Indianapolis Times, Volume 36, Number 112, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 September 1924 — Page 8

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WEST INSPIRES J. W. DAVIS WITH NEW ENTHUSASM X Democratic Candidate Becomes Militant Crusader, Followers Say, Bn Vnited P*iss EX ROUTE WITH JOHX W. DAVIS TO DES MOINES, lowa. Sept. 17.—A new John TV. Davis was swinging through lowa today on the last lap of his first invasion of the West. In the two and a half weeks Davis has spent in the West his advisers on the trip have seen him change from a retiring lawyer reluctantly facing his audiences into a militant crusader with a message. When he speaks to the lowa farmers tonight on tariff and taxation. Democratic leaders say he will put even more fight into his utterances than he did in Bunceton, Mo., where the enthusiasm of the monster meeting seemed to Inspire him with a new confidence. “The West has acted like a tonic on Davis,” said Cardell Hull, former national Democratic chairman, who is accompanying Davis on his tour. “I have never seen such a change come over a man in so brief a time. Frankly, when Davis left New York he felt he was leading a forlorn hope, but he carried on like a good soldier, shouldering the responsibilities that had been thrust upon him by his party. “Since coming West and getting a contact with the people, Davis has grown daily in enthusiasm until today he is a militant crusader for the cause of honest government with an abiding confidence of victory.” Davis has a busy day before him in Des Moines. Immediately upon arrival he was to go to his hotel, where he will confer with State leaders. He was scheduled to make a brief speech at a luncheon and his main speech tonight in city auditorium. A LA SEPTEMBER MORN Train Strikes Man, Strips Off Pants and Shirt. Bn Timex Special HAMMOND. Ind., Sept. 17. Henry TVyzyokowski of Indiana Harbor didn’t lose his life, but he did lose his pants and shirt when struck by a railroad train here. The engineer of the train, thinking he had killed Wyzyokowski, stopped his engine and ran back only to see the man approaching, ala September morn. Wyzyokowski was unhurt. 1,525 at De Pauw Bu Timex Special GREENCASTLE, Ind.. Sept. 17. The official enrollment for De Pauw University this fall as announced toiay was 1,525. This includes both :he students of liberal arts and the school of music. The enrollment figures show a s’ight increase over last year.

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Hoosier Briefs | L _~3 G. ROBBINS, Union traclyY/j tion motor-man. was cut | * -J about the head when a bird flew against the glass in front of the car, breaking it. Robbins said many birds had flown against the glass, but never had broken it before. He attributes it this time to the fact that the bird was a yellow hammer. . Cows had their revenge on the fann of Harry Brooks near Noblesville. A gasoline engine used to operate a milking machine fired the barn and caused a $12,000 loss. Home building in Ft. Wayne is averaging $796 a room, builders there declare. Bi" "ILUFFTON entertained its first lost airplane travelers. i__ Reg Robbins of Texas landed here, with his wife and baby. He told citizens that he and his family were flying to Illinois and became lost. Traffic is so heavy on “Sorority Row” at Bloomington police have made it a one-way street. Carl Wiseman, 7, of Elwood, was badly bruised when a/team became frightened at Hobbs elevator and Kin aw-ay, w-recking the wagon in which he was riding. HARLES FLETCHER of Frankfort won' thave to i__J buy so many shoes now. He has retired as postman after carrying mail for thirty-three years. Times-Tribune at Alexandria got the raspberries. They belonged to M. McDermitt. He brought them around to the newspaper office to be displayed.

Today’s Best Radio Features Copyright, 1924, by United Press. WLW, Cincinnati (423 M.), 9 P. M., EST—Concert 10th Infantry Band. WJJZ, New York (455 M.), 7:30 P. M., EST—Program by Sons of the American Revolution. KDKA. Pittsburgh (326 M.). 8 P. M.. EST —Brocket, Mixed Quartette. WEAF. New York (492 M.), 7:30 P. M., EST—Joint recital Mildred Mills, soprano, and Frank LaForge, pianist. WDAF. Kansas City (411 M.), 8 P. M., —Evening concert program, piano and esoprano soloists. READY FOR MONON DAY Traffic Club to Take Several Hundred Men to Fiench Lick. A special train bearing several hundred steam and electric railroad officials and representatives of shippers will leave the Union Station Wednesday at 9 a. m. for French Lick, Ind., where the Indianapolis Traffic Club will celebrate “Monon day.” Wilbur D. Nesbit. president of the Indiana Society of Chicago, author and song writer, will be toastmaster at the banquet in the evening. H. R. Kurrie. Monon president, will he the guest of honor and one of the principal speakers. Thomas Taggart also is scheduled to speak. Other guests of the club will include E. P. Corckrejl, general passenger agent of the Monon; E. P. Vernia, vice president, and other Monon officials from Bloomington. Ldfayette, Chicago. 111., and Cincinnati, Ohio.

