Indianapolis Times, Volume 35, Number 213, Indianapolis, Marion County, 15 January 1923 — Page 2

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LEGION HEADS MEET TO TAKE STAND

RUFF EJECTS WOB COP WOO VOICEOOPENI9I3 Newspaper Statement by Miss Holsapple Termed ‘Vicious’ . by Police Chief. REFUSES TO GIVE UP BADGE ‘Offender’ Smiles at Order of Boss, Who Threatens to Take Dismissal Steps. Following the issuing of a newspaper statement denouncing the police department, by Miss Emily Holsapple, policewoman. Police Chief Herman Rikhoff today asked Miss Holsapple to turn in her badge. He termed the statement “vicious.” Miss Holsapple smiled but refused to give up the badge. The chief said he would take steps to have her dismissed. Because she had been on the force only since March 8, 1922, and her appointment never has been confirmed, as customary rfter a ninety-day probation period, Rikhoff said he believed it would not be necessary to file charges against her. A conference was arranged between Oscar Queisser. secretary to the chief, and 'William T. Bailey, assistant city attorney. "Constant Trouble” If it is found that Miss Holsapple cannot be dismissed without the filing of charges, the chief said he would charge insubordination and incompetency. He declared the police woman had been a constant source of trouble. Mrs. Hettie Brewer, colored, and Mrs. Anna Buck, policewomen, were cailed into conference by the chief today. When they declared they had never made statements against the chief and said they had been treated fairly, they were sent back to work collecting vehicle and boarding house licenses. Following Chief Rikhoff's announcement last week that Miss Holsapple, Mrs. Brewer and Mrs. Buck would be put back to work in juvenile court, Judge Lahr of the court visited the chief and also sent him a letter to say that he refused to have the women around the court. Dr. Hodgin Also Cold Dr. E. E. Hodgin. president of the board of public health, also refused to use the three women in his department, although he said they might he used in a division of housing and sanitation, if it were attached to Juvenile Court. He said the health department had no funds with which to pay for their services. The trouble started at a board of safety meeting Dec. 26, when Mayor Shank charged that the women were inefficient and asked that charges be placed against them. He charged that the city paid the bill while the women worked for the county in juvenile court. Since then they have been shifted from department to department.

FATHER BOiED SAVJNG FAMILY By United Press CHICAGO, Jan. 15.—Nicholas Schillo. 40. fought for his life today as the result of burns suffered when he rescued his wife and three children from a fire which destroyed their home. Schillo. awakened • by flames, wrapped blankets around his wife and or.e child and carried them to the street. With his clothes in flames, he returned to the bedroom and carried two other children to safety. Police believe the fire was of incendiary origin. BRADSHAW WELCOMES BUILDERS’ SUPPLY MEN Dick Miller Gives Address at Convention. The annual convention of the Indiana Builders’ Supply Association opened with a luncheon in the Claypool Hotel today. Arthur E. Bradshaw, president of the Indianapolis Mortar and Fuel Company, was toastmaster, and gave a short address of welcome. Dick Miller, president of the City Trust Company, spoke on “Fundamentals of American Prosperity.” The entire afternoon session was to be given over to' hearing reports. Speakers for the afternoon session were to be D. L. Squires, “Free Wholesale Markets;” E. K. Cormack, “A Code of Ethics for the Building Dealers.” At the session Tuesday an anonymous paper on “100 per cent Dealer Distribution and What the Manufacturer Should Expect in Return,” will b“ reaJ. Other speakers will be H. M. Heckler, Chicago; G. W. Haffner, and Charles Neizer, Ft. Wayne; Harvey Whipple, Thomas Black, E. C. Reel, John Horn, C. L. Miller, T. H. Holdeman, Eller R. Newland, Warren E. Cox, John Kenower, Walter M. ’'Hildebrand, Frank G. Laird and J. Frank Smith. The convention will close with a banquet. LEGION LEADERS SPEAK Alvin Owsley, national commander of the American Legion, and Major Comstock, secretary of the Indiana Memorial Association, addressed members of the Service Club today in their luncheon at the Hotel Lincoln. Members of the national executive committees with the national vicecommanders of the Legion were g"Uetq of honor.

