Indianapolis Times, Volume 38, Number 17, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 June 1926 — Page 5
JUNE 1, 1926
HOLIDAY TOLL IN INDIANA IS NINE VIOLENT DEATHS Many Other Persons Injured in Accidents Over State. Nine persoiw were dead from various and violent causes in Indiana today and many others were injured, several seriously, as a result of holiday accidents. Three were killed by lightning in a heavy thunder storm which swept the State late Monday. Four died in auto crashes. Henry Jutzi, 68, rtf 238 E. Pratt St., died in the Brazil Community Hospital. His automobile struck a light pole south of Brazil. Burial will be at Brazil. Kenneth Wessel, 16-year-old farm boy, sought shelter under a tree near Linton and was killed when lightning struck the tree. Oran Patton, 44, was struck by lightning while at work on his farm near Greensburg. George Paine, 31, was killed by a bolt at Terre Haute. Mrs. Cora Scott, 35, of Detroit, j lost her life in the head-on crash of ] two automobiles near Kokomo as j she was returning home from the Indianapolis Speedway race. Six others in the two machines were badly hurt. Crash Near Lawrence William Cummins, 26, of Fortville, was killed in an automobile crash two miles east of Lawrence on the Pendleton Pike. Jesse Olivey, McCordsville, Benjamin Woodbridge, 733 Ketcham St., Woodbridge, 733 Ketcham St., drivers of the cars, and Mrs. Wood-| bridge were Injured and treated at Ft. Benjamin Harrison hospital. Paul Wilhoit, IS, of Elwood, died at Muncio when an auto driven by his father, Emmett Wilhoit, crashed into a telephone pole. The father and a younger son were injured. Riding Freight **'- Henry Morris, 20, of Ladoga, was killed 'while riding a Monon freight at Crawfordsville Junction. His coat caught on a car and he fell beneath the wheels. f While cleaning a revolver at Muncie, Ansel Doughty, 34, shot himself through the heart. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Henderson. S2l N. Fairfield Ave., were injured in a collision of two autos at Lynnhurst Dr. and Mooresville Rd. Mrs. Henderson is in city hospital. Clarence Ball, 22, of 527 River Ave.. driver of the car which struck the Henderson machine, was charged with reckless driving by Sheriff Haw- i kjns. Robert Ketchum, 2, of 1128 Villa Ave., received a fractured collar I bone, and head and body injuries when an auto in which he was riding with his brother, Howard Ketchum, 525 S. New Jersey Stturned over at Villa and Prospect Sts., Monday. Their auto collided with one driven by Andy Pake, 2105 Lexington Ave., who escaped injury', police said. Howard received a cut hand. Others injured in auto accidents: Harry Hall, 542 E. Maple Road, cut face; Miss Fannie Wilson, 1428 Martindale Ave.
MOTHER OF CHILD PRODIGY GRIEVES (Continued From Pago 1) of the fatherless child, she has fought to comparative security. And Elizabeth has been her reward. Her mother tells of the first realization that hers was no ordinary child. The baby was entered in a health contest in Waco at the age of eight months. While the examining physician held her, she lookejl up at him and said: “Baby wants dinner.’’ The man almost dropped her. At 16 months, a psychology class 'at Baylor University, in which her mother was a student, tested Elizabeth's vocabulary and found it to contain 159 words. At 3, Elizabeth startled her by reading the letters in a magazine. At 4. having been left in a convent while her mother was away on a. newspaper assignment, Elizabeth sneaked into a classroom and electrified the teacher by reading j from the book the class was using. She had never been taught. Now they hope she may find a placo in a wealthy family as playmate and tutor for a child, to grow and travel until she is old enough for college. In spite of the Impending separa-tion-Elizabeth Is enjoying her graduation. “The only thing I don't like,” she said, wrinkling her bright, round, child’s face, “is that I can't go to my own senior dance, because I'm rot 16! "Study? No, I don't like to study, j I just read and remember. And I'm lazy about housework. Just ask j Darling—my mother, I mean. Say, j do you like Michael Arlen? “I think he’s shoddy. His books are synthetic pearls. 1 Aldous Huxley is the real thing. I read all of Hardy when I was S. I think Anatole France Is the greatest author in literature. But Cabell runs him a close race.” Elizabeth will discuss world politics and theology if*encouraged. She never introduces a discussion herself. Elizabeth’s mother insists that her daughter's progress is the result of no system. “She worked alone, while 1 was out on newspaper assignments. 1 surrounded her with good books and let her choose. Once when I was ill she spent a month at home alone, though she was only 8 V During that time she read twenty volumes of the Book of Knowledge. “I dread the time when I must come home and not find her here. But everything has to end. doesn't it? Elizabeth feels she must help.” Anne Austin and Ellen Eljzabeth have got along very well. As for the father, whoso name Anne dropped ten years ago—he sent Elizabeth a wrist watch for commencement.
