Indianapolis Times, Volume 38, Number 109, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 August 1926 — Page 2
PAGE 2
DEATH SPEEDS '‘HIT-RUN’ DRIVE OF DEPARTMENT Woman, Injured Saturday, Dies —Two Who Fled Sought. While Coroner Paul F. Robinson, was holding an inquest today into the death of Mrs. Mary Fltzgflerald, 28, Negro, 532 W. Twenty-Fifth St., police sought two “hit and run” drivers who fled after their autos figured in accidents. One man, injured when he fell from a street car, is improved. Mrs. Fitzgerald was injured Saturday night when an auto in which she was riding with her husband, Robert, was in a collision at Emerichsville Bridge with an auto driven by James Carter, Negro, of 440 W. Michigan St. Carter, who was charged with speeding and assault and battery was charged with manslaughter today. Mrs Hattie Brown, 2032 E. Tenth £t.. riding with Carter was injured the body. Another Crash After the collision, the Carter auto careened into an auto driven by John Hale, 619 Langsdale Ave., and his daughters Elnora, 4, and Katherine, 11, were injured. Police sought a woman "hit-and-run” driver, who refused to give her name and address to Woodford Chambers, Negro, of 232814 Yandes 81.., after her auto struck his horse fxd wagon at Seventeenth and Meridian Sts., Wednesday night.' The wagon was overturned and Chambers was pinned under. He was taken to city hospital in a serious condition. Witnesses gave the license number of the auto to police. Leaves Scene Another man driver left the scene of an accident at Chester Ave and E. New York St., where his auto struck Arthur Ewbank, 405 N Chester Ave., a pedestrian, severely injuring him. Frank Stevenson, 70, of 2133 Ring gold St., was injured seriously when he fell backwards from a street car at Southeastern Ave., and Washington St., late Wednesday. Police Bent the injured man to the city hospital. Clarence Baker, 36 N. Denny St., and George Johnson, 148 W. TwentySeventh St.. State policemen, who were seriously injured In a police car-milk truck crash at National Rd and Eagle Creek, early Wednesday, were reported improved today. Statistics show that married men ore six times more reliable than single men. WI WONDERFUL THE WAY KONJOLA RELIEVES PAINS’ Well-Known Local Man Surprised at the Action of This New Medicine. Among the many prominent Indianapolis citizens who are publicly Indorsing this celebrated new KonJola oompound, probably none Is better known than Mr. Harry Barlow, who Is Stage Manager at Broad lUpplo Park, living at 829 Locke Street, Indianapolis.
MR. HARRY BARLOW
“1 think it is wonderful the way Konjola relieve* pains,” said Mr. Barlow in his statement to the KonJola Man, who is at Hook’s Drug j Store, Pennsylvania and Market Streets, this oity, where he is meeting large crowds of people dally and explaining this remarkable medicine. "My first touch of pain appeared when I was on a hunting trip last March, a year ago,” said Mr. Barlow. "My right hand began to hurt, Bnd before I could get home tny fingers were so swollen and cramped I couldn’t does my hand. The pain waa terrible—Just felt like my hand was in a vice. X got medical attention, and tried various remedies, but nothing would ease up that awful pain. Never a day passed that I wasn't in misery. I lost the Use of my right hand completely, and finally a knot raised on my wrlet as large as a hen’s egg. I was certainly worried, and for over a year I was victim to this suffering and discomfort. "I read the papers and became interestd in the way so many Indianapolis people were indoreing KonJola. I started taking this medicine myself and It was the one and only step I ever took that actually ended that pain and misery. I can use my hind ;ust as well as anybody how, and the knot has gone from my wrist. Konjola has done what a great many other things failed to do for me, and X feel that a medicine Which will give such wonderful relief is worthy of praises. It Is a pleasure to Indorse this Konjola for the wonderful help It has been to me, because X know what helped me will help others.” The Konjola Man Is at Hook’s Drug Store, Pennsylvania and Market Streets, Indianapolis, where he la dally meeting the public and In troduclng and explaining the merits of tills remedy. Konjola la also for sate by every Hook Drug Store In this city, and by all druggists In outside towns. ' —Adver+ , m'^ t
One More Bathing Beauty
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By the time all the bathing beauty champions get into the ocean at the Atlantic City pageant this fall the water will be crowded way up on Cape Gris Nez or some place. Here’s the latest city champion—. Miss Dorothy Seilpr, 21, who won the title in Madison, Wis.
