Indianapolis Times, Volume 39, Number 29, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 June 1927 — Page 7
JUNE 14,1027
STRIFE BREWS |S STATE G. A. R. POROUPS GATHER Sons of Union Veterans Face Fight-in Effort to Become ‘Heirs.’ ®l/ ini led Press GARY, Ind., June 14.—First of a controversy which piay develop jnto a spirited fight among auxiliaries of the Indiana G. A. R. were heard here today, as the ‘‘boys in blue” and members of auxiliary organizations gathered for the forty-eight annual_ encampment, which will be opened formally this afternoon with Flag dayexercises in Lake Front Park. Arrival here yesterday of Dr. E. W. Homan of Lynn, Mass., national president of the Sons of Union .Veterans, and his announcement that he would attempt to have his Organization declared the heir of the Grand Army in perpetuating jfche observance of Memorial day is Expected to rouse spirited opjjbsition. Dr. Homan announced he intended to carry the fight into the Rational Grand Army encampments throughout the country, in an effort to line'up sufficient delegates to injure passage of his measure. , More than 500 Civil War veterans land close to 2.000 members of auxiliary organizations had registered parly today. Trains from all sections of Indiana were bringing other fciundreds into the city every hour. I The veterans will be honored fcuests tonight at the annual reception, with Governor Ed Jackson Reading the receiving line. Jackson will remain in Gary for~the annual parade Wednesday afternoon and the campfire Wednesday Jiigljt. A south side social organization, the “2-Ys” Club, has engaged the Riverside skating rink for a party Wednesday night, a number of special features *have been plamfed, feays Earl Ross, president.
Polishes, soaps, cleansers —irritate and roughen your skin. To have soft, white hands —even ( during house cleaning time— use a little Italian Balm at least coo© a day. For sale everywhere. ! ife* Balm
I To enable you to get quick action in ■ filling positions, emergency or otherwise, immediately, The Times has arranged a “last minute” help wanted fl i service and can now take your ad daily up to 11:45 A. M. 4 and in just one hour and a half after that, your ad, printed in the Home Edition, is on “the street” detailing your needs to severpl thousand observ- • I ing eyes—and among them" is the H “6arly bird,” always the most reliable employe, the one who won’t wait “until morning,” but respond ' ready to work today- Your ad works from 1:15 to 5:30 p. m. during the afternoon of your business day and the SAME DAY, too. f And Remember This: L From the more than 250,000 daily Times readers you can not only secure all the help you need, but also do it at a lower cost. For help wanted ads cost considerably less in The Times. And lower costs mean increased profits for your business. B Call Main 3500 * Just Say Charge It
Alcohol Shown to Have Certain Value as Food
It’s Action From Beginning to End Held Depressant, Not Stimulant. Are physicians justified in prescribing medicinal alcohol for their patients? This is the third of a series of articles giving the opinions of the world’s leading medical authorities on this much discussed question, given increased interest by Indiana’s controversy. BY DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN Editor Journal of the American Medical Association and of HjKiii. the Health Magazine. The British pliysiologost, Ernest H. Starling, in a thorough consideration of the effects of alcohol on the human body made in 1923, summarized all evidence thus far available as to what occurs when this substance is taken into the system. / He agrees with most other Investigators that alcohol is without a doubt a food especially valuable in cases when ordinary foods cannot be taken. On the other hand, he says that the concentration of alcohol in the blood and tissues can be controlled only by regulation of the amount which is drunk.. ficial effect of alcohol as a food is more than compensated for by its deleterious effects as a drug. Has Depressing Effect “the idea that a plentiful use of alcoholic drinks is beneficial for heavy workers,” fcaid Professor Starling, “is misleading and mischievous. He considers its chief value as a food in certain cases of diabetes. Starling considered it also as a food in the weakness of old age, but said that for the normal individual the food value of alcohol Is not of importance. Dr* Starling says that the action DANGE CAUSES SHUFFLE Parisians’ Gait Becomes Affected by , Black Bottom. Bn United Press PARIS, June 14.—Parisian addicts of the Charleston and Black Bottom develop an unconscious shuffling gait that distinguishes them from other pedestrians, a Paris critic says, That Americans seem immune to the influence he attributes to the prevalence of sport in America, which provides an easy, graceful carriage. DOG TAKES BOY’S PANTS Romps Off Wit? Trousers While Owner Is Swimming. Bn United Press EVANSTON, 111., June J4.—Norman Meirner? (foes not consider his trousers beautiful, but now that they’re gone he wishes he had them back. A playful dog rompei off with the pants while Norman was swimming. , , j
of alcohol from beginning to end is essentially depresent. Its chief effect is to dull the perception of unpleasant feelings, of surroundings, to diminish self-criticism and the fear of undertaking any action which may excite remarks or be regarded by other people as not appropriate to the situation. Emotions Easily Aroused Thus, under the influence of alcohol, an Individual becomes more communicative, losing his suspicion,and his emotions are 'more easily aroused. Under the influence of alcohol the shy and diffident person becomes less fearful of revealing what is pressing on his mind. It Is not surprising therefore that alcohol should commonly be regarded as a stimulant. However, the same action continued further affects the next lower levels of the nervous system, causing interference with co-ordination and deteriorates intelligence unsuitable to mental work. Alcohol is therefore unsuitable for the highest mental efforts or during the performance of prolonged muscular feats. In some people the control of the body by the highest nerve centers is developed to an excessive degree, so that their constitution may actually interfere with the carrying out of complicated acts acquired by constant practice. To such individuals alcohol acts as a relaxation, diminishing the nerve tension. A man of this type who plays golf sometimes improves his technic by a small dose of alcohol. f/ Next: When to Prescribe Alcohol.
