Indianapolis Times, Volume 35, Number 126, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 October 1922 — Page 2

2

WIDOW LOStS HER ESTATE SHARE 01 SPIHSE'S SCHEME

Mrs. Mary Schafer Alleges She Was Induced to Sign Away Rights. UNABLE TO READ OR WRITE Contract Presented to Bride Immediately After Her Marriage. By Times Special BRAZIL, Ind., Oct. s.—That her husband took advantage of her inability to read or write to induce her to sign a contract by which she was deprived of the widow’s one-third share of his $75,000 estate is the charge of Mrs. Mary Schafer in a suit against George Keller, administrator. Mrs. Schafer stated they were married at Terre Haute in 1893 and immediately after the ceremony the husband presented the contract for her to sign. It merely provided that she agreed to be a faithful wife and perform her household duties, she alleged. After his death a year ago, when a division of the estate was about to take place, she discovered her husband had imposed upon her credulity, the petition stated. The plaintaff also claimed her husband divided property valued at $32.000 among his children a year before his death. Hoosior Briefs PIERCETON— L. D. Nichols. Pennsylvania Railroad agent for fifty years here, is working in the same building in which he accepted employment m 1872. SHELBYVILLE —Not to be outdone by other parts of the State, Samuel Laughlin reports owning a cherry tree in full bloom for the second time. FT. "WAYNE —Deserting the Army at Camp Travis, to marry, Smiley Gibson jilted by the girl here and, disappointed, surrendered to police. COLUMBUS —Asa Smallwood, local hamburger king, sells 100,000 sandwiches a year. MARION —Few bolder thefts are reported than one at the Spencer House wherein the toll box in the telephone booth, was stolen. • FRANKFORT —Gypsies robbed the cash register at Charles Marsh’s restaurant in his presence. HARTFORD ClTY—With horseshoe games all the rage over the State, The Hartford City News suggests a tobacco squirters contest. TERRE HAUTE —While pupils at the Hook school were quietly studying a pistol bullet crashed through a window pane, injuring Leroy Andrews, 13. KOKOMO—Not satisfied with nagging him at home, Elam J. Smith charged in a divorce complaint his wife continued it over the telephone.

FT. WAT\B—Bootleggers sold him white mule in the lobby of the postoffice. Thomas Hartey, charged with intoxication, testified in city court. PRINCETON—In order to devote more time to his barber shop and poolroom, August A. Fichter resigned as city street commissioner. KOKOMO—Burglars took a chance in city hall and succeeded in escaping with? 16 taken from two desks. FT. WAYNE—Having just found his conscience, a Harrisburg (Pa) man, sent Postmaster Beals a rusty wrench, which he “borrowed” in 1906. FRANKLIN—When Ossie McClain drove a wagon wheel two and one-half feet over land to pass another wagon, Charles Stillabower charged him with trespass. TERRE HAUTE—Lynn Weisenberg wants SIO,OOO from a taxi owner for six broken ribs and a broken arm received when a train hit a car. FRANKFORT —Patrolman Charles Land found a 'possum loitering on a sidewalk and “arrested” him for a reunion with sweet 'taters. FRANKLIN—A stranger went to Runyon’s boarding house to shave himself and when the landlady demanded a quarter haughtily threw it on the floor. ELWOOD—Police thought of old times when they arrested sixteen persons for intoxication during September. FRANKLIN—A nail he was driving into a fence flipped into his left eye and may cause Arthur Mathis to lose his sight. UNION CITY—J. W. Sutton, who carried a bottle of oil in his hip pocket, has the laugh on Pete O’Dell, who drank half a pint. TIPTON —Theory that women do not use their heads driving cars was disproved by Miss Mary Baldwin, who, to avoid a collision, ran over a curbing. GREENSBURG —Again the Mysterious Stranger, a bootlegger, gave whisky to Cal Harwood and Willie Jackson, who were fined sl3 each for intoxication. MONTICELLO —A hive of bees was wrecked when a wheelbarrow and car collided, and L. B. Elmore and John Biederwolf lingered no longer. GREENFIELD—Sixty years ago Mr. and Mrs. Lafayette Slifer, who celebrated their wedding anniversary here, were married. ELEVATOR DESTROYED Loss On Building At Milgrove Estimated at $15,000. , By Time* Special HARTFORD CITY. Ind., Oct. 5. An elevator at Milgrove, southeast of here was burned to the ground Wednesday afternoon. The loss was estimated at $15,000. William Graves •wned the building.

