Indianapolis Times, Volume 35, Number 111, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 September 1922 — Page 2
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Suit 11 [DECT LINCOLN NOIL NEABMStLE W. A. Guthrie, President of Association Sponsoring Movement, Calls Meeting. WOULD PRESERVE RELICS Board Will Assemble at; Statehouse Saturday Morning to Discuss Plans. William A. Guthrie, president of the Indiana Lincoln Memorial Association, formed to promote a movement for the erection and maintenance of a memorial to commemorate the youth of Abraham Lincoln spent in Indiana and preserving books and other relics which rtain to the statesman's early life, has dialled a meeting of the board of trustees for Saturday at 10 a. m. at the office of J. W. Oliver, secretary of the State historial commission, room 334, Statchouse. Plans will prabab v be formulated for a campaign to enroll members in the association and to consider appointing a campaign director. This will be the first meeting of the I borrd of trustees composed of Claude ! G. Bowers, Ft. Wayne; Thomas James de le Hunt, Cannelton; L. N. Hines, Terre Haute; Mrs. Laura Fletcher Hodges, Indianapolis; William A. Hough, Greenfield; Charles W. Moores, Indianapolis; John W. Oliver, Indianapolis; John C. Shirk, Brookville; Jesse W. Weik, Greencastle. The officers of the association are Mr. Guthrie, president; Harlow Lindley, vice president; Kate Milner Rabb, secretary; Harry W. Glossbrenner, treasurer. The association proposes to further a movement for the location of a fitting memorial at Lincoln City, near Evansville.
GOVERNMENT NEAR CLOSING OF CASE Daugherty Says No Citation Will Be Issued Against Jewell for Contempt. By United Frees CHICAGO. Sept. 18. —Attorney General Daugherty announced just before the resumption of the injunction hear-; ing here today that no request would be made at the present time to cite Bert M. Jewel 4n contmpt of court j f<v an alleged statement made by him | afisr the issuance of the railroad shop- 1 men's restra ning order. The Government planned to offer several affidavits before closing its case. _ _ . Union attorneys were expected to launch a bitter attack, charging'that the railroads organized to the unions and welcomed the strike as a step in their plans. ADOPTS NINETEENTH CHILD Mrs. Charles White Started Numbering ’Em Instead of Naming. PITTSBURGH. Sept. 18.—When the father and mother of the little girl next door died. Mrs. Charles O. White took the child into her home and treated her as she would any of her eighteen others. When she was 15 years old Mrs. White began as a nurse in a hospital, but a year later the married. Os the eighteen children born curing her twenty-four years of married life there was only one pair of twins. “I was married only once, but only once is enough,” said Airs. White. “How about names?” "After I ran out of names I didn’t know how to do until a neighbor suggested that I begin numbering them, but I stopped naming and numbering them long ago. Eighteen children Isn’t so much when you say it, but it’s a whole lot when you think it over.” OFFICERS RETURN Chief Riiihoff Orders Downey and Ratliff Back to Juvenile Court. Following a conference with Judge | Lahr of the juvenile court today Chief of Police Herman F. Rikhoff an- j nounced he would send Patrolmen j Downey and Ratliff back to the ju- ’ venile court where they will conduct investigations. The two patrolmen were removed from the court and assigned to other duty recently. Judge Lahr had protested when two inexperienced men were assigned to duty with tho court. SERBIA WILL HELP Cabinet Pledges Diplomatic Aid to Greece'Against Turks. By United Press PARIS. Sept. 18.—The Serbian cabinet decided today to lend diplomatic aid to Greece in support of her policy to Attempt to keep Turkey from establishing herself as a European power and to maintain tho status quo of Thrace, according to i radio dispatch received here from Belgrade. MOTORIST IS KILLED Automobile Crashes Into Telephone Pole Near' Rockfleld. By Times Special LOGANSPORT, jlnd.. Sept. 18. — When the automobile in which he was riding crashed into a telephone pole near Rockfleld last night, Ora Peters of Lincoln, Neb., was instantly killed. His wife and a brother, Tom Peters, were injured. The party was going to Indianapolis to visit Mrs. Stewart, a sist>- of the dead man. Refuse* Road Bond Issue The State board of tax commissioners has disapproved a bond issue of $7,460 for construction of the Charles E. Hahn road in Pipe Creek Township, Miami County.
