Indianapolis Times, Volume 38, Number 1, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 May 1926 — Page 2

PAGE 2

DEMOCRATS FACE SHOWDOWN TODAY ON SHOALS ISSUE Senator Copeland Calls Party Caucus on Stand to Be Taken. 'Timm Waxhiwiton Pttrmit. M?.? Arte York Avenue WASHINGTON, May 13.—The Democratic party faced today an absolute showdown on the Muscle Shoals problem. Senator Copeland of New York took the lead In forcing party action. He announced lie would seek a Democratic caucus in the Senats, thereby to demand what action the party intends to take toward the Coolidge Administration’s plan of leasing the $150,000,000 Government power plant to private capital for private profit. Copeland's move is important, due to declarations made by the Democratic national committee In the las* national campaign. In that campaign the committee induced the whole Cooltdge Admfnistration in favoring the national power trust. Hoover Attacked In a, pamphlet sent throughout the nation the committee attacked Herbert Hoover, Secretary of Commerce, as a power trust member of the Cabinet,” alleging "he has recently delivered speeches opposing public developments and advocated

RUN DOWN AND NERVOUS -SPRING REMEDY BRINGS RELIEF John W. Moore, Indianapolis, Ind., Says He Obtained Wonderful Results From Todd’s Tonic. “I have been subject for many months to dizzy spells, nervousness and that tired feeling. I was advised by friends to try Todd's Tonic and 1 find that my friend was right. Todd's Tonic improved my whole system wonderfully. It has stimulated the action of my stomach so that everything I eat digests well; has quieted my nerves; relieved me *>f my aches and pains. Now, after putting in a day's hard work, I feel just like putting in another one as I don't feel tired. I ant glad to thank the Todd's Tonic manufacturer for this wonderful tonic.” JOHN W. MOORE, 1531 N. Capitol Ave., Indianapolis, Ind. Todd's Tonic, made of finest California Wine is pleasant to take. For sale at all Haag Drug Stores and all other drug stores throughout this section. Todd's Tonic Laxative Tablets—"A Dose at Night—Makes Everything Right."—Advert isement.

PIMPLES LASTED OVERHEAR Hard and Red. Face Disfigured. Cuticura Heals. “ My trouble began from U3lng cheap soap. My face broke out with pimples that at first were large and soft, but later became small, hard and red. They scaled over and Itched and burned causing me to scratch. Scratching caused eruptions and my face was so disfigured that I was ashamed to go out. The trouble lasted over a year. “ I read an advertisement for Cuticura Soap and Ointment and sent for a free sample. It helped me so I purchased more and In five weeks I was healed." (Signed) Miss Anna Dennis, 3510 Lowell Ave., Lorain, Ohio, Sept. 28, 1925. CuticuraSoap,Ointment and Talcum are ideal lor daily toilet uses. Sop2se Ointment, 25 nd Me. Talcum 25c. Sold ♦ t*rjrwhr<. Sample each free AddreM: "OIWVi Laboratories. Dept A, ilald.tn. QHP* Cuticura Shtflng Stick 25c.

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Husband Nearly Too Considerate Consideration for his wife nearly led Marshall King, 2414 N. 8a I lei St., to be arrested as a burglar late Wednesday, after he crawled in a window at bis home, instead of arousing her to open the door. King told police, who answered a burglar call, that he had forgotten his front door key and crawled through tlie window rather than wake his Wife.

