Indianapolis Times, Volume 36, Number 129, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 October 1924 — Page 8
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CHARITIES BODY CHANGES NAME Dr, James Millikan Heads State Social Conference, Bn Time* Spee ini NEWCASTLE, Ind., Oct. 7.—The State Conference of Charities and Corrections from now on will be known as the Indiana Conference of Social Work, according to action taken at annual session here Monday night. A resolution, ordering the change in name to conform with the national organiation of that name, was adopted by the delegates, who, in addition, selected Vincennes as the next convention city. Dr. James Millikan, superintendent of the Southeastern Hospital for the Insane, was named president. Others elected Dr. Walter C. Van Xuys, superintendent of the Indiana Village for Epileptics, first vice president. Judge E. Miles Xorfon, Clary, second vie3 president; Miss Rhoda Weidy, Mancie, third vice president; W. H. Hill, Vincennes, fourth vice president; John ABrown. Indianapolis, re-elected secretary. with Mrs. James Keesling, Newcastle, Mrs. Laura B. McClure ts Vincennes, Mrs. Beadle of La--fayette, and Mrs. Theresa Doyle of Ft. Wayne, assistant secretaries. Men's Club Day Friday Members of Indianapolis men's clubs will gather at the Indianapolis Industrial Exposition at the State fairground at 8:30 p. m. Friday, Men’s Club Day, and parade through the building. Ed Hunter of the arrangements committee announced. Each marcher will be given a club badge. m Beauty A Gleamy Mass of Hair 35c “Danderine” does Wonders for Any Girl’s Hair
Girls! Try this! When combing and dressing your hair, just moisten your hair brush with a little “Danderine" and brush it through your hair. The effect is startling! You can do your hair up immediately and it will appear twice as thick and heavy—a mass of gleamy hair, sparkling with life and possessing that incomparable softness, freshness and luxuriance. While beautifying the hair “Danderine” is also toning and stimulating each single hair to grow thick, long and strong. Hair stops falling out and dandruff disappears. Get a bottle of “Danderine” at any drug or toilet counter and just see how healthy and youthful your hair appears after this delightful, refreshing dressing.—Advertisement. FOR ITCHING TORTURE Uso Antiseptic Liquid Zemo There is one remedy that seldom fails to stop itching torture and relieve skin irritation, and that makes the skin soft, clear and healthy. Any druggist can supply you with Zemo. which generally overcomes skin diseases. Eczema. Itch. Pimples, Hashes./Blackheads, in most cases quickly give way to Zemo. Frequently, minor blemishes disappear over night. Itihing usually stops instantly. Zemo is a safe, antiseptic liquid that may be applied at any time, for it does not show. Trial bottle, 35c; large size. SI.OO. Zemo Soap, 25c. Ail druggists.—Advertisement.
Do Trifles Annoy and Upset You Do You Have Frequent Headaches SjP Do You Quarrel WYth Those You Love ¥ Do You Jump When the Door Slams @
Well Known Hospital Physician Says These Are Some of the Danger Signals of Exhausted Nerve Force —What To Do
One of the most terrible of all human ailments is exhausted nerve force. It weakens all the organs of the body and as a result ad kinds of alarming symptoms may appear. Some people get nervous indigestion, pains over the eyes, in the heart, and across the small of the back; In others the first symptoms are mental instead of physical —sleeplessness, worry over trifles, or inability to concentrate on your work. The nervous mother is upset by her children, squabbles with her husband, has frequent fits of the “blues” and burst.’ into tears over the smallest troubles. In such cases it is worse than useless to waste time taking stimulating medicines or narcotic drugs; the starving nerve cells must have nerve food which is supplied by the blood. Any physician will tell you that if the blood supply were cut off frorreany nerve in your bodv- that the nerve would die.
