Indianapolis Times, Volume 42, Number 153, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 November 1930 — Page 2
PAGE 2
COUNTY DEMOCRATS TO GET 300 JOBS AT COURTHOUSE
G. 0. P. EXODUS OF EMPLOYES STARTS JAN.I Replacement of Republicans in Choice Positions for 16 Years Pledged. COUNCIL TO MEET New County Group Will Converse for First Time on Nov. 15. With about 300 G. O. P. county employes’ exodus from the courthouse slated for the end of the year, newly elected Democratic county officials jockeyed into position today to name the successors. Triumphant in Tuesday’s election, these Democrats will enter their respective offices Jan. 1, promising replacement of the Republicans decamped from choice positions held the last sixteen years. Glenn B. Ralston, county clerkelect. and Charles (Buck) Sumner, sheriff-elect, will occupy the most strategic positions in naming of employes with thirty-four and fortynine vacanci'es, respectively, created by the G. O. P. defeat. John C. McCloskey, Democratic Center township assessor-elect, will have seventy-one vacancies to fill. Wilson to Name 28 Deputies Naming of twenty-eight deputies to succeed those of incumbent Judson L. Stark, will be left with Herbert Wilson, newly elected Democratic prosecutor. To John F. Geckler, successful Democratic nominee for the juvenile court bench goes the privilege jof appointing twenty-two persons, including bailiffs, probation officers and investigators attached to his court. Ira P. Haymaker, recorderelect, will dispense nineteen posts, and Bruce Short, surveyor-elect, will have eleven appointements to make. Question of permanency of jobs of 115 political Workers appointed under the defeated administration of county commissioners hangs in the balance. General House Cleaning Including heads of county institutions, road gangs and general maintenance forces, the positions, now filled whcflly by G. O. P. workers may be ruptured with appearance in the commissioner’s board of Don W. Vorhies, successful opponent, to Charles O. Sutton, incumbent’ and Coffin henchman. Persons familiar with the political complexion of the present board of commissioners assert there will be a general house cleaning in the ranks. Major positions which probably will be imperiled by the new order of things include that of Clinton H. Givan, county attorney and Coffin henchman; Charles Mann, Coffin highway superintendent; John V. Carter, superintendent of the Marion county poor farm; Benjamin J. Morgan, superintendent of the Marion County Hospital for the Insane at Julietta, and Robert Hathaway, weights and measures inspector. New Council Meets Nov. 1 Several minor posts, including that of courthouse custodian, health superintendent, county garage superintendent, pauper attorney and maintenance man, will be laid vacant by resignations, it was indicated. County Auditor Harry Dunn and Treasurer Clyde E. Robinson, holdovers during 1931, indicate they will not disturb the present personnel of their offices. Dunn said today the newly elected Democartic county council will meet Nov. 15. for organization and acceptance of the oath of office. Several important pending financial questions will be discussed by the new council, Dunn indicated. TWO IN AUTO KILLED Biuffton Men Victims When Car Goes-, Through Bridge Into Creek. Bu United Press BLUFFTON. Ind., Nov. s.—Two men were killed Und another injured when the auto in which they were riding plunged over a bridge railing into a creek near Biuffton. The dead are Herbert Stout, 55, and Lewis Frauhiger. 45. Reuben Kaehr, driver, was injured but is expected to recover. All were Biuffton residents. Burglars Get sll3 £i/ Timm Special GREENCASTLE. Ind., Nov. 5. The Greencastle Water Works Company was robbed of sll3 by burglars who gained entrance through a back door and worked the combination of a safe. They overlooked two envelopes contaimng S6O.
Castoria... for uu CHILDREN’S |^l ailments 1 ; 'ip£~l Are you prepared to render first iVij raid and quick comfort the moment ijnjj Con .*lff Sw>* J your youngster has an upset of any \T “lSofSb? 1 I tort? Could you do the right thing V H —immediately—though the emer- l| I gency came without warning— /JFjjaffi-fcflh I perhaps tonight? Castoria is a j? mother’s standby at such times. jjl] | ■RQJIQCjSSfHH There is nothing like it in emergen- s. ries, and nothing better for every- _ •Jay use. For a sudden attack of colic, or for the gentle relief of . T . . . , , constipation; to allay a feverish Castoria. It js harmless to the spell, or to soothe a fretful baby sma^’est infant; doctors will tell that can’t sleep. This pure vege- ou ®°* table preparation is always ready You can tell from the formula on to ease an ailing youngster. It is the wrapper how mild it is, and jnst as harmless as the recipe on how good for little systems. But the wrapper reads. |f you see Chas. continue wjth CastoHa until a child If. Fletcher’s Signature, it is geniune is grown.
