Indianapolis Times, Volume 37, Number 297, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 April 1926 — Page 3

A PHIL 14, 192 b

When you drink teayou should drink INDIA: TEA I . . Ijf

INDIA TEA, when made in the correct way, is the most stimulating and refreshing drink in the world. It soothes and rests the nerves. It increases energy. It helps digestion. * More than a million pounds of Tea are consumed every day in England. I hey know its bracing and stimulating properties, All classes drink it. In cottage and mansion, in workshop and factory. Tea is drunk many times a day, because it creates renewed energy, and invigorates you so. Vv hen you have guests, serve afternoon tea It makes things run smoothly, promotes c 1 eerful conversation, and creates a pleasant atmosphere. * About one half of the world's tea supply comes from India, Onthelndia I ea Bush grows the finest Orange Pekoe in the world.

How to make a perfect cup of tea. Use an earthenware teapot. Put into it one teaspoonful of India Tea for dach cup of Tea required. Be sure the water is poured into the teapot the moment it boils. Allow to stand for 5 minutes to infuse. Put a little milk or cream into each cup before serving the tea. It greatly improves the flavour. Then add sugar to taste. but be sure you use INDIA TEA or a blend containing INDIA TEA

HOMES ON WEST SIDE INSPECTED Residents Urged to Clean Up Surroundings. Thousands of homes and business places were to be visited today in Mount Jackson and Haughville by Fire Chief Jesse A. Hutsell and his inspectors in quest of tire hazards. Residents Were urged to clean up their homes and surroundings as a part of the clean up and paint up campaign conducted by the Junior Chamber of Commerce. The city firemen began their in spectiony Tuesday by visiting approximately 1,600 residences in West .Indianapolis. The firemen received the greatest cooperation from every one, declared Inspector Bernard Lynch, who is assisting Chief Hutsell and Horace W. Carey, Are prevetnion division chief. Thursday the firemen will inspect north Indianapolis. Friday they will visit Brightwood. The day preceding the inspections a fire truck visits that section of the city, announcing the visit the next day.

GLASS DEMAND HINDERS POLICE (Continued From Page 1) ed crime and vice eliminated. But these same bankers had managed to obtain the assignment of policemen to stand guard inside their hanks. When I withdrew the policemen there was an outcry. The bankers felt they were a privileged class, but I could see no reason for their not employing their own guards. The ban Iters then lost their interest in the civic light. Traffiemen Shifted We began shifting traffic policemen at regular intervals. They had been kept too long at the same posts, they had made friends and permitted these friends, mostly influential business men, to violate traffic ordinances. Some of these posts were worth thousands of dollars a year to the policemen. Another clamor arose. Bankers and business men swamped by office and the mayor's with complaints. The Chamber of Commerce refused to support the war because the persistent effort to enforce the law impartiality, on rich and poor alike, had affected the hotel business. They said salesmen and other travelers avoided Philadelphia on weekends because liquor could not purchased in the hotels. The churches and church people were sincere, but they were pacifilsts. They said, let's do it painlessly, without offense to our rich contributors who sit in the front pews. The Committee of Seventy, a socalled reform organization, was a dud. The Kiwanis, the Rotary and similar business groups took no active part in the war, though some did pass resolutions. The Law Enforcement League, not a strong organization, diil stand up and is now “in bad” in consequence.

Parsons Pacific There are no fighting parsons in Philadelphia. All seemed to be afraid of the money suppliers. One prominent clergyman told me he intended to break the law whenever he felt like It. There are hundreds of traffic violations every day and It Is this privi-lege-demanding class that commits most of them. The president of the Chamber of Commerce, Charles P. Vaughan, was twice arrested for speeding. I wouldn't help him. He appealed to a magistrate and, after an affectionate scene, escaped punishment. These people really demand privileges—they don't merely request them. A world renowned philanthropist, who lives in Philadelphia, insisted on being given a courtesy card —a card that would permit him to park his car anywhere he pleased and to violate other minor laws. When It was refused he cooled off on reform. Philadelphia’s leading banker, one of the wealthiest men in America, appealed to me personally several times to renew such a card for him. He had carried one for many years. Kefused, ho, too, cooled.

