Indianapolis Times, Volume 38, Number 29, Indianapolis, Marion County, 15 June 1926 — Page 2

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FRANCE WILL NOT TRADE COLONIES FOR WAR DEBTS ! ' Remembers Louisiana Purchase —Premier Frowns on Suggestion. B'J United Press | PARIS, June 15. —France will not | put her colonial possessions on the counter. 1 That is the government’s reply to | a certain faction of French menu bers of Parliament who, despite the - Mellon-Berenger debt agreement, still urge an attempt to trade off to the United States certain French (colonies in settlement of the war fdebt.-* Cannot Forget * France cannot forget how Ameri;ca, With the knack of a shrewd * Yankee trader, struck a bargain with Napoleon and bought Louisi- | ana and the States to the north for 80.000,000 francs. France has sold .only that one colony, but the lesson .cost her dear. * A certain group in Parliament "would send an offer to Washington 7to trade Martinique, one of the . Windward islands in the West Indies; the barren and rocky islands of St. Pierre and Miquelon, inhabited by fishermen and rum runners r off the southwestern coast of New- | foundland, and Guadeloupe, anothcr West Indian island possession Which/ now does a three million dolSlar business annually with the ■ American mainland. All they would ask in return is that the $4,000,000,000 war debt be stricken off the f books. Xo, Says Premier The minister of colonies, to whom the proposition was submitted, was prompt in his protest to M. Brland. | “We have nothing to sell,” ’(he premier replied, emphatically. \ FORM WOMEN’S SERVIGELEAGUE Headquarters of Overseas Organization Here. Incorporation papers for the Women's Overseas Service League, a national organization of women, who served abroad in the World War, were filed today with the * Secretary of State, preparatory to establishment of national headquarters in Indianapolis. Miss Adah E. Bush of Indianapo- : lis, one of the charter members, I has been named chairman of the committee in charge of establishing national headquarters. Her sister, the lase Ruth Charlotte Bush, was a founder. National officers are Helen Douglas, Atlanta, Ga., president; .Sara Inman Bell, Atlanta, oor- : responding secretary; Aileen Hagerty,' Havana, Cuba, recording secretary, and Estelle Martin, Atlanta, treasurer. Headquarters, will be established In one of the buildings on the Indiana War Memorial Plaza. The organization represents more than 20,000 women, who served overseas. GARVIN TO TARE OP COURT DOTIES Governor Names Attorney as Municipal Judge. Thomas E. Garvin, local Demoi cratic attorney, will assume his duties as judge of municipal court on Wednesday morning, he anj nouncecl today following his ap- * pointment by Governor Jackson to . succeed the late Judge Edward W. Felt. Garvirj, who Is 31, was the Democratic nominee for city judge in 1921. Ht has practiced law in Indianapolis for the last ten years. He was born in Evansville, attended the Chicago law school and was graduated from the Indiana law school in 1917. Shortly afterward he enlisted in the anti-aircraft artillery and feerved on the front several months. Following the war he was active in forming the American Legion in Indiana. Garvin is married and has one ■ daughter. They live at 3610 N. Pennsylvania St. He is a member of the Presbyterian Church and of various Masonic organizations. His appointment is for Judge Felt’s unexpired term, about three and a half years. SIO,OOO FOR HOSPITAL Mrs. Howard H. Spaulding Jr., Chicago, Makes Riley Donation. Hugh McIC. Landon, president of the Riley Memorial Association, today announced the cash gift of SIO,OOO for the building fund of the Riley Hospital from Mrs. Howard 11. Spaulding Jr., of Chicago. The gift was unsolicited and comes nearly a month after the close of the State-wide campaign for $1,500,000. The gift was made because of Mrs. ..Spaulding’s deep interest in the work of the hospital. Site was for- . mcrly Miss Catherine Barker, daughter of one of the founders of the Hackell-Barker Freight Car Company at Michigan City, Ind. She came into a fortune of $30,000,000 left by her father and is sole owner of stock in the concern. HIGH SCHOOL DEDICATED Pu I nitrri Press V WASHINGTON, Ind., June 15.J; Dedicatory services were held Mon- “ day night for the ne\C SIOO.OOO anLditoriurn at the Washington Catholic High School.

