Indianapolis Times, Volume 43, Number 249, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 February 1932 — Page 2
PAGE 2
BAPTIST PASTOR IS CLAIMED BY HEART DISEASE The Rev. G. C. Chandler, 76, Served Memorial Church 12 Years. Heart disease proved fatal on Wednesday night to the Rev. George C. Chandler, 76, pastor of the Memorial Baptist church since 1920. He died at his home. 2424 West St. Clair street. Born in London, England, Mr. Chandler emigrated to Canada when he was 15. He attended school in Toronto and was ordained in the ministry in 189. Mr. Chandler was made an honorary member of Lavellc Gossett post. Veterans of Foreign Wars, last November. He belong to the Blue lodge Masons of Rochester and thp Royal Arch Masons of Plymouth. Funeral at 3 Friday Funeral services will be held at 3 Friday at Memorial church. The Rev. Frederick E. Taylor, pastor of the First Baptist, church, will officiate. Burial will be in Crown Hill cemetery. Surviving him are the widow, Mrs. Emily May Chandler; a son, Harvey W. Chandler of Indianpolis; a daughter, Mrs. B. M. Hanna of Rockford, 111.; two brothers, the Rev. A. E. Chandler of Sterling, Colo., and the Rev, John Chandler of Mountain Home, la., and five grandchildren. William Ryan, 84, of 4422 East Washington street, a former grocer, died Wednesday at his home. He had lived in Indianapolis sixty years. Funeral services will be held at 2 Saturday in the Planner & Buchanan mortuary, 25 West Fall Creek boulevard and burial in Crown Hill. Frank H. Lacy Dies Frank H. Lacy, 60, 2152 North Meridian street, died Tuesday night following two months’ illness. Mr. Lacy was the head of the livestock purchasing firm of F. H. Lacy & Son. Funeral services will be held at 1 Friday in the Flanner & Buchanan mortuary, 25 West Fall Creek boulevard. Burial will be in Washington Park cemetery. Lew W. Cooper, 69. of 3739 Salem street, lifelong city resident, died Wednesday in the Methodist hospital. Mr. Cooper was prominent in the business and civic affairs of the city many years. He was connected with his father in the D. W. Cooper Shoe Company. Funeral services will be held at 2 Friday at the Hisey & Titus funeral home, 951 North Delaware street. The burial, wliich will be private, Will be In Crown Hill cemetery. Mrs. Elizabeth Leming Pyke, mother of David C. Pike, 3625 Coliseum avenue, thrice potent master of Adoniram lodge of the Scottish Rite, died Wednesday at her home in Lafayette. Funeral service will be held at 10:30 Friday in the Romney M. E. church. Burial will be in Romney.
ORIENTAL RUGS, TOPIC George C. Calvert Will Address I. U. Class Wednesday Night, • Oriental rugs will be discussed by George C. Calvert, manager of the Indianapolis Clearing Association, Wednesday night at the Indiana university extension center, 122 East Michigan street. Others to speak include Mrs. Eleanor Miller of the L. S. Ayres & Cos. educational department, who will discuss accessories and lamps, upholstered furniture, domestic rugs and bedrooms. QUEEN IS SALESWOMAN Bui It’s Unwitting; Buyer at Fair Orders Chair She Used. By United Pres* LONDON, Feb. 25.—QueeTl Mary unwittingly acted as a saleswoman at the British industries fair, it was revealed today, when an American buyer ordered three dozen replicas and the Chippendale chair in which he had seen the queen sitting. PLEASANT RELIEF FROM CONSTIPATION Shoulders droop under weight of years. Young, yet beauty has fled. Cheeks ar e sallow and drawn. Unsightly pimples. Keep your system clean and you keep the beauty of youth. Its ehergy. Its irresistible charm. Then life is not a failure. Clogged bowels and inactive liver cause poisons to seep through the system. Health vanished and with it beauty and energy. Dr. Edwards Olive Tablets will help save you from this dark hour. For 20 years they have been pres< ribed in place of Calomel to men and women seeking health and freedom from constipation. They act easily and smoothly. No dangerous griping. Take nightly before retiring. Results will amaze you. Thousands of men and women would never be without Dr. Edwards Olive Tablets, a vegetable compound. Know them by their olive color. 15c. 30e and 60c. All druggists.—Advertisement.