SHEIK HAIR SAFE NOW Rough Days Art* Over at Indiana University. By Timet Special BLOOMINGTON. Ind., S*pt. 17. Freshmen with "sleek Sheik” hair are safe this year for the first time in history of Indiana University. There’ll he no hair-cutting this year. Instead, there will be nice, gentlemanly hold day contests by the freshmen and sophomores. And any one who touches a hair on a freshman’s head—expulsion from the university. And that's that. Cab Manager Killed By Timet Special EVANSVILLE, Ind., Rept. 17.Charles J. Fendrich, manager oi the Checker Cab Line Company, is dead *oday. The car he was driving struck the railing of a concrete bridge east of here and he was hurled through the windshield. Death was Instantaneous. ‘‘Be Yourself,” Is Advice One lesson to be learned from big men and women is to be yourself, not pose or act an unnatural part, said Blaine McGrath, president of the Advertising Club Tuesday night before the Pals Club, in the Communal building, 17 W. Morris St. Home Burns By Times Special GREEXCASTLE, Ind., Sept. 17. Fire destroyed the home of Arley McCammack. southwest of here, Tuesday. The loss estimated at $5,000 was partially covered by insurance. The blaze started from the kitchen stove. Ten Children Survive By Timet Special NOBLESVILLE, Ind., Sept. 17. Thomas Sumner, 73, is dead at his home north of here. Ten children survive, including Claude, Charles and Carrie Sumner and Mrs. Lee Wherry, all of Indianapolis. George Gates Buried By Timet Special NOBLESVILLE, Ind., Rept. 17. George Gates. 46, was buried today. Until his health began to fail two years ago he was a member of the F. E. Gates Marble and Tile Company of Indianapolis.

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( 'TfW TUSH -M3H AWIN J MMan'l t CQM V GOiNG TO LEAVE. V- 'N TH F^ONT [ UNCLE, AMOS- \ L TVP K\D IN TH* - ROvJ TH HIM AUNTY SAYS THAT \ N ° T ACCOMPANY YOU QuSH -—I DON’T (j 'H TR |1 YOU WAVE TO GO T 0 CINEMA THIS BLAME HIM-THAT =p DPUHMER , FcM} WITH ME IDM'GVC '* MORE ' LOUD sK W TO A MOVIE 1 **■ AN IMPORTANT BOTHEBAN' Sj AN' YOU WILL ENGAGEMENT AT HARM* ™ GET ■ A Then hunt TOR fit hm/FTDSTMIN seven, AND I WILL R'O OF than ? \ His CAP: 91 , ..-nT ° HAVE TO LEAVE SHCRTIY I IXO EAFETV P'CV.ff f | WITH ME AN MOT oiruT / \ RAZOR BLADES !J ff Cp A ] WAIT outside like V ,N av ! - N fy ft a ...1... MAJOR HATES CHAPERONNG v -• nY ' Alvin to the moviES- ~~ ° jeopyngm. by nea ic.> j

L \NoTHIv-Aj Jr i A in i EXVUKE HOftMBLOWE^' \ ' TO DEFENOTWE PRINCIPLES HIS GRANDFATHER HP STEPPED OUT WITH TWO BLACKjBr EYES AND MINUS HIS HAT- (IRJmMV

