Indianapolis Times, Volume 37, Number 125, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 September 1925 — Page 8

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RAILROAD WILL REPAIR SEWER, FIXIT LEARNS Property Owners Complain About Water on S. Arsenal Ave. Do You Know? Official actions of Mayor Shank and other city officials are submitted to James M. Ogden, corporation counsel, to test for legality. If your stock of oratory with city officials runs low, caU for an oration from Mr. Fixit. He'll help you get that improvement. Write him at The Times. A broken sewer under tracks of the Pennsylvania Railroad near Arsenal Ave. and Williams St., which has flooded the neighborhood, probably will be repaired soon, Mr. Fixit learned / today. DEAR MR. FlXlT—There is so much water on S. Arsenal Ave. between Williams St. and the railroad It Is Impossible to walk on the sidewalk, not to mention the street. Water does not run down the sewer, but comes up for hours after It stops raining and this has been going on for years. PROPERTY OWNERS. The responsibility rests on the Pennsylvania Railroad, according to officials of the street commissioner’s department. The railroad’s engineering department will investigate, Mr. Fixit was assured. DEAR MR. FIXIT —Can you get a red bulb put in the socket on the concrete post on the south side of the track elevation just below McCarty St? The light has not been burning for three weeks. ALWAYS TIMES READER. John Berry, board of safety electrical engineer, promised to effect the repairs at once. DEAR MR. FIXIT: W. Vermont St. from Tibbs Ave. to N. Warman Ave. is impassable after heavy rains and during winter months. During the two years we have lived here, no improvements have been made, not even scraped, graded or anything. It Is terrible. CITY TAX PAYER. You should petition the board of works that a grade be established. DEAR MR. FIXIT: I wish to call your attention to conditions In the alley between Reisner and Blaine running, from Miller south to Minnesota. Here we have garbage cans that do not come up to the require-, ments, baskets, open containers and one place dumps right In the alley. The garbage has been in some places; for months, as the collector refuses to take it in when It Is not in the proper container. Also there are several vaults that are badly in need of cleaning. TIMES READER. The board of health will Investigate at once, and also will attend to the following complaint: DEAR MR. FIXIT: Will you please see that a house on Lincoln St. is fixed up? The cellar Is falling in and it is dangerous for people to live in it. Also please see that the weeds are cut in the 600 block on E. Norwood St. and that people in the 600 block on Stephens place their garbage In cans and not in the weeds. TIMES READER. DEAR MR. I am interested in knowing what right the an-

CORETHROAT Gargle with warm Balt water ~ ttiPt.' apply over throat— V;cks ▼ Vapo ßub IMI Over 17 Million Jarm Used Yearly __ yours be shapely j T DO NOT want to be thin! I just X want to be my right weight! I want these hollows filled out. I just want enough firm, plump flesh on my bones to fill out my figure.” Os course you do. You want a figure that you can drape your clothes on—not just hang them on! What’s the use of having pretty clothes, if they just hang on you? And what would you say If you were told you could have the figure you want? A graceful, well rounded body—firm, solid flesh —just enough —just your right weight? You’d be jnighty happy, wouldn’t you? Well, then, be happy because you can have it! Put plenty of red cells in your blood and watch your weight go up to where you want it! That’s what’s the matter with you! Your blood is impoverished. You need more rich, red blood. S. S. S. is the thing to put red blood in your system. S. S. S. helps Nature build red-blood-cells by the millions. You just try S. S. S. and watch how quickly you begin to fill out your clothes. Notice your skin clear of unsightly ,— v blemishes your petite increase —f O O O 1 strength come \ flabby muscles and vim and vigor fill X. S your whole system. It’s red blood that does it. And S. S. S. surely helps Nature build that red blood. S. S. S. is spld by all drug stores. The larger bottle is more economical.