Manslaughter Term for Slayer

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LYMAN STOCK WELL, LEFT, AND DEPUT V SHERIFF 9 RANK KEMPS, RIGHT, ON WAY TO" JAI L. STOCKWELL WAS SENTENCED TODAY IN MARION COUNTY CRIMINAL COURT TO TWO TO TWENTYONE YEARS IN PRISON FOR MANSLAUGHTER. HE KILLED A NEIGHBOR.

Oil Turns Indian Woman Chief Into Modern Midas

By United Press KAW CITY, Okla., Jan. 15.—Lucy Tyiap Eads, first woman chief of an Indian tribe, was looked on as a modern Midas by Poor Lo today. She has turned the bleak hilltops of the Kaw Indian reservation into gold. ■ The poverty-stricken cous.ns of the i rich Osage Indians were being offered < SI,OOO and more for royalties on the land which for generations has barely produced pasturage for their lean cattle Wild scenes were enacted through-

CREDIT MEN TO NDLD CONVENTION Local Firms Will Be Represented in Terre Haute. The sixth annual one-day conference of Indiana credit men will be held in Terre Haute Tuesday. A large representation from Indianapolis firms is expected to attend. The conference is under the auspices of the Indianapolis Association of Credit Men. Nationally known speakers aro on the program. These Indianapolis firms will he represented: E. C. Atkins & Cos.. Hugh J. Baker & Cos., the Indianapolis Star, Advance Paint Company. Armour & Cos., Hibben-Hollweg Company, Diamond Chain ana Manufacturing Company, Merchants National Bank, the Indianapolis News, Vonnegut Machinery Company, Merchants Heat and Light Company. A. Burdsal Company, Indianapolis Electrical Supply Company. Mlljer Rubber Company, Maas-Niemeyer Lumber Company, Harry G. Sargent Paint Company, Kiefer-Stewart Company, I. J. Cooper Rubber Company, City Trust Company, the Maytag Company, Mutual China Company, the Bradstreet Company, Ajax Rubber Company, Indianapolis Engineering and Electric Company, Acme-Evans Company; Dictaphone Company, R. G. Dun & Cos., J I. Lolcomb Manufacturing Company, Sherwin-Williams Company, Keyless Lock Company, Udell Works, Mason Tire and Rubber Company. Officers of the Indianapolis association are C. W. Steeg, president; J. M. Caswell, first vice president; Henry Knaff, second vice president; C. E. Sullivan, treasurer.

SQUARE AND COMPASS TO INSTALL OFFICERS Frank L. Riggs to Become President Tonight. The third annual installation of officers of the Hoosier Square and Compass Club will be held at 8 p. m. tonight at the clubrooms, 43 and 45 S. Meridian St. The officers elected two months ago and to be installed | tonight are as follows: Frank L. i Riggs, president: Fred I. Willis, first i vice president; Harry Henry, second vice president; Harry Orlopp, third vice president - W. Glen Tipton, fourth vice president: Harry Epply, fifth vice president: A. R. Chapman, secretary; Arthur E. Wilson, treasurer: William R. Mendall anc J. N. Cuilom, directors. Following are the holdover members of the board of directors: Eph Levin, Charles McCormick, Frank Reynolds and Ed Burgan. A large attendance is expected to give the new officers a warm welcome. BOXING BOUT PROVES FATAL By i'nitcd Pres* KENDALLVILLE, Ind., Jan. 15. Engaging in a friendly boxing bout with his son immediately after eating a big dinner caused the death of Edward Kinney, 62, of A villa, six mile3 south of here. Shortly after the bout started, the father was stricken with heart trouble and diwi two hours later. The son Is grief stricken.

out the reservation today following discovery of a 2,000-barrel oil well. Excitement ran high as scouts raced to be the first in the field, and sleepy Indians were haled from their beds to grasp bundles of money from those seeking leases. They remained blinking and unconvinced as the speculator dashed away to the next house. But the Kaws feel assured that their new found fortunes are their rewards for selecting Lucy Tyiap Eads as their chief.