PRIZE RILEY LETTER Written to James Paxton Voorhees Col’ & "Y—■l Sow* ' °T V^-* wo vy*. Vr L Vvx Y_j Vyrvu Vyr <vvva*m cUy, T 'U ytibLiP 5 v \“>-

The letter here reproduced in James Whitcomb Riley’s own handwriting, received by th poet’s lifelong personal friend and well wisher, James Paxton Voorhees, and for the first ! time given publication, is a valued | possession of Mr. Voorhees. I There were pleasantly remembered meetings in earlier and later years, ! between Riley and the literary son of | ’’The Tall Sycamore of the Wabash” j when each would submit or read to the I other for suggestion, criticism or something like final judgment results of their efforts. In such pleasant ex- ! change of professional and social | courtesies of friendship and esteem, j lit up by weird, humorous and genial flashes of Riley's own wonderful genius, a poem written by Mr. Voorhees is recalled, which had the fair approval 'of Mr. Riley himself. It is entitled ‘‘The Knight Rode On,’’ and vividly illustrates the incompleteness of average earthly ambitions: “Slowly he paced down a sunset height. In the twilight hour of fame. And he paused in a wood and the fading light Os the vale below, where the coming night Veiled the rivers song end the wind's low flight. And he sighed, 'ls there ioy in a name?’ " ‘We have ravished the land to find renown,’ He cried by the flowing stream. •In peace, in war. in wild and in town. Have we hunted the myth, nth Its wraith form down. But to crush warm hearts—sear a soul for its crown Here forgot, in the mist of a dream!' “The knight bared his crest of its glittering casque. While his good steed quietly browsed: And a light in which lone spirits bask. Floated silently forth from ttehind the mask Os years of toil and hardship and -task. And his soul, to hope, aroused—- “ For around a form, spun in shimmering white. Clung dawn s soft resplendent glow. And a f see that gleamed through supernal light. Filled with a wondrous joy the knight. , And he sat his steed in fairy flight, I With Love at his saddle bow." KLAN PLANS PARADE New Muneie Police t hies Says lie'll Stop street Demonstration. By United Press MUNCIE, Ind., Oct. s.—Following suspension of Chief of Police Van Ben Bow on the grounds that he had

failed to stop a Ku-Klux Klan parade two weeks ago, as ordered by the police board, members of the Klan announced today that another street parade was scheduled for Friday night. John Casey, successor to Benbow, declared that he Is ready to take any steps necessary to prevent the Klan from parading, if masked. An argument over suspension of Benbow reached a sudden climax in a drug store when Clarence Benadum, Delaware County prosecutor, took offense at remarks of John Moles, suspended night police captain, and struck Moles several times in the face. Spectators parted the men after Moles’ eye had been discolored. No arrests were made. LIEBER IS SPEAKER Conservation Head Talks to Association of Engineers. “The fight against stream pollution is not a matter of sentiment nor an attempt to return the waters of the State to their virgin purity,” Richard Lieber, director it State conservation, told members of the Indianapolis Association of Engineers at a noon luncheon today held at the Chamber of Commerce.

wASPirih SAY BAYER 9 when you buy Aspirin

Unless you see the name “Bayer” on package or on tablets you are not getting the genuine product prescribed by physicians over twenty-two years and proved safe by millions for colds, headache, toothache, earache, neuralgia, lumbago, rheumatism, neu-