Double lives Led Pillars of the church and of society wanted to bo considered on the side of law and order, but many of them were violators of the law. They had liquor in their homes, drank in public, had it at the dinner-dances they gave in the hotels for their children. How could they aid in the war? Tlio privilege-demanders transferred their allegiance from police headquarters to the magistrates. It was amusing to see men and women prominent in religious, social and business circles making a fuss over magistrates who were former policemen or plumbers. To eliminate this form of hypocrisy we might classify all citizens. Those with $1,000,000 should have blue buttons showing they were permitted to commit any crime on the calendar, including murder. Those with SIOO,OOO, white buttons, permitting robbery, burglary and assault and battery. Those with $25,000, red buttons, permitting only

Color Effects to Be Detailed Why men love red-headed girls and prefer loud neckties and Niie-green sox will he explained to the Indianapolis Advertising Club Thursday noon at the Claypool by Arthur S. Allen of New York In his talk on "Color in Advertising." Allen will tell what colors give magazine advertising attractiveness; what are the most effective color combinations for packages, catalogs and booklet covers. He Is considered one of the Nation’s foremost authorities on color in advertising and printing and his discussion will include a survey of the effect of colors on the mind.

Makes Race for State Senator

''-Wo Wffli ffignpr ■ M

Anderson Ketchum

Anderson Ketchum of Greensburg, deputy clerk of the State Supreme Appellate Courts, announced today that he will "stump’’ four southern Indiana counties in bis coming race for the Democratic nomination for State Senator. Ketchum boasts seventeen years’ active participation in politics, entering the game when he was only 15 years of age. He is a member of the Decatur County bar, having studied law with his brother. Gates Ketchum, now Rush County prosecutor. His coming campaign will carry him to Bartholomew, Decatur, Franklin and Union Counties, from which one Senator will be elected this fall. Ketchum is a member of the Methodist Church, the American Legion, the Knights of Pythias and the Odd Fellows. He served three enlistments in the Indiana National Guard and was a noncommissioned infantry officer during the war. He is married.

violation of traffic laws. All under $25,000 would have no buttons and be punishable for any offenses they might commit—as they are now. This would simplify the work of the police. It would also Inspire citizens to greater efforts, in order to advance from the red to the white and from the white to the blue-button class. Works That Way It is not as silly as it sounds, for it works pretty much that way, without the buttons. A cheap saloon, selling beer, is raided, the beer confiscated, the owner arraigned, tried and convicted, his place pad locked. The wealthy hotel owner escapes. He has money and influence. The poor man plays cards in a cheap club and is arrested in a raid; the wealthy man gambles for high stakes in a fashionable club and is free of annoyance. The liquor laws. the vice laws, the gambling laws, are all class legislation. The poor cannot afford to buy good liquor at today’s bootleg prices. They drink poison liquor. The wealthy man, if he didn’t stock up before prohibition, buys it at his club or hotel. So, by divine right, position rules, and the police plod on, opposed by those who can i hire skilled lawyers and have millions behind them, unsupported by the very people who cry most loudly for law and order. Again I must say, considering everything, the political situation, the apathy and pacifism of the churches, the open antagonism of the privileged class and the constant temptations offered, the police of Philadelphia did remarkably well. (Tomorrow General Butler dlseusses the second three months of Ills regime and events leading up to the first open break with the > tyor.) (Copyright, 1926, by the Be. Syndicate, Inc.)

OGDEN KEYNOTE FRIDAY Constructive Program to Itc Given by Candidate. A constructive program for proper representation of Marion County in Congress will be presented by James M. Ogden, candidate for Republican nomination as Seventh District Rep. resentative, in his opening speech at 7:30 p. m. Friday at 2909 Central Ave. All candidates who attend will be Introduced to the audience. Mrs. Ogden, in charge of women’s activities, announced at a meeting of women workers there would bo organization of women formed in behalf of her husband's candidacy in every ward and precinct. BILL SUPPORT URGED Lawmakers Asked to Back Postman’s Pension Proposal. Officers of the Indianapolis branch of the National Letter Carriers’ Association today wired Hoosier Senators and Congressmen Urging their support of a bill boosting postmen’s pensions. The measure makes 62 years the retirement ago with the privilege of working a nadditional three years, requires 30 years service to make postal employes eligible to receive a pension and increases the present monthly pension of S6O to SIOO. Indorsement of the blil was given Tuesday night at the Chamber of Commerce.