“clear road ahead J“ It’s great to feel that way ... tfßßPltap and you do . . . when the blood has the “feel” of enough rich red cells Br'' f' EGARDLESS of age—be fortified to overcome this trouble? A general w ' of red blood. * run-down condition means a lack of fx at s-p-e-l-l-s happmen. normal resistance to infection and disSo frequently work, worry, colds '**'■ A lagging appetite often leads ' and sickness reduce the red-cell count to underweight and ill health. llfes, in the blood .. . then our spirits go . , . , ifi® down as the blood cells arc lowered. ; ' OO cinnot ( bf low • strength and The process may be so gradual that we wonder “what is the matter.’' Fo J generations S.S.S. as a tonic Why yon shooJd bf intereated It is well to give thought to those has been helping people gam New Blood Count invisible—yet precious red-blood-cells Strength, better health and happiness. < Left ' Microscopic view of —the '‘ships.’’ if you please, that Its successful record of over 100 vears healthy red-blood-cells. They sail in the blood, carrying nourish- in restoring strength and vitality to °th. ment to all parts of the body. the blood surely warrants your giv- 12*? body—they also remove im“Tbat tired feeling” ing it a good trial. BSSfli pnritie * from tbe tiMUCS * may be a warning ... so Why not start taking < i | ,t > Weak red-blood-cells pSJPJi are pimples, boils and rSfim m'\ W\ ccc J,„ r > , —only 60 per cent of normal rl™|% f & \W S.S.S. today?—tbe larger .trensrth. Such a condition is |Fjf Ojtf t size represents a price responsible ter body Why not take steps jJsihPlPtiMo%4NPf*' savins. weakness, paleneea, fallow |PaJ 1 1 ■ 1 ■ l 1 saving, complexion, punples and boils. ■BmumH
Hindenburg Is Victor Where Napoleon Failed; Crushes Great Russian Armies
Thii is the fourth of six exclusive stories on President Paul von Hindenburg. Germany's greatest modern figure, who is now a candidate for a second term in the national election to be held in Germany on Sunday, March 13. BY MILTON BRONNER European Manager, NEA Service (Copyright. 1932. NEA Service. Inc.) BERLIN, Feb. 25. —In the gray light of an early morning in the latter part of August, 1914, an old gentleman in civilian attire nervously paced up and down the railway platform at Hanover, accompanied by a solicitous old lady. It was Paul von Hindenburg and his wife waiting for the special train which was speeding from the west front in Belgium, bearing General Eric Ludendorff, who was to be his chief of staff. The two men never had met. All that Ludendorff knew about Hindenburg was that he had attained high rank, had retired, had reached the age of 67. but was, nevertheless, reported to have sharp wits and considerable military ability. It is doubtful if Hindenburg knew that much about Ludendorff. German military headquarters was displeased greatly with ColonelGeneral von Prittwitz, who was in command in the east, and who was clamoring that he must withdraw his troops beyond the Vistula. This would mean giving up most of east Prussia to the Russians, and if the Germans then were beaten, woura open the way for the Russian steam roller to go crashing toward Berlin. Then somebody at general headquarters remembered Hindenburg; that he was east Prussian and formerly had been stationed at Koenigsburg, so that he probably was well acquainted with the terrain. Ludendorff also was an east Prussian. It would be a good scheme to send the older man as general and the younger man as strategist. So said, so done. tt tt tt WHEN Ludendorff’s speci a 1 train drew in, he stepped down, saluted, and shook hands. It was the first time the famous pair had met. They quickly boarded their train and started off in haste for Koenigsburg. The German situation was serious enough. Their army had General Rennenkampf, with a huge Russian army on one side and General Samsonoff, with another army, farther south. Maybe Hindenburg knew something about the hatred between the two Russian commanders, which had begun in the Russo- Japanese war. Whatever it was, he determined to put his fortunes to the test. He withdrew most of the troops facing Rennenkampf, leaving only a slight screen. He concentrated all the troops he could secure In an endeavor to draw Samsonoff into a trap. It succeeded. The Russian army was almost annihilated. Ninety thousand prisoners were taken. Samsonoff shot himself on the battlefield which Hindenburg named Tannenberg. It was the revenge for the defeat his ancestors had suffered here nearly 500 years before. Joy bells were rung all over east Prussia. Germany, as a whole, heard of this old dug-out for the first time