Indianapolis Times, Volume 36, Number 231, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 February 1925 — Page 11

FRIDAY, FEB. 6, 1925

STATE DEMOCRACY IN SESSION HERE DONS NEW ARMOR 'Roused to Heights at Annua! Banquet—Business Meeting Today, Miller Effingham, eon of I* G. Eliinghun, publisher of the JournalGazette, Ft. Wayne, Ind., was elected treasurer of the Democratic Editorial Association at the Claypool today. Other officers are advanced by rotation. They are: John Gorman, Princeton, president; Thomas McCullough, Anderson, first vice president; E. T. Beadle, Rushville, second vloe president and John D. DePrez, Shelbyville, secretary. The business meeting today followed the annual banquet at the Claypool, Thursday night. Roused to new enthusiasm by addresses of party leaders, the more than three hundred editors, their wives and friends who attended the banquet prepared to “don new armor” and lay plans for the 1928 election. Taggart In Tribute Thomas Taggart pointed to United States Senator Samuel M. Ralston as the leader of Indiana Democracy and a safe leader for Democrats of the Nation. “If the national committee will follow In the footsteps of this peerless leader we need have no fear of the future,” Taggart said. Senator Ralston declared: ”1 am not presumptious enough to proclaim the things the Democratic party should advocate in the next two or four years, but I am certain of this —that my party can not be successful as a party of -negation. It cannot rely on the mistakes of the opposition party numerous as they will be, but it must have its own program of service. "It must never be afraid to modify a policy to meet changed condiions when it can do so without sacrifice of principles that have been tested by time and experience. Our first step therefore toward the restoration of the Democratic party to power is to renew our devotion to it as the party of all the people; to exclude from our councils and platforms all extraneous questions which have no pikes or part *in politics and thus avoid making the issues of matters that can only be determined by each individual for himself. Party Is Not Dead "A party which has forty members of the United States Senate, 183 members of the House of Representatives and twenty-four Governors of States, is neither dead nor repudiated.” Ralston declared the only sane program ever worked out for the peace of the world was the League of Nations. Other speakers were Dr. Carleton B. McCulloch, State Senator Joseph Cravens and Mrs. L. G. Ellingham of Ft. Wayne. Election of a secretary was the principal interest at the annual election today. Other officers take office by rotation. RE-ELECTED PARK HEAD C. A. Bookwalter Rechosen President by Commissioners. Charles A. Bookwalter will head the city park hoard as president for another year. He was re-elected late Thursday. Emsley W. Johnson was named vice president to succeed Frank P. Manly. Property owners interested in completion of the east end of Kessler Blvd. were present, and practically the entire strip of land needed from Crows Nest east was offered free to the board.

—to build tip Weight/ ANY WOMAN, any man, can now hare a well-developed face and form. The whole, simple secret of a well-developed form is in the number of blood-cells in your body. You can now forget all the theoretical talk about diet, exercise, fad treatments, food-fats and fat-foods. NothldK' is of any use, after all, excejATmood-cells! Thin, run-down nrbn and women, with bony necks, sunken cheeks, bony shoulders—all these are suffering from one thin g—too few blood-cells. Science has proved that B.S.S. Helps to make the rich red-blood-oslls, which you need. Your blood is starving for these new blood-cells t Give your blood the blood-cells it needs—take S.S.S. the great scientific blood-cell maker. S.S.S. has done marvels, too, in making beautiful complexions, clearing the skin, making lips rosy red, the cheeks full and plump —because It rids the blood of impurities which cause pimples, blackheads, acne, blotches, eczema, tetter, rash and rheumatism, too. As the medicinal ingredients of SJ3.S. are purely vegetable, it may be taken with perfect safety. This is why S.S.S., since 1826, lias meant to thousands of underweight men and women a plus in their strength. Start taking S.S.S. today ind your great problem, that of your personal appearance, can be solved.. m © &&8. is sold at all good M drug stores la two sixes. The larger sure is more economics!.

