Indianapolis Times, Volume 36, Number 155, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 November 1924 — Page 15

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PRESIDENT WILL Idle congress WITH IRON DIO Friends of Administration Will Head Important Committees, By Cnitrii Press Washington, xov. ?.~ Thn°w Congress wilt be subject to the firm j hand of the Administration with one of It? loval supporters at atmos' every post of importance. Unlike the present Congress, j which the Progressives controller] j through their balance of power, the new Congress will have a small ■ though clear, Republican majority. ! This majority may dwindle later in the session as the mild Progressives j in the Senate recover confidence, but it will function at the start when Congress is being organized. Therefore, in the organization, i every committee chairmanship, even every committee assignment, will be shaped as much as possible to the new policy of keeping a Republican Congress In step with a Republican President who has just won a tremendous victory at the polls. The new Vice President, Charles •i Dawes, will preside over the Sen I e. n t.ile the speakership of the. House will fall, according to present party plans, to either Nicholas I/oneworth, present floor leader, or to Martin R Madden of Illinois. | rhairman of the appropriations com mi t tec'. New Floor leader On account of the serious illness of Senator Dodge. Republican flopr leader in the Senate, a successor to ! him will have to he found. Custom which has never been violated provides the post must go to the Sena tor of next longest service. Senator Warren, Wyoming, comes next ir. line, hut because of his age and his devotion to his present post as chairman of the appropriations ; committee, there is some doubt that he may become floor leader. In any event Senator Curtis. Kansas Republican whip, will undoubtedly attend to the routine re- j spon„ihilities of the floor leader and Frederick H. Gillette, new Senator from Massachusetts will prove the principal spokesman for the Administration On floor of the Senate. Lodge's sickness affects the chair- i manship of the foreign relations committee. Senator Borah, next in line for the chairmanship, though not sympathetic with all the foreign policies of the Administration, especially with regard to Russian reeogri tion, will undoubtedly heeomo the chairman. Johnson Has Post ' -r John n .-f Cal forma. 1? in lit." to succeed the late Senator Colt, as chairman of the Immigration Corn mittee. 5. A movement was under way in ! .Republican senatorial circle*: today to oust Senator La Follette from his tMatus as a Republican Senator. On aiccotint of his seniority he is near the top .in a number of important committees in the Senate. On ac count of the traditional reluctance jo break Senate precedent. however, some hesitation was felt about “reading La Follette out of the party," even though he did conduct a personal campaign against a Republic- j an President. BOARD TO GET PETITION < ivic Club Wants Shelby St. and Arsenal Ave. I .est Open. More than 3,<H>o signatures are on a petition ready for presentation to the board of works today asking that Shelby St. and Arsenal Ave., be left open In the east side track elevation project from Davidson St. to State Ave. Names were obtained by the Southeastern Civic Improvement :Association from citizens when they voted at the polls Tuesday in five ! precincts of the Tenth ward. The hoard has confirmed resolutions for opening of Oriental and Pine Sts. Decision of the board on the other two thorough fires b expected today. *3OAKS RIGHT IN AND LIMBERS OP! STIFF JOINTS Pharmacists call it “Joini-Kase” he- ! cause it’s for Swollen, Sore . Painful, Creaky Joints Only. it took a good many years to get together a combination of pain subduing and swelling reducing agents declared to be the one rein.dy that almost instantly penetrates through skin and flesh and star's right in to make swo). „leii. Inflamed, creaky, pain racked joints j as good as new. They call this new and wonderful preparation “Joint Kase" because the medical man who turned the trick, worked for years to perfect some lewpriced remedy that w.>u!d really bene, fit the millions of people who have one j •>r more joints that need helpful at- j tention. So “Joint Kase” is prepared only for people who hare a swollen, painful, creaky. dl<-tortcd or stiff joint, whether it be in knee, elbow, shoulder, ankie. neck or finger am! whether .t is cattsed ;by rheumatism or something else. Os course, it can’t help but quickly put an end to sin h superficial ailments as lumbago, neuralgia, neuritis, aching . muscles, stitch in the side, crick in the neck or sore feet b-raiies of its penetrating a ion hut what it is really recommended for is Joint ailments of ■any nature whatever. • Ask for a tube of “Joint-Ease.” You can use it several times in one evening : lor quick results, because it goes right ► through the skin with only a few sec lends rubbing. It surely is"a swift penftr'rntor and when it gets under the skin. P* starts right in to clean up all joint trouble. Hook Drug Go dispenses it daily for about <V> rents a tube, as do first via -. everywhere. Always remember. n hen Joint-Ease gets tn Joint agony gets out—quick. Every rheumatic sufferer ought to ; send today for free book, “The Inner Mysteries of Rheumatism” (Just out). Address H. P. Uenrwater, Bor 800, Hub loweli, Maine.—Advertisement.

