Indianapolis Times, Volume 35, Number 274, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 March 1923 — Page 4

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

HOOVER -w- -yERY ugly charges that the Department of AND \/ Commerce aided and abetted the sugar gamSUGAR V biers in their gigantic gouge of the public by issuing alarming reports about the sugar supply have been hurled at Secretary Hoover by the People’s Legislative League, which is the research and publicity organization of the progressive bloc in Congress. Secretary Hoover denies that liis department played into the hands of the sugar gamblers. He has explained that the Department of Commerce reports were misinterpreted by the sugar gamblers. In statements to the Washington representative of this newspaper he has denounced the sugar gouge, and his assistants have furnished material bearing on the expose of the gouge. But that does not clear Mr. Hoover nor the Department of Commerce, in the public eye, now that these charges have been made to the President and the public direct. The People's Legislative League demands a grand jury inquiry into the sugar manipulations. The thing for Secretary Hoover to do. in his own as well as in the public’s interests, is to join in that demand for an inquirA’ so searching that it wit 1 not only expose the master manipulators, but will also throw so much light on the sugar situation that further price juggling will be impossible. MURDER Arkansas legislative committee which WHITE- I promised to unearth the facts necessary to WASHED X see that jusitee was done for the murder of E. C. Gregor at Harrison and for the driving of citizens from their homes, has made its report. It is most peculiar. The investigators very carefully traced details of Gregor’s fate up to 3 o’clock on the afternoon before he was hanged from a railroad trestle. After that, they could learn nothing, the report said. Also, they had no idea as to what individuals took charge of Gregor after 3 o’clock, although they know who had him before that. Wonderful! Positively wonderful! Newspaper correspondents had no difficulty in ascertaining who seized Gregor and hanged him. His wife heard from him over the telephone at 0 o’clock that night, and he told her who bis captors were. But the authorities could learn nothing of what happened after 3 o’clock. It looks as though the only penalty for killing in Arkansas when a railroad wants someone murdered, is whitewash and protection for those who <lo the dirty work.

H. FORD -y-vURCH ABING 120.000 acres iu Kentuckv, COAL y-J Henrv Ford increases bis coal land boldines BARON X to 165.000 acres, thereby beeoming one of the great coal barons in the country. But Henry is a different kind of a coal baron. In his mines, he establishes better working conditions, a. wage scale assuring a decent standard of living, and labor troubles end. His engineers work out a process for using only the gasses and biproducts in coal, leaving the bulk to be sold as coke to domestic consumers. This gives Henry an edge over his competitors, because he ean dig coal from his own mines, carry it to his factories over his own railroads, and then burn the same chunk of fuel twice. But does he monopolize good fortune? Not Henry. He offers to supply fuel to his Detroit neighbors who will install these economy furnaces. And that isn’t all Henry is doing with his coal domain. While miners are grubbing underground for coal. Henry has other men digging above ground, planting trees, reforesting the hillsides. While other coal barons allow their lands to wash into streams, he proposes to grow one of the finest forests in the East. Taking him by and large, we’d say that Henry is a pretty good sort of coal baron to have. We wish there were more like him. AFTER T-AYNE WHEELER rallies his Anti-Saloon HOOCH \/V League forces for anew attack on .1 IJarievBUYERS ▼ ▼ corn. He s after I nde Sam to enforce Section C of the \ olstead act. which makes it unlawful to buy hooch except on doctor’s prescription or Government permit. The bootlegger and his customer are legally on the vame footing, both subject to arrest and penalty, whenever the national Government wants to enforce the law. It may have been a mistake, that T'nele Sam didn’t tax liquor out of existence and apply on the national debt the millions pocketed by bootleggers. Still, no price on liquor would be considered prohibitive by some. And prohibition by high tax would have favored the rich. Class legislation.