t What Will They Think of Lindbergh s 1 Jr light in 1Q77 *
rpo US it is Man’s Most Daring Achievement. To our grandparents it would have been -X unbelievable. In their day there was no automobile* no telephone, no motion picture, no radio, no wireless, no submarine, no airplane. We have seen the vital changes all these inventions have made in every-day life. What further great changes are to come? * •. v t * i Sir Philip Gibbs, great thinker and great reporter, has looked into the Future by studying at firsthand all that is bdng done by scientists all over the world. He has unleashed the full power of his imagination in his prophetic article “The Day After Tomorrow”' He sees coming a world so weird it will amaze you. Strange, towering buildings . . . television news bureaus . . . automobiles that fly * •• airplanes that crawl along the roofs of the streets! Men all over the earth will see and talk to each other almost, instantly. We will tap the earth for power produced from the atom and transmitted by wireless waves. Individuals will fly with as little effort as moths. Such rapid communication may make necessary a universal language, anew social system and even the erasing of national boundaries. His series begins in July Cosmopolitan.
IRVIN S. COBB TT'AR up in Tennessee Irvin -a S. Cobb has discovered a veritable treasure house of <3 short story material which hois bringing Cosmopolitan \ readers in his new stories of the Romantic River. Here Mr. Cobb has found what is probably the last •tronghold of the old-time steamboat life . . . They're packed to the gunwale with adventure, romance humor. The first of these stories is As Brands from the Burning ; in July Cosmopolitan.
• Many Other Splendid Features E. Barrington writes on Diet and Mystic Wisdom . . . George Ade discusses a subject of which he Admits he knows nothing Women ...O. O. Mclntyre tells searchingly of Unseen Dramas of Hollywood . Milt Gross contributes another of his Famous Fimmales ftom Heestory, Loocritchia Borgia . . . Elsie Robinson presents a searching essay,'A Song of Men .. . Martha Ostenso, author of “Dark Dawn," “Wild Geese” and other successful novels, begins anew serial, The Mad Carew* ~, also serials by Rea Beach, Edwin Balmer and Robert Hichens.
THE INDIAXAPOLIS TIMES
RAIL WARJN OFFING Delaware & Hudson, B. & 0. Both After Line. Bu Times Sine in I WASHINGTON, Jlmc 14.—The j Interstate Commerce Commission, it appears, virtually must take sides in | the struggle of two great railroad groups to consolidate Eastern and mid-Western railroads when it rules on the Delaware & Hudson’s application to lease the Buffalo, Rochester & Pittsburgh railroad. The B. & O. railroad, opposing the lease strenuously, has served notice in briefs filed with'the commission that it adheres to its plans for a new short line from Chicago to New York, and should the pending petition be turned down it at once would start negotiations for a lease of the Buffalo, Rochester & Pittsburgh. ONE PUPIL TO TEACHER Nebraska Schoohna’am Gets $75 Monthly for Light Work. Bu United Press O'NEILL Neb., June 14.—One of the highest-paid school teachers in the country, in proportion to the number of pupils, is Miss Marie MacLeod. She receives $75 a month and teaches one pupil in her rural school near here. When her picture was printed in a local newspaper she received thirteen proposals of marriage. Borheo tribesmen still consider human heads necessary <or their religious ceremonies, but the practice of head-hunting has become so firmly restricted that they now must borrow their heads from their neighbors.
