Indianapolis Times, Volume 35, Number 245, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 February 1924 — Page 7

MONDAY, FEB. 25,1924

CHRISTIAN SCIENCE ORIGIN DESCRIBED v BY MARY G. EWING 'Mrs, Eddy Gave to World Revolutionary Truth of an Infinite Cause.’ Miss Mary G. Ewing, C. S. 8., member of the board of lectureship of the Mother Church, First Church of Christ Scientist, Boston, Mass., in an address at the Irvington Masonjp Temple, Sunday, described the origin of the theories of Christian Science through the experiences of Mrs. Mary Baker Eddy and showed how they were gathered into a religion. ‘‘This discovery,” said Miss Ewing, “came to her in much the same way. apparently, that remarkable discoveries in so-called physical science have come to others: It came through revelation and inspiration, but it came, as well, through keen and careful attention to certain phenomena of common experience, and by ‘eating and applying the results of . ich observation until, with accumuced evidence and proof, the exist&rce of the fundamental Principle governing such phenomena, its character and the laws through which it operates, were established beyond a reasonable question. “This discovery furnished the basis for a system for the application of this Principae to all discordant conditions of human life, resulting in the reappearance in the world today of that same healing of sickness and sorrow and sin which characterized the mission of Jesus of Nazareth on earth, over two thousand years ago. "With sublime courage and unfailing assurance of truth, Mrs. Eeddy proclaims to a world steeped in materialistic theories, the revolutionary truth of an infinite cause which is Spirit and a consequently spiritual universe and man. wholly dependent upon that spiritual cause and governed by it alone. This Is an epitome of the teaching of Christian Science.” IF KIDNEYS ACT BID TAKE SALTS

Says Backache Often Means You Have Not Been Drinking Enough Water. When you wake up with backache and dull misery in the kidney region It may mean you have been eating foods which create acids, says a wellknown authority. An excess of such acids overworks the kidneys in their effort to filter it from the blood and they become sort of paralyzed and loggy. When your kidneys get sluggish and clog you must relieve them, like you relieve your bowels, removing all the body's urinous waste, else you have backache, sick headache, dizzy spells; your stomach sours, tongue is coated and when the weather Is bad you have rheumatic twinges. The urine is coludy, full of sediment, channels often get sore, water scalds and you are obliged to seek relief two or three times during the night. Either consult a good, reliable physician at once or get from your pharmacist about four ounces of Jad Salts; take a tablespoonful in a glass of water before breakfast for a few days and your kidneys may then act fine. This famous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with lithia, and has been used for years to help clean and stimulate sluggish kidneys, also to neutralize acids in the system, so they no longer frrltate, thus often relieving bladder weakness. Jad Salts is inexpensive, can not injure and makes a delightful, effervescent lithia-water drink. Drink lots of soft water. By all means have your physician examine your kidneys at least twice a year.—Advertisement. my . Rheumatism is gone - ” There’s glorious joy in knowing this:— that more Red-Blood-Cells stops Rheumatism, and that S.S. S. builds Blood-Cells. ••There are thousands of you men and women, just like myself, slaves to rheumatism, muscle pains, joint pains, and horrible stiffness. I had S.S.S. thoroughly rids the body of Rheumatic Impurities. the wrong idea about rheumatism for 15 years. I didn’t realize that Increasing blood-cells had the effect of completely knocking out rheumatic impurities from the system. That is why I began using S. S. 8.! Bay what you will, I never knew such startling results were possible. Well, folks, besides knocking out my rheumatism it gave me back some of the strength I used to have way back! I’ve got a better color In my face, my appetite Is dandy. I don’t use my crutches any more. I’m walking around straight-up on two young legs!” 8. 8. 3. makes people talk about themselves the way It builds up their strength. By building blood-cells It builds nerve strength for young folks who ought to have more, and for older people who have little. It stops pimples, bolls, blackheads, eczemtu chases away blood Impurities. You can always rely on it. Start S. 8. 8. today for that rheumatism. You'll feel the difference shortly. 8. 8. 8. Is sold at all good drug stores. The large size Is the more economical. S.S.S. ss&jtsrJg

