Indianapolis Times, Volume 37, Number 142, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 October 1925 — Page 2

2

RUCKER SLINGS SOME MUD AT MYERS FORCES G. 0. P. Speaker Asserts Old Machine Is Backing Candidate. “The same persons who discredited the city with the BellPerrott machine are behind the candidacy of Walter Myers for Mayor,’’ Alvah J. Rucker, attorney, declared at a Republican meeting Tuesday night at 2037 Prospect St. Retaliating to what he termed Democratic mud slinging, Rucker flung some moist dirt of his own and also predicted the line-up of the official cabinet for Myers, if he is elected. “Denny Bush is reported to be on the av’noo attempting to organize the colored population for Myers and it is openly charged he is to be street commissioner, if Myers wins,’’ Rucker said. “It is well reported that Hendricks Kenworthy, a pillar of the Bell regime, is to be city purchasing agent; that William E. Clauer is to be elevated from his former post of board of works secretary under Bell to presidency of the board. It has been asserted that Frank P. Baker, formerly prosecuting attorney, is to be corporation counsel and that John Zener, the fund collector de luxe, is to be chief of police. Gippy Gavin, in the belief of many, is to be rewarded by the Democratic organizations as the head of the street cleaning department.” Rucker said many of those indicted by the grand jury during the Bell investigation are in the front line trenches for Myers now.

Gone, but Not Forgotten

If you see any automobiles bearingthes elicense numbers, call the police or 'ine Indianapolis Times. Main 3o0(>. Tlio owner may be able to do the same tor you gome time. Automobiles reported stolen to police belong to: Carl Kudelke, 1407 S. New Jersey St.; Ford, 10167, from 1417 E. Washington St. t Wayne Dean, 1324 Ringgold St., Ford, 491-295, from Shelby and Comar Sts. William H. Freeman, 5159 Park Ave., Buick, 385-034, from Louisiana and Illinois Sts. Albert Tyre, 730 N. Holmes Ave., Dodge, from Meridian St. and Monument PI. Thomas Gromsley, 2029 E. Washington St., Ford, from Merrill and Illinois Sts.

BACK HOME AGAIN

An automobile reported found by police belongs to: J. O. Houston, 929 E. Pratt St., Ford, found at Dearborn St. and Massachusetts Ave. STREET FOR HEROES WINNIPEG, Can.—After learning that three Winnipeg men, who earned the Victoria cross during the World War, lived on the same street within a block of each other, the city has decided to change the name of the street to Valor Rd.

Help for Women Who Work The Most Reliable Help for Ailing Women Who Are Obliged to Work is Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound These Four Women Testify To That Fact

; - : :■■ ' . • * ::>• : : ; •' '• • ty, ■ I , ■ *v ;V ; ,

OPERATION AVOIDED

“I was doing heavy, straining work which caused me to have great pains in the lower part of my abdomen. At times my'pains were so great it was necessary to take morphine, and I feared an operation was necessary. I took Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. The first bottle brought results and I can truthfully say that for the past four months I have never felt that pain.”—Mrs. Joseph Poltier, 9110 Lumpkin Ave., IJamtramek, Michigan.

These are the Conditions for which Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound is Justly Famed as a Remedy

FOR WOMAN’S ILLS Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound is a dependable medicine. It has restored thousands to health. MIDDLE AGED WOMEN find symptoms accompanying the Change of Life are readily overcome by the Vegetable Compound.

Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound

Lawyers Defend Stephenson

v. s{& ijK iß| .s&\ J!.y & Jjpjjj 7 ' y w J| MB 1 * i '’: 1 iiiii' i * '■’*v- ■’ luMl|n!(Rwfi| - ■> |||gßL JwH|^ML^v^v.. ••: i *^^TOjfeißgtfi^<**

Left to right: Ira Holmes and E";>h Inman, two of (lie attorneys defending I). Stephenson, Earl Klimk and Earl Gentry', now on trial at Noblesvilte on a charge of murd 't ing Miss Madge tlberholtzer,' Indianapolis.