FORMER DRY CHIEF JOINS BRENNAN Republican Says Prohibition Menaces Nation. Bu Vnited Press CHICAGO, Aug 12.—John Kjellander, former prohibition director of Illinois and a lifelong Republican, today announced he would support George E. Brennan, Democratic senatorial nominee, dry law modification champion. “I want it understood,” Kjellander explained, “that I am still a Republican, but I intend to go all the way with Brennan because he had the courage to come out boldly against one of the greatest perils that threaten the nation. My experience as a prohibition officer has convinced me that Brennan has taken the right position." The allying of Kjellander with Brennan i* another link in the chain of recent events which make Brennan’s managers particularly sanguine over his chances for victory at the polls in Nbvember. REPORT PHONE THIEF Three Irvington Business Houses Are Looted. The same burglar is believed to have entered three Irvington business establishments Wednesday night, making pay phones his chief loot. At the D. E. Kennedy grocery, 6129 E. Washington St., the phone contained $3.50, He took other merchandise. The Paul Millar drug store, 6133 E. Washington St., was entered and a pay phone and $9 taken. At the C. J. Dorn grocery, 5136 Brookville Rd., two pay phones and $8 were taken. IN TIkIACKING FIGHT? Police Believe Bootleggers Used Stolen Auto—ls Recovered. Bootleggers stole the car of Charles Myers, 146 S. Harlan St., fought hi-jackers in it and returned it early today, police believe. Mrs. Myers reported the machine, anew touring car, stolen and police, investigating, found it abandoned a half block from the Myers home. It had been driven thirtynine miles and there was a bullet hole in the glass in a rear door. A neighbor reported seeing a man,,who resembles a bootlegger known to police, standing by the car at 3 a. m. OLD LAND MA R K ~BU RN S Erie & Wabash Canal Freight Station Destroyed. Bv Vnited Press LOGANSPORT, Ind„ Aug. 12Fire of unknown origin early’today destroyed the old Erie & Wabash canal freight storage station „here, with a loss estimated at $15,000. The building, a famous old landmark, was occupied by a feed store.
Non-gagging Ronflr.. Plntee, made here only SWEET SLEEP Oxygen and gas. A vitalized air. The only method of extracting .eeih absolutely painless with safety at the same time. Toung or old. one tooth or thirty It’s ill the same. You simply drop Into a gweet sleep. When you awake the teeth are out and you feel fine. Complete X-Ray Service EITELJORG & MOORE Corner E. Market and Circle Few Btep* from Cfrrle Theatre
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AGED ARCHBISHOPS FACES SEDITION TRIAUNMEXICO Examine Statement Made by Mora Del Rio to N. Y. World. B w Vnited Press * MEXICO CITY. Aug. 12—Archbishop Mora Del Rio, the aged leader of Catholicism in Mexico,- may be summoned before the legal authorities on a charge of sedition in violating a clause of the new religious laws. Secretary of the Interior Alberto Tejeda has ordered the attorney general to examine a recent statement given by the archbishop to the New York World to determine whether, the prelate’s expressed sentiments violated the prohibition against members of the clergy criticising acts of the government or the laws of Mexico. If the attorney general finds the utterances to have been seditious, the ordinary procedure would be to summon the archbishop for a preliminary hearing. Archbishop Mora Del Rio Is a thin, white haired little man in his late seventies. Upon him has fallen the burden of directing the church's fight against laws which the government avows to have been designed to break the alleged political power of the church in Mexico. Priests Executed Meanwhile reports of new Isolated disturbances ire being revealed here. Press dispatches state that the forces of General Mange in the state of Michoacan executed five priests at the Hacienda la Ouava Sunday, after they had been charged with inciting Insurrection and court-martialed. Conflicts, however, are confined for the most part to states immediately surrounding the states of Mexico, Michoacan and Jalisco. A United Press special correspondent en route from Mexico City to Guatemala found the small towns of southern Vera Cruz and the states of Tnbarco and Chiapas little Interested in the controversy, although some effects of the boycott were noted in the larger towns. New Fuel Added New fuel has been added to the controversy, however, by the announced plan of the Mexican government to take over church properties held in. the names of individuals as well as by churches themselves.. On the ground that the clergy Is not permitted to possess property. The newspaper Graphlco estimates that the total value of church properties held on Haciendas and ranches and including chapels on private pVoperties and mines, is about $600,000,000. The campaign will touch all parts of the republic. Many priests are wealthy men, having entered the clergy after iffheriting fortunes. The $60,000,000 estate of Monsignor Gillow. former archbishop of Oataca, who died a year ago, probably will be affeced. He inherited his wealth from an English family. Archbishop Montes De Oca, who died in New York, left an estate valued at $40,000,000, including mines, haciendas and other properties, which he inherited from his family. The orders effecting *h* plans for nationalization were being prepared today by the secretary of the interior.
