Indianapolis Times, Volume 40, Number 228, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 February 1929 — Page 16

PAGE 16

COLLEGE CHIEF BRANDED CZAR FDR DRINK BAN Little, Out as President of Michigan U„ Aroused Students’ Ire. This I, the third and last of the series drtai’.lnc the stormy rarerr of !>r. C. C. Tittle as president of Mirhitan University. BY HOWARD STEPHENSON. ANN ARBOR. Mich., Feb. 11.— Advocacy of birth control and his differences with Governor Fred W. Green figured in the recent resignation of President Clarence C- Little of the Univeristy of Michigan, but numerous other controversies contributed to a situation that finally seemed 1 ’css. Convinced that unfit students Should be eliminated, Little preposed creation oj a “university college.” He immediately encountered violent opposition. His idea was that students for the first two years should be enrolled in the proposed college, and be given a diploma on graduation. Ts they had shown themselves capable, they were to be permitted to go on with specialized work. The faculties of the engineering and literary schools promptly vetoed the proposals. After long controversy, Little was sustained by the rc~"nts, but conditions were such that It would have been difficult to j put the plan into effect.

Drink Ban Stirs Ire When Little put a ban on student autos except in the hands of upper classmen, and sought to end drinking in fraternity houses, he aroused the student ire. His efforts were only partially successful and he threatened to put into effect a proper system, controlled by the faculty. Thereupon the students called him czar and dictator and caricatured him in their publications. Another row began when Little started to carry out the proposed plan to house girl students in dormitories, which would have affected the bread and butter of some 7,000 landladies. They joined the cry against him, as did real estate operators. One dormitory, planned for five hundred girls, has been held up in construction, and when completed, may not house more than three hundred. Little came into conflict with the regents when he urged that they proceed cautiously in accepting gifts with strings attached, as some donors insisted. Many universities have found donations of this character a hindrance, Little argued, but the regents preferred the gifts. Gifts Carry Strings William W. Cook, corporation lawyer of New York, has given large sums to the university, from which he was graduated in 1882. It is estimated his benefactions during his lifetime will exceed $10,000,000. The nn’ioi es Little proposed would have affected Cook’s theories in making gifts. A legal research library in which professors of the law school may not have offices, a woman's dormitory reserved to students of certain classes, and a lawyers’ club closed to summer session students already have been built by Cook. And he will build more, with Dr. Little gone. Dr. Little will leave in the spring. The regents have not selected his successor, and admit that their task is not an easy one.

i#ii Thousands of 1 Wk pairs of trouser* ! mLs MB in nil sires and 1 EW? all weights, in- I iffh |efn eluding nlti n s 1J& B jalp patterns. Von'll ■ find that "The M B tender" will save tgßl ▼on about % on J&ik extra trouser*. Ijpß> (B|p $0.69 rS| And Jp, | ELDERLY MAN FREED FROM RHEUMATISM Bloating and Stomach Pains Were j Also Relieved. Tells How. Elderly people whose lives are burdened by rheumatism, back-ache, or stomach distress, will read with interest a letter recently received from F. L. Pratt, 72 years of age. 821 Whitman St., Rockford, 111. He writes: "I was hopehwrly sick for five long years wish stomach trouble and rheumatism. The rheumatism in my shoulder gave me intense pain. Whenever I ate anything, gas would form, accompanied by severe cramps. Dizziness would attack me so frequently that work became almost impossible. I was, weak and tired all the time, rolled and tossed all night, and got up more tired than when I went to bed. Recently I started taking Viuna. Already my rheumatism is gone and the dizzy spells have entirely ceased. The gas trouble is nearly gone and my stomach pains have stopped. I am eating well as I could ten years ago. It seems hard to believe, but it is true, every word of it.” Viuna has worked wonders in thousands of desperate cases of kidney trouble, back-ache, stomach trouble and rheumatism. It may be the making of you. Try one bottle under positive guaranty. $1 at druggists or mailed postpaid by Iceland Medicine Cos.. Indianapolis. Ind. VIUNA The Wonder Medjcw

•F. F. V.’Belle Will Wed

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Miss Emily Addison Langhorne, daughter of David Gray Langhorne of Pulaski, Va., soon is to wed “the village smithy” of Aurora, 111.,, Andrew Frederick Gustafson. Gustafson, who owns a blacksmith shop in Aurora, is coach of the Virginia Polytechnic football team. Miss Langhorne’s father is a cousin of Lady Astor and Mrs. Charles Dana Gibson,