lIIIVATCn ID All INCREASES THE nerve force aHd 11 UAMI CD I null GIVES NEW STRENGTH AND ENERGY
Today’s Best Radio Features Copyright, l?li, by United Press KFI, Los Angeles (469M1 8 p. m., PCST—Massenlta’s opera. “Manon,” with Sabanieva, Schipa and Picco. KSD, St. Louis (546 M) 7 p. m.. CST—Street carnival and parade ir. connection with the Veiled Prophets’ celebration. KDKA. Pittsburgh (326 M) 8 p. m.. EST—Gala musical program, orchestra, Quartette and solo numbers. WC, Detroit (517 M) 10 p. m., EST Red Apple's Club weekly broadcast. WO AW Omaha (526 M) midnight, CST—Frank Hodek's owl frolics. KNIGHTSW SEASON OC LlB Monthly Social Events . Planned by Raper, Monthly entertainments at the Masonic Temple have been arranged by Raper Commandery Xo. 1. Knights Templar, beginning Oct. 18. Old-fashioned minstrels, comedies, lectures and musical entertainments are on the program. Entertainments are preliminary arrangements for raising funds for attending the grand encampment at Seattle, Wash-, in July, 1925. “Old-Time Modern Minstrels" will be the first entertainment. A chorus of thirty voices is planned. Raper Commandery Choir, directed by George W. Kadel, will give concert Xov. 15. “A Pair of Sixes,” a three-act farce comedy, is scheduled Dec. 20. William E. Kopplin will lecture on “An Evening, With the American Indian." Jan. 17. Mrs. Clause E. Titus and Lester Horton will sing. '
Hoosier Briefs O' WNERS of small autos are nervous at Elwood. Street i_ . J Commissioner William Mc- | Donald has ordered war on tin j cans. The annual convention of the In i diana High School Press Associa- ; tion wii! be held at Franklin Coli lege, Oct. 24-25. Tragedy has marked the happy married life of two brothers who married sisters at Anderson. White ; chasing rats. Roy Haines, 22, shot and sericusly wounded his brother, 1 Orville. Decatur is going to have Sunday ; movies for the first time, according J to theater announcements there F r ~~' OLKS scurried for shelter at Portland, thinking a bootJ legger battle was on. It i was only the auto of Jay Collins, J farmer, back-firing. | A free auto ride for William S. I Jolly, former Tipton resident, was j costly. He left a brand new ralnI coat in the car. I John M. McCafferty, field agent for the Indiana reformatory, has joined the war on constables. He | was mistaln for a bootlegger at j Washington and ordered to turn | over his grip for inspection. The memorial tablet dedicated at Logansport Armistice day a year ago by the war veterans was defaced by unknown vandals. Three gold stars were tom off and the tablet removed and stamped on. Logansport is seeking an “execution room.” Poiice have been shooting dogs on the street. “Too risky, shoot them inside somewhere,” say residents. SIGMA NU TO MEET Inspectors of Ninety Chapters Will Discuss Problems, Oct. 10-11. Inspectors of the ninety chapters of Sigma Xu, national college fraternity, will meet in Indianapolis, home of the national offices, Oct. 10 and 11, to discuss problems confronting the college fraternity. Some of the subjects to be discussed are: “Is the Athlete and Asset or or Liability?”; “Chapter Supervision of Freshmen;" “What Purposes and Ideals Should a Fraternity Have, Xot Common to Other Campus Organizations?” and “Scholarship Requirements.' Meetings will be held at the Indianapolis Athletic Club, with Regent John M. Roberts presiding.
If you have any of the symptoms of nerve force exhaustion, you should at once take steps to enrich your blood. This can be quickly and most effectively accomplished by the free use of Nuxated Iron, which not only increases the activity of the blood making organs, but feeds true red Wood food directly to the blood itself and thereby helps to create millions of new red blood cells. The discovery of organic iron as contained in Nuxated Iron is one of the most red blood making scientific discoveries since the creation of modern medical science, and its effect in helping to create new nerve force and revitalize worn-out, exhausted nerve cells is sometimes most amazing Try Nuxated Iron for two weeks and if at the end of that time you have not obtained all and even greater benefits than you expect, the manufacturers will promptly refund vour money.
