Indianapolis Times, Volume 38, Number 160, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 October 1926 — Page 12

PAGE 12

GOVERNOR LAUDS WORK OF OFFICIAL WHOM HE OUSTED ■■■ ■ •* Jackson Praises Toastmaster at Dedication of Lanier Home. Bv Thrten Rpcclnl MADISON. Ind.. Oct. 11.—Friends of William A. Guthrie, of Du Pont, former chairman of the State conservation commission, were greatly pleased Saturday evening, when Governor Jackson, speaking at the J public banquet at Clifty Inn, which ; closed the two-day dedication program of the I.anier Home, paid glowing tribute to Guthrie for his affective and efficient work while a member of the State conservation commission. In reviewing the accomplishments of the department In the restoration of the historic Lanier home, and development of the State park system, the Governor mentioned names of no other members of the department. In his tribute to the great accomplishments of the deparment, he mentioned no names except in bis reference to the great a.nd effective work accomplished by the toast- j master of the evening, Guthrie was toastmaster. Wrote Open Letter Guthrie's friends from every section of the State, who were present, took tha Governor’s remarks as a | ■complete vindication of the ex-chair-man of the commission In the difficulty which led to his removal. They recall that the Governor released statements through the Indianapolis News which Guthrie took as a reflection upon his Integrity, also the open letter addressed to the Governor by Guthrie In which he Stated his side of the controversy and which has never been confirmed or denied by Jackson. His reference Saturday evening to Guthrie is the first he has made In any form since. Guthrie's open letter was published. The Governor did not go Into detail as to the reasons for removing from office one whom he now thinks j was so valuable a servant to the j Sta/tm. \ The Governor has neve? denied the facts stated In the Guthrie letter, In which appeared the statement that it was the Governor’s lnstruc- j tlcm to Guthrie and Everett that the I salary of Richard Lieber, director, be reduced. ' No Explanation H® haß never explained why he deramnded Guthrie’s resignation, j when the action reducing the salary of the director had been accompllshed. JefTarson County friends of Guthrie would now appreciate a statement from the Governor as to why he dispensed with the services of Guthrie in preference to those of Lieber whom he at one time so much desired to remove. No Stomach Trouble or Rheumatism Now Suffered for 30 Years, Before XT* Found Right Road to Health. There is mighty good news for sick people, in a letter written by Harvey Knox, Route 2, Gaston, Ind He feels sure other sufferers can regain health Just as he did. Mr. Knox writes: “I had stomaoh trouble for 30 years. My stomach would bloat and cramp. The gas would crowd back mjr heart, and the pains were awful. My appetite was poor and I had to watch what I ate all the time. I also had rheumatism In my right leg below the knee, and my ankle swelled up so I could hardly walk. Nothing I would take did me any good. Then I heard of Viuna and bought a bottle, and right from the first I felt better. Now I feel fine. My stomach trouble is all gone. No gas, none of that bloating, and I can eat anything and plenty of it. My rheumatism Is gone, doesn’t pain or swell at all, and my leg is as good as it ever was. My weight was formerly 140 pounds, and now I weigh 157 pounds, a gain of 17 pounds. I lay my present state of good health to Viuna.” ect* promptly on alnrrhrt Durifl u7 er / nd woak kidney? II purifies the blood, clears the skin, ren^*Lr P,H! IL te ““J 1 digestion, and bring! new strength and energy to the whole n ? t ke botne on trlaL ThTn ls £ !ad / ou tried Viuna. your money will be refunded. $1 at druggists, yr mailed postpaid by Iceland Medicine Oo„ Indianapolis, Ini VIUNA The vegetable regulator

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EMPORIA SA W THA T GAME AFTER ALL Editor Bill White Fails to Let Ministers’ Frowst Halt Score Board.

Bu TimeH Special EMPORIA. Kas., Oct. 11.—While the Sunday chicken cooked in a slow oven at home Emporia Sunday afternoon cheered and groaned alternatively as the final world series battle between the Cardinals and the Yankees was flashed on the etectrio scoreboard In front of the Emporia Gazette office. For Editor William Allen White, known to Kansas as “Bill” White, stuck to his guns and “played” the Sunday game on his scoreboard

Did Legion Guess Correctly? PHILADELPHIA. Oct. 11.— Selecting the date of the American Iyegion convention after studying weather reports as far back as 1330 was the means taken by the local Legion committee to insure good weather for the Lesionnalres’ invasion. CoL Vincent A. Carroll, chairman of the local committee on arrangements, consulted with Forecaster George 8. Bliss of the Philadelphia Weather Bureau beforo notifying tha national headquarters of the convention dates this year. Together they dived Into the files and after going back nine-ty-six years they found the second week in October would proride the best chance for fair, stable weather conditions. During the five-day period chosen this year (Oct. 11-16) there has been only a trace of rain on one of those days in the past two years. Bliss said.

BIG DEMOCRATIC RALLYTONIGHT Headrick to Start County Campaign With Talk. The active campaign of Marion County Democrats will open tonight with a rally at Fountain Square, at which William D. Headrick, candidate for Congress, will speak. County candidates also will be present and speak. Headrick, confined to hit home for eight weeks by an attack of rheumatism will appear. Tuesday night a rally will be held In Perry Township at School 9, at which county candidates will appear. Fifth and Sixth ward Democrats will hold a meeting at North and Minerva Sts., at which Ileadlck will be the headliner. County candidates will be on the program. A Ninth Ward rally will be held Tuesday night at Rural and Washington Sts. John W. Holtzman, candidate for Joint Senator from Marion and Johnson Counties will speak. Mark Rinehart, candidate for county treasurer will discuss the question of taxation. Other county candidates will be introduced. A number of other precinct meetings have been scheduled for the week.

