Indianapolis Times, Volume 39, Number 247, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 February 1928 — Page 5
FEB. 22, 1928.
ANTI-AMERICAN CROWD CHEERS i FOR NICARAGUA Mexico City Students Parade in Sympathy With General Sandino. By United Press MEXICO CITY, Feb. 22.—Students today were blamed for the anti-American demonstration staged along the Avenida Juarez last night by a crowd estimated at more than 2,000 per sons. Fireworks were exploded, insults were cast at Americans and there were mingled vivas for Gen. Augustino Sandino, the Nicaraguan rebel leader. It -was a harmless demonstration, although some of the celebrators invaded hotels and dining rooms, where Americans were, and denounced the visitors. There were many women in the group, and although they were poorly dressed, they were said to be students. Enter Eating Places The demonstration started on the Avenida Juarez, one of the principal streets of the city, and afterward small groups entered hotels, dining rooms and theater lobbies. They •frequently shot off fireworks as they carried on their demonstration. “Viva Sandino'’ was a frequent shout while occasionally the shout of “kill the Gringoes” could be heard. At the Hotel Regis, where there were a number of tourists, many Americans retreated to the lobby as the crowd approached. Others stood in front of the hotel and listened to the taunts and jeers of the crowd. Explode Fireworks At Sanborn's restaurant, one of the main eating houses of the city, a number of Americans were having a. late meal when a small group of demonstrators entered. They shouted their denunciations of the Americans and exploded fireworks in the restaurant. Two policemen put out the group, estimated at about seventy-five, without difficulty.
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‘MEN ARE LIKE THAT’ IS BIG HUMAN STORY The Bobbs-Merrill Qompany Has Just Published a Book That Throws the Strict Light of Truth Upon Russia of Today and Yesterday. BY WALTER D. HICKMAN The most cruel story I have ever read is “Men Are Like That,” by Leonard Ramsden Hartill. This book tells the story of Chanus Appressian, an Armenian, who first was of the Czar’s army and who passed through all the bloody trouble which resulted in the Red flag being unfurled over all Russia.
As-I read the terrible adventures of Ohanus, my blood often ran cold. Here is the most cruel story I have ever read. And I believe that is all true. It is a most human recital of the terrible suffering that all people of Russia passed through in the last days of the Czar and the days that ushered in Russia's “freedom.” From February, 1922, until March, 1924, the author was stationed in the Caucasus, engaged in agricultural reconstruction work and it was there that the author met and became acquainted with Ohanus. The author has permitted Ohanus to tell his own story of both individual and national suffering that at tunes it is a miracle that he lived through the terrible ordeal. Hartill writes that he personally investigated ail of the Armenian's story and visited most ol the scenes of the man's struggle. I have no reason to disbelieve a single line. I take no sides, mentally in the Russian mess. It was awful at times and most of the time under the Czar and it seems to me, based upon the data given by Ohanus that conditions were just as bad under the governments that followed the Czar. , And yet he concludes—“ Tire Red flag is symbolic to the peasant of a relentless mastery of ideas and purposes beyond his comprehension; yet the flag, such as it is, is the only hope he has for the time being of a termination to the ages of stagnation in serfdom that has fallen his lot under alien masters." I will let Ohanus speak to you as follows: ‘•Tonight I shall begin as a little boy in Khankandi. I shall see things with a child's eves and 1 shall learn that men are worse than wolves, for men arc like that: I shall live through the fateful years that marked the ending, in all of great Russia and In all the lands under Russian sway, of the old order of things and the old way of life. I shall be conscripted Into the Russian army and shall march with my comrades singing marching songs, songs ot the Volga, of the Cossacks, of village life, of the army, of love and of war. I shall march into battle, into a storm Os shells and machine gun fire. The heavens shall open, the earth heave, and 1 shall be in hell. But out of the five thousand in my regiment who went Into battle, I shall be one of tha two hundred and fifty that survive. . . “Then I shall know romance for I shall be sent to the home of the beautiful Nina in Poland as a spy. And I shall completely lose myself in rapture and adoration of her; arid miracle of miracles, I shall win her heart. But, God pity men on the day when X shall discover who she reallv is. “In battle again, X shall see my regiment annihilated. Then the revolution! I shall hear the great orator, Kerensky, speak at Odessa. In Kharkov I shall he caught in the midst of tho counter-revolu-tion. and, disguised as a baker's helper, I shall escape death from the Reds. “Then dear God. I shall be once more In my land of Ararat, where the world was begun anew. Once more before famine, war and pestilence have ravaged the country, I shall know feasting and danc-
ing. music and laughter and love. There in the city of Alexandropol shall I find the lovely Markoule, who dances divinely, and shall win her hand in marriage. “Again when happiness beckons me shall X be torn from It. Through events that make world history. I shall be an infinitesimal part. Swift moving drama, diabolical in violence, shall I know. I shall be made a beast of burden, flogged and driven along a road of sharp stones that cut my feet, with a load too heavy for my starved and lacerated body. I shall face a firing squad and live to remember the horror of it Through perils unbelievable I shall win iny way back to Khankandi and find my desperate little family. Famine and pestilence shall stalk the land, making men beasts. "And yet shall I see a brighter side, for in such a pass, T shall see men and women who become saints, the last of their strength In the service of others: beasts and saints, for Men Are Like That.” I believe “Men Are Like That” gives us a completely truthful account of the Ruslan situation. I recommend it to the thinking public that wants light upon a great problem. It is published by the Bobbs-Merrill Company of this city.