Small fortunes were made selling his pictures. tt tt tt HINDENBURG now went hotfoot after Rennenkampfs army, which narrowly escaped a trap and got out of German territory. By mid-September, east Prussia was cleared of Russians. But, as a whole, things were not going well for the central powers. The allies had more than held their own in the west. They had won the battle of the Marne. In the east, the Russians were in Galicia and were threatening Hungary. Hindenburg was made comman-der-in-chief of the armies of the east. As such, he wanted to make an offensive toward Warsaw, but his plans were limited by the timid Falkenhayn, then generalissimo of the German forces. Notwithstanding that, he did lead his armies near to Warsaw, and then was compelled to fall back, because of Austrian defeats. Then Hindenburg turned about and captured Lodz in Poland. tt u THE Grand Duke Nicholas, chief of the Russian armies, had lost 250.000 men in six weeks and winter was coming on. Nevertheless, in response to the call of the allies in the west, he prepared another grandiose plan, involving millions of men. One huge army was to force its way through the snowy passes of the Carpathians into the wheat plains of Hungary—the breadbasket of the central powers. At the same time, another big army was to invade east Prussia. Hindenburg, himself, took charge of the troops in east Prussia and in February was fought the second battle of the Masurian lakes, resulting in 110,000 Russians being captured. Hindenberg believed, if given the troops, he could put Russia out of action completely in 1915, compel Russia to sue for peace, and thus give Germany opportunity to con-
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When History Was in the Making—These two old wartime photographs of General ftindenburg (left) and General Ludendorff at about the time they started on their campaign and, at the right, Hindenburg and Kaiser Wilhelm going over plans for a battle.
centrate all her troops on the western front in the end. But Falkanhayn did not believe Russia could be conquered. Napoleon had tried and failed. So Hindenburg never got all the troops he wanted. He had beaten the Russians nearly every time, but the Russian armies still were gigantic, still full of fighting spirit. tt it it BUT Hindenburg drove on Libau, Mitau, Lemberg were captured. Novo Georgievsk, with a garrison of 100,000 men, fell. Then Warsaw was taken, and Grodno. In six weeks the Russian front had receded 150 miles. Grand Duke Nicholas was removed and the czar, himself, assumed command. Once more the Germans moved, particularly in the north. Riga, Kovno, and Vilna were occupied, and by the late summer of 1915 the Russians began to think of defending Petrograd from capture. But in his main object,, Hindenberg had failed. His attempt to encircle the main Russian armies had not come off. The Russian front remained unbroken. Whatever the enthusiastic German populace might think, Hindenburg knew Russia still had plenty of soldiers, some very good generals, and her food plains were unoccupied. tt tt o IN 1916 Russia began to move again.. Her armies effected little against the Germans, but in the south, under Brussiloff, the Russians smashed the Austrian Fourth corpsreached the Carpathians and saw the Austrians in Bukowina run away. But Russia’s strength was broken, as events were soon to prove when she sued for peace. History was to show that Hindenburg, then nearly 70, had succeeded, where Napoleon failed, in conquering the land of the czars. Then things came to a standstill, but the allies scored by bringing Rumania with a million men into the war. In the meantime, Falkenhayn denied further troops to Hindenburg. He needed them all for the-luck-less and savage attack on Verdun, where the flower of the German army perished in a futile effort to crush the French. By July, 1916. the kaiser and his flatterers came to a sense of realities. Accompanied by Falkenhayn and others, they came to the castle of Pless in Upper Silesia. Hindenburg and Ludendorff were sent for. Falkenhayn resigned and Hindenburg was made commander-in-chief of all the armies, with Ludendorff as his quartermaster general. tt tt tt THE new chief at once decided there must be no more Verduns. The German armies on the STOPIMIICIORTURE Clean, soothing, invisible ZEMO brings prompt relief to itching skin. Eczema, Pimples, Ringworm, Rashes, Dandruff and similar annoying, itching skin or scalp irritations are relieved and usually healed by this antiseptic, soothing lotion. All Druggists. 35c, 60c, SI.OO. Extra Strength for obstinate cases—sl.2s. —Advertisement.