CZAR’S FAVORITE AN EXILE -■!-' r ;-v > Mademoiselle Marie Kousnezoff, Russian opera beauty and former favorite entertainer of the czar, is an exile in London. She fled Soviet Russia in peasant disguise.
Who Is Supplying Funds to Turks Former Ambassador Elkus Asks
By United Xetcs RED BAND, N. J., Sept. 18.—Abram I. Elkus, former American ambassador to Turkey, in an exclusive interview, raised the quest.on of who is supplying the Turkish armies with funds, ammunitions and supplies. Elkus pointed out that as a result of the World War Turkey was; stripped of territories wh.ch paid j tribute to the Sultan. “Yet in spite of this loss in revenue,” he said, “means have been found to maintain and provision an enormous army which has been fight- ' ing against the Greeks. | “Who has supplied the funds to maintain this army is a question. When I left Turkey it was in a state of financ al ruin and collapse. It had no revenue worthy of the name. If anything, the condition is worse now. i “It has been intimated the soviet
SENTENCED FDD BEATING B3YS Stepmother Given Year in Jail for Revolting Crime Against Children. DETROIT. Sept. 18— Mrs. Sophie Sokolowski, 32, was sentenced by Judge A. C. Backus to serve a year j in the house of correction after she had been convicted in the municipal ' court on a charge of assault with in- [ tent to do great bodily harm in con- j nection with alleged Inhuman treati ment of her stepchildren. The woman was sentenced after a revolting tale of cruelty had been told by the children and physicians who examined them. The woman sat calm- j ly through the entire testimony, only i occasionally looking at the children, | hut when Judge Backus pronounced sentence she screamed and swooned and was not revived for several minutes. The principal witnesses were Irvin, 5, and Ollie, 9, two of her stepchildren. Both boys showed bruisea and scars all over their bodies where they alleged they were beaten or otherwise attacked by her. Both had a number I of burn scars, resulting, they testified, from the stepmother having applied hot curling irons and hot pokers to j their bodies. BRITISH'CABINET MEETS IMustapha Kemai’s Reply to Ultimatum Awaited by Allies. By United Press LONDON, Sept. 18.—The British ! cabinet met at noon today to consider I further warl.ke moves in the Near East, while British troops and fighting ships rushed to the Dardanelles and Constantinople. It was understood that Mustapha Kemal so far has not sent an official reply to the communication of British, France and Italy warning him not to invade the neutral zone. Distinctly Individual Old-fashioned Mother: I’m sure Adelbert would make an ideal husband, my dear. He understands women thoroughly. Modem Daughter: But Mother, I don’t want to be understood. —Life.
Detectives Mingle With Groups of Mourners at Biers of Victims
By United Press NEW BRUNSWICK, N. J.. Sept. 18.—Detectives mingled with the mourners at the biers of the Rev. Edward W. Hall and Mrs. James Mills today, in hope of finding a clew in the actions of some of the mourners present Investigation has revealed, acording to the police, that the murder of the rector of the Episcopal Church of St. John the Evangelist and Mrs. Mills, choir singer and wife of the sexton, probably took place In the city of New Brunswick Thursday night. After the man and woman had been shot, beaten and stabbed to death, their bodies were placed In an automobile and carried to the grove on an abandoned farm where they were found Saturday. The slayer or slayers (Arefully scattered tom love letters Iround to give the affair the aspect "f a crime committed through mo-
government of Russia has supplied the Turks w;th funds, but a few short months ago this same government was appealing to Amer.ca to fum;sh relief for her starving millions, and it is hardly to be bel.eved that this government would on the one band i supply funds for an army of Turks; and on the other apply for aid to j America.” Elkus called attention to newspaper reports that “certain interests” in Paris are involved. “Well may Senator Borah demand that the allies who are asking us to cancel the.r debts to America cease supplying armies With the necessary funds with which to wage war before they have a /ight to ask us for this j relief.” he said. I “It would be a matter of interest to j know who is behind the Turks. It j might be a question for the League of j Nations to investigate.”
