Indianapolis Times, Volume 41, Number 175, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 December 1929 — Page 20
PAGE 20
VARE TO WAGE LAST FIGHT FOR SEATJNSENATE Norris Resolution Will Be Called Up Tuesday for Action. Bu Fcripps-H award Xctcspaper Alliance WASHINGTON, Dec. 2.—Senators prepared today to end the three and one-half-year controversy over the seating of Senator-Elect William S. Vare of Pennsylvania. Indications are that before the week ends his successor will have been named by Governor Fisher. Vare is in Washington to make a last stand fight for his seat. He finds himself deserted by old guard Republicans whom he counted on anu ignored by the White House, where he also expected help in return for his support of President Hoover’s candidacy at the Republican national convention of 1928. Aside from his own, the only speech contemplated in his behalf is one by Senator Reed of Pennsylvania. Senator Norris will open the fight on Vare Tuesday, when he will call up his resolution denying Vare admission to the senate because of his admitted expenditure of $785,000 in the senatorial primary of 1926. The Norris resolution also charges fraud and corruption. This resolution is expected to pass the senate by an overwhelming majority, with most of the progressive Republicans and Democrats voting for it. In the meantime, the senate privileges and elections committee, which will meet this afternoon, is expected to take steps to wind up its three years investigation of the contest brought by William B. Wilson, secretary of labor under Woodrow' Wilson, challenging the legality of Vare’s victory at the general election. This committee is expected to refuse Vare’s request to count the ballots in thirty-one counties carried by Wilson and thereby pave the way for its final reoort on the election contest. This report is expected to find that although there were irregularities in Pittsburgh and Philadelphia, they were insufficient to overturn Vare's majority of 173,000. 294 OPINIONS GIVEN DURING FISCAL YEAR Attorney-General's Report Gives Particulars of Work. Two hundred ninety-four opinions were prepared by the office of Attorney General James M. Ogden during the fiscal year ending Sept. 30, his annual report disclosed. Two hundred ninety-six bills passed during the 1929 legislative session. Fifty extradition hearings were attended and 235 extradition papers were passed upon. Title to land bought by the state was examined in 158 cases. Six receiverships were handled for the state banking department, eleven applications for bank rceiverships and one for a building and loan. Two hundred tw’enty-two state highway department land suits were handled. Criminal appeals totalled 101 cases, of which sixty-five were for liquor law violations and five for murder.
RID OF RHEUMATISM AND BACK-ACHE Had Five Years of Misery, Bui Finally Found Road to Health. Anyone who is enduring the pains of rheumatism, backache, kidney weakness or stomach torture, will be more than interested in reading the experience of Mr. C. T. Bowen, 629 Mulberry St., Rockford, 111. He writes: “Rheumatism made my life miserable for 5 years. The pains in my right leg and hip were so intense that I couldn’t lie on my right side. I couldn’t even lean back in a barber’s chair. In addition, I had terrible back-ache and kidney pains, and my liver felt sore all the time. I had suffered for years with constipation and stomach trouble, and was always taking pills and laxatives without getting relief. Whenever I ate, gas would form and I would bloat and cramp so that I was afraid to eat. I rolled and tossed all night long, vnd got up more tired than when I went to bed. I was a mighty, sick man when I read about Viuna and sent to the drug store for a bottle. From the first few doses. I knew I had found the right medicine at last. Before I had finished the first bottle, I improved wonderfully. Now all my rheumatism has just about vanished. My back-ache is gone, my kidneys are strong and my liver working fine. Food tastes good and I am eating heartily and sleeping soundly, with no stomach distress and no constipation. Today I am a well man, working every day, and enjoying life which I never expected to do again.’’ 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 TUm Wonder Medicine
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LET not your heart be troubled: ye believe in God. believe also in me.—John 14:1. a a a HE hath shewed thee, O man, what is good; and what doth the Lord require of thee, but to do justly, and to love mercy, and to walk humbly with thy God?— Micah 6:8. an u PARABLE of the Prodigal Son. —Luke 15:11-32. ana THE woman taken in sin.—John 8:3-11. a a a THE final sublime example of forgiveness from the New Testament. (Compiled by the Bible Guild) —Next: Lillian M. Gilbreth, successful consulting engineer. RECOVER ELEVEN BODIES Several Children Included Among Dead in French Building Collapse. Hu United Press MARSEILLES, France, Dec. 2. Eleven bodies were recovered from the ruins of two apartment buildings which collapsed, burying fifty occupants. The dead included several children. Eleven others were injured seriously.