Victors in County Ballot Race
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Glenn B. Ralston, Circuit Court Clerk
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Charles A. Grossart, County Auditor
GENERAL BLISS CRITICALLY ILL World War Chief of Staff May Not Recover. Bv United Press WASHINGTON, Nov. s.—General Tasker Bliss, chief of staff during the World war, was critically ill at Walter Reed hospital today following an extended illness. The veteran officer, who has suffered a series of serious relapses, was not expected to recover. General Bliss, a native of Lewisburg, Pa., is 76 years old and was graduated from West Point in 1875. He was retired in 1917 but continued on active duty at the order of President Wilson, who appointed him to serve on the American peace commission at Paris. LOVER IS MURDERED Hunt Husband of Woman as Man’s Slayer. Bn United Press CINCINNATI, Nov. s.—Joe Colson, 24, Ashville, N. C., was shot to death here today as he sat in a parked automobile with Mrs. Charles Ring, mother of two children. Police began an immediate search for the woman’s husband on the theory that jealousy inspired the killing. Letters from Colson, found in Mrs. Ring's purs§, revealed an affair between the two, officers said. DEER’S VICTIM BURIED Last Rites at Kokomo Today for . Jacob F. Bergman. nv Times £ aerial KOKOMO. Ind., Nov. s.—Funeral i services for Jacob F. Eergman, custodian of Pokagon state park, were held here today. Friends here point to the fact that his death was a strange fate for a man who was a great lover of all wild life. His death at Angola Sunday morning was due to an attack by a deer. Mr. Bergman was active in establishing the wild life preserve as a part of the Pokagon park. While superintendent of the Kokomo park system, lie was instrumental in installing the zoo at Highland park. When a young man he had an interesting career as an Indian fighter in the far west and knew many of the pioneer men of the mining camps. Aged Woman Dies Bv Times Special CRAIGVILLE, Ind., Nov. s.—Funeral services were held today for Mrs. Kaziah H. Miller, 80, who died of pneumonia.
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Ira P. Haymaker, County Recorder
Election Baby Ru I nited Press VINCENNES, Ind., Nov. 5. Civic duty and the right of franchise detoured the stork here wb : ’.e Mrs. Catherine Kerr went to the polls. A half hour after she had voted, she gave birth ta..„a ten-pound boy.
STATE FLORISTS WILL CONVENE November Meeting Thursday at Richmond. mPTimes Special RICHMOND, Ind., Nov. s.—Tire November meeting of the State Florists’ Association will be held here Thursday, it is announced by the officers, Edward A. Neuman, Richmond, president, and Edward C. Grande, Indianapolis, secretary. The visitors will be taken on inspection trips of Richmond’s famous floral establishments, including the Hill Floral Products Company, Joseph H. Hill Company, Richmond Floral Company and E. G. Hill Company. Luncheon will be served at 1 p. m., followed by a business session. FIRE FATAL TO TWO Fowler Man and Daughter Victims of Flames in Home. Bp United Press FOWLER, Ind., Nov. 5.—A father and his 3-year-old daughter are dead today after a fire that depleted the Cahill home here. The dead are Edward Cahill, 37, and the daughter Marguerite. The child died from suffocation and the father suffered from fatal burns. It was sail the fire started when the father poured kerosene in a heating stove.
