Indianapolis Times, Volume 36, Number 28, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 June 1924 — Page 8
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TRIBUTE IS PAID TO OLDEST AND LARGEST AT 1.0. Diplomas Given to 614 — Prof, Woodburn to Quit After 52 Years, By United Press BLOOMINGTON, Ind., June 11.— To six hundred and fourteen graduating students and to the professor who has been connected with the State University longer than any other man in its history, Indiana University today paid honor and bade farewell at the ninety-fifth annual commencement exercices. With his commencement address today to the class of li*24, Dr. James A. Woodburn, historian, ended his fifty-two years at the University as student and faculty member. Many hundreds of alumni who had gathered from all sections of the State and Nation heard the venerated head of the history department recall the landmarks of the institution’s history and saw the largest class ever gx-aduated awarded their degrees. Lauds Bryan Dr. Yilliam Lowe Bryan, who has beer, '/resident of the university for twei y'-two years, was one who received tribute in the address of Dr. Woodburn. The speaker told of Dr. Bryan’s beginning at the univei'sity as a teacher of mathematics and his rise at the age of 24 to the position of associate professor of philosophy, and later to the presidency of the university. “One of the most important events in the history of medical education in Indiana,” was Dr. Woodburn s characterization of the struggle Dr. Bryan made early in his presidency for a school of medicine here. “The struggle was successful and gradually the education of the doctors of Indiana was wi-ested from the proprietory and unregulated schools,” Dr. Woodburn said. The conti'ibutions made by Indiana were cited by Dr. Woodburn, who characterized the presidency of David Starr Jordan as "a landmark in the history of Indiana.” “Dr. Jordan found hard and fast set systems and in their place established curriculuins that developed the individual to his greatest powers,” Dr. Woodburn said. “He tore down old rules that repressed the student body. When he first came here he announced that in the future only two rules would regulate the students —first, that they would not set fire to the college buildings, and, second, that they would not shoot any members of the faculty.” Replete With Reminiscences Dr. Woodburn’s address was replete with reminiscences of the development of the university during more than half a century, and of the growth of facilities for handling the constantly increasing student body. ( The commencement exercises brought to a close the week of commencement festivities and the reunions of various classes of alumni. Mrs. Sanford Teter, Bloomington, was elected over three men candidates at the trustees’ election Tuesday. She is the first woman trustee in the history of the institution. SEASON’S CUT ENDS Fifteen Million Feet of Timbers to be Brought Into Edmonton. Bit Timrx Spprial EDMONTON, Alberta, June 11Fifteen million feet of timber, representing the season’s cut in the Pembina River districts, will shortly be brought to Edmonton for manufacturing into lumber.
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Gone, but Not Forgotten
Automobiles ’repox-ted stolen belong to: Carl Hillman, 362 E. Morris St., Hupmobile, from Pennsylvania and Ray Sts. Walter F. Jones, 242 N. Mount St., Ford, from Monument Place. Henry C. Churchmann, 1136 N. Meridian St., Willys-Knight, from 136 N .Delaware St. BACK HOME AGAIN Automobiles reported found by police belong to: Edward Bell, 1827 N. Talbott Ave., Overland, found at Canal and Parkway Blvd. C. Winfrey, 31 W. Thirteenth St., Packard, at Lafayette Pike and Meyers Rd. GLARKEFUNERAL IS HELD TUESDAY Aged Physician Dies in Pittsburgh—Burial Here, Funeral services for Dr. William B. Clarke, 76, for thirty years a resident of Indianapolis, who died in Pittsburgh, -were held Tuesday afternoon at Planner & Buchanan chapel. Burial was at Crown Hill. Dr. Clarke was at one time publisher of a medical journal in Ohio, and worked on a number of magazines and newspapers in various capacities. He was a member of Pittsburgh Typographical Union No. 7, for eight years secretary of the Indiana pfomeopathic Medical Society, and at one time vice president of the American Anti-Vaccination Society. A son, Clarence B. Clarke, of Cleveland, and a daughter,- Mrs. William Rhea Johnson of Overbrook, Pa., survive.