PRACTICE IS ABANDONED Police Not to Contract for Owners for Auto Repairs. Police will receive instructions to call - no garage to take charge of automobiles smashed in collisions, leaving the matter to car owners, the board of safety has decided. Board members agreed to obliviate a “gentlemen’s agreemejat’’ with the Glenn Trucking Company, whereby damaged cars were taken to that company’s garage, service to be compensated at the owner’s option. Board members said they had received complaints against the system. tomobile tire repair companies have to use the sidewalks and streets for repair work. How much do they pay for this privilege and to whom is payment made? Some of the tire companies will not let you park in front of their place of business unless you want repairs made. WILLIAM H. SMITH. Tire companies have no right to keep you from parking in frofit of their places of business in tho spaces not being used, the board of safety informed Mr. Fixit. Os course, it is wrong to block the sidewalk. However, board members are powerless because the city court has released owners arrested for that offense. DEAR MR. FIXIT: Will you please have the alley between Gale and Station Sts., running from Roosevelt Ave. to Twenty-Fifth St. inspected? It’s in a bad condition. Heavy trucks go through the alley every day and have the alley in such a cut-up condition it is very near impossible to drive through it. TIMES READER. W. P. Hargon, clerk of the street commissioner’s office, will investigate at .once. Mr. Fixit is obliged to inform readers that Hargon is unable to authorize repairs to the alley in the rear of 1724-40 N. Tacoma St., because it is a private alley.

Hoosier Briefs “/ppl OO insanitary; let him | | I sleep,” said Sanitary OsL. J fleer James Willey of Seymour when he investigated the case of a tramp found near the B. & O. Railroad tracks near there. The man was thought to be dead at first. A cigaret thrown in a locker is thought to be the cause of an incip ient Are discovered at Milroy High School. After smoke was seen, a smouldering oiled mop was found in .the locker. Rosemary Stefani, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Stefani of near Clinton, lived to be just one year old. She died on her first birthday anniversary. # Though it was not discovered for about six years, an insurance policy held by Andy Rapp, former Montpelier business man, who died in 1919, will pay his three heirs about S7OO. The policy was discovered when the district insurance agent was checking up on all policyholders. Indiana's first sheep train of feeders for farmers pulled into Tipton from Livingston, Mont., with 10,000 lambs on board. A party of Tipton men chaperoned the train, with the cargo valued at SBO,OOO. S|!X persons who attended their wedding fifty years i- ago were present when Mr. and Mrs. David Spaulding of near Mechanicshurg celebrated their golden wedding anniversary. Four couples who already had celebrated their golden anniversary also attended the celebration. Two hundred sweaters in five years is the knitting record of Mrs. Elmer J. Whiteley of Muncie, according to records of the Delaware County chapter of the Red Cross The sweaters were given to needy Muncie citizens. Silo workers and their families of near Alexandria celebrated the close of the silo season with a party at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Glen Thurston. Elmer Leonhard, Frank.’ort drug clerk, had a thorough ‘ breaking In” while learning to drive his new automobile. While hacking out of the garage he tore a door fiom the car and ripped the gears cn the machine. IRON COURSE PLANNEJD Purdue Extension Work to Bo Given at C. of G. A ten-weeks’ Purdue University extension course dealing with the effect of fabrication and heat treatment on iron and steel will open the evening of Oct. 2 at the Chamber of Commerce under auspices of the manufacturers division of the chamber ,lt was announced today by Eldon N. Trusler, division director. John F. Keller, engineering specialist in iron and steel, will conduct the course. Enrollment is drawn from all classes of factory workers, from works managers to apprentices. Enrollment now is open. Classes will meet each Friday night. BUSINESS MAN DIES Bv Ti dim Sncctnl SOUTH BEND, Ind., Sept. 24. Funeral services will be held here today for L. H. Rule, 67, vice president of th Merchants Fire Insurance Company of Indianapolis and a prominent business man here. He died suddenly Tuesday. Bmmmi •■PTJLQ6E IkESSfiH] JBIO WBTNjii |pps TlmeTsi iMTHHIESm fT|H[gslpnl _JH[EIIE|R|S|E| s C bipoßu ns| PATHIrIaIIoIpIeIn E;P lAlLlEßmlAiglS^ErplEl Answer to Yesterday's Crossword Puzzle;

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Today’s Cross-Word Puzzle

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HORIZONTAL 1. Playhouse. 7. Inmate. 13. Streets. 14. Metal in rock. 16. Apart. 17. Skill. ?. To attack. 21. A pin or plug. 22. Father. 28. To liberate. 24. Chore. 26. 3.1416. 27. Otherwise. 29. To loiter. 31. Contralto. 33, To attempt. 35. Beverage. 36. To piece out. 37. To originate. 40. Envoys. 43. Preposition, of place.

