Indianapolis Times, Volume 35, Number 44, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 July 1922 — Page 4

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The Indianapolis Times TELEPHONE—MAIN 3500 > Published bj The Indians Daily Times Company. 25-29 S. Meridian St.. Indianapolis., Member of the Scrlpps-Mcßae Learue of Newspapers. Client of the United Press. United News. United Financial and NEA. Service and member of the Scrippe Newspaper Alliance. Member of the Audit Bureau of Circulations. Subscription Rates: Indianapolis—Ten Cents a Week. Elsewhere—Twelve Cents a Week. Entered as Second-class Matter, July 25. 1914, at the Postofflce, Indianapolis, under the Act of March 3. 1879. Pure religion and undefiled before God and the father is this. To visit the widow and the fatherless in their affliction, and to keep himself unspotted from the world.—James 1:27. He Has Gone to His Reward Politically, Senator Porter J. McCumber has gone to his reward. - For twenty-four years he represented North Dakota In the United |tates Senate, but for the next twenty-four, not so. His name Is already eatly lhscribed on a nice, large tombstone in the Newberry’n ground and ifter next fall Washington will see him no more. Senator McCumber stanchly supported the rich Truman H. Newberry if Michigan, and voted obediently with the old guard to seat the $2,000,00 Michigander in the Senate. Senator McCumber is the author of that amazing monstrosity which Lodge calls “the Republican tariff,’’ a tariff to make the high ost mt living higher. He had hoped this might be a monument to him. b tuflhed out to be only a footstone to his political grave, the headstone f is Newberry. Senator McCumber is father of the bonus hill, commonly referred o athe "hunk bonus measure,” because it promises the ex-soldier much, >ufc forgets to provide the wherewithal with which to make good. Rewarded then, is Senator McCumber. He was beaten by a progressive—former Governor Lynn J. Frazier—just as had happened before to old guard candidates in Indiana, Pennsylvania and other States. More tombstones are in the people's marble yard and more mossI backs will have the "here lies” planted on top of his political grave beI fore the antl-st&ndpat epidemic is finally over next November.

Four Dozen Operations Have you heard the amazing story about Herbert McCarty? He is .dead now, after undergoing forty-eight operations. k McCarty, war veteran of the Seventy-Ninth division, was riddled by German machine gun a few days before the armistice. A He was brought home, to battle for his life nearly four years in with twenty machine gun bullets in his body. bullets had been removed when he died the other day at jEjCartv got his wounds while rescuing dying comrades lying in exBlaces. r course of McCarty’s forty-eight operations, the surgeons reof his ribs, a collar bone and part of one shoulder blade. he lived for nearly tour years, with such terrible physical shock, in the human body’s powers to resist death fate there is a great lesson for hypochondriacs, congßfrimagining they are ill, magnifying each flutter of the heart into that its beating is about to cease. People create what they sea health, financial disaster, all kinds mind affects the body as certainly as the body affects the mind. yMwhen the outlook seems black, and we are inclined to magnify petty into disheartening obstacles, let us think of Herbert McCarty. our lot with his. It should shame us into good spirits, of our troubles are Imaginary. ||| Playing Horse should walk on all fours instead of on two feet, for nature inman to be a quadruped. This thrilling suggestion comes from ■Sple authority—Courtiere, celebrated French scientist. Mjßen who have hunted for collar buttons under the bureau will not Sißwlth him. Nor will the father whose young son Insists that pa suggestion is \aiuable. however, if for no other reason ■ it starts. Anything that takes people's minds off their .'■-■By il stops morbid intn .spec, ion— analysis of self—is a stiinutonic. is why so many men, fagged out from the day’s work, turn comic pictures before they read page one news stories. Watch For the Gouge M&£SBs&nent at Washington is yawning, stre.ching. and mutterwould indicate it is waking up to the coal situation, coal pile is mighty low. big interests, including the railroads, are beginning to bring to bear on the White House to do something to end the tie-up. will be done? are told, on reliable authority, that the Government really has at all now, but is only “fisbing around.’’ shortage is virtually inevitable for the coming winter. Unis done to prevent it, coal prices will hit the ceiling. owners will boost the tariff, unless prevented, so as to pay now on their books, and give them considerable velvet besides. eSmßis distinctly up to the people in Washington, employed by us to SHBfter our common Interests, to prevent this gouge.

