Indianapolis Times, Volume 41, Number 129, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 October 1929 — Page 3

OCT. 9, 1929

DAUGHTER OF PREMIER SEES WELFARE WORK Not Interested in Clothes, Miss MacDonald Visits Service Agencies. BV JOSEPH GORDON* I nltfd Staff Correspondent WASHINGTON, Oct. 9 Miss Ishbel MacDonald will, bid farewell to the nation’s capital Thursday, happy in the warm friendships she made and in the opportunities accorded her to further her interests in social service work in a strange land. The attractive and intelligent daughter of the British prime minister has revealed a fulLsome capacity of energy since her arrival in Washington. She has accompanied her famous father to the White House, the Capitol, the President's fishing camp, the great White House dinner Monday night and on numerous other calls and still has found time to indulge. In her hobby. Lauds U. S. System Nothing, she says, has stirred her Imagination quite as much as the manner in which Uncle Sam cares for the American people through the many established agencies. Upon her arrival in New York Miss Ishbel immediately proclaimed her lack of interest in clothes. Immediately the nation’s women readers gasped. Her interview showed she was more interested in social service, child welfare and similar work. Since her arrival here, the prime minister's daughter has watched small children at play, heard the opinions of eminent psychologists on reactions of children to various games and continued her study at the children’s bureau of the labor department and later at the woman's department of the bureau. Well Versed in Work Miss Mary Anderson and Miss Grace Abbott, heads of the two departments, said the questions Miss Ishbel asked revealed her intimate knowledge of the problems affecting the world's youth. Miss Ishbel's apparent lack of interest in clothing was demonstrated today when she appeared at the labor department in the same ensemble she had worn while attending a musicale earlier in the day. For the most part, the gowns she worn here are expensive and attractive. but are inclined to the more severe mode, prevalent in England. Her costumes, however, are colorful. She evinced a keen interest In spiritual and folk songs at the musicale and applauded various selections warmly.

HIDDEN AUTOS SOUGHT Center Township Assessor Believes 10,000 Are Not Taxed. ‘‘Ten thousand Center township residents must be wrong.” Today, deputy township assessors were ordered to go to residences of that many auto owners who, Frank Brattain, township assessor, charges did not list their cars on spring assessment lists. Brattain said he was convinced more than $1,000,000 worth of autos owned by township residents were not carried on assessment reports and "soon will find out.” FIREMAN ASKS DAMAGES Emil Rutzkc Files SIOO,OOO Suit Against City in Accident. Emil Butzke. 2164 North Harding street, former city fireman, has filed suit for SIOO,OOO in superior court three against the city for permanent injuries received when two fire trucks collided at Market and Pennsylvania streets' March 9. According to the complaint. Butzke was riding one of the trucks and suffered injuries that necessitated amputation of his left leg. Woman Dies Alone in Home Pji Time * Special GENEVA. Ind.. Oct. 9—Children of Mrs. Glista Clawson s neighbors who came to her home to see the “funny papers” and found doors locked, leading to the discovery that the 73-year-old woman was dead. She lived alone. It is believed f she had been dead five days when found.

I Men don't understand; and some women are so helpless. * Eaeh/nonth they suffer untold pau\ though those times could be entirely painless. Midol makes the “natural process an incident: yes. even for tlvase who have always experienced ] . ♦ acute and prolonged suffering! Try Midol; an- ®||pySM| ticlpate your time and avoid all misery or even discomfort. Or take it when-the pain is at its height, and feel at ease in five to seven minutes. Midol is not a narcotic; acts directly on organs affected. Fifty cents, aluminum case.* BHfet ..

* Midol’s comfort is not confined to any certain days or age. It relieves at any time of life. Its ease is felt immediately in cases of nervous f.eadache, backache, cramping, hot hashes and all febrile pain peculiar to women.

Love Me, Love My Dog Best Time to Buy Your Dog Is When He Is 3 or 4 Months Old

Great Dane. Chancellor, owned by* Mr. aiiu ;urs. G. W. Williams. V The Great Dane is a very popular dog both in England and America, and has been known in this country more than a hundred years. He is of very ancient-German origin and referred to by many old writers on canine subjects. He is of majestic proportions, with a "serenity born of high breeding and consciousness of power.” Tl*p Great Dane is in a class by himself, a king among the canine race. Bismarck chose the Harlequin, the spotted variety, Great Dane, as his favorite companion.