Cotton Mill Owners Find Employment of Children Under 14 Does Not Pay, Although They Oppose Laws

Some Youngsters See Daylight Only Through Factory Windows—Many Live in Alabama and Work in Georgia Because of Lenient Regulations,

BY ROY J. GIBBONS Bv SEA Service [-'■'"l TLANTA, Ga., Feb. 26.—EmI A I ployment of children under 11 I years Is not good business. Southern cotton mill owners have found that out. They say they were taught their lesson during the time the Federal child labor law, now defunct, was in force. Yet they are opposed to a constitu. tional amendment which would empower Congress to enact new child labor legislation. Typical of this attitude is the statement by P. E. Glenn, president of the Georgia Cotton Manufacturers Association, who says:

U. S. JUDGES HEAR SUITS AIMING TWO STATE LAWS Constitutionality of Oil Inspection and Insurance Acts in Doubt. Thr“e Federal judges. Ferdinand A. Geiger, United States district judge of Milwaukee; Evan A. Evans of United ! States Circuit Court of Appeals of Chicago and Judge Albert B. Anderson heard two cases today, involving the constitutionality of State laws and acts of a State official. One suit was filed by fifty-five insurance companies, asking an injunction against Thomas S. McMurray, State insurance commissioner, to pre vent enforcement of new rateß of commissions to be paid fire insurance agents. His acts were declared unconstitutional. The other suit, filed by three oil companies, attacked constitutionality of the oil Inspection law. Presentation of arguments in the oil Inspection case was completed this morning. Attorneys for the plaintiffs argued the law constituted a tax on interstate commerce, In violation of the ourteenth Amendment. They raid State records showed a balance of $84,000 in the Treasury last year, over expenditures for the inspection. Judge Evans remarked, "This is a revenue act Imposed on an article of interstate commerce.’’ U. S. Lesh, attorney general for Indiana. presenting the State’s case, said that no oil was Inspected while In Interstate commerce and that the law did not apply until oil had reached final destination In Indiana. children’s coughs at once! DON’T let them run on until dangerous complications set in. Nothing to quickly stop® coughing as Dr. Bell’s Pine-Tar Honey. It combines just the medicines vour doctor prescribes with the old-time remedy, pinetar honey. Hard packed phlegm loosens and clears away—the inflammation is reduced — normal breathing is, restored. Excellent for young and old, alike! It tastes good, too. Keep Dr. Bell’s on hand for all the family. AH druggists. Be sure to get the genuine. DR. BELL’S Pint-Tar Hotter

“There might once have been a time when the Southern textile operator could have been criticised for his employment of very young children. “But today this operator realizes that children under 14 working In his mill are not profitable investments. “Under the Federal law, which was declared unconstitutional, child workers between 14 and 16 were prohibited from working more than eight hours a day. “But in the South our children mature more rapidly. “Prohibiting them from working until 14 we consider is ample protection.” You'll find plenty of 14-year-old

HOOSIER BRIEFS

Ora Morrow, Kokomo, flitted from one job to another and never worked longer than tow weeks at a time during his marled life, Is the testimony of his wife In her divorce suit. Architects are working on plans for replacing the college building and the Armstrong-Landon Company will erect a six-story building immediately. Both Kokomo business houses recently burned. There is not a single man charged with crime in Vigo County who has not had his case disposed of and no case pending has been In court more than ninety days, says Judge Jeffries of the Vigo court. Jess Lawson, Muncie, has been arrested three times in two months for

