’.! s- things and many o,ucrs. fS'tv and Indianapolis. . are alnmst one, have arisen out BHflHßVemess to a position of importanc, ana wealth The taxable property in Marion County is more than $600,000,000. *4 We coming of an anniversary the re i- a te:.d.-nc> to look into HHHas well as into the past. Xo one living can anticipate with SftEHKElof accuracy what the r :.g . • Marten ( 'oun*> H®Hfl|H presumptuous eve:-. > r..c deve! qinvurs of a century will bring. The location of Indianapolis ||®Blarion County and their relative importance in the commercial and scheme of the State and the country assures a steady growth and in population. How rapid this growth will be and what tjSs the progress of Invention will make In the nature of this aevel,jfijgfl can not even be made subjects for a guess. Time only will tell. rfrapith ilarion County having reached the century mark and with the past that mark it is to be hoped that before the second century old there will come a simplification in the governments of the two and possible consolidation of the two governments. As now stand there Is a great duplication of effort. The county has organized and expensive government functioning in a district if the city of Indianapolis were left out, would be one of the smallest, E||® the smallest, in point of area in the State. One of the first steps on of progress in the new century should be tlio simplification cf government. This is a problem that is really acutJ and one faced in no other county in the State to such a serious degree as B eless as Jazz Antidote OT \i music, imported from the underworld dives of Buenos Aires, i sweep Ameriea in 1913. Sailors brought It Into Now Orleans. It up the Mississippi River. Negro roustabouts on the levees new varieties of jazz “blues.” Tramps, in their camps, which : call “jungles,” caught the infection. They called jazz “snow bird SeJic’’—“snow” being the underworld name for cocaine and a "snowbird” dope fiend. H Infectiously the epidemic of jazz spread over the country, evolving Bn Jazz melodies to a form of Jazz life characterized by fatalism, indifrecklessness and immorality. Simultaneously, the jazz germ Hpt Europe. In “The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse” you read Hraez*s fine description of France being worked to a high pitch of jazz Bnotlonallsm. B Psychiatrists recognized the jazz epidemic as one of the peculiar waves of social neurasthenia, or hysteria, which periodically sweep countries or even the whole world. The tango craze was one of these psychic epidemics. The international wave of social hysteria culminated In the ■Vorid War, violent international insanity. The reaction is on. People are becoming normal again—thinking thoughts. Jazz is passing. During the jazz epidemic there has a lot of worrying about Young America. Youth in general seemed gone off on a tangent of wild prodigalism. L. One morning the country woke up and was amazed to learn that the hcd. gone crazy on wireless. The radiophone had corralled enthusiasm. The wireless craze has developed far enough to \ that it’s going to be the most powerful antidote against jazz. The is tinkering with Hertzian waves has his feet on the ground, is , .g clean thoughts, training his brain, soaking up useful knowledge. wireless fan is vaccinated against jazz, just as boys of a genago were kept in a healthy, norma! mental state by playing Inbuilding shanties, collecting bones and old junk in alleys listening fakers, staging amateur minstrel shows, stringing toy telegraphs. the Law Joke of the law is a most dangerous and vicious tendency. newspap'ers are full of jokes about the evasion of law. The stage ®B” are based on the same subject. All grades of society enjoy boastHratories the methods employed to get around legal restraints. It QH ' so BE&n the air to mock the authorities, block them in the perwiamcejsSSkglr duties and make heroes out of the violators. Yet the Ke laugh heartily at law breaking would be the first to Hht anarchyfn this land of ours. ■ All civilization is founded upon law. Without law* there would be Haos and revolution. Y T et whenever certain elements of organized sore y find themselves restrained from the practice of license and held Pgßhin the bounds of true liberty, they endeavor to overthrow the particu- ■ laws which have proven irksome, or render futile their enforcement. most effective method employed Is to let fly the shafts of ridicule, are faced at this period with deliberate and insidious propaganda F&MlgßLto create a demand for the repeal of laws by giving out the imQBjfr are ineffectual because they are not capable of being this dangerous attitude is directed primarily toward the rAfAijjjyutlonal amendment, it goes much farther and incites revolt laws. It is the duty of the citizen to obey the law's of the lies within the jurisdiction of the courts to create the proper re®ect for law observance, and it unquestionably devolves upon the properly Hnstituted officials to enforce the laws correctly and properly and wlth®t