Help your stomach and liver End. gas pains, constipation /Ba TF your Btom*ch and iKS 'a \ JL UTtr are weak, y*ur (KSr JL tod to net digested. V A 13 Thto ttun* (Md to to ACjT held op la year body. l/toMF 4 * The ami remit to con- \ rtipetion, which oaoees \\aKL headache aad eerere gas x m peine. Per 68 years, people have sensibly corrected thto oonSttion by aetna Chamberlaia’e Tablets tor the fitemecn aad Liver. They help the digeetiva organa atop ehroato eon•tl nation. Got Chamberlain’e Tabtote today at aay Drag Store, enly 26c.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

POLICE ANREST MUSICAL DRIVER Did Not Have Hands on Wheel, Officer Says. A musical driver, who, it is said, paid more attention to a harmonica than to the steering wheel, was arrested early today by police on a reckless driving charge. Twelve motorists were taken Tuesday night. Motorcycle Policeman Renforth said he arrested Robert Britton, 20, of* 912 S. Delaware St., on the reckless driving charge after the young man had driven his car for more than two blocks without placing his hands on the steering wheel. He was playing a harmonica as he drove. Alleged speeders were; William Shaw. 21, of 1523 Sheldon St.; P. RWhcstine, 25, of 1616 Wade St., and Arthur Lamb, 24. of 307 E. North St.; Clarence Raymond, 27. of 2329 Stuart St.' . E. Skillman, 21, of 3201 E. ! Tenth St., and C. B. Wheeler, 27, Fairview Settlement. Fred A. Gorsuch. 49, of 306 S. Warman Ave., and Herbert Willard, 25, Fountaintown, Ind., were charged with reckless driving.

Far and Near A luxurious French chateau, servants, automobiles and an income of a man of wealth may he offered by France to Abd El-Krim, the rebel Riffian chieftain, if he will agree to leave Morocco to assure peace. Hunt for New York’s “radio raffles,’’ who shot and killed one policeman and wounded three others, ended Tuesday when Paul Hilton, 26, was arrested as he was buying a ticket to see a baseball game. Fifth attempt of Peggy Hopkins Joyce toward a lasting marriage may fail. Mrs. Evelyn Comstock of Chicago says she and Stanley Comstock. wealthy Florida realtor, and fiancee of Peggy, are still married. The Ix>s Angeles, the Nation’s only rigid dirigible, left its hangar at Dikehurst, N. J.. Tuesday for its first flight, since last June. The ship behaved perfectly, officers said after the flight. Thousands of enthusiastic Norwegians greeted Roald Amundsen's dirigible Norge as it landed at Oslo, Norway, en route to Leneingrad on its proposed flight over the North pole.

MAN ON TRAIN HELD Arrested in Investigation of Shooting of Ohio Policeman. Police emergency squads met a Big Four Springfield division freight train at Sherman Drive and TwentyFirst St., Tuesday night and arrested a man giving his name as Clarence Phillips, Conway, Ark. He was found beneath logs on a car. Conductor C. G. Brown, 270 N. Addison St., notified police he suspicioned him of being the man who shot a police officer at Newark. Ohio, Tuesday. Toughs—a harmful NUISANCE Are warning of an inflamed, irritated, congested state of the air passages, which with neglect, damp and changeable weather, so often proggresses into bonchitis or pneumonia. Effective' for these serious coughs and colds is Foley’s Honey and Tar. It easily raises the germ-laden phlegm, puts a soothing, healing coating on the irritated, inflamed throat. It stops tickling and nervous hacking, quiets coughs quickly, lest for children and grown persons. Satisfaction guaranteed. Sold everywhere. —Advertisement.

