Indianapolis Times, Volume 36, Number 32, Indianapolis, Marion County, 16 June 1924 — Page 8

8

C. OF C. GIVES OUT FIRST TO SIGN UP FOR EXPOSPACE Fifty Concerns Assigned Space—Officials Elated Over Outlook, Karnes of the first fifty Indianapolis industrial concerns to take exhibit space for the second industrial exposition, to be held Oct. 4 to 11, undef the auspices of the Indianapolis Chamber of Commerce, in the new exposition building at the State fairground. were made public today by Irwin R. Brown, chairman of the space committee. "This means that Indianapolis manufacturing concerns are behind the exposition with an interest and enthusiasm that assures the complete success of this big civic project,” declared Mr. Brown when he received notice of the first week’s canvas of manufacturers. “We are making progress far in excess of the first exposition. The manufacturers who had a part in that recognize the importance and value to the entire city, and the space committee is highly pleased with the report for this last week.” The first fifty exhibitors and the exhibit spaces taken by them are as follows: International Machine Tool Company, Universal Brass Works, United States Corregated Fibre Box Company, Oval & Foster. Uzum • Soap Company, Central Rubber and Supply Company, Hugh J. Baker & Cos., Robbins Body Corporation, Atlas Sand & Gravel Company, Real Silk Hosiery Mills, Indianapolis Star, Electric Machine Company, R. W. Durham,Edward R. Hodges Company, Dilling & Cos., Harry B. Mahan Company. Indianapolis News, Indianapolis Furniture Manufacturers. Taggart Baking Company, Lauck Manufacturing Company. Yunker Bottling Works, Lewis Meier & Cos.. Prest-o-Lite Company. Indianapolis Varnish Company, National Casket Company, Service Spring Company, Indianapolis Brush and Broom Manufacturing Company, Patterson Shade Cloth Company, Link-Belt Company, National Malleable and Steel Castings Company. Chandler & Taylor, Robert H. Hassler Inc., Tarpenning-La Follette Company, Kingan & Cos., American Nut Company, Polk Sanitary Milk Company, Lyman Brothers, American High Speed Chain Company, Vonnegut Machinery Company, Nichols Candy Company, Indianapolis Wire Bound Box Company. W. H. Bass Photo Company. ■ Standard Nut Margarine, Insley Manufacturing Company, Marschke Manufacturing Company, The A. Burdsal Company. Enquirer Printing Company, Central States Bridge Company, The Fishback Company and Indiana Oxygen Company.

Gene, but Not Forgotten

Automobiles reported stolen belong to: ' George Muleon. 150 IV. Washington St., Oakland Coupe, from Riverride Park. Dale W. Fahler. 135 Ninth St., Beech Grove. Ind., Ford, from Maryland and Meridian Sts. Miss Mildred Hurley, 3102 Northwestern Ave.. Ford, from Illinois and Maryland Sts. BACK HOME AGAIN Automobiles reported found by police belong to: H. H. Morris. Claypool Hotel, Ferd Sedan, found at 131 X. Traub Ave. Chevrolet Sedan, bearing Ohio license 839-295, stolen in Cincinnati, Ohio, was taken in capture of Ray Starncr, 318 E. McCarty St. Anderson Man Killed Bti Times Speeial \ ANDERSON, Ind., .Tune 16. George Humpke, 51, was killed and three others were hurt Sunday when an automobile which Humpke was driving skidded in loose gravel and struck a telepgraph pole.

ADVICE TO JUNE GRADUATES Young Executive Better , Paid Than Profession MAN IN BUSINESS SHOULD ASK FOR HARDEST JOB SHOULD KNOW VALUE OF STOCK

By JOHN C. WAHL President Wahl Pen Company ’’ r~;riß first factor in the suc- | j I cess of any young man * I starting out in life is that he know what he wants and have a definite object before him in planning for a career. He should be reasonable and practical in his but should want something and know what he wants. To a young man who is interested in supplying the people of this world with the necessities and of life there is no field he will find more congenial or more remunerative than manufacturing. To be successful beyond the average he should have, in my opinion, first, a judgment of— values, second, a capacity for hard work. He should first ally himself with some prosperous, successful, going concern. He may have a great idea, but if he starts out for himself he lacks both experience and capital. Working for some one else, he gains the experience and when he has demonstrated his ability, he can command the capital. As he goes up the ladder he should always apply for a job a little bit harder than what he thinks he can qualify for. If it is a hard job he is compelled to work harder and in that way learns more. To obtain a judgment of values be must be in close contact