prejudice. Provisions are made in our government for the protection of the inand his rights, and the citizen can avail himself of that protection. H disrespect and disregard for law should never be countenanced. widian Propagandists Busy ® A false conception of the true conditions in India has been given the Hrld by Indian extremists who have exhibited an unusual facility in ■reading propaganda, especially in the American press, according to Madras (India) Mail misrepresentation and the wholesale suppression of truth are H stock materials of these revolutionaries,” says an editorial in the t®L “In their hatred of Great Britain they stop at no mean trick to de-H-e their fellow countrymen and the peoples of other nations.” \m The paper gives the lie to statements of the National Indian Congress ■ Chicago that hundreds of natives were shot down and houses destroyed ■ British troops, and proves that pictures of disturbances published in were taken many years ago during the Punjab disorders. B ‘We in India know that the opposite is the truth,” continues the Mail, Pthat the British forces have been busy endeavoring to prevent the Moplah rebels from burning houses and committing similar outrages. “We have, however, to thank the National Indian Congress in Chicago for one valuable admission. Extremists in India have been busy Idenying all connection with the Moplah rebellion. Their fellows in are much more frank about this matter. * * * The main is that we have here a frank avowal that the extremist organizations have been and are connected with the Moplah rebellion. We are ul for these admissions. They certainly serve to prevent loyal and of Gandhi or the prison-born axioms of Mahomed Ali. lies are far more harmful to India than Britain, they ten 1
GOVERNMENT ‘Of the People, by the People, for the People?
Paternalism Threatens Our Educational and Domestio Systems. The predominating purpose of the advocates of paternalism is the reaching out for new fields w T hich may prove prolific sources of employment for an army of useless, inefficient political hangers-on. There are before Congress many bills wh.ch would attempt to mold the entire educational system of the United States in the form dictated by a small group of so-called educators, from central headquarters at Washington. Gradually there is slipping Into our school system the cold and destructive hand of paternalism. It boldly asserts that the children are ward* of the State and that they must submit to the control of zealous regulators and inspectors in all matters pertaining to home, life and health, bodily conditions, clothing, feeding and mental classification and segregation. The paternalist, in his various guises and disguises. Is imperceptibly but surely displacing the educational department in its constitutional right to operate and control the schools, and is displacing the parent In the control of the children. Any educational system, in order to be true to Us name, must be elastic and easily adaptable to changing conditions. Under cumbersome government control this Is impossible. Under the political Influence, which would at once enter into the control of this new field, party advantage would come nrst and educational values last. There would be no incentive for individual advancem Nicholas Murray Butler, president of Columbia University, In a recent report, makes most strenuous objection to such measures and the evils of government control and Interference In educational matters: “Once more to tap the Federal treasury under the guise of aiding the and once more to establish an army bureaucrats in Washington and another army of inspectors roaming at lurge
Ve TOWNE G'.SSIP Copyright. IBtZ. by situ. Company. By K. C. B HOW LONG ago. • * • THAT IT was born. • • • OK WHO It was. * • • THAT GAVE it birth. I DO not know. • • • BI T I do know. • • • THAT IF I could. • • • I’D FIND myself. ... A GREAT high hill. ... WHERE ALL the time. THE SEN came down. ... AND NO clouds hung. EXCEPT ON days. • • • WHEN WARM rains fell. ... TO QUENCH the thirst. ... OF GROWING things. AND ALL the time. ... THESE GROWING thlng- ... SHOULD HOLD the life. OF SPRINGTIME days. ... AND BIRDS would come. ... INTO THIS hilL • • • THAT I would choose. AND THERE they’d sing. • • • Til FI K ROUNDELAYS. • • • AND BE ?o glad. t • • THAT THEY had found. ... THIS HILL of mine. ... THEY’D ALWAYS sing. • • TnEIR SWEETEST notes. ... AND ON this hill. ... THKRE WOULD be paths. ... AND SHADED nooks. AND EVERYTHING. ... THAT WOULD Invite. • • • THE OLD and young. • • • IF SO It be. • • • THEY WERE in love. • • • OR BECKONED there. • * BY LOXESOMENKSS. • • • AND I would build. • • • UPON THIS hill. • • • WHERE ALL might ace. • * A MONUMENT. ■ • * OF LASTINC. stone. t * * AND I would cut. • • • IN LETTERS deep. * # INTO THIS stone. ... SOME SIMPLE words. SO ALL might know. • 4c IT WAS put there. ■ • * IN GRATEFUL thanks. * • • UNTO THE girl. * • WHO FIRST did say. • • • TO LONESOME man. 0 0 0 “ALL-RIGHTEE!” 0 0 0 ON THE telephone. 0 0 0 I THANK you.