ll moans Loss of Standard Supposed to Be Authentic

jS4the Editor: Some months ago I Xjl i a Parts dispatch to the efthat the standard of metrical Bfcurement, a platinum-iridium bar K meter in length, had expanded. I two lines the press told to the Brld of science a tragedy. En the strength of the belief that Kl&tinum-irldium alloy was not exigible were based practically r.ll the ■ts of scientific measurement. If is true the imit bar actually has Ipped,” then very few calculaHts can be made accurately. It remains for science to establish Bcanent standards and make them sure by casting duplicates. JONATHAN FINLEY. the Editor —Many children lost lives each year from tetBs ors lockjaw caused by Ml. Ding on the points of nails Vughtlesely left prothruding from Irds which are thrown down and ■ where barefoot children or chilB with worn thin shoe soles can B on them. H only takes a few moments to re■e the nails from the boards. W A. L. POTTER. H Stop The Lynchings Bo the Editor: One horrible case lynching follows another, jet the anti-lynching bill is still hung lid the United States Senate. ■he chief difficulty seems to be the B' that It might be thrown out as Constitutional by the United States Breme Court. le Constitution of the United says (Article 3) that the Pgfeme Court shall have original in all cases affecting amSiTt dors and consuls, and those in a State is a party; and that it have appellate jurisdiction in £?§■cases, "with such exceptions and CSS such regulations as the Conmake.” lately passed ai law leering in that Dis-

trict of Columbia, and added a clause saying; "This law shall not be subject to review by the Supreme Court, and the Supreme Court shall have no jurisdiction over it.” If our Congressmen can do this when they themselves are Inconvenienced by high rents, they might to it when their fellow creatures are inconvenienced by being burned alive. ALICE STONE BLACKWELL. Dorchester, Mass. HOLDS CULTURE ESSENTIAL Commencement Orator Decries Trend of Times. WESTFIELD. Mass., July I. Henry Turner Bailey, director of the Cleveland School of Art, speaking before the graduating class of the Normal School in this city, declared that "bootlegging, loafing, gossiping and other forms of useless activities would disintegrate the entire social system if the majority of working people had four hours of leisure time.” Bailey emphasized the need of making the most of leisure time, saying that the present level of intelligence would disrupt the entire country if people weren't kept busy. "A cultural education is as important as a practical education,” he said. If you are WELL BRED You sit erect when you are eating. Lounging back or leaning is not good taste. It is ungraceful to put the elbows on the table, or to toy with the silverware during courses. When not occupied with the process of eating the hands should lie quietly in the lap. Repose of manner is one of the indications of social poise.

Sure Fire By BERTON BRAX.EY. THOUGH broad generalities seldom apply To all individual cases. Here’s one you can bank on —it won t so awry, all colors, all races: So. this is counsel —with sweetheart or wile. Be lavish with phrases endearing. They’re something: that she, through the length of her life. Will never grow weary of hearing: The fact that you love her, your actions may show. But. nevertheless, keep on telling her so. SHE may call you slUy. but deep in her breast. . , The glow of her love waxes brighter; That little “I love you.” sincerely expressed. Is certain and sure to delight her. She may say “You softie,” and 4 Don t be absurd. 4 ' But—note the warm light that s appearing , . . Way back in her eyes when again she has heard . The words that she wants to be hearing. Be wise: if you love her. wherever you go Just keep on repeatedly telling her so. THOUGH frequent the cases where passion has waned. You never wIU find among such A suit where the wife of her husband complained . He told her he loved her too much: It thrills her in heart and In spirit: No matter how often your love may be told. She always Is ready to hear it. Oh, man. if you love her, keep letting her know. , . , Keep always, eternally telling her sol (Copyright. 1922. NEA Bervice.)

