Indianapolis Times, Volume 36, Number 125, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 October 1924 — Page 2

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‘GOOLIBEE SAFE’ G.O.P. TURNS TO AID CONGRESSMEN Wood Confers With Hoosier Nominees on Return From Powwow in East, I Congressman Will R. Wood of the Tenth district, chairman of the State congressional committee, is meeting all Republican candidates for Congress, both incumbents and nominees, at Republican headquarters at the Severin this afternoon. Wood has just returned from Republican headquarters at New York and Washington and will talk over the Indiana situation with Hoosier nominees. Eleven of the thirteen candidates were present. Vestal from the Eighth and Noble Johnston, of the Fifth District were the absentees. Wood sees a Coolidge victory in Indiana and will discuss campaign plans with he candidates to help put over Republican congressional slate from Indiana. Luncheon at Columbia Club Theodore Risley, first assistant to Secretary of Labor Davis, addressed the women of the Seventh District Republican Club at luncheon at the Columbia Club today. Miss Dorothy Cunningham, national committeewoman from Indiana, was in charge. Miss Cnnningham, who also heads the Coolidge-Dawes bureau at Republican State headquarters, announced she has been placed in charge of all national speakers. Plans Made for Dawes Republicans are making great plans for the Dawes tour of the State Friday. The special train arrives in Terre Haute at 10:20 a. m. Leaders will meet the train there and accompany Dawes through the State to Ft. Wayne, where he makes his principal address Friday night. The train schedule calls for arrival at Bril at 11:55 a. m.; Crawfordsville, 130 p. m.; Lafayette. 2:30 p. m., and Ft. Wayne at 5:45 p. m. United States Senator James E. Watson will speak with Dawes at Ff. Wayne. Miss Cunningham announced organization of Coolidge-for-President clubs in a majority of the counties of the State. HALLOWEEN PARTY NEXT Garfield Civic League Begins Activities for Winter. A Hallowe'en party at the home of Mrs. Julius Morrow, 1501 Barth Ave., is planned by Garfield Civic League. Winter activities were begun at a luncheon Wednesday at home of Mrs. Emma Flick. 1500 Barth Ave. Purchase of a $25 Riley Hospital health borfd was authorized. The club wilt cooperate with Joseph Doer, president Thirteenth Ward Civic League, in securing drinking 'fountains at all public playgrounds. Missing Lads Found c '~~*-nts of Fred Kirk, 822 Fletcher avs., and Roscoe Day, 803 E. Maryland St., went to Scottsburg, Ind.. to bring them home. The boys were apprehended there by the sheriff and the parents here notified through the police, after they had run away.

CORNS Lift Off-No Pain! Doesn't hurt one bit! Drop a little "Freezone" on an aching corn, instantly that com stops hurting, then shortly you lift it right off with fingers. Your drag-gist sells a tiny bottle of “Freezone” for a few cents, sufficient to remove every hard corn, soft com, or corn between the toes, and the foot calluses, without soreness or irritation.—Advertisement.

WANTED! 15,000 SUFFERERS FROM \CATARRH (CATARRHAL DEAFNESS ALand head noises * wnt the names of 15,000 people who suffer from catarrh, SFj| k catarrhal deafness, or head noises. I have an original home 'l treatment for these distressing conditions whichl waatyoc * ' AgfiaBSMMeKJ 'otry witaoot eocler oc.jijd.ua. I tuCertd tot bmj join. Tnai many ootereni remedies all ot which tailed to serve W. O. ODFTOC, Motd Catsrrfc permanent relief. 1 beg-an experimentins on myself moa Deafaaee Spacteilet and finally found a treatment which completely healed my catarrh, restore 1 my hearing and stopped the terVidte head noises. I want you to try this splendid treatment entirely at my own expense. Just send me your name and address. 15,000 Treatments to Efiaggl Be Given This Month i" Rl fii im ■