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Best Sellers The following is a list of the six best sellers in fiction and nonfiction in Brentano’s New York stores: FICTION “Clair Ambler,” B. Tarklngton (Doubleday. Doran). “Jalna, ,r M. De La Rocha (Little, Brown l. “Southern Charm,” Isa Glenn iKnopfi. ““iron and Smoke,” S. Kaye-Smlth (Duttor). “Bridge of San Luis Rey,” T. Wilder (A. and C. Bonl). "A President Is Born." F. Hurst (Harper). NONFICTION "DlsraelL” A. Maurols (Appleton*. ‘‘Count Luckner: The Sea Devil.” L. Thomas (Doubleday, Doran). “A Son of India Answers.” D. Mukerjl (Dutton). “My Life.” Isadora Duncan (Bonl fc Liveright). “Napoleon,” E, Ludwig (Bonl St Liveright). “The Immortal Ninon,” C. Austin (Brentano's).
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LIQUOR CARGO GOESJO JAIL Runner for City Residents Held at Lebanon. By Times Special LEBANON, Ind„ Feb. 23.—Fiftyfive gallons of liquor for delivery to Indianapolis customers, will never reach its destination due to the arrest of Clyde Horton, 32, Chicago, whom officers found unconscious on a road eight miles south of here after he had been beaten by hijackers. Horton was in his automobile when found. It had been forced off the road pavement and mired in mud. The liquor was not taken nor was SSOO Horton carried on his person. He told officers he and the hijackers exchanged shots and that he wounded one of them. A farmer living near the scene of the clash said four men called at his home early Tuesday seeking; medical attention for one of their number. With the alcohol, officers con-
fiscated a book containing names and addresses of several Indianapolis persons. Deserter Sent to Fort Frank Farrell, 19, deserter from the United States Army at Ft. Howard, Md., who surrendered to Police Capt. Jess McMurtry Tuesday, hungry and tired of evading the law, today was to be turned over to Ft. Benjamin Harrison authorities. He said he deserted last October.
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Orders Dogs Killed Bu Times Special GARY, Ind., Feb. 22.—“ Shoot to kill” orders have been issued to police here by Chief William A. Forbis in reference to all dogs found on the streets. The order followed a warning by city health officials that an epidemic of rabies is possible. One dog that bit a woman was found to be mad, another Is suspected and three have died of rabies recently.
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Helpless, After 15 Years of Asthma Chough and Wheeze Stopped Two Years o. Well Ever Since. Any on, tortured h ’ asthma or bronchial troubles wi. glad to read ho w these a ill. ‘s were ended ior Mrs. Geo: t Kiefer, Route B< Box 133, Indianapolis. She writes: “I suffered from asthma 15 years, I tried every thing, but was told 1 ln-t herited asthma and there xv ;a uo cjre for It. I was bo bad I couldn’t even d't my housework. Could hardly wail across the house on account of m.v breathing, and used to sit up in a chair for four or five nights at a time. The second night after beginning Nacor 1 slept in bed all night. I have not noticed any asthma In over two years; breathing tine, no wheezing and 1 sleep fine.” You will enjoy reading many other letters from people who recovered after years of suffering from asthma, broni chitis and chronic coughs, and have had no return of the trouble. These letters, and a booklet of vital information about these diseases, will be sent free by Nacor Medlcln© Cos., 4tS State Life Bldg., Indianapolis, Ind. No matter how serious your case, write for thi# free information. It may lead you back to health, as it has thousands of others. —Advertisement.
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