Indianapolis Times, Volume 37, Number 153, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 October 1925 — Page 5

TUESDAY, OCT. 27, iy2s

CORRESPONDENT RETURNS FOR FIXIT ‘SECONDS’ •his Time He Asks Improvement of Two Muddy Crossings.

Do You Know? Almost every section of Indianapolis is organized into a community association?

Let Mr. Fix it help solve you' troubles with , city officials. He is The Times representative at the city hall. Write him at The Times. One of Mr. Fixit’s correspondents came back for “seconds”, as they used to say in the Army, in a communication today. Mr. Fixit saw that the pavements on West Michigan St. were repaired and now it’s a question of the corner of Wilcox St. and Tibbs Ave. DEAR MR. FIXIT: At the corner of Wilocx St. and Tibbs Ave. during wet weather it is almost impossible to cross Wilcox St. without wading through two or three inches of mud. This condition also prevails at the intersection of Tibbs Ave. and W. Michigan St. In behalf of residents of this section of the city, it would be greatly appreciated if this condition is remedied. We greatly appreciate the attenion given by you RP our appeal to have the W. Michigan St. pavement repaired. E. C. M. W. P. Hargon, clerk of the street commissioner’s office, promised an early investigation. Inspectors also will be sent to the following complaints: DEAR MR. FIXIT: Would appreciate anything you can do to have the chuckholes in Concord and Twelfth St. fixed. Try riding south on Concord from Sixteenth to Twelfth St., then west on Twelfth St. to Tibbs Ave. If you don’t get stuck, you have a better puddle jumper than mine. WORKMAN IN THAT LOCALITY. DEAR MR. FIXIT: I wonder if you could get the second alley south of 3700 E. Washington St. between Sherman Dr. and Bradley Ave. filled with cinders. It is full of chuckholes and is almsot impassable. GEORGE HOHN, 118 S. Bradley Ave.

DEAR MR. FIXIT: What do I do if I want to build a house, about permits etc.? CITIZEN. First apply for a permit at the office of the city building inspector on the second floor of the city hall. DEAR MR. FIXIT: Tou have helped so many otners. Can you tell me why motorists pay no attention to the stop and go signals. I almost got run into the other night ■hen I had the go at Senate Ave. Wnd W. Washington St. TAXPAYER. That's a newly installed signal. Possibly the absent minded car driver was unaware the signal had been Installed. DEAR MR. FIXIT: What has become of the city manager plan for government? We don't hear any more about it. Have they let it die? SOUTH SIDER. The committe eis charge of that campaign has announced plans are afoot to push the measure in due time. VETERAN PASTOR DIES Jlu Vvlted Pres* NEW ALBANY, Ind., Oct. 27. The body of Rev. E. R. Vest, 73, veteran Methodist minister, was taken to Seymou* today for burial. Rev. Best occupied a pulpit in the Indiana conference for forty years. HELPED HIS ROY Henry Duncan, Alpine, Alabama, writes: “My boy had a bad cough and cold. T read about FOLEY’S HONEY & TAR and after giving it to him a few days he was well. He had been having this cough for two years, but FOLEY’S HONEY & TAR stopped it and made him well.” Contains no opiates. Good for children and they like it. Get a bottle today from your druggist and it will be on hand to check coughs and colds. m —Advertisement. TIGHT FEELING ANDJEADACHE Friend Told Louisiana Lady Black-Draught Would Stop Her Ikouble, Which * She Says It Did. "Thedford’s Black-Drauglit has had a very prominent place on oar medicine shelf,” says Mrs. W O. Howell. Tuscola, La. “For constipation and indigestion, I don’t think any better remedy can bo found. “When I used to eat anything that gave mo indigestion and a tight feeling in my chest and I couldn’t get my breath good, this would usually be when I was constipated. My head would ache and I would not feel like doing my work. “Some friend told me of BlackDraught, that if I would take it, it would stop all this. I sent for a package and sure enough it relieved this trouble and it has been my friend and help for 9 years. It certainly is splendid and X am glad to recommend it to f Thedford’s Black-Draught is a purely vegetable medicine, made from carefully selected, medical roots and herbs. It contains no harmful, habit-forming mineral drugs. The full medicinal virtues of the vegetable ingredients are retained in Black-Draught, and its prompt, natural action affords quick relief for disorders due to a sluggish, lazy liver. A million packages sold a month. Ob--xainnble everywhere Trice, 20c.

j^UVERMEOICINE

I. U. MOTION OVERRULED Judge Dea'es Plea for New Trial in Stadium Case. Federal Judgo Robert O. Baltzell Monday overruled the motion of Indiana. University trustees for anew trial :n their $55,000 damage suit against the Detroit Fidelity and Surety Company. The trustees alleged that the Bedford Steel and Construction Company, builders of the Indiana University stadium, did not erect the structure according to specifications, causing it to deteriorate. The surety company was named defendant because it held the construction company’s bond. In the trial last May the jury verdict was for the surety company. NEW ALUMNI SECRETARY George Heighway Succeeds VonTress i I. V- Job 71 u Times Special ■ BLOOMINGTON, Ind., Oct. 26 New secretary of the Indiana University Alumni Association is George Heighway of Indianapolis. Selection was made by trustees here Monday. Heighway succeeds Edward VonTress, who resigned.

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IRISH AUTHOR FOUND DEAD Statesman Was Dancer’s Husband, She Said. Iltl Vnitrd Press LONDON. Oct. 27.—Darell Figgis, Irish author and a leading member of the Free State parliament, was found dead today in his room in Bloomsbury, a residential section of London. The Evening Star says the room was filled with gas from an open jet. Figgis’ death follows that by eight, days of Riga Norris, a young dancing teacher, who declared before she died in a maternity ward of a hospital, that the Irish statesman

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

was her husband. It also recalled the suicide of his wife who shot herself in a taxicab in the Dublin mountains less than a year ago. DR. H. J. WATERS DIES ! Noted Agriculturist Succumbs to Pneumonia. Ilu Vnited Press KANSAS CITY, Mo., Oct. 27.—Dr. Henry J. Waters, 60, former head of the Kansas State Agricultural Hospital. died of pneumonia here last night. Dr. Waters was recognized as one of the most expert agriculturists in the country. Funeral services probably will be held In Columbia, Mo., Thursday. WANDERS FROM HOME Relatives today were looking for Adam Stuppy, 76, of 756 N. Tremont St., who wandered away from home on Oct. 18. He was wearing a sweater and a woman’s knitted cap.

Pcieaning^ [I Worries |

TRY A WANT AD IN THE TIMES. THEY WILL BRING RESULTS.

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