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YS>OOSL/ELI JglN AFRICA * © 192-4 MLA Service In_
Robert Koran. newspaper rorre. spondent. accompanies the Theodore Roosevelt expedition into Africa itt lpoii They arrive at Mombasaa. the “gateway to British Bast Africa." and then make the long railroad journey to their first camp in the game-crowded Khpiti Plains. After a wonderfully successful shooting Irip in the Sotik country, the expedition camps for more hunting at a farm called Saigai-Sai. After several other trips they invade the (litaso Nyero elephant country and meet with some more good sport. The Roosevelts are given*a royal reception at Njoro and Entebbe. And now they are ay lloima, the capital of I’nyo-a. on the first stage of their long journey across Uganda and Into the Sudan. At Hoima Koran undergoes an operation for relief of an abeess. Roosevelt assists in the opera tion. NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY ON Jan. 4, Colonel Roosevelt led his expedition off on their i__J march to Butiaba. the port on the Albert which is some thirty miles from Hoima. They left me behind in camp under the care of Dr. Straithaim, for I was quite unfit to travel. The expedition camped • 1 first day at Kajura, 142 mil' . urn Kampala, where they foun. the usual bandas prepared by the lot al natives for their comfort. The country through which they passed was very uninteresting, and there was not a vestige of game to be seen anywhere. On Jan. 5, they continued their march to Rutiaba, by a road that wound up hill and down dale until the -summit of the escarpment was reached from where they obtained a magnificent view of the Albert Nyanza. They looked down on its placid blue waters from a height of some 1,800 feet. On reaching the plains below the escarpment, the road is difficult for it is a sandy track into which the feet sank deeply. The heat was terrific. Butiaba is nothing more than a wood-and-iron store and a couple of small bungalows; it’s the headquarters of the Nile flotilla of -Uganda—the flotilla consisting of a small steam launch, which ought to have been placed on the scrap heap ages oofore this, two steel boats for sailing, and a few large rowboats and barges. The Roosevelt expedition pitched
OUR BOARDING HOUSE—By AHERN
THE OLD HOME TOWN—By STANLEY
tamp within a hundred yards of the ■dge of the lake, and prepared to •split up their parly as the availiLle boats of the Xile flotilla could iot accommodate all the party, porti sand loads, in one trip. Koosevelt reache Koba at midtight, and on the fier found ali the l phant poachers from the Lado Enclave, or “No Man's Land" as it was called locally.
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ROOSEVELT TURNS HIS BACK ON AFRICA. They all had traveled in from many miles away in o*ier to greet the distinguished American hunter. As he stepped ashore they broke into lusty cheering, and then led Roosevelt and the whole of- the party to a grass-thatched banda, where ttrwy had spread out a very creditable banquet. This moonlight and midnight welcome to Colonel Roosevejt was a remarkable tribute. Never before had .he Congo poachers ever assembled togei her to do honor to any one. Among these daring and adventurous spirits were many men whose
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
names were historic in East Africa. Uganda, tho Congo and Central Africa generally. Each man carried his life in his lands, for if he was captured it meant ten year sin a Belgian chain gang—which was nothing more nor .ess than being tortured to death while chained to a gang of African convicts. About 2 o’clock in the morning the ■xpeditlon resumed the voyage down in' Nile to Wadelai, where it was to cross over into the Congo for the 'Rhino Camp.” CHAPTER XXVII Roosevelt’s Luck at “Rhino Camp” On the 12th of January, I started off in my rickshaw. 1 camped the first night on the banks of the Hoima River, and made the Washi River at mid-day on the seem** march out from Hoima. I had only eight miles to go before reaching Butiaba. My wound was still very painful, and was not healing at all fast. My faithful old Swahili servant, Sefu bin Mohammed, cooked all my meals, looked after my tent and clothes, dressed my wound twice daily, and in many other ways proved invaluable. I really do not know what I should have done without him. For over six years he had served me in all parts of East Africa and was a servant in a thousand. He was much pleased with the heard that I had allowed to grow, it really looked like a genuine beard he exclaimed to me proudly: “At last, the Bwana is a man!" Apparently to be beardless was a terrible tragedy in his eyes. I reached the shores of the Albert Nyarza on the early morning of Jan. 14. I pitched camp on the site of the camp on the Roosevelt expedition. There was a fine breeze blowing off the