Indianapolis Times, Volume 35, Number 169, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 November 1923 — Page 3
W JNOV . jU/mj
MENTAL HYGIENE SUBJECT AT MEET _ Sodety Will Hold Anifual Meeting Dec. 17, Judges, mental experts, teachers and social workers will attend the eighth annual meeting of the Indiana Society for Mental Hygiene, which will be held at the Claypool Hotel Dec. 17. Dr. J. W. Milligan, superintendent of the Southeastern Hospital for the Insane at Madison will be the first speaker. Other speakers at the opening session will be: Dr. W. C. Van Nuys. s of the Indiana Village for Epile/ n-s at New- • aatle: Dr. Bvron E. Biggs, superintendent of the Indiana School for Feeble-Minded Toutfc at Ft. Wayne: Dr. P. H. Weeks of the State prison at Michigan City: Charles A McGonagle. superintendent of the Indiana Boys' School at Plainfield: Dr. S. F, Smith, superintendent of the Eastern Hospital for the Insane at Richmond: Dr. Charles P Emerson, dean of the Indiana University School of Medicine of Indianapolis, and Dr Frank wood E. Williams me al director of the National Society for Mental hygiene. New York , Speakers at the afternoon session will be: Prof. Herman H. Young, department of psychology. Indiana University Mrs Ea:a R. Jatho of the School for Feeble Minded at Ft. Wayne: Mrs. Helen T. Woolley of Detroit Mich.: L H. Dirks of Shortndge High 8choo! and E. U Graff superintendent of In dianapolis public schools Ben anon J. Burris State superintendent of public instruction will preside at the event!J session. Speakers will be Lee* B. Myers of Evans Miss Ethel Clark of Richmond. Mrs. Wooller Dr. Kenosha Sessions of the Indiana Gtr’s - School at Clermont. W. G. Bate of Richmond. Judge Frank J. I.ahr of juvenile court Judge James A. Collins of Criminal Court and Dr. Williams. FUNERAL OF AGED SECRET SERVICE WORKER IS HELD Lords Wien, 85, Worked for United State*, England and Germany. Funeral of Louis Wien, 82, for many years, prominent in secret service work in three countries, were scheduled todsty at Royster & Askin funeral parlors. Burial in Crown Hill cemetery. Mr. Wien died Tuesday He was born in Prague, and came to the United States in 1888. He served the United States, Great Britain and German governments as a secret service man. At one time he operated a private detective agency here. Mr. "Wien is survived by a son, Louis Wien Jr., & Federal prohibition agent. DECRY CAMPUS DRINKING Indiana to Become School of Drunkards?” Student Asks By Timet Special BLOOMINGTON, Ind.. Nov. 28. The campus of Indiana University buzzed today with comment on the communication of Homer R. Bolen, graduate student, to the Daily Student in which he decried the “drunkenness on the campus.” “Is Indiana to become a school of bootleggers and drunkards?" Bolen asked in the communication. “A hilarious trio in company with eight or ten fraternity brothers created a disgraceful scene at the pow wow,” he said. This was a men’s banquet and pepfest held on the Friday night before the Purdue-Indiana football game. Bolen deplored the general drunkenness on the campus over the last week-end. The situation at Indiana is perhaps better than at any of the other Big Ten universities, Dean C. E. Edmonson declared. Bootleggers concentrated on “Homecoming,” he said. MAX BEHR SUCCUMBS Former Nobles villp Man Dice at Home !n Cincinnati. By Timet Special NOBLE SVILLE, Ind., Nov. 28.—A message received here Tuesday night from Cincinnati announced the death of Max Behr, 70, at his home there, engaged in business here for many years. The widow and two sons Julian and Norman, the former an Indianapolis newspaper man, survive. He was a trother-in-law of L N. Joseph of In* dianapolis. Custodian Accuses Custoclan Archie Valentine, colored, custodian of an apartment at 8905 N. Delaware St., was held in Jail today pending investigation. He was charged by Frank Clements, colored, custodian of an apartment at 1022 N Senate Ave., of firing a shot at him Monday night, according to police. Valentine denied the charge.
HER BOY HAD ALWAYS BEEN WEAK AND PUNY Now he eats everything in sight and romps with playmates. “My four-year-old boy had been weak and puny since birth, and had constipation and indigestion. Nothing did him any good until we tried Milks Emulsion. Since using it, he can't get enough to eat and has outgrown his childhood trouble. He plays out with the children now, and he was never able to that before.” —Wm. Heart, 424 Bundy Ave., Newcastle, Ind. Weak, ailing children usually start eating and getting stronger from the very first bottle of Milks Emulsion. Most children like to take it, because It really tastes good. A trial costs nothing. Milks Emulsion restores healthy, natural bowel action; it is a truly corrective medicine, doing away with all need of pills and physics. It promotes appetite and quickly puts the digestive organs in shape to assimilate food, and thus build flesh and strength. Milks Emulsion Is strongly recommended to those whom sickness has weakened; it is a powerful aid in resisting and repairing the effects of wasting diseases. Chronic stomach trouble and constipation are promptly relieved. This Is the only solid emulsion made, and sc palatable that it is eaten with a spoon like Ice cream. No matter how severe your case, you are urged to try Milks Emulsion under this guarantee—Take six bottles home with you. use it according to directions and If not satisfied with the results; your money will be promptly refunded Price. 60c and $1.20 per kottla. The Milks 'Jo. Tati* flvit*, TB<s Ssld by druggists WWlm i riverumaaaat.