BRINGING UP FATHER.
/ I n ; NO ' M,J,bX UP to 1 (Tl, the A-j J !W U i ° E T.M-WJN* m ROOM j - E.VER.X T\rAE, l L P Wf )7 P,l^rl \4 ! I 1 ! OJNTV MOORE HAVE. A LOT OF WORK 1 Loo * MIX HOieANO \ | . COULD 2rr ?°1 A& ' l* THE CAT**, v . TO OC- ' fid MMA4INE I CAN U ”1. L, ran 1 V-> -jJmfl MIEO'-v nKIN 2 flilliS . , CORNED C>EEF AND j | ; !, c—-* ) ' ' J j — —M
INDIANA DAILV *f IMUS.
throughout the land, will not only fall to accomplish any permanent improvement in the education of our people, but it will assist in affecting so great a revolution In our American form of government as one day to endanger Its perpetuity. The major portion of any appropriation that may be made will certainly be swallowed up in meeting the cost of doing ill Chat which should not be done at all. Bureaucrats and experts will speedily take the life out of even the best schools and reduce them to dried and mounted specimens of pedagogic family.” Paternalism Destroys Initiative. Some of the dangers of paternalism are illustrated by the effects of the so-called “efficiency expert” In his attempted control and direction of Industry and labor under efficiency methods. With coldly observing eyes, these "experts,” nrmed with stop watches, elaborate theoretical tables and limitless selfassurance. for a time held sway. The steps of the operator were counted as - well as each motion he made, and an attempt was made to have the men stop thinking for themselves and become animated automatons. What did this accomplish? In very many cases the results were stagnation of the individual, loss of constant Improvement in methods followed by decreased production and increased costs of operation. The men were forbidden to exert initiative and there was no incentive for them to forge ahead. The intentions were good but the spirit was wrong and in opposition to all economic laws. The system failed because the American citizen refuses to stop thinking for himself. He refuses to give up his independence. It was this quality of initiative which won the World War and demonstrated for all time the weakness of paternalism. Let us encourage Initiative in our schools | our homes, our Industries and In every phase of our daily living and so stamp out the evils of paternalism wherever it may attempt to enter Into our lives. America was founded on Individualism prospered and developed beyond all precedent because of It. and stands to day as the greatest, best and strongest country in the world as a result of it Shall we discard all this, lower our standard to that of middle Europe and Russia and sacrifice atl that, has been | bequeathed to us at so great a cost of life blood and treasure spent fy our forefathers? We are headed that way and going at tremendous speed and the only power that can stop ns and avert thf danger lies in the individual citizen. Every American under the provisions of the Constitution lias Inherited well d*> fined. Inalienable rights. To safeguard these constitutional prerogafivea In his duty. The power to meet the constant attacks against these rights made by the bureaucrat and the paternalistic is in proportion to the individual citizens de sire to get a true understanding of the tind erhfcng motives and ultimate purpose In the minds of the men backing various political moves. The development of this habit of analysis and a refusal to net blindly will cause the votes to be cast for principle and not for party, and this awakening will mark the downfall of paternalism and the growth of Americanism. Will you stnnd for your rights ns an American and aid In stamping out paternalism In our State and national Gov eminent ?