Nowit’s Toreadora

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Senorita Frida Gombaszogi of the audacious shawl and tilled dun. Is the toast of the town in Madrid. She is a bull flghtess. After ihe matadors and picadors get the bull good and vicious, Senorita Frida dances out and applies the rapier with a feminine cteftness that is irresistible. X

COOLIDGE WILL. EAT WITH NEGRO Departs From Precedent to Honor Haiti President. By United Press WASHINGTON, June 15. —The Nordic President of the United States and the brown-skinned president of the West Indian Negro republic of Haiti will break bread together today in the White House, twenty years after President Roosevelt stirred this .country by inviting Booker T. Washington, Negro educator, to luncheon. It will be the first time a President of the United States has eaten with a .Negro. While Roosevelt invited Booker T. Washington to luncheon, the two sat at separate tables. President Borono of Haiti is tall and imposing. He dresses fashionably and is well educated. A huge delegation &t Washington Negroes greeted him at the Union Station. President and Mrs. Borno proceeded to the White House shortly after their arrival, -where they were presented to President and Mrs. Coolidge. Ten minutes after they left, President and Mrs. Coolidge returned the call at the Haitian legation.

HEALTH / How to Get It and How to Keep It

If the reading of this teaches you only this one lesson about your owu body it may be worth more than millions of dollars to you: for of what use is money without health, or after you are dead? The lesson is this; —"Keep your system pure and you will have health and strength to gain and enjoy hap. plness. success and length of years. But you may ask:— How Can I Keep My System Tore? That is not a hard question to answer, for physiology plainly teaches you that your liver, which is larger than all of your other vital organs combined has the sppcial work of purify ing your blood and your entire system and of keeping it pure and healthy. How Does the Idver Purify? Physicians tell us that the liver purifies the f vstem b,v manufactrring a greenish-yellow, hitter fluid railed 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 purgative. It is your bile that keeps your bowels pure, sweet, clean and tree trout the germs of ferments tion (gas) putrefaction, decay and disease. Remember that germs cannot live where there Is hiie and there can therefore be no fermentation to cause gas, nor put refaction or decay to produce poisons ot tuxines. Also, as bile is Nature's purgative, there can be no constipation if the bile is flowing naturally and freely into the bowels aftei each meal But when the bile stops flowing tree tv your bowels stop acting regularly and the contents become a foul, slag narit, breeding bed for the germs ot fermentation (gast decay and disease These poisons (called toxinesi are gratl ually absorbed Into your blood and circulate all over your body, poisoning irritaling 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 Nature's Dnnger .signals When your car gets out of fix you can tell it. It is the ‘■ante way with llrer. lure gives you warning

FAMOUS SONS OF PURDUE HONORED 584 Degrees Awarded at Annual Commencement. By United Press LAFAYETTE, Ind., June 15. Five hundredand eighty-four degrees weer awarded today at the annual commencement ceremony at Purdue University. Honorary degrees were conferred on George Ade, John T. McCutcheon and C. H. Robertson, all Purdue graduates. Chase S. Osborn, former Governor of Michigan, who was compelled to quit Purdue before completing his work with the class of 1889, was given the bachelor of science degree. Dr. Frank Baldwin Jewett, vice president of the American Telephone and Telegragh Company, commencement speaker, urged the graduates to consider seriously the expanding field of scientific and industial research. Donald Cunningham, graduate of the school of mechanical engineering, was awarded the western conference medal as the outstanding student in athletics and scholarship. Among the seniors receiving degrees was Lowell Martin, Lafayette cripple, who did all his work at home and successfully passed the examinations.

—not hy wolds, but by signals or symptoms. Tour doctor recognizes ihese 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. soouer or later, begin to feet some of the following symptoms:—Your breath may become heavy or foui, your tongue coated, a bad taste in your mouth, your food (and tobacco) iose their natural flavor, your food does not agree with you; you may have heartburn, gas; or fluttering around the heart, dizziness or bliml spells; you may be troubled with belching or frequent passage of gas 'rora the bowels: the gas ‘'balloons" your bowels and presses so hard on the kidneys ttiat It gives you pain, soreness. stiffness In the small of your back over the 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 o* re freshed Gradually your health Is injured Your complexion becomes sal low. muddy or yellow—your skin may be disfigured with liver spots or pimples: you may become sleepless, restless aiui irritable or blue and /melancholic. You may have frequent, dull headaches: your bowels stop their free, full and natural action: you have constipation. fprnienlation. gas. putrefaction and self-poisoning or "suto-lntoxi-calion" as the doctors call tt. 1 How to Make the Bile Flow We learned that bile Is Nature's purgative and Nature's antiseptic (or germ killen for the “bowels; that, 1d 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 freey, bow can we start it up again? The answer is. Take Calotnbs at bedtime and drink water freel.v tile 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 ‘ake oils, salts, eascsra, or the manv other simple-laxative syrups, powders and candy laxatives, you 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 th flow of the oile. which is Nature s only purgative and intestinal antiseptic. When you take t'alotabs you know that you have taken a real, doctor's medicine. it cleans you out thoroughly. Kvery Inch