Hoosirer Briefs
W. H. Lapp, farmer near Anderson, no longer says: “Nice Kitty.” The kitty had adopted two small pole cats to mother. Charles Dillon, Logansport. is looking for the motorist who delib- j erately ran over his prize collie puprj Hazel 16, Lucile 11 and Ruth 6, j daughters of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Benefiel are sound sleepers. They ! did not hear the cyclone that struck Bedford and wcke up in the morning to find glass and wreckage on their beds. William O’Keefe and Arthur Moore in police court at Bedford on drunkenness charges, told the judge j they had taken an over dose of an Indianapolis physician’s prescription. Lebanon is particular about the kind of oil it uses on its streets. Two car loads were rejected. Means dusty streets for new oil can’t be obtained for awhile. Frank Smith told the original hard luck story at Blurfton. His wife and nine children ran away with another man. Took all his money; all his provisions and even di-ained the gasoline from his flivver. E. S. Walmer, merchant, paid for his food at jail. Greensburg had its morning sleep wrecked, when the burglar alarm at the Citizens National Bank began to ring. It took twm hours to stop it. John Starks of New Point was temporarily blinded, but otherwise unhurt, when lightning * struck a tree ten feet away from him. The tree was felled. Paul Cook of Columbus and Noble * Wagoner, Newcastle, will edit the Franklin, the W'eekly college paper of Franklin College next year. Power of Dollar “During t-he first two months of this year the purchasing power of the farmer's dollar has stood at 74, ' reports C. R. Arnold of Ohio State University. "Since 1913 the American farmer’s purchasing power has been above 100 for only five years.”
boys and make my garden. I feel fine and I tell others what the medicine has done for me. I think it is the best medicine in the world for women.” M~s. Thomas Grindle, Volga City, lowa. Can Do An/ Kind of Work Fouke, Arkansas. —“I had the ‘Flu’ and after that I had a pain in my side and was not able to do my work I was so weak. I found an advertisement in a paper and it told what Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound would do, and I took it. Now I can do any kind of work I want to. I fhink every family ought to keep it in the house all the time and I intend to do' so.”—Mrs. Dora Philyaw, R. R. No. 2, Fouke, Arkansas. Over 100,000 women have so far replied to our question, “Have you received benefit from taking Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound?’ 98 per cent of these replies are “Yes.” This shows that 98 out of every 100 women who take this medicine for the ailments for which it is recommended are benefited by it. This goes to prove that a medicine specialized for certain definite a cure all—can and does do good work. For sale by druggists everywhere. AdvertUement.
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BEGIN HERE TODAY Peter Newiiall, Augusta, 6a, flees to Alaska, after twin? told by Ivan Ushtnin. Russian violinist, he had drowned Paul Saricl.af. Ishmin's secretary. !sh min and Peter s wife, Dorothy, had urged him to flee to South America. He joins Big Chris Larson in response to a distress signal at sea, giving Larson his sea jacket.. Their launch hits rocks. Dorothy receives word that her hns band s -body, identified by his sea jaeket. is buried in Alaska. But Peter has been rescued by another ship. Injuries completely change his appearance, hiding his identity. Larson's body occupies the grave. Ishmin and Dorothy go to Alaska to re. turn Peters body to Georgia. They do not recognize Peter, who is chosen head guide. A storm carries their ship to sea, stranding them at the grave. Peter and Dorothy hunt. He carries her across a stream. NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY I w 'LT was only an incident of the I I and it disturbed her ! I that, as she walked on toward camp, she could not get it out of her mind. It did not please her that she could be moved, even vaguely and faintly, by this crude, rough man of the barrens. Yet, somehow, she had been caused to think of the lover of her girlhood. Memories, tender and dear, had been quickened to life. To Pete the moment had been of nothing less than glory. He, too, knew it was only an adventure of the trail, that it was but the image of a hopeless dream that must never —could never —come true; yet for an instant it had lifted him, as with wings, out of the valley of the shadow. CHAPTER X Pete Saves Ishmin v Dorothy found, to her great surprise, that the days of waiting passed rather swiftly. She slept long in the morning on the comfortable, rudely contrived grass mattress that Pete’ had made for her; she played cards with Ivan, and made many little adventurous excursions into the wild with one or both of the two white men. Ivan was consideration itself, always willing to beguile her with his marvelous music, wooing her with his of ardor, fascinating her in hours of talk with intricacies of his brilliant intellect and of his complex, marvelously attractive personality. she owed a great -leal to the
OUR BOARDING HOUSE—By AHERN
THE OLD HOME TOWN—By STANLEY
