Indianapolis Times, Volume 38, Number 262, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 February 1927 — Page 7
FEB. 7, 1927
INDUSTRIAL BOARD LAW REPEAL, PLEA OF LEGISLATORS Home-Rule tor Compensation Claims Advocated by Bill Authors. Home rule in the settlement of claims under the workmen’s compensation law and/complete abolition of the Indiana industrial board is (lie substance of a bill planned for joint introduction in the Indiana Legislature, by Senator Delbert V. Blackburn (Rep.), Evansville, and Representative French Clements (Rep.), Evansville. The industrial board bill authors sav that abolishment of the board will mean a saving to the State of $90,000 annually. Claims would.be settled in the local Circuit and Superior Courts. Unnecessary Expenses Tn discussing the bill with a group of friendly members of the Legislature Sunday night both the Senator and representative emphlaslzed the fact that the compensation law defines how much must be awarded for various losses and that in case the dispute is taken to the Industrial Roard it involved unnecessary State expense, since it might be administered by the local courts and is very apt to be taken to the courts any way. Should the board be abolished it would mean the loss of position of Chairman R. Artman, who recently resigned from the Public Service Commisison to accept the Industrial Board job at a $2,000 reduction in salary. A bill was introduced in the House to make his salary $6,000. * Cites 590,000 Budget It is the salary of the board members and other office and traveling costs that make the budget of the board SOO,OOO the Evansville legislators contend. “Why should an industrial board member and his secretary come all the way to Evansville from Indianapolis, when an employer and employe have an argument over a smashed finger?” they inquired. "Oftentimes the judges are away from the bench while such hearings are being conducted and they could just as well be on the job and hearing the cases themselves.”
MAN OF 80 STILL RIDES OLD TRAILS Missouri Doctor Makes Rounds on Horsebac^. Hu V7J.4 Service ST. LOUIS, Feb. 7.—Though he is SO years old, Dr. Taylor C. Estes, who for sixty years has patroled his district in rural Missouri, still rides horseback over the old trails, day in and day out. His years of service in the country around Fipley County have turned his hair white, but his keen, blue eyes still speak their owner's enjoyment of life. With his luxuriant mustache and tall, spare figure, he is like a picture from the west of ouarter of a century ago. Dr. Estes’ territory covers about sixteen miles. For several years he was evangelist, often being called from the church to the bedside of the siclf, from a wedding to the bedside of a farm hand, who had injured Ijis jiand in a threshing machine. He has helped more than 1.400 children inio the world. Often his pay has been in corn and wood. I RY THIS SAFE LAXATIVE REMEDY FOR COUGHS Colds and constipation are so closely linked that the one condition aggravates the other. Cough remedies that contain chloroform or opiates arc harmful and intensify the constipated condition. Foley’s Honey and Tar Compound is invaluable for coughs and colds as it is free of opiates, is mildly laxative and absolutely reliable for all coughs and throat irritations, hard bronchial coughs, lingering "flu” coughs, bothersome night'coughs. Bland to the tender throat of a child, effective for the stubborn coughs of grown persons, Foley’s Honey and Tar Compound is a fine dependable family cough remedy. Ask for it. Sold everywhere.—Advertisement.
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Talks With Senators
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Miss Blanche Lee secs that the Senators attending the Legislature get the right numbers. Sho presides over the Senate switchboard.