ON SALE TOMORROW SMART NEW FALL HATS SIJ9 Felts in All Shades Silks t Combinations Not Just ordinary Hats, but new Fall Hatß, the latest whispers In styles. You’ll like their smart charm and appearance. Come In tomorrow and see them. /the ManiwoHL CoS K .grange ran wo mm *
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
WOMAN ROUTS BURGLAR Police Hunt Prowler Reported at Residence Window. Screams of Mrs. Lawrence Giltner, 224 S. Harris St., routed a prowler near her home Wednesday night, she told police. Police searched the neighborhood, but were unable to find thq man. She said she saw a hand at her bedroom window and shouted. A man has been seen in the neighborhood several nights, she said. WATSONATTACKS FARMJID PLAN (Continued From Page 1) me as an effort on my part to promote personal interest or gratify selfish ambition. “Our problem is to lift agriculture up and not pull industry down.” Abrogation of tariff schedules would do the latter, he asserted. “If the farmer could be completely organized for the purpose of cooperative marketing, the whole problem would be solved, for production at least might be partially regulated and products could be fed into the market at such a rate to hold up the price, but at the present time that is not possible.” Opposition to the McNary bill, is not “a tenable position for an advocate of the doctrine of protection,” Watson declared. President Coolidge opposed the McNary bill. “Our opponents say that If our proposed legislation secures a better price for the farmer it would tend to stimulate production and to reduce consumption. If that is true of the price increase secured under legislation we proposed, it is true of any price increase, for instance, one secured by cooperative marketing. Make Tariff Effective “The real problem that confronts the farmer is to make the protective tariff elective in its application to his products. “We propose to do it by placing at the disposal of the, producers a mechanism, with the assistance of which they can control the handling and marketing of crop surpluses, thereby preventing price fluctuations and securing, in domestic markets, the price benefits of the protective tariff. “The present tariff bill was written to meet the demands of the friends of agriculture. It is hot true that the farmer sells in an open market and buys In a protected market, for 84 per cent of all he uses on his farm or in his house is on the free list, while there is imposed the highest rate on agricultural products coming into this country from other countries than was ever before levied by any tariff law in the entire history of the Nation. “There come in absolutely free of all tariff taxation, agricultural implements of every kind, binder twine, barbed wire, leather goods of every character, fertilizers, and many other articles too numerous to mention. "I personally know that the agricultural schedule was submitted to the heads of the various agricultural organizations in Washington and indorsed by them as entirely satisfactory, and but for those sections agriculture would ibe in a far more deplorable position today than it is. 80 Per Cent at Home, “The farmer sells abroad 10 per cent of all he produces and 90 per cent Is consumed at home. "It would be wicked and wanton
STARTING TOMORROW FINAL CLEARANCE OF Summer Silk Dresses Tomorrow morning at 8:30, 483 dresses will be placed on sale. Ever}’ dress is from our regular stock and grouped in the basement for this great Clearance event. Many of these dresses are actually worth two to three times this sale price. ' Jfe -44 Dresses 8 1 -li #lj BREL , .74 Dresses 8 2- 98 jMk tA UMk 22 DRESSES* Q9B 18 Georgette Dresses SO9 'Jf Mn |y \ \ Worth $6.95 4== Worth $7.95 WtiSk 24 Silk DRESSES$ r .00 " L “ e * Size SC.OO Wm Worth * 7 ’ 95 - Silk Dresses 0-= / Mmj FOURTEEN I 122 118 SPRING L ]L\JUt jP§ss SUITS SILK DRESSES COATS m3LM ‘~ l/fly s Worth $15.00 Worth "Wf S2O Values IlgEjsf B MH scjß Vip 7= $Q.95 IS! iJfkiy 1 •** si9°7s m ** W a |S- 65 Black Satin Dresses, ! 5 | 17/71 DRUSES 119 S Worth $8.95 ||\j ' || Solid Color *#% ao 142 Tricolet J \ , £| 1 Q RAINCOATS *yM PRINCESSSI /J>\\ O' J, O Worth $7.95 II slips w