Hoosier Briefs

| r r' OKOMO police got the shock I K of their lives when Frank L Virant, Aurora, 111., appeared in city court with only one leg. When arrested he had two. Explanation: Frank removed his “pe£” leg to gain the sympathy of the judge. He got it. Jerry Mahoney, Anderson, likes to coast on his bicycle. He coasted in front of an automobile. He's in a hospital with a crushed arm and shoulder. Pennsylvania Railroad officials feared William Hurrtsinger and Ed Mills, Elwood crossing watchmen, couldn't see •well enough and gave them spectacles. mAY DILGARD, farmer near Auburn, was demonstrating anew milking machine. "Bossie” wasn’t favorably impressed. Dilgard is confined to his home. Lillian. 11, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Claude Wheeler of Patoka, fell when a swing broke and broke both arms. On the eve of her wedding, Miss Edith Glendening, daughter of Bluffton pastor, had to go to the hospital to be on for appendicitis. A Grant County farmer, watching the mowing of grass on the courthouse lawn at Muncie, asked William Guthrie, custodian, if he could get a permit to permit him to place sheep on the lawn. Her husband only bought her two dresses in five years, so Thelma E. Hersley, Grecnbrug, is suing for divorce. Noble Davis, Bedford business man, it is said, vowed he'd never drive a flivver. That was before two bandits held him up near Spencer and took away his big new sedan. The bandits left him their flivver. mAMES PORTER. Bluffton poolroom proprietor, was on a ladder washing windows when he was called away to wait on a customer. On returning he walked under the ladder. Looking up he saw a black cat on top. Porter nearly had a nervous breakdown when he remembered it was Friday, the 13th. ~ Marion was the scene of a mighty crash when two freight cars loaded with eggs were wrecked in the yards. John Cosgaree. South Bend, says his wife told him she would rather drink herself to death than to live with him. She’s drinking a lot, he further contends, in a suit for divorce. Mrs. Minnie Walters. Columbus, refused to wash her sac *nd hands in the morning. Her husband, Isaac, ha,s filed juit for divorce. PLAN FOR 400 STUDENTS Registration for Butler Sujnmer School to Open Monday. Registration for Butler’s summer session begins Monday. An enrollment of 400 is expected. Faculty members and courses offered: W. O Morrow, biblical history and literature: R. C. Freisner, botany: G. H. Shadinger, chemistry; J. W. Putman, economics; Andrew Leiton, Donald DuShane, and Cecil C. Carson, education; Allegra Stewart and Gretch en Scotten, English; M. D. Baumgartner, German; P. L. Haworth, history and political science; H. M. Gelston, Latin: E. N. Johnson, mathematics and astronomy: H. O. Page, physical education; R. V. Pritchard, physics; Martha May Kincaid, romance languages; H. E. Jensen, sociology; H. L. Bruner, zoology. UNCLE DOESN’T SWEAR Why Should General Dawes, .Asks Seymour Pastor. Bu Times Special SEYMOUR, Ind., June 16.—Because he was former pastor to W. W. Mills of Marietta, Ohio, an uncle of Charles G. Dawes, Republican vice presidential candidate, the Rev. E. E.j Fishback. pastor here of the Trinity M. E. Church, says the general cannot be a profane man and.-accepts the story that “Hell'n Maria” are ujst the names of two girls.

with his subject and well informed of everything concerning It. Sometimes in business a man has to act very quickly and, if he hasn’t good judgment of values, he may make a r failure. The man who succeeds is the man who knows a little more about his subject or his hne than the other fellow and who has the best judgment of values. If he enters the manufacturing business, learns one trade, and is content to remain a bench hand, his pay is fixed by the pay of that trade. But if he gets a working knowledge of all the important processes in the business, if he knows something about the market for the product** if he has fairly good knowledge of how it is advertised and sold, his superiors will soon find it out and hd will be advanced as rapidly as he is ready to gd forward. As to financial rewards, I would say that the rising young executive in a manufacturing concern was better paid than the professional man of the same age, and will continue to be better paid as long as he continues to rise. As to pjrsonal satisfaction, it seems to me that to bring comfort, convenience or ease into people's lives should be as worthy and bring as much pleasure as to heal their wounds or settle their legal difficulties. Next—Retailing.