head guide, too. In particular lie watched out for her material com fort, superintending the preparation of her meals so that every cup of coffee, every succulent breast of ptarmigan was exactly to her taste, keeping her ever warm and dry, N filling her mattress every day with freshly cut grass and keeping the fire bright every morning in the camp stove for here to dress by. HE FOUND THE GIRL IN THE RUSSIAN’S ARMS It was not so easy to explain the instinctive comradeship she felt for him. Os course he was the one man of her own race in the entire company, and here—far from the cities of men—bonds of race were revealed as of surprising strength. From Pete’s point of view the days went by in a single flash between the curtains of night, and he dreaded to his heart’s depth the hour certain to come when the Warrior would roll in on the waves and carry Dorothy out of his life. His attitude toward Ivan was too complex ever to completely straighten out in his mind. In the first place he had deep and unfaltering genius from
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
the East. He was pleased and gratified by the man's attitude toward Dorothy; his own most chivalrous instincts seemed reflected In the Russian. Yet sometimes a sudden, white flame, strange to his sight and puzzling to hi* heart, mounted and paled in the thin, almost beautiful face; sometimes he was appalled and estranged by a spark in the almond eyes, a gesture of the white hands; and sometimes he caught, a fleeting expression on the classic counte nance that wakened, in his own heart, a sullen, almost a murderous rage. Once, on bringing fresh fuel to the little camp stove in Dorothy’s tent, he found the girl in the Russian's arms. She had just yielded to his lips, and she was convinced—at the instant that Pete appeared at the threshold —that in Ivan her destiny of happiness was secure. But she was instantly cold, inexplicably appalled, as she looked into Pete’s face. She eoul 1 not.have explained why. The man looked drawn, as in thw last stages of fatigue; but there was no conceivable excuse for her sense of shame, her strange drawing-in to herself and inability to emerge again into Ivan’s warmth. On leaving the tent Pete walked straight past the camp fire on to the hills. He was profoundly shaken and unnerved, not from amazement at what he had seen—he had realized that Ivan and Dorothy were virtually engaged—but at the narrow margin by which the girl had missed irrevocable disaster. It had not been by too wide a margin that he had restrained a mad, tragic impulse to leap into the tent and shatter the man’s lijte. He spent a . restless night after the incident, and his peace of mind had departed from him. For all that, this was his last dream on earth —the only shadow of happiness that he dared to hope so felt that by all conscience he must cut it short. His trust in himself was shattered, and there was nothing so: him now but td turn away from this camp where his love was and vanish among the desolate hills. His star would soon set, the tower of his only strength was tottering. Yet the hours passed, and he lay in his bunk, unable to reach up to this sacrifice of self. But if he had lost faith in himself, a higher, better faith had come to him in these years ir. the wild, and the basic prayer, the first and last cry of all mankind, came easily to his lips: “Oh, Lord, lead me not into temptation, and deliver me from evil!” Yet it was a higher wisdom that temptation should come to him, in an unexpected form, before the day that he saw break over the eastern
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FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS—By BLOSSER
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hills sloped down again to darkness. The party of five had made serious inroads in the small caribou he had brought to camp, and partly with the idea of procuring fresh meat, and partly because he wanted to be alone with his hitter thoughts, Pete announced his intention of penetrating the interior on a hunting expedition. Dorothy was lame from a stiff climb of the evening previous, so she declined his invitation to go. Ivan, however, looked up from his book with heightened interest. “I’m getting soft as mud from too much ease.” he said. “I believe I'll go with you this morning. I believe I can crack down one of those caribou with my pistol.” Pete stiffened slightly. “I don’t see how both of us can go, unless Mrs. Newhall wants to go, too,” he said quietly, so not to be overheard by the.two natives. “True enough. It had slipped my mind for a minute. We’ll take the natives with us—l think it would be a good plan to kill several caribou, if wo run into them, and try to cure them—in preparation for emergencies—and these men can help you carry the meat into camp. She’s safe enough by herself, f sn’t she?” "As safe as she could he anywhere in the world. None of the wild beasts of the region will come within miles of her, and there are no other humans." “I’ll stay and struggle with your book then, Ivan,” Dorothy said. Soon they filed away into the hills, Ivan leading with his pistol, then Pete, carrying his rifle, and the two Indians, unarmed for thenhunting knives, bringing up the rear. They deployed like a squad of advancing infantrymen as they neared the first alder thicket, ..the two Indians remaining at the extreme right and following a deeply worn bear trail, like the ruts of an old road, that conducted them easily through tft'e heavy barrier of brush; and Pete and Ivan seeking separate trails to the left. They were in file again when they reached the more or less open hillside, but because of greater skill at choosing the trail, the two natives were more than a hundred yards ahead of Ivan, and Pete was thirty yards farther in the rear. At that instant Peter caught the unmistakable thumping sound of running caribou, and turning, he had a brief glimpse of a barren doe in the brush thickets behind. The animal was better than two hundred yards distant when Pete glimpsed her again, running in a great arc up the hill. She made the poorest kind of a target as she leaped through the scattered clumps of brush, but eager