WllilC 1/6COIIICS Os tftlo Oil is WHO

Disappear?

VOU wonder what become# of them * —the girl# who disappear—drop out of sight, many never to be heard of again. There are hundreds of such girls. You read about them in the papers for a day or two—then interest lags, and except for a broken-hearted mother, a father prematurely aged and hair turned gray, each case is forgotten in the interest that the next arouses.

Late one night a young girl stepped from a train in the station at an Ohio City. She was attractive, beautiful and of excellent family. She wanted to surprise ner parents by her unexpected home coming and so, instead of telephoning to her father to come and escort her, she took a night-hawk taxi standing at the curb. Later, a car came to a stop before a quiet-looking house with drawn curtains, and an unconscious girlish figure was carried quickly up the steps and through the door —a door that might well have borne the legend “All hope abandon, ye who enter here.” That is how one girl disappeared as though the earth had swallowed her. Thus it was that through a simple error such as any girl might make, there began a chapter in her life so

Other Heart-Gripping True Stories in the March Issue Are:

“Asa Woman Sows”— To Blanche, marriage for love was a forlorn road to happiness —unless plenty of money went with it to bolster up the matrimonial scheme. So she hesitated not an instant when she saw a chance tolure rich old Alexander Potterinto marriage wkh her. She did not count on the fact that a man may be old, but still very clever—and when, shortly afterward, real love actually came into her life,she found that she had recklessly thrust herself into the jaws of a terrible trap from which it seemed there was no escape. Read this girl’s confession of her folly and the heart-rending events it led to. It's one you won’t forget for many a day. “How I Won My Husband”— When a girl loves a certain man who is too sby to propose, is it wrong for her to use strategy? That was the question Winnie had to answer respecting Dick. But when she decided to go ahead and win him by methods all her own, she did not foresee the amazing entanglement in which she was to involve herself as a result. While there is a touch of humor in this astounding true story as Winnie tells it —every girl who reads it, whether she is in love or not, will profit by the mistakes that Winnie made. “The Bigamist’s Wife” —Born amid the sordid surroundings of the serving class in London, she came to hate her lowly station even as a child, and determined that some day she would climb to the high social level of those she then served. She had partially succeeded, she thought, when she met and married Harry Hobbs, owner of a large

wb t -... ■ fijppSfl BBijß BBsdlMr ■■■>—iih iBUI SBMfl| SMfWW |pßifc llHhißf mf/~C V3k I IpBB Bli mmSMBm WfmSgM mffljgk !§ BPi Wtjmfflm BBmSm mmmr-i mils A a.^ai iUfffll BaBBL j,

If You Enjoy True Story, You Will Also Find Much To Interest, Fascinate and Thrill You In True Story’s Sister Publication— •

As vivid, colorful, dramatic narratives, the stories in True Romances have all the compelling, heart-stirring interest that has won so many millions of readers for True Story Magazine. Yet True Romances

is different We all have within us a streak of the romantic, which never fails to rouse us to the keenest enjoyment of stories

dreadful that she will carry the sickening memory of it with her to the grave. Ordinarily wild horses could not tear from her the details of the horrors she endured from the time she stepped into the taxi until she was rescued days later from that terrible barred room in the house with the shades drawn down. But because she realizes that thouands of girls innocently and unthinkingly make errors that might easily result as disastrously as the simple

mistake she made, she has relived the '// episode once again, in order that other * girls may be spared the depths of degradation and humiliation she suffered. You will find her story, told in her own words, in True Story Magazine for March, entitled “Outside the Lam.” Every word, every incident, every detail, recorded exactly as it was burned into her memory, Nothing is changed, nothing hidden, except the real names of the persons involved which for obvious reasons have to be disguised. It is a powerful, gripping true story that every girl and every parent of girls should read. Never in the history of True Story Magazine, whose purpose is and always has been to fight the powers of evil, has it placed before its readers a tale that will do more to protect girls and women from %he human vultures who feed upon the trustfulness and thoughtlessness of innocence than this self-told story of agirl who disappeared. Yon will find it in True Story for March, now upon the newsstands.