Wallace Has Own Idea of Forest Plans By FRANK J. TAYLOR, Staff Special WASHINGTON. July I—A sandy haired, quiet-spoken, stocky gentleman, who knows how to sit tight, is the stumbling block to the Administration scheme for "developing” the public domain by private exploitation, as outlined by Secretary Fall. He is Mr. Henry Wallace, Secretary of Agriculture. Now and then they print stories that, if he doesn’t have his way about the public forests, Mr. Wallace will resign. Will Not Resign He isn't going to resign. They are not going to take the forests away from him, any more than they’re going to cut that woodlot out of his farm in lowa. The situation in the Department of Agriculture is this: So far as the President is concerned, he has promised to "keep an open mind," at least regarding the forests, until he talks to Wallace, and all Wallace asks of the President is that Mr. Harding keep out of it, when the fists begin to fly. He doesn’t want the President to get hurt. There isn't any doubt about the sentiment of the country regarding conservation, nor regarding the views of Congress.

UNUSUAL FOLK

By XEA. Service SAN FRANCISCO. July I.—The laws of the air lanes are to be put to their first legal test. The first airman * 1 “ to be "di nled the cell, stunt and com- * preparing for bat- 1 tie maneuvers in j fused a pilot’s cense by the California State motor vehicle department I Ipjpifei• and ordered nrImtmUmmummmmJtAend rf >gted When h 6 PURCELL. proceeded to take flight without one. Purcell, when the case comes up will ask to be allowed to make an aerial trip, while jurors watch several thousand feet below, in an effort to show that he is a careful and experienced driver. One of the specific charges placed against the flier has been that he executed air tricks at too low an altitude and was a "consistent reckless driver.”

German War Officers Hit By U nemployment Wave

BERLIN, July I.—" Fifty thousand] former offlicers of the old army whom' the fend of the war and the Versailles ! treaty rendered breadless still are: trying to find new Jobs in trades and industries, but wherever they get a position they are doing extremely well," says an Industrial expert In the Berlin Tageblatt. "Up until now the vacancies bureaus for officers have been able to place about 12,000 ex-offiicers, while all others up to the total of some 30,000 are still unaccounted for. The exact figures of offlicers now being employed in all sorts of professions are: "Industries, plants, chemical factories 4,200 Trade and commerce . 3,750 Private undertakings, detectives, hotel employes 2,100 Private secretaries, clerks, teachers of languages 1,950 Total 12,000 Number Greatly Increased "It must be remembered that the personnel of the old army and navy provided 50,960 offlicers in the army and 4,800 naval offlicers. During the war It Increased to altogether 325,776 offlicers and 33,406 army doctors. The total losses amounted to 55,000 dead and 96,213 severely wounded. "Os these gigantic totals only 4.000 former officers found occupation In the present German army, the Reichswehr and a very small number in the police forces. Thousands Study Economics "Thousands of those officers who had some small funds left turned to studying national economics and jurisprudence, hoping for positions in trades and industries, but the majority of them, being very poor, entered all sorts of professions after the armistice to earn a living, automobile firms preferably employed former commanders of U-boats and officers of technical units, where, however, they had to start as simple "Large sections chose pleasant professions, the ge Jike jobs, such as agents of companies and •