LONG CRUISE PLANNED English Group to Cover 35,000 Miles in Small Vessel, Bu United Press LONDON, Oct. 14.—A 30.000-mile adventure cruise lasting two and a half years has been undertaken by Captain Gardiner, his wife and son and two Englishmen. The vessel, a twenty-sevon-ton sketch, will touch at hundreds of small ports in distant British possessions where white men are seldom seen. The adventurers hope to cover the expenses of the trip by trading with the natives and sales of articles such as might be badly wanted by isolated white traders.

RARE PEARL DISPLAY Bu Times Special LONDON, Oct. II. —In a Regent St. shop here are shown a rare collection of pearls. There are white Austrian pearls, with a silvery sheen, very beautiful, but very cold, to be worn by the pale blond. There are the warm magnolia-tinted pearls found in the depths of the Red Sea, ideal for darker women, and the rare black pearls, found in the Gulf of Mexico by fishers searching for the black mother of pearls.

TIRED, AILING MOTHERS let Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound make you well and strong. It has no equal. GIRLS WHO WORK find that Lydia E.Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound may be expended upon to overcome pain and irregularities.

NO OTHER MEDICINE FOR WOMAN’S ILLS HAS RECEIVED SUCH WORLD WIDE ENDORSEMENT AS

ONLY ONE HORSE RACED Toluo Reports One Case Where Vou Couldn’t I/O sc Money. Bu XEA Service TOKIO, Oct. 14.—You couldn't possibly have lost if you had bet on a recent race at the Xelgishi track. There was only one entrant, Junpu, but it ran around the track just as If it had about a dozen horses following it in a Kentucky Derby. “It was the uneventful race of the day,” said the Japan Advertiser. NEW WAX FIGURES POUT Personality Shown by Manikins in London Shop Window's. Bit United Press LONDON, Oct. 14.—Wax figures as seen in the London shop windows are no longer all of the “beauty chorus” variety. Instead, some frown, some pout, some look downcast, some look peeved. The new idea in producing wax figures for show window purposes is that the characters shall reflect the individuality of the clothes on display. Glass eyes and real hair for the figures have also gone into the discard. The new models have waxen hair and waxen eyes.

I i**'/ , i % ■* \

FACTORY WORKER

“I was very nervous and suffered for a long time with pains in my back and side. I worked in a factory then, and for about three months I did not work at all. Two women told me about Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. I tried it. It has taken my pains away and my nervousness. I recommend it when I can as I know it is good for women’s troubles. I will answer any letter that any woman writes me." — Mrs. Charles R. Stine. R.F.D. 2, Litltz, Pa.

BANDIT ROBS MAN IN GARAGE Lone Stick-up Gets sll and Saxophone. Finck Dorman. 24, of 1936 Central Ave., was the victim of a lone holdup man, as he was putting his auto in his garage late Tuesday night. The bandit took sll and a saxophone %-alued at $75. James H. White, colored, 2338 Calhoun St., fell victim to the ancient fleece game, when two men met him and doubted that it was possible to bank and withdraw money. White showed them It was possible to draw out $194. Then he allowed one to inspect it and that is the lost he saw of It. A. W. Goodwlr, 2444 N. Meridian St., reported was shopping when his watch valued at S4O was lifted from his pocket. Carl Brensh, 125 W. Fourteenth St., driver for Schloss Bros., reported eight suits were taken frbm his auto. Miss Myrtle Roup, 167 Blake St., employed at Armours Packing House, reported her watch valued at s2l taken from a locker. R. W, Smith, CIS Drake St., reported clothing, rugs, valued at sllO taken from home. F.dmond Showalter, 240 W. Vermont St., said SBO was taken from room.