m — .... -j W BV bJoVE ROSTER m'IADW mocilagE y; fj MoO pip UoT IIEAR OF -r Pooß e\| lkWEk i-r 10) j tc, T FR\EkiD'9 WARV/EIOU9 y -~-~v I HESIH "TARGET -flUkl A A MUCILAGE / &C&V I -fUA'T\ ALL vJ,LD GET OF' MOD FOR STAMPS, E44V/ELOPEG , DDPTfJ SHcrT*3 - J G UaRDG OkJ A L AklD C3TICWERS, 1H AT COMES cm iWE LL TO p TURTLE Ikl PEPPERMikp CLOV/E, _, . P lo LgET OVJ6 S I CAkITGgE \T £ WuJTeRGREEkI, Ikl FACT co.min 9 ' DE |1 FOR A STUFFED F 1 ~ mSTso Id Pi ORGAh\I-2\klG A COMPAQ , r/u , \ L ' kc - A J | AklD \F VOLI VJIEVA I CAkl 1 MORE ' / If

AS the TELEGRAPH OPERATOrL WAS LOCK/NC, k THE NIGHT AN IMPORTANT MESSAGE OVER. THE WIRE-^

CThe^-LAND^OF df Edison JlaYslicdh P.ele<Lsed by NEA SeiVice, Inc, '

BEGIN HER ft TODAY Peter N’evvhall, August;). Ga , fie to Alaska, after being told bv Iv i ishmin, Russian violinist. tie had drowned Paul Sarirhef, ishmin s secretary. Ishmin and Peters 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. Larson s body is buried as N'ewhall s. Peter, rescued, finds injuries have completely changed his appearance. Dorothy and Ishmin go to Alaska to return Peter's body. They do no*, rngognize Peter, who is chosen head guide. A storm strands them at the grave. They hold a seance with one of the guides as medium. The message: “Change name.” Dorothy believes to be front Peter telling her to accept Ishmin s* marriage proposal. Ishmin goes lor supplies. Dorothy learns Peter is an exile. NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY mT WAS the same with her, too. If she had to do it over again she would never barter away her birthright for a mess of pottage. She had had all possible opportunities for happiness, but together she and Peter had wasted them a;nd no matter what she tried to make herself believe, no matter what contentment she would ultimately find in Ivan’s arms, they could never come again. Tears flooded her eyes. She dropped down farther on to her bunk. The fire in the camp stove bfirned down to coals. She saw Peter knock out the ashes from his pipe—lightly, so as not to disturb her—and for an instant he stood, perfectly motionless, at her threshold. A faint, pale glow through the air draft in the front of the stove showed him dimly, and something in the cast of the homely face, th£ half-obscured, dim, sober curl of his lips, suggested a tenderness that she had never, even in their Inosmt exalted moments, seen in the face of the magnificent man and genius to whpm today she had given her promise. She had seen ardor, truly, longing and desire that bewildered her by its savage intensity; but she had never found real tenderness, innate instinctive chivalry. “Good night, Pete,” she told him simply. “Good night, Mrs. Newhall.” His answer came soft and moving from the darkened threshold. “Sleep good.”

OUR BOARDING HOUSE—By AHERN

THE OLD HOME TOWN—By STANLEY

He meant that she need not be afraid of the dark. Though he himself stayed in the dugout, this humble man would be on guard through the long, empty hours. CHAPTER XTV Peter Injured This camp was home, but in Dorothy's mind it was a very and desolate place when both Ivan and Pete were absent. So when Pete started to his hunting on the afternoon of the second day Dorothy expressed a wish to accompany him. The man's delight knew no bounds a:nd soon fliey were tramping side by side over the tundra. It was not the kind of day that one ordinarily chooses for a walk abroad. The clouds were sullen rfnd gray, low-hung so that the white peaks of the divide were obscured, and the seas were gray in their shadow; a brisk inshore wind blustered at them as they climbed the ridge, chilling them, threatening them with the travail of the winter that would soon strike down. Once they saw a black fox whose expensive fur was already long and dense in preparation for winter; and Dorothy found him even more to be admired here in his native setting —as he raced across a patch of oldsnow and shimmered in living beauty—than a neckpiece in a fashionable fur shop in her native city. On the high, windy ridges and just below the long, white sweep of the main range they flushed up a small herd of caribou. They were out of rifle range before ever Pete got sight of them, far across the gulch, and it was att?iost incredible to Dorothy how quickly they disappeared. “Too bad we didn’t see them in time,” Pete commented. "We're going J;o need lots of dry meat for the trip out in the dory—and for my winter supply. And, by George, we might get them yet ” “Chase them down?” the girl asked. "With an airship, yes! That’s a blind canyon they are running up, and it’s an old caribou trick to come swinging back. Mrs. Newhall, if you