JAMES PAXTON VOORHEES

INSTRUCTORS NEEDED Competent Sunday School Teachers Lacking, Says Speaker. By Time* Special RICHMOND, Ind., Oct. s.—Need of competent Sunday school teachers was emphasized by the Rev. O. L. Black in an address at. the Indiana Presbyterian Synod here last night. Work of obtaining trained instructors, lie said, is greater than obtaining new scholars. The statement was made In connection with a discussion of the need of men in church-work. MINER IS KILLED Marshall McClure Dios of Injuries Received at Bicknell. By Times Special BICKNELL, Ind., Oct. s.—Marshall McClure, 47, died in the Good Samaritan Hospital at Vincennes Wednesday afternoon of injuries he received in a mine accident Wednesday morning. A string of cars collided with the coal car upon which he was riding, throwing him off. His feet were mangled and he sustained internal injuries.

ritis, and for pain in. general. Accept only ’’Bayer” package which contains proper directions. Handy boxes of twelve tablets cost few cents. Druggists also sell bottles of 24 and 100. Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoacetlcacidester of Salicylicacid.—Advertisement.

TidLbi US i>iAJN Ai*OLl!S TIMES

APPEAL TO HOOVER Sailors Union Says Lake Carrier* Are Violating LaFollette Law. By United News CHICAGO, Oct. s.—An appeal to Secretary of Commerce Hoover to “put a stop to the open and flagrant violation” of the LaFollette seamen’s law by the Great Lakes Carriers’ Association in its alleged practice of replacing striking sailors with inexperienced men, was made Wednesday by Secretary K. B. Nolan of the sailors union. Hoover was asked to investigate alleged violations of the seamen’s law by United States customs officers in clearing ships which had less than the required 65 per cent of able seamen in the deck crews. KELSEY WILL SPEAK Optimists to Hear Near East Relief Head Friday. Mead A. Kelsey, State secretary of Near East Relief, will addross the Optimist Club at the club's weekly luncheon at the Hotel Lincoln Friday noon on “What I Found in the Near East.” Secretary Kelsey recently re-! turned from this disturbed part of the j world. The program will be in charge of Carl B. Julian, chairman; J. M. Scmid, George Scmid, Donald Campbell and E. C. Bishop. Fifty prizes will be awarded to guests and members. TRUCK IS SEARCHED Bloomington Man Reports Ilold-up Near Maywood. Five men held up Cecil Hendricks of Bloomington, near Maywood at 1 a. m. today, but did not rob him. Hendricks told the police that the men stopped their car in such a way that he was forced to stop his automobile truck. Three of the five men got out of the touring car and covered Hendricks with a revolver. They searched his truck and when they found nothing, asked him if he had any money. When Hendricks told them be had none they got Into their automobile and drove In the direction of the city.

ASKS MINE TAX Slate Inspector Advocates Rescue Service Bureau. The Indiana General Assembly, which convenes in January, will be asked by Cairy Littlejohn, State mine inspector, to pass a bill compelling each coal operator in Indiana to pay a levy of *4-cent on each ton of coal mined to support a first class mine rescue service bureau in this State. From this proposed revenue, Littlejohn claims that $75,000 can be collected annually for carrying out this work. SPEAKS ON BUSINESS Former District Governor of Rotary Addresses Remedial Association. Charles Watkins of Muncle, ex-dis-trict governor of Indiana Rotary Clubs, spoke of “Human Element in Business” at the semi annual meeting of the Slate Remedial Association, composed of loan companies of Indiana, at the Clay pool Hotel yesterday afternoon. Fred Saint of Muncie is president of the organization. VETERANS WILL MEET First Reunion in Five Years of 88th Regiment to Bo held. By Times Special FT. WAYNE, Ind., Oct. s.—Reunion of the BSth Indiana Regiment will be held here next Saturday at the courthouse, the first to be held In five years. The last meeting was held at Columbia City. Next Saturday will be the sixtieth anniversary of the Battle of Perry villa, one of the important engagements tn which tYle regiment tool: part. Out of 1,500 members of the regiment only fifty-five survive.