BROADCAST TESTS WILL BEGIN NOV. 11
Marion County and District , Amateurs Will Compete. A series of events in the Indiana amateur broadcasting contests will be held on the stage of the Granada theater begininng next Tuesday night and continuing through Saturday. Marion county residents will compete Tuesday and Wednesday nights, and six will be chosen to enter the district semi-final competition. The first stage of this contest, with Hamilton, Johnson, Boone and Morgan counties represented, will be held Thursday night. Those of Hancock. Hendricks and Marion counties will compete Friday night. The district final will be held Saturday. , With the exception of Marion, six entrants from each of the other counties have already been chosen. The state contest from which Indiana's best amateur broadcaster will emerge, will be held in Indianapolis early in 1931. Entry blanks are available at WFBM. the office of The Indianapolis Times and the Granada theater. TEACHERS IN SESSION Lafayette Host to Three-Day Lutheran Synod Meeting. Bv United Press . LAFAYETTE., Ind.. Nov. 4. Teachers of the Northern Indiana Conference of the Lutheran church. Missouri synod, opened th iir annual meeting here Wednesday to continue until Friday. S',. James church here is host. The conference territory includes a ll of Indiana nefrth of Indianapolis and also northwestern Ohio. Nearly 100 teachers are attending. Theodore Kosche, Gary, is chairman of the conference organization and K. W. Mucker, Hammond, secretary.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Robert R. Sloan, County Assessor
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Timothy P. Scxtcn, County Treasurer
CORN HUSKERS • VIE FOR TITLE State Contest Being Held Near Elwood Today. Rp Times Special ELWOOD, Ind., Nov. s.—The best corn hunker in Indiana will emerge from a contest being conducted today on the farm of Michael Meyer, three miles east of here. Charles Etter, 23-year-old Benton county farmer, is the defending champion. He won the state title last year when he husked 33.84 bushels. First place winner will receive SIOO and a frae trip to the national contest to be held in Norton county, Kansas, Nov. 14. Other prizes are SSO, $25, sls and $lO. . SCHOOL GIRL KILLED Nurse’s Automobile Struck Child as She Left Bus. vu Times Special s SOUTH BEND, Ind/, Nov. s.—Julia Vida, 8-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mi-s. Joseph Vida, Warren township, was fatally injured late Tuesday afternoon when she was struck by an automobile eight miles west of here. The child had just alighted from a school bus and ran in front of a car driven by Miss Lucille Elam, 26, a nurse in the Sacred Heart hospital at Garrett. Miss Elam, with two sister nurses, was on her way to East Chicago to attend the state convention of the Indiana Catholic Hospital Association. After the child was struck, she was picked up by motorists going east and taken to Epworth hospital here. The child, however, was dead when they reached the hospital.
General’s Flag > Made Gift to Muncie School Ilu Times SDecinl MUNCIE, Ind., Nov. 5.—A pennant divert Major General William Graham Everson, chief of the United States militia bureau, which he has carried on air tours over the nation, will not be returned to the school. Instead, Central high school has accepted an offer of the general’s personal flag and he was given permission to keep the school pennant. General Everson, addressing the student body, urged the immediate need of the municipal airport in Muncie. When he returns from his Porto Rico inspection, the high school pennant will have been carried 80,000 miles. husbandl’urguTrT WIFE TELLS POLICE When aKroger grocery at Prospect street and Villa avtoue was robbed of merchandise a year ago a woman appeared at police headquarters to accuse her son-in-law of tile crime. Police a month later captured. Harry Long, 22. of 417 East Wyoming street, whom the woman named. In court the mother-in-law refuted her previous accusations and Long was freed. Today another woman approached police with similar accusations and retold all the articles taken from the store. She was Mrs. Catherine Long, wife of the man arrested last peeember. Her husband had beaten her, stabbed her once and refused to support her, she told police. Long again is under arrest, charged with vagrancy. He has served sentences for burglary aid vehicle taking, according to poli< e.
STARTING TIME OF PENAL FARM . TERM IN ISSUE Point Raised by Prisoner , Awaits Decision by. Supreme Court. H,u Timex Special GREENCASTLE, Ind., Nov. 4. The Indiana supreme court will be asked to determine whether a prisoner’s sentence to the state penal farm begins the instant it is imposed by the trial judge, or starts when commitment papers are signed. The question is presented in an appeal to the supreme court from a ruling in Putnam circuit court here by Special Judge F. S. Hamilton In the case of Eugene Smith, 38, Terre Haute, who is at liberty under SI,OOO bond pending action on the appeal. Sued for Release Recently Smith, a prisoner at the state fatm, filed a habeas corpus proceeding in Putnam circuit court against Ralph Howard, superintendent of the institution, alleging he has been wrongfully held. Following conviction on an assault and battery charge in 1926, Smith was fined SSOO and costs with a six months’ farm term. He appealed to the Indiana appellate court and was released pending its decision. About a month ago, the court upheld the conviction and Smith was immediately committed to the farm. Asserts Term Ended Smith contends that the sentence began when imposed and that it was ended three years and six months ago. or six months after it was imposed. Judge Hamilton took the opposite view, that the sentence did not start until commitment papers were signed, and the appeal to the supreme court followed. If Smith’s contention is upheld, he will be free; if not, he will lose the month already served and face a full half year at the farm, attorneys say.