PUSS IN ROOTS. TT*. By DAVID CORY. “One, two. three. Four and five. I caught a hare alive; Six, seven, eight. Nine and ten, I let him go again.” 1 “You should not have counted up to ten.” laughed Puss Junior. “Oh,, that wasn't the reason,” replied the hunter. “He begged so hard for his life I couldn’t help It. I’m too tenderbearted for a huntsman, anyhow." Puss was In a hurry this morning, so he trotted along, and by and by he met little Jenny Wren and Robin Redbreast. He had not seen them since their wedding day. “Good morning, Robin,” he cried. Mr. and Mrs. Redbreast sang away as if they were too happy for anything. “What’s all this singing for?" Inquired Puss. "Don’t yon know?" replied Jenny Wren. "We have a whole nostfnl of little Redbreasts. We are as happy as the day Is long.” “Isn't that lovely?” cried Puss. "It ought to be so, for you had such a nice wedding. Do you remember how the sun shone?” “Yes, and all the birds sang so beautifully.” "What's your hurry?” asked Robin Redbreast. “I’m Just restless this morning,” replied our little traveler. “Don’t you ever get restless?" “We haven’t time with all these youngsters to feed,” laughed Little Jenny W ren. “Well, good-by,” said Puss, and off he went through the green woods. And after some time he met Robin Hood. “Two robins In one morning,” thonght Puss. “I wonder what that means? If It were blackbirds, I’d know.” “Good-morrow. Sir Cat,” cried Robin Hood. " ’TIs long since last we met. Where is Mother Goose?” "I left her safe in her little hut,” replied Puss. “She is still there, tor all 1 know.” "Fine old lady." said Robin Hood. "Do you know, Sir Cat, that often of an evening I read her book aloud to my merry men. Wo gather together and by the light of the moon T croon and sing those old ditties. “Twinkle, twinkle, little sfnr,’ and ’Old Mother Hubbard’; oh, you know them ns well an 1 do. “Everybody knows 'Mother Goose.’ I learned it from my mother and she learned it from her mother, and so on and so on!" Then, after a while Robin Hood said good-by, and each went his own way, happier for knowing that each knew his Mother Goose.—Copyright. 1002. To Be Continued.
G. 0. P. CAN’T SHIFT BLAME, WRITER SAYS Rejection of Peace Treaty and League of Nations Astounds Civilization. To the Editor: Dear Sir—lt la now apparent to all who are watching political events as they are developing, that our Republican friends are going to claim that our present deplorable condition was not caused by the election of Warren G. nardlng, but that It Is an aftermath of the great World War, and that It could not have been prevented. This position Is untenable, as can and will be shown by the Democrats before this campaign is very I far advanced. IVe Democrats have never claimed that ‘ President Harding is solely responsible for the great disaster that lias come upon this country, but we do say that fils election was the last straw which broke the camel’s back. With his election the last chance to avoid a distressing, disgraceful and humiliating diasler disappeared, and not only ourselves, but all civilized mankind was everywhere amazed and dnmfounded, thnt we had rejected th e Peace Treaty and the League of Nations. We followed Warren G. Harding’s advice and turned our backs upon a hungry, starving, heartbroken world, and thereby brought upon onrselvesc the most withering depression thnt has come upon ; us in the whole history of the Republic. We pulled the house down while we were Inside. O. O. P. CONGRESS CAUSE OF DISTRESS. The election of the Republican Congress. chosen in 1918, was the greatest calamity that ever befell us. That Congress not only caused the major part of our present distress, but so disgraced us that we hav P not now, nor have we had in the last three years, one single sincere friend among all the nations of the earth. That Congress among other vicious things, rejected the Peace Treaty and the League of Nations, and that brought upon this country and the world a collossal catastrophe. It stagnated and demoralized every line of human endeavor In the land. It closed up the mnnufac- , turlng Industries arid threw six million men out of work. It paralyzed the business Interests generally and brought upon the farmers a distressing disaster that amounts to a calamity. It placed In Jeopardy the peace of the world and Staggered civilization. In my opinion the Republican loaders rejected this treaty, and caused the Congress to reject It, believing and knowing that It was right and to the best interests of humanity. They rejected It because It was sponsored by a Democratic' President. They rejected It because they saw In It a master stroke In the progress of the human race. They rejected It knowing that It was the one mighty marvelous achievement, of man, of all the ages. They rejected It because they believed that It would make Woodrow Wilson and the Democratic party so tremen dously popular that the final result would he death and utter oblivion for the Republican party. That this Is a reasonable and logical conclusion, I do not believe It can be successfully galnsayed. The unscrupulous and corrupt methods used by the Republicans to carry the election of 1920 is positive proof of this A* an Illustration 1 call attention to the fact that James E. Watson called th* Republican stump speakers to In dlanapolls, and told them to go out among the people and tell them that the League of Nations proposed to legalize the traffic in women for Immoral purposes. He knew this was a monstrous falsehood, Which could have come from no one save the devil himself. We have positive proof that It was a falsehood In the fact that the