hotel; and when later she found herself a widow and burdened with her late husband’s debts, she was easily flattered by the attentions of the young army captain represented the aristocracy of England and ‘promised” txT make her his wife. Read and learn how he fulfilled his

A Mother’s Opinion of True Story When I reed “If Tooth Bnt Knew," 1 decided I would get True Story each month, because I have two boys, ona past 16 years and the other 18 years, and there are things boys should know and I dreaded to tell them. We only have the two childrfei and we are a loving family one to the other and I was afraid they would think me bold if 1 explained plain facts to them. They are both great readers and want to read every magazine or book that come in our home. So whan I read “If Youth Bnt Knew," I thought our problem waa solved. When I put the magazine on the table } left it open at that story. And my oldest boy came and got It and read it and I never let on that I saw him reading it. When he had read them all, he said, “Mother, there are some good lessons for young folks In True Story Magazine. Let’s take it all the time.” So we all read True Story now. I have Just finished reading the February issue, but 1 cannot tell one story 1 liked better than the others, for it is as Son said—there are good lessons for both young and old in it. Ths only fault I find with it is that it’s so interesting I can hardly do my work when if cornea in the house. We can hardly wait each month for it and 1 don’t see what you could do to make it a better magazine and I think all folks raising a family should take True Story Magazine, eo the young people can read it. I think it would keep many a boy and girl from going astray. Your a truly. Male her, lowa MRS. A. 1.0.

Jr ue Romances

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES — -

“promise," and its dramatically eventful outcome for Gladys. One of the most gripping stories that has appeared in True Story Magazine.

Other Features in the March Issue are: zZfo ‘The Understanding Heart” “Prisoners for the Night” “The Sinner and the Code” “What Love Did for Me” ' “Fine Feathers” “My Stepmother'* “When Fortune Smiles” “Her Bargain” “The Primitive Lover” “Sins of the Fathers” A Record of Life If Human history could be reduced to a single page—if the lives of the men and women whose names have lived could be recorded in the space of a few paragraphs—one great fact would stand out and dominate all the rest. And that is, that even among the highest and mightiest—sin never has succeeded—wrong never has,and never can win. If the great of the earth cannot escape the inevitable penalties of wrong, what chance have we lesser ones who make up the majority?

found in any other magazine. Out the 23rd of the month. At all newsstands, 25c.

of beautiful love. If you tyre not a reader of True Romances, a great treat awaits you. Every single story in this delightfully different publication is charged with a heartgiippingtruthfulness to life, not

Thw fa a truth about life that Bemarr Macfadden has been hammering home ever since he started several years ago to edit and publish True Story Magazine. In a thousand different ways, touching on a thousand widely-varied problems erf life, he has sought, through the pages of True Story Magazine, to drive into the public consciousness those great burning truths about our moral, spiritual and physical lives that every man and woman, every boy and girl ought to know. That he is succeeding in a big way is attested by the large number of letters from all over the world that pour into the offices of Trus Story Magazine. Those who have walked blindly have had their eyes opened. Those who needed instruction and guidance have received it, and have profited thereby. Those who have been tempted have seen the Truth, and have found strength to resist temptation. Those who have erred through ignorance or misinformation, have been saved from shame, sorrow and degradation and have found the only way to success and happiness. Such is Bemarr Macfadden’s great achievementone that any man might well glory in. —■"—"■“l Use This Coupon If You Cannot Get True Story * At Your Newsstand

TRUE STORY MAGAZINE 64th Street end Broadway, New York City t want to take advanl age of roar Special Offer, i enclose tIM, for wMel please eater my name on your mailing list to receive S Issues of True Story Magazine, beginning with the March number. (If yon prefer to examine tho mmfasine before subecribing aim ply moil ee 35 oente and we wiUeend yoo one copy of the Mercb ieeoe et onoe.) ' • ■ Ci— *’< -

11