MAURINE WATKINS r T''HE young author of X that remarkable drama, “Chicago," contributes a 5 s t or y that opens with one of } ~r/ the most startling ideas that mi cver began a narrative . . . A husband ... his first wife . . . and the jealousy that, acid-like, ate into the happiness of his second wife . . . around these strange elements Miss Watkins has written a most gripping and unusual story which she calls Alimony ... in July Cosmopolitan.
Forward The Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Ind. Gentlemen: We think your new typographical dress very fine and a great improvement over the old. We hope that you continue the forward movement of making a better paper. We are all working to make Indianapolis a better city. Wishing for your continued .progress, wc are, Yours very truly, E. J. HOLLOWAY, Holloway Building Cos.
150 MILES WITH TRA'P Bald Eagle's Flight Ends in Death by Shooting Bu United Press KILLDEER, N. D„ June 14 —Several weeks ago two hunters noticed a large Americarv bald eagle acting queerly and killed the bird. They found that one of its legs was held by a coyote trap, to which another trap was fastened by a piece of wire. Publication of the incident brought word that the traps had been set 150 miles distant. NUGGETS IN CHICKENS Home Dressing Profitable for Mon- . tana Housewife. Bu United Press HAMILTON. Mont., June 14. while dressing two chickens for Sunday dinner, Mrs. J. G. Liebel found several gold nuggets in their craws. A seaiph failed to reveal any more nuggets in the chicken run, but the Liebels are considering entering the.-poultry business on a large scale.
265 RECEIVE DIPLOMAS Senator Fess Graduation Speaker at De Pauw. Bu Times Special GREENCASTLE, Ind., June 14. Diplomas were presented to 265
SHOES!—SHOES!—SHOES'. OUR BIG ‘NO RENT’ BASEMENT IS JAMMED WITH SHOES TO— — '■■■ 1 1 . Ladies * $4; $5 and $7 High Grade
BUY NOW— SAVE NOW
CHILDREN'S TENNIS - SHOES Special at 69c * PAIR
GEORGE A. DORSEY W ing best seller, “Why ,1 We Behave Like Human V v>p§jr Beings,” tells what all the shooting’s for in China. This fascinating article reveals our part in China’s affairs,which Dr. Dorsey criticises as none too admirable, and shows why China might hate us with no little bitterness. Read this remarkable article, If I IVere a Chinaman —only one of eight brilliant features in July Cosmopolitan.
Hearst's International combined ninth July ■ -‘Just Out
young men and women of De Pauw University at 'the eighty-eighth annual commencement exercises Monday. Commencement address was given by Simeon L. Fess, senator from Ohio; invocation by the Rev. Franklin Fillmore Lewis, head of the St. Louis Methodist conference; I
GLOBE STORE! 330-334 W. Washington St. J
and benediction by the Rev. Lemuel H. Merlin, president of the university, who also awarded the degrees. A pintail duck killed recently In California bore an aluminum tag placed there twelve years ago by a United States game warden.
■ ■ • Distinctive Short Stories GOUVERNEUR MORRIS prove* that if destiny hangs by a thread it may also hang by a tooth as it does, most surprisingly- \n~A Paradise Lost. GEORGE MOORE brings the love story of an Irish girl ... At the Imm of the Road ... and who could write it better than he? RUPERT HUGHES writes The River Pageant .'. . intermingles humor and romance in the love story of a scapegrace. " j CAPT. JOHN W. THOMASON, Jr.. gives us Tell It to the Marines . a yarn; of the Marines in South America and a wet riot at Huahua Crossing. EDITH BARNARD DELANO tell* the story of a womdn who was beautiful . . . and knew it. Beautiful but Cold . . . and playing the marriage game with a high hand .. . until. . . A. E. W. MASON ..a story of first love Little Sweetheart is the dramatic romance of a woman who seemed insignificant .. . until she told her story. . j ERNEST POOLE tells in Listening to Wall Street ... the story of an overheard telephone conversation and a New England telephone operator. EUGENE MANLOVE RHODES is a past master of Western tales. The Bad Man and the Darling of the Gods is in itself an adventure in short story reading. ROYAL BROWN. ..in Marrying Money . . . gives Richard Tarrant a chance to marry a million? V. and he turns it down . . . almost. RING W. LARDNER spins a story on the roulette wheel .. . 7 he Spinmtfg Wheel turnf-thc private gambling salon inside out for you ... in the most Lardneric manner.
PAGE 7
-LATEST STYLES ALL SIZES
CHILDREN’S STRAP SLIPPERS AND OXFORDS 98c to $1.98
