Indianapolis Times, Volume 36, Number 205, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 January 1925 — Page 7

Wt JAN. 6,1925

CHMnALARMED BY COURT VERDICT IN WATER FIGHT Fear Water Supply Will Be Contaminated if Decision Stands. Bu United Prett CHICAGO, Jan. 6.—A mass meeting of city officials and business men will be held Saturday to decide on steps to protect Chicago and other cities affected by the decision of the United States Supreme Court restricting the flow of water from the lakes into the Chicago River to 4,1 ST cubic feet per second. At present Chicago is diverting 10,000 cubic feet per second from the lakes. Unless some way is found to continue the present,flow, the Illinois and Des Plaines Rivers and thousands of wells in towns throughout the State will be converted into dangerous cess pools. Contaminating Feared The rivers will become a settling basin in low water and in high water will back into the lake, contaminating Chicago’s drinking water with filth. Pear is also expressed thta Chicago and many surrounding towns would be plunged into darkness because the city’s lighting system is provided by the generation plants at the Lockport, 111., dam. There are. but two hopes for relief. They are: 1. Legislation by Congress, authorizing the withdrawal of 10,000 cubic feet per second. Representative Madden, Illinois, has such a bill pending. Order Possible 2. Issuance by Brigadier General Taylor, chief engineer of the War Department, of a permit to the sanitary district to maintain a sufficient flow of water to avoid a contaminated water supply. Officials of the board .are hopeful they may prevail upon the chief engineer to grant the permit. The sanitary district was created in 1889 by the Legislature. Construction of the canal was started in 1892 and water has flowed through it since 1900.

U.s. UNEASY AT JAP WAR TALK (Continued From Page 1) sanao Hanihara, resigned after the passage of the exclusion act. His only reason for so doing was the delicacy of our relations with Japan. Jap Maneuvers Japanese naval maneuvers were recently held in the Pacific to the southeast of the mainland, where, should trouble come, the great seav fight would most likely take place. They were on a grand scale, costing some $2,150,000, according to Secretary of Navy Wilbur, and were directed against a "blue fleet” advancing from our direction. It is generally admitted, even in Japan, that the “blue fleet” represented America. Congressman Fred A. Britten, of Illinois, has gone so far as to offer

LIVER TROUBLE CAUSE OF RICH BLOOOPpSURE Medical science knows that poisonous waste in our bodies would actually cause death in a few days if not eliminated by Nature’s processes. Because it destroys these deadly poisons, the liver is our most important organ—the body’s wonderful purifier. The liver prevents the formation of body poisons that causes diseases of the heart, kidneys, blood vessels and are chiefly responsible for premature old age. When the liver becomes weak, the poisons are socked up by the blood and health is broken down. Physicians know that the liver cannot be regulated by drags, bnt a safe Nature substance has been discovered which will at once increase the vital bile supply. Tbe discovery is purified ox gall. Get from. your druggist a package of Dioxol. Each tablet contains ten drops of purified ox gall. In 24 hours the poison toxins will be removed. Your liver will be regulated. Blood purification will begin. Sallow skin will dear. You will feel so much better yoa will know you have found the cause of yonr ill health. Dioxol tablets are harmless, tasteless and cost less than two cents each. These genuine ex gall tablets are prepared only under the name “Dioxol.” If any tablet is offered you under another name, refuse It Accept only Dioxol in the original genuine package. —Advertisement. STOP ITCHING SKIN Zemo, the Clean, Antiseptic Liquid, Gives Prompt Relief There la one safe, dependable treatment that relieves Itching torture and that cleanses and soothes the skin, goon after the first application of Zemo you wilt find that irritations. Pimples, Blackheads, Ecsema. Blotches, Ringworm and similar skin troubles wilt disappear. Zemo is all that is needed, for it banishes most skin eruptions, makes the skin soft, smooth and healthy. It is a non-greasy. disappearing Jqiuid that may be applied during the day. Trial bottle, 36c; large size. SI.OO. Zemo Soap, antiseptic and healing, 25c.—Advertisement.