Questions ASK THE TIMES A nsivers

Tou can get an answer to any question or fact of information by writing to the Indianapolis Tine's' Washington bureau, 1322 New York Ave. Wash tngton. D C.. enclosing 2 cents in stamps. Meoieai. legal and love and marrUjre advice cannot be given, inncan extended research be undertaken, or pa, -ten. speeches, etc., be prepared Unsigned letters cannot be answered, but all letters are confidential arid receive personal replies. — EDlTOß. What are Orangemen? Members of an Irish society called the Loyal Orange Institution, founded after the Battle of the Boyne, 1690, to oppose Roman Catholicism ana maintain the Union of England and Ire land and the Protestant succession to the throne. What makes the bones in tanned salmon soft? Boiling under steam pressure at 250 degrees Fahrenheit. Who was Molly Pitcher? A seml-historical character, said to have taken her husband's place at the cannon when he was 6hot during the Battle of Monmouth In the Revolutionary War, and who saved his gun from capture. Many legends have grown up around her. It is alleged she received a commission as sergeant from General Washington. However, there is little authentic known about her. How many Odd Fellow's are there in the United States? 2,676,582. How would you say the number 1.258.369,421,211,328.923,234.120, 021,985,222? This number would read: One deeillion, 258 nonillions, three hundred and sixty nine octillions, four hundred and twenty-one septillions, two hundred and eleven sextlllions. three hundred and twenty-eight quintilllons, nine hundred and twenty-three quadrillions, two hundred and thirty-four trillions, on* hundred and twenty billions, twenty-one million nine hundred and

eighty-five thousand, two hundred and twenty-two. What are Indian names for “I nder (lie Mountain” and “Birches?” “Under the mountain:” Onondagin wa (Onondago language). “Birches:” Wigwass (Ojibwa language) Wuskwee (Orce). Opahaksun (Choctaw). Who is the greatest Irish composer? Probably Michael William Balfe. What is the sire of the. United Stales Navy airship Z-It-I now building? Length, 680 feet; diameter seventy- \ six feet; twenty gasbags, of total capacity 2,155,200. Are Morning-glories edible? The ordinary morning-glory Is not. In China there is a morning-glory, acording to Science Service, the leaves and stems of which are used for food. Our own sweet potato is merely a cultivated member of the morning-! glory family. Who invented the camera? It is usually ascribed to the Italian, John Baptist della Porta, whose book describing it appeared in 1558-1559. Who were Jennlson’s Jaywalkers? A famous body of raiders during the political troubles of the free-soil war In Kansas. How did the Finnan I laddie get its name? From "Findon ‘ Scotch village, and “haddock.” Who was Peter Funk? Thq term means any person employed at auction stiles In making bids in collusion with the owner of the propeity to bo sold

The Indianapolis Times

EARLE E. MARTIN. Edltor-in-Chief. FREE KOMER PETERS, Editor. ROY W. HOWARD. President. O. F. JOHNSON, Business Manager

DM SF CITY WITHOUT SMOKE ‘CASTLEJ AIR’ Scientists, However, Say Plan Is Possible and Would Be Economical, By .JOHN (.’ARSON Times Staff Correspondent |T tASHIN'OTOS. March 27. VV/ Dream -f a rity without " * smoke, of beautiful trees, of houses that remain white, of wearing a white shirt more than on° day. It is all a dream, undoubtedly a wonderful dream for Indianapolis which will never “1 come true, despite what scientists in‘ist is not only posW slide, but that real Y conu m y would \ - D* force such a conoltion. Insists I.aw Wrong Jm&fn In Washington 1 hey have t smoke 2 s oidii in e which r 1 ing any smoke is CARSON a law violation. 0. P. IJood, tiie man who handles the smoke problem for the Bureau of Mines, insists the law is wrong and if enforced it would eliminate the use of soft coal Never iheless, Washington would much rather pay th • exorbitant price asked for hard final than see the wonderful trees dies ami put up with a smoke problem. '•no of the idealists of Buffalo con tended that the smoke problem could be- eliminated hero a few years ago. ■ ino. lie offered to pay the exp* use of an investigation. The Bureau of Mines n i ■■ a thorough study and may make public a report eventually. The re port is in form now but it is not decided as yet whether it shall be printed. The Buffalo idealist pursued the theory of the economists that smoke coni'! be eliminated by roker.ixing soft coal, iis: <g the gas ,-el ,-oki for fuel pur,.' • s :md then disposing of other by products. Coke Is Problem I was found coke itself was the problem. I'nless a market could le found f the by products, the coke could i ■ bo sold at prices as favorable as charged for raw coal.. “Tt was n dollar and cents argument am! you could not prevail t gainst It,” said the bureau expert. “But suppose an ordinance could be passed to prevent the use of soft coal and enough soft coal could be eckenized to provide fuel,” was sug .tested. “That is a dream which should not be declar-d intpossihl-, but it. is a dn in ui : h-y have tried to work out gradually in Rochester, and they have iu.d been successful ns yet. 1 'hink th-y are doing about as well there In the way of making cheap gas as anywhei'- hut they have not gotten rid of tie dr coke ami their smoko problem.”

