Indianapolis Times, Volume 36, Number 11, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 May 1924 — Page 8
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JAPS MAY LEAVE POST VACANT AS PROM TO BAN Washington Hears Hanihari Will Resign and No One Will Be Appointed, Times Washington Bureau. 1322 New York Ave. WASHINGTON, May 23.—1 t is altogether likely that Japan, as a protest against the exclusion of her nationals, will not name an ambassador to the United States to succeed Masanao Hanihara, soon to withdraw, but will be represented here by a charge d’affaires. That such a procedure will be followed until some way is found to alleviate the sting of Japan's resentment, is intimated in well-informed Japanese circles here. Ambassador Hanihara will probably returned to Japan as soon as he can complete the necessary arrangements following definite disposal by President Coolidge of the immigration bill now on his desk. The President has until May 29 to sign or veto the measure, when, if he does neither, it automatically becomes law. May Go to The Hague News from Toklo indicates Japan will protest the' law shortly after it goes into effect, asking The Hague or the League of Nations to take cognizance. This would be done not in the hope of altering the exclusion law. for the Japanese admit every nation is supreme when it comes to immigration. The charge will be made, however, that formal treaty obligations have been nullified by a friendly government without consulting Japan and Japan desires to have some international tribunal say so. Japan hopes in this way to save her dignity which, she feels, has been seriously ruffled. Will Employ Linguist Japanese newspapers, containing cabled accounts of doing in Washington at the time of Hanihara’s letter to Secretary Hughes, have now reached Washington. They admit the w r ords “grave consequences.” used by the ambassador to describe the probable result of the passage of the exclusion bill, when translated into Japanese, do not convey their real significance. Their use is described as a blunder and to prevent similar launders in future, it is said, “a literary advisor capable of delineating the finest shades of the meaning of English words” will be employed at the Washington embassy.
SMITH IS LISTED WET; HERES WHY New York Law, to Which He Fixed Signature, Is Reason, Times Washington Bureau, 1322 yew York Are. WASHINGTON, May 23.—June 1. 1923, Governor Alfred E. Smith at Albany, N. Y., signed an act of the Legislature and made it a law. June 2, 1923 Wayne B. Wheeler, head of the Anti-Saloon League, announced that Smith’s action would stir the Nation as it was stirred by the shot fired on Ft. Sumter. A year has elapsed a)nd it scarcely can be said that the Nation has been stirred as it was in ’6l, but one certain result has come to pass. Governor A1 Smith is known from his home town to San Diego as a “wet.” The bill which did this for Smith was drafted by a legislator named Cuvillier and its effect was the repeal of New York's State enforcement law. passed earlier i!n keeping with the Federal Volstead act. For twenty-nine day* Smith had kept it on his desk while a storm raged about him. The wet forces and the drvs made it a bitter issue, each
VETERAN JUDGE GIVES FACTS IN HIS CASE
Hon. A. P. Tarbox Tells How He Overcame Stomach Trouble of Long Standing by Taking Tanlac. Honorable A. P. Tarbox. distinguished lawyer and judge, residing at 217 West 23rd St-, University Place, Neb., lends his name to further the cause of Tanlac, the famous treatment that has proved of such great benefit to him. "If anybody knows what Tanlac will do." recently said Judge Tarbox, ‘‘it is me, for the medicine has kept me on my feet and able to work for the past two years.” Judge Tarbox has been a member of the bar since early manhood and has practiced law in Illinois, Nebraska and Oaklahoma for more than a half century. He is a charter member of Farragut Post, Lincoln G. A. R.. and also prominent in fraternal order circles. Speaking further of his experience with Tanlac, Judge Tarbox said: ‘‘Stomach trouble had been the bane of my existence even before tne Civil War. Indigestion such as I had is abcut the worst enemy a person could have, and it kept getting worse all the time. “I simply could not have kept going the past two years if k had not been for Tanlac. It made my stomach sound and wholesome.