HOLDUP VICTIM HURT SERIOUSLY Samaritans Find Man They A ! ded Not Drunk. Samaritan kindness of two Indianapolis citizens Tuesday night for a man they supposed to be drunk, turned out today to have been opportune help that saved the sober victim of a holdup from exposure. Louis Wilkes, 59, of 4539 College avenue, a carpenter, was found lying in an alley by George Bloch and John Sullivan, 701 Arnolda avenue, who were attracted by his groans. Thinking the stranger intoxicated, the two took him home with them for the night. Today Wilkes groans increased. His rescuers investigated and found he had a broken rib. Further investigation by police revealed that Wilkes had been slugged and kicked by a holdup man who robbed him of S2O. He is in a serious condition at the city hospital. U, S. COURT OPENS i More Than 100 Persons Face Trial at Hammond. Bv United Press HAMMOND, Ind., Nov. s.—Judge Thomas W. Slick opened the fall term of federal court here today with a calendar that contains some seventy-five cases affecting more than a hundred defendants. Ralph E. Bradford, Gary politician, will stand trial with alleged underworld characters, on a charge of conspiracy to violate the antinarcotic laws. Lester Ottenheimer, East Chicago lawyer, and Nyman Cohen, member of the East Chicago sanitary board, face charges of obstructing justice during federal investigation of the East Chiacgo liquor conspiracy case a year ago. JOBS DEADLINE SET Postoffice Not to Hire 650 Extras Until Nov. 15. The postoffice deparmtent will not be ready to receive application for 650 extra workers to cope with the holiday mail rush, until Nov. 15, Robert H. Bryson, postmaster, announced today. Married men with families will be given first opportunity at the work to start Dec. 15 and continue until after Christmas. It will be useless to apply before Nov. 15, Bryson said. CONTEMPT CASE ENDS Charges Against Two Accounts j Board Examiners Dismi ed. Bv United Press PRINCETON, Ind., Nov. s.—Con- i tempt of court proceedings against Carl Coble and Walter D. Schroeder, examiners for the state board of accounts, have been dismissed by Special Judge Hevey C. Kirk in Gibson circuit court here. Several days ago, the examiners were given a thirty-day jail sentence and each fined SSO and costs by Judge Kirk after the filing of a report in court which was allegedly “unfair and misleading.” Lawrence F. Orr, chief of the board ot accounts, ordered the report withdrawn and the dismissal followed. • Sullivan Fire Chief Dies Bu Times Speciml SULLIVAN, Ind., Nov. s.—Roy Bennett, 47, Sullivan fire department chief, h| dead, as a result of exposure whiW on duty a week ago.
ASK $797,872 FOR STATE EPILEPTICS
Shrouds! That’s What Ballots in Chicago Resembled: 3 Feet Wide.
11 it United Pres* CHICAGO, Nov. s.—Ballots used by Chicagoans Tuesday were so large that they looked like'shrouds. 'One was three feet wide and four feet long, while another was but a few inches smaller. Many citizens voted a straight ticket simply because of the physical difficulty of voting otherwise in candle-lighted election booths the size of those used for telephones. Pm United Press • TOt’EKA, Kas., Nov. s.—While most of the nation remained up to listen for the outcome of the electiops. Vice-President Charles Curtis topped off a vigorous western campaign tour by sleeping on a Pullman car. He cast his Republican vote here Tuesday and then boarded a train for Washington. Ru United Press TULSA. Okla., Nov. s.—Secretary of War Patrick J. Hurley flew by airplane from Washington to cast his vote here Tuesday. “I voted a straight Republican ticket,” he announced. Ru United Press WASHINGTON, Nov. s.—Senator William E. Borah of Idaho will get an increase of salary out of his expected re-election. Borah had refused to accept a salary increase from $7,500 to SIO,OOO a year voted by congress in 1925 until his reelection. He contended he had no right to accept SIO,OOO a year when he was elected to a $7,500 office. Bit Unil\ul Press NEW YORK. Nov. s.—Perhaps fearful that he would oversleep and lose a chance to vote for himself, Heywood Eroun, newspaper columnist running for congress as a Socialist, arrived at the polls before 6 a. in. by the simple process of not going to bed at all. Broun, in his campaign against Mrs. Ruth Pratt, Republican incumbent, and Magistrate Brodsky, Democrat, established something of a local political record by making 319 speeches. Rit United Press OSSINING, N. Y., Nov. s.—Sing Sing’s 2,230 prisoners were permitted to hear election returns tonight over their radio extension sets, but prison officials reported apathetic interest. The convicts were represented as opposed to Governor Roosevelt, who has used his pardon power sparingly, and to Charles H. Tuttle, a former United States attorney. District attorneys are seldom popular here. lip United Press NEW YORK, Nov. 5. Daniel O’Brien, 72, dropped dead Tuesday as he swung the lever that registered his vote in a mid-town polling booth. Bp United Press NEW YORK, Nov. s.—lt cost the city $1,127.65 to register George Schrader’s vote. Schrader, a boiler engineer, was the only voter in a Manhattan election district where residences have given way to business houses. Although he appeared at the polls shortly after they opened at 6 a. m., the law required that four clerks and two patrolmen remain at the booth until 6 p. m. Their fees and the expenses of registration brought the cost to the extravagant figure. Bp United Press NEW YORK, Nov. s.