“EAST OF THE SETTING SUN’’ Today in Mexico, Canada, Spain, Cuba, Haiti, France, England, Peru, Chili, Argentina, India, the Philippines, Colombia, Central America, the West Indies and the isles of the sea, women are buying the old reliable remedy, Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. Here in the United States nearly 4,000,000 bottles of this medicine are sold in a single year. Ask your druggist. Advertisement. Helpless After 15 Years of Asthma Cough and Wheeze Were Slopped Two Years Ago. Well Ever Since. Any ono who has been tortured by asthma or bronchial trouble will be glad to read how these troubles were ended for Mrs. George Kiefer, Route B. Box 133, Indianapolis. She writes; "I had suffered from asthma for fifteen years. I took everything any one told me. sueh as electric treatments, serums and chiropractic treatments. 1 was told I Inherited asthma and there was no cure for it. "I was so bad I couldn’t do my housework, sueh ns sweeping, washing or anything. Could hardly walk across the house on account of my breathing; in fact they could hear me breathe clear out in the yard. I began Nacor in September, 1923, and purchased three bottles of it. It used to be that I would have to sit up in a chair for four or five nights at a time. The second night after beginning Nacor I slept In bed all night. I have not noticed any asthma in over two years; breathing fine, no wheezing at all and sleep fine nil night.” You will enjoy reading many other letters from the people' who have recovered nfter years of suffering from asthma, bronchitis and severe chronic coughs, ami have had no return of the trouble. These letters, and also an interesting booklet giving information of vital importance about these diseases, will be sent free by Nacor Medicine Cos., 413 State Life Bldg.. Indianapolis, Ind. No matter how serious your ease, call or write today for this freo information. It may point the way back to health for you, as it has for thousands of others.—Advertisement.

We are now located In our new home. 20 WEST OHIO STREET We Solicit Investment Fund* 6% on Savings. UNION NATIONAL SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION

PRISON BLAMED FOR ACTION OF DR. ROSS Mother Says Sixteen Years Behind Bars Have Played Tricks With Mind of Her Boy.

The 76-year-old mother of Dr. N. B. Ross, fugitive M-uncie slayer, believes sixteen years of prison confinement have played tricks with the brain of her boy—her nurse. Mrs. Lucinda Sisson, living with her daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. M. J. IValsh, “who are awfully good to me.” at 3801 E. Thirty-Eighth St., today said she believed “his mind’s rambling;” that Dr. Ross would have gone back to prison, April 1, if his mentality had not been upset by the horrors of prison life. Mrs. Walsh went shopping Jan, 23. She admonished her mother not to go out because of the icy sidewalks. But the mailman left a letter in the box. Broke Her Hip “I thought it might bo from my poor boy," Mrs. Sisson explained. She fell and broke her hip. A thirtyday parole was secured for Dr. Ross so that he might help take care of his mother. He stayed each night, every half hour giving her medicine. He “got in touch with people,” asking them to work for a permanent parole for him. The thirty days elapsed, A thirty day extension was granted but no more extensions could be secured. Dr. Ross left April 1 to return to prison. Officials started a nation-wide hunt for him April 5, he having disappeared. "It was politics.” Mrs. Sisson said emphatically. Doubtless His Writing Mis. Walsh examined a letter, mailed in New Orleans April 1 7. to

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The Times twitting the searchers. She said it doubtless was her brother's writing. It indicated he was going to Havana, Cuba. The fugitive in a letter to Ft. Wayne authorities mailed Sunday in St. Louis declared he would return to Indiana after the primary to be arrested on the streets and fight recommitment to prison. “The Governor turned me out illegally on a temporary parole,” he wrote. “There is no such thing as a temporary parole for a lifer. When a lifer goes out of the prison gates by order of the Governor he is a free man unless he is in the custody of a guard. I was -in charge of no one.” "My poor hoy, 54, his health broken —his mind rambling—out in the world without a home,” cried Mrs. Sisson. SENATOR AT NEWCASTLE ♦ Robinson Will Speak Tonight at Knights town. Senator Arthur R. Robinson was to speak at noon today at Newcastle and tonight at Knightstown. Reports of splendid progress in Robinson’s campaign for renomination were received at a meeting of district leaders here Tuesday at the Severin. influenza I Asa preventive, melt and ■ Inhale night and morning— VICKS v Vapoßub 6”' T 7 Million Jars Used Yearly

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LODGE FROLIC PLANNED Twelve committees are making arrangements for the frolic of Indianapolis Lodge, No. 669. F. and A. M., April 21-24 in Tomlinson Hall. A special feature of the event will be a Charleston contest each night with finals on the last night. Vaudeville, music and dancing will

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be on the program. Ten per cent of the proceeds will go to the Masonic home at Franklin, Ind. Those desiring to enter the Charleston contests are asked to communicate with Leo K. Kline, 433 Lemcke Bldg.

For That Cold or After the Grippe 1 : Sr i § / if r pi and villi ■ TAKE DR. PIERCE’S GOLDEN MEDICAL DISCOVERY In Liquid or tablets, at your Drug .Score Contains no harmful ingredient. Send 10c to Dr. Pierce’e Invalids* Hotel, Buffalo, N. Y., for trial pkg. Tablets

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