Ed Janis Burlesques Art Dance at Palace
lllr "if BHBL ■ mumt*" Wk, • jiiJk —BBi A nSSBB
ED JANIS AND CARMAN RECKER
Ed Janis is a jovial jester who is coming to the Palace the last half of this week with his own company of dancers and comedians. Janis stages a bit of burlesque wl\en he
The Greatest Force
3431
gives his impression of an American troupe putting over a Russian dance. He is assisted in his follies of songs, music and dances by Carmen Recker, premier danseuse
Peggy White, Alice Van Allen and Rits Jarvis. The act was staged and produced by Ed Janis. Opens Thursday afternoon at the Palace. -I- -I- -I----“Good Morning Dearie” Opens Thursday at English’s On Thursday afternoon, “Good Morning Dearie,” a musical comedy opens a three-day engagement at English’s. The story concerns a Cinderella tale of a little downtown shop girl who was adored by an uptown prince. There is a “rough guy” who wants Rose-Marie, the heroine, for his “goil” and he makes a bit of trouble, but always there is the comic sleuth, Steven Simmons, at hand to baffle him, not to mention Billy Van Cortland, the tall hero, and his strong right arm. Needless to say, the ending is anything but tragic. -I- -I- -I- ' Other attractions on view today include: “The Spice of 1922” at the Murat: Fejer and his orchestra at Keith s; Clark and O’Neil at the Lyric: Wright and Deltrfch at the Palace: “Youthful Follies” at the Capitol: stock burlesque at the Broadway; movies and variety at the Lincoln Square; “Little Old New York" at the Circle; “Enemies of Women” at Mister Smith's; “The Thrill Chaser” at the Tsls; “The Lone Star Ranger” at the Apollo and “The Gold Diggers” at the Ohio. JEWEL ROBBERY HALTED Inquisitive Stranger at Store Is Sought by Police. A probable attempt to rob the Bogatz Jewelry Company, 224 N. Meridian St., was frustrated Tuesday, po lice believe, after a man who had made numerous inquiries recently concerning the company appeared at the store and refused to leave after being ordered out by Charles Held, president. The man escaped before arrival of police. The same man questioned Ruben Cohen, 703 W. Eleventh St., an errand boy, while he was on Massachusetts Ave., Friday, police say.
The greatest force in the world is the will to serve. When it is bom of enthusiasm it is dynamic in its intensity. When it emanates from a sense of duty it endures. It is the will to serve that puts imagination into business. It is the will to serve, persisted in over a long period of years, that has made the Standard Ojl Company (Indiana) one of America’s outstanding successes. It is this same will to serve that has encouraged this Company to foster industrial husbandry not alone in its own business but elsewhere. If the management of the Standard Oil Company (Indiana) had been content to take from crude petroleum, gasoline, kerosene and lubricating oils only, this Company would have been a large manufacturing concern, but it never could have achieved its present position as an institution in the industrial world. Without disturbing those three essential major products, this Company set about utilizing waste. It retrieved products of great benefit to the medical profession products that lighten the burden of the housewife—products that make night travel safe products that make good roads —and products that serve mankind in a score of ways. All these products were developed by the will to serve. The personnel of the Standard Oil Company (Indiana) is obsessed with the will to serve and led by men with imagination imagination reduced to terms of practical business. 4 It is the will to serve that inspired the Manufacturing Department of the Standard "Oil Company (Indiana) to develop methods for increasing the yield of gasoline from a given quantity of crude petroleum. It is the will to serve that caused the Standard Oil Company (Indiana) to lease to competitive concerns the right to use such important manufacturing processes. It is the will to serve that caused the Standard Oil Company (Indiana) to create and maintain facilities so comprehensive as to serve a five-gallon customer as carefully, as accurately, and as promptly as it serves a thousand-gallon buyer. It is the will to serve, expressed in terms of action, that has earned for the Standard Oil Company (Indiana) the confidence, respect and esteem of the thirty million people of the Middle West Standard Oil Company (Indiana) 910 So. Michigan Ave., • Chicago, 111.