to destroy the market in which he sells his 90 per cent in order to attempt to increase the 10 per cent, for the whole world is becoming rehabilitated agriculturally, and the competition on all agricultural products abroad will be keener in the days to come than It has been at any time in the past. “The farmer does not need more money. He does not need to be placed in a position where he can borrow more cash. What he needs is a higher price for what he produces. and he cannot obtain this by largely decreasing the purchasing power of those jwho make his market while at the saine time he floods the market with agricultural products fr®m all the countries of the world. “And how is that task to be accomplished? We propose to secure a greater degree of stability in the price levels of corn, wheat, hogs l and cotton. Care For Surplus "Notwithstanding all that has been done for the farmer in the way of legislation, there is one thing that must needs be done, and that is to make arrangement by legislation to take care cf his surplus products, for any solution of the farm probHemorrhoid Sufferers Answer* to Your Pile Questions Do you know why ointments do not gfve you qnlek and lasting relief? Do you know the cause of piles is internal? That thsye is a stagnation of blood in the lower bowel? * Do you know that there Is a harmless internal remedy discovered by Dr. Leonbardf and known as HEMROID, now sold by Hook's and druggists everywhere, that is guaranteed? HEM-ROID banishes piles by remor. ing the cause, by freeing blood circulation in the lower bowel. This aimple home treatment hag an almost unbelievable record for sure, safe and lasting relief to thousands of pile sick suf. ferers, and saves the needless pain and expense of an operation. Don't delay. Try HEM ROID today It will do the tame for you,—Advertisement. Child-birth Is explained In wonderful Book sent free to all Expectant Mothers MAKE the months of expectancy easier, freer from tension and pain: land make the birth of y OU r child a happv event byusnig r, "Mother's Friend. '■ttgt Om the external lubrisß* '\va cant for expectant . mothers, known and used by three genera, tions of mothers. aOlgA \ yk Use ”M ot h e r'e Ml V ' Al\ Friend aa our mothera and grandmothera did. Start tol.'jyni] . day. and meanwhile vB li'n) write to Bradfleld Regulator Cos.. B-A 17. Atlanta for wonderful free book, let (sent in plain envelope! containing in. formation every expectant mother ahould have Begin using "Mother's Friend ’ now and you will realize the vtsdom of doing ao aa the weeks roll by!. "Mother's. Friend" is sold by all good drug stores—everywhere.—Advertisement.
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lem that does not take into consideration the disposition of the surplus must of necessity fay far short of the mark.” Belittling the policy of “tariff for revenue alone,’’ Watson continued: “I am one protectionist who believes that the wheat tariff, for example, was Imposed for the express purpose of enabling the farmer to obtain a higher price for his product than that obtained by his foreign competitor in wheat production, the price to equalize the difference between his production costs and those of his competitor abroad. The very
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AMUSEMENTS
ENGLISH’S TONIGHT 8: IS Berkell Players “The Bridal Suite” Mats. Wed., Thurs. and Sat. Next Week “Love of Su Shong” Phone MA In 3373.