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

FOOD PRODUCTS PRICES ARE CUT Only Few Advances Evidenced at City Market. A lower price tendency was in evidence today at the city market, due to tlie over supply of fruits and vegetables. Only a few advances werb made. ■Watermelons were off 90 cents at $ 1.60 each. White asparagus was slightly cheaper at 10 cents and three hunches for 2 5 cents. The green variety was unchanged at 20 to 60 cents. Gooseberries were down at 15 to 25 cents a quart. Home-grown cherries were lower at 12‘£ to 25 cents a quart, tali fornia chsrries were steady at 40 to 50 cents a ]>oiind. Peaches were down to 10 cents a pound. Apricots and plums off at 15 to 20 cents a pound. Price advances were: Carrots*, 10 cents a hunch; Florida oranges, 30 to 80 cents a dozen, and peas, 15 to 20 cents a pound. Other prices included; Duck eggs. 40 cents a dozen; hen eggs, 35 to ,5S cents a dozen; butter, 53 cents a pound: hens, 45 cents a pound; frys. 60 cents a pound; lemons, 20 to 40 cents a dozen; pineapples, 10 to 30 cents each; strawberries, 15 to 20 cents a quart; red raspberries, 25 cents a dish; tomatoes, 25 to 35 cents a pound; bananas, 25 to 30 cents a dozen; coeoanuts, two for 25 cents: new creaming onions, two pounds for If cents: new home grown beets, 10 cents a bunch; homegrown rhubarb, 15 cents a bunch; strawberry rhubarb, 5 cents a bunch; cantaloupes, 15 20 cents each: eggplant, 20 to 35 cents each; Honey Dew melons, 30 to 60 cents each; wax and green beans, 15 cents a pound. CHARGED WITH FORGERY Man Trailed by Auto Company Employe—Had Purchased Machine. Clyde Turrell, alias Robert Ruxton of Houston, Texas, is held today on changes of forgery and vagrancy, following his return late Monday from Bloomingdale, Ind., where he was trailed by an employe of the Mattox Sales Company, 1001 N. Meridian St. Detectives said he gave a SI,OOO worthless check to the auto company for a machine, Saturday. Turrell also Is said to he w r anted in Texas for jumping a bond on a liquor charge. LEASE MERIDIAN ST. SITE Tire Shop so Build on Downtown Location. Announcement was made today of the twenty-five-year lease on property at 710-14 N. Meridian St., by the Indianap Tire and Battery Shop by Samuel L. Trotcky, owner of the Indianap service. Rentals aggregate about $250,000, It was reported. Part of the site is cleared at this time and it is expected the station will be completed about the middle of July, when the service is to be moved from Its present location, 626 N. Meridian St.

of your twnnty-flve-foof canal, Includ mg your gtninacb. small intestines and larsre Intestines, Is thoroughly cleared and trashed clean and (Mire and your blip Is flowing freely. Next morning your liver Is active, your system is purified and refreshed and you are fpplinc fine with a hearty appetite for breakfast. Eat what yon please and go about your work:—there Is no danger, for falotahs are perfectly safe and create no habit except the habit of health. What Are Calotnbs —How Do They Act? falotahs are a real doctor* medicine —the beat 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 In modern man ufaeturlng methods, even the poorest person can easily find the price of package of Calotaba. for they are now manufactured by the millions. In one of the largest medical laboratories in the world, and are sold wherever medicines are sold, in convenient, economical packages, price thirty-five cents for n large, family package. Calotabs are composed of a thoroughly purified and refined calomel combined with assistant* and correctives. The calomel increases the flow of the bile and every physician know* that no other medicine can take its place; there Is no *urh thing ns a substltute for ralomel. The assistants act tike salts, washing the calomel out ol the system and preventing Sts accumulation and any possibility of dangr. Thp correctives settle the stomach and bowels, preventing nausea, sickening and grijdng effects • Calotabs (and wateri therefore, give you the combined effects of calomel and salts 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 ill. ness. Directions for Using Calotabs: Complete directions, in plain language which every one can understand are contained in each package of Calotabs. Ask your I'pfatl druggist to order a package for you. Ihe price only thirty five cents for a large family package, will be cheerfully refunded ii you are not delighted with the r* suits.—Advertisement.