I era so proud of my treatment and so anatom la kve uthar sufferers know about ft that! has* peeked and ha vs ready for shipment 15,000 treatments which I will giveaway thism-ota ctaolotely free of all cost. 1 want to prove to 15.000 people entirely at my wnexpenee that my original bane treatment will, ‘ve quick tel ief from catarrh, catarrhal deaf nee* and head noieea. The rrsolta are quick aad convincing. Too can fee 1 ttw difference almost immedlctely. Thie treatment eoeta yco nothing whatever. You are nnder no obugatkms. BiffiDly write me. nigiadly send the treatment Free. It 1 5 the beet treatment 1 have ever found in over forty pixs dafly practice as in Eye. Ear Neat aad Throat ci-vcialat. I want yea to try It Frae. Don't Neglect Catarrh While catarrh Inltaelf may net be dangeroua, when •eyleoted it often lead# to all sorts of eompttoationa. I —"' i i~ iiss claim that nearly 90% of all deaf nee# is

CBsW.OaCoffM, Suit® 3133, St James Hotel Bldg., Davenport, I*

North Side Celebrates in Two-Day Festival

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CAR IN NORTH SIDE PARADE WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON. (LEFT TO RIGHT) MISS LEONA GAL LOWAY, AND MISS CHARLOTTE UHL. (INSET) MISS FRANCES KELLY. QUEEN OF FESTIVITIES,

SECURITIES LAW MOTIVE UPHELD Schortemeier Refers to Candidacy in Talk, By Timr* Special NOBLESVILLE, Ind., Oct. 2. First formal reference to his own candidacy was made here Wednesday evening by Frederick E. Schortemeier, Republican nominee for secretary of State. He said: “I believe the Jndiana securities law and its administration has resulted m much good to the people of Indiana. If X am Secretary of State, an honest investment com pany whose motives are genuine and whose organization is, sound, need have nothing whatsoever to fear so long as it observes the law. This law should be strictly enforced or the department abolished, and in my opinion such amendments to the law as will strengthen it should be considered by the Legislature. and if the Legislature enacts them into law they will be enforced."

ORDER SCHOOL ECONOMY Building Program Adjusted to Meet Budget Reduction. Indianapolis school board members are attempting to adjust the building program to budget reductions made by the State tax board. The board cut the proposed levy to 93.5 cents on each SIOO, leaving the levy a net increase of 11.25 cents over the 1923 levy which was 82.25. The program of repairing old buildings must go on. It is said, and the reduction of 2.3 from the special fund may impede the building program. building program. Richard O. Johnson, business director, said he would send letters to all department heads urging them to exercise caution in seeing that expenditures were made from the proper funds and that no fund transfers were made. School Commissioner Fred Bates Johnson went to the tax board office late Wednesday and denounced the levy cut as “outrageous, demagogic* and childish yapping at our heels." Escaped Soldiers Sought A search of a house near Ft. Harrison, was conducted by police and Sergeants Gibbs and Covington of the military police force at the fort. No trace of the four men who had escaped from their guards earlier in the day could be found.

earned primarily by Catarrh of tbe head and ear naw> agea. Others state that K leads to indigestion rbew mathnn. catarrh of the gtocoaob nod man r otbar cUma trowing coodltiooe. Just Try It Free I don’t ask yon to send one penny for tUa Ann S5^K doin 7 thieto tpdckly advertise my original home treatment to cofferers.from catarrh, catarrhal deefneaa and bead "Oja—- Writing me place* yon ond r no ofatlgation whatever. I believe I treat more easea of catarrh, catarrhal deafness and head noieea than any other physician in the United States and I know this treatmeat is the beet I ha ve ever need. A leant my free offer Send me yoar name and eddresa today. State whether you coffer from catarrh, only, or are elan troubled with demfneas aad head notnee. This notice may eot at peer e gain so write me at ones.

A vaudeville show tonight, followed by a "battle royal" at Illinois and Thirtieth Sts., will climax a two-day festival given by Illinois and Thirtieth Sts. Business Association, of which Omar -Morgan of Indiana Engineering Company, 3016 N. Illinois St., is president. Forty north side business houses had decorated tioats in the parade Wednesday afternoon. The picture shows one of the fifteen cars entered by Indianapolis Life Insurance Company. 2060 N. Meridian St., Miss Leona Galloway, 434 E. St. Claii St., and Miss Charlotte Uhl, 3005 S. Meridian St., employes. Miss Frances Kelly, 332 N. Summit St. queen of the festivities, Is shown in the inset. She was attended by four children from School 36. Edward Clark, 40 W. Thirtieth St., is secretary and James Phillippe, 3001 N. Illinois St., treasurer. Several thousand persons attended the third annual carnival on Wednesday night. Prizes for the baby and dog shows will be awarded tonight.