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Old Guard Is On the Ropes, So to Speak BY ROBERT J. BENDER. United News Staff Correspondent. WASHINGTON, July I—A bit groggy from the fourth consecutive wallop handed the old guard by the primary defeat of Senator McCumber in North Dakota, Republicans are preparing to rest up. There is a feeling of relief among Administration Republicans that, for the present at least, there are no more wallops in store for them. Meanwhile they are rubbing their eyes and wondering where the next blow will come. Senator Frelinghuysen of New Jersey is booked to tangle with George Record, an uIU-a-Progressive, in New Jersey in August, which month also will see Senator Hiram Johnson In the metaphorical ring against all comers. Carmi Thompson, Harding’s personal friend, will clash with Senator Atlee Pomerene in Ohio, and the outlook is a midnight blue, standpattically speaking. Down in Texas the Ku-Klux Klan is giving the old guard something to worry about, and McAdoo, out in California, also is disturbing the brain cells of the Administration. McAdoo is understood to be awaiting the psychological moment to spread his stuff. He is expected to boost the cause of Mrs. Oleson In Minnesota, and former Governor Ralston of Indiana, who is out against Albert J. Beveridge, for senator. International co-operation, it is said, will be McAdoo’s keynote.

SUNLIGHT

BY DR. R. H. BISHOP. A growing plant does not thrive in the dark. It needs sunlight as well as fresh air. A growing baby is the same. It is not enough that it is fed sufficient and properly, that it gets fresh air often. It must have sunlight too. In a recent number of the American Journal of Public Health, Hess describes the treatment of eases of rickets, by frequent short exposures to direct sunlight. When the babies were exposed to the sun daily for about fifteen minutes to an hour, he says they not only improved in general vigor and nutrition but the signs of rickets rapidly disappeared. First the children’s legs, and then their arms, and, when the weather was mild, their chests and backs were exposed. It is believed the effect is not due to the light rays, but to what has been termed the actinic or chemical rays. These. Hess says, have but little penetrating power and cannot pierce the clothing. Such experiences show the need ol Improving the housing conditions of the poor, and the fflimination of the dark tenements. They indicate that sunlight is not a luxury for the growing child but a necessity, that i.. depriving the infant of sunlight, wo are depriving him of something which is necessary to his normal growth. As regards rickets, it shows that the disorder Is not simply of a dietlc nature; that it Is both dietlc and hygienic; that It Is not sufficient for a baby merely to be breast-fed; that It needs its share of sunlight. In stressing the importance of sun light, it should still be borne in mind that cod liver oil is a specific for rick ets; that it will prevent Its occurrence, or cure the disorder.

TODAY’S WORD

TODAY’S word ia INTROSPECTION. It is pronounced in tro spek shun, With accent on the third syllable and the "e” short. It means —Inspection of one’s own thoughts and feelings, and comes from the Latin introspiccre, to look Into (intro, within —and specere, to look). It’s used like this —“Anything that takes people's minds off their prolv lems and stops morbid introspection Is & stimulant and a tonic."

Many of them preferred a free profession like chauffeurs and taxi drivers and even miners. Many of them became hotel clerks because of their knowledge of foreign languages. Returned Home Broke “It is not true, however, that a great number enlisted In armies of foreign countries. On the contrary, those who went abroad for the most part returned absolutely broke and had to start anew life at home. “Former officers of the Navy very often invested their last money In buying a small cargo vessel, forming the crew of the ship themselves and also clearing the cargo in harbor. "This also was done by the famous raider. Commander Berg, the captain of the Appa’m and afterward of the Moewe, who. in a fit of madness, committed suicide because of inability to support his wife and three children, whom he had left at Apenrade, which, owing to the clauses of the Versailles Treaty, became Danish. The exchange situation became so bad that he saw no way out of his plight.” MISER LEAVES $60,000 NEW YORK, July I.—All that any one down on the east side knew about old Leopold, who was found dead in front of a squalid hallway, was that he never spent more than 50 cents a day for food, and wore tattered clothes, the like of which could not be on anybody else In all that povertystricken district of the "Lower East Side." At the morgue they were getting ready to bury the body in the potter’s field. Searching for Leopold’s full name, so it could be painted on the plain, white headboard over the grave, officials traced him back to his dingy tenement room and looked through his little pile of papers. They found a series of bank books showing deposits on hand of $14,000. A dusty envelope contained $30,000 in mortgages. In another corner of the room was hidden $25,000 in good bonds.