—Although the Republicans usually lose the election in the Fourth assembly district, a Tammany stronghold, it is not customary for them to lose $487 along with it. Two bandits were responsible for the additional loss Tuesday, however. They took the money, $450 of which represented campaign funds, from the Republican leader, former Judge Alexander Wolfe, and two aids. \ AUTO GOES IN DITCH; DRIVER ONLY BRUISED Zionsville Man Goes to Sleep' at Wheel; Car Burns. Garland Thompson, Aonsville, escaped with minor bruises when his auto plunged over an eight-foot embankment on Michigan road near Sixtieth street, early today. He said he was asleep. While a passerby took him home the car caught fire, probably from a short circuit, and burned. /
ACID CONDITION j the common cause of pain and discomfort after eating - - • * # Get RID of your dread of pain after eating. Eat without fear of “indigestion,” sour stomach, disagreeable gas or headaches. When your food ferments, “disagrees,” lies like a lump in your stomach, it’s a sign of too much acid. You need not resort to crude n^thods —take instead an anti-acid that will correct the condition. Phillips’ Milk of Magnesia. pi A spoonful of this pleasant-tasting, soothing fluid neutralizes many times its volume * j I of acid. It restores the proper alkaline Fo balance to an acid-soaked stomach and due to Add* bowels —assists these organs to function as '"digestion I I they should. , coNsr rBURN £ Phillips’ Milk of Magnesia is what you need when a bad breath, coated tongue, j dm headaches, nausea or biliousness indicates an over-acid condition. Take a spoonful today and for several days and see how it Genuine Milk of Magsweetens the system. You wo„'t be nearly “ f®,?. ' so liable to colds or sickness. All drug- j or the name Phillips on stores —in 25c and 50c bottles. the bottle.
$233,512 Is Requested for New Structures at Indiana Village. Request for $233,512 for new structures is included in the biennial budget request of the Indiana Village for Epileptics at Newcastle, filed today with A. C. McDaniel, state budget clerk. Os this amount-. $109,512 would be spent for completion of the power plant and heating plant and $70,000 for anew admmistration building. Total biennial budget request for the institution is $797,872, an increase of $92,372.87 over the present appropriation. Judges File Requests Appellate court judges filed requests totaling $149,000, a S6OO increase. Increase in personnel and salaries asked by Chairman Roscoe Kiper of the state industrial board amounts to $28,718. Total request is $196,718. Department of mines and minings asks S4S,2CO, which is the present appropriation. Clarence Wysong, state insurance commisisoner without reappointment, asks salary and staff increases amounting to $27,260, total being $168,860. Increases Are Asked The public service commission wants a $73,500 increase, including a deficiency appropriation of $40,986.27 to cover the cost of the Insull merger investigation, paid by advancing funds. Total budget request of the commission is $406,000 and the present appropriation is $332,500. The board of public printing asks $505,450, as compared with the present appropriation of $148,850 and outline a plan explaining that with the increase they will take over and, pay for all departmental and institutional printing for the state. INSURANCE MEN AT SOUTH BEND State Association Meeting to Open Thursday. j Rp Times Special SOUTH BEND, Ind., Nov. s.—The. ! Indiana Association of Insurance Agents will hold its annual convention here Thursday and Friday. The session will open with registration Thursday, after which there will be a golf tournament. A tour of the city will be made and in the evening the thirty-first annual banquet of the association will be held with Howe S Landers, general counsel of the Metropolitan Casualty Company, as the speaker. The toastmaster will be Clarence Perkins, secretary of the South Bend Insurance Exchange. On the program Friday will be Alex Coquillard, South Bend; J. W. Kirkpatrick, Muncie; C .D. Livingston, commissioner of insurance, Lansing, Mich., and Claude B. Smith, past president of the National Insurance Association, and Clarence Wysong, Indianapolis. 300 ATTEND MEETING ■ State Conference of Catholic Hospitals in Session at Hammond. Rp Times Special INDIANA HARBOR, Ind., Nov. 5 —A delegation of 300 persons are gathered at St. Catherine’s hospital here for the Indiana conference of Catholic hospitals. The Right Rev. Bishop John F. Noll of the Ft. Wayne diocese, and the Venerable Sister M. Sabina, president of the Indiana conference, are scheduled to make addresses. Mayor F. W. O'Connor, East Chicago, gave the welcoming address. The conference program includes two days of clinical and professional discussion, a tour of the city’s industries and a banquet tonight closing the meeting. NAME NEW DIRECTORS Two Indianapolis Men Are Chiefs of Purdue Dads’ Assembly. Two Indianapolis men were announced today by President E. C. Elliott, Purdue university, as new directors of the Rurdue Dads’ Assembly, representing fathers of Purdue students. Colonel R. G. Kirkwood, Ft. Benjamin Harrison, and John Hook of the Hook Drug Company are the new directors. They will be in the ■assembly’s next meeting at Purdue Nov. 15.