WOOSEVRT BUS AFRICA Pohoil POIcLH y ® 19124 NEA Service Inv,

BEGIN HERE TODAY Robert Koran, newspaper correspondent. accompanies the Theodore Roosevelt expedition into Africa in iflOO. They arrive at Mombassa. the 'pateway of British Past Africa.” and then make tiie , railroad Journey to their first camp on the game-crowded Kapiti Plains. 2H miles from tincoast. YVith Colonel Roosevelt are his son. Kernut, and three scientific members of his staff—Major Edpar A. Mearns, Edmund Heller and J. Alien Loring. Incredible pood luck comes to the rifles of Colonel Roosevelt and Kermit duting the first two weeks of their so journ Then they spent some time at Nairobi, where they are royally re. ceived From Nairobi the party poes to Knabe to start on their grst. prolonged safari into the wilds of Africa. NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY Cl— lOLONEL ROOSEVELT. Ker mit, Loring and Heller had ridden on the cowcatcher seat over the engine—Roosevelt’s’ favorite seat when traveling on the Uganda Railway in the hours of daylight—as' far as Kikuyu, the netx halt after Nairabi. “You and Dawson come and ride with me between Kikuyu and Limorp,” Colonel RoosoY-elt had said to me at this first halt, while the engine took in Yvater. And we joyfully replaced* Holler and Loring beside him on the cowcatcher. We were in enthusiastic company, for Colonel Roosevelt was simply bubbing over Yvith excitement —first at the magnificent views, and then at thhe wild birds, monkeys and forests through which we passed. He was a wonderful fund a knowledge; and absolutely nothing escaped his attention. We had traveled far from Kikuyu, when a startled exclamation from him drew my eyes to the track ahead of us. A hyena slunk across the track just in front of our train, and we all held our breath for it seemed impossible that it should escape instant destruction. “By gosh!” laughed Roosevelt, gleefully. "That was a narrow shaY-e. That hyena only just saved his skin. Another second later and it YY'ould ha\'e gotten under the wheels of the engine.” At 5 o'clock in the afternoon we reached our destination. Kijabe Within a quarter of a mile of the railroad depot had been erected the Jiuge tent town that was to form

OUR BOARDING HOUSE—By AHERN

THE OLD HOME TOWN—By STANLEY

he Roosevelt camp for the next >vo days. It faced toward the globus and rugged scenery of the fa- ■ ious Rift Valley, and the site was lerfect. Over Colonel Roosevelt’s ••nt, in the foreground of the e.yfnp, n-oudly waved the American flag

that never left the expedition throughout the journeyings in Africa. Early next morning Mearns left to collect bird specimens in the forests, while Kermit, Heller, Loring and Dawson went off to hunt species of rare monkeys. They were particularly anxious to obtain some .•roups of the long-haired, biack-and-

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

ROOSEVELT AND HIS PARTY ON THE WAY.

white Colobus monkey, numerous about tills part of Africa. Shortly after their departure the Rev. Charles E. Hurlburt rode into the camp to escort Colonel Roosevelt out to the Agrican’ inland mission, of which he was director. 1 had been invited to accompany them and so we all three presently rode there through a fine forest road. Covers had been laid for some forty people on a raised platform among the trees; and besides ourselves, the missionaries had invited all the neighboring settlers and their families to do honor to Theodore Roosevelt. After the feasting came the speeches, and Colonel Roosevelt delivered his first deliberate public speech in East Africa.

"It gives me very great pleasure indeed to be present today at the Kijabe Htation of the African Inland Mission, and to meet my fellow countrymen in East Africa,” said Roosevelt, when the OY’ation had ceased. "I am exceedingly glad to have been able to see for myself your work, so that 1 can bear testimony of

WHY MOTLItPS GET GrPAV- afc . A LIGfMT LU KICM . tCopyrisht, 1934. hr NEA Serwe*, tec.* J v —■ 4 ——■■■■■ ■

FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS—By BLOSSER

Ilf? WW ACE you PGNHIMG j /j ou orfV f m, ) I MUCKY j iV? amv DEFsear? ahcE ) caice - j L \Jmw s% \ - -cSa L" f \ / DO HUEgy .FgEeHLES* 7 7 1577577 > m W MUST ALWT -C§§l TAU.E TUE PIECE AIEACEST TO a / af\ . y/tVT (ropyrigbl. TOI.bN’KA Vrrire. lnt.l f-\j

it when I return to America. Moreover, I am much pleased to meet the settlers hero today, also; and to find that you are both working together, side by side. It is to the credit of neither the settler, nor the missionary, nor yet the official, unless all three work in perfect harmony. “The settler has to deal with the material side of things and the missionary’s is primarily a moral task. But the settl/rs must not lose sight of the moral in the material; nor must the missionary ever forget the material side in his striving for morality. Naturally, I have a peculiar feeling for you settlers, who are working in this new country; for you remind me all the time of my oxvn people in the Western States of America—a people with whom I have worked and enjoyed life. And just as we in our own country, know no difference be tween Easterner, Westerner, Northerner jnd Southerner, and pay no heed so a man’s creed or his birthplace. so I hope you here, who are performing the great task of conquering for civilization this new country; will frown on every effort to keep alive or arouse any spirit of unworthy jealousy, Yvhether based on creed or national origin, or anything else.

