Indianapolis Times, Volume 35, Number 218, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 January 1923 — Page 4

MEMBER of the Scrlpps-Howard Newspapers. * • • Client of the United Press, United News, United Financial and NEA Service and member of the Scripps Newspaper Alliance. • • • Member of tlie Audit Bureau of Circulations.

KEEP TtE are unalterably opposed to American young i SONS OUT \/\/ men being sent across the seas again to OF WAR Y Y fight in another foreign war. We believe there is not a family in the United States, rich or poor, which does not whole-heartedly share this sentiment. The duty of the government at Washington then, is clear. It is up to the officials to take the steps necessary to keep us out of such a war. How can this be done? By preventing such a war—rcertainly not bv continuing the policy of “isolation.” We tried that from 1014 to 1917. We tried hard. And we failed. Anew war is brewing in Europe. If it comes, we will be dragged in again. Americans are not servile cowards, and there is a point beyond which wc will ahnays cease to turn the other cheek. Washington officials must choose between two courses. One, the easiest way, is to~do nothing—let the war drift down upon us, tb©n try to keep out with every chance against our being able to do so. The other, the harder way, the way which requires statesmanship. is to AVERT war, not wait until it comes. Yesterday The Times offered a plan to PREVENT another world war. We suggested that President llarding call a conference of the chief world war powers and lay before them a definite, eheck-your-gun-at-the-door proposition for world sanity. The plan involves no “meddling” in European politics; it suggests nothing to “entangle” us; there is nothing about it any more radical than President Harding has already undertaken in the four-power pact to keep the peace of the Pacific. It merely means the United States, the greatest power on earth, and the one great disintere*ed power, would throw every ounce of its stupendous weight into the balance for PEACE and* against WAR. The American government is in a position to lay before the world a peace program which no European cabinetcers or politicians would dare refuse to support. The peace-hungry peoples I over there would chuck them out on their heads if they did. World peace means work instead of war. Tt means life instead of death; food instead of hunger; it means markets for the American farmer’s surplus crops and the American manufacturer’s surplus products. Tt means less unemployment; more money; better times. Tt means keeping our boys at home. SENDING ~T~ OXDON Daily Mail prints the first photoWIRELESS graph sent by wireless in England. The Mail PICTURES i A is quite excited. Tt calls the photo a “great scientific achievement, after fifty years of experiments.” A correct description. We are close to the day when pictures of the most important events will be wirelessed and printed in every newspaper of importance. Ynfi cannot get much closer to the supernatural, this side of the gra\|e, than sending a photo by radio. However, we live in an age of Ifcagic, wonder crowding wonders, and the average eomnun{ will be: “Wonder why some one hasn’t been able to do it before.” The world is learning that nothing is impossible. ( LTTING A prize of $19,000 awaits vou if vou invent a °UT l\ way to slaughter, more humanely, animals CRUELTY jLjl. for food purposes. The prize is offered by the American Society for Prevention of Cruelty to Animals of New York. Why not run them in a room, where they’d be put to sleep by non-poisonous gas, then electrocute them? Tt might cost a few more cents a head than slitting a hog’s throat or stunning a steer with a sledge. But it would eliminate pain. And such elimination is cheap at anv price. By the way. does vegetable life suffer when wef kill it? How do you know? What proof hftve you? War Ships Can Sail Up Long Island Sound for Full Length

QUESTIONS ANSWERED Vrn can get an anatrer to any question of fact or information by writing s o tbe Indianapolis Times' Washington Bureau, 1322 Xew York Ave., Wasii inyton. D. C.. inclosing 2 rents in stamps Medical, legal and love and marr’age advice cannot be. given. T'nsigned Tetters cannot he answered, but all letters are confidential, and receive nersonal replies. Although the bureau does not require it. it will assure prompter replies If readers will confine questions to a single subject, writing more than one letter it answers on various subjects are desired. EDITOR. How far is l/oug Island Round navigable for battleships of the largest type? For the full length of the sound up to Hell Gate, where it becomes too rocky for the larger sbiP 3 - Was Andrew Jackson born in North or South Carolina? There has been much controversy between these States regarding the place of Jackson's hirth. There is a tradition that he was born at the Waxhaw settlement in Union County, North Carolina, but Jackson himself thought he was bom near the NVaxhaw Creek in Lancaster County. South Carolina, and the opinion of his most thorough biographer is that "the weight of evidence seems to favor the South Carolinians." Why is halving soda kept in paper boxes? Would it be injurious to keep it in fin cans? The only reason baking soda is put up Jn paper boxes is because they are cheaper and just as safe as tin cans. It is perfectly safe to keep baking soda in tin cans as long as it is kept dry. If it is in a damp place, it would be better to let it remain in the paper box. What are the- essentials for growing bulbs indoors? They must be thoroughly rooted before the tops are permitted to grow. This is done by planting the bulbs in soil eltTler In shallow porcelain pots or In boxes. These bulbs are then placed In r cool place in the dark for a period of two to six or eight weeks, or even longer if desired. They should be left there until the roots are well started. In the case of the bulbs planted in pots, the pots may be inverted and gently tapped, when the bulb and soil will come out in a mass. When the bulbs have been sufficiently long In the pots, the earth in the bottom of the pot will be completely covered with rootlets. The