BY MRS. HELEN B. JILLSON The best age at which to buy a or adopt one is 3 or 4 months. Many, however, are taken at 6 weeks, shortly after they have been v/eaned. Until this time, he has had most of his nourishment from his mother and he has developed two tiny rows of teeth which are far too sharp to suit her. One of the first indications of weaning is shown by the mother, who regurgitates a partially digested meal, and this the puppies take to kindly. The capacity of the young pups’ stomach is very small, indeed, so care must be taken to feed frequently #nd in small quantities, most e.!i young dogs voulu eat all the food offered them, but the results would be disastrous. Overfeeding stretches and overloads the

A Cash Prize Is Yours If You Give Best Name

Marion Nixon and Al Jolson

This picture .shows Marian Nixon pleading with Al Jolson in "Say It With Songs,” not to treat her so cruelly as he .does in the prison scene in this picture. Now it is for you to determine what good title for a song this suggests. * Write out your title and send it to the “Say It With Songs” editor of The Times. The contest editor will issue a check for $3 for the best song title and $1 for the next. For the next best five, a pair of

stomach, causing too much weight on the legs and indigestion. Now we have a well-developed’ puppy, functioning properly, strong on the legs, alert, and full of mischief. His toenails have developed, which, by the way, appeared shortly after he was born. His tail is cut (if he is the breed to have a docked tail* and his dew-claws snipped off. These operations are performed about the time his eyes open, and sometimes earlier. Although this might seem cruel and may some day be discontinued, the pain is slight and the mothers’ tongue is a panacea for all ills. Dew-claws are extra toes, on some young pups and not on others. They are of no use, apt to be torn and cause trouble so away they go before the puppy is old enough to know what it is all about.

| tickets will be given for the Apollo, where this* new Al Jolson movie is playing to capacity. Another picture in the series will be published in Thursday’s Times. TICKET DOMINATED All Beech Grove Officials Will Ask Re-Election. Present members of the town board of Beech Grove were nomiTuesday night at a meeting at the i town hall. The present town authorities will run for re-election on their record in office, they announced. The ticket: H. W. Britton, L. C. Dukes and W. S. Newcomer, trustees: William L. Gearhart, clerk, and Charles Adams, treasurer. One or two other tickets may be filed for the Nov. 5 election. VOLUNTEERS TO SERVE More Than 600 to Solicit Personal Pledges to Community Fund. - More than 600 volunteer workers will take part in solicitation for the individual gifts division in the Community Fund campaign in November, J. I. Hoicomb, general chairman, announced today. Edward A. Kahn, Fred Hoke and Herman P. Lieber will serve as cochairmen of the gifts division. The men are fund directors and Lieber is treasurer. BURGLARY IS REPEATED Home of Mrs. Ed Pugh Is Entered Third Time in Month. For the third time in a month, the home of Mrs. Ed Pugh, 1113 North Arsenal avenue, was ransacked by thieves Tuesday eight and $2.50 taken. Clothing, valued at $250, yeas taken from a truck owned by the Hauger $9.99 store, 117 North Illinois street, Tuesday night, at Washington and West streets.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