AUTHOR OF CANN BILLIE SPEAK Lafayette Senator Before Civic League Tuesday. Senator Howard Cann (Rep.), Lafayette, author of the Senate bill ■ to abolish the public service com- I mission, will speak before the Sher-1 man-Emerson Civic League at School j 62, Wallace and Tenth Sts., Tues- j day, at 8 p. m. Alvah J. Rucker, former corpora-! tion counsel, recently deposed by I Mayor John L. Duvall, and who also is advocating abolition of the commission, will speak. The league was ore of the first bodies to oppose the merger of the j two electric utilities. President Roy Swartz, 1515 N. Chester Ave., will preside. Mathematics Club Elects President Harold Warren, 5241 Washington Blvd., senior at Shortridge High School, has been elected president of the Mathematics Club. The organl-
zation is sponsored by Walter G. Gingery, mathematics head and vice principal. The club has been studying astronomy during his bimonthly programs and will continue a study of mathematical constructions, using the compass only. Fallacies and puzzles are features on the club’s pro- j grams. “So this is Lon-
Warren
/ don”’ by Arthur i Goodrich, has been chosen for the j dramatic production of the Short- | ridge High School senior class. BOY STARTS IT HONOLULU, Feb. 7.—The origin-! of steel guitar playing, Hawaii’s I foremost contribution to instrn mental music, is described in detail in manuscripts recently published by the Bishop Museum. A Hawaiian lad in 1893 found that by placing a ; pocket comb on the fingerboard he | brought anew twang from the : guitar. This was followed by experl- | ments with the blade of a pocket knife, and resulted in the use of a riece of thick steel for the purpose. URGE DOWRIES PARIS. Feb. 7. —Stajte dowries for girls who are married to peasants have been proposed in several departments of France in order to' keep the. country girls down on the farm. One 1 measure proposes to insuje each girl | for SSOO, the sum to be paid when the | girl reaches 21 on condition that it be I j used as a payment on land or toward j Ia home. I
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Far arid Near
BRUSSELS—RepIying to a newspaper campaign for a plebsicite in the provinces of Eupen and Malmedy, regained from Germany after the war, the Government announced that Germany had renounced all rights and titles to the provinces and no plebiscite would be held. ATHENS—Private advices from Salonica 6tiid anew revolution has begun in Albania. PARlS—Francesco Cianca, editor of the Italian newspapers II Mondo and Risorgimento, has arrived here, the Quotidien announced, after (light from Italy whence the Fascists planned to exile him on the Island of Campedusa. BUCHAREST Radium treatment of King Ferdinand for intestinal cancer has begun here under the direction of Professor Sluys, who brought the radium from Brussels. PISCO, Peru.—A broken landing wheel has delayed the departure of the United States Army’s Pan-Amer-ican flight squadron for Mollendo. The wheel was broken when the fliers arrived rom Lima. WASHINGTON.—Joint memorial services for Senator William B. McKinley (Rep.), Illinois, t.nd Representative Charles E. Fuller (RepTT, Illinois, were held by the House. The entire Illinois delegation and friends of the two deceased legislators from other States attended. Representative Britten (Rep.), Illinois, presided. CHICAGO—Lcve at first sight often is a case of being in love with love rather than falling in love with the person the Rev. A. W. Palmer said in a Sunday sermon on marriage. NEW YORK—A local train on the Brooklyn-Manhattan transit I line was eighteen minutes late in reaching Queens Plaza because for 1 a distance of five nii(fs it followed ; a playful white poodle which scami pered along the tracks. The rcolorman would not risk killing the dog. i CHICAGO—Every one has a | “natural bent” toward some stage of insanity. Di\ H. Douglas Singer, an alienist,says. Many are “eccentric,” believing they are not appreciated by their employers and have impossible relatives. WASHINGTON, N. J. The Warren County Ku-Kltix Klan has sold the Cornish mansion, its headquarters, to Harry Cohen, retired dry goods merchant. NEW YORK—The advance of feminism eventually may lead to the ! abolition of Monogamy, Prof. W. F. Montague of Barnard College said at a meeting of the Fortnightly Forum here. The early Romans made cement as i good as or better than that of the j present day, and the Saracens manuI factured an excellent steel.
Do You 1 Feel “Out of Sorts
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
MARINES MOVED SOUTH OFTEN IN PAST 31 YEARS Twenty - Five Detachments Sent to-Central America and West Indies. Bu United Press WASHINGTON, Feb. 7—During the past thirty-one years, American lives and property have been protected In Central America and the West Indies by twenty-five detachments of United States Marines and bluejackets, naval records disclose. On March 8,1895, 60 officers, sailors and Marines from the U. S. S. Atlanta landed at Boca del Toro to protect the United States consulate and government property. Marines and bluejackets from the U. S. S.. lowa were dispatched to Panama In 1901 and during the same year a detatchment landed at Colon from the U. S. S. Machias. Battaiian Along Canal The following year, a battalion of marines was landed at Colon and were stationed at Panama, Colon and along the Panama Railroad, protecting the transit of the A marine detatchment landed at Santo Domingo in 1903. Later a brigade was sent to Panama. This brigade returned in 1904 but left a battalion in the Canal Zone, maintained there until 1914. Because of the insurrection in Cuba in 1906, a brigade of marines was sent to Cuba, forming part of the Army of Cuban Pacification. In the same year 120 sailors and marines landed at Havana from the IT. S. S. Denver for the protection of American interests there. Two detachments of sailors from the L T . S. S. Marietta landed at Truxillo and Ceiba, Honduras. March 18, 1907, to protect Americans during an insurrection. A week later another detatchment from the same ship landed at Puerto Cortez. HondurasTo insure a peaceful election, an expeditionary force was sent to Panama in 1908. Revolutions in Nicaragua caused three expeditionary forces to be sent to that country in 1909. A guard left there for the American Legation was withdrawn August 3, 1925. In 1912 a provisional brigade was dispatched to Cuba because of unsettled conditions. Two regiments of marines and bluejackets were landed at Port au Prince, Haiti, in 1915,and marines have been on duty in that republic since that time. Boundry trouble arising between Panama and Costa Rica in 1921 caused a batallion to bo dispatched for duty in Panarpa. Marines were landed in Honduras in 1924, when a serious revolution broke out. Further landings in Honduras were made the following year. In 1926 marines were landed in Nicaragua, where additional forces were sent Jan. 6, of the present year.