Washington Chuckles at Senator Watson Cartoon Standing- Back Os The President
Reproduction of cartoon appearing in the Baltimore Sun.
Bu Times Special WASHINGTON, June I.—Something of a sensation was created in the Senate yvhen the Baltimore Sun cartoon on*Senator Watson, “standing back of the President," was passed around last Saturday. Senator Caraway of Arkansas brought the copy of the paper, containing the cartoon into the chamber. Chuck-
STORMS MAKE HOLIDAY VISIT Small Cyclone Does Damage at Marion. Indiana, in holiday attire, was blown about and rained upon in spots Monday, but today, back at work, found clear skies overhead. Fair weather should prevail tonight and Wednesday, with temperature a bit lower tonight,- Meteorologist J. H. Armington of the united States Weather Bureau said. Rain in the State Monday was in local thunderstorms, Armington
How to Get It and How to Keep It
If the reading of this teaches you only tills one lesson about your own body it may be worth more than millions of dollars to you* for of what use is money without heal.th, or after you are dead? The lesson is this: —“Keep your system pure and you will have health and strength to gain and enjoy happiness, success and length of years.” But you may ask: — How Can I Keep My System Pure? That is not a hard question to answer, for physiology plainly teaches you that your liver, which is larger than ail of your other vital organs combined, has the special work of purifying vour blood and thereby your entire system and of keeping it pure and healthy. How Dqes the Liver Purify? Physicians tell us that the liver purifies the system by manufacturing a greenish-yellow, bitter fluid called the bile, which, between meals is stored up in the gall-bladder, but after each meal Is poured out into the intestines. The bile is purgative and antiseptic or germicidal. In health, it is your bile that makes your bowels act regularly and freely every day—it is Nature’s only purgutive. It is ytyir bile that keeps your bowels pure, sweet, clean and free from the germs of fermentation (gas) putrefaction, decay and disease. Remember that germs cannot live where there is bile and there can therefore be no fermentation to cause gas, nor putrefaction or decay to produce poisons or toxines. Also, as bile is Nature's purgative, there can be no constipation if the bile is flowing naturally and freely into the bowels after each meal. But when the bile stops flowing freely your bowels stop acting regularly and the contents become a foul, stagnant, breeding bed for the germs of fermentation (gas) decay and disease. These poisons (called toxines) are gradually absorbed into your blood and circulate all over your body, poisoning, irritating or inflaming your brain and nerves, your muscles and joints, your heart, lungs, skin, kidneys, bladder, spleen and every vital organ of your body, including your liver, stomach and bowels. 7 Nature’s Danger Signals When your car gets out of fix you can tell it. It is the same way with your liver. Nature gives you warning
ling, he showed it to several Senators, who called others. They viewed it and laughed. That is, until it came to Senator Watson himself. He surveyed the cartoon owlishly through- his spectacles and stalked away without a smile. His attitude recalled that of Queen Victoria of England when someone told a Joke which she did not approve. “We are not amused,” said the Queen.