VOTING MACHINES ' PASS STATE TEST I Adjustments for Seven Columns Adopted, The State board of election commissioners today adopted adjustment? for the seven-column voting machine, making it possible to put nine tickets on the machine. J. A. Davis, Indiana representative of the voting machine company, held a demonstration at the 'county election board warehouse, Northwestern Ave. and the Big Four. The original device, which have placed the extra two tickets at the lower left hand corner of the machine, was abandoned and anew device adopted which will necessitate placing the electoral tickets following the county tickets on the ballots. The extra tickets will go to the right of the regular seven tickets, there being sufficient space for two on a jine by use of a mechanical adjustment costing 10 cents a machine. W. W. Spencer of the State board said that since the parties have until Oct. 15 to petition for places on the ticket, no immediate action will be taken to determine which tickets will go at the end of the line.

BABY FROLICS AS PARENTSLITIGATE Ask Judge to Say Which Shall Have Her, A bitter legal fight between Glenn K. Scheiring and Mrs. Edith E. Scheiringr for custody of their nine-teen-mopthsold daughter Wanda was begun today before Superior udge T. J. Moll. The child Is living with tbs maternal grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. W. S. Baker, 808 Tecumseh Pl. Fnconscioug of the turmoil, the child played about the courtroom with a toy dog. On Nov. 16, 1923, Judge Moll denied a divorce to Mrs. Scheiring, at the same time refusing the father a decree on a cross-complaint. The couple have been separated since. Mrs. Sfceiring is a patient at Sunnyside, county tuberculosis horpital. Mrs. Baker testified she was arrested by her son-in-law recently on a downtown street and taken to jail for five hours on a charge of child stealing. She has taken the baby to Greensburg, Ind., on a visit. Judge Moll continued the case. The largest illuminating advertisement in the world—sl2 feet long and ,40 feet high—has been erected at Loughborough, England.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

INDIANA NURSES OPEN EDUCATION BRANCH SESSOIN State Association to Meet Here Friday and Saturday, Walter S. Greenough of Fletcher Savings and Trust Company addressed the seventh annual meeting of the Indiana State League of Nursing Education at the Claypool at 10 a. in. today on the value of publicity. About seventy-five leaders in the education of nurses attended the meeting. The afternoon program included an address at 1:45 by Miss Bernice Wallace, Gary, Ind., on “Planning and Teaching a Course in the History of Nursing;" an address by Mrs. Alma Scott, of the board of examiners for Indiana, on "Records and Teaching Equipment In Training Schools:" a round table discussion, and election of officers. Mrs. Ethel I’. Clark, of Robert Long Hospital, Is president, and Miss Edna L. Hamilton, is secretary treasurer. Friday and Saturday the League of Nursing Education will join in tho Indiana State Nurses' Association's twenty-second annual convention, at the Claypool. About 1,300 Indiana nurses .ire members. Among the speakers will he Miss Tda M. Oaskill, Indianapolis, president; Miss Agnes Deans, New York, secretary of American Nurses’ Association; Miss Elizabeth Fox, president National Organization for Public Health Nursing of Washington, and Miss V. Lota Lorimer, director of division of public health nursing of Ohio State board of health. POISON FOUND IN BODIES Chemist’s R**port to Be Part of HighbSweetin Evidence. By United Pm* MOUNT VERNON, Til., Oet. 2. Complete reports of tho analysis of the vital organ of Wilford Sweetln and Anna Hlght, poisoned by the Rev. Lawrence M. Hlght and Elsie Sweetin, have been received by Jefferson County authorities and will be offered as evidence to the grand jury which meets Oct. 13. "Arsenic troxlde” better known as arsenic was found in the liver, stomach, muscles and hair.

Meow, Meow! Bp Time* Bprrial IMICAGO, Oct. 2.—“ What does a pussy cat say when it says ‘Meow?’ ” Eight hundred University of Chicago freshmen wrinkled their brows over that one. It was one of 100 questions asked freshmen in a psychological examination which university authorities say will determine their “vocational aptitudes.” Perhaps the examiners had dangers of collegiate drinking in mind when they asked: “What per cent of alcohol Is there is white lead paint?” And not to forget the fair sex, the examiners listed four women: Peggy Joyee, Jane Addams, Corinne Griffith and Mary Garden and queried: “Whom do you consider the greatest living American woman and why?” Other puzzlers were: What did Confucius have to do with the discovery of America?” “If the total cosu of Brooklyn bridge was $3,000,000, how much did each end cost?” “What would be happening in a house if you saw a doctor, a lawyer, a nurse, an ambulance and a bridesmaid going in?”