Concerning G. Enesco

Georges Enesco, the violin virtuoso, was the artist guest of the Indian-* apolis Maeimerchor at the Academy of Music Sunday afternoon and gave an Interesting program to an appreciative audience. The numbers selected by Enesco gave full scope to his superb mastery of the violin and displayed to the fullest extent the quality of his playing. The tonal quality and interpretation of each number showed him to be a master violinist, and his audience gave full appreciation by recalling him after each number. The program was as follows; Nardlni—"Sonata In D major" “Adagio'' “Allegro con fuoco” “Larghetto” "Allegretto graeiogo" Chausson —“Poeme" Corelli —"Folies d' Egpagne” Saint Saens—"lntroduction and Rondo Cappriccloeo" Sarasatic—“Zigounerwgisen' Any organization that brings artists Os the character and standing of Enesco and the other artists who have played at the Maennerclior are ful Cling a wonderful mission and are helping sustain the reputation of their city for the best in art and music. The next concert will be given my Miss Ethyl Hhyden on Monday evening, March 3. (By Observer.) ‘FRAT’ NAMES OFFICERS M. M. Andrews Heads Delta Kappa Epsilon Alumni. New officers of the Indiana Alumni Association of the Delt Kappa Epsilon fratemlt are M. M Andrews, president; Bishop Frederick D. Leete, first vice president; Harry M. Age ter, second vloe president; George G. Rlnier, secretary, and Raymond D. Jackson, treasurer, all of Indianapolis. Then men were elected at the twentysecond annual dinner, at the Severin. Treasurer Steps Up (ferry E. Taylor has been elected president of the Ex-Service Voters League to succeed Humphrey Harrington, who resigned following his appointment as a member of the county board of election commissioners. Taylor was treasurer.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

FOURTEEN-YEAR-OLD BOYS WORK SIXTY HOURS A WEEK IN GASTONIA (N. C.) COTTON MILLS. PICTtTRE (UPPER LEFT) SHOWS THEM GOING TO WORK. ROME (GA.) BOY (RIGHT) IS 12 YEARS OLD AND THE SOLE SUPPORT OF HIS MOTHER AND TWO BROTHERS. TYPICAL MILL CHILDREN OF ROCKY’ MOUNT. N. C. (LOWER LEFT) ARE HOME ALONE ALL DAY, FOR BOTH THEIR PARENTS MUST WORK TO EARN A LIVING FOR THE FAMILY. ROY* GIBBONS, NEA SERVICE WRITER. FOUND AN ORPHAN GIRL (LOWER CENTER) IN ROCKY MOUNT WHO WORKED SIXTY HOURS A YYEEK FOR $5.80 ON WHICH SHE LIVED.

boys and girls In typical southern mill towns whose only glimpse at the sun is through the window of a cotton mill. In North Carolina armies of sallowfaced little mites are granted legal permission to work eleven hours in a single day and sixty hours a week. Grind Leaves Pallor Sixty hours of work a week leaves an easily recognizable pallor on the mill 'child’s cheek. Schooling has ended for the average miy child below the fifth grade. Georgia mill owners, however, have Introduced a bill in the Legislature prohibiting employment of 12-year-old boys In textile Industries. This is a significant move. But Georgia, by reason of her weak labor laws, still attracts great numbers of child workers from the adjoining State of Alabama. These interstate employes, protected by Alabama laws, which prohibit more than eight hours of work for