GARAGE ON CIRCLE INJUNCTION ASKED Owners Contest Withdrawal of City’s Approval, An injunction to prevent city officials from withdrawing permission to build a storage garage at the southwest corner of Market St. and the Circle Is asked In a suit to be heard by Superior Judge Linn D. Hay. The petition was filed by Skiles F. Test, Donald Test, Dorothy Test Hiatt and Mary Test, owners of the property. Francis F. Hamilton, building commissioner; Joseph L. Hogue, city controller, and the city are made defendants. On Nov. 10, it is charged, Hamilton and Hogue approved the plans for a $200,000 six-story building, and have “pretended to withdraw the approval.” Four modem storerooms will be leased on the first floor, the owners declare, and the upper floors will be used for a storage garage. The building will be of beautiful
COLDS Break a Cold Right Up with “Pape’s Cold Compound” Take two tablets every three hours until three doses are taken. The first dose always gives relief. The second and third doses completely break up the cold. Pleasant and safe to take. Contains no quinine or opiates. Millions use "Pape’s Cold Compound.” Price, thirty-five cents. Druggists guarantee it. —Advertisement.
design, and ho repairing will go on In It, it is said. TECH CLUB NOMINATES Debating Section Among Several tot New English Organization The English Club of Technical High School, newly formed, has nominated the following semester officers: Pres ident, Naomi Adams, Miss Mildred May, Earle Thorpe; vice president, Miss Wanda Farson, Miss Llewellyn, Miss Anna Louise Werner; secretary, Miss Dorothy Dugdale, Miss Helen Brown, Miss Rose Gordon; treasurer, Miss Helen Schmitz, Richard Schellsclimidt, Miss Mary Lathan; attorney general, Lawrence Bowers. Miss Priscilla Pittenger, Miss Mary Ennis; sergeant-at-arms, Miss Pauline Mcllaffey, Miss Rose Gordon, Miss Alice Phillips. The club is to be divided Into seceral sections, one of which will be a debating club. Artist’s Exhibit at Institute Among the exhibits at the thirtysixth annual exhibition of American painting and sculpture at the Chicago Art Institute is a has relief by Myra Reynolds Richards, 1446 N. Alabama St. The relief Is from the collection of Mr. and Mrs. Alfred M. Ogle of Terre Haute. The dimensions are four feet by eighteen inches and the subject is five life-size heads.
Most ij and Cl People |" future v carefu WllO S£3 travel and C _ 4. _ - Today gO to If Ktiaam —a Today vice l x Chicago It ope daily i one as Go on too* mmsm i mmm day.wi for bu #ft .a All & CHS, w Boulez Indiar reside: CHICAGO, INDIANAPOLIS A LOUISVILLE RY.
179
SHANK URGES HELP FOR jOpO KIDS Golden- Rule Meal on Sunday Asked in Proclamation, Mayor Shank says he believes In the Golden Rule. The mayor and Mrs. Shank are in deep sympathy with the plans for Golden Rule Sunday, when people are asked to dine simply and inexpensively and to turn Into the Near East Relief orphan fund the difference between the cost of the simple meal and a more lavish one usually served on Sunday. “The most distressing thing In the world Is a hungry kid —a child—and it’s worse if the child Is an orphan and hungry,” said the mayor. Late Tuesday Mayor Shank issued a proclamation asking the public to observe next Sunday with sacrificial meals. “An emergency has risen,” the official declaration declares, “and the people of Indianapolis, I am sure, wish to do their share toward meet-
HP HE Monon Route takes pardonable pride in the fact that most people who travel between Indianapolis and Chicago use its line. This did not just happen in the course of events. Years ago Monon Officials foresaw the metropolitan future of Indianapolis and carefully planned a road and a service that would take care of the then future heavy travel between Indianapolis and Chicago. Today this heavy travel is a fact. Today the Monon offers service between Indianapolis and Chicago better - _ than any other line. IHJP Its line is the short* est —its time is the fastest. It operates four fast trains daily in each direction—each one as good as the best. It operates “The Hoosier”— a train by which you can go to Chicago and back the same day, with a half day in Chicago for business or pleasure. All Monon trains stop at Boulevard Station (38th St., Indianapolis), adjacent to the residence district. All Monon trains use Ijilj Dearborn Station, UP Chicago, only two ry. blocks from the loop. All Monon trains carry Library-Observation Cars. All Monon trains carry “The Famous Hoosier Dining Car Service,” said by epicures to be the best dining car service in the world. When you travel between Indianapolis and Chicago, do as most people do—go on the Monon. It costs no more than to travel on other lines, and you are protected by Automatic Block Signals All the Way.
tag It. We ought to be ready to share the anxiety with which the Near East Relief faces another winter with an empty treasury, 60,000 children under its care and another 50,000 pleading at the gates of the orphanages for admission.”
Get Two Trial Boxes PAZO OINTMENT is a Guaranteed Remedy for all forms of PUes. Pay yonr druggist $1.20 for two boxes of PAZO OINTMENT. When you have used the two boxes, If you are not satisfied with the results obtained, we will •end $1.20 to your druggist and request him to band it to you. We prefer to handle this through the druggist because his customers are usually bis friends and will be honest with him. PARIS MEDICINB COMPANY, St. Louts, Mo.
3