ABANDONS MARKET Melon Seller Heeds Order—Arrest Not Necessary. The board of park commissioners will not have to treat Angelo Amate rough after all to keep him from l selling melons and other produce on [ a vacant lot at 2160 N. Capitol Ave. R. Walter Jarvis, superintendent of 1 parks and recreation, said a representative of Angelo promised he would close up and get off the i boulevard by Wednesday. When property owners complained ! of Angelo's market as an eye sore, i Mayor Shank ordered Jarvis to have i him arrested twice a day until he got out. HOOSIERS TAKE HONORS Results at Camp Perry Shoot Show Marksmanship. According to advices received by Adjt. Gen. Harry B. Smith from the | national shooting matches at Camp Perry, Ohio. Capt. George R. Gewahn of Ft. Wayne lias been proclaimed winner of the individual club members’ match | and some member of the team is reported finishing in the money in each shoot. The team is in charge of Lieut. Col. ! Basil Middleton with MaJ. Matrford \ G. Henley as assistant coach. AUTO STRIKES WAGON Two Negroes Arrested After Crash Injures Oscar Swartz. Oscar Swartz, 1027 Southern Ave., received injuries yesterday when a wagon on which he was riding was struck by an automobile, at Union and Palmer St. Two colored men in the auto were arrested. STRIKEBREAKERS ATTACKED Strikers Return to Northwestern Shops, Driving Out Substitutes. By United Press a CLINTON, lowa. Sept. W?. —Strikebreakers at the Northwestern shops were beaten when 1,000 shopmen drove them off and resumed their old places here today. Police were called to protect twenty-five who took refuge in the shop offices. Clothing Is Stolen Harry H. Rosnagle, 3544 Carrollton Ave., reported to tho police that clothing worth $135 was stolen from the Murat Theater yesterday.
tives of jealousy. All these love letters may have been forgeries,* in belief of police. A rod, found near where the bodies were discovered, is believed to have fallen from the automobile which conveyed them there. Detectives examined a number of automobiles, In expectation of finding one with the missing rod. Mrs. Hall, questioned by police, admitted she was the “woman in the polo coat” seen entering St. John’s rectory' about 2:30 a. m. Friday mornI ing. She declared she had gone to | the chureh to see if her husband had fa ’.en asleep in his study. Mills, husband of the slain woman, visited the church about the same hour, looking for his wife, he told police, thinking she might have been taken ill whilo working there. But the clergyman’s wife and the sexton did not chance to meet while on this mission, both Insisted.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Underwriters Begin Campaigns to Standardize Laws of Arson
By B. M. THIERRY NEW YORK, Sept. 18.—A systematic campaign against the firebug has been begun by the National Board of Fire Underwriters. Arson last year was worse than In any previous year, according to a report of the committee on Incendiarism and arson. Standardization of arson laws, defining the crime and fixing the penalty more rigidly in all the States, Is the purpose of the campaign, according to announcement of John B. Morton, president of the board. Secret service men, under the direction of Frank R. Morgaridge, chief of the arson bureau, are scattered over the country investigating suspicious fires. They are on the trail of crooked adjusters as well as firebugs. Many Arrests Made Investigations were made into 832 fires last year, and 308 persons were arrested. Out of 210 cases brought to trial, 150 persons were convicted and fifty-one acquitted. Heavy penalties imposed include a twentv-to-forty-year sentence for an Italian cobbler in New York, who set fire to his kitchen and endangered the lives of twenty-five families In the same building.