BURNED TO DEATH Boy Playing With Matches Sets Fire to Shed. By Times Special SOUTH BEND, Ind., Oct. s.—While playing with matches in an oil shed at his home on a farm southwest of here, Joseph Rupel, 4, was burned to death when he set fire to the budding Wednesday afternoon. ACID THROWER SENT UP Sherman Kortwright Is Sentenced at Richmond. By Times Special RICHMOND, Ind., Oct. s.—Sentence of one to fifteen years in State prison was given Sherman Kortwright 31, on charge of throwing acid In the face of Herbert Ray, policeman. EAGLES’ HOME ROBBED Rurglars Take $445 From Safe in Office. By Times Special ANDERSON, Ind., Oct. s—The Eagles’ home was robbed of $448 by burglars who worked the combination on the safe in the office. No clews have been obtained.

Kidney and Bladder Troubles Conquered or Money Back For 40 years, said Dr Carey, I have been prescribing my prescription No. 777 (known for years as Marshroot) for kidney and bladder sirkness and now that I have retired from active practice I have made arrangements with leading druggists to dispenee this wonderful prescription at a moderate price, on the money back if dissatisfied plan. Beware of kidney disease—thousands die of it every year who ought to be enjoying the blessings of life and health. Watch the symptoms. If you have specks floating before the eyes, puffy eyes, clammy feet or moist palms, backache or sideache, you ought to get a bottle of Dr. Carey’s famous prescription No. 7T7 right away. It has wonderfully benefited tens of thousands of eases of kidney and bladder troubles and Is the medicine you can always depend upon. Uesults are guaranteed. NOTE—Dr. Daniel O. Carey was a practicing physician for many years and *iis great prescription No. 777 aided thousands of sufferers from kidney and bladder troubleg. Hereafter you can always •get this effective prescription in boih lijuid and tablet form at Hook's Dittfg (tore, Pearson Drug Cos. and all reliable pharmacists the country over.—Advertisement.

ILL INDIANA IS TO PUT TRIBUTE TO HOOSIER POET Laying of Corner Stone for Riley Memorial Hospital Will Take Place Saturday. NOTABLES WILL ATTEND Services at 2 O’clock to Be Preceeded by Rites of Hardly Lesser Significance.

All Indiana will pay tribute to James Whitcomb Riley, poet and lover of children, Saturday afternoon, when the corner stone will be laid for the James Whitcomb Riley Hospital for children. Participating in the ceremonies will be one girl between the ages of 12 and 14 from every county in the State. The names of the girls and the ninetytwo counties will be deposited in the corner stone box. The ceremonies, starting at 2 p. m., will be preceded at 1:30 p. m. by a conecrt by the Indianapolis newsboys’ band. During the concert, visitors will be invited to inspect the hospital site. Flags have been placed on telephone poles showing the boundary of the eighty-eight acres of ground to be donated by the city of Indianapolis and to surround the Indianapolis city hospital, the Robert W. Long Hospital and the Indiana University School of Medicine, with the Riley Hospital in the center.

William Fortune, chairman, in charge of general arrangements, will preside. Bishop Joseph It. Francis will give the invocation. More than two hundred school children will sing. Addresses will be made by Dr. William Lowe Bryan, president of Indiana University; Mayor Lew Shank; Thomas R. Marshall, principal speaker; Marcus Dickey, Riley's biographer, and Governor McCray. In charge of the actual laying of the corner stone will fie Dr. Lafayette Page, Almus G. Ruddell, Marion County chairman; George A. Ball of Muncie. George Ade of Brook and John T. McCutcheon of Chicago. Club and oiyunizations attending In a body are asked to he seated In reserved sections by 1:45 p. m. The corner stone box, eighteen inches long, seven inches wide and eight inches deep, is said to be one of the largest ever made. The corner stone ceremonies will be preceded by a luncheon at 11:30 a. m. at the Claypool Hotel. Representative persons from all parts of the State will attend. Officers of city and State organizations may sign the parchment paper to he placed in the corner stone, until 10 p. m. Friday at 1402 National City i Bank building. Contributions of $23,550 to the building fund, making a total of $116,- ■ 150 pledged In the last ten days, were ; reported yesterday. Indianapolis school teachers, at a meeting at Slnjrtridge High School, approved a plan to raise a fund. It is expected at least $35,000 will be raised within five years.