Gone, but Not Forgotten
Automobiles reported to police as stolen belong to: Leslie F. Todd, R. R. 1, Chevrolet sedan, from 125 South Capitol avenue. Earl Underwood, Plainfield, Buick coach, 64-719, from Capitol avenue and Ohio street. Mrs. Albert Ray, 21 South Sherman drive, Buick roadster, 83-854, from North and Meridian streets. I. A. Christie, R. R. 7, Box 226, Ford coupe, 712-287, from Senate avenue and Market street.
BACK HOME AGAIN
Stolen automobiles recovered by police belong to: Evan Collingsworth. R. R. 3, Box 931. Ford coupe, found at Market street and Senate avenue. D. G. Campbell, 910 Tecumsch street, Hudson coach, found at New York and Meridian streets. Ford coupe, no license plates, found at 3900 Brookville road.
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AD INSTITUTE IN SECOND YEAR v Pittsburgh Press Repeats Public Service Move. Rv Times Special PITTSBURGH, Dec. 2—The Pittsburgh Press, a Scripps-Howard newspaper, and the first newspaper in the United States to hold a retail advertising institute as a co-opera-tive move to increase the productivity of advertising, has announced the second season of the institute to open Tuesday. Six lectures, one to be delivered the first Tuesday night of each month up to and including May 6, comprise the 1929-1930 course of the institute. Nationally known advertising and merchandising authorities, including William Nelson Taft, editor Retail Ledger; Kenneth M. Goode, author and advertising counsellor, and Frank H. Young, eminent advertising layout authority and director in the American Academy of Art, have been engaged as lecturers. In establishing the Pittsburgh Retail Advertising Institute last year the
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Press pioneered an advertising movement which is spreading rapidly throughout the country. The Press is sponsoring the second season of the Institute as a further indication of its belief, shared with The Times and the other Scripps-Howard newspapers, that the newspaper of today and the future must be founded on service, both to those who buy advertise ing space, in making their investment more effective, and to its readers, in making advertising more attractive and informative. Check Offender Repeats Rli Times Special RENSSELAER, Ind., Dec. 2.—Carl Scheidler, who has previously served sentences for passing fraudulent checks, has been sentenced to the stnte reformatory from two to fourte n years on the same charge in Jasper circuit court.
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AIDS INJURED CAPTORS: THEN WALKS TO JAIL Auto, With Custodians, Wreckedj Prisoner Procures Help. By United Press HIGH POINT, N. C., Dec. 2.—R. L. Brewer, charged with larceny, in custody of Detective L. W. Blackwelder and Policeman Charles Whitlow, was en route from Newport News to High Point, when their car crashed int othat of J. A, Hartness, secretary of state of North Carolina. All but Brewer were seriously injured. Sizing up the situation, the prisoner ignored an excellent opportunity to escape, hailed a -passing car, sent his three captors ahead to a hospital, and sat down by the
Merchandise displayed in our salesrooms is consistently of tlie liigliest quality-—wliere the requirements of every purse may he met with real satisfaction, shirley Brothers J Funerals They MORTUARY TEMPLE Illinois at Tenth Street A A Six Establishments ins Indianapolis
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road to think the whole matter ever. A few hours later he walked Into Durham and surrendered voluntarily. Clarksville Doctor Dies By Times Special CLARKSVILLE, Ind., Dec. 2. Dr. William E. Camp, 8, leading physician here, is dead.