Penny Dance Something Different Free Admission One Penny a Dance Thursday, August 12 At Riverside Dance Palace
BROAD RIPPLE PARK AND ZOO All Week In Open Air Theater at 8:45 HELLO GIRLS REVUE[ 21 PEOPLE j A Breezy Musical Show With a Bevy of Pretty Girla “FROM BROADWAY TO BROAD RIPPLE” cmi ii In the Bi Pool Off llu Pure Filtered Water National A. A. U. Swimming Meet, Aug. 17-18-19 Thur„ Aug. 19, Bathing Beauty Contest and Fashion Parade.
SPECIAL DANCE Kentucky Cardinal, 11 Orders Featuring Richard Powel, Tenor You have heard them broadcasting through HAS. Come and hear them at Riverside Sunday, Aug. 15, and Thursday, Aug. 19, Saturday, Aug. 21. Regular admission.
object of the tariff Is to give the American producer an increased price over his foreign competitor. "That was the aim of the McNary bill, for it simply supplemented the tariff making it effective wherein, because of surplus crops, It would Ineffective.”
AMUSEMENTS t/riTU’C BAT, MAT. IIL II Ii U 25c-50c-75c LAST WEEK OF SEASON The Stuart Walker Company THE MOUNTAIN MAN GEORGE GAUL—LAEL CORYA LAST PERFORMANCE WILL BE SUNDAY NIGHT WApdel BAILEY AND BARNUM Late with “Lady Be Good” and the Greenwich Village Follies m McCORMICK & WALLACE REVUE COMIQUE CHARLES ALTHOFF I I | MANNING & GLASS MARY REILLY BADER-LAVELL TROUPE & TODAY NAT C. HAINES & CO. Offer “HELLO MAMA” Comedy Masterpiece of Vaudeville Twhite KUEHNS Pongs as They Should Be Sang OTHER BIG ACTS PHOTOPLAY HOUSE PETERS in “THE COMBAT ”
Dance THURSDAY SATURDAY SUNDAY CASINO GARDENS Admission 75c
AUG. 12, 1926
Discarded motor car tires are made into shoes. Spanish peasants, the Chinese and natives working in South Africa diamond mines utg| such footgear.
MOTION PICTURES i— GSR*— GILDA GRAY “ALOMA Os THE SOUTH SEAS” O. Henry Comedy “The Complete Life” LAST TIMES TODAY SYD CHAPLIN “Oh! What a Nurse!” COMEDY AND REVIEW IBtSiiM fiCK O TH£ PjCJUPCS - MUSK THAT CHSOMS-RIN-TIN-TIN The Wonder Dog In "A HEROaOF THE BIG SNOWS” Wedge, Van and Wedge Novelty Singing and Dancing American Harmonists Playing and Singing Novelties Cipom? Greatest of All Circus Picture* “Bigger Than Barnum’s” Ralph Lewie. Viola Dana. Gen. O'Hara. *** • • • Sennett Comedy, Fox Nwn, Lester Huff. Paequale L. Montanl, EniU Seidel and hie orchestra.
asis Thurs., Fri. and Sat. William ALWAYS Fairbanks “The FOR Handsome Brute” “g Comedy I IS H “Sky Bound” A VV* Complete Change of Program Sunday.
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First National Present* . CONSTANCE * TALMADGE in “The Duchess of Buffalo” It Is to Laugh ! ! U. S. S. Leviathan Band DESSA BYRD at the organ Plazma In Kelley Color Comedy—" Solid Gold” ~ Animated Circle News
ON SALE TOMORROW In Our Shoe Dept. HUNDREDS OF PAIRS OF Ladies’ Smart FOOTWEAR $0.19 msA A Pair Straps, Pumps, Oxfords , Cutouts and Novelties See Our Windows They Are Real Values, Worth Twice This Sale Price MHEMIuIiwOM.CoO % .grants ran wo mss M