BURNEY BANK CLOSED Institution Quits Business at Request of Stockholders. By Vniled Tress GREENSBURG, Ind.. Oct. 5—A heavy run on tlio Burney State Hank near here by depositors forced directors of the Institution to request that it he closed by State officials temporarily. Insecure loans last month resulted in a 50 per cent assessment on stockholders to put ft in good condition. Some of the stockholders refused to pay the assessment and the directors decided to dose'the doors. TALK OVER BUDGETS College Presidents With Kschhach to Discuss 1923 Expenditures. Presidents of Indiana State Normal, Purdue and Indiana Universities, have met with J4ssn Kschhach, chief examiner of the State board of accounts, to talk over the 1923 budgets.

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A Splendid Hair Grower and Wonderful Bcautifier

Here’s good news for men and women whose hair is falling out, who are growing *bald, and whose scalps are covered with dandruff, and itch like mnd. Any good druggist can now supply you with the genuine Parisian Sage (liquid form), which is guaranteed to quickly and safely abolish every sign of dandruff, stop itching scalp and falling hair and stimulate new hair to grow or the cost, small as it is, will be refunded. Thousands can testify to the excellent results from its use; some who feared baldness now glory in their abundant hair, while others who suffered for years with dandruff and itching head got a clean, healthy scalp after just a few days’ use of this simple treatment. No matter whether bothered with fating hair, gray hair, matted, stringy hair, dandruff or itching scalp, try Parisian Sags—you will not be disappointed. It’s i scientific preparation that supplies all hair needs. The first application will unite your hair and scalp look and feel 'OO per cent better. Don’t delay—begin tonight. A little attention now Insures abundant hair for years to come.—Advertisement.

ELECT CHEST HEADS Community Fund Leaders Reform in Session at Lincoln. Eight members of the board of directors of the Community Chest were to retire today and new members to be elected at the annual meeting of the directors at the Hotel Lincoln at 4 p. m. today. Proposed amendments to the constitution will provide for a board of twenty-one members. The terms of Frederic M. Ayres, L. C. Huesmann and J. W. Lilly will hold over. Retiring members of the board are Fred J. Hoke, E. A. Kahn, W. J. Mooney, Francis H. Gavisk, Hugh McK. Landon, Evans Woolen, James K. Oglen, and Rev. T. W. Grafton. Charles W. Jewett, Stoughton A. Fletcher, Frank D. Stalnaker, Charles B. Sommers, Aquilla Q. Jones, Robert Lieber and Franklin Vonnegut compose the advisory board.

WILL MEET HERE Greencastle Dislrlct of W. F. M S.. to Hold Annual Session. The forty-fourth annual meeting of the Greencastle district of the Woman’s Foreign Missionary Society of the Methodist Episcopal Church will open a two-day session Friday morning at St. Paul’s Church. The session will open with devotional services, followed by departmental reports. In the afternoon Mrs. Edgar Teague will speak on “Our Young People” and Mrs. A. S. Warriner on “Our Children.” At a supper to be given tomorrow night, several missionaries will be introduced. A full day's program is announced for Saturday. Mrs. Harris Dante, district president, will resign because of moving to Chicago next month. CHOSEN CLUB HEAD Vernon Smith to Lead'Tech Nature Organization. Vernon Smith has been elected president of the Technical High School nature study club. Other officers are Stephen Hughes, vice president: Harold Shippey, secretary, and Brandt Steele, treasurer. The next meeting will be held Oct. 11.

Third Generation is Using Syrup Pepsin

N* other Laxative con replace Dr. Caldwell'* in the confidence of tboie who ate it THERE are thousands of healthy, robust young men and women who have never in all their lives taken any other laxative for constipation than Dr.

Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin. Their parents were given it by their parents; the grandparents are using it today. It is the one laxative ideally suited to all the family, safe for the little ones, effec-

tive in grownups, so compounded that elderly people, who are constantly forced to take a laxative because the intestinal muscles tire weakening, find increased dosage unnecessary. This wonderful constipation remedy has been used continuously for 30 years, and over 10 million bottles are now sold annually, the largest selling family laxative in the world! The cost averages lmt a cent a dose. Every druggist sells it, and under a guarantee to do as cluirned or youi money will he refunded. Millions of carefully conducted homos are never without a bottle of Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin.