OPENS DODD AND BRIDGE PROPOSALS Highway Commissions Finds Estimates Exceed Bids on All but One Project. The State highway commission today received bids for the construction and repair of eight bridges and for six miles of hard surface road on the Lincoln Highway in La Porte County. John D Williams, director of the commission, announced after the opening of the bids that all but one bid on the bridge contracts were below estimate and that all road bids were ! lower than estimates made by the enj gir.eers. Contract to One of Three The contract for the construction of the Lincoln Highway unit will be given to one of the three lowest bid ders, the letting to depend upon the commission’s decision as to the type to be used. The low bidders were tho Highway Improvement Company of South Bend, bituminous macadam, $109,017, aaginst estimate of $134,630; C. S Brineman of Bluffton. concrete. $152,247. against estimate of $172,060; 51'ike Construction Company of War--1 saw% bituminous concrete. $164,059. against estimate of $211,912. Has Lowest Bid The lowest bidder on the Whittley County bridge construction was Ward D. Hill, Ligonier, $1,994 against estimate of $2,227; the Jackson County I construction job bids were all above estimates and not considered; the Vanderburgh County project low bid was made by Anton Hchenk of Mt. Mernon, $6,218 against estimate of $7,007: Blum and Parr of Hammond were low bidders on the Starke County sub-structure project, $3,885 against estimate of $4,689. ; The Elkhart Bridge and Iron Company was the low bidder on two Kosciusko County structures, one at $6,135 against $6,905, the other $2,632 against estimate of $2,895; Otis Kirtlev of Plainfield was low bidder on the j Wabash River repair job, Parke and I Vermillion counties, $17,198 against I $20,317. Total estimates on construction by commission engineers was $44,003 and total low bids was $38,065. ATTEND CONFERENCE Tax Authorities at Convention at Minneapolis. Philip Zoercher and William A. I Hough, members of the State board i of tax commissioners; W. C. Harrison, ; seemretary of the board, and Allen ]■ Busklrk. tax agent of the Indiana I Bell Telephone Company, are in Minj neapolis, Minn., attending the national i tax conference in session this week. HAMMER CASE OCT. 20 ! Judge nouser Postpones Trial When Mrs. Phillips Appears. By United Press LOS ANGELES, Sept. 18.—Trial of Clara Phillips was postponed until Oct. 20, when she appeared without counsel in Judge Houser’s court today In answer to the charge of beating Mrs. Alberta Meadows to death with a hammer. DEFERSJTO SOVIET Mustapha Kemal Dispatches Note to Foreign Minister Tchitclierin. By United Press BERLIN, Sept. 18—(By Radio).— Mustapha Kemal will not sanction a Near East peace conference with the allies unless the soviet government gives its consent. Kemal has dispatched a message to Tchitcherln, soviet foreign minister. SUES B. P. 0. E. Attorney Claims Order Refuses to Pay for Services. Frank Williams, local attorney, to- ■ day entered suit against the Benevo- ! lent Protective Order of Elks to recover SSOO. Williams claims he represented the order In a law suit the past year in Bloomington, and that payment has been refused. FILLS VACANCY Marjorie Coleman Will Become Stenographer In Revenue Department. Announcement of the appointment of Marjorie Coleman of New Albany as stenographer in the Internal Tteve-1 nue Department to fill tho vacancy l caused by the transfer of Mary Cure- j ton to Terre Haute, was made today by M. Bert Thurman, Federal collector of revenue. Sparks Cause Fire Fire started by sparks blown on the roof, today caused damage estimated at ss’oo to the dwelling of C. W. Albright, 1005 Ashland Ave.
A woman employed as a maid in Detroit was sent to the house of correction for from ten to twenty years for setting fire to the home of her employer in revenge for a fancied grievance. A Long Island pyromaniac. who, out of a craving for excitement, started fires that nearly cost several lives, got thirty-nine years in Siqg Sing. Sentences of from one to fifty years and one to fifteen years were imposed on men in San Francisco and Everett, Wash. Standardization is necessary, officials say, because penalties are too severe in some States and too slight in others. Four States, Alabama, Delaware and North and South Carolina, have death penalties, but juries seldom inflict them. A similar fault is found with the arson laws in Vermont and Mississippi, where death is the penalty if life is lost in a fire, and life imprisonment otherwise. Penalties in other States run from two to fifty years. During the last three years, since the model arson law has been promoted by the national board, ten States have made important changes in their arson statutes.