LOkE SURVIVOR CALLS FOR DEAD COMPANIONS (Continued on Page ) through a heavy cloud of smoke from •he two engines which had just passed, the skirt of a girl stepping into the path of his engine. He called to his engineer, B. A. Greene, to put on the brakes, but it was too late to save the four young people. The mothers of both the girls were prostrated when they learned of the tragedy. Helped Support Family Miss Micks, the eldest of the eight children of Mr. and Mrs. Otto Micks, had been working to help support the large family. The father is a painter and decorator. Miss Micks has three sisters, Edith, 13; Thelma, 11, and Valeda, 7, and lour brothers, Norman, 15; Glenn, 9; Hersehel, 4, and Floyd, 2. The injured girl was horn at Rising Sun, Ind., and moved to Indianapolis sixteen years ago. Mrs. David Edmonds, mother of the dead girl, sobbed toda* as she told of the. death of three other children, when they were babies. ‘But I never knew real sorrow until now,” she cried. Miss Edmonds’ father is a Big Four car inspector. When he reached the scene of the accident near his home Sunday night he would not believe his daughter had been killed until he crawled beneath the engine and saw her mangled body. Besides her parents. Miss Edmonds leaves two brothers, Rufus and Virgil, and two sisters, Mary and Burton, all younger than she. Smith, the son of Mr. and Mrs. Edward L. Smith, had served two years in the Army aviation corps. He left three brothers, Edward Jr., Richard and Arthur. Mike Gootte was the son of Mrs. Frank Mattirgly of Loogootee, Ind. Besides his mother, Gootte Is survived by four brothers, Sherrel, 24, a soldier. who is now In China; Dennis, 19; Curtis, 12, who lives at Lootgootee, and Wilbur, 18, who has been visiting Michael for two weeks. Gootte had lived at the Orvel Hotel, 528 E. Market St., In this city for five years. When he failed to return to the hotel during the night, H. L. Miller, proprietor, remarked to Wilbur Gootte that It was strange that Michael had not returned, as he had never failed to come back to the hotel at night during the years he had lived there. It was not until he was notified by a representative of The Times that Wilbur Gootte learned of the fatal accident. Persons living near the scene of the tragedy said it was the second accident at the crossing within a week and the eighth in the past year. Many tracks crossing at the intersection of the diagonal street. Southeastern Aye. and Oriental St., are confusing, residents said, although there are gates at both Oriental St. and Southeastern Ave. SULCER HONORED Henry D. Sulcer, who formerly lived In Indianapolis, was elected a director of the Century Trust and Savings Bank, Chicago, at its meeting. He is well known to many Indianapolis people as an advertising expert. REVOLVER STOLEN Joseph Wright, 2246 Ashland Ave., reported to police today that his home had been entered through a rear window and a revolver and clothing valued at $36 taken.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

1001EO HUBBY’ TRAILS WIFE TO HER m COTE' Another ‘Eternal Triangle’ Revealed When Jail Bars Snap Bonds of Romance. By United Press KANSAS CITY, Jan. 15.—Jail oars proved too much of a strain on the slender bonds of love ties in another • eternal triangle” here today. Dr. Charles H. Frye, physician of Beloit, Wis., and Mrs. Linna Rosentretter, also of Beloit, declared from their prison cells today they had paid in tears for their elopement last September. The couple was arrested on complaint of Albert Rosentretter, the “wronged husband,” who followed his wife and Frye to Kat sas City where he found the former prominent physician employed as a strike-breaker in the railroad yards. The love-cote; he found was a rear room on the third floor of a cheap rooming house. “It all seems like a dream," Frye said today. “We drifted into it —I don't know how. It was only a month or so after I left Beloit and Joined Linna here that I began to realize what I had done. I had left the savings of my life with my wife, so that she was not in want, but my conscience would not let me rest. “Then I discovered that Linna was in touch with her husband. I did by best then to convince her that she should return to Itosenstretter and her 4 year-old boy. “Mrs Rosentretter pleaded with her husband for ‘another chance,’ and ne promised to take her back to thier home in Beloit.” "I became enamored with hjis position and high standing In Beloit,” she sobbed. "As my physician he called constantly for almost a year and finally I could not say no to his pleadings. But lam cured and want to go back to my husband.” Dr. Fryo also declared he was anxious to return to the old life. Police, however, refused to release the couple pending an investigation.