bulbs should then be brought into * < slightly warmer place with some light for three or four days and then brought gradually into greater j warmth and full light. During a!! the period of growth the ground should be kept moist without being water-soaked. Wliat is a centrosonic? A minute protoplasmic body found 1 in the cytoplasm. less often in the nucleus, of many animal and some plant cells, which takes an important j part in mitosis (splitting of the chromatin—that portion of the nucleus of both animal and vegetable cells which is readily stained with various dyes—or a nucleus, or subdivision of any minute granular bodies embedded in living protoplasm), and is regarded by many as the center of the dynamic activity manifested in that process, in has been believed to be a permanent j cell organ, always originating by division from the controsome of the i preceding cell: hut there is strong evl- j denoe that the centrosome may originate independently, though its transmission from cell to cell can be demonstrated in many cases. How are postoflices classified? The amount of receipts constituted i the classification of a postoflice. A postoffice with receipts of $40,000 and over is considered a first-class post office; between SB,OOO and $40,000, sec ond class; between si,ooO and SB,OOO, third class; all under SI,OOO, fourth class. What is flic oldest species of fish in the fresh waters of this country? The paddlefish. or spoon-bill cat. it ! i- our single representative of an order of shark-mouthed fishes which is believed to date back to a very early i period of fish evolution. Sturgeon, garpike and bowfin are also among the oldest families of fish; but they are not so old as the spoon-bill cat. How is Maryland chicken prepared? Dress, clean and cut up two young j chickens. Sprinkle with salt and: pepper, dip in flour, egg and soft ' crumbs, place in a well-greased drip ping pan and bake thirty minutes in a hot oven, basting after first five minutes of cooking with one-third cup melted butter. Arrange on platex and pour over two cups of cream sauoe.

- The Indianapolis Times

EARLE E. MARTIN. Editor-in-Chief.

Are You Slipping at 35 ?pZ!7!Z

Tragedies of Middle Life Prompts Formation of 'Well Being’ Concern,

B.v ALEXANDER HERMAN NEA Service Staff Writer NEW YORK. Jan. 20—Old university professors working as dishwashers. seasoned Army officers serving as bus-boys, experienced office executiv- s doing menial housework — These are some of the tragedies of life past S3 which have prompted a group of men and women here to form “The Aged and Middie-Aged Well-Being < ‘orporation.” At is a young woman, Miss T. W. Bouimistrow, who expects the movement eventually to become national in its scope, even international. Few Societies of Middle Aged “Youth must be served.” she says, “but what about middle age" "There are innumerable young men and young women’s associations to help the youthful. But for the older person, there is little but tragedy. “The experienced stenographer who has reached the late thirties finds that she must give way to her younger sister. The expert clerk, who has grown old on his job. Is turned out in favor of his younger brother. “The result? Life’s greatest tragedy—the !ins, faithful, retiring person. cast out of his field at an age when it is hard to enter another With confidence shattered, he tries, again and again, only to fall and slip further.