TERROR REION SUSPECT HELD Young Man Accused of 50 Attacks on Women. Bu United Press ATLANTA, Ga., Feb. 11.—A secret search for a man who is alleged to have attacked at least fifty prominent women and girls was believed ended today with the arrest of a 25-year-old married man. The man held gave his name as Alvin Euegene Merritt and until midnight Sunday night had refused to admit connection with the attacks. Within a few hours after his arrest, police say, Merritt has been identified by fourteen women and girls as the man who lured them to lonely spots, threatened them with a revolver, robbed and attacked them. Those who identified Merritt were attacked during the last few months. At least thirty more victims, also attacked within the last few months, are to view Merritt today. The search, as well as the numerous attacks have been kept secret by police, both because of the orominence of some of the victims and because of their fear the man they sought would leave the city. Their search ended when they identified a suit of clothes sent to a tailor for repairs as one belonging to the man under arrest. The suit police say, was tom in a struggle with one of the girls. Manager Plans Vote June 4 Bu Times Special TERRE HAUTE, Ind., Feb. 11.— Terre Haute citizens will vote June 4 on whether the city manager form of government shall'be adopted. Efforts had been made by opponents of the plan to obtain a court order forbidding calling of an election by the city council, but they were unable to obtain even a temporary restraining order. Girl Missing Two Weeks Bu United Press EVANSVILLE. Ind., Feb. 11.—A search was continued today for pretty 16-year-old Amah Harris, who disappeared from her home here two weeks ago, after a quarrel with her father because of her attendance at a basketball game.

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2 FACE DEATH CHARGE Muncie Men on Trial Today In Slaying at Ft. Wayne. Bn United Press FT. WAYNE. Ind., Feb. 11.—Carroll Cooper and Wayne Williams, both of Muncie, went on trial here today, charged with first degree murder in connection with the death of Clem Foley, meat cutter, during an attempted robbery here Jan. 7. The trial of Lawrence Thompson, also of Muncie, also indicted in the murder was sent to Huntington on a change of venue.

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HUNDREDS DIE IN EUROPE DF COLDJPIBEMIG Starving Wolves Take Horrible Toll of Children in . Frozen Regions. Bp l nitcd Frees LONDON, Feb. 11.—Exceptionally cold weather in Europe and floods in New South Wales claimed thirteen lives during the week-end. Shipping and land transportation was at a standstill in some sections. In .addition, 651 deaths from influenza in England during the last week were reported today and seven other deaths from the epidemic now 7 affecting jnostf of Europe were recorded in Budapest. Twenty-tw'o of the thirty-six deaths indirectly were attributed to the cold. Starving wolves in the region about Corvtza killed sixteen children and six men. dispatches to Athens from Jannina, near the Greco-Albanian border, said. Ice Traps Ships Ice in the Baltic sea had entrapped 140 ships, the Daily Mail s correspondent at Berlin reported. A United Press dispatch from Copenhagen said twenty-five vessels were ice-bound in the sound between there and the island of Ruegen, in the Baltic. . Thirty ships had been liberated from their ice prisons by the German battleship Schleswig-Holstein, earlier Berlin dispatches to the Daily Mail said. A huge Lufthansa air liner cruised over the Baltic all day Sunday spotting the ice bound ships and the Danish government also sent out planes to search for vessels and drop supplies to those needing them. Smaller ships were warned

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LOCAL LADY FREE OF KIDNEY PAINS AFTER TEN YEARS “Konjola Was The Medicine I Should Have Had In The First Place,” She Says In Praise of Famous Remedy. Surprising as it may seem, this new and totally different medicine, Kupjola, is at the very peak of its powers in cases that have defied all medicines and treatment >. Working with the sufferer’s own food, it restores a more normal,

MRS. EMMA HAMILTON —Photo by National Studio

healthy action to the important functionary organs of the body. How often the Konjola Man, who is at the Hook Drug Store, Illinois and Washington streets, this city, hears the expression “How I wish I had known of Konjola a great deal sooner—it was the medicine I should have had in the first place.” Grateful men and women are calling every day to tell of the remarkable benefits they derived through the use of this medicine. Many of his callers are people in poor health, seeking to find the road to new and glorious health. The Konjoia is pointing out to them case after case wherein Konjola proved the first and only medicine that brought relief. Take, for instance, the statement of Mrs. Emma Hamilton, 1214 East Tenth street, this city, who had a most remarkable experience with Konjola: “After I had taken a brief treatment of Konjola I realized that it was the medicine I should have had in the first place. For ten long years I suffered: from kidney trouble of the worst sort. Severe pains in my back almost prevented me from getting around. Night and day they affected me; my feet and ankles were swollen and sore, in fact, my whoje body was filled with these sharp, agonizing pains. Due to the sluggishness of my liver I became subject to dizzy spells, when hundreds of spots appeared before my eyes. I was becoming weaker and more rundown daily—often barely being able to get out of bed In the morning. Worst of all was the fact that nothing gave me the slightest bit of relief. “It was just when my case was at its worst that I started on the Konjola treatment. This medicine certainly had the most adverse conditions to work under. But do you think that made any difference? Certainly not. Konjola did not falter. It went right to the source of my troubles and in little over a month I was a well and happy woman. Konjola strengthened and invigorated my kidneys—banished the swelling and pains. My liver was regulated so that the dizzy spells vanished and new energy and vigor took hold of my system. Konjola alone is responsible for the remarkable change in my health. I owe everything to it. I can fully understand why it is called the master medicine of them all and I praise it to everyone—young and old.” This is not an exceptional case. Konjola has thousands of them to its credit. Daffy more and more men and women are describing the benefits they derived through its use. It is said that no sufferer can afford not to give Konjola a trial. The Konjola Man is at the Hook Drug Store, Illinois and Washington streets, this city, where he is meeting the public daily, introducing and explaining the merits of this amLgt tAiiViSi tisement.