[ alleged liquor law violations. He asks i continuance of his triails until he j has his trial on a manslaughter charge j In connection with the death of Miss I Mltajdi Shrout in an. automobile acci- | dent. Two imposing piCars. constructed of fancy building Brick surmounted with stone slabs and marble urns to be erected at the entrance of Calloway Park, El wood, Is rhe gift of the local Phi Delt fraternity. The Anderson Women's council are to ask Mayor Horn® to eliminate gambling devices at the fall fair there. If Ft. Wayne does not change its system of dumping solid sewage into tile Maumee River, citizens of New Haven are expected to ask the United States Rivers and Harbors Board to force such action. Spanish War Veterans and their families attended a district meetipg at Marlon Sunday. Judge Tuthlll, of Michigan City, city court, has ruled that one violation of a saloonkeeper on a liquor charge does not constitute grounds for closing his business as a public nuisance. Purdue University*® annual alumni gala week will be held June 7-9. The new Columbtis junior high school In honor of America’s war President. A bronze tablet bearing a dedicatory Inscription will be erected In the building. Twenty-five dollars were awarded five Muncie school pupils for essays on the use of tobacco. The contestants were permitted to argue either for or against Its use. The board of directors of the Vanderburgh county’s federation of evangelical women's organizations has purchased a twelve-acre site to erect a Protestant Old Folks home. Nobert J. Wlllert, Lawrenceburg, Is suffering from a broken arm, a dislocated shoulder and severe cuts received when he was thrown off a mule. The animal ran several blocks, fell and broke his neck.

Liver Trouble Now a Known Cause of Premature Old Age

Medical science knows that poisonous waste In our bodies would actually cause death In a few days If not eliminated by Nature’s processes. Because It destroys these deadly poisons, the liver is our most Important organ—the body’s wonderful purifier. Ccience now understands how the liver prevents the formation of body poisons that cause diseases of the kidneys and blood vessels and are chiefly responsible for premature old age. When the liver becomes weak, the poisons are sucked up by the blood and health Is broken down. Guided by this knowledge, medical science has found the only way to help th® liver create the purifying bile without

children between 14 and 16, flow across the boundary line dally Into Georgia. Morning and night sees the bridge across the Chattahoochee River at Columbus, Ga.. crowded with boy and girl cotton mill workers coming into Georgia from Alabama. All of them are between 14 and 16. But Alabama, in which they live, can do nothing to prevent such self imposed exploitation. Boy Supports Family And at Rome, Ga., where the writer was arrested on the protests of a mill owner who objected to having pictures of his property taken, an instance was found where a 1-year old boy was given employment at $5 a j week, while his older brother, a lad ; of 18, complained of walking the streets in search of a job This same 12-year old boy, by vir- j tue of his earning power, was the sole j support of his widowed mother, his 18-year-old brother and a still younger member of the family. As yet, there is no State aid through a mother’s pension for youngsters of this type in Georgia, so all the commonwealth can do to assist, them Is grant permission to quit school and go to work. Generally speaking. In the principal southern cotton mill States, long hours for child workers prevail. This condition, in addition to Indus trial privation, saddles further domes tic hardship upon the mill boy and rl. Living In a community built around the mill, the children receive but brief contact with the outside world. INSPECTORS TOO FEW Enforcement of the city’s smoke ordinance is being handicapped by lack of Inspectors, it was learned today. Although the new ordinance wacalculated to include every building in spector as a smoke inspector, H. !•. Templeton, assistant chief smoke in spector, today said the entire work was left to Fred Beck and himself. Beck was Inspector under the old city smoke ordinance. City council limitations on the num ber of Inspectors in the building de partment prevents relief unless anew ordinance is passed. Templeton said that he has not been furnished a car to make inspections and has purchased a machine of his own. Before that cars wore rented. SURPRISE FOR POLICE Burglary’ Proves “False Alarm” Was Real, After All. Police discovered today that an emergency run during the night to 332 E. Washington St. was not on a false alarm, as they had thought. YVhen the I. Krakavotiz saloon was opened, it was discovered that the cash register, containing $59 and $5 worth of cigarettes, was gone. A roomer at the Craig Hotel told police he saw two men, who ran when they saw him. At that time It was not known anything woa taken. Blind Man Unhurt In Fail By Times Special CRAWFORDBVILLE, Ind., Feb. 24. —Hal Sutton, local blind newspaper 1 and magazine stand owner, fell j through an open trap door on the sidewalk leading to the basement of a j store and was only slightly bruised. He says he fell on one of the men working below.