FIFTY-THREE GET FINES FOR SPEED IN WEEKLY COURT Heavy Continuances Feature Hearing of 101 Drivers, Heavy continuances marked speed court today. Fifty-three persdns were fined, one case was dismissed, one judgment was withheld and two persons were discharged. • City Judge Delbert O. Wilmeth ordered re-arrest of: Henry Meyer, 421 PI. Orange St 1 Marshall Rowe, 1064 Oliver Ave.; Thomas Kimberlin, 1429 N. New Jersey St.; Alonzo H. Chapman, 2447 N. Illinois St.; Ralph Eilar, 647 Fairfield Ave., and William Thayer, 1012 E. St. Clair St. Thirty-eight were given continuances. These were fined on pleas of guilty; costs not included: Fred Grosdick, 643 V 2 E. Eleventh St., thirty-two miles, sl7; P’erd Kivett, Stilesville, Ind., thirty-three miles, $18; Maxwell Baer, 5217 E. Tenth St., thirty-one miles, sl6; Edward Toms, 44 W. Thirty-Sixth St., thirty-two miles, sl7; Elmer Straub, 1830 Applegate St., thirtytwo miles, sl7; Dale Seal, 122 Bosart St., thirty miles, sls; Adolph Mueller, 2948 Paris Ave.. thirty miles, sls; Everett Newman, 2141 Bellefontalne St., thirty miles, sls; Arnold Lyness, 2440 College Ave., thirty miles, sls; John Rentsch, 309 N. Walcott St., thirty miles, sls. Alvin Mooneyharn. Ft. Harrison, Ind., thirty-two miles, sl7; Albert Harding, 1222 Harding St., thirty miles, sls; Earnest Kessler, Senate Hotel, thirty miles, sls; Cecil Wilson, 531 Belmont Ave., forty miles, SSO; Willard Mellens, 3015 N. Illinois St., thirty miles, sls: Richards Goins, Speedway City, thirty-two miles, sl7; Willard Smith, 3117 Lenwood St., thirty-two miles, sl7; Henry Carr, 522 W. Forty-First St., thirty miles, sls; Cornelius Lysett, 623 Wallace St., thirty-two miles, sl7; Ray Jarbls, 1922 N. Volney St., thirty two miles, $lB. Martinsville Man I-lned Stewart Bankhardt, 258 Consolidated Bidg., thirty-two miles, sl7; Robert Hubbard; Martinsville, Ind., thirty-four miles, sl9; E. L. Norris, 4222 E. Michigan St., thirty-one miles, sl6: Robert Pherson St., thirty miles, sls; Morris McCormick, 2616 N. Capitol Ave., thirty-four miles, sl9: Raymond Kapzenberger, 1504 E. Tenth St., thirtythree* miles, $lB Fred Duncan, 613 Highland Ave., thirty-two miles, sl7; George Jones, 2427 Northwestern Ave., thirty-two mijes. sl7; Charles Wells, 1526 S. Sheffield St., thirtytwo miles, sl7; A. R. Haynes, 211 Peoples Bank Bldg., thirty-ono miles, sl6; James Chastine, 2517 Ransdnlo St... thirty-two miles, sl7; John De Coursey, Ben Davis, Ind., thirty-three miles. $18; Lester Moore. 127 N. Capitol Ave., thirty miles, f 15. Plead Not Guilty These were fined on pleas of not guilty: Russell Cook, 3640 N. Meridian St., thirty-two miles, $10; Jack Ross, Broad Ripple, thirty two miles, sl2; David Ray. 2214 E. ThirtyFourth St., thirty miles, sls; A. J. Wesner. Bloomington, twenty miles, sls: Herman Rose. 2007 Miller St., thirty-one miles, sl4; Bruce Campbell, 115 E. Walnut St., thirty miles, $10; John Fox, R. R. F\ Box 272, thirty miles. $10: Loran Fugate, 1227 College Ave., thirty three miles, sl3; R. IT. Thompson, 624 E. Thirteenth St., thirty-six miles, s2l; Paul Jones. 852 Camp St., thirty four miles, $11; George Thornburg, 221 E. Pratt St„ thirty miles, sl2. Henry Slick, Southport, Ind.. thirty miles, sls; Al!>ort Davis. 606 W. Twenty-Fifth St., thirty-four miles, sl6: Jess Fields, 2009 Columbia Ave., thirty-three miles. sl4; Ralph Stewart, 1321 W. TwentySixth St., thirty-two miles. sls; Fred Walker, 212 W. North St., thirty-five miles, sls; Edward Melsberger, Holton, Ind., thirty-seven miles, $10; Alfred Laroeque, 236 N. Jefferson Ave., thirty miles, sl9, and Ed Vandeventer, 1427 W. Court St., thirty-miles, sll.