AS sweet and clean as the breath off her native h hills was the “Little Boss,” as she was fondly called. Wild as a morning breeze she ran—and as innocent—until the handsome Eugene Martin came into her life. How like a prince from her fairy books he seemed. So gentle, so kindly—the perfect knight—and so different from Big “Flint” Corey and the other rough fellows she had always known! Poor, trusting, motherless little girl! Untaught, unwarned, pitifully ignorant of the facts of life, she was the last to suspect her prince of treachery—-as she was the first and fiercest to defend him against any charge of wrong. For “Flint” Corey —Flint the Big, the Grim, the Terrible—discovered their secret. No mere fury and bluster of the jealous and discarded lover prompted his mode of reckoning. His was the calmer, the slower, the surer way. The singular, if cruel, means this wilderness giant took to teach the Little Boss the great burning truths of life that every girl ought to know, is one of the

Other Absorbing Stories from Life Just a Few of the Thrilling Stories in the December Issue of This Amazing Magazine

“His Daughter’s Honor” —Helping a friend carry on a clandestine love affair in the face of stern parental opposition sounds brave and generous—especially when the father of your friend’s fiancee is a dangerous, gun-toting, bull-headed old man. But Aubrey little knew into what a tangled web his part in the conspiracy was to lead him —nor how near it was to come to costing him his life. This thrilling, heart-gripping story will hold your breathless interest from the first line to the last. “Simply a Fool” —She had everything that a young wife could desire —a beautiful home, elegant clothes, money. Yet Bhe wanted one thing more than all the rest —excitement, adventure, a gay time. She really had no thought of wrong. She did not realize that in encouraging the attentions of dashing young Walton MacDonald, she was digging for herself a black pit of disaster. Blindly, unconcernedly she went ahead. She had her fling —and paid as every woman must pay who violates the laws of right and wrong. A powerful true story with a tremendous moral punch. “Was It Worth While?” —Once she was only a shy, sensitive, motherless young girl in an obscure western town. Today she is a great concert artist —internationally

famous, sought after. But she has paid dearly for her triumph —just how dearly only she who has 80 frankly bared her life can ever fully know. As she looks back now through the mist of years, to her treacherous betrayal in the days of her girlhood—as she realizes through what depths of grief and shame she has struggled to attain the admiration of the world—she asks herself: “Was It Worth While?” Never was the emptiness of success built on folly and wrong more dearly proven than in this true narrative. “Love Finds a Way” —Reared in a selected boarding school, under the stern eye of a watchful chaperone. Gloria had been carefullyshielded from the truth about life, about the world and the way's of men. So when she escaped to search for her mother, she little dreamed that she had plunged recklessly into e whirlpool which threatened to drag her down. Her tragic discovery about her mother —her strange adventure with the rich young Mr. PiUsbury—her flight to the north woods —the swift successions of startling events that awaited her there —and their amazing outcome—is a true story of a young girl’s desperate battling against odds that will thrill and inspire you. “The Divine Law” —ln the first year of marriage Jim’s selfish neglect, his secret attentions to other women, were soon more than Dons’s lonely heart could \ear. Then she met Dan, the fascinating young artist, and took the 6tep that was to be fraught with so much

A Macfadden Publication jll, December Issue Now on Sale Xgfepiy

A delightful monthly journey to the land of love and romance awaits you in Dream World —the magazine of beautiful stories. A single copy will make you a regular reader. Out the 15th of the month —25c. A Macfadden Publication

most astounding, most compelling’ true-life dramas that has ever found its way to the printed page. As she looks back on that song year of humiliation, suffering and bitter shame—her rebellious soul tortured and flayed in Big “Flint” Corey’s strange but relentless school of discipline—the Little Boss, now a woman grown in years, knowledge and experience, shudders to think how narrowly she escaped from the horror of a lifetime of degradation and utter woe. And it is only as a warning to other girls that she has consented to re-live her experience in this amazing story. Never was the misfortune, the folly, the crime of ignorance driven home with more telling blows than in this powerful, heart-gripping, true-life narrative. It teaches an unforgettable lesson. Every growing girl —every father and mother with a daughter—should read it. It is entitled “The Rattlesnake’s Rite,” and appears in True Story Magazine for December. Yet it is but one of the many intensely interesting, helpful, inspiring features in this great issue. Don’t miss it!