Garvin Named on Municipal Bench

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Thomas h. Garvin, appointed by Governor Jackson to fill (lie unexpired term of t lie late Edward \V. Felt as judge of Muuccpal Court One.

RAILROAD MEN MEET Representatives of Pennsy Shop Employes Convene. More than 200 executive committeemen representing Pennsylvania Railroad shop employes throughout the Middle West met at the Severin today for the fifth annual convention of the Western Region Shop Crafts Association. Charles Mode of I.ogansport is general regional chairman. Three regional offices, including general chairman, will be filled.

2 53 Years of Faithful Service A I to the Indianapolis I J Tremendous Reductions over 500 XV Y*\\ jQ Beautiful AST y\ IJJ Spring & Summer, wnTw Dosses il 38 1 \ All Colors, Sizes | \\ B vi-i and Styles | l.rirr, - | Valutt | Over 250 COATS \ TS | $15.00 Coats, $7.50 / |p I $19.75 Coats, $9.88 mWMM 1 $24.75 Coats, $12.38 i ( Ms! I $29.75 Coats, $14.88 I /f lMi B $35.00 Coats, $17.50 (Jp L_,

6 - CHICAGO AND RETURN CHILDREN 5 AND UNDER 12 YEARS, $3.31 ACCOUNT EUCHARISTIC CONGRESS TICKETB ON SALE JUNE 19, 20, 21, 22, 23 Also trains leaving Indianapolis 12:40 and 2:40 a. m. of June 24 Good to Return until June M, Inclusive. TICKETS GOOD IN COACHES ONI.T For tickets and full Information, apply City Ticket Offlra, 11? Monomont Circle, phone Main 0330, or t*nlon Station, phone Main 4567. •I. M. LF.MO?*, Plrialon Pa*ien(rer 810 FOUR ROUTE

NEED OF BACKING INDUSTRIES TOLD Pennsylvania Merchants Asked to Boost. Merchants must boost the city’s industries and aid in the creation of greater purchasing power, W. Gerald Holmes, director of the manufacturers' division of the Chamber of Commerce, told the Pennsylvania .Street Business Men's Association at the Columbia Club Monday night. He said the essential aid to retail business is the financial possibilities of the working class. “The man who produces tangible goods is the basic factor in a more prosperous Indianapolis, for, after all, the production of goods that have an exchange value creates true community purchasing power,” Holmes said. I<\ c. Sehinke, association president, announces the following committees: Program and entertainment, Herbert Jennnlngs, chairman; Roltare Eggleston and Carl Etter; membership, Edward Hart, chairman; Harry Levinson, H. C. Davis. Herbert llaag and W. J. Baker; attendance, Jul McCarthy, chairman: August Julian, Frank Blunter and Harold Jaffe; reception. Charles S. Becker, chairman; A. W. Tlllequist, Harry W. Wert and John P. Magnet-; finance, Eugene Short, chairman; E. A. Meat, G. R. Ledig and J, S. Griggs; civic affairs, Reily C. Adams, chairman; F. R. Kautz, R. A. Lemcke and George Elliott: grievance, S. E. Mendell, chairman, John A. George, Julius Goldsmith and John A. . Hook: publicity, Isador Kornblum, chairman, R. C. Stevens and Lester Nagley. SI,OOO INCENDIARY BLAZE Fire officials today said a blaze which did SI,OOO damage at a vacant l ouse at 1425 X. Capitol Ave., Monday night was believed to be of incendiary origin.