Gov. Parker, Foe of Hooded Terrorism in South, Pledges Self to Oust Members

81l .V BA Service BATON ROUGE, La., Jan. 20. What sort of a man Is Governor John M. Parker who has set about it to stamp out masked terrorism in Louisiana — Who went to President Harding to demand Federal aid when evi°nce reached him that masked bands had supplanted the civil authorities in parts of Louisiana — Who, out of his own pocket, paid for the present investigation of the

GOVERNOR JOHN M. PARKER murders of two by hooded mobs In Morehouse Parish— And who now proposes tn call a special session of the State Legislature to legislate masked secret organizations out of existence and to impeach tlie civil authorities of Morehouse Parish? Parker is a farmer, a cotton dealer, a golfer, a hunter, a former intimate friend of Theodore Roose velt. and in many respects his life is very- rimiiar lo tjiat of Roosevelt. Friend of Roosevelt. Parker was born in 1863 at Bethel Church, Miss. He entered the cotton business in New Orleans In 1880 and still owns a cotton factory there. He was the Progressiva party

American Legion Official Tells Why War Vets Indorse French Invasion

• Tee national executive ommittee nl the \an Legion which met In Indianapolis this week indorsed the re unitu.n nf the Ruhr by France, in \ resolution offered by Brlf, (Jen. John U. Y.iQiiigg, committeeman for Ohio Tin Times asla-d the author of tiie resolution to fell why tho Amen- ,tn Legion approves the occupation I BY BRIG. GEN. J. R. McQUIGO ("N LHVKLANP. Ohio. Jan. 29. —In 1914 for tho sooond time within fifty years France was attacked and Invaded by Germany.

Seven of the richest and most productive provinces of France were devastated. More than 12.000 square miles of territory w ere laid waste. Thousands of villages, towns and cities were destroyed. Germany at last sued for peace and the armistice was signed. Came

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McQUIGG

then the peace conference. That greatest court in history, foe such it was. decided Germany should pay certain amounts as damages for the destruction she had caused. y The amount of this award Was

F. IV PETERS, Editor.

fjC (y| t il> / I i ■ 'M

MISS T. W. BOUIMISTROW “There are hundreds of these persons In New York—thousands throughout the country. They drift from Job to job and end up, down-and-out failures. "Yet they are quite as good as their youthful competitors, if not better. But sentiment Is against

nominee for vice president of the United States In 191*5. He became governor of Ixmlsiana in 1920 and his term will last until 1924. Then his friends want him to run for the United States Senate but he says he won’t. Golfing and hunting are his hobbies. Ho can beat the best at goif. And the hears and wildcat? of Louisiana swamp:-- can tell of bis prowess as a hunter. Once on a hunt with Theodore Roosevelt, Parker laid his rifle aside, attacked ft bear with his hunting knife and dispatched it Everybody in Louisiana is either Parker’s friend or his enemy—there’s no half way about it Parker Is straight, as an arrow and of medium build If" pc-sesses none of the languor the northernerassociates with those of the .South. He always walks as if he were i about to catch a tic hi The Governor Is a wealthy man. He owns a big firm near St. Fran eißville, La . and nnoMjer at his j birthplace. Bethel Chun h. Alc-s.

Esch-Cumniins Bill Injects Self in Democratic Leadership Fight

BY'ROBERT TALLEY WASHINGTON. Jan. 20. Like Banquo's ghost, the Esch-Cummins railroad bill returned to inject : elf in the fight for the Democratic leadership of the next Semite. With Senator F. M. Simmons, North Carolina, and Senator Joseph T. Rob inson, Arkansas. engaging in i straight out contest for tho position to be made vacant by the retirement of Senator Underwood. Alabama Simmons' friends turned to the records. Rafting the dry bones of the 1919 delmto on tho Each Cummins bill, with Its anti-str-ke clause, they showed that Benator Robinson had supported this measure throughout, while Senator Simmons made repeated attempts to weaken it. As numbers of Democratic senators elected In November waged their campaign largely on opposition to die Each-Cummins Dill and as the 1-sue is almost certain to be one of tho biggest in the 1924 presidential race.

132 billion gold marks, which was accepted unconditionally by- Germany on May >t, 1921. By agree merit of the allies France was to have 52 per cent. Republic Mortgaged With the acceptance by Germany, the award became an obligation, a lien upon all tho resources of the German republic. Within a short time after the award Germany fell in arrears and the people of Germany began to send out of the country gold, securities and other forms of wealth and to seriously impair the whole German financial system for the purpose of avoiding payment-. In tho United States if-one man owes another a. debt secured by lien or mortgage and the debtor refuses to pay, the mortgage is foreclosed, the property sold and the debt paid. If a judgment for damages is awarded and tho judgment debtor refuses to pay-, an execution is issued, a levy made by the sheriff and his property sold to satisfy the Judgment. This is exactly what France is doing. The court was the peace conference; the sheriff is the French army, and the whole procedure thus far is very much In accord with the way individuals do things in America even in time of peace. The American Legion approves