OLD EMPEROR’S _ GRAVE LOCATED Ho-o Ruled Japan From 1259 to 1214. Bu T'nifcd Press TOKIO. Feb. 7.—The tomb of Emperor Kameyama Ho-o. who ruleq in Japan in the days of Kublai Khan, has been definitely located in the ancient province of Idzumo by scientists of the P/efectural Historical Research Commission of Shimane. Emperor Ho-o reigned in Japan from 1259 to 1274 and his piety is credited with saving the Empire from being conquered by Kublia Khan, when the great Mongol eonquerer was at the height of his power in Pekin. Kublai Khan, according to an ancient legend, swore an oath that Japan should pay tribute and come under his rule. He sent a force of 100,000 men in scores of juriks to overcome the Japanese. Emperor Ho-o, terrified at the onslaught of the conquerer, retired to a Shrine and offered a solemn prayer for salvation, declaring he would spend the rest of his life in religious meditation if his people could be saved. The Japanese then went out to battle, and aided by a great storm off the coast of Hakata, completely destroyed the invading force. It was the last effort of the Mongol ruler to capture Japan. MILLIONAIRE AT SEVEN London. Feb. 7.—Rupert Clark 7 years old, is now a millionaire and one of Great Britain’s largest landowners. His father died recently at Monte Carlo. The estate includes 113.000 acres near Melbourne, Australia.
FLAPPER FANNY SAYS:
crrSTiRT on rw_ HMJ'-S’Seu. - ARTicnotcaCALUC£TpK l cisarr at wa mwet me.
When a man’s bank roll is light he tries to keep it dark.
Shulgasser to Arrive From Ellis Island Ater three weeks incarceration at Ellis Island, Bernard ghulgasser, 25-year-old Lithuanian student at Butler University, left New York City Sunday and will arrive in Indianapolis late today. He will resume his studies which were Interrupted when immigration authorities arrested him for deportation on charges that he violated his student immigration permit the working. The youth was given a hearing after influential friends and organizations interceded in his behalf. Shulgasser was granted a year’s stay in the United States to prove his good intentions in maintaining his student status. MURDERERS MAKE GOOD Few Return to Life of Crime, Report Shows. Murderers generally make good after they are paroled, or pardoned, according to statistics from penal institutions of Indiana submitted to Pardon Board Secretary! Charles E. York. In commenting on the statistics York declared that he was not favoring murder over other crimes, however, and is a firm believer in the English system of making a murderer pay the penalty with his own life. He pointed out that murder is a crime usually committed in the heat of passion and that many of the offenders who are released have no inclination toward a life of crime, nor did they ever have. Ninety-eight per cent of the murderers released .never again break the law in any manner the figures indicate. Those released for other crimes have a lower rating and the average of all offenders is 90 per cent. LIFT BAN ON AUTOS Bu United Press HARBIN, Feb. 7. —The ban on motor traffic between Manchuria and Mongolia, which had been placed by the Chinese authorities, has finally been lifted. The interruption of communication has placed great difficulties in the way of the rising Mongolia-Manehuria trade. On account of the general business de pression in North Manchuria, many local merchants turned their attention to Mongolia and had begun to establish promising business relations wfth the Mongola and the Soviet Colony at Urga. 808 IT IN INDIA LONDON, Feb. 7.—The ancient customs and coiffuers of India are giving way before the flapper and her bobbed hair, according to Sir Avargari, a member of the legislative assembly of India. Throughout the whole Orient the feminist movement is spreading, ho reports.