Rent a Room Persons w T ho will rent rooms to Speedway race visitors should fill out and mall this blank immediately. Convention Bureau, Indianapolis Chamber of dommerce, 28 S. Meridian St., Indianapolis, Ind. 1 will be glad to help house visitors to the Speedway race, and you may list my room(s) as per the information given below. Name Phone Address Number of single rooms Number of double rooms Price per person per night $ Note: Telephone reports on tnis subject cannot be handled by the convention bureau Names and addresses should be printed to avoid mistakes
side drawing support from all parts of the country. When, June 1. Smith affixed his signature it was national news. All America witnessed his actiajn through the columns of the newspapers. For Wines and Beer Previously he was known to regard the Volstead act as illiberal. He had ••voiced his belief in the propriety of using light wines and beer and his desire that the national prohibition art be modified to permit this. But he had not attracted attention outside the State. The pressure on Smith to pe.suade him to veto the Cuvillier bill was terrific. Few in New York believed that his personal political interests would be served by signing it. On the contrary. it was generally regarded as a fatal step from the standpoint of politics. Many of Smith’s enemies admit that he displayed courage when he took the step. Rebukes Authorities The Governor’s action, as explained in his message to the legis lature, was based on the theory that the Volstead act, being a Federal statute, its enforcement was a Fed eral function and called for no State law. He took occasion to rebuke the Federal authorities for their failure to function, especially because of rum running across the border from Canada and past the Federal flotilla on the Atlantic outside New York. He warned all peace officers in the State, however, that they were still bound to enforce the Federal law, the only difference being that cases under it would be tryable in the Federal courts. He insisted that the repeal of the State law (the Mul-lin-Gage law) had not made legal anything that was illegal theretofore. In reply the dry forces and a majority of the newspapers argued that, tegardless of his reasons for doing it, Smith in signing the repeal seriously damaged liquor law enforcement in New York State. Which is how New York’s candidate for President got his reputation on this particular issue. BOTTLES FLY FROM CAR Police Chase Five Men In Alleged Bread and .Milk Thefts. It rained milk and whisky when the police emergency squad was chasing an auto in the vicinity of River Ave. and Ray St. early today, officers say. Police were called on a report that five men in an auto were stealing milk and bread from boxes in front of grocery stores. Occupants threw bottles of milk and whisky out of the car as they fled, police say. The machine was overhauled and the five men charged with petit larceny and liquor law violations. They gave their names a Clarence Wilson, 517 W. McCarty St.; Martin Bryan, 2300 S. Meridian St.; Harry Bebley, 11 Wisconsin St.: George Costello, 1015 Maple St., and Richard Pypon, 2311 S. Senate Ave.
TAUg OX
did away with all signs of indigestion and built me up in a way I had thought impossible. "In fact. Tanlac lias brought me health, strength and happiness when I was sick and suffering, so I have every reason to give it my unqualified endorsement and praise.’ Tanlac is for sale by all good druggists. Accept no substitute. Over 40 million bottles sold. Tanlac Vegetable Pills for consti* pation made and recommended by the manufacturers of Tanlac.—Adv.
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BEGIN HIKE TODAY The marriage between Dolly and Nigel Bretherton proves unhappy When war is declared, Nigel is glad to enlist. He leaves Dolly under the care of Mary Fumival. Nigel is killed and Dolly marries an old sweetheart and sails with him for America. When Nigel's brother. David, calls to see Nigel's widow. Mary is ashamed to tel! him of Dolly's marriage. David mistakes Mary for Nigel's wife and takes her to live with tis aunt at Bed Grange. Mary is happy in her new home until Monty Fisher exposes her to David. Mary disappears. David asks Monty to help him ttnd her. Monty is sorry for Mary and tries to help David locate her. NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY UT Mary was no weakling. After the first moment of t.. anguish she faced the future resolutely. She had managed to keep herself before. Well, she would do it again. She only possible thing was to shut out the past, bolt and bar the door of her heart against memofy, and be prepared for whatever might come. She spent the first day tramping from office to office in search of 1 work, but the result was discouraging. In spite of the war and the consequent shortness of men, there seemed no place for her. Many times her name and address were taken. “We will let you know if we hear of anything.” The same old answer, the same old excuse with which she had so often been put off befoi-e! She got back to her room at night tired and dispirited. The day had seemed endless. Her feet ached with tramping the pavements. Surely it was only in a dream that she had ever walked the velvety lawns of the Red Grange and driven with David! She had kept her thoughts resolutely from him so far. but now, alone and wearied, the memory of him came surging back to her. How he must hate her now if he knew everything! And, of course, he did know —Monty Fisher would have to,ld him. How he must hate her! She spread her arms on the little round table, and laid her head on them. The Red Grange! It sounded to