PRIVATE POLICE FACING SECOND SLAYING_ TRIAL Acquittal by Jury Causes Wave of Protest in Mine Fields. Bit Pcrinrto-llnirnrii Xrrrfvnoer AlHnnrr PITTSBURGH, Oct. 9.—Pennsylvania will make a second attempt on Oct. 14 to fix responsibility on three former coal and iron policemen of the Pittsburgh Coal Company for the death of John Barcoski, whose name became the rallying cry in February for a state-wide movement for reform of the Pennsylvania coal and iron police system. At the second trial the three defendants will be charged with Involuntary manslaughter. Their acquittal on Sept. 28 evoked a wave of protest throughout western Pennsylvania. The jurors, eleven men and one woman, who had spent half of their two-week term on the coal and iron police trial, were dismissed from service on other cases during their term by Judge James H. Gray at the request of District Attorney Samuel H. Gardner the firing of the jury was an almost unprecedented rebuke. Judge Was Surprised “I was never more surprised in all my life,” Judge Gray said, declaring he agreed with the statement of the district attorney that “the jury was not 'competent and did not have sufficient moral stamina.” The judge expressed the opinion from the bench, before discharging the jury, that a second-degree murder verdict should have been returned against Walter J. Lyster, former lieutenant of coal police, and Harold P. Watts, formerly a private in the coal force. The acquittal verdict may have been proper in the case off Frank Slapikls, the third defenant, the judge stated. Two Held in Jail Lyster was released under $5,000 bail following the acquittal. Watts and Slapikis remained in jail, unable to raise the bond. The verdict of “not guilty' drew a protest equalled only by the public outcry which followed the death of the Polish-American farmer and miner. Foremost among those condemning the verdict were four members of the executive committee of the Pittsburgh branch of the American Civil Liberties Union. “Such a verdict will make more Communists than all the speeches on all the street corners in the country,” was the warning of Dr. Ralph S. Boots, one of these committeemen.

DRUG RESTORES LIFE Indian Scientist Discovers New Heart Stimulant. Bn rnitrd Presi CALCUTTA, Oct. 9.—The famous Indian scientist, Sir Jagadish Bose, just returned from Europe, claimed today the discovery of a powerful heart stimulant w'hich he asserts will restore life after cessation of heart action. Sir Jagadish’s discovery, which he contends will go a long way toward conquering death, is derived from a plant found in the Himalaya mountains.

Unnecessary w%]L§ /) Pain! mjprm Nowadays, people take Bayer Aspir- JjwHa in for many little aches and pains, and as often as they encounter any jjg' Why not? It is a proven antidote for pain. It works! And Bayer Aspirin tablets are wjgp j utterly harmless. You have the h| medical profession’s word for that; JBs |jj| they do not depress the heart. So, don’t let a cold “run its course.’’ Don’t wait for a head- you can always turn to Bayer Aspirache to “wear off.” Or regard * n or neuralgia, neuritis, or even rheum- Bayer Aspirin is always availatism as something you must en- able, and it always helps. Famildure. Only a physician can cope iarize yourself with its many uses, with the cause of such pain, but and avoid a lot of needless suffering. BAYER ASPIRIN Aipirta is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaceticacidcster of Salicylieadd

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No Liquor Today!

~N | Sf

There were seven bootleggers on the street where Mrs. Michael Daly lives in San Francisco, she said, and the thirsty ones who visited these so-called "joints” often mistook her place for just another one. They rang the bell at all hours of the night and so disturbed her sleep that she put a sign near her doorbell. Shown above, it is self-explanatory.

Darrow’s Sterilization Stand Called Dogmatic

‘No One Knows Law's Value/ Defense of Charities Board Official. “Neither Clarence Darrow, nor anyone else knows the value of sterilization of the unfit ! "For Darrow dogmatically to oppose sterilization is as unsound as to declare positively that its benefits are extremely great. Nobody knows.” This was the opinion of John A. Brown, .secretary of the Indiana state charities board, today in commenting upon Darrow’s stand against sterilization. The famgd Chicago lawyer, philosopher and criminologist, condemned roundly the passage of sterilization laws in an interview with the United Press correspondent in London. Law on Indiana Books Indiana is one of the few states in the union where a sterilization law is on the statute books. v Tlie law was favored by Brown upon its passage by the legislature in 1927. It empowers the state to sterilize insane, imbeciles and feeble-minded after their being declared “unfit” by a court. “It has not been in use long enough here to afford any concrete idea of its ultimate results,” Brown declared. “We do know, however, that if two feeble-minded persons have children the result always will be increased feeble-mindedness. California Strong for It “California has experimented with 6,000 cases and in that state they support the law strongly.” Both lawyers and doctors are divided in their opinion of the benefits to be derived, Brown pointed out. He also stated that a group of religionists are opposed to such ac~

tion by the state on the theological and moral grounds. “Os course sterilization is an infringement of personal liberty,” Brown asserted, “but so is all law.”