WATCH GOLD PIECES $lO Counterfeit Coin Passed tq Drug Store Clerk. Warning was Issued to merchants today to beware of $lO gold pieces after police discovered two men had passed a counterfeit gold piece fit, the drug store of I). Jl. Frenk, ITOI E, Michigan st., Monday, E. R. Walker, a clerk, said two men came in and asked Idm to give them two $5 bills for the gold piece and after ho compiled with their request discovered the money given to him was counterfeit, Federal authorities are investigating, FIRE AT_ MILWAUKEE Furniture Company Building Burns With $200,000 I.oss. By United Press MILWAUKEE, M’ls , June 15. Fire of unknown origin destroyed the Hartman Furniture Company Bldg, here early today w-lth a $200,000 loss. CHARGED WITH DI’KGLARY Lawrence Porter, Negro, 28, of 815 N. California St., Is under arrest today on charges of grand larceny and burglary. Detectives Burnaby and De Rossette, who made the arrest Monday, said he entered the home of O. L. George, 615 N. California St., on June 11, and stole money and jewelry valued; at $76.

CS&W excursion Hnuml Trip Fare* to CINCINNATI- $2.75 Baseball —Cincinnati Vs. Chicago Train Imtft 7 a. ni. Upturn, leave# Cincinnati 7 p. m. (S p. nl. city time) T~v _ , Til (to <7r* Nee Beautiful Decatur, 111., spZ./D ukk dkcatcr VISIT TURKEY RUN— lndiana State Park—MARSH ALL, $1.38 Hperlal Tr;tJn lifavpM 7 a. in. Hfturiilng, Decalur 11 p. m. One fare round trip to hII station* on C., I. & \X. Hnlurda; and Huaduy, Return Sunday or Monday. / For Information, tall MAln WO4 or MAIn 4AF7.

MOTOR COACH EXCURSION TO SHADES OF DEATH SUNDAY, JUNE 20, 1926 $2.75 ROUND TRIP leer. Traction Terminal Station S a. m. For Further Information and Heaer.railon See r . .1. (-ORE, Jt. Tkt. Agent. Traction Terminal Station Interstate Public Service Company

$6.62 to CHICAGO ™ RETURN via CHICAGO, INDIANAPOLIS &. LOUISVILLL RY. Ticket, on ..I. June 19 to 23, Inclusive. Alee for the mid. night special leaving at 1 a. m., June 24. Good returning Uhtil 12:01 a. m. train June 28. Good on all trains (In coaches only.) When you go on the Monon you are protected by AUTOMATIC BLOCK SIGNALS ALL THE WAY For tickets or information, call: FRANK V. MARTIN General Agent, Passenger Department 114 Monument Place Telephone Main 6404

Eastern Resorts Reduced RqundJrip Teres Leave the sweltering city. Go t-o the cool Northeast. Rough it in the exhilarating air of the mountains and balsam scented forests or stop at comfortable hotels providing every diversion. Take advantage of-our low round trip fares New England / / Visit its quaint seaport towns and inland V { . villages. Stop at its famous resorts bor- ; Y**~„ r * dering the North Atlantic Coast. See its . £ many “shrines”of historic interest to every if— • i American. Learn K /j/ while you loaf. TJA 4S* am il Canada fc.l "'W t' *u Y° ur wish for a mstic vacation cannot be [U better gratified than among the Muslcoka IS. <a j Lakes, Georgian Bay, Algonquin Park or Lake of Bays regions of Canada with their sturdy forests and exAdirondacks Beautiful country—refreshing, cool air— r rousing good sports —fishing, canoeing, mountain cHmbing, tennis, swimming, golf, ' - A motoring—and the jolliest places to live. T<ipv I Thousand Islands Winding channels splitter with motor - boats, sail boats and hydroplanes. Golf, tirii" tenn ’ s Ashing, polo, swimming, danc- *** ing every sport afloat or ashore may be enjoyed at this ideal, bland dotted spot in the St. Lawrence. Par booklet and complete information call or addrats; jilflK City Ticket O ‘flee, 11 2 Monument Circle, phone Ma,n 0.710, or Union Station, phone Moin 4567. J. N. Lemon, Div. Maw*Tyia?lff Paa*. Act., 112 Monument Circle. - BIG FOUR ROUTE

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I^J^norrow M loutnnt, eorr• st s . J (sontlpivlon. [ for cvmr y Chips off -Hm 0W Block MI JUNIORS—LIttIs Nss Ons-third the regular doss. Mads of Sams Ingredients, then candy Coated For children and adult*. mum VOI D DYVOUR DRI’QOIRTmn

t The Bright Spot of Fountain Square Shelby Furn. Cos. 1113-17 Shelby St.