pointed out. In Indianapolis it registered .11 of an inch during tl# day and .38 of an inch at night. However, iY probably was heavier than this at the Speedway. Several places had heavy winds and lightning which wreaked considerable havoc. A young cyclone swept through Marion about 6 p. m., leaving heavydamage in its wake. Trees were uprooted, wires were torn loose and many autos left in the open were badly wrecked. Trees fell on the cars. First Methodist and Catholic Churches were slightly damaged by the storm. Mrs. Edward Wert, wife of a city councilman, yvas seriously injured when struck on the head by a portion of a flying roof. The roof of the Pettiford garage in the southern section of the city was blown off. Two freight cars on a C. & O. siding were blown over. _
—not by words, but by signals or symptoms. Your doctor recognizes those danger signals and you also should know them and instantly heed them. It will save you much pain, serious Illness and perhaps big repair bills. When the bile stops flowing freely into your bowels you, sooner or later, begin to feel some of the following symptoms:—Your brenth may become heavy or foul, your tongue coated, a bad taste >n your mouth, your food (and tobacco) lose their natural flavor, your food does not agree with s'ou ; you may ‘have heartburn, gas, or fluttering around the heart, dizziness or blind spells; you may be troubled with belching or frequent passage of gas from the bowels: the gas “balloons” your bowels and presses so hard on the kidneys that It gives you pain, sore ness, stiffness In the small of your back over (be kidneys, making you think you have kidney trouble; at night the gas In your bowels presses upon your bladder, thus breaking into .your sleep. In the morning you are tired instead of refreshed. Gradually your health is injured. Your complexion becomes mllow, muddy or. yellow—your skin may be disfigured with liver spots or pimples: you may become sleepless, restless 'and irritable or blue and melancholic. You may have frequent, dull headaches: jour bowels stop their free, full and—natural action: you have constipation, fermentation, gas. putrefaction and self-poisoning or “auto-intoxi-cation” as the doctors call it. How to Make the Bile Flow We have learned that bile Is Nature’s purgative and Nature’s antiseptic (or germ killer) for the bowels: that. In health, bile keeps the bowels moving regularly and freely every day and prevents fermentation, gas, putrefaction decay, disease and self-poisoning. But when the bile stops flowing freely, how can we start it up again? The answer is. Take Calotabs at bedtime and drink water freely the next day. This treatment represents the best thought and experience of the best physicians in every civilized country of the world. No other purgative will do. if you take oils, salts, cascara, or the many other simple-laxative syrups, powders and randy laxatives, yon are merely wasting valuable time. .They only make you feel better for a day or two. They do not remove the cause for they do not increase the fltVw of the bile, which is Nature’s only purgative and intestinal antiseptic. When you 4ake Calotabs you know that you have aken a real, doctor’s medicine. it cleans you out Every inch
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
SALOON LEAGUE SPENDING PACES CONGRESS PROBE Drys, However, See Nothing Wrong in Paying Solons for Speeches. Bu Times Special WASHINGTON, June I.—The Anti-Saloon League does not regard itself guilty of unethical conduct in paying Congressmen for making dry speeches. t This position was taken in a statement issued by the League in reply J,o the announcement fey Representative Tinkham, Massachusetts, wet Republican, that he will offer in the House today a l-esolution to investigate the use of money by the dry organization. “Os course the Anti-Saloon League never paid any Congresman for introducing or championing a bill,” the statement declared. “Oc< asionatly when a Congressman makes a speech for prohibition his expenses and sometimes an honorarium is paid by the organization that arranged for it. A Congressman who has ability enough so that the people want to hear him should not.be stopped from this service simply because he is a public official. Vice President Marshall said he had to do this when he was Vice President.” Representative Cramton, Michigan Republican and House dry leader, and Representative Upshaw, Georgia Democrat, are two of the dry Congressmen who are understood to have been paid for prohibition speeches. $2,500,000 Spent — — Wayne B. Wheeler? general counsel of the Anti-Saloon League, acknowledged that 82,500,000 was spent by the national and State dry organizations at the height of the campaign for ratification of the Eighteenth Amendment. When Ohio had its State referendum on prohibition some years ago, $200,000 a year was used for several years. Wets have charged the Anti-Saloon League paid <dfmpaign expenses of Andrew Volstead, who introduced the Volstead act in Congress after it had been prepared by the AntiSaloon league legal staff. Bullying Charged The organized activities of the drys are commanding considerably more than the usual amount of attention just now. Former Governor Hem y J. Allen of Kansas, a dry. has just announced the “bullying influence” of the Anti-Saloon League as a result of conditions in Kansas, where high officials were found to be receiving retainers on the side from State dry leaders. Another organized ry group, the Methodist Board of Temperance, is urging dry Republicans in Pennsylvania to scratch Vare, the wet Republican candidate for Senator, and_ to vote for the Democratic carvdi-"" date, William B. Wilson, former Secretary of Labor under the Wilson Administration.