TRANSPARENT VELVET Bj'irjiiifpiirnrTTTr'iniiM qq ||l Bd mI a] Figured or plain figures. The finest ft S aflm bus* A H M of velvets in t lie choice shades of gUf g£| jg£ jf flaw ’H 9 m 99 the season. i // / \ \ PV \J * Smart Tweeds, English Novelties, Jj I- Sport Fabrics—All Are Fur or N \ W , Fur and fabrics combine to create X X I / coats of exheme distinction and X)* \\ smartness. Flared and straightW - lines are considered smart. Girls’ $5,98 Navy Blue First Quality f§ —Fall and Winter Chinchilla ..underwear A Perfect and an £ 4 A A 9 ? I§ /% g V extra value - Colors 0 . i/t 1 r (\ tvil 1 u tZ™: ecruand A=== |j ij tailored and S 98 FLANNEL Q Ij J 7 “hTnehnu ■/' PAJAMAS fc'Ui Y blem on sleeve. Size 2to 8 years. SLIPOVER $0.45 \ . / Formerly $1.69 Value SWEATERS ~\> Girls’ Navy (f“g A A Heavy quality and just the | I Chinchilla Berets $ I .DU |jU Girls’ Flannelette Gowns RAYON MIXTURE 1 Q,, or sleepers, pink or blue stripe. Flannelette m cn\r'V c .1. *v. - pajamas trimmed with silk frogs. Sizes 2to /I O- jUUVj / 6 y ears< a fancy sock that is an extraordinary value. —Second Floor. All colors. —First Floor. Misses’, Women’s and Children’s BOYS’ SHEEP-LINED t RIBBED jtjfik fA A r TC UNION vUrt 1 acl M* MM 'nforceU wittMeHther. Wa^rm, K 'Mil 'm“7 Ri w e - Z 9BHn LEATHER CQ- \ r„*r arc HELMETS ©SC jj . t' ei^u'i Exceptionally Priced White Outing A Five-Piece Sets An extra heavy, well fleeced, 27- I M ir m RUFFLED I inch outing and a real and un- JL wmA ■1 illffSLt fin. Outing Gown* f-A in on * Orff A full cut, heavily fleeced, double .acting coiors. yoke gown with long sleeves and a w Striped Outing IQ V OTLovely striped or all-over 36-Inch heavy quality outing. Ex- | ijdWi': i ■ 11.6 iggj cretonnes, in all 1 n celient for gowns, pajamas, sleepers X%/ V* • l ®new colors lOC and undies. Light or dark colors. — Third Floor. —Basement.

SOFT POLITICAL JOB IS FILLED - ■ —■ Samuel Campbell to Get Emmelman’s Position. Samuel Campbell. Warren township Republican chairman and member of the country's dominating political faction, today was listed on the county pay roll to receive $l5O a month as "bridge inspector” succeeding Wayne Emmelman, who resigned temporarily shortly before he was nominated Republican candidate for city clerk. Emmelman received $214 a month. The "berth” was provided Campbell by county commissioners, under the title "public improvements inspector.” Before last spring, when Emmelman was appointed, the post had been unfilled for many years. ! In his new capacity Campbell is j assured the monthly salary until December, commissioners said, when

A Laundry So • * Steadfast and Constant sti Wet Wash Superior Service, Thursday. Friday, Saturday TilSt It HaS 4® Lb. Become Almost Minimum Bundle, sl.Ol IWitltUltlOtt • 459; Paul H. Krauss Laundry

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Emmelman's success or defeat in the election will be known. Early this year Campbell wa* offered a deputy sheriff post by Sheriff George L. Winkler, but declined it. lloosier Killed in West , Pji Ttmt 9 Sprroil MONTPELIER. Ind., Oct. 9. —- Purcy H. Rhine, 47, former resident here, was killed w hile working in the oil field near Long Beach, Cal., as a driller. He was struck by a clutch i lever of a machine which he at- ; tempted to operate. Sure Relief /ts JMakes You Feel Better” I Beu-ans •v —J Hot water Sure Relief DELL-ANS FOR'INDIGESTION 254 and 75<t Pkgs.Sold Everywhere