Leader of Boy Sleuths Recovers Stolen Wagon

Hours of waiting and searching by members of the Kenwood Ave. Boy Detectives Association have been rewarded. The youthful sleuths had been on the lookout for wagons and other toys stolen In their neighborhood a week ago. To Carl Grumarm, 3645 Kenwood Ave., 8-year-old executive of the association. with his mother and sister, goes the credit for the recovery of Carl's wagon. Carl's eager eye spied a wagon similar to his. In possession of a boy at Twenty-Third and Meridian Sts., as the family was on the way downtown In an automobile. Mrs. Grumann had hardly stopped the car before the children were out.

GOURTHOUSETO GET HIT WATER Bids for Gas Heater Will Be Opened Tuesday. Bids on the installation of an automatic gas water heater for the courthouse, equipped only with cold water taps since its erection in 1874, will be opened by the board of county commissioners Tuesday. Bids on construction of a retaining wall and bank protection along the Raymond St. fill will also be considered. Other contracts, the total of which will cost the county approximately 8100,000, will be let within the next month. On Feb. 1 bids on a fivepassenger enclosed car for use by the commissioners will be received. At the same time offers to sell the county thirty Holstein tuberculosis-tested cows to supply myk for Julietta. Sunnyside and the poor farm will be considered. Repairs to the Keystone Ave. bridge will be considered Jan. 20. No estimate on the work has been prepared, although the commissioners ordered one from J. J. Griffith, county engineer. Advertised for the third time, bids will again be opened ori the Furnas asphalt road, known also as the English Ave. road, on Feb. 16. The road is 2.02 miles long, and the estimate cost is $87,638. TAR WASTE SENDS UP HIGH COLUMNS OF FIRE Two Scores R<*siilt From Boys’ Bon Fire. People living near State Ave. and Orange St., had two bad scares when tar waste from the Citizens Gas Company in Pleasant Run twice caught fire and flamed almost 100 feet in the air, Saturday and Sunday. There was no wind or nearby houses would have been Ignited, fire department officials said. The department put out the flames without difficulty. The waste caught when boys built a bon fire near the stream. BLIND TIGER ALLEGED Hugh Cooper, 33, and Wiley Mattox, 49, were arrested on a charge ofoperating a blind tiger when Sheriff Clark, Prosecuting Attorney Hume and Federal Officer Hindel raided a farm one mile west of Bellville, In Hendricks County. Two stills, with capacities of twenty gallons and twen-ty-five gallons, respectively, together with 400 gallonsfyof mash, were found on the farm, the officers said.

Dixon Disciple of T. R., May Be Fall’s Successor

JOSEPH M. DIXON By A' FA Service HELENA, Mont., Jan. 15.—" The biggest family of girls in any executive mansion In America,” That’s what Montana claims. It's the family of Governor Joseph M. Dixon, whose name has come up in connection with President Harding's choice for a successor to Secretary of Interior Fall. Dixon is a disciple of Theodore Roosevelt in more than one way. There's his family of six daughters. And there Is his known progressive leaning in national politics. As United States Senator from Montana, 1907 to 1913, Dixon was a close personal friend of Roosevelt So much so that he became the former President’s campaign manager and chairman of the Progressive National Committee in 1912. Dixon Is 55 now and has been Governor of Montana since January, 1921. His political activities, darting In 1892, took him through local offices to membership In Congress and the Senate, arid then Governorship of Montana. After his election as Governor of Montana, in 1920, and before he took office, there was talk of his possibility for appointment as Secretary of Interior. But Senator Fall's appointment ended that.

and the chase for the boy and the wagon was on. When caught, the boy admitted the wagon was not his, hut said it was given to him by “some one.” Carl and his 0t1..:r were so happy to get the wagon, thafthey asked no other questions they said. AVhile Carl was very happy over his find, he was none the less Interested in the recovery of the wagon belonging to Billy Lowry, 7, 3608 Kenwood Ave., which was stolen on the same night. Billy Is a loyal worker in the detective association, and Carl today asserted he has clews to the missing wagon, and other thefts is the neighborhood.