BALTZELL FIBS 10 MEN GUILTY Head of Sanitarium Only One Acquitted. Bu Times Special EVANSVILLE. Ind., Oct. 14.—Ten persons were found guilty' in Federal Court Tuesday and one man was acquitted. Dr. I. G. Hollinger, New berg, head of a sanitarium for liquor, drugs and tobaccoadHicts, was found not guilty by a jury on charges of violating the anti-narcotic act. Judge Robert C. Baltzell is on the bench. Persons found guilty, charges and sentences follow: Clarence Coogan, liquor, thre months in jail and fined $100; William Potter and James Gray, auto theft, six months and four months in jail, respectively'; Chester Clements and John H. Crews, narcotic violation, six and four months respectively. Jake Timberlake, liquor, four months and S3OO fine; Charles Bevinger, liquor, four months and SIOO fine; Harry' Loeths, liquor, ninety days and John Klasser, liquor, six months and SIOO fine. PROPOSE 'RUBBERNECKS’ Park Board Considers Feasibility of Sight-Seeing Route. A committee of the city park board today was investigating feasibility of a regular route over boulevards for operation of sight-seeing busses, proposed at hoard meeting Thursday by Robert I. Todd, president of the Indianapolis Street Railway Company. The route Todd proposed includes Fall Creek Blvd.. Thirty-Eighth St.. N. Meridian St., N. Capitol Ave. and Myers Rd.

- - II V=W r ••• ••• aRb:.

“At the time I began taking Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound I had been suffering for two years with bearing down pains and cramps in my legs so I could scarcely walk. My mother was taking your medicine for the Change of Life and thought it would help me, and It did. I recommend your medicines to my friends, and I will answer all letters asking about it.” Mrs. P. E. Everts, Box 140, Marshalltown, loua.

OPERATIONS AVOIDED Many women have been restored to health bv the Vegetable Compound c...j operations have been avoided. EXPECTANT MOTHERS find Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound strengthens and tones up the system for the trying ordeal.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

CRAMPS AND PAINS GONE

OVERWORKED WOMEN who suffer from female ills find health and strength in Lydia E.Pink* ham’s Vegetable Compound. NERVOUS PROSTRATION The Vegetable Compound builds up and strengthens the tired, weak, overwrought nervous system.

Jury Frees Youthful Husband in Stabbing

Deputy Sheriff John Sands, Cobum lluniiiiglon and H:s Wife, Mrs. 'lholma Huntington.

Verdict of Not Guilty Is Ret. turned in Criminal Court Murder Case. Coburn Huntington, 18, of 719 N. Alabama St., tried in Criminal Court on charge of second degree murder, was acquitted by a jury which returned its verdict today to Special Judge Frank A. Symmes. Huntington had been held in jail j since May 6, after he fatally stabbed John Williams, 17, colored, with a butcher knife, during an argument in the kitchen of the Wilcox restaurant, 326 E. Market St. The case was given t othe jury at 4:15 p. m., Tuesday. Huntington was jubilant when the verdict was read. He kissed his pretty y'oung wife, Mrs. Thelma Huntington. 18, to whom he was married only three weeks before the tragedy, and shook hands with his friends in the courtroom. The jury' was hut for one and onehalf hours, having taken eight ballots. Throughout the trial the youthful defendant sat beside his wife. During a dramatic plea made by Fred McCallister, defense attorney, to the jurors Tuesday afternoon for a verdict of acquittal, Mrs. Huntington wept as she clasped the hand of her husband. It was brought out in testimoney that Huntington and Williams had quarreled over the theory of evolution. Huntington is said to have jokingly called Williams grandfather a “black ape.” It was after Williams resented this that they had

- ■ 1

OPERATOR AND SUPERVISOR

“My work was long distance operating and supervising, and I got into a very nervous state and was all run-down. I had a tired feeling which made me awfully listless. I learned of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound and tried it. It quieted my nerves and I was less annoyed and more lively. It took away that dragging feeling and improved my health in every way.”— Mrs. O. TF. Thecl, 925 Pawnee Street, Leavenworth, Kansas.