BETTER TIMES iS mm OF TREASURY OFFICIAL McCoys Points to Increased Taxes and Sale of Autos, Hy Tinn h Special WASHINGTON, March 27— Every day in every way, times are getting better and better. Take this from J. 3. McCoy, actuary of the United States Treasury, whose job it is to look into the future and predict what's going to happen to the Nation's business lor the advice and guidance of the tax framers in Congress. "We are going to have the best year since the war boom," says .McCoy. 'The wave of prosperity that began last fall will continue throughout 1923 and we can look forward to more jobs and better times.’ ’ Ability Is Uncanny The veteran actuary’s ability is a! most uncanny. When the excessprofits law was being drafted, he en titrated that the tax would produce :2.n0.-,an mill annually and two years laps when the first, collections were made tltev amounted to $2,305,000,000. "1 said times are getting better and here a some figures to prove It," continued McCoy, as he reached for a sheaf of January records just compiled. "See hero. American people are buying more autos—not trucks or commercial vehicles —but pleasure cars, as shown by our auto tax collections which were 27.732,000 in January this year as compared with $2,567,000 In January of 1922," he said. "And rememb r that the tax rate hasn’t been i hanged, whereas prices of autos have fallen. Accessory Sale Increases “A better indication, though, is the increase in sales of auto accessories and parts because a motorist doesn't spend his money for fancy spotlights and other knick-knacks unless he’s feeling pretty prosperous. Yet, these tax collections increased from $1,761,000 in January. 1922, to $3,243,000 in January, 1923." Taxes from sales of jewelry, a 1 thofpUi jewelry is slow to re-act to iiiV: ruiditions, eiimbed from ■. to $4,285,000. Amusement tax receipts ascended from $6,453,000 o $6,76G;000. Clgaret\gx collections grew from $11,117,000 to $16,060,000,” McCoy continued. \ .

New Amusement ‘Czar’ to Clean Up Midways at Circus and County Fair

By EDWARD THIERRY .Y E A Service Staff Writer NEW YORK, March 27.—Your morals and your poelcetbook are to be protected when, you visit the circus, the eornivul midway, and the county fair. Thomas J. Johnson, showman “czar,” is the newest dictator of amusements, taking a place alongside Judge .Landis of baseball. Will Hays of the movies, and Augustus Thomas of the theaters. “No more roll-downs, blow offs and squeezes,” says Johnson "That means a clean-up of indecent shows and gambling concessions.' 1 Cryptic words lib*- there spell danger to the unwary. The “czar” explained them: “A roll-down is a concession' game Where the sucker is lured on with prizes and then bilked by a mechanical trick. \ squeeze is illustrated in the game of tossing balls in a bucket for prizes, which at the last moment are put out of reach of the player when the operator secretly squeezes the bucket and makes tho balls bounce out. “Devices of this kind separate sideshow patrons from thousands of dollars. These, togeth- r with Keno and three-card monte and the shell game, are often hidden during the first three days of a carnival's stay. The blow off usually comes Thursday. when the sky's the limit for a quick cleanup, sometimes with the connivance of town oliici ils.” Johnson said most of the graft, gambling and iintno; ility was practiced by hangers-on with outdoor shows visiting the smaller towns. “We are also barring. he said, “all Indecent shows, including ‘kootch* dances, Hawaiian villages, nien-only shows, the ‘49-Camp, which Is patterned aft*-r the old time revels of mining camp barrooms, and the Lilry-in-the-well show, which is one of the worst types of illusions with ,l sex appeal.” Gypsies are to he barred, be said, for sanitary reasons. Also peddlers of moonshine liquor, narcotic drugs, and inimoi and pictures and literature. The Showmen's 1/t-glsla.Uve Committee, of which Johnson is the new commissioner, will embrace thirtyeight circuses and 1&7 carnival companies. These, he said, represent half .a billion dollars invested capital, employ upward of 100,000 people, and do a gross business of close to $4.!i0O,OOO wc-kly. “Here's the big stick."’ h raid. “We will outlaw any show or con-ee-sion refusing to-abide by the i -tv rules. Advance notices will go to mayors, police chiefs, prosecutors, clergymen and newspapers it! towns and villages on show and carnival routes telling plainly what Is permitted and what is prohibited. Wo will have Investigating agents, and we will hit at crooked machines and games and at Improper use of merchandise as prizes by getting the cooperation of manufacturers "We’re going to clean up the outdoor show business from the Inside. Swindlers, gamblers, sharpers, peddlers. and panderera will bo ostracized.” Johnson is a Chicago lawyer who has been connected with 1 -gal phases of the show business for twenty years. He was appointed dictator Ht a meeting of showmen In New York.