OUT OUR WAY—By WILLIAMS
to procure meat as near camp as possible and not to miss any chances, and perhaps slightly startled and out of hand by the animal's sudden appearance, Pete fired vainly at every opportunity. Whether or not he hit the animal at all he could not tell, for at the fourth shot she disappeared in the thicket almost opposite Ivan. The echo of the rifle report rolled, dimmed, and was still, and the men stood in those queer, fixed attitudes that almost invariably follow any excitement. Presently Ivan beckoned and pointed into the brush thicket beside him. “She is right here/’ he called. “Y'ou must have got her that last shot. I hear her thrashing around.” It seemed entirely probable that the deer had swept through the brush unseen and had fallen wounded but a few yards from Ivan. Pete started to grope for further shells; Ivan peered into the brush. It seemed to the head guide that, as he paused, he could hear faintly the rustle and stir in the brush that came so distinct to Ivan; and he was not greatly surprised to see the latter draw his pistol and begin to fire in evident excitement. He S.S.S. stops Rheumatism " iVT Y Rheumatism is all gone. I feel a wonderful glory again in the free motion I used to have when my days were younger. I can thank S. S. S. for / c^ose y°ur fft V*l ;y\ i eyes and i r j fhink that W'Mj I health, free U J motion and \ K / strength are / gone from you forever! _ It is not so. S. S. S. is waiting to halp you. When you increase the number of ydur red-blood-cells, the entire system undergoes a tremendous change. Everything depends on blood-strength. Blood which is imnus sufficient red-cells leads to a iong list of troubles. Rheumatism is one of them.” S. S. S. is the great blood-cleanser, bloodbuilder, system strengthener, and nerve invigorator. tS. S. S. is sold at all good drug stores in two sizes. The larger sire is more economical. ' C C Best olood Medicine
WEDNESDAY, J LINE 11, 1924
! supposed, of course, that the man j was putting the finishing touches to i the fallen caribou. No blame could I be laid on Pete that he did not call j a warn :,g Tre did not distinguish the real identity of the creature In tho thicket until it-was too late. The animal that suddenly bounded out of the thicket was a bear cub of that season, and it was squealing in mortal agony from the pistol I leqd. There was no danger in him; I he was less than knee height and ! was desperately seeking flight. But ; Pete knew, and the Indians, appalled on the hill above, knew, too, that a squealing cub means an enraged mother not far off. And in the wink of an eye th | great shaggy dam came roaring out i of the thicket like an avalanche—straight toward the hapless Russian Fear-ridden though she was, the she-bear could not seek flight when her dying cub cried for help. She charged with unspeakable ferocity. (Continued in Our Next Issue) iowjo" ! SET THIN French Specialist Tells How ta Lose Excess Fat Witliou* Exer cises, Habit Forming or Worthless Creams. “If you are 10 to 100 pounds overweight you can easily and safely lose all that fat,’ - says a French specialist. “For years I suffered with fifty pounds of excess fat. I was weak, short of breath and ‘all in.’ I eould not find anv clothes to_fit me, and I was thoroughly disgusted -wh life until I found out about SAN-GRI-NA. a marvelous discovery. I know that a great many fat men and women are going through these same troubles today. Ahd, for their benefit, I am glad to explain what I did to reduce and how they can easily and gradually lose a few pounds each week without any danger. Go to any good drug store and get a package of SAN-GRI-NA—(remember the name, and do not accept anything else, as nothing like this has ever before been offered to. the American public). W “SAN-GRI-NA, the formula of a French physician, has been used in Europe in private practice, where enormous prices have been paid for it.. Simply take two tablets before each melt, and watch your fat disappear. Once you have started to take SAN-GRI-NA, you should feel greater pep and energy. No more tired feeling. SAN-GRI-NA is guaranteed absolutely harmless, and positive to relieve you or your money is refunded. Remember that is all I did to get rid of 50 poun3s of unhealthy, ugly rolls of fat. I have not regained one pound since I stopped using SAN-GRI-NA. I look and feel years yottnger, and can sincerely recommend it to any fat man or woman.” SANrGRI-NA can be had at Haag Drug Cos., Hook’s Dependable Drug Stores, or Goldsmith Bros.—Advertisement.