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—Advertisement— Noted Talkie Stars , End Colds Quickly Way Doctors Urge
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ALICE WHITE QUICKLY ENDS HEAD COLD CAUGHT WHILE OVERHEATED AT DANCE! Scores of Hollywood Stars, Like Hundreds Here, End Colds By Quick Pleasant Method Doctors Advise Instead of Facing Microphone'\Vith Hoarseness or Cough A tempting taste! Surprisingly quick relief! Then the joy of facing the microphone without fear of spoiling a talking picture by the sniffle of a head cold, the husky hoarseness of a chest cold or the static-like discord of a cough. This, briefly, is the new experience of Alice White, Lee, Robert Armstrong, Nancy Drexel, Roland Drew, Robert Montgomery and scores of other Hollywood stars. For doctors have shown the way to quickly end a head cold, cough or chest cold. And at the first sign of a cold, stars are now given a few pleasant doses of Ayer's Cherry Pectoral. Soon the cold is gone! For this hospital certified remedy has been chosen by physicians as the best
ROOT. ARMSTRONG Starring in “SSir News,” “Oh Yeah,” “The Racketeer,” etc. ROBERT ARMSTRONG FINDS OUICKEST WAY TO END BAD COLD In making talking pictures, Robert Armstrong no longer dreads to face the sensitive microphone. For, like scores of other Hollywood stars, he has found how easily one can get rid of a cold by the quick, pleasant method doctors now advise for home use. Mr. Armstrong, for example, had a severe cough caused by neglecting a chest cold. Examination showed that his breathing passages were congested, his throat was inflamed by constant coughing and his voice was hoarse. Then he was given double strength doses of Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral every 15 minutes until congestion started clearing r.p, then a spoonful every two hours. In just an hour or so the medication began to relieve congestion. Breathing became easier; the spasmodic attacks of coughing ceased and by dinner time he was feeling like a different person. When friends arrived for bridge that evening his hoarseness had almost entirely disappeared. The next day he was delighted to find that Cherry Pectoral had cleared up the cold so that his voice was in condition to go ahead with the picture.
ROLAND DREW ENDS COLD CAUGHT WHILE MAKING “EVANGELINE”
Colds always make one feel miserable and may bring risk o f pneumonia. That's why Hollywood has been careful to choose the quick, pleasant method doctors advise for colds instead of risking needless danger. Roland Drew,
Roland Drew, for example, felt star in Kvnn- a cold coming on mon*r JL 1 * 1 1 ® ll ma .H ng Evangeline. Instead of ending the cold promptly, he kept on working in the hope it would clear up without treatment. Instead, congestion started spreading so fast that he became alarmed. Acting on the advice of physicians, then, Mr. Drew began taking a pleasant spoonful of Cherry Pectoral every 15 minutes. Relief began almost immediately and by late afternoon congestion was clearing up rapidly. A complete examination next day showed that Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral had cleared up all trace of the threatening cold.
_DEC. 2, 1929
of different widely used methods to treat colds. Test cases have proved that it gives the quickest, surest relief. Alice White Relieves Bad Cold In Few Hours “During a recent dance,” says Alice White, star of “The Girl From Woolworth’s,” “I became overheated on the dance floor and walked out on the veranda to cool off. Asa result I caught a severe cold. The next day my head and chest were so congested with cold that the director advised me to stay at home. He realized that my hoarse voice would simply spoil the picture. “By evening the cold was worse and I was advised to take Ayer’s Pectoral every 15 minutes until congestion began to clear up, then once every two or three hours. By night my fever was gone. I was able to sleep without coughing. The next day my voice cleared up so that I could work—and v in just a day or so I was astonished to find that all trace of the cold had disappeared. No wonder Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral is a necessity to players, especially now that talkies demand that one’s voice be kept free from the effects of a cough or cold.”
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mi,A I,EE Slnrrin* In “The Arjfyle Caae*% ••Hurdy-Gurdy Man” and "Dr**" LILA LEE TAKES DOCTOR’S ADVICE; COLD SOON CONE Lila Lee is still another, like scores of Hollywood stars, who has taken the advice of physicians and found how quickly colds disappear after a few pleasant doses of Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral. For in Hollywood, as in hundreds of Indianapolis homes, this hospital certified remedy has become the standard treat- ( ment for colds. “The other day,” says Lila Lee, “I found that a miserable cold was lowering my vitality. I simply could not put energy into anything I did. And, to make matters worse, I dreaded to stand before the micronphone with the full knowledge that the slightest hoarseness, cough or sneeze would spoil the picture. “That evening I started in earnest to get rid of the cold. Every 15 minutes, for nearly three hours, my maid faithfully brought me a half spoonful of Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral. The taste was really tempting and I enjoyed a refreshing? night’s sleep without being bothered by coughing. Soon I was really surprised to see for myself how quickly my cold disappeared.” N Ayer's FMloral wan hospital certified ’ as the host of different widely used methods tested for head colds, rosfhs , and chest colds because It gmre fc*J quickest, surest relief—with absolute! safety. It Is now featured by Hoakjj Drug and all leading druggist*. JE