MRS. MARY ELLEN ENNIS TO BE BURIED TUESDAY Daughter of Early Settler Dim af Home Here. I Funeral services for Mrs. Mary El- | len Ennis, 65, will be held Tuesday at 2:30 p. m. at the home, 2317 N. New Jersey St. Burial will be in Crown Hill. Mrs. Ennis was a. life-long resident of Indianapolis, and a daughter >f Zachariah Bush, who came to Indiana from Pennsylvania in 1847. Mrs. Ennis is survived by the busband, Robert S. Ennis, a son, Clarence'Myers; a stepson. Claude J. Ennis; a brother, Adam Bush, and a sister, Mrs. Lydia A. Lake, all of Indianapolis. LAST RITES TUESDAY FOR MRS. ADDIE B. JOHNSON Pioneer From Ohio Had Lived Here Thirty Years. Funeral services for Mrs. Addle B. Johnson, 83, will be held at 2 p. m. Tuesday al the home, 904 E. Fifteenth St., with the Rev. E. H. Kistler in charge. Burial will be at Crown Hill. Mrs. Johnson, who was born In Pleasantridge, Ohio, for thirty years had been a resident of Indianapolis. She lived in Noblesville for a time. Surviving her are two daughters, Mrs. Maude Cook and Mrs. Edward M Wood, both of Indianapolis; a brother, Albert Agncw, of Hamilton, Til., and three sisters, Mrs. James L. Miller, West Point, Til., and Miss Mary J. Agnew and Mrs. C. J. Grubb, noth of Galesburg, 111. n PROWLER FLEES Elmer Spray, 270 Richland St., reported to police last night that he beard a noise at his front window. Turning on the light he heard some one run from the front porch. Two v nien were standing on the sidewalk In front of a grocery across the street, he said. Police searched the neighborhood, but failed to find any suspicious person. SUFFER HD FIVE YEARS WITH fttLUifiATLiti Backache, rheumatic pains, dull headaches, dizziness and blurred vision are symptoms of kidney trouble. "I suffered five years with rheumatism and disordered kidneys. Then 1 tried Foley Kidney Pills and they certainly did me a lot of good. Have not used j two bottles and am able to go about,” | writes Mrs. John Anderson, Baltimore, | Md. Kidney and bladder trouble de- ! mand prompt treatment. Foley Kidney Pills give quick relief. Sold I everywhere.—Advertisement.

ON RUHR OCCUPATION

Committeemen Vote to Establish Home for Orphans of Veterans Un-American Text Books Reported in Use. The American Legion will make known its stand on the French occupation of the Kuhr valley today. A committee to draft a statement covering this was appointed by the executive committee of the Legion in session today. The committee consisted of John R, McQuigg of Ohio, Emmet O’Neal of Kentucky and Orville E. Cain, New Hampshire. Establishment of a home for orphans of former service men was decided upon. Selection of a site will be taken up later, it was