PROPOSES TDiDN RENTED ROBS Councilman Wise Wants $5 a Year Levied on Each. Every rooming house or private dwelling where so much as one room Is rented would be licensed by an ordinance Councilman Walter W. Wise J said he would introduce tonight. Wise planned to tax houses or ho- ; tels where trombone to ten rooms are rented $5 a year: from ten to twentyfive rooms, $25, and all over twentyi five rooms, SSO. In addition each owner would be required to register ; his place as a rooming house or hotel, j Wise said he also would introduce ! an ordinance exempting truck owners ; living four or more miles outside the : city limits from paying city truck i license fees. • | A big delegation of West IndßLnapolis citizens planned to attend the council meeting to lobby for the ordinance prohibiting operation of sac-! tories emitting objectionable odors, but ! it was understood the measure would not be acted upon tonight. MIT CHIDE IN ZONING ORDERS Property Owners in Meridian Street Dwelling District Would Build Flats. Contention of owners of ground near Thirty-Ninth and Meridian Sts., that Meridian St. should be an apartment j house street In that neighborhood will I 1 be heard by the city plan commission Tuesday afternoon. The city zoning plan puts this section in a dwelling i house zone. Apartments can not be built in such a district. Lawrence V. Sheridan, execuUve secretary of the commission, said he understood owners of homes in Meridian St., north of Thirty-Eighth St., would protest vigorously any change in the zone. Tho tentative draft of the plans and zoning ordinance will be presented *o the city council tonight. SUIT FOR RECEIVER Vfterbaeh Says Manufacturers’ Distributing Company Owes Him SIOO. i Complaint for receiver was filed today in Superior Court, room 5, against the Manufacturers' Distributing Corporation by Edwin Utterbach. The plaintiff charged the corporation owes him SIOO for assignment of patent interest. CULLS MANY FLOCKS Poultry Specialist Busy in Marlon County. Poultry flocks totaling chickens have been inspected by Wilson Huey of Fortville, a poultry specialist working pnder the direction of Purdue University, and Royal L. H. McClain, county agricultural agent. Fifteen hundred hens havo been culled out of the number as small producers. Tuberculosis hae been found infesting a number of flocks. I Makes You EAT BETTER SLEEP BETTER WORK BETTER H FEEL BETTER j Over 30 MiUion Bailies Sold I
■ THEY’LL FIGHT KU KLUX KLAN “The Invisible Jungle, Knights of the Tiger's Eye,” anew secret order, is being formed to combat the Ku-Klux Klan. It is recruiting among the racial and religious elements said to be opposed by the Klan. Here’s an initiation. *
Tries to Collect Insurance He Took Out on Friend Who's Alive
By United Seres CHICAGO. Sept. 18. —When Joseph Eulo was seriously 111 two years ago, his friend John Ingravello was very kind to him. John's kindness even tended to the point where, when Joseph grew worse ind the doctor's didn't hold out much hope, he went to an insurance agency and took out a $4,000 policy on his sick friend’s life, with himself as beneficiary. But Eulo drew no halo. From the day his life was insured, he improved | steadily and about the time Ingravello ! had planned to condole himself with the proceeds. Eulo was In better health than himself. John however, kept the policy
Syrup Pepsin Helps Nature Give Relief
Try it when t Laxative i needed and tee tha wonderful remit* IT is not necessary to take a violent physic for so simple an ailment as constipation. Yet many thoughtless parents give mercury in the form of calomel, and coal-tar in the tform of phenol when a natural vegetable compound like Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin will do the work equally well and without dan- *** (ter. People should realize that mercury may salivate and in certain conditions loosen the teeth; that phenolphthalein. by whatever name known and however disguised in candy, may cause dermatitis and other skin eruptions; that salt waters and powders may concentrate the blood, dry up the skin and cause lassitude. You can take Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin yourself or give it to a halve in arms, as thousands of mothers do every day, with the confidence that it is the safest and best medicine you can use for constipation and such complaints. A teaspoonful will relieve you over night even if the constipation has been chronic for