KSYRUP PEPSIN gftie family laxative

Better Yet N . \ Indianapolis Toledo Detroit Service Leave Indianapolis 12:00 noon, arriving ’ at Toledo in sealed cars at 3:30 a. in., Detroit 8:00 a. m. Returning leave Detroit 12:00 noon, Toledo 9 :30 p. m. and arriving in Indianapolis 10:00 a. ra. This is better than express service, but at freight rates. This train is rightfully named the “Aeroplane.” Union Traction Company of Indiana

x - on v. !"%. §I jdf rr%7ffieeMk 6 <rcm-)4niericcin 1 ’ j as on other through trains . J j P|IJ ' of the Lxmisville <3* Nashville R. R. tfflLM 1 The Heart outhbound THE PAN-AMERICAN Northbound i • ; .J[ * V rsi 8.15 am Leaves CINCINNATI Arrives 8.40 pm" ; ■> \ fir TnP \PTiJtiCQ H-55 am Leaves LOUISVILLE Leaves 5.10 pm ■JHR> L-VVf ‘'J* wv " 9.55 pm Arrives MEMPHIS Leaves 7.15 am . j gWIS/lLd |W r .VL>' IC* rffS 5.03 pm Leaves NASHVILLE Leaves 12.05 pm X ' \\ ,7 Ila g/fV 10.27 pm Leaves BIRMINGHAM Leaves 6.42 am I 1 1 12.53 am Leaves MONTGOMERY—Leaves 4.12 am Z' 6.00 am Arrives PENSACOLA Leaves 10.45 pm WPnffllflr'l f|l '■'***’ e.ooam Leaves MOBILE Leaves 11.12 pm SERVICE, A LA CARTE Observation Car—Drawing Room-Two-Compartment and ihe P™ es are ""derate, comparing very favor- Sleepers-Dinlng Cars-Modern Steel Coaches ably with those of hotels and restaurants (no extra tare) offering an equal grade of service. Parlor Car to Memphis ■psMßyiLw' Two other through trains to New Orleans, Memphis, etc., leave Cincinnati 6:18 p. m. and Hb faJI fight jja 10:25 p. m., and Louisville 10:10 p. m. and 2:20 a. m. For information apply to BvluvS fa H. M. Mounts, T. P. A., 810 Merchants Bank Bldg., Indianapolis, Ind. Main 2317. I. H. I>. P. A., Louisville, KV.

FLOWER PARADE LINHjP GIVEN Divisions to Form North of Fall Creek—Expect to Start at 3:15 P. M. Formation of the Flower Parade to be staged Saturday afternoon, Oct. 7, will be by divisions as' follows: Nos. 1, 2 and 3 —State, county, city and township divisions, Twenty-Sec-ond St., north on Meridian. No. 4—G. A. R. and other military organization, north side of Fall Creek, Meridian to Illionois Sts. No. s—Rebekahs, north side of Fall Crdek, Meridian to Pennsylvania Sts. No. 6 —Odd Fellows, north side of Fall Creek, Illinois St. to Capito! Ave. No. 7—Manufacturers, north side of Fall Creek, Pennsylvania to Talbott Sts. No. B—Fraternal8 —Fraternal orders, from Fall Creek north on Captol Ave. to TwentySixth St. No. 9—Retail, north side of Fall Creek, Talbot to Delaware Sts. No. 10 —Wholesale, Capitol Ave. from Twenty-Sixth to Twenty-Seventh Sts. No. 11—Civic organizations and clubs, north side of Falll Creek, Delaware to Ruckle Sts. No. 12—Automobile section, Capitol Ave. from Twenty-Seventh St. north. No. 13—Churches and schools, north side of Fall Creek, Ruckle to Alabama Sts. The parade is to start at 3:15 p. m. BRYAN William Jennings Goes to Europe— Will Not Speak Here. Because of a suddenly arranged trip to Europe, William Jennings Bryan has cancelled a two-day speaking tour of Indiana this month. Miss Gertrude McHugh, secretary of the Democratic State committee, announced today. Frederick Van Nuys will be the chief speaker at the Marion County Democratic rally at McCord’s park, Oct. 14.