44. Mother. 45. Correlative of either. 46. Toward. 47. Wages. 50. Unity. 53. Prepared soup container. El. To knock. 56. Sailor. 57. Hodgepodge. 69. Noted. 61. Distinctive theories. 63. Measure of area. 64. Snare. 66. Schedule. 68. Neuter pronoun. 69. Child. 71. To burden. 73. Devoured. 74. A standard of perfection. 76. To soak flax. 77. More recent. 79. Middle point (pi.). 80. Everlasting. VERTICAL L Acrobatic apparatus. 2- Hourly. 3. To devour. 4. Paid publicity. 5. Emperor. 6. Resembling a rose. 7. Negative. 8. Makes lace. 9. You and me. 10. To tear. 11. Expert. 12. Military bodies. 15. Sun god. 19. Matching dishes. 20. To place or set down. 23. Common spore plant. 25. Parrot. 28. Mechanics as distinguished.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

OUT OUR WAY—By WILLIAMS

from dynamics. 30. Second note in scale. 32. Correspondence. 34. Residence of a mandarin. 36T Heron. 38. Door rug. 39. To sunburn. 41. Age. 42. Goddess of dawn. 47. Serving as a warning of dagger. 48. Went by. 49. Tailors. 50. To manage a machine. 51. Spike. 52. Girls having the same parents. 55. Part of verb to be. 58. To corrode. 59. Ventilating machine. 60. Period. 62. Minute objects. 65. Part in a drama. 67. To loan. 70. Two fives. 72. Musical note. # 73. Reverential fear. 75. Preposition. 78. Deity. BRAZIL TO CELEBRATE Local Delegation to Attend Centennial Oct. 1-2. Christopher B. Coleman, director of the Indiana State Historical Society, today paid he will go to Brazil Oct. 1-2. to attend the centennial of the county. Dr. George D. Finley of Brazil, is in the charge of arrangements.

—By BEN BATSFORD

jFeel Older Than Y° u Should? C TSa dull, persistent backache male- \ \ iIV \] / -A MWW Img you old and miserable? Are \ \\ Jf| you l ame ’ stiff an( * achy; tortured ) with rheumatic pains? Do -faery V YOU feel tlred > Weak WOrnOUt — Teu a star/ 1 suffer headaches, dizziness and disturbing bladder irregularities? Then you should know that all too often these are warnings of faulty kidneys. And even a slight kidney ailment is too serious to neglect. Don’t risk delay! If your kidneys are disordered, help them with a tested diuretic. Use Doan's Pills. No other remedy is so universally successful. None so well recommended. Ask your neighbor!

Read How These Indiana polis Folks Found Relief:

R. B. HAYSLETT, 725 Dorman St., Says: “My back ached so I was in misery. When I bent over, such sharp pains caught me I could hardly straighten. I felt dull and didn't have any energy. My kidneys were disordered. Doan's Pills, from Haag's Drug Store, rid me of the trouble and I haven't been bothered since.”

Every Druggist C! IJjTT T C? Foster-Milburn Cos. Has Doan's. rA I I I I j I Mfg. Chemists 60c a Box. Buffalo, N. Y . Stimulant Diuretic to the Kidneys

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FKECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS—By BLOSSER

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MRS. MARIA M’DAhiIEL, 1448 W. Market St., Says: “My back gave out and when I washed I suffered from bearing-down pains. Rheumatic pains went through my limbs and my feet and ankles swelled badly. My head ached and I was nervous, toe. My kidneys were disordered also. I used Doan's I’llls and they rid me of the trouble.”

OUR BOARDING HOUSE—By AHERN

THURSDAY, SEPT. 24,1026

JAMES W. TOLSON, Painter, 1416 W. Ray St., Says: "My back felt na though it had heen clubbed and the knife-llke twlngea were so severe, \.I could hardly bend. My kidneys were x dlsordered. I was so dizzy that everything seemed to be spinning around. 1 got Doan’s Pills at ('arneflx's Drug Store and used them. They cured me.”—Advertisement.