KSYRUP PEPSIN , &he faiaiW laxative
HAAG’S CUT PRICE DRUGS Everything Fresh, Genuine, of the Purest and Best Quality. Prices Subject to Change Without Notice. 35c Vicks Vaporub, A Sample of Difference in Regular and Haag’s Prices
I Armand's Cold Cream Fare Powder. I $2.00 All coarse strong black comb.sl.4B 152.00 Strong black comb, Vi coarse..sl.4B 170 c Strong black flne comb lslso Strong all coarse black comb..9Bc 170 c St r ot)g all coarse pocket comb..4oc 125 c Babcock's Cut Rose Tale ....15c I Ayer’s Fnce Powder and Luxor Cream. 175 c Boncllla Face Powder 59c >oc DJer-Klss Face Powder 39c |oOc Djer-Klas Rouge 39c 125 c DJer-Kias Talcum 2-c $1.25 Djer-Kiss Vanity Box 98c |soc Dorln's Brunette Rouge 89e 60c Java Rice Face Powder ...S9o | Mary Garden Talcum Powder ‘24c 25c Mennen's Rorntcd Talcum 19c 20c Aspirin Tabs 10c doz., 3 for 250 20c Bayer's Aspirin Tabs 12e 65c Sempre Glovine 390 65c Berrv’s Freckle Ointment 49c 50r Stillman’s Freckle Cream 39c 75c Boncllla Cold Cream 69c 75c Ronellla Vanishing Cream 59c 50c Daggett & Rams Cold Cream 39c 30c Espey's Fragrant. Cream 24c 35c Holmes’ Frostilla 29c 50c Hind’s Honey & Almond Cream 89c 60c Melvina Cream 43c 50c Milkweed Cream 89c 25c Peroxide Croatn 18c 33c Pond's Vanishing Cream 24c 60c Pompeian Day Cream 45 35c Pompeian Night Cream 29c 60c Pompeian Massage Cream 45c 60c Pompeian Face Powder 89c
HOT WATER BOTTLES, FOUNTAIN SYRINGES. COMBINATIONS AND ALL OTHER RUBBER GOODS AT CUT PRICES Two-grain Quinine Caps., Is£ Dozen; 2 for 25£ 7 Haag’s Cut Price Drug Stores are Located in Center of the Shoppir.g District of Indianapolis Haag’s Drug Store, 156 N. Illinois St., is only 6 doors north of the Interurban Station. Haags Drug Store, 101 W Washington St., is in the point room of the Lincoln Hotel Haag Drug Stores, 27 and 53 S. Illinois SU are in first square south of Wash. St., on way to Union Depot. Haag Drug Stores are located in 114 N. Pennsylvania St., 55 Virginia Ave. and 802 Mass Ave., cor. College
against the unhappy day—as sort of a ' John Doe” document. It appeared, | for when his second cousin, Max Piej monti, went to join the gone, dead and departed. John appeared at the insurance office, said amid tears that Eulo was defunct, and that he, the bereaved beneficiary, was all set to be ! condoled. i The insurance people told him to return in a few days for the $4,000. John followed these Instructions and ran into the wide-open arms of a policeman. The rest was short and 1 snappy. Eulo, Hale and Hearty, was there in court, and Ingravello was senj tenced to from one to ten years for I trying to play a confidence game.
ANT FAMILY MAY TRY IT FREE Thousands of parents art ashing themselves. “I \here ran I find a trustworthy laraiire that anyons in the family can use when constipated?" I urge you to try Syrup Pepsin. I trill gladly provide a liberal fret sample bottle, sufficient for an adequate test. Write rre where to send it. Address Dr. W. B. Caldwell, SIS Washington Si., Manlietlio, Illinois. Do it now! years. Dr. Caldwell's Svrup Pepsin is a compound of Egyptian senna and pepsin with pleasanttasting aromatics, and does not cramp or gripe. Every druggist handies it, and bottles are so generous that the cost amounts to only about a cent a dose. You buy it with the understanding that if it does not do as claimed your monev will be refunded. The names of ail the ingredients are on the package. Mrs. A. Arceneaux of Orange, Texas, suffered from constipation for six Years and found no relief until she took Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin: and Mrs. Gus Anderson of Ball. Kans., corrected her bowel trouble so that she now eats and sleeps normally. Bring a bottle of Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin into your own home and let the family use it for constipation, biliousness, wind, gas, headaches, flatulency, and to break up fevers and colds.