League of Nations In Its last meeting at Geneva undertook to work out a plan to stop this monstrous evil, and with this end In view, they called upon the United States to help them. Then this great republic, nonin the hands of the Republican party, which has boasted of its glorious achievements, high ideals, and lofty aspirations, refused absolutely to have anything to do with the nasty thing. ANOTHER PROOF OF INSINCERITY. Another proof of the Republican Insincerity and hypoeracy lies In the fact that they had men on the stump In 1920 speaking both for and against the League of Nations. It will lie remembered by many people thnt William H. Taft one week before the election, stood up before a great New York audience, and told them that If Harding was elected, that the treaty would be ratified, and that if Cox was elected, it would not be ratified. At the same time Borah and Johnson were Cunning up and down the land telling the people to vote for Harding and kill the treaty. Warren O. Harding himself wiggle wobbled through the campaign so no man could tell to a certainty where he stood on the treaty or any other question. It was all things to ait men and anything to get in. It was a foregone conclusion that Mr. Harding’s Administration could lie nothing but the most dtsinal and disastrous failure, in the whole history of the Republic. At the present time, the notorious hypocrites like Lodge. Watson and New are calling William E. Borah n blatherskite because of his fight on the fourpower treaty; when his record Is the only clean and honest one of the bunch He at least has been consistent. The four power treaty Is a weak, puny and Insignificant thing when compared to the League of Nations, and not an argument, that was ever made against the League of Nations, hut what can he made with much more force and- logic against the four power treaty. If It could bo shown thnt our present deplorable and unparalleled situation was as claimed by tho Republicans, an aftermath of the war. It would give the lls to all the claims and pretentions made by them, during the last twenty-five years, because they have constantly and persistently claimed that hard times, panics, unemployment, distress and soup houses werp Impossible while they were running things. The thing which I have been trying i to make plain In this article Is, that |
Making Your Own Loose Coupler DAILY RADIO FEATURES
RADIO PRIMER STATIC. This term Is applied to electrical disturbances In the atmosphere which affect the audibility of radio messages. Some authorities have ascribed the cause of static to the rapid revolution jof the earth and its curtain of atmosphere. No method yet has been devised that will do away entirely -with static, although lowering of the antenna has been found to lessen disturbances. By R. L. DUNCAN, Director, Radio Institute of America. All set to bpgin building your radio j receiving Instruments ? j The first part Is the construction of j the loose coupler. Get a cardboard tube six and one- ; half inches long and four and onequarter inches in diameter. This is for the primary or stationary coil. Take i another cardboard tube five and threequarter inches by three and one-quarter Inches. This is the secondary or sliding ! coil. Give the tubas two coats of shellac before starting to cover them with wire and place in warm oven to take up all possible shrinkage. Then get these sup- | plies: Three-quarters of a pound of No. 22 ! cotton covered copper wire. A square brass rod seven and onehalf inches long and three-sixteenths Inch Construction of loose coupler. A and BCD, binding posts. 8, slide, square for tho support of tha primary slider. Two round brass rods 13\4 Inches long and 3-i6 Inch In diameter for the support of the secondary coll. These Bhouid be so arrang.-d that It will be easy to move the coll In and out of the primary. Four binding posts. Switch knob and blade. Switch contact points. Nuts, screws, nails. The main base can be made of well seasoned wood about eighteen Inches long and ten Inches wide. For the primary supports use pieces about nine Inches square. One of these ghoald be cut through to permit the passing in and out of the secondary coll. The other should be partly hollowed for the rear end of the primary. Now for the winding: Start a half Inch from the end of the primary tube. Tighten the wire securely and then wind tightly around tube in a single layer. Stop about half an Inch from the end of the tube and lead wire to binding post. A, which connects with aerial. Run wire from point on slider to binding post B. which connects with ground. Brace tube on wooden supports. Then at the close of the great VTorld War, we were the big strong brother In the groat family of the nations of the earth, anil could have very easily stabilized the world. We could have brought comfort, cheor and consolation to multiplied millions of people, and while so doing, we could have made ourselves tremendously prosperous, nr and could have had tho sweet consolation ot having done something really worth while. Thera Is absolutely no doubt In my mind, but what at the close of that mighty conflict, that the great Jehovah, who holds in His hands the destiny of men and of nations expected and desired that we should be the leaders In the reconstruction of the world. Under the leadership of Woodrow Wilson, had he not been thwarted by the devil, we would havo led the nations of the world np to a higher plain of civilization and would have given to our people the greatest. era of peace and prosperity experienced by any people In the whole history of the human race. HARVEY Z. COLLINS, Huntington, lad.