turning over the water power rights now belonging to the people to private corporations." In the same pamphlet the Democratic National Committee proclaimed: “Another proof that. President Coolidge can be depended upon to turn over the water power sites of the Nation for private exploitation is shown by his suddden friendship with Henry Ford, leaving himself legitimately open to the charge that if Ford would retire from the presidential race Coolidge would help him secure Muscle Shoals." The Democratic committee cited figures to show that private power companies are overcharging the people for electricity, and declared "the power interests dread any demonstration of any kind which will reveal to the people the amazingly low cost of producing and distributing electric energy.” Democrats Help Despite these declarations, fifteen Democratic Senators voted March 8 for tlie resolution by which a congressional committee negotiated with private capital for a fifty-year lease of Muscle Shoals. The committee finally recommended the bid of thirteen associated power companies. When a move was made to have this bid further investigated by a Senate committee, thirteen Democrats joined with the Republican machine to smother it. In both of these votes putting the Democratic party on record, such leaders ns Robinson, Arkansas, floor leader: Harrison of Mississippi and Swanson and Glass of Virginia voted with the Administration. Copeland said today; "I am unalterably opposed to leasing Muscle Shoals to the power combine. I believe the Government should hold on to the people’, prnjeet until we knowjust what the project is worth to the Nation. I think it is time to call a party caucus."

GUILD WILL GIVE TEA Musical Program Will He Presented Friday Afternoon. The Hassler Mission Guild will give a musical tea at the home of Mrs. Paul Bessire, 4224 Washington Blvd., Friday afternoon from 3 to 5. Receiving with Mrs. Bessire will he the guild president. Mrs. George L. Pugh; Mrs. E. C. Wacker, treasurer; Mrs. Byron Sunderland, secretary, and Mrs. Theodore Stenzel. vice president. Mrs. Mary Traub Busch, contralto; •Tames Garfield, tenor: Miss Bernice Reagan, violinist, accompanied by Mrs. William Herbert Gibbs, pianist, -will be on the musical program and Mrs. Cliantilla White will give readings. Mrs. Blanche Godfrey and Mrs. Oliver P. Fauchier will preside at the tea table and will he assisted by Mesdames Goethe Link, Otto Keller. H. 11. Petty, Jacl* Karstadt, Henry Ruckelshaus, H. H. Ila'nning, Fred S. Duesenberg and other guild members.

‘REGENERATION’ SUBJECT New York Pastor Assails Modernism —Urges Faith. "Modernism cannot steal the ethics of the Cross of Christ while It rejects the substitutionary power of the cross,” said Dr. John Roach Straton, pa-stor of Calvary Baptist Church, New York, In a sermon Wednesday night at Cadle tabernacle on “Ye Must Be Born Again.” "We need the olrl-fashioned truth of regeneration as the basis of all our thinking.” he said. Man through faith can find the key to the mystery of regeneration and can pray his way into regeneration, he declared. Dr. Straton insisted the modernists are trying to change Christianity front a supernatural, divine religion into a religion of bald materialism. and are indulging in an Idle dream through lost faith and wrong teachings.

HOSMAN IS ELECTED Ixtcal Man Heads State Eclectic Medical Association Dr. Fred L. Hosinan, Indianspoils, was elected president of the Indiana State Eclectic Medical Association at the close of the convention Wednesday, at the Lincoln. Other officers: Dr. F. W. Moses, Indianapolis, vlop president; Dr. J. N. Billman, Sullivan, second vice president, and Dr. John Swanson. Ft. Wayne, and I>r. C. A. Tindell, Shelbyville, were re-elected secretary j and treasurer, respectively.

TEMPLARS ON WAY HOME rrize for Rest I>rill Team Goes to Kokomo. H)l l nitrrl PrcKt TERRE HAUTE. Ind., May 13. Knights Templar of Indiana were turning homeward today following the close of the annual State conclave. The prize for the best drill team went to the Kokomo commandery. Prizes for attendance from their respective districts were awarded to Rushville, Newcastle, Vincennes, Plymouth. Bloomington, Greencastle and Clinton. SEA LION VS. SEA BASS OAKLAND. Cal.—Beginning in an argument over floating food, a 12-foot sea lion and a huge sea baas fought for ten minutes in full view of trans-bay commuters. The lion finally severed the smaller fish’s 'oackbone. Instruments to record temperatures, pressures, drafts, etc., have saved millions of dollars worth of coal In steam plants.