ANY FAMILY MAY TRY IT FREE Thousands of parents are asking themselves, “ Where can I find a trustworthy larat ire that anyone in the family can use when constipated 2” I urge you to try Syrup Pepsin. I will gladly mo tide a liberal free sample bolilt, sufficient for an adequate lest. Mr He me where to send it. Address hr. H'. U. Caldwell, 515 Washington St., Montwelto, Illinois. Do it now!

Mr. J. R. Relk of Shaw, Miss., relies on it entirely to keep his children in health, and Mrs. Catherine Connolly of Jersey City, N. J., declures that not only herself hut all her neighbors and friends use it and tell others about it. There is scarcely a day that someone in a family does not need it for constipation, flat ulency, auto-intoxication, biliousness, intestinal poisoning, headaches, cdfio and cramps, and to break up fevers and colds. Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin is a scientiiically-bulaiiced compound of Egyptian senna with pepsin and pleasant-tasting aromatics. The formula is on the package. As the popularity of this natural vegetable laxative increases, the public discards the harsher physics like calomel, coaltar in candy form, salt waters and iiowders. Dr. Caldwell's Syrup ’epsin empties the bowels more cleanly and without any danger.

OUT. o, imA

LEASE PLAZA SITE Bobbs-Merrill Company Will (ontinue in Oid Home for Present. Property at 18 E. Vermont St., bought by the county from the Bobbs-Merrill Company for the Memorial Plaza project at a cost of $203,000, has been leased to the original owners for S4OO a month. The company will occupy it until the war memorial board assumes possession. CORNS Lift Off with Finger** Doesn't hurt a bit! Drop a little “Freezone” on an aching corn, Instantly that corn stops hurting, then shortly you lift it right off with fingers. Truly! Your druggist sells a tiny bottle of “Freezone’’ for a few cents, sufficient to remove every hard corn, soft corn, or com between the toes, and the calluses, without soreness or irritation.—Advertisement.

Mrs. Florence Coop \ BEAUTY and HEALTH For Women of All Ages Kokomo, Ind.—” Atone time I felt draggy and worn-out and greatly in need of a tonic, when a friend suggested to me to try Doctor Pierce’s Favorite Prescription. I had taken other tonics, but 1 never took anything that helped me so quickly as the Favorite Prescription. It was not an unpleasant medicine to take and my whole system seemed to be benefited. I have also used Dr. Pierce's Lotion Tablets for cleansing purposes and found them to be just perfect.”—Mrs. Florence Coop, 2108 N. Market St. Get Dr. Pierce's remedies at any drug store, in tablets or liquid. Write Dr. Pierce. President Invalids' Hotel in Buffalo, N. Y., for free medical advice.—Advertisement. AILING WOW OF MIDDLE AGE Mrs. Linton Tells How Helpful Lydia E.Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound is at This Period Denver. Colorado. —“I have taken Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com-

pound for Seven years and I cannot tell you the good it ha3 done me. It is good for young and old and I alwayskeep a bottle of it in the house, for I am at that time of life when it calls for Lydia E. Pinkham’s help. My husband saw your ad. in

i

the papers and said ‘ You have taken everything you can think of, now I want you to take Lydia E.Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound! ’ So I let him get it, and I soon felt better and he told me ‘I want you to take about six bottles. ’ So I did and I keep house and do all my own work and work out by the day and feel fine now. I tell every one about the Vegetable Compound, for so many of my friends thought I would not get well.’’—Mr*. R. J. Linton, 1850 West 33d Avenu* Denver, Colorado. Af terreadingletters like the above, and we arc constantly publishing them, why should any woman hesitate to take Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound if she i3 in need of help? It brings relief where other medicines fail.