ROY W. HOWARD. President,

“It is this that we are trying to change. “Why not have a 40-year-old office girl, if she is more efficient than a youngster? Why not retain the old clerk If he is good?” Miss Bouimistrow wasn't very optimistic when she started her campaign. But she is more hopeful now. Encouraged by Many fitters “We are receiving hundreds of letters of encouragement,” sho says. "The;# come from workers and employers alike. “Eventually wo hope to bring all the writers together through a ceil tral meeting place or employment agency. “Then, perhaps, we may bo able to alleviate some of these terrible tragedies that are rarely chronicled because they are so real —and corn iron.” In the meantime, the young organizer is busy enrolling applicants —more than 35 years old. What lo You Think? Is life's greatest tragedy that of middle age? Do men and women, just as they reach the age of mature development. hit the toboggan that ends In failure? i’lid late Sir William Osier, one of the world’s greatest physicians. set 40 as the age when the great slide begins. A woman here sets it at 33. Vet the greatest leaders, cap tains of industry, leading scientists. inventors, nrtists, writers, suiV'-sses all. do their greatest work when they are well ad vanced in years.

Ho spends his money generously for those who need it. In 1909, when the boll weevil swept, through the cotton district, funds supplied hv Parker k**pt many a cotton grower’s head above water until the trouble was past. Probably no one not a scientist hns a better knowledge of the habits of birds and wild animals than Parker. Besides he's a natural mimic. He delights in imitating owls, which ho does so perfectly he can call owls to htni when driving at night. Knows the West. Parker is similar to Rooscielt in that he was born a weak and puny boy. Like Roosevelt, he went West and took to rarge-rlding and cattlepunching. There he gained the marvelous constitution ho possesses today. “Never quit a fight because you figure it. ts a forlorn hope,” is Parker's motto. That’s the kind of a man who's pledged himself to tear the masks from the terrorists of Louisiana. Watch what he reveals under it.

friends of Senator Simmons declared that Democratic, senators could not consistently elevate one of Its spon sors to the leadership of their party. Selection of the new leader will turn largely upon th votes of new Democratic members who are to take office March 4 as a poll of the present Demo • ratio membership shows a very close result. From the present numbers, it is indicated. Robinson can expect fourt'-en votes end Simmons eighteen, but the ten new members can swing the balance of power. Robinson can win with eight of these ten, while Simmons wtll need four. UNION CITY MAN ROBBED A pickpocket Friday night relieved a Mr. Montana of Union City of a purse containing SSO. Tho thief took the purs© while Montana was at tho Union Depot.

the action of France in occupying the Ruhr. Six Reasons 1. Because the award was a righteous one rendered by a competent court and accepted by Germany-. 2. Because Germany has voluntarily defaulted a.nd refused to pay tind has wrecked her whole finan clal system for the purpose of avoiding payment. 3. Because the course taken by France is the only effective course left to her in dealing with an obstinate debtor. 4. Because Germany has refused to levy taxes and take other steps necessary to enable her to pay the debt. We In the United States are paying three times as much national tax as Germany, arid France is paying more than four times as much per capita as Germany. 5. Because if Germany is not made to pay the damage caused by her, some one else will have to pay it. C. Becahse, if Germany is not made to pay, the slaughter and expenditure of material and effort necessary to win on the battlefield will have been, to a large extent, in vain and there will be little to deter nations frem running amuck in the future and making an assault on civilization whenever they think they are sufficiently strong to win.

O. F. JOHNSON, Business Manager.

/UAPITOL ferf Jor^

BL THOMAS J. WALSH U. S. Senator From Montana

WALSH rather a cantankerous cl ap, anil his attitude was that of a scoffer on anything Congress had done or was likely to do for the farmer. ,At length Marsh said, "Senator iWcNarv, I'll challenge you to debate this whole subject with ine out in your own bailiwick.” “Quite useless, quite useless.” McNary replied. 'I make it an invariable rule never to debate on a subject. on which my opponent knows nothing.” “Well.” Marsh retorted, “ordinarily T stick by the same rule. But T am perfectly willing to waive it in your