Judge Arrests Driver Officers who arrested and charged motorists during the past week with speeding forty miles an hour had little difficulty explaining to Wilmeth Just how fast that is. On his way to the city building today Judge Wilmeth gave chase to a car, he said, traveled forty miles an hour. He slated the driver, Robert Phillips, 20, of 3327 Central Ave. Speed court session today brought 101 drivers before Wilmeth. Those charged with speeding Wednesday and early today are: Jesse Philips. 25 of 753 N. Pershing Ave.; Art Eaton, 53, of 1115 W. Thirty-Fourth St.; Ben Lquden, 27, of 624 Coffey St.; Layman L. Norris, 24, of 4222 E. Michigan St.; Edward Toms, 27, colored, 44 W. Thirty-Sixth St.; Robert Garten, 19, of 3242 N. Meridian St.; Paul Jones, 31, colored, 852 Camp St.; Lester Moore, 26, of 12 S. Capitol Ave.; Cecil Douglas, 21. of 1822 E. Minnesota St.; Tony Poperad, 33, of Ben Davis, Ind.; Ferando Kivett, 19, of Stilesville, Ind.; Ernest Kestler, 23, of Senate Hotel; Willlard Mellene, 21, of 1315 N. Illinois St. Other Violations Ralph Stewart, 21, of 1321 W. Tv’enty-Sixth St., is charged with speeding and driving with open muffler; Louise Lunte, 27, of 246 N. Rural St., with speeding and failure to stop at preferential street, and George W. McGee, 53, of rear 156 W. Sixteenth St., with driving while intoxicated and driving on the left side of the street. Maxwell Bare, 24, of 5217 E. Tenth St., and Morris McCormaack, 21, of 2616 N. Capitol Ave., were arrested today on speed charges. All-Metal Bodies All-steel open bodies are expected to enter the low-priced car line. Rumors have it that an Important producer of such cars is planning allmetal bodies.

SMOKER FOR PLEDGES Delta Theta Phi at Indiana Law School Is Host. An informal smoker in honor of pledges v. as held by the Indiana Law School chapter of Delta Theta Phi, national legal fraternity, Wednesday night at Chamber of Commerce. Judge Sidney S. Miller, Attorney Asa Smith and Francis Wayne, alumni, spoke. Pledg-js were: W. D. Joiner, Russellville; Maurice Mackey, Seymour; W. R. Neukom. John Helney, Henry O. Goett, L. C. Rainer, Edwin C. Berryhill. W. E. Livingood, George Clark and A. C. Butler, all of Indianapolis. FORMAL PROGRAM ANNOUNCED FOR RILEYJOSPITAL College Presidents to March in Ceremonies Marking Dedication, Formal tenderingJfcf the James Whitcomb Riley Ifßpital for Children to the State by the Riley Memorial Association will take place Tuesday afternoon at the formal dedication of the institution, when a parchment, representing a deed to the State, will be given Dr. William Lowe Bryan, president of Indiana University, by L. C. Huesman, chairman of the association finance committee. A committee composed of Huesman, Dr. Lafayette Page, Hugh McK. Landon and W. C. Bobbs, members of the executive committee of the association, will present the hospital formally to the State. Complete program for the dedivatory program of the hospital was announced today. Feature will be an academic procession in which representatives of approximately fifty universities of the country, who will attend the program, will participate. The Program The complete program Academit procession. Invocation by the Rev. Mathew L. Haines. Address, “The James Whitcomb Riley Hospital for Children.” by Hugh McK. Landon. president of Riley Memorial Association. Presentation of hospital to State. Address of acceptance by Dr. Bryan. • Address, “Our Responsibility to Childhood.” Dr. Walter H. Jessup, president of the University of lowa. “A Monument to James Whitcomb Riley," Dr. John H. Finley, editor New York Times. Academic Procession The parchment representing the St life’s dead to the hospital, will remain in the institution permanently. The academic procession will assemble at the Indiana University school of medicine and proceed to the site of the program on the south side of the Riley Hospital. The procession will he headed by presidents of various universities of the country, including Wisconsin, Minnesota, Kansas and Florida. The marchers will be attired in cap and gown. According to James W. Carr, executive secretary of the association, the demand for reserved seats for the dedicatory program bids fair to exceed the supply. The committee is endeavoring to obtain seats for all who attend, however.