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

want to be in at the death, you 11 have to travel quick " “Go on. If 1 can’t keep up, I’ll wait for you.” So they started at a fast pace down the steep slope of the ridge with the idea of crossing into the valley and meeting the herd as it swept back. Almost at once Dorothy saw ,hat she could not keep pace. Pete was traveling down hill in long, swift steps. From where Dorothy stood she saw that the man was disconcerted. The gully was' evidently almost an abrupt precipice, too steep to descend easily, and if he should lower himself down without mishap, the time required to climb the opposite precipice would make him too late to intercept the returning herd, lie hesitated but an instant, then turned rapidly up the edge of the gully, seeking an easier place to cross. THE FRAGILE CRUST BROKE BENEATH HIS WEIGHT. He soon reached a bank of old snow stretching "completely across—apparently a thick crust such as often endures in these latitudes from one year to another over the cold, deep gullies. He turned to lau 7h back at the girl, waved his arm gajfcy—a yivid, cheering picture that the stress of civilization not soon wipe from her memory—then started to cross. Her first impulse was to shout a warning. Did he not know that often such snowbanks melt from the-bottom until they were merely fragile crusts? Her instinct was to stop him at no matter what co*,t of her dignity and caste-pride; to run after mm, crying; to order him back; to stretch her arms to him. Her fear was so great that it par-

Y —: —• " ' S* / N /" ! Px /tft haodaN /m’VAH-MVAH-VA-aA \ I OOkiT HAFTA GO I ( FOLLERtN’ OG> j 'wi-TGO HOME PPP // BACK HOME! VOU \ 1M COMIM* -XnHEGOT MW/M DOsirOWMTHiS ROAD! BACv< THERE \ , LtKE X GOT a Right Tgo l 1 —mUH ware x Feel life. J p<pwPv —pJpPd Widest(. TmU DRAWBACK. * bv NF.A Sen-ire, Inr & n

FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS—By BLOSSER

( DON'T THAT SOUND V TEAM- Do \T T] • JUST LIKE A SOME MOPF j Ilf HKr7 -’f

took of the nature of actual premonition. Vet he knew what he was doing. This was his home land; and if he took risks they were on his own head. It was not for her to show such interest in him, a guide. • It was folly, at best.' The man knew what he was doing. He was advancing with some degree of cau tion at least-one foot placed gingerly before he stepped. Surely if he let his zeal for hunting—always a passion with the Anglo-Saxon—-carry him into danger, it was no cause for her to lose her cool poise on which she prided herself. Likely it was only a silly trick of the imagination. Yet the shadow that had crossed and darkened her had been that of a predestined event. Her inner warning had beer, true; and with shameful falsehood to herself she had disregarded it. She had watched breathlessly. ad suddenly she uttered a strange, small sound that the wind scattered into the vaseness. The elemental powers had been in ambush, just as Peter had said; and he had fallen into their trap. When he was half way across, the fragile crust broke beneath his weight, and he dropped through as when the trap is sprung on the gallows. ■ 1 CHAPTER XV Dorothy Disturbed To Dorothy were left the hills and the sky, the steep crags and the alder thickets, many-colored by the whims of the frost. That Istrange mood of utter loneliness that she remembered from many a tragic dream settled upon her, weighing her down, seemingly about to kill her with its burden upon her heart, and with It a sense of absolute futility jand helplessness. There was no special sense of terror, because the loneliness was itself terror in its last degree, and it pervaded all her being. She was all alone, lost as in a dream. She stood a solitary figure in an uninhabited waste; the empty barrens stretching down to the barren -sea; the hills, gray with dying herbage, rolling on and losing themselves at last behind the curtains of the clouds; the gray, forbidding crags piled up In endless grim heaps about her. It was a Jonely, utterly cheerless vista of dead sky and dead world, and the blast of the wind was too unvarying and monotonous to detsroy the effect of silence. She was scarcely conscious of her own life as she stared down at the yawning hole in the snow crust through which Pete had fallen. Her thoughts were those of half-dejjrium —abstract terror, queer erratic fancies, that were darkened and sha-