of yottr twenty fire-toot canal, tnclud Uig your stomach, small Intestines nnd large intestines, is thoroughly cleared and washed clean and pure and your bile is flowing freely. Next morning your liver is active, your system is purified and refreshed and yon are feeling fine with a hearty appetite for breakfast. Eat what you please and go about your work: —there is no danger, for Calotabs are perfectly safe and create no habit except the habit of health. What Are Calotabs—How Do They Act? Calotabs are a real doctor’s medicine —the best of their kind ever devised. Kings, presidents and millionaires have traveled far and have paid rich fees to the world's greatest physicians and have regained their health by this medicine. But now, thanks to modern manufacturing methods, even the poorest person can easily find the price of a package of Calotabs. for they are now manufactured by the millions, in one of the largest medical laboratories in the world, and are sold wherever tqedicines are sold, in convenient, economical packages, price thirty-five cents for a large, family package. Calotabs are composed of a thoroughly purified and refined calomel, combined with assistants and correctives. The calomel Increases the flow of the Wile and every physician knows that no other* medicine can take Its place: there Is no such thing as a substitute tor ealomel. The assistants act like salts, washing the calomel out of the system ami preventing Its accumulation and any possibility of danger. The correctives settle the stomach and bowels, preventing nausea, sickening and griping effepts. _ Calotabs (and water) therefore, give you the combined effects of calomel and snljps without the nauseating, sickening, griping ad dangerous effects of either. The medicine chest of every home should be supplied with Calotabs. the most important of all family medicines, for they are needed in almost every case of sickness, and, if used promptly, may prevent many cases of serious illness. Directions for I’slng Calotabs: Complete directions. In plain lan guage which every one can understand, are contained In each package of Calotabs. Ask your retail druggist to order a package for you. The price, only thirty-five cents for a large family package, will be cheerfully refunded ii you are not delighted with the results.—Advertisement.
BURIAL GROUND OF INDIA NS IS FOUND Bedford Man Tells, in Indiana History Bulletin, of Find in Jackson County—Human and Animal Bones Rescued.
Considerable interest has been aroused in archaeological circles through the recent • discovery in Jackson County of an arfeient Indian burial ground, by E. Y. Guernsey of Bedford, one of the State's leaders in historical research. In the current issue of the Indiana History Bulletin, Guernsey tells an interesting story of the discovery of the mound on which the cemetery was situated, and the subsequent exploration. More than ten years ago, Guernsey says, hl attention first was attracted to the archaeological possibilities of the mound more than 200 sees in diameter, lying three miles east of Mcdora on State Road 4. “Without exhibiting the usual outward evidences of a mound artificially produced, a certain Intuition seemed to suggest the wisdom of a critical examination of the interior,” Guernsey declares. Nevertheless there was reason to suspect that the mound was of glacial origin, inasmuch as Jackson County owes its rugged topography to glaciation. A superficial examination of the Wolke site, as the burial site is known, revealed that this particular eminence differed little from surrounding mounds, except for the extremely dark color of the surfaco soil. Numerous flint chips and arrow heads gave rise to the belief, then, that the mound was a natural eminence that had been adopted by the Indian because of its commanding location. A perfunctory exploration of one slope produced one perHack of money to finance further exploration compelled abandonment of pdoration compelled al>andonment of research at that time. A few months ago Mr. Guernsey made a second trip to the Wolke site and was dismayed at the sight of teams hauling away the surface of the mound, dumping the dirt in a nearby gully and transporting the
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gravel to a highway. Human skeletons were strewn about the spot, in profusion, some even being carried away by neighbors ns souvenirs. Despite the scatterment, portions of thirty human skeletons were collected and assembled. Five complete skeletons were rescued and preserved. Besides the human fragments, a considerable quantity of animal bones, including those of bear, wolf, wild hog, deer and wild turkey were found. Some small fossilized bones were found, but they were thought to have no connection with the more modern specimens. Most of the animal bones seemed to have been deposited in refuse pits. Several sharpened deer antlers, supposedly used in flaking arrow points, also were found.
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