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
west must stand on the defensive for the time being. The first business in hand was to attend to those Rumanians. Joint armies of Germans, Austrians, Bulgarians and Turks were set in motion and in a swift and ruthless campaign the Rumanian army was put out of business. Hindenburg now could pay some attention to the west. He might well have said to his kaiser what Foch said to Clemenceau: “You give me supreme command in a lost battle and ask me to be happy about it.” Everywhere the Germans had performed prodigies in arms, but the British and French armies themselves were performing heroic miracles and the Russians still gave signs of fighting strength. England’s grip on the sea had tightened and her blockade of Germany had made the people of the
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kaiser feel the bitter pangs of hunger. Next: The new commander-in-chief of all Germany’s armies takes charge on the heels of starving Germany’s terrible “turnip winter” in 1916. . . . The alGerman drive of March, 1918, brings their darkest day in the World war. . . . American doughboys at the Marne, ari the turn of the tide . . . from bad to worse . . . the ashes of November . . . an old hero retires for the second time. Death Results From Fall By United Press LOGANSPORT. Ind., Feb. 25. What at first were thought to be minor injuries, suffered by Miss Etta Wysong, 21, in a fall two weeks ago, caused her death Wednesday night.
MOTOR LICENSE DEADLINE NEAR Arrests for Using Old Auto Plates Start Next Week. Motorists were warned today by James Carpenter, head of the state automobile license bureau, that Monday is the last day for use of 1931 plates and arrests will start Wednesday. Sales of 1932 plates are about 35 per cenfc less than on the same date last year, Carpenter said, but receipts are $3,271,193.94. which is $82,857.99 larger than on this date in 1931. However, last year contents oi forty mail bags received from branch offices had not been included in the total. Today there are no unaccounted branch office receipts in Carpenter’s office. Despite the fact thf.t anew law, effective this year, compelled buying of plates for automobiles of cities and other governmental units, officials expect receipts will be lower. These New Salts Are Wonderful! A HOST OF FAT FOLKS CAN’T BE WRONG When you take Kruschen Salts for a few days that old indolent armchair feeling deserts you—it doesn't matter how fat you are—the urge for activity has got you—and you’re stepping out—and lively. And Lest of all you like this activity —you walk and enjoy it—you thought you and never dance again but you find you re getting as spry as ever—the old tingling active feeling reaches even your feet. Kruschen is a combination of 6 mineral salts. Why not try one inexpensive bottle a bottle lasts 4 weeks and one bottle is enotigh to prove to you that Kruschen will make you feel younger—spryer more energetic—you’ll enjoy life—everv minute of it—and lose fat. As one stout woman wrote: ‘'Kruschen Salts are worth their weight in gold to me.” A half teaspoonful in a glass of hot water every morning amazingly helps to keep one healthy and the stomach, aver, bowels and kidneys in splendid condition—frees your system from harmful toxins and acids. To take off fat harmlessly and SAFELY be sure for your health's sake that you ask for and get Kruschen Salts. Get them at Dependable Drug I Stores or any drug store in the world and If the results one bottle brings do not delight you—do not joyfully satisfy you—money back.—Advertise ment.
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TRY A WANT ,D IN THE TIMES. THEY WILL ’’.RING,, RESULTS.
•FEB. 25, 1932