50c Palmolive Cream S9e 25c Borden's Eagle Milk, 2 for 35 50e F. E. I. Pyorrhoea Tooth Paste..Bß 60c Forhan’s Pyorrhoea Paste Ssc 30c Kolynos Tooth Paste 180 30c Lyon's Tooth Paste or Powder..*4o 50c Pebeco Tooth Paste 33c 50c Pepsodent Tooth Paste SS 50c Listerlne Tooth Paste 89e 35c Rtiblfoam 29e 30c Listerlne 19c 30c Sozodont Paste or Liquid 24c 25c Laxa Pirin Tablets 19c 35c Barhasol 29c 25c Carbolic Soap 190 20e Castile Soap Boeabella 15c 35c Castile Soap Conti, Italian 25c 20c Castile Soap Stork, 13c....2 for 25c 15c Cocoa Castile, 70c S for 25e 25c Cuticura Soap, 19c 8 for Ssc 10c Cosir.o Buttermilk Soap 7c 25c Clayton’s Dog Soap I9e 65c Glover’s Mange Remedy 54c 25c Williams Reload Shaving Stick. I9c $1.20 Scott's Emulsion Cod L. 0i1...74c SI.OO Warapolis Wine Cod L. Oil ...74c 75e Gentry's Mange Remedy 49c 35e Johnson’s Shaving Cream ......29e 35c Krank’s Lather Kreem 29c 75c Lloyd’s Lxrsis Bc 50c Mennen's Shaving Cream 39c 35c Palmolive Shaving Cream 29 10c Williams' Shaving Soap 8e 30e Williams' Luxury Soap 22e 35e Williams' Holder Top Soap ...,29c j.35e Williams' Shaving Cream 29c
SEPT. 18, 1922
SHOPMENOETURN TO SIX BIG ROODS: JEWELLGOES EAST Negotiations Abandoned in Two Instances Over Alleged Minor Matters. By United Pres CHICAGO, Sept. 18.—More than 40,000 striking shopmen were expected to return to their jobs on western roads today. At the same time negotiations were launched to send the thousands of additional men back. Bert M. Jewell, president of the shopmen left here last night for New York when it was reported that peace settlements with the New York Central and the Southern Railroad were called off at the last minute. Jewell refused to discuss the failure to reach an agreement with the New York Central, but intimated that the difficulty was a minor one and that an adjustment would be affected. A s milar situation existed on the Southern. Men were returning to work today on the following roads, according to union headquarters: The Chicago & Northwestern, tne Baltimore Ohio, the Chicago. Milwaukee & St. Paul: the Seaboard Air Line; the Green Bay & Western; the Chicago, St. Paul, Minneapolis & Omaha. In addition agreements and new company unions were formed on sev eral other roads, notably the Burlington and the Union Pacific, which viri tually ended the walk-out. Edith Maude Hull,the woman who wrote “The Sheik,” begins “The Desert Healer,” anew love story o{ Algiers and its treacherously peopled sand wastes in OCTOBER (osmopolitan at newsstands No more ; <Oujferht(} hascrone from yourjace, mother ! FATHER knew too well that rheumatism is the most common cause of heart | disease. It was then too late j | to experiment! He gave mother S. S. S. and stopped her suffering. S. S. S. clears the body of rheumatic impurities. Its remits in thousands of rheui matic cases have been nothing short of amazing. 'What [can be more wonderful, than to see the shackles of pain released from your struggling body? You can do it. Use kS. S. S„ the great destroyer of rheumatio _ impurities. It is sold ( at all drug stores. makes you feel like fowsdj ajain-
30c Miles Anti-Pain Pills 230 sl.lO Vitamon 85c 75c Nose Atomizer 59c SI.OO Nose and Throat Atomizer 74c $1.25 Nose and Throat Atomizer ...,89c Devil bigs No. 15 and 16 Atomizers. $2.50 Oil and Water Atomizer $1.74 75c Fountain Syringe 590 SI.OO Fountain Syringe 74c $1.25 Fountain Syringe 89c $1.50 Fountain Syringe 98c $2.00 Fountain Syringe $1.48 $2.35 Fountain Syringe *1.74 52.75 Fountain Syringe st.9B 53.00 Fountain Syringe $2.28 $2.00 Fountain Vaginal Spray *1.48 SB.OO Fountain Vaginal Spray $1.98 75c Hot Water Bottle 49c SI.OO Hot Water Bottle 74c $1.50 Water Bottle 98c $1.75 Rot Water Bottle *1.24 $2.50 Comb. Syringe and Bottle... .$1.98 *2.00 Comb Syringe and Bottle $1.48 $3.00 Comb. Syringe and Bottle. ...$2.24 75c Breast Pump 59c SIOO Breast Pump 74c 35c Fountain Syringe Tube 25c 75c Colon Tubes 60c 10c Rectal Tubes 49c 53 00 Invalid ("■ shion Ring $2.48 $2.00 Spinal Ice Rags $1.48 $2 00 Throat Ice Bags $1.48 SI.OO Ice Caps \ 74c $2.00 Ice Bags, oblong $1.48 I $4.50 Fever Thermometer 88c j $2.00 Fever Thermometer $1.48