OUT OUR WAY—By WILLIAMS

dowed with a sudden, secret knowledge of thei dread ineanUig of life. She had known security—the last dream, the dearest blessing in all the uncertain trails of life—but it had departed, and now she was exposed to the punishment of Destiny. Os 'course, Pete was dead. Such chasms were of fearful depth. The dujl red coloring paled slowly in her face, and she swayed as if about to drop down. Yet she must not lose consciousness. It was part of the grim code of this grim land to fight to the last breath; such was part of the obligation of all living things. Pete himself had made that plain. She began to climb down the hill, stumbling, sliding in the loose earth, fighting through the alder thickets. Her delicate skin was scratched and torn; her hands bled from grasping the sharp roeksi Soon she reached the brink of the chasm. One glance showed it to be more than sixty feet in depth—at the point she encountered it first—iand a small stream flowed betwen great boulders at the bottom. Here the banks were covered with a heavy, impassable growth of alders. She followed down the brink a short distance.' then began to work her way down- into the gully itself. Half-sliding, half-running, in imminent danger of breaking her bones on the rock at the bottom, she made her way to the stream bed. fought on ap toward the place where Pete<lfiad fallen. The banks were too sheer to find a foothold, so she walked In the stream, the icy water splashing over her as she slipped and stumbled on the slippery stones. Soon she vanished into a cavern formed by the snow-bank completely bridging the gulley. The shadows slowly gathered the fartheshe went under the roof of snow, until finally she groped her way in a curious, wan twilight that was like the grayness of a dream. The gaping rent in the snowy roof above showed here where Pete had fallen. She made out a long shadow amohg the boulders of the creek bed, and at once she knelt in the shallow water at his side. (Continued in Our,Next Issue) WE DON’T BLAME HIM John Parrish, 35 N. Warman Ave., siad today he would like to have a few words with the person who gave his name to police when arrested. Police said a man held in a gambling raid gave the name of James Parrish, 35 N. Warmai/ Ave. Ever since, John Parrish says, his friends have been asking him how he came to be arrested ad he's getting tired of It.

MONDAY, JUNE 10, io-C

EXHIBIT IS HONORED Certificate of Merit Awarded Display on Infant Health. The American Medical Association has honored the child fyygiene division of the State board of health, in awarding it second certificate of merit for its display of charts and maps showing decreases in infant and maternity mortality rates in Indiana. The exhibit was sho-wn at the annual meeting of the Association in Chicago which closed Friday. Four medals and five certificates were awarded among about sixty exhibitors, according to Dr. Ada Schweitzer, director of the chiltL hygiene division. WOKE UP TIREO EVERY FORKING UNTILG. H. Ammerman, Indianapolis Man. Gains Weight, Relieves Serious Stomach Trouble And Tones System With Todd’s Tenlo And Its Strength Building Qualities Os Rare Old Wine. Strengthen Your Body This This Spring With It. “I had continuous pains in ray stomach and I had no appetite at all. What little food I~did eat tasted like straw. My blood was in very poor condition. I was very restless at night and could not sleep, and when I arose in the morning I was more tired than when I retired. I was induced to try Todd's Tonic by the demonstrator and I have not been sorry for it. for now the pains in uiy stomach have gone and my appetite is more normal. The condition of my blood has improved, and I am no longer restless at night and certainly do sleep. When I.awake in the morning I feel very much refreshed. I recommend Todd's Tonic because it has built me up and I have gained in weight. For anybody suffering as I did ‘take Todd's Tonic’ because it is the best medicine I have ever tried.”—G. H. AM MERMAN, 511 N. New Jersey St., Indianapolis. Ind. Todd's Tonic, with lts"wine-like flavor, is most pleasant to take. Sold at Hang Drug Company’s eight stores and other good drug stores in Indianapolis and throughout thfs section. See Mr. Glubok at Haag’s 103 WB Wash. St. store and he will courteously explain the merits of this wonderful tonic to you. HAAG’S c D,:r 114 N. Penn. St. 53 S. Illinois St. 55 Virginia Ave. 27 S. Illinois St. 802 Mass Ave. 103 W. Wash. St. 816 N. Ala. St. 156 N. Illinois St. TODD’S TONIC LAXATIVE TABLETS—“A Dose At Night—Makes Everything Right,’*