Desert Scinds (jive Up Secrets of Sphinx

COne'a, TIMtS

The full grandeur of the Sphinx of the Plain of (li/.eb has just emerged from Egypt’s desert sands. For long ages these sands buried the ba.se of the great stone form, and not until hundreds of Egyptians had toiled for six months, carrying the accumulation away, was the fi,OttO-year old memorial revealed as it appears in the above photograph. Inset is a picture showing the Sphinx, engulfed by sand almost to the shoulders, as it appeared before tlie excavation work began. The figure now is identified as that of a wingless, crouching Hon, with the head of one of the Pharoahs, Extending iifi feet to the front are huge paws built of small stone blocks. Between these paws are a Roman altar and a tablet with hieroglyphic inscriptions. The figure, 172 feet long and fitl feet in height, rests in a great trough cut into the plain. Restoration of iHirtions of the Sphinx, damaged by the elements and by vandals is planned.

THEFTS REPORTED; ONE PERSON HELD Said to Be Wanted in Connection With Robbery. James Smith. 40, of 1113 Deloss St. was held today under high bond. Police said he was wanted in connection with the theft of S4O from Albert Slack, barber at 1143 Deloss St. Richard Swan. Negro. 405 W. North St., reported on attack on himself and wife Wednesday night by three men in a small auto near White River. Swan said the men took a coat and $5. Fred Hall. 2TO 1 N. California St., awakened by a noise in his home, saw three white men in the front room. When he shouted they ran. flight auto owners reported losses, mostly tires, of $179.80. 11. C. Thornton Jr., 4 130 N, Pennsylvania St., told police of the disappearance of a S3OO diamond set bar pin. He did nbt know whether it was stolen or lost. Gone, but Not Forgotten Automobiles reported stolen to po lice belong to: Marion Chevrolet, Eleventh and Meridian Sts., Ford, from that address. J. Harold France. 2755 Central Ave.; Essex, 525-1 7S, from 27 E. Pratt St. Miss Hannah Moriarty. 306 N. Arsenal Ave.; Ford, 546-237, from rear of 125 S. Pennsylvania St. I. M. Worth. 2640 College A Willys-Knight, from Twenty-Seventh St. and College Ave. Bernard Swails, 1543 Spann Ave.; Chevrolet, 17-598, from Washington and Oriental Sts. Frank T. Callon, 24 S. Alabama St.: Ford, 29-847, from Capitol Ave. and Market St.

BAC K HOME AGAIN

Automobiles reported found by police belong to: Ford coupe. 556 17ft. at Hiawatha and North Sts. Fold roadster. 558 480. at Pine and Washington Sts. BLAZE AT ELEVATOR Origin Investigated—Small Amount of Grain Damaged. Fire officials today were investigating origin of a fire late Wednesday that damaged a grain elevator owned by the Mid-West Elevator Company, Twenty-Third St. and the Belt Railroad. Small amount of grain was damaged officials said. Several days ago the elevator was damaged by fire, thought to have started from spontaneous combustion. Fire starting from sparks caused a $250 damage to a garage occupied by James Ferry. 518 E. Morris St. Chinese import from this country old newspapers by the ton. A reeent shipment was comprised of 1.700 bales. Most of the papers return to the United States wrapped around goods Americans have bought In Japan.

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

New Agent Is Busy Meeting Farmers ' I v ■ > > >*: • > f U\'" * U. (Pat) Henry Assuming his duties as Marion County agricultural agent. C. (Tat) Henry is busy getting acquainted with farmers and Farm Bureau leaders in the county. Henry, who took over his work May 1. lias nis office temporarily in the Indiana Farm Bureau Federation headquarters, 16 N. Senate Ave. County commission- , ers are arranging to give him an I office in the courthouse. For the past few years Henry has been farming in Ohio. He formerly was county agricultural agent at Ft. Wayne and first assistant county agent leader at Purdue University. He plans a campaign to increase the number or boys' and girls' clubs, and ' to put better and more modern meth ids into use on the farms in the ounty. ORGANIZATIONS TO AID Twenty-One Groups to Participate in .‘Memorial Exorrises. Twenty-one local patriotic organizations will participate in the observance of Memorial day, May 30. and Memorial Sunday, May 23, it waa announced today by 1). 11. McAbee. president of the General Memorial Association. General arrangements were completed at a meeting of the association Wednesday night at the Board of Trade. Senator Arthur R. Robinson will speak at Memorial day services at Crown llill Cemetery. Boy Scouts will place a flag at the grave of each Civil War veteran. Preceding the cemetery ceremonies a parade will be held downtown. On Memorial Sunday special services will be held at local churches. LAUGH ON LANDLORDS CHICAGO —In the basement of an apartment house, health authorities discovered millions of mosquitoes apparently thriving on the damp steam heat. Tennants had complained all winter that they were being eaten up by the stingers, but the landlord only laughed at them. Eighty per cent of the homes in the Cnited States are made of wood. The presence of a great ice cap lowers the temperature of a region about 50 degrees.