Unusual Foik LEBANON. Mo., April I.—Fern Waterman, 4 years old, Is the champion speller hereabouts. He went before the itjjjfccaja faculty of the State Teachers’ College at Springfield, Mo„ restg? cently to prove it. The wise pedagogs iW- ™ picked these words ’em without a single he was 3, his parents FERN. say. A THOUGHT FOR TODAY For even that which was mode glorious hath no glory In this respect by reason of th glory that excelleth.—ll Corinthians 1:10. No man perhaps suspects how large and Important the region of the unconscious in him is; what a vast unknown territory lies there hack of his conscious will propose and which Is really the controlling power of his life.—John Burroughs.
By GEORGE McMANHS.
TONIGHT’S PROGRAM INDIANAPOLIS STATION WLK—--9:30 r>. m., weather report. INDIANAPOLIS STATION WOH—--8:00 p. m., music; mixed program of “high brow” and “jazz” selections. PITTSBURGH STATION KDKA (eastern time) — 7:30 p. m„ special children's entertainment; bird and animal imitations by Carlton C. Anthony. D. D. S. 8:00 p. m., talk; speaker to be announced later. 8:30p. m., Geneva College musical clubs. 9:00-9:05 p. m.. news (United Press). 9:05 p. m., music. 9:55 p. .m, Arlington time signals. NEWARK (N. J.) STATION WJZ (eastern time)— 7:00 p. .m, “Man in the Moon” stories for children. 7:40 p. in., short falk by William F. Skene. United States Department of Agriculture. New York. 8:30 p. in., Stevens Institute musical clubs; program. Glee Club; orchestra. Rnnio-Mandolln Club; vocal quartette; Cooke, Slfshey. Oanz and O’Mahoney: cello solos by W. H. Kingsley. “Berceuse from .Toeeyln” and "Last Rose of Summer:” violin solos by S. V. Miano: solos by L. W. Lemon; instrumental quintet composed of Detmer, Lemon (saxophones). Good (piano), Beneditti (violin) and Linnell (traps). Ccmbined clubs. “Mechanical Engineer.’ President Humphreys will probably „e pres, nt and give a short talk. 9:52 p. in., Arlington time signals. CHICAGO STATION KYW—--7:30 p. m., children's bedtime story. 8:00 p. m., Herman Devries, music critic; Ruth Marguerite Williams and Jeanne Deyo, sopranos; Stuart Barker, barytone; W. B. Hoxie, oboe: Audiss Waite Caward, Kathleen Mor rls and Sallie Menkes, accompanists. 9:00 p. m., news and sports. SCHENECTADY (N. Y.) STATION WGY teastern time) — 7:00 p. m., mnrkel quotations supplied by New York State department of farms and markets, and weather reports. DETROIT (MICH.) STATION WWJ—--7:00-8:30 p. m., regular musical program. SPRINGFIELD (MASS.) STATION WBZ (eastern time) 7:30 p. m., bedtime story. 7:45 p. m., special business review, written by Stuart P. West. 8:00 p. m.. Joseph F. MeCarron, Irish tenor; Alphonse Guyon, pianist. take secondary coll and fit with Its two small discs. Drill holes for tha slider rods. Start winding the secondary or smaller coil the same as the primary, but on the tenth or twelfth turn punch two holes through the tube one-quarter of an Inch apart. After twelve turns cut the wire five or six inches from the tube and punch through the first hole. Then take the wire you had been winding and force through the second hole, twisting the two ends Inside the tube. On the outward end of the secondary coll mount the contact points on the disc with small terminals on the Inside. Run wire from your first contact point to the two twisted ends inside the tube. Then wind from eighteen to twenty-two more turns and repeat as above. The more taps on your secondary coll, the more selective the tuning of your lose coupler. When the tube is wound to within a