_NOV. 5, 1930
STATE FARMERS SESSION TO BE HELD NOV. 24-25 Attendance of 2,000 Forecast for Indiana Bureau Annual Meeting. Nationally known authorities on co-operative marketing and purchasing will appear on the program of the annual convention of the Indiana farm bureau to be he*l in Indianapolis at the Clay pool hotel. Nov. 24 and 25. Attendance of 2,000 is expected. The morning session Monday, the opening day, will include the annual address of W.‘ H. Settle, bureau president, and announcements of department banquets and auxiliary meetings for the convention period by L. L. Needier, secretary-treasurer. C. E. Huff, president, Farmers' National Grain Association, Chicago, will address the afternoon session on co-operative grain marketing as provided in the Agricultural Marketing act. A business session will conclude the afternoon program. The annual banquet will be held in the evening in the Riley room of the Claypool when the principal speaker will be Carl Williams, member of the federal farm board. Mrs. Charles W. Sewell, chairman of the women’s committee, will address the convention Tuesday morning, as will P. O. Wilson, secretarymanager, National Live Stock Marketing Association, Chicago. In the afternoon, C. R. WTiite, president of the New York Farm Bureau Federation, will discuss tax matters, and James Peter Warbasse, president, Co-operative League of America, New York, will discuss consumers co-operatives. The Indiana Farm Bureau Cooperative Association, known as the purchasing department, will hold its annual farmers’ breakfast Tuesday morning at 7 on the roof garden of the Hotel Severin. The insurance division will hold its annual banquet Tuesday evening at 6:30 o’clock in Hotel Lincoln. The women’s luncheon will be at noon, Monday, at the Claypool. DEATH OF FOUR PROBED Coroner May Ask Prosecution in Muncie Poison Case. Ru Times Special MUNCIE, Ind., Nov. s.—Prosecution of the person or persons who sold denatured alcohol, causing the death of three Negroes and a white man here, probably will- be asked by Coroner Clarence Fiepho. The coroner has not yet determined on his course, awaiting facts that will disclose from whom the purchase was made. To convict, Muncie lawyers say, it would be necessary to prove that the person who sold the liquor knew it was to be used as a beverage.
DANGER lurks in neglected CORNS m IMB them HLjljpPr PAIN i What a grand and glorious feeling ;omes ,vhen the first tiny drop o, FREEZONE instantly takes all ache anc pain out ot that troublesome CORN But FREEZONE does more than kil pain in a second. Even acorn that doesn" ache is dangerous. You favor the foot it'.* an and wolk: unnaturally. FREEZONE loosens corn so that yov can ,—. Toon lift it right off, easily, j—y painlessly. Never suffer with I / corns, calluses or Warts. Use Sr FREEZONE. Buy a bottle jjf? W** | ,
“When my baby was a | month old, I took a heavy cold 1 and after that I felt miserable, j ! Could not lift anything. My j husband had to help me with 1 the housework. I was so weak I could not do a washing. I saw Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound advertised in the Kittaning paper and I gave it a good trial. Before I had taken half a bottle, I found the difference. I do all my own work now and I have told others how much this medicine helped me.” —Mrs. Alice Bassett, Cadogan, Pennsylvania. BlTllMiMiiiLllMllß