which no human can live. Physicians know that the liver cannot be reg ulated by drugs, but a safe Nature substance has been discovered which will at once increase the vital bile supply. The discovery Is purified ox gall. Get from your druggist a package of Dloxol. Each tablet contains ten drops of purified ox gall. In 24 hours the poison toxins will be removed. Your liver will be regulated. Blood purification will begin. Sallow skin will clear- You will feel so milch better you will know you have found the cause of your ill health. Dloxol tablets ore harmless, tastless and cost less than two oents each.—Advertisement. I

ZIEGFELD CHORUS BEAUTY WEDDED TO COPY READER Jessie Reed, Connoiseur of Millionaires, Picks Chicago Young Man, Bu United Press CHICAGO, Feb. 25.—Je/ssie Reed, Flo Ziegfeld’s mijlion-dollar manniquin, Is married again. Although regarded as a connisseur of millionaires, Jessie’s husband is William F. j Young, a copy reader with an advertising agency. Y'oung is 26 and his bride gave her age as 24. They were married Sunday by a justice of the peace at YVaukegan. Whirlwind Courtship Friends of the bridegroom said it was a whirlwind courtship: that Young met Jessie Saturday afternoon and purchased the engagement ring a few hours later. Young, however, said he met Jessie four years ago In a Long Island home. The Follies are in Milwaukee today without one of its most stunning chorus girls. Jessie said she did not think she”would join the show. She thinks maybe she will settle down to a placid domestic life. Young, quite flustered. is'not sure whethor Jessie will give up her stage carper. „ . ~ “She will decide #iat later, he said. Divorced Year Ago Just one year ago Jessie was divorced by her first husband, Dan Casswell, scion of a wealthy Cleveland family. They had been married a year. Recently rumors of her engagement to Russe Colt, eastern millionaire, were circulated. G. 0. P. JUNIORS TO MEET Club Will Hold “Pep” Campaign Meetmg Thursday. A mass meeting to stir enthusiasm for the 1924 campaign will be held Thursday by the Marion County Junior Republican Club at the Marlon Club, Bailey Fesler, chairman of arrangements committee, announced today. Frederick E. Schortemeier, secretary of the Republican State committee, will speak on "Why I am a Republican." William H. county prosecutor, will preside. D. A. la. Mar, president, will outline plans for the year. The club Includes both men and women. Mrs. Rosalind English Parsons is vice president and Gordon L. Shaw, secretary-treasurer.

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WORD OF DEATH RECEIVED Captain lining, Former Marion Man, Dies in New Mexico. By Times Special / MARION, Ind., Feb. 25.—Relatives here have received word of the death of Capt. Frank R. Loring at Albuquerque, N. M., where he had gone for- his health. While engaged in consri-uction work during the Waff? he received injuries in an explosion which resulted in his death. He was the foster son of the late Edward Wilcutts of this city and w r as a graduate of Purdue University. BOARD PREPARING ISSUE Park Commissioners Arranging to Borrow $560,000 for Kessler Bird. Legal advisors of the Park board were preparing a $560,000 bond issue today to cover cost of constructing Kessler Blvd. from Meridian St. west to Cooper Ave. and south the Crawfordsville road. The James E. McNarfiara Construction Company was awarded the contract Saturday on a bid of approximately $512,000. The board eliminated the bridle paths. The paving will be completed this summer.

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DECORATORS BUSY ON AUTO SHOW Annual Affair Will Open Next Monday Night, Decorators from the studio of Charles Read were busy today placing in position decorations fpr the thirteenth annual automobile show of the Indianapolis Auto Trade Association, which will open next Monday at the auto show building at the fairground. One hundred eighty thousand square feet of cloth, 9,600 square feet of netting and 400 gallons of paint were used in making the decorations. The rules of the association require that exhibits must be complete when the show opens. Mission Conference AiTanged The executive committee of the Reformed Church of the United States is making plans for the 1924 missionary conference to be held July 12-18 at Bethany Park. Many prominent church workers are on the program.

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