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JARDINE TO GIVE ADDRESS HERE Farm Leader Will Dedicate New Elevator. William M. Jardine, Secretary of. Agriculture, Is expected to speak at the dedication the last of July of the new Beech Grove grain elevator to be used by Indiana Wheat Grow ers' Association, Herman Steen, association secretary, announced today. Steen, who returned Wednesday from Washington, said Jardine has promised to come. The million bushel capacity elevator is about half completed. It will cost about $300,000. COL. BEACH ACQUITTED Former Narcotic t liief Freed on Conspiracy Charge. Bu Timm Special CHICAGO, May 13.—C01. Will Gray Bench, former head of the Federal narcotic squad here and prominent as a lecturer before women s clubs on the "dope evil," was ncqui ted by a jury in Federal court Wednesday of conspiring to violate the Harrison anti narcotic net. Beach was indicted, along with several aids and underworld characters. when Federal authorities found a rich cache of narcotics and stolen jewels in bis apartment They said lie had employed dozens of sneak thieves to work for him, paying* them with narcotics. Marriage Licenses Samuel M Swisher, 22 .3221 K T-ei - Sixth, medium.-: Edith I. North 20 1 K 34 S. Rural, typist b-ilie I, Frazier. 2f> 1437 W Thirty Fourth (lrucTiat: Sue 1. Walker 27. 122t> X. Illinois Henry C Koeatera 32,' 527 Terrace, foreman: Thelma A. Branllmrcr. 22 Oak landon. Ind I> Weater Camp. 28 Summitville. Ind . salesman: Bess M Curtis, 22. Colonial Ho tel. cirri' Mark It. Bottom* 30. 112*1 Keating, milk business: Virginia O. Oberlies, 21 11211 Keating, domestic Clifford O. Pollard, 20 Ft. Wayne Ind . manager: Florence Funke 25. 47 W. Twenty Sixth, clerk. ITillis (.1. Batdorb 20. *lllO N. Meridian, salesman: Mary C. Chambers, 22. ittil West Or.. Woodruff Piaeo

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COOLIDGE TO GO TO MOUNTAINS 10 ESCAPE CAMPAIGN Summer White House to Be Maintained in Remote Mountainous Section. Ru Timm Snrrial WASHINGTON, May 13. dent Coolidge intends to get as far away as possible front politics during the congressional campaign by establishing his summer ’ White House in one of the most remote sections of New York State, fifty miles from the Canadian border. He has chosen the isolated summer camp of Irwin It. Kirkwood, publisher of the Kansas City Star, located in the pine-covered Adirondaeks, near Paul Smiths. N. Y.. a point farther north than Plymouth, Vt.. and removed from the beaten highways. Although this camp is far front the haunts of civilization there will be ample comfort for the President and Mrs. Coolidge in this primitive pine forest. The camp consists of a group of modernly equipped cabins one serving as a lounge and another ns a dining cabin. There is a large master's cabin and four guest cabins. each wltfi two bedrooms, bath and electric lights. The President hardly will use the lwwling alley, the billiard table and the tennis courts, but there is a boat-house with launches and canoes, for the cantp juts out into Lake Osgood so that there is water on three sides. Here are servants' cabins and lodges for the gardeners, caretakers and other employes of the camp. Hidden in Forests The camp is a mile and a half from the State highway, hidden in the forest, and adjoins a large State forest preserve, so that the President may Walk for miles through primeval woods with nothing to remind hint of tlie tedious annoyances of civilization. In selecting his summer retreat, t'oolidge required two things—high, dry air for his nasal trouble and isolation that would put great distance between hint and the politicians who always burden Jhe President with appeals for aid in campaign yoffi-s. The Kirkwood estate is. several miles off the main railroad lines, the nearest station being Paul Smith’s, a small resort nearly five miles away, and twelve hours out of New York. But there is reason to be skeptical of t'oolidge's hope that he will get away from the politicians by diving into these pine forests, remote as they are. For in political years the President of the United States is subject to the same fate that befalls the maker of better mouse traps. He ran bury himself in the deepest woods, but the world —the political world —will beat a path to his door.