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FEDERAL BANK EXAMINER DIES John C. McGrath, 66, Succumbs at Home Early Monday. John G. McGrath, 66, of 701 Col- i lege Ave.,'lndiana national bank examiner for the Federal Govern* ment, and former assistant secretary of State of Illinois, died at his home at 1 a. m., Monday. Death was due to a heart ailment after an illness of one month. Mr. McGrath came to Indianapolis Men Past 40 Need Strong Internal Organs TO WARD OFF DISEASE AND WEAKENING SIGNS OF PREMATURE OLD AGE With worries, overwork, lack of j sleep, excesses, rich or improper foods, j domestic troubles and the rapid pace at I which we live, daily sapping strength, j energy and vitality, thousands of men are breaking down and showing signs of age while still in their prime. Seven out of ten are said to be victims of kidney, liver. or stomach trouble with such distressing symptoms as lame back, rheumatic twinges, sour stomach, biliousness, pains in the head, dizziness, high blood pressure, weakness and nervous debility. In all such cases, you owe it to yourself to start at once to get into your system the marvelous restorative Radium power supplied by ARIIM Tablets. By producing a vitalizing internal exercise, ARIUM helps to quickly bring back healthy, norma), youthful action of the internal organs, just as Nature intended. Physicians and other users report amazing results. Mr. J. B. McK. of 111., says: “My vitality, nerves, bowels, stomach and appetite decidedly improved.’’ Mr. B. H. F. of Utica, N. Y., writes: “Aches and pains have left my body.” Mr. M. 11. H. of Atlanta. Ga., states: "Since taking ARIUM, I have recovered from a very serious illness and high blood pressure.” A multitude of alarming symptoms often quickly disappear. You should see and feel a truly starling improvement in yourself each day. .The Associated Radium Chemists. Inc., of rh> wh,ch supplies druggists with AHIL M guarantees successful and satisfactory results from its progressive use in evet? case or money refunded, and also that a definite quantity of genuine radium is used in its preparation. ARIUM is economical to take and may now be readily obtained in this city from any good druggist such as Hoog Drug Stores. Stores. DiggetUs Drug Store. Goldsmiths .—Advertisement.
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A buying guide BEFORE you order dinner at a restaurant, you consult the bill-of-fare. Before you take a long trip by motor-car, you pore over road maps. Before you start out on a shopping trip, you should consult the advertisements in this paper. For the same reasons! The advertising columns are a buying guide to you in the purchase of everything you need —including amusements! A guide that saves your time and conserves your energy; that saves, useless steps and guards against the false ones; that puts the s-t-r-e-t-c-h in family budgets. The advertisements in this paper are so interesting, it is difficult to see how anyone could overlook them. . . fail to profit by them. Just check with yourself and be sure that you are reading the advertisements regularly—the big ones and the little ones. It is time well spentalways. * Avoid time-wasting, money-wasting detours on the road to merchandise value. Read the advertising “road maps.”
in 1917, from Jerseyville, 111. He is ■urvived by the widow, one son, F. N. McGrath, of St. Louis, and a daughter. Miss Florence, at home. Mr. McGrath was a member of the K. of C. and Elks Lodges. Services will be held Wednesday morning at 9 o'clock at St. Francis Xavier Church, Jerseyville, 111. CHURCHILL CAN TALK LONDON, Feb. 7. —The talkers of the House of Commons have been distanced. Chancellor of the Exchequer
fantastical Spectacle NEW ORLEANS— Sggxl \ J j Mob ile Pensacola Biloxi. LjUtii - /’""’AY music and tinkling laughter on - the balmy air costumes of every Hv / f i land —merry voices—bright lights—pagA Tfl T cants of beauty undreamed of— Mardi J i Gras! Such merriment and beauty as our ■SaHjjfiw, ! *V\ workaday country sees just once a year. \ Just a few hours away! Enjoy, too, the JujJp winter horsc-racing now in progress at and be sold at re* 'mp ' Free stopovers at Gulf Coast points— Riloxi, Gulfport, Ocean Springs, Pass Jnr f § Christian, Bay St. Louis, Pascagoula—on jf I vffijr I New Orleans Mardi Gras excursion tick* nf j * ctß reading via the L&N, the only rail* I! Xw lyly road^ traversing this entire delightful rc* Conducted Tour j ” A personally conducted 'all* J gy. expense Mardi GrastourtoNew / Orleans will be operated over * ' this railroad, leaving Indianap* All-Expense Tour olis 3:j/\3 pm., February 25th, r returning March 3rd, $86.90 rroin from Indianapolis ($81.65 If Indianapolis upper berth is used). Full par* ticulars on request. . H. M. Mounts. T.P. A., T. Carpenter. C.P.A, f\ -V Owl 310 Merchant’s Bank Bldg., Ph, Riley 1041 yOk 'n)*l l In JUft' indianapolin.lnd. irak - H. MiUlken, D. P. A., Louisville, Kv. LOUISVILLE & NASHVILLE Fc&C
AUTO SHOW BUILDING FAIR GROUNDS ind.anZTlL DAILY FEB. 14-19 Adults, 50c Free Inside Parking Children, 25c for 5,000 Cars
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Winston Churchill Is the man. According to the Parliamentary Gazetle he spoke 362 columns (about 160,000 words) of the Official Report from the beginning of the session in February to adjournment in August. BRONCHITIS f I At bedtime rub the throat and %gg chest thoroughly with— VICKS v Vapoßub Over 17 Million Jars Used Yearly