GOVERNOR 'JACK' IS BOOSTED FOR VIGE_PBESIDENT Oklahoma Executive Was Clerk in Electrical Store Ten Years Ago. By Times Special OKLAHOMA CITY, Jan. 15.—1f it hadn't already happened, you'd swear it couldn’t be done. “Jack” Walton, who sits in the Governor's chair here today after the greatest Inaugural celebration on record, ten years ago had a job in an electrical goods store and was apparently settled there for the rest of his life. By merest accident he got into politics and now he's being boosted for Vice President —but read on. Over 100,000 persons from all over the State overflowed Oklahoma City to attend his Inauguration and the biggest barbecue In the world’s his tory. For three days and three nights the town revelled in an unbroken holiday, totally unlike anything else that had happened since the West ceased to be wild and woolly. Was Some Party And It was some party— War-whooping Indians in blankets end war paint-buckskinned cowboys on prancing pintos, splitting the air with resounding yells—old men—young men— women— children— everybody happy—sweeping through the streets in wild parade. The inaugural ball at the State capitol—forty hands blaring away—--400 ‘‘old fiddlers” sawing like mad—square dances for the old-timera on one floor—lndian dances for the Indians on another —"cake walks" for the negroes on a third —jazz dances for the young folks on a fourth. What sort of man is this Jack Walton for whom 100,000 turned out to welcome him Into office? Ten years ago he was manager of the apparatus department In a Kansas City electrical store. If you had asked him then “Where do you hope to be ten years hence?” he would have answered “office manager," probably But chance carved out another destiny. That same year he came to Oklahoma City and opened an office as a consulting engineer, for he is a col lege graduate, in 1917 Oklahoma City decided to construct anew waterworks and sewerage system for the entire town and they wanted a man who “knew his stuff" as commissioner of public works. Walton was asked to run and he did—and won. Once In politics, he found he liked it and two years later they made him mayor of Oklahoma City. He was a mayor of original ideas; every Sunday he dolled up his police department in their best bih and tucker and marched them down the street to attend church services. And he did a lot of other things equally as startling. Came the 'umniar of 1922 and his friends persuaded him to run for Governor on the Democratic ticket. Sensing the "back to the people” feeling, he made his plea to the hickoryshlrted and biue-jeaned citizens who were going to rise up in their wrath and decide who was who and why In tno November election. He wore a hickory shirt, himself, and ate pie with a spoon, just to show he didn’t have any high-falutln’ ways. The "plain people” plea worked, and Dalton was elected by more votes than all those received by his opponents combined. Already they're talking about run nlng him foi Vice President on a Henry Ford ticket, in 1924, but has he any further political ambitions?

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“Pape’s Cold Compound” Breaks a Cold in Few Hours

Every druggist here guarantees each package of "Pape’s Cold Compound” to break up any cold and end grippe misery in a few h( urs or money returned. Stuffiness, pain, headache,

TUB PROPER WAY TO TREAT PILES Valuable advice and information for the treatment of every form of Piles is enclosed with each box of PAZO OINTMENT. The remedy is guaranteed. The price of PAZO OINTMENT is 60c and you can get it at any drug store. The advice and information goes with it.

announced. Reports that many text hooks containing un-American sentiments are in use in public schools throughout the United States will be investigated. There was a strong feeling among the members present that buglers should he stationed in every American cemetery in France to blow taps every day. A committee was appointed to report later. To Probe War Funds A resolution favoring an investigation to determine what disposition was made of the tremendous sums of money raised for various organizations for war work during the World War was adopted. The following directors for the Legion Publishing Company, publishers of the American Legion Weekly, were named: Alvin Owsley, national commander; Lemuel Bowles, national adjutant; John D. Ewing, Shreveport, La.; C. B. Bletten, Seattle, Wash. All members of the committee were guests of the Service Club at luncheon. Hospitalization of disabled veterans was discussed. Charges that private physicians have discriminated against service men were made. The resignation of George Cramer, chief of the legal division of the United States veterans’ bureau, was demanded. Cramer was charged with saying that he would not employ any additional former service men in his department in the future. It was asserted that Cramer now has sixty-four non-service men in his department. A reduction of 20 per cent in the budget of the national organization was authorized. A recommendation to this effect had been made by the national convention of the legion. A five-year ban on all immigration was advocated in a resolution prepared for transmission to Congress.