Beans and Peas Give Body Backbone and Muscle

BY IV. R. BEATTIE Extension Horticulturist, United States Department of Agriculture S THING beans, bunch beats, snap beans, green beans and nil those of which the tender pods are broken into sections and cooked aa a green vegetable urn the /MtfKGX most, universally / TTIF \ grown and lm- /•_ ‘ / -A portant from the I rUll Afam/ I* 11 ni gardener's VvU-Ul standpoint. Lima \ \/ / beans are an ini I , " rt ‘ l !) t garden crop for the Wpr' northern sections X and on the Pacific 'i Coast. Certain of HgjAi the smaller ~ varieties of Lima t is beans, known as : .ISKb Sb'va beans, can be grown in many sections of the Navy beans BEATTIE \v h 1 t e kidney beans, jiinto beans and a number of others constitute an important list grown for dry beans. Blackeye peas aro an Important food crop throughout the Mouth. In fact, nearly even - section of the country has a. particular bean or pun. adapted to the peculiarities of is sol) and climate. Betts in great variety aro adapted to almost every port of the country and aside from the fad that they occupy considerable space are suited to growing In home gardens generally. They grow best during comparatively cool weather. A continuous supply of fresh peas may be had for at least two months by the proper selection of varieties and by making three or four plantings one or two weeks apart. Planting Pens One quart of seed peas of the variety known as Alaska or Early Alaska will supply a family of five persons with six or ten meals. A second planting of one quart of any of the medium growing sugar peas will provide an additional two weeks’ supply. A third planting of Telephone or any of the tall-growing varieties of sugar peas will extend the time of use another two weeks. One quart of navy beans will plant about one-twelfth of an acre and under ordinary conditions produce sixteen to twenty quarts of dry beans. In the latitude of Washington. D. C., the planting should not be made until about the tenth of fifteenth of June so that the beans will mature rather late and escape the depredations of the bean weevil. In the Northern section the beans will require almost the entire season for their development. Blackeye peas are subject to the work of the common

THOMAS J. JOHNSON

Woman Deputy Sheriff Armed With Smile and Her Revolver

I'u W ! Service WELLS BURG, W Va.. March 27. -Deputy Sheriff Mildred Evangeline Stephens, assistant turnkey of the WrHsburg jail. Is armed with two weapons. Her smile and — The .32 revolver she always carries in her shoulder holster. And nary a prisoner has tried to escape since she took nflfV-e! Perhaps he looks a trifle too dainty to be rough with husky prisoners, but other deputies at the Wellsburg jail say Deputy St- pneris has just as much control over the county's guests as any one in like position in the Panhandle. Ever since her husband. Sheriff J. \\ Stephens, took office, Nov. 7, 1922. West Virginia's only “guntoting” deputy has r*!gned as chief assistant to John Ralston. Sheriff Stephens' bookkeeper. On many occasions Deputy Stephens is alone In charge of the jail. More than 200 prisoners passed through the Wellsburg mil in the course o’s a few months, recently, having been arrested for complicity In the miners' armed march at CHftonviUe July 16. 1922. and for having been in tho party which sl< w 11. II Duv.-vh Sheriff Stephens’ predecessor.

; weevil which boras little holes In liana and must be treated either by : heating or with carbon disulphide to save them Those treated with heat ; are not tit for seed as their germ has been killed by the treatment. Good Soil Needed Leans and peans both require good i sol! because they cannot store up ; the properties that give backbone | and muscle to the hitman race un- I i less these properties are furnished the i j IfcUotuSijip of Daily Lenten Bible reading and modi- ; tattoo prepared fur Communion on Evangelism of Federal Council of I Churches. His Final Declaration _________________________________ "Ait! Jesus said, I am.'' Mark j 14:61, 62. Head Mark M M 65. "It is the open eyes looking out j upon the world which Jesus lias made I new, that furnishes the testimony to the mission of Jolts which can never i be destroyed.” MEDITATION: Do we believe the declaration of Jesus? lie gave us the j way to prove its truth, "If any man willeth to do his will, ho shall know.” Are we willing to prove him? HYMN: My faith looks up to thee. Thou Limb of Calvary, Savior divine! Now hear me while I pray. Take all my guilt away, O let me from this day Be wholly thine! PRAYER: Grant us, O Lord, in all our duties thy HELP, in all our perplexities thy COUNSEL, in all our dangers thy PROTECTION, In all ; our sorrows thy PEACE, for the sake j of Jesus Christ, our Savior. Amen. ARRESTS FOLLOW FIGHT Woman Witness to Encounter Between Two Men. Arrest of two men followed a “fight over a woman” Monday night. Police said Pete George. 439 AV. Now York St., told them that when he spoke to Miss Mildred Lunch, 472 3. Pine St., whom he knows, Charles Abel, 472 S. Pine St., knocked him down Abel said George insulted Miss Lunch and that when he protested George drew a knife. Abel then hit George with a rock, according to officers. Goorge was charged with offending persons on the street and assault and battery, and Abel with assault and battery.