OUR BOARDING HOUSE—By AHERN
THE OLD HOME TOWN—Bv STANLEY
her very much as the name Fairyland must to a child—as something wonderful and unreal, something of which one only hears aud never dares hoep to see. And yet once she had been there. Once, for a few short days, she had had her peep at paradise. Nothing could take that from her. She would always have the memory to hug to her heart. It was on the second day that she met Dora Fisher, and she came back choking and afraid. Something in the other girl’s insolent beauty had set Are to the smoldering jealousy in her heart. David would marry Dora! In spite of all he had said, she believed that he would. Dora would go back to the Red Grange as a happy wife, whilst she—always the world had turned a cold shoulder to her—always her place had been in the shadows. She hardly gave a serious thought to Dora’s last words. SHo did not really believe that David was thinking of punishing her for what she had done. And .after all, what had she done? Deceived him —yes. But he was in no way the loser for it. unless one counted the few happy drives she had take nwlth him, the few nights she had spent under his roof, the few meals she had taken at his table. If she had been the adventuress they would all think her, she would not have been satisfied with that. She would have wanted money and clothes, and perhaps jewels. The tears rushed to her eyes as she thought of Miss Varney. The old lady had been so good to her, had been genuinely fond of her, she was sure- Would she, too, now hate her, as David assuredly would? 'She tried to eat the tea the landlady brought for her, but the thick slives of bread and butter and the cheap tin tray, with no dainty linen cloth to hide Its ugliness, brought a lump to her throat. It was absurd, so she tried to argue. She rose resolutely from the table. She felt that she would go mad if
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
she stayed any longer In this room With its stuffiness and ugliness. She took her hat and went out. CHAPTER LVI The Wheel of Fate The streets were dark and urdn teresting, but there, at least, she could breathe and move. No four walls hemmed her in. The horrible feeling of being in prison vanished. A batch of soldiers swung past her in the road singing merrily. Their boots were thick with dust. They looked tired, but their spirits were high. She thought of Nigel. Once he had been one of them —he who was now sleeping almost forgotten somewhere in France. MARY CAUGHT HER BREATH. “YOU?” SHE SAID. Surely she must have loved him in another lifetime. Surely with his death she had closed one book of her life and begun another. As she turned a corner a young man coming quickly in the opposite direction ran against her. He apologized, raising his hat. They were close to a street lamp, and by its subdued light each saw the other's face. Mary caught her breath. “You?” she said. Young Evans colored to the roots of his hair. For a moment he could only stare at her. Then he put out his hand. “I was beginning to think we should never meet again.” He has been thinking of Mary a moment since; he had been thinking of her ever since ,the morning, when he had been called into Monty Fisher's office, and been questioned
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FRECKLES AND TITS FRIENDS—By BLOSSEE
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about her. And now here she was; now they were face to face again. He held her hand in a glad clasp. His heart was thumping wildly. He moke out again, stammering a .ittle. “I never thought we should meet any more. lam so glad to see you.” Mary did not know what to say. She had liked him during their brief acquaintance; he had been kind to her. But there was something now in the expression of his eyes, the tone of his voice, that bewildered her. She drew her hand away nervously. “The world is such a small place, isn’t it? It’s wonderful how people do knock up against each other.” She would have turned and left him had It been possible, but she knew it would be unkind and discourteous. Evans rose to the occasion. “Will you come somewhere and have a cup of coffee with me? I’ve been working late at the office—” He broke off. remembering that Fisher’s last words to him had been about this girl. He shook the memory aside; he did not want to remember it now. Mary assented; she was really glad to have met a friend. She followed him into a restaurant close by. Evans ordered coffee and some cakes. “I haven't had my tea yet,” he said, meeting her eyes. “I am hungry, if you are not.” He leaned a little closer to her. “And how are you after all this long time?” he asked. It really did seem a long time since they had met, though in reality it was but two or three weeks. His interested eyes realized that she looked pale and unhappy. He longed to ask her what was the truth of all this mystery; why David Bretherton was searching for her so eagerly; what she was to him. But a feeling of jealousy kept him back. Bretherton was rich —whilst he— Os course she* would never look at him! He was only a poor clerk. Mary answered, smiling faintly, that she was quite well. She did not want to talk about herself. She tried to turn the conversation into other channels. She questioned him about his work: she talked about the w r ar. She talked feverishly about every other subject un ler the sun. and yet —after all, Evanr’ conversation came hack to herself. “And where are you living now? Not in the same flat?” “Oh, no; I left it a long while ago.” It seemed a long while—though she knew it was but a few weeks.