CHANGE INTRAGK LiKITED South Side League to Help Draft Bill. A committee of three from the Belt Elevation League of the south side, John L. Elliott, city engineer; Taylor E. Groninger, city attorney, and a representative of the Indianapolis Union Railroad Company will meet Wednesday to draft a proposed bill for a change in the track elevation law, it was decided at a conference between city officials and a committee from the league today. P. J. Landers of the Indianapolis Union Railroad Company, who was present at tne meeting, stated that the railroad saw the need for the track elevation, but such work at the present time would force the railroad into bankruptcy. The deplorable condition of the crossings at E. Tenth St. and the Belt, Southeastern Ave. and the Pennsylvania railroad and the Belt on the south and west sides were shown by John L. Elliott, city engineer. Elliott said that the track elevation law should be change in order that the city may issue bonds to pay for the work and the bonds later to be taken up by the railroad. PROHIBITION IS SUCCESS. SAYS BISHOP NICHOLSON Predicts Dry United States Soon as People Know. Facts. By United Press CHICAGO, Jan. 15.—Prohibition is a success, Bishop Thomas Nicholson, president of the Anti-Saloon League declared today on the eve of the third anniversary of the enforcement of the Eighteenth Amendment. He predicted a dry United States as soon “as the facts can be brought before the people.”

feverishness, inflamed or congested nose and head relieved with first dose. These safe, pleasant tablets cos* only a few cents and millions now take them instead of sickening quinine.— Advertisement.

JAN. 15, 1923

BOY WILL FIGHT ML WIFE Northwestern University Student Declares He Wants Bride. By United Press CHICAGO, Jan. 15.—Fred Scott, nephew of President Walter Hill Scott of Northwestern University, who was parted from his bride before the honeymoon got under way, declared he “was ready to fight for his rights” today. Scott eloped and was married to Miss Audrey Lonnquist, daughter of a prominent realtor. Irate parents separated the couple before they had a chance to leave on their honeymoon. “Audrey is of age. I am of age. This annulment talk is absurd,” Scott said today. “I’ve quit school and I’ve got a job and can support Audrey if she hasn’t changed her mind.”

GILS! BEAUTIFY HI JIT OHCE Try This! Hair Appears Soft, Colorful and Abundant —A Gleamy Mass 35 Cent Bottle of "Danderine” Also Ends Dandruff; Falling Hairl

A “Danderine Beauty Treatment” will immediately double the attractiveness of your hair. Just moisten a cloth with Danderine and draw it carefully through your hair, hiking one small strand at a time, this will cleanse the hair of dust, dirt or any excessive oil—in a few minutes you will be amazed. Tour hair will be wavy, fluffy and possess an incomparable softness, lustre and really appear twice as thick and abundant — a mass of luxuriant glinty, colorful hair. Besides beautifying the hair, Danderine eradicates dandruff: invigorates the scalp, stopping itching and falling hair. Danderine is the best, cheapest and most delightful hair corrective and tonic. It is to the hair what fresh showers of rain are to vegetation. It goes right to the roots, vitalizes and strengthens them. Its stimulating properties help the hair to grow long, heavy, strong. You can surely have beautiful hair, and lots of It, if you will spend 25 cents for a bottle of Danderine at any drug store or toilet counter. It is not greasy, oily or sticky.—Advertisement.

SOUS SMASH IS CAUSED BY ACIDS Stay off the damp ground, avoid ex posur'’, keep feet dry, eat no sweets of any kind for a while, drink lots of water and above all take a spoonful of Jad Salts occasionally to help keep down uric and toxic acids. Rheumatism is caused by poison toxins, called acids, which are generated in the bowels and absorbed into the blood. It is the function of the kidneys to filter this acid from the blood and exist it out in the urine. The pores of the skin are also * means of freeing the blood of this inspurity. In damp and chilly, col# weather the skin pores are closed, thus forcing the kidneys to do double work; they become weak and sluggish and fail to eliminate this poison, which keeps accumulating and circulating through the system, eventually settling in the joints and muscles, causing stiffness, soreness and pain, called rheumatism. At the first twinge of rheumatism get from any pharmacy about four ounces of Jad Salts: put a tablespoonful in a glass of water and drink before breakfast each morning for a week. This is helpful to neutralize acidity, remove body waste also to stimulate the kidneys, thus helping to rid the blood of .hese rheumatic poisons. Jad Salts is inexpensive, and is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with lithia, and is used with excellent results by thousands of folks who are subject to rheumatism.—Advertisement.