Public Opinion Today's World C risis In the Editor of The Timm There could bo no stronger vindicn tion of the policies of ex President Wil son tVian the crisis which the world is facing today. Men and women art fast corning to idealize (those who would not see it four years ago) that the most colossal mistake this country has e\i r made was its failure to ratify the Versailles treaty and the League of Nations. And the pity of it is that the crippled, bleeding world has bad to suffer on and no. while men are dominated in actions by personal hatred and political jealousies. \ud more the pity that we as Intelli gent voters will send men to Congress who are unable to discriminate between lo;, alty to party and loyalty to ■ omit ry. The \m< ncan people are very gullible Even in normal times they i seem to enjoy being humbugged. Un ! scrupulous politicians loyal party politicians --found them easy to sway -with their oratory about “entangling alliances with foreign nations," and their appeals to the mothers not to vote to send their boys across the j water again to settle the dlspt.es of other nations It sounded reasonable, and it worked. Particularly so. since tile majority of the people knew only so much about what the league was intended to do as our politicians pleased to tel! them. And then, too, wo were promised some sort of a guaranty against future wars —something that was inexplainable, something not Wilsonian. We have been waiting for that something. but evidently our present Administration is unable to find anything that is not too Wilsonian. Albert J. Beveridge and a few oth-'rs are still preaching “isolation," while at the same time they know isolation is Impossible, and not only impossible, but inhuman and impracticable. Ism not so great a- league enthusiast as to believe it a cure for all Ills, nor do I believe a different policy on the part of the United States would have made the road smooth all] along the way. It Is not In reason that such an upheaval as the world had passed through would settle us down In the same smoothly running, prosperous condition, with no unsolved problems; but we should have helped to solve the problems. We could have done much toward re hablll :ation. IVA left France bleeding from her many wounds with her battles half won. We did not help to guarantee that Germany would pay. On the ether hand, our attitude encouraged Germany not to pay, and lienee the present move of Franco which will end how and when, no one knows. Surely no one can look upon or even think of the devastation of France and condemn her for her attitude. And now should there be another world war it is inevitable that we participate. How much better had we dent our fullest endeavor to make for a world peace. We would all cheer the hero who rushes to the aid of the weaker party in a combat, but we would hiss him if he left the wounded weakling to bind up his own wounds, blinded by pain, staggering and groping his way to safety; while he. the hero, contends that he did his full duty when he felled the bully to the ground. Four years ago we were the nation among nations. All the peoples of the earth were looking to us for help. We failed In our highest duty and our prestige began to decline, culminating in the separate peace. The greeneyed monster bgan his work in Congress. The Democratic party had attained entirely too much distinction under the Wilson regime, and something must be done to discredit it. It was party loyalty above personal honor, above the country and above the whole world. So the great principles for which our boys had fallen and for which our President, had so neai-ly made the supreme sacrifice were defeated and trampled on, and while a suffering world looked on in amazement the American Congress went back to Its old job of building stronger than ever the high protective tariff wall for our infant (?) industries. And there is a j gap for foreign competitive labor 1 which must be closed, or reatly re stricted; else, within another decade, i there will be no America for Americans. MRS. S. J. CARTER. Brooklyn, Ind. *-

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IF there were no . cuss words, how, would you talk about the weather? ft ft ft Everything has its place, except your overcoat at a movie. * ft ft In Kentucky, they found a still by following some drunken dogs. Must have been rum hounds. Every time we read about Europe we wish the Atlantic Ocean were as wide as the Pacific.

WAS on a Senate com mittee with Senator McNary of Oregon. We v ere holding a hearing on agricultural affairs and one of the witnesses was B. S. Marsh, head of the so-called Farmers’ Union. There were a number of tilts between the two, for Marsh was

Musician claims jazz is swearing in music, but that doesn’t leave anything for grand opera to be. * * ft There can’t be universal peace as long as people go out and forget, to shut our doors. Men who can’t grow mustaches seem to be the ones who want them. * * ft Set a thief to catch a thief and you lose two thieves. * • • Asa rule, as you look so are you looked upon. • ft Next to a dime the hardest thing to keep is fifteen cents. • ft ft People who talk in their sieep should tell the truth while awake. Those who don’t like the movies have a hard time staying away from home. ft • Many a father can’t be in style because his son doesn’t wear his clothes out quick enough. • ft ft Throwing yourself at some one’s feet is dangerous. They are liable to step in your face. ft • ft One sad thing is not enough wars are being prevented. • • ft Every man has a letter he intends writing when he has time. ft ft ft Practice makes perfect, but who wants to be a perfect liar? •• • ' If all wolf clubs were used properly every rug in the world would be beater, twice a month. • * ft Woman's place may be in the home, but her daughter’s place seems to be in the auto.