The Referee HIP FLASKS. Prohibition visits the orient, stays 48 hours and gets out. This happens in Manila, where anew law prohibits sale of liquor on registration and election days. It is the first time that part of the world has had a bonedrV B P el l since priml- • Jljw tive men of the Philip Ippine Islands disco v- \ JPaB ered that fermented j ulce ot ni P a p a i m Jam* “went to the head.” Manila took the closing of bars good naturedly, and chuckled as it patted the hip flasks. It might not chuckle if it knew that locking the bar room during voting was the way prohibition gots its real start in America. The handwriting is on the wall, Manila. MAN POWER. Le Trocquer, minister of public works in France, draws up plans for a tunnel under the English Channel. His idea is to have Germany do the work and furnish the materials. The completed Job would strike $4,000,000,000 off the German indemnity. It is a sensible plan. The bulk of the indemnity will be paid in man power, or not at all. Germany hasn't the gold. She has the man power. Gold, after all, is Just a mortgage on human labor. SKILL. Rudolph Blaschka, the only man In the world who can make perfect glass models of flowers and grass, is ’’doing” a collection of his works of skill for Harvard's botanical museum. Blaschka can make an orchid out of glass, perfect even to the delicate coloring. His art was passed on to him by its discoverer, his father. If you can figure out what put the notion of making glass flowers into the brain of the elder Blaschka you will know what makes one man want to be a machinist, another a lawyer. Some guiding force is back of it all, keeping a rough balance. COAL. -

The suspension of anthracite coal mining in Pennsylvania since April I has cost the miners about $42,000,000 and the operators $53,000,000. This is the recent estimate by Clifford B. Connelley, Pennsylvania's State Commissioner of Labor and Industry. It is only a fraction of the toal individual and economic losses due to the national coal strike. The cost to consumers will not be known until coal begins rattling into cellar bins next winter. If all the men were far-sighted, sensible and fair, the conferences that eventually end such strikes could be held before the strikes started —and with the same results, waste eliminated. “If,” however, is a big word. Industry, at present, often spends a quarter to save 25 cents. UNCOMPLETED. The Chinese were practicing with aviation before Europe learned to use sail boats. Mongol. Tartar or Manchu, they have flown mancarrying kites for centuries. If they had i ' mechanical genius to provide them with motors, they might have bombed Rome with giaut firecrackers 2,000 years ago. This interesting information is circulated by the Aeronautical Chamber of Commerce. It discloses the principle behind the decay of oriental civilizations, China especially. The Chinese were wonderful originators. But they rarely developed anything beyond a tenth of Its possibilities. The thing that makes America great Is squeezing all the Juice out of the orange, instead of just a few drops. Success, as has been pointed out frequently, is 10 per cent inspiration or "hunch” and 90 per cent perspiration or concentration on development of the original idea. POWER. If President Harding makes his trip to Alaska he can see one of the strangest things in nature—Mount St. Ellas. This mountain is 18.024 feet high today—but it is growing. Earthquakes are its growing pains. The qußkes are gradually lifting the entire mountain higher into the air. One quake in 1899 raised a nearby beach 47 feet. Stupendous forces are locked up inside the earth, down under our feet. To an unknown extent these forces will be harnessed to help do the work of our descendants.

Americans In Argentine Do Patriotic Work Bv United Press BUENOS AIRES, July I.—Over 500,000 pesos In the past five years have passed through the hands of a little group of American women living in Argentina, known as the Patriotic Society of American Women. This sum has been raised through various social enterprises and has been devoted first to war work and later to local charities, so that now numerous worthy memorials bear the name of the group. A certain degree of national -tride has characterized the project and "over the top,” that slogan long since worn out in the United States, still lives In the spirit of the Patriotic Society's endeavors. Last year Its financial force was put behind the McLaughlin memorial scholarship, by means of which one deserving poor child each year Is now being provided with an education and all personal needs at Mercedes orphanage. The funds bears the name of one of the city’s most prominent Americans, the late Dr. McLaughlin, formerly pastor of the American church. In addition to this society gave donations of 500 pesos each to such enterprises as the Young Women’s Christian Association, the Boca Mission, the British end American Benevolent Society, the British Hospital and a host of others. This year’s work involved raising a fund sufficient to support a visiting nurse and eventually found an American nursing home. There are as a rule no more than 3,000 Americans In the Argentine and the membership of the Patriotic Society averages around 360.