SANITARY BOARD COTS PAT ROLL Effort Made to Meet Reduced 1925 Levy, Reorganization of employes in Sellers farm, where the sewage and garbage disposal plants of the city sanitation departments are located, was announced today by the sanitary hoard, following reduced appropriations for 1925. Arno G. Siefker was put in charge of Sellers farm maintenance and in charge, of all construction work not under contract. Cecil K. Calvert was named to operate the sewage disposal plant, and Floyd E. Baber, the garbage reduction plant. All the men are experienced, and Frank C. Lingenfelter, city engineer and head of the sanitary board, explained that the appointments were to “clarify duties at Sellers Farm.” It was announced no increase in salary would accompany the appointments. Charles C. Hurd, consulting engineer, will retain his position in supervising the plant. Fourteen laborers and mechanics have been dropped.

Castoria is especially pre- / pared to relieve Infants in \ f / / arms and Children all ages of y Constipation, Flatulency, Wind Colic and Diarrhea; allaying Feverishness arising therefrom, and, by regulating the Stomach and Bowels, aids the assimilation of Food; giving natural sleep. To avoid imitations, always I<Kk for the signature of Absolutely Harmless -No Opiates. Physicians everywhere recommend It

FRANCE TO AID 0. S. TRAP RUM SMUGGLING RING American, Charged iWth Piracy, Discloses Higher Ups in Game, By United Presa BREST, France, Oct. 2.—Max Phaff has saved his neck and started two governments on a world-wide search that may lay bare the entire business of rum running and deal a death blow to the biggest smuggling ring of the lot. Lighter Charge French authorities have postponed for a week further examination of the American whom they first accused of piracy in connection with the rail last June on tho French steamer Mulhouse which netted the pirates $2,000,000 worth of liquor. They will proceed to pres a slightly less serious charge—conpslracy in pixacy—against Phaff, after they have made an effort to capture some of his alleged accomplices. The men wanted were named by the young New Yorker Wednesday. It is only the desire of the authorities to avoid inter-national complications that hinders the French in the chase. They hope to provide the United States authorities with valuable information about rum-running in exchange for assistance in capturing the Mulhouse pirates. Escaped Noose Phaff. who was threatened with hanging if convicted on the piracy charge, escaped that danger when one of the crew of the Mulhouse declared the prisoner was net among the raiders. Saved from the noose, the American is seeking to extricate himself from his predicament by telling what he knows of the rum-running business, and especially by aiding the French to lay hands upon the Mulhouse raiders.

UNIVERSALISTS IN ANNUAL MEET E, P, Ross Opens SeventySeventh Confab, With 125 delegates the seventyseventh annual Universalist convention of Indiana opened today at Central Uniersalist Church, Fifteenth and New Jersey Sts. Emery I’. Ross of Aurora, president, made the annual address. Theodore Schlagel, vivee president, Indianapolis, welcomed delegates. John F. Clifford, ConnersviHe, responded. The Rev. W. O. Bodell. of Galveston, conducted devotional services. The Rev. Edwin Cunningham, pastor Central Universalist Church, conducted Service of Honly Commounion. The Rev. Wellington C. Holmes, Logansport, spoke. Following devotional services led by the Rev. Bodell, Dr. F. C. S. Wicks, pastor Indianapolis Unitarian Church, and the Rev. Lewis B. Fisher, Chicago, wil speak tonight. Woman’s Universalist Missionary Association of Indiana, of which rs. Martha Barr, Richmond, is president Indiana Universalist Sunday school convention, with Miss Maude Countryman, Galveston, president, and Young People's Christian Union, of which Miss Olive Eaks, Oakandon. is president, will hold meetings this week. BANDIT CAR TRACED Police Believe Licenses Stolen From Washington Man, • * Detectives say today a check up of the license number on the car used by the two hold up men who successfully obtained S7O from the cash drawer of the Harry C. Hume grocery, 222 E. Sixteenth St., was issued for a large make car to an owner In Washington, Ind. Officers say they believe the men are the same who held up two grocers Tuesday. Tfrey were In a small car both times. James Franklin, colored, of 638 LAcke St., told police his home was entered and clothes valued at S4O taken. Dallas Auto Hotel Dallas, Tex., has an automobile hotel where autos are “registered" and “checked out" like persons at their hotels. It is called the "Parkmoor.”