peril to her soul. Dazzled by his magnetic personality, yielding under the spell of his tender sympathy, she did not foresee where it all must end. And then —But let Doris herself tell the story. It carries a powerful lesson. “Crossroads of Life” —The longing for refinement, for quiet, dignified surroundings among nice people had given Iris the courage to battle her way upward from the vulgar atmosphere of the tenements to a private secretaryship with a notable law firm. Then came the test —the choice between sinking back —with honor —into the old life so repulsive to her —or bartering her soul for what the world calls success. The road she finally took, and its dramatic outcome, is one of the most intensely interesting true-life stories ever put in print. Other Fascinating Stories In This Issue Are: “An Old Maid’s Story’’ “Mountain Blood” "Black Gold” “Through The Night’’ “The Faith of Woman” “Southern Pride” “Where Poppies Bloom” “The Guilty One” “Board and Lodging” "If Youth But Knew” “What Every Woman Hopes” “They Were Only Human”

This Girl Stumbted— But True Story Sat ed Her From Falling We published the following letter from a young wife, not because it is particularly outstanding or spectacular but because it is typical of thousands of letters received by the editors of True Story. For every dramatic rescue by True Story (and there are many) of men and w men after they have fallen, there are a thousand average cases where the necessary deterring influence is brought to bear bo early that the lalal errors are never made. - , T*va. TRUK STORY. !HroiJway, New York Ctty. Gentlemen : A few days ngo while in a pouting Kpeil after * fuaa with my husband over money matters. I picked up a "True Saory"and fate acetned toturn thepogaa to the atory “Cutting Loose I ra*td a page and threw the magarin© across the room. But fate would not be beaten, ro 1 read on. If the wr-iter had known me he cowld not have written my story more truly. The rilma* of‘Cutting Loose" kept me from going the wrong way. 1 aaw that 1 was in the wrong, so then and there I atarted anew. ! like nil stories In True Story eine.Tor they all have a wonderful moral. No other mag a nine compare© with True Stoi y. Yours truly, Mrs - ,

Pages from Life As long as man has been able to convey his thoughts in writing, he has known the power of the written or printed word. Today the world is deluged with books and magazines—some good, some had. some indifferent. But this we know: that only the true thing reaches its mark and endures. Only the sincere heart can reach and move other hearts. And nothing under heaven can carry understanding and conviction to others like pages torn from the book of life itself. Because) they are true transcripts of lifa, written straight from the heart, the glowing, inspiring messages in True Story Magazine reach and influence more people for Good than any other single publication in the world. Out of hearts that have been crushed and broken out of experience and knowledge bought with suffering and bitter tears—these stirring life dramas are poured into the pages of True Story Magazine to teach, to warn —to encourage the erring and to guide and protect the innocent. Since Bemarr Macfadden founded this now famous magazine five years ago, thousands of grateful readers have found between its covers answers to problems that perhaps could have been solved in no other way. Thousands can point to this great crusader —this fighting champion of moral progress—with joy and thanksgiving that he has dared to battle tor Right—for Truth—cost what it may.

No more fascinating stories are being written than those which appear each month in True Romances —the sister publication to True Story Magazine. Your newsstand has it Out the 2srd of the month —25c. A Macfadden Publication

Flint’s told, handsome fact went white with rage. He took one step and had Eugene Martin by the throat. ” You miserable , sneaking; co ward, ”he ground *ui, if you try to run away I’ll break e\>ery bone in your body. ” —From “The Rattlesnake 's Bite , " Use This Coupon If You Cannot Get True Story At Your Newsstand

TRUE STORY MAGAZINE 64th Street and Broadway, New York City I want to take advantage of your Special Offer. I enclose SI.OO, for which please enter my name on your mailing list to receive 5 issues of True Story Magazine, be- } ginning with the December number. (If you prefer to examine the magazine before subscribing simply mail o# | | 25 cents and we will send you one copy of the December issue at once.) j 1 ‘ I Nam* j I l | City State - , .... | i— I

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