PAINS IN SIDE AND BACK often indicate a female derangement which will quickly yield to Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. A DEPENDABLE MEDICINE Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, made from roots and herbs, has stood the test tor fifty years.

a souffle which terminated in Huntington stabbing Williams. Hunt'ngton insisted he acted in self defense. He claimed Williams was reaching for a meat cleaver when he used the knife.

Be§t Way to Loosen Stubborn Cough Thin liome-nmde remedy in a wonder for quick results. Easily nnd cheaply made.

Here In a home-made syrup which millions of people have found to he the moot dependable means of breaking up stubborn coughs. It is cheap and simp's, but very prompt in action. I'ndcr its healing, soothing Influence, chest soreness goes, phlegm loosens, breathing becomes easier, tickling in throat stops and you get a good night’s restful sleep. The usual throat and chest colds are conquered by it in 24 hours or less. Nothing better for bronchitis, hoarseness, croup. throat tickle, bronchial asthmay>r winter coughs. To make this splendid cough syrup, pour 2% ounces of Pinex into a pint bottle nnd fill the bottle with plain granu’ated sugar syrup and shake thoroughly. If you prefer use clarified molasses, honey, or corn syrup, instead of stigar syrup. Either way, you get a full pint—a family supply —of much better cough syrup than you could buy resiy-mado for three times the money. Keeps perfectly and children love its pleasant taste. Pinex is a special and highly concentrated compound of genuine Norway pine extract, known the world over for its prompt healing effect upon the membranes. To avoid disappointment ask yottr druggist for "2Vt ounces of Pinex” with full directions, and don't accent anything else. Guaranteed to give absolute satisfaction or money promptly refunded. The Pinex Cos., Ft. Wayne, Ind.—Advertisement.

MELLON TO fiIVE TAX COT PLANS Secretary Will Go Before House Committee. Ba t lifted Press WASHINGTON, Oct. 14.—Secretary of the Treasury Mellon will before the House ways and means committee with his theories of taxation when the congressional mac chine starts to vrind out the new tax reduction scheme Monday. The new law probably will la elude a retroactive slash on taxes' pai dthis year—peihaps a 25 per cent cut. Congressional lenders announce a

Walk-Over TWO DAY SALE THURSDAY AND FRIDAY 1,963 Pairs of Shoes Three Great Price Groups S3„SS ss. m $5.00 Numbers in Gold and Silver Cloth

c hJafik~€>iJet l SHOE STORE 28 N. Pennsylvania St.

For Early Men and Women Store Opens 7:30 A. M.

Selig’s Subway EXTREME VALUE YOUR MONEY ■ . j.... /

MEW! | and on Sale Thursday FROCKS For Women and Misses—Smartest Winter Styles Featured at *13 3i Velvets — Satins — Crepes— Woolens — Two-piece effects, flares, ' princess frocks, tailored woolens, boleros. An ((T . event you can’t afford to miss. Be here early!

Vv jiiDi'tEfeDA 1, At Cl. lij lu^o

schedule whereby it is planned to pass the new law by March 1. After ten days of hearings the committee will go behind closed doors with treasury department experts to' write the first draft of tho new bill. blanked by Assistant Secretary Winston nnd Trensurey Actuary McCoy, Mellon will give his opinion as to how the $350,000,000 available to the new cut can best be distributed. ONE-CYLINDER FISH SPRINGFIELD. Mass.—Kxplana- ■ tion of the finding of a spark plug in the stomach of a pickerel caught near Collinsville, Conn., recently, is made by Richard Bailey and William Hatch here. The men suy that while fishing in June they cast a line weighted wtlh a spark plug. A large pickerel was seen to leap for the bait. When the line was pulled in the plug was missing.

Closes 6 P. M. During Sale Shop Early