Re-Elected

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H. E. JAHNS H. E. Jahns of La Porte was reelected president of the Motor Bus Association of Indiana at the annual convention of the organization at the Lincoln today. Ted C. Brown of Indianapolis was re-elected secretary.

a resolution In Congress Inviting the white peoples of the Pacific to meet with us to form a sort of coalition against the Asiatics. Japan’s open preparation for war, Representative Britten said, is reason enough for the whites bordering on the Pacific to have “a definite defensive policy for their mutual protection.” As we are minus naval bases in the F&r East, he frankly has in mind the possibility of our using Singapore, Hongkong, Sydney and other British outposts in that quarter of the globe. What if war did suddenly burst upon us? The American public goes to bed every sight secure in the belief that no* nation on earth can harm us. Are we prepared now to defend ourselves and our possessions?

British View Here is what Hector Bywater, foremost British naval critic, has to say about it. I quote Bywater, because he is a neutral —neither American nor Japanese—and can speak disinterestedly. “If America fights in the Pacific it wil! be, among other things, for the protection, or what is far more likely, for the recovery of the Philippines. And to do this she must be prepared to undertake active naval operations in the immediate zone of war, namely, the far western Pacific. How this is to be done without local base facilities Is a problem which apparently defies solution. “It is certain,” he says, “that in their present defenseless condition, both the Philippines and Guam would, become Japanese in the first weeks of war.” The Japanese strategist, Sei.liro Kawashima, writing in the “Dal Nihon,” admits the same thing. He says Japan could take the Philippines and Guam in the event of war, even if the American fleet were in Hawaii when hostilities began. At least, he says, “Japan would risk everything to destroy these two bases,” to prevent the United Statse using them. Secretary of the Navy Wilbur admits America occupies third place as a se4 power in the Far East. Japan, on the other hand, is daily making herself stronger, strong enough to be a match for America and Great Britain combined. Whcih leads the English authority above referred to, to observe: “For good or 111 the doors of the Far East have been slammed, barred and bolted, and the keys placed in the hands of Japan.” NEXT: What Use Will Japan Make of the Keys? Mac Fall Heads Sanitary Board Russell T. Mac Fall was elected president of the sanitary board for 1925 today. Frank C. Ungenfelter, president during 1924, was named vice president. O. C. Ross is the new mfember of the board.

Yodeling The Swiss have their yodelers. The American corn belt ha* its hog callers. No yodeler has a greater variety of vocal tricks, it is pointed out, than the really expert hog caller. There is the far-sounding falsetto, “Whoo-00-eyi” when the pigs are f&r off in tfie pasture. There is the rapid and nervous “Hig-pig-pig,” to arouse a bunch of lazy porkers near at hand. And there is the gushing. spelldefyhig call that is used when a bucket of swill is about to go splashing into the trough.

U.S. DEBT CLAIMS TO BE PRESENTED AT ALLIED PARLEY American Envoys Decide to Put Matter Before Conference. Bu Timet Sveoial PARIS, Jan. 6. —Question of American claims to share In German payments under the Dawes plan will be brought up at the earliest possible moment in Wednesday’s conference of allied finance ministers. The American ‘‘big three”—Ambassadors Kellogg and Herrick and Col. James A. Logan—who will attend the conference decided upon this move today, to prevent the question from being relegated. A final conference of the American observers will be held at the embassy tonight. The total of the American claims is something like 8600,000,000. Os this tentative total, some $350,000,000 is claimed for war damages suffered by individuals and firms, while -the balance represents the costs pf the occupation of the Rhine. France, Belgium and Italy have recognized in equity the right of the United States to be paid these claims and Japan has agreed in principle, but Great Britain opposed the proposal. The United Press learned today that Colonel Logan, in order to obtain British recognition of the justice of the American claims, offered —by way of a compromise—a proposal that payment of the Rhine army costs be spread over a longer period than originally provided. The American “big three” also is going to oppose discussion of allied debts at the conference.