"I believe, with all my heart, that large parts of East Africa form a white man’s country, and * every effort should he made to up a prosperous and numerous population. But, because of this belief. I ask all f.ettlers to cooperate with the missionaries, to help in treating the black man justly and in working to put him on a higher le\-el, “I do not believe that, in the long run or from the standpoint of permanency, any real good can come to an individual race striving to trample down someone else. The individual who rises highest is he who helps others to rise—and the same 1 believe of the race. “I particularly appreciate what you people of this inter-denomina-tional industrial mission are doing, because you strive to teach the African to help himself by giving him the simple industrial training which is the pre-requisite to any movement for his permanent elevation. “It seems to me you are doing your work in a spirit of wholly disinterested de\ f otion to an ideal, and yet with a most practical endeavor to adopt the means that will really do good since your ideal is based very wisely upon the obserY’ation of facts.” I discussed this speech with many of the missionaries and settlers who were present, and I found that they wwe all quite unanhnouu in their

OUT OUR WAY-By WILLIAMS

delight at his encouragement of their work: and all of them appeared to be considerably impressed by the grasp Colonel Roosevelt had acquired ont he conditions and needs of East Africa. After the luncheon was concluded, Colonel Roosevelt mixed freely with the guests and engaged in earnest conversation with many of them. He was particularly interested in a family of Cape Colony people named Ullyat. This family consisted of a father, son, daughter-in-laYv and three young daughters. He was very much Interested in them on hearing that the three girls had driven their father's ox-wagon transport throufh the country the youngest child, aged 10, acting as leader of the team of sixteen oxen, while an older girl of 17 had driven them. "I am glad see women and children in this young country,” f£marked Roosevelt, "who are capable of enduring hardships and doing their share of the work, for as long as they do this, East Africa must surely prosper. That is what happened in the old pioneer days in our western States.”

Gas On Stomach Makes People Nervous _____ * Mrs. Cook Nervous 12 Years Due to Gas

“For 12 years I suffered from gas on the stomach and was nervous and short of breath. Adlerika (intestinal antiseptic) has done me more good than anything.” (Signed) Lela Cook. Intestinal Antiseptic There is now offered to the public a liquid preparation having the I*ol BEK action of an intestinal antiseptic and a complete system cleanser. This preparation, known as Adlerika, acts as follows ; It tends to eliminate or destroy harmful germs and colon bacili in the intestinal canal, thus guarding against appendicitis and other diseases having their start here. It cleans out BOTH upper and lower bowel and removes foul matter which poisoned the system for months.*. It brings out all gases, thus immediately relieving pressure on the heart. It is astonishing the great amount of poisonous matter Adlerika draws from the intestinal’ canal—matter you never thought was in your system. Try it right after a natural movement and notice bow much MORE foul matter it brings outewhich was poisoning you. In slight’disorders, such as occasional constipation, sour stomach, gas ou tha stomach or aide headache, one spoon-

WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 17, 1924

CHAPTER VII To the Sotik Country There w*as plenty of game about Kijabe and Kermit and the three naturalists made the most of their two days' halt in the neighborhood. However, they confined themselves to collecting species of rare monkeys, birds and small mammals, and they were most extraordinarily successful. There were both rhinoceros and buffalo near by. but no one was after them, as they wished to reserve themselves for the greater attractions of the Sotik. (Continued in Our Next Issue) SABY NY SUIT CASE Mystery Surrounding Death Unsolved at Mancie. By Timet Special MUNCIE, Ind., Sept. 17.—Mystery surrounding the finding of a suitcase in a uatch of weeds, containing the body of a four-weeks-old baby, was still unsolved today. Coroner Frank Downing took statements of the four men who found the body. He said he believ'ed the child had been drowned and then placed in the suitcase.

fill Adlerika ALWAYS brings relief. A longer treatment, however, is necessary in cases of obstinate constipation and long standing stomach trouble preferably under direction of your physician. Reports from rhysicians “1 have found nothing in my 50 years’ practice to excel Adlerika." (Signed) Dr. James Weaver. “I congratulate you on the good effect from Adlerika since I prescribed it.' (Signed) Dr. L. Langlols. “I use Adlerika in ail bowel cases Some require only one dose.” (Signed) Dr. F. M. P. (Name withheld by request.) "Adlerika is the best In my entire #7 years' experience.” (Signed) Dr. G. Eggers. “Cannot describe awful IMPURITIES eliminated from my system (by Adlerika i. Feel better than for 20 years.” (Signed) T. E. Puckett. Adlerika is a big surprise to people who have used only ordinary bowel and stomach medicines, because of its quick pleasant and COMPLETE action. It is sold by leading druggists everywhere. Sold in Indianapolis by Hook Drug Cos, and other leading druggist*.—<A4< rerUswat.