lake, which made the weather a little more bearable. The remainder of the Rooslvetl expedition porters were embarking for Koba when I reached Buiaba; but I had to wait for the return of the launch from “Rhino Camp” before I could proceed to Koba with my safari. Just as I was pitching my camp, two of my native runners arrived from Rhino Camp, having traveled all the way by root and canoe, with the news that Colonel Roosevelt had managed to kill both a cow and a calf wnito rhino on the very first night in camp. This was great news, for I knew how much store the Roosevelts and Cunninghame had set on securing these rare specimens. Later that day. 1 received a letter from Cunninghame asking me to take charge of Saleh and the porters as fur as Nimule. He also told me
FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS —By BIOSSER
that, after leaving Koba, they had traveled all night and the next day before they reached “Rhino Camp.” He said that Colonel Roosevelt and every one was very well, and that they were all hugely pleased with their success with the white rhino, and that Kermit was out with Grogan at the momeent of writing in the hope of killing a good bull to complete the group. CHAPTER XXVIII The Arrival at Nimule Nimule is very hot, and is considered the most unhealthy government station in the length and breadth of Uganda. Wadelai used to claim that reosnl, but it had exacted such a heavy death toll that it had been finally abandoned. The Roosevelt expedition came on the fourth of February. The first to arrive was a rowboat containing some of the porters and a number of the loads, and after a short interval, Quentin Grogan came ashore from the Good intent with more porters and most of the trophies obtained in the Lado Enclave. All the Europeans now present in Mimule had congregated at the landing stage to great Colonel Roosevelt on his arrival. Presently, round a band in the wide river, appeared the steam launch flying the big American flag at the bow. It was towing the two sailing boats, which were full of porters and baggage. Colonel Roosevelt. and Kermit had traveled in the launch, and so had Cunninghame; while the three naturalists were in a sailing boat. Ever? one looked most wonderfully well, especially the two Roosevelts. Mearns and Heller had both grown hard, fine, boards, and looked as hard ns lions. Kermit’s beard was making good progress and he had now adopted the East African custom of wearing short khaki trousers. leaving the knees bare. Their arrival was greeted with loud cheering from the small European community, temporarily resident. at iNimulo. After chatting with every one at the landing stage for a few minutes. Colonel Roosevelt. Ivermit and myself walked over to the camp, where some comfortable grass houses had been erected for their accommodation. "I am really very delighted witli the results of my hunting in the Congo,” he remarked enthusiastically Both from a scientific and sporting point of view, nothing could have been better. We got eleven white rhinos, as well as buffalo and other game. “Some of the crocodiles were very interesting, too. Kermit managed to get some wonderfully good t ptc-
OUT OUR WAY—By WILLIAMS
tures of a cow and calf white rhino standing under a tree. Then # he killed the cow, and the calf would not go away. Kermit and Grogan pelted it with sticks and clods >f earth, but it wouldn’t desert its lead mother. Finally, he had to fire his rifle in its direction to scare it: and then it went off in frantic haste." “How man white rhino did you see, Colonel?” “Some thirty or fortjfl altogether. We found the flesh of rhino excelet eating, especially their humps. Kermit saw ten rhinos in one group m one occasion.” “How about your health. Colonel?" “Well Kermit and I have both been well; but the others have all had fever, touches of the sun and iome dysentery. One of the gunbearers died of fever.” “And four of your porters died of lysentery between Kioba and here,” I added. “I am very sorry to hear that," he
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TUESDAY, OCT. 7,1924
replied sorrowfully. “They are fine fellows, those porters.” Next day was a very busy one in the Roosevelt camp, for ever one was fully engaged upon the giant preparation for the march along the banks of the Nile to • Gondokoro. Colonel Roosevelt’s expedition was to follow next day. There was a huge mail waiting for the Roosevelt expedition at Gondokoro, and I sent it off to them at once by special messengers. The Roosevelt expedition, to all intents and purposes, would come to an end on reaching Gondokoro. According to the first arrangements they were due to arrive there on Feb. 14; but I received news a day or twq earlier that they intended to go out hunting elephants on Feb. 16 and would not now reach Gondokoro until the 17th. Continued in Our Next Issue