tPA£¥ r —* \ fitoL#?W BEStRUcTiOH [ PRESENT l JfItLPERNESsj

“Black Friday” Day of Significance In Both America and Great Britain

QUESTIONS ANSWERED I You can get an answer to any question of fact or information by writing to the Daily Indianapolis Times Washington Bureau, 1322 New York Ave., Washington D. C-, enclosing 2 cents in stamps. Medical, legal and love and marriage advice will not be given. Unsigned letters will not be answered, but all letters are confidential and receive personal replies.—Editor.

Q. —What was Black Friday? A.—This name has been applied to two disastrous days in the financial history of the United States. On Friday, Sept. 24. 1869, a panic was caused in Wall Street by the effort of Fisk & Gould to corner the gold market, gold rising to and on Friday, Sept. 19, 1873, occurred in the New York Stock Exchange the great financial crash which was followed by the widespread panic of 1873. In England the name Is given to Dec. 6. 1745, the day on which news reached London that the Pretender had arrived at Derby; again May 11, 1866, when the failure of Overend & Gurney brought on a disastrous panic. Good Friday is also known as Black Friday in the Western church, because on that day clerical vestments and altar draperies aro black. Q. —What tire some good names for summer camps or shacks? A. —Sultsus, Mereshack, Wholeloaf, Backlog Camp, Ivamp Kalmia, Starlight, Wide Water, Dewdropin, Bide a Wee, Klassy Kanip, Tarryhere, G. I. N. V. U., Camp Nokomts, Camp Har-

BMRmrßnnte

CHANGE IN TIME Effective Sunday, July 2, 1922 Train No. 6 —Dally. FIFTH AVENUE SPECIAL. Leave Indianapolis 12:15 p. m., arrive Cleveland 7:15 p. m., New York 9:40 a. m., Boston 12:00 noon. EQUIPMENT —Coaches Indianapolis to Galion. Parlor car Indianapolis to Cleveland. Sleeping car Indianapolis to New York. TraiD No. 11—Dally. SOUTHWESTERN LIMITED. Arrive Indianapolis 11:50 a. m. from Cleveland, New York and Boston. Train No. 41 —Dally. Arrive Indianapolis 11:25 a. m. from Cleveland, Marlon and Bellefontaine. Train No. 43 —Daily. Arrive Indianapolis 12:25 a. m. from Cleveland, Marlon and Bellefontaine. Train No. s—Daily. Leave Indianapolis 6:00 p. m., arrive Chicago 9:40 p. m. Train No. 4 —Daily. Leave Chicago 5:00 p. m., arrive Indianapolis 9:45 p. m. For detail information call City Ticket Office. Union Station. J. W. GARDNER, Division Passenger Agent, 112 Monument Circle.

EXCURSIONS Try One of These as a Vacation Trip NIAGARA FALLS, N. Y., and other points on the Great Lakes Low rate excursions each Saturday and Sunday. Daily round trip fares to the same points at slightly higher fares commencing July 15th. Good 15 Days Commencing July 15th daily round trip fares to TOLEDO and CLEVELAND, OHIO, DETROIT, MICH., at fares only slightly higher than the one-way fare. All good over our steam railroad and boat line connections. These fares are made extremely low to induce travel and give you the opportunity to spend your vacation at points on the Great Lakes at only a little travel expense. Daily excursion rates to all Indiana Lake Resorts. Inquire of any agent or write Tralllc Dept., Anderson, Indiana. UNION TRACTION COMPANY OF INDIANA