FATAL STABBING I AT LIQUOR PARTY Turning on of Light Said to Have Angered Negro. WlTlle Yocum. 21. Negro, 2909 Columbia. Are., wsut fatally stabbed it hl home early today as th 6 ell- j max of an alleged liquor party. Yo- I cum Is alleged to have became enm.ged at Oscar Hamilton. Negro. 1314 Alvord St-, because the latter | switched on a light. Hamilton said after Yocum stabbed blm nr Ith am loe pick, he drew a knife and retaliated. Hamilton was arrested charged with murder. Refusal to go on a party resulted in stabbing of Miss Lucy Martin, : Negro. 2’S, of 802 Clifton St. She said Miss Alice Jones, Negro, 973 Coe 9t. wielded the knife after of- I i ferlng the Invitation. Sam Thompson. Negro, 802 Colton | St., was stabbed three times on the head when he tried to disarm Miss Jones. | Police fought Andrew Parker, Ne- I gro, of 420 Darnell St., on a charge I of assault and battery with Intent to kill. Police say he drew a knife and razor, while he and Thomas I Payne, XL Negro, of 1024 N. Senate Ave., engaged In an argument at 11208 Lafayette St. Payne Is In city i hospital. Test Answers I These are the answers to the ques- I tlonm which appearar on page 4: L Herry Ford. 2. Lie at. Commander Richard K. Byrd, Jr. 8. British Broadcasting Company. 4. Gene Ahern. 5. Tiny Insects. 6. Twelve. 7. Mountain time division. 8. Thirty-one. 9. Kt cetera. 10. A star-shaped mark used In printing, WONDERFUL HEALTH REPAYS WISE FORETHOUGHT Mrs, Wm. C. Fischer, 2009 Woodboumo Ave.. Louisville, Ky., occasionally takes Foley Pills, a di- j uretlc stimulant for the kidneys, ! which helped her over a quite severe aliment, "Yes,** she says, “I still take Foley Pills, diuretic, at times, whenever I fell I need them, and as a result my health Is wonderful.” Not surprising, for Foley Pills, diuretic, are a reliable, valuable, tonic medicine, constantly in use over 25 years, promoting that satisfactory I cleansing flow so necessary to good health. Try them. Sold everywhere. J —Advertise meat. •in

, despite the protests of several ! ministers who objected to the breaking of the Sabbath by playing basoball whether on a dirt diamond or an electric scoreboard. Ministers Deplore During the week, the ministers adopted resolutions “deploring” Editor White's hospitality when he printed a piece in his paper for Em- | poriuns to “eat a late Sunday | dinner and come on down and watch j the game.” The ministers objected lon the grounds that such an ln- | citation interfered with the intent and purpose of Sunday in Emporia. Editor White’s town is strict about such things as Sunday baseball and musical comedies where figures, not notes, are featured. Several shows in which feminine charms were reported to bo displayed generously, were forbidden to play in Emporia i recently. But all that is beside the point. Editor White had put up the scoreboard and he was determined the baseball fans, deprived of actual flesh and blood Sunday playing, should follow the fortunes of the western favorites, the Cardinals, on his scoreboard. i While Answers ! When the ministers adopted their resolutions. White answered by asking editorially, just how many hours after church services did the Sunday ■ baseball game cease to be a sacrilege land become just a ball game. He asked for information sis to whether the game became less sinful as the interval between the parsons’ benediction and the umpires’ , play ball increased. There was no replay forthcoming from the pastors. They felt they had done their duty. Fans on His Side So Editor White felt his obligation to the fans was finished only when the last play of the final inning had been flashed on the scoroboard. And today the hundreds of fans who swarmed in front of the G.-u zetto office—many of whom had fidgeted all during the morning sermon for fear they would miss the first inning—were on “Bill” White’s ride. Sunday dinners in Emporia were uniformly late—for the last time until the 3927 baseball classic.

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

BURGLARS OBTAIN !D IN CLOTHES Tailor Shop Entered —Other Thefts Reported. Burglars entered a tailor shop at 534 N. Pennsylvania St., Saturda.y night, stealing over S6OO worth of clothing and $25 in cash. Ralph Jacobs, proprietor, told police that Sunday afternoon ho discovered a rear window smashed and the place ransacked. Frank Brown, 75, of 2355 Northwestern Ave., reported to police that two young men grabbed him as he was walking through the Statehouse yard, taking his watch and sl4. Robert Wilkie, Spink Hotel, was hold up and robbed of S2O by four Negroes as he was walking in the 400 block on Indiana Ave. Motorpolicemen Small and Oakley IF BILIOUS, SICK OR CONSTIPATED TAKE"CASCARETS” No headache, had cold, sonr stomach or costive bowels by morning’ Get a 10-cent box now. You’re bilious! You have a throbbing sensation in your head, a bad taste in your mouth, your eyes burn, your skin Is yellow, with dark rings under your eyes; your lips are parched. No wonder you feel ugly, moan and ill-tempered. Your system is full of bile not properly passed off, and what you need is a cleaning up Inside. Don’t continue being a bilious nuisance to yourself and those who love you, und don’t resqrt to harsh physios that Irritate and injure. Remember that most disorders of the stomach, liver and bowels are cured by morning with gentle. thorough Casearets—they work while you sleep. A 10-cent box from your druggist will keep your liver and bowels clean; stomach sweet, and your head clear for months. Children love to take Caacarets, because they taste good and mver gripe or sicken.—Advertisement.

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