Ilands-Off Policy President Coolidge wants very much to keep out of primary and election fights this year. Wilson, in 1918. left a recent example of the (listBefore Baby Comes JI'ST how to rase much unnffmiirj suffcrlnr for yotiraelf is one <>f the nxet important T. \tlant;i. <a. for free Booklet 'sunt in plain envelope) telling: many things uvcr.v expectant mother jdiouhl know. •'Mother's Friend" is sold at all good drug stores. Bogin now and yon will realize the wisdom of doing so as the weeks roll by!—Advertisement.

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aster that is apt to overtake Presidents who interfere in Congress elections. The Senate is in danger of going Democratic and any blundering interference by Coolidge might result in a defeat that would be cothstrued by the country as a direct rebuff. Republican candidates in many contests seek to identify themselves with Coolidge as closely as pussiblt to benefit by his prestige, as in the case of Senator Pepper in Pennsylvania. But the White House is reluct®nt to he anything more than a passive factor in such cases. Though McKinley, in the recent 111 inois senatorial primary, did everything possible to label himself as the Coolidge candidate, the President did not do so much as by n letter indicate any interest in McKinley's fate. He thus escaped any injury when the Illinois Senator was defeated for renomination. Coolidge, like other Presidents, suffers from politicians and candidates who pay formal calls and then issue forth from t lie presidential suite with adroit statements which seem to convey presidential endorse ment. Even the most general and courteous expressions of interest ori the part of the President often is distorted into a declaration of presidential support. So that Coolidge hopes to minimize this practice as much as he can by getting off into a remote spot where the calls will be fewer and farther between. But even so. he cannot hope to be left

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Can You Afford to Neglect YOUR TEETH? DELAYS ARE DANGEROUS Perfect Teeth Are Natures Priceless Gift! Have a Sanitary Mouth and Good Health On recommendation of otlicr. I traveled thirtyfive mile*, to I lie People). len<Ut to have twentyfive teeth extracted. I am certainly (pad that I k followed the advice of my friend*, a* 1 J'lFere.l no pai „ whatever. EVERETT 1!^ a Gold Crown. .$4 and $5 per tooth A Bridge Work. .$4 and $5 per tooth Filling SI.OO up Artificial Sets, Gold Pin. 512.50 up IV fT/IJm Painless Extracting 50c up ’ Extracting Free When Plate* or Bridge* Are Ordered. Examination Free. THE PEOPLE’S DENTISTS WEST WASHINGTON STREET J.OI RS_R:OO A. M. to 6:00 P. M. SUNDAY 9too A. M. to lt:M M. —— ■ Oyer Ganaepohl Trunk S*nr

MAY 13, 1926

entirely alone, so long as the trains run and the motor roads are pass able. ' $3,500 FIRE DAMAGE Blaze of Unknown Origin at Home Soul Invest of City. Fire of unknown origin caused damage of about $3,500 at the home of Joseph Scott, Lynnluirst Dr. and Miller St., southwest of the city, early today. The house waa a one .story, eight-room structure.

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