CIVILIZATION

mony. Greenwood, Faraway, Izuza (Sioux word for white stone), Unaweep (Indian word meaning red rock), Ventura (Spanish for luck or favorable chance), Wakoo (Indian word for elm). Q.—How did the word "lady" originate? A. —It meant originally “loafgiver.” Q. —Has Anita Stewart bobbed her hair? A.—Yea. Q. —How can one get a perfectly pure and healthful green coloring for icing, or ice creams, etc.? A. —Take fresh spinach or beet leaves and pound them in an earthen or marble mortar. If wanted for immediate use, take off the green froth as It rises and mix It with the article Intended to color. If the coloring must be kept a few days, take the! Juice and to each teacupful add a I piece of alum the size of a pea and allow it to boil In a saucepan. Q. —What was the cost of the Washington Monument and how long did it take to build it? A.—The cost was $1,187,710.31. Work was begun in 1848, continued slowly until 1877, ceased until 1878, j finished In 1884. Q. —Why did not Grover Cleveland i serve in the Civil War? A.—ln 1863 Cleveland was assistant. district attorney of Erie County. During his term of office he was so busily engaged with the duties of it that when he was drafted as a soldier he

JULY 1, 192 J

could not leave his work to enter Army so hired a substitute instead. iH a family council, also. It had been cided that as he was earning money to make his contribution valuiH ble to the family he should not entefl the Army. Two of his brothers esfl tered the war in 1861 and throughout the whole war. Q. —What Is the salary of the Li brarian of Congress? 1 A. —$7,500 per annum. ] Q. —What are the meanings of th following names? H A,—Perpetual—forever; Conrad-® able counsel; Seth —appointed; Jsan-M the grace of the Lord, Vincent — confl quering; Tristren vtenturesono® knight; Adins.—adorned; Rodney— M standing fair; Angela—angle lik® Jacint ha—hyacinth; Carlotta —noblH blrt Amarayllis—counutry girL Q —What constitutes a quorum doing business in Congress? af A.—The Constitution provides a majority of all the members of House of Congress make a or the number necessarily present do any business.

AWNINGSP Indianapolis Tent & Awning (So 447-449 E. Wash. SI. SPECIAL TRAIN Tuesday, July 4tjh VIA L.E.&W.R. R. irrnrvT I World’s Lightweight Championship Bout BENNY LEONARD (Champion of the world) VS. ROCKY KANSAS (Contender for the Title) AT Michigan City, IndJ The SPECIAL TRAIN will leave the Indianapolis Union Station at ssoo a. m. (standard time) running direct to the big new- permanent modern arena at Michigan City, lauding passengers within 50 feet of th* entrance. The L. E. &W. Railroad Is the only line running direct to.the arena. k Special Reduced Round Trip B Special train returning will Michigan City at 1:00 p. m. ard time) Jnly 4th. LUNCH AT A BEASOSAjS® CHARGE CAN BE ON TRAIN. Further information gladly ftraK nisbed on request. City Are, 112 Monument Place. Circle 5,300. Union Station, PflwßEj Main 4567. Mass. Ave., Bt.,®spa Phone Main 2120. KSgEji R. C. Fiscua, Asst. Genl Pass. Indianapolis, lud. Phone. Circle ■§s£**

Michigan City, li|| TRAIN SERVICE JULY4th I Account Leonard-Kansas Prize Fight SPECIAL RATES Leave Indianapolis 7:45 a. and 4:30 p. m. * -pr Arrive Michigan City 12:30 and 9:00 p. m. Leave Michigan City 5;00 n-BiSfe and 9:10 a. m. 3T f jVi Arrive Indianapolis 9:45 p.BL,"j 2:20 p. m. For further informat!oiL>l|| Inquire at city ticket offic(Pj|§ 114 Monument Place, Call JR