OUT OUR WAY—By WILLIAMS
"But you are still living in London?” “Oh, yes!” He colored a little at her evasive reply. “Yon don't want me to know where.” She looked distressed. “Oh, please don't think me unkind! It isn't that; but—but I haven’t time for friends. I know you think it horrid of me—especially when you were so good to me.” "I only think what is nice about you.” Ho spoke the words with clumsy sincerity. He kept his eyes on his plate. His heart was pounding under his office coat. He would have given anything had he dared to put out his hand and lay It over her own; but something restrained him. She was not for him—this gill with the sad face and sweet eyes; he knew that, even while he knew, too, that he loved her. There was a little silence. Suddenly he looked up. “If you spoke quite honestly, you would say that you do not wish to see me again,” he said. Mary colored. “I should not! I have so few friends; but you don't understand.” He stirred his coffee vigorously. "Perhaps I understand better than you think,” he said at last slowly. “Perhaps—” He broke off. “Some one was asking me about you today,” he added .after a moment. "About me?” “Yes. Mr. David Bretherton.” He heard the little catch in her breath; saw the way her hands clasped each other convulsively. "David Bretherton? How —how do you know him?” "He is a great, friend of Mr. Fisher’s. I am in Mr. Fisher's office.” “Oh!” There was something afraid in the little ejaculation. “How did FOR SKINjrORTURES Zemo, the Clean, Antiseptic Liquid, Just What Tou Need Don’t worry about Eczema or other skin troubles. You can have a clear, healthy skin by using Zemo obtained at any drug store for 35c, or extra large bottle at SI.OO. Zemo generally removes Pimples, Blackheads, Blotches, Eczema and Ringworm and makes the skin clear and healthy. Zemo is a clean, penetrating, antiseptic liquid. It is easily applied and costs a mere triflfle for each application. It is always dependable. Zemo Soap, 20c—Zemo Ointment, 50c.— Advertisement,
FRIDAY, MAY 23, 1924
he know you knew me? "What did he ask you?” “He is looking for you everywhere; he hoped I could help him find you.'* Mary did not answer. She was remembering what Dora Fished had said —that Dayid was furious —that he would never forgive her —that he meant to see that she was punished for her deception. She remembered, too, the story Miss Varney had told her of the Gray Lady at the Red Grange. David was a Bretherton. (Continued in Our Next Issue) Now We Know Why ( People Have Burning Feet All in the Joints, Says Maine Doctor “What fools we mortals be.” All these years we have been trying to help thousands of footsore people by bathing and powdering the skin when all the time the real trouble Is in the bones, ligaments and cartilage— Or, to he short, in the joints. There are 26 bones in the foot covered with cartilage and connected with ligaments and they have a tremendous amount of work to do. The slightest strain on one little ligament from being “on the feet” too much Inflames the whole foot, causing soreness and burning, aching and general misery. “All this can be quickly proved.” says a prominent Maine doctor whose name is known the world over. Just try a remedy that is compounded for joint troubles only—such as Joint-Ease, which every druggist carries, and see how quickly your sore, tired, inflamed and tortured feet will get well and strong and sturdy again. a Forget your powdering and ing and other makeshifts for just a few days and get rid of all foot misery by using Joint-Ease. It’s an active emolient that you rub on with your fingers for about a minute and it soaks right in through skin and flesh away down to the joints—the real seat of all troubles. And remember when Joint-Ease gets in all foot agony gets out — quick—A tube for 60 cents—Every drug store. Hook Drug Cos. sells lo_s of Joint* Ease.—Advertisement.