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DEPUTY SHERIFF MILDRED EVANGELINE STEPHENS. NOTE HER REVOLVER IN SHOULDER HOLSTER.

plants. \ good garden loam with a moderate .'.mount of for;il:z*r will do the trick if supplemented by good se>*d and proper cultivation. Too much nitrogen in the fertilizer makes an excessive grow h of vino and foliage. Poultry manure, in very moderate quantities, is a good fertilizer for peas, especially if reinforced by a little wood ashes and lime, on most soils. Lima beans should be planted with j the eye downward and covered only about equal to their own depth. Snap or string beans should be one inch deep in sandy soil and one-half inch in heavier soils. Peas should be planted three inches in well-drained, randy loam soils, two inches in clay loam soils and pust barely covered in heavy or slightly wet alluvial soils. Peas ttro planted on ridges In some sections and In furrows in others so no definite rule can be given. Next: Tomatoes, popular homegarden plant. Wasted Lives? By BRUTON BRALEY (Cant. Eddie Kickmhuuker. American ace. tay that the lives lost in tin* World War , were lost in vain.) NOT fliato ill vain—the se.is that u*od to bo Full of a lurking* death We could not { Are clear again. And that blood-drenched ; expanse Os fifrhtinjr front that, scared the fact* of France Is growing green once more The world w free Os that black blight of Prussian mastery Which threatened all that we hold good and fair. They died, who fell to s.t.ve us from despair. Not quite in vain ! DEI) jealousies and hates a; am may fl are Into a Rudden fury lure and there. And diplomats may fence and disagree. But they who fought and died so splendidly Died, in that mighty conflict “Over There,’ j Not quite in vain! (Copyright, 1923, NEA Service, Inc.) \

Economy Trips to Europe Today, thanks to the favorable rates of exchange in Europe and to the general revision of hotel charge and railway fares, it is possible to take a six weeks’ all expense trip to Europe for only $495.00 For further information call or write MR. F. A. DOLL. Travel .Department.

PUBLISHED daily except Sunday by The Indiana Daily Times Company, 25-29 S. Meridian St., Indianapolis. * * * Subscription Rates: Indianapolis—Ten Cents a Week. Elsewhere—Twelve Cents a Week. * * * PHONE —MAIN 3500.

J ER MAN paper money is so low ft __ it is cheaper to feed a goat \ on cash. * • c Finding a four-leaf clover or working as hard as you can are considered signs of good luck. 9 0 0 It gets 70 degrees below zero at the noi'lh pole and at a party when you forget yourself and cuss. * * * Whai the average young fellow wants

is a girl as sweet as sugar, but not quite as expensive. 9 9 9 An optimist is a man who is an automobile salesman. Hound dogs sit around and howl at the moon. What a pity calamity howlers don’t do the same. • * * Y ou never know how lucky you are until you are not. 0 9 9 •Many a man marries a woman simply because he admires her good judgment in selecting a husband. • * * It is a hungry moth that has lived on one bathing suit all winter. 9 9 9 Kansas man who swallowed twenty-seven spoons certainly has a silver lining. *sjjr • * • W inter is just starting in Australia, and this is enough to make them as mad as everything. • • • Indiana man had two wives. Experts say this is one too many. Many may enjoy learning a Toledo (Ohio) saxophone player is in jail. 9 9 9 Sign of spring in Georgia was when a freeze damaged the fruit. • * * Frenchman claims he danced twenty-four hours without stopping. When he did stop he called it a day. • • ♦ When 4’J.O!id <_ra!!ons of gas burned in East St. Louis people got about ten scares to the gallon. • 9 * burn pirat'-s are robbing honest, hard-working bootleggers at sea.