THURSDAY, OCT. % 13l

MAN AND BOY MlSy^ Police Seek Julietta Patient Who Escaped Wednesday. Earl Wlnninger, 708 Madison Ave.. left his home last -Monday and has not been heard from since. He was wearing a blue suit, brown cap, according to his mother, Mrs. Rose Pennick. Ben Kenworthy, 33, Inmate of the Julietta Hospital for Insane, escaped from there Wednesday. He was wearing overalls and jacket, black hat and Is dark complexioned and bald headed. His former home was at 551 S. Harding St. JUDGE RECOVERS FROMCOLLAPSE Worry Caused by Threats Made Against Wife. , By United Preaa CHICAGO, Oct. 2.—From his rooms in Mercy Hospital here, Justice John R. Caverly who gained international attention by his handling of the sensational LeopoldLoeb murder case, today sent word he was practically recovered from his nervous breakdown. Only intimate friends are permitted to see him. "I’ll be back on the job Oct. 13,” hewas quoted as saying. ‘‘l have had a strenuous year. "It was climaxed by the LeopoldLoeb case and I was on the verge of collapse when it was over. I tried not to mind the unkind remarks made by hundreds of cranks. But I started to worry when they began to threaten my wife. One wrote he would stick a poison needle in her."

FINE FOR OLD FOLKS! Take Haley’s MagnesiaOil —Milk of Magnesia and Mineral Oil Combined. When nature relaxes her vigilance and permits the bowels to become clogged with accumulating waste matter, a tablespoonfnl of Haley’s Mag-nesia-Oil. once or twice a day, will restore the bowels to their normal ac- ! tivity. A perfect combination of milk of magnesia and pure mineral oil, Haley’s Magnesia-Oil provides at one time an efficient antacid for disordered stomach, and a most natural lubricant for the bowels. The mineral-oil carries tbe milk of magnesia straight to the lov.-er bowel, where it is most required. Ii is harmless, causes no griping or nausea, and Las only tije palatable tastj of magnesia which is lost entirely when it is mixed with milk. Kuy a bottle of Haley’s \.agnesia-Oil today, and keep it always on hand. If your druggist can't supply you we will mail postpaid on receipt of price. Trial srie, 35c; family sixe. sl. The Haley >l-0 Company, Mldianapolis. r yakijt> |y|- O QurflYUlk of JUxujnvda "and Pane ftlinwal Oil —Advertisement. Cuticura Complexions Are Fresh And Clear Daily use of Cuticura Soap prevents clogging and irritation of the pores, the usual cause of pimples and blackheads, while the Ointment soothes and heals. Always keep Cuticura Talcum on hand; it is cooling and refreshing. SjuaplM PrM by Mill Addre..: T*br--*tonti,Dpt.soF.Mid4n4S, Sus Sold (varyfrhfire. Soap2sc. Ointments and 50c.Talcum25c. PIT* Cuticar* Product* Are Reliable.

MY DAUGHTER WOULD CRY AT EVERYTHING Nervous and Irritable. By Taking Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound Became Entirely Normal. “My daughter was in a very rundown condition, and was Irritable, |md would cry at UjPmHIU |' sllo waa so weak I ' ncl nervoU3 - As iw ham's Vegetable JP ■ on> pou n and had Jj- helped me when III) ‘ifflnlll gave it to her to build her up, and the results were that we could wish for. I wish that every mother with growing girls would try it for these troubles girls often have. I had taken it myself. I recommend the Vegetable Compound to women and girls and can not praise it too highly.”—Mrs. I. A. Holford, Box 48, Clinton, Wisconsin. Mothers can depend upon Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound to relieve their daughters of those troubles they so often have. They know from experience the value of the treatment of these complaints and many, like Mrs. Holford, give it I to their daughters.—Advertisement. I