Sheriff Candidate Would End Gambling Promises to suppress gambling, which he charges is being conducted on a large scale In Indianapolis at present, in the ovent of his nomination -and election are made by Charles C. Morgan, 1015 Congress avenue, In announcing his candidacy for the nomination of sheriff on the Democratic ticket at the primary election In May. ”1 will advocate the election of a straight Democratic ticket In Marlon County this fall, and I promise, as sheriff. backed by a Democratic prosecutor and Judge of the criminal court, I will break up gambling In Marlon County within thirty days after 1 take office. “There is more wide open gambling i going on In Indianapolis today than for j
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SUNDAY’S PROGRAM! INDIANAPOLIS STATION WI.I^^H 2:30 p. m., church service froirßjgßH Tabernacle. HBH 8:30 p. m., talk on the better fOHB religious books in Religious Book week, under tIHH ivetion of Charles E. Rush, ciMH brarian: speaker to be inter. 8:45 p. m„ musical program. Featuring Miss Virginia Lucas. cal: Miss Christine Houseman, pitH Miss Ruth Smith, piano. INDIANAPOLIS STATION WOH—--10:00 p. m„ religions and classi* music. PITTSBURGH STATION KDKA ern time) — 10 45 m.. services of Calvnry^^B copal Church. Shady avenue, burgh; the Rev. E. J. Van rector. 3:00 p m., radio chapel at KDKA, conducted by the Kay Evers, pastor East End ■§■ ti.n. Church. Pittsburgh. Pa. 7 :5o p. in., services of the Point Presbyterian Church, Fifth ancKuflj avenues. Pittsburgh, Pa.; Dr. Barker, minister. NEWARK (N. J.i STATION WJZ ern time) — 3:00 p. m.. radio chapel mon by the Rev. J. P. D, resisted by the organist from Christian gregational Church of Upper rlair, N. J. 4 :00 p. in., sacred music. a^B 0 :-■*-■ i p. m.. “Sandman Tales,” ’ Phillips Walker. ” .s p. in., recital by Ruth pianist, age 12: duets by Quirk and Harold Kelly, These beys entertained 500.000 soldiers in the camps pßi the last two years of the 7:30 p. in.. "United States Coast £~sl' * Service," by B. L. Reed, New York division. U. S. C. gHH S :00 p. in., recital by Yvonne B||| villi-, coloraturo soprano, C unique 9:30 p. .in, recitall by Mile. F. who sings in all the large houses abroad. CHICAGO STATION KYW— HM 3:30 p. m„ radio chapel: Has to Discover God for bv the Rev. J. Morrison or the Ravenswood Church. William Newey, rector of the church, will the musical service. SPRINGFIELD (MASS.) STATION (eastern time) — ■■ 3:30 p m., radio chapel; the E Chapman, Carew Street Church. 8:00 p. m., church servlcesatstuß half Inch of the edge, pull the through to the inside and led by a ible cord to one of the secondary bti <■ posts. The switch lever is connecttcß the other. B Make sure that both primary and B ondary colls are wound in the rection. After tightly winding coils, ply a very thin coat of shellac to BV the wires in place. Use a sharp pen knife or hot iron to scrape off the insulation primary C"il where the slider runs. slider Is made of a piece of mounted on slider rod so fixed t! jjj can move easily with small flexible strip contacting on the top of mary coil.
years past, and there is a wide fJ these gambling interests are beingl tected. If X am elected sheriff, all will stop in short order.” fl
Miss M. E. HOAGLANIJ Democrat J Candidate for Marion Coxß State Representative® Subject to Primary Electi® May 2. 1922. ■ Advertisement =^:^B
AWNING Indianapolis Tent & Awninl 447-449 E. Wash. I
REGISTERED E. S. PATENT]