To Give or Sell Death Liquor in Oklahoma Is Murder Offense

Hu / ■:•>■! • trr'.flt OK LAID i.MA CITY, Okla.. March 27. —To pivo or .sell Heath-dealing iiqiior in Oklahoma now constitutes the offense of murder. Two white men, alleged to have sold liquor to Sikus Lewis, a negro, which caused his death twenty min-

Where There’s a Sucker There’s Alw ■ays a Way to Get His Money

This arc. ' • bv Lena M. Siler. editor ■I VV’nrl li Press, (fives you more Info mi - used by the fake oii t . i remoter;? to > xtraet from you .r N-,\ ••.*•. ul it—-It may save you sonu money, some day when you are tempted by HUnirr literature pron.i-imr you easy money quickly. By LEON M. SILER FT. WORTH, Texas, Mirch 27. Where there's a sucker, there’s a way to get his money, the fake stork promoters say. If a sucker already shorn of one batch of savings won't bite on "stock.” he may fall for something else. Here are a bunch of other “tricks" usAi by Texas promoters to gather in fortunes by mail from suckers: "Royalty” syndicates take their toll: ■‘mineral deeds” and “pipe line assignments" are sold in large quantities; individual leases are peddled; there are all kinds of "pools." Holders of stock in promotions which have become defunct are canvassed by so-called "mergers" with invitations to exchange their old stock for new—on a plan which involves putting up twenty-five per cent or more additional money. Toward Common End Brokers, "investigators,” and weekly “newspapers" devoted to the oil stock selling trade all strive earnestly and unceasingly toward the common end of stripping suekerdom of its excess funds.’ The weekly "newspaper" which professes to expose promoters who are unscrupulous may assail some company one week and carry Us advertising and booster "news" about it the next. If a dime of the dollar which the “sucker” sends to the Texas oil promoter ever gets within sight of a real oil field, the "sucker” eati count himself lucky. The promoter who spends more th:ut ten or fifteen per cent of his stock sale receipts on actual oil operations is regarded with scorn by others of his fraternity. If tlio promotor turns the sale of his stock over to a brokerage house or firm of publicity experts, he pays a commission of 50 per cent of the gross receipts. From the remaining 50 per cent the promoter deducts his own promotion fee. Then he must have a plush-car-peted and mahogany fixtured office suite and a costly car. These things .of course, are legitimate “expenses," chargeable to the company funds.

TOM SIMS SAYS:

utes after drinking, are held in tho ilartshorne jail now under this new law recently enacted by the State Legislature. Four other persons, said to have imbibed of the same booze, age seriously ill.

From giving detailed information about themselves and their property holdings the promoters always fight shy. Capitalization? Qh —"actual cost plan,” which means simply that the promoter is selling all the stock the public will buy. Exact location of le;tses? Why—"in the heart of the field.” Qualifications of the promoter as an oil man? Weil—“long years of experience,” say. Nhy on Information If his financial backing is sufficiently elastic, the promoter is likely to de clare 25 to £OO per cent “dividends” to tin* first few purchasers of his stock, a few weeks after he begins operations. Paying out of his own pocket ‘‘dividends' 'amounting to several hundred or even several thousands dollars sometimes is "good business.” For when the news of these "dividends" speeds out over the wires, or is spread broadcast in smashing promotion Journal advertisements, there's certain to be a healthy response. RECEIVERSHIP APPEALED Indiana National life Insurance Com pany Protests Ruling. Appointment of a receiver for the Indiana National Life Insurance Com pany by Superior Judge Sidney S. Miller, was to be appealed today to the Supreme Court. The decision fol lowed refusal to reconsider the ap pointment. Time for filing the appeal bond of '350,000 expires today. Charges that the company loaned money on securities, and that assets were converted into loans and securities of doubtful value were denied by the defendant. Vice President Morton S. Hawkins and other officers. The receivership was instituted by Attorney General Fresh. Switzerland is against jazz music. Swiss dealers are Inning enormous quantities of American-made phonograph records, but almost all the orders call for classical and oneratic selections.

/ JP

Chronic Bad Breath Destroys Your Charm The late Elbert Hubbard used to say that he would agree with any Judge who would rule that chronic bad breath was sufficient cause for divorce. Whether Elbert suffered from a stenographer with bad teeth or a foreman with pyorrhea is a question only he could answer, but the fact remains that a chronic bad breath comes from infected gums or decaying teeth. If your breath is bad Utend to your teeth. All doubt us to your ability to ••struct teeth without pain ha* bren dispelled. 1 will surely recommend you to niy friend*. HfiitSt HEI. f*l LIAVAX. 1150 Brookside Ave. THE PEOPLE’S DENTISTS 36 WEST WASHINGTON ST.