Vanderlip Hard Work and Thrift Develop Great Banker

FRANK A. VANDERLIP B v A EA Service SCARBOROUGH, N. Y.. Jan. 20 If. as gossip has it. Secretary of the Treasury Mellon resigns, his successor may be Frank A. Vanderlip, as great a financier and noted a character as Mellon himself. From 16, when the duty of supporting his family fell on him. Yanderllp worked hard to make a living. First as machine shop apprentice at 75 cents a day, then through the Uqlve.rsity of Illinois, working sptrre time to pay his way and finally, while financial reporter for a Chicago newspaper —there developed in him the urge for hard work and thrift. His newspaper work wort him friends among influential men. In 1897. at 33, he was^given the position of private secretary to Secretary of the Treasury Lyman J. Gage. A month later he became assistant secretary, and soon after James Stillman, head of the bank which Vanderlip made famous, took him in as vice president.. The development of the National City Bank into jin international institution is credited to the keen business foresight of Vanderlip. But he himself accredits it in great part to cooperation with his fellow workers. This he has tried to instill in his three boys and three girls.

TOM SIMS SAYS:

Flaws By BEATON BR.AT.F.Y - OS the whole niy table manners aren't so bad. I am silent in consuming consomme. At an early time of life T quit eating with my knife And I think I use my fork the proper way. I don’t ever out my salad I don't stoop To inhale my coffee audibly as some. But—l like to crumble crackers In my soup And I like to peel an orange with my thumb. I -rum I'd rather peel an orange with my thumb! I spill very few potatoes on my vest. T drop very little gravy in my lap. And mother s teaching lingers so I do net lick my fingers. Nor get pumpkin pie, regardless, on my map: By experience my manners have become Quite refined enough for almost any group. Still—T like to peel an orange with my thumb And I like to erumblo crackers in my soup. Poor dupe I like to crumble crackers in my soup! There are things that social training cannot cure. There are vulgar tastes that cannot be denied. And though otherwise in terror of the slightest social error Here s a case where .all conventions arc defied. Though it wreck my whole career beyond recoup. Though m.v hostesses and hosts iook very glum. 1 shall always crumble crackers in m.v soup. I shall always peel an orange with my thumb. Ho hum. t I just love to peel an orange with luy thumb! (Copyright, 1923 NEA Service)

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Union Labor to Open Bank in New York City By FRANK J. TAYLOR NEW 3 ORK. .Jan. 20.—Just to show Wail Street a few fine tricks about banking, the organized labor organizations of New York are preparing ; to open a union labor bank in New York City early this year. W. P. McCaleb, who founded the Brotherhood National Bank in Cleveland a year ago, has arrived here to superintend organization of the New York labor bank. It will be modeled after the 'Cleveland bank. McCaleb is now looking for a site j for the New Y’ork bank, which he j says he will open just as near to Wall Street as possible. Just as the Cleveland Brotherhood Bank has brought about a complete reform of the banking practices of that city, McCaleb expects the new union labor bank to bring Wall Street to more humanitarian banking methods. For example, profits to stockholders in the Cleveland bank are limited to ilO per cent. Beyond that sum. earn- ' ings go to depositors in the form of i dividends upon the sums they deposit | with the bank. A similar practice will be employed ! by tlie New Y'ork labor bank, which ! will have an initial capital of $1,000,- ! 000. to be raised by subscription among unions, shares to be valued u |s2so each. DETECTIVE GIVES TALK Methods employed by the secret service department tn apprehending [criminals and examples of the bravery of secret service men were discussed before the Civitan Club by Thomas E. Halls, chief operative of the United i States secret service in Indiana. Charles H. Beckett, club president, presided. HUNT THIEF: FIND POLICE When Sergeant Dean and the poI lice emergency squad reached James | Zivein's dry goods store. 1340 N. SenI ate Ave.. at 1 a. m. today to capture Ia burglar, they found Patrolmen Mul- ! len and Jankins and Merchant Policeman Columbus H. Hess standing in | front of the store. The store had not j been robbed and the police were unj able to learn who sent in the burglar I call.