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Wife’s Job to Be Buffer Between Husband and Unpleasantness, Mrs. Robert Dollar Believes

She Makes Home for Man Who 'Commutes’ Around . World. By HE A Service RAFAEL, Cal., Jan. 6. I S I —Converting a cottage or I u I a palace Into a home is easy for 'the efficient and conscientious housewife. Much easier than the self-ap-pointed task of Mrs. Robert Dollar of San Rafael, whose lifework has been the making of transient homes for a husband who ‘‘commutes” around the world. The husband Is Capt. Robert Dollar, head of the Dollar Line Steamship Company, who Is credited with doing more than any other man in developing trade between America and the Orient., Staterooms of liners, Pullman car accommodations, hotel suites, they’re all one to Mrs. Dollar. They've had to be. If she were to accomplish her purpose of keeping a happy home. Since 1902 the couple have traveled Twentytwo times 'to China, and have gone around the world twice. Their yearly average of travel is 30,000 mttee! Mrs. Dollar established their first home and she has seen to It that a happy home has been provided ever since. Rattled Hard Lack The young people were married on a Friday, Immediately* after a financial panic which left them worse than penniless. Undaunted, they set out with a crew of eighteen men to make anew start in Bracebrldge, Canada. Leaving Mrs. Dollar in the town’s hotel, the bridegroom set out for the forest where hia work lay. Returning a week later, he found that hia bride had left the

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hotel. The clerk could .giye no' information, but — \ Searching a bit,, the future captain found her established in a wee bit of a cottage, furnished with second-hand purchases she had made—it was their own home. Despite their financial stringency, Mrs. Dollar had paid cash for her purchases. It is a habit which has never left her.

A Radio Section in Tabloid size—easy to handle and to keep, will be a part of The Times each Thursday beginning this week. '•> . * i J / - Having established the “Hour by Hour” Program in Indianapolis, The Times now brings to Radio Fans the first section devoted exclusively to Radio News.

“Modern easy credit makes it much harder for young folks to save,” she declares. “I believe in paying cash. Thiq woqld make young couples realize that a lot of ■necessaries’ are not necessary at all.” Mrs. Dollar believes a wife should be a business partner to her husband in discussing new business enterprises. Then, too,

which her husband is witness, she keeps herself in a* buoyant frame of mind, free from moods and angry fits, undiscouraged by reverses and unmindful of discomforts. “In the lumber camps I learned how much of himself a man must put into achievement of success. So I gave my husband the beet of care, and kept myself welL I constantly kept myself cheerful and happy. “Nor did I tell him when little things at home went wrong. I tried to be a buffer between him and home unpleasantnesses. “True, my Job seemed Infinitely small as compared with his; but small as it was, it was never neglected.” This still continues. The captain never is bothered with travel arrangements, or the details of social and business entertaining, nor with home problems. eskldschools OFFERPROBLEM U. S. Spends 70c Per Child Dally for Teaching, Bv United Preet WASHINGTON, Jan. 6 .—Uncle Sam spends 70 cents a day to educate each native Eskimo and Indian child in Alaska, according to •the Department of Interior. The average cost per child of maintaining schools for the Alaskan natives Is $66.23, based on the total enrollment, and $97.66, based on actual attendance. Eighty-three schools are operated by the department, with 161 teachers, including principals and superintendents. With the Eskimos scattered oVer the Arctic regions In Northern Alaska, the department regards the education of natives as one of the biggest problems of the Government.

Some Eskimos live in small village! with a population from twenty to 500. The area of Alaska is divided into school districts and one district is twice the size of the State ol Illinois. While the enrollment of Alaska natives totals 8,910, the average daily attendance Is only 2,662.

EVERYDAY DITTY Keeping your body strong and efficient is your plain duty. Scott's Emulsion is a food-tonic that is used every day by thousands who nave learned die art of keeping strong. Take Scott’s 1 Scott St Bowse, Bloomfield. N. J. St-fi

(KUkb QiacUr team To Rely Oo Coticn To soothe and heal the rashes and skin irritations of childhood. Daily use of Cut!cura Soap, assisted by Cuticura Ointment, will keep the skin and scalp clean and healthy and prevent simple irritations from becoming serious. Bov Be. Ointment B and 90c. IWram Be. Bold eewrwbere. Semple each free. Addrrje: “CaSeara Laboratory*, Dept. MVTICaMta, Baa*." W" Cuticura Shaving Stick 25c.

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