Indianapolis Times, Volume 37, Number 313, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 May 1926 — Page 3
WAV B, 1925
KILLS DAUGHTER, SON, ENDS LIFE ’rfple Tragedy In Fashionable Section. tv United Press CHICAGO, May 3.—Despondent jverpoor health, Mrs. Emily Carlton early today shot and killed her son, Alfred, 23, and daughter, Dorothy, 35, and then committed suicide at their home In a fashionable residential district. John Carlton, the husband, arose early and was working In the garden at the time. QUITS JUDGESHIP RACE E. C. Boswell I'rges Voters to Nominate Clydo I’. Miller. Edwin C. Boswell, candidate for the Republican nomination for juvenile court judge, today announced his withdrawal in favor of Clyde P. Miller. “I know Mr. Miller's high standing 'in his chosen profession which was clearly demonstrated when he obtained the highest number of votes cast for all candidates for this pffice by the Indianapolis Bar Association,” Boswell said. "I urge the friends who supported me to vote for Mr. Miller.”
JUGO-SLAVIA DEBT PACT Agreement for Funding 55,000,000 Beached. Du Time ft Special WASiIIXGjTON, May 3. An agreement for settling Jugo-Slavia's $5,000,00 war debt to the United States has been reached at a conference between the American debt funding commission and a commission of Jugo-Slav statesmen here. HAD STOMACH ATTACKS THAT LASTED HOURS Indianapolis Citizen Given Relief by the Konjola; Able to Go Back to Work, He Says. .j. Reports continue to pour in from nil parts of Indianapolis regarding the amazing accomplishments of this celebrated medical compound, Konjola, In instances of stomach, liver, kidney and bowel disorders, and rheumatic and neuritis troubles. ft /| f, f Jar ■L:
mi:. elmek e. uai'ble Just a few days ago Mr. Elmer E. (laublo, well known Indianapolis citizen, living at 1240 English Ave., this city, made the following remarkable statement while talking with The Konjola Man, who is at Hook's drug store, corner Pennsylvania atul Market Sts., Indianapolis, where crowds call daily to hear his personal explanation of Kon- | jola medicine. "I had been suffering for a long i time with my stomach,” said Mr. ! Gauble. “Nine weeks ago I had to ! ciuit work, as my condition had ' gotten very .bad. T couldn’t keep j any kind of food on my stomach, as | m.v food would sour and ferment—then raise up into my throat. Following this, I would have an awful burning and raw feeling in my mouth arid throat, and these terrible attacks from my stomach would last for hours, so that I would become terribly weak and cold sweat would stand out all over "me. I certainly suffered about as bad as anyone ever did with their stomach, and even at nights I was subject to the same misery. In fact, I very seldom slept over two or three hours a night. I had also been troubled with constipation and was told that this had my whole system poisoned and affected, so it is no wonder my general health went clown, and as I said, I finally gave up work. ‘‘l heard about Konjola, and how oilier sufferers in Indianapolis were getting benefit from this new medicine, so I tried it, and the very first bottle showed mo that it was just what I had been needing. IConJola seemed to cleanse my system at once, and it removed the congestion and ixiisons so that l felt better within a few days. Now, mv digestion is good and I am again able to go back to work. It is wondei ful how the food which I now eat is building me up. l do not have those awful attacks with my stomach, and I am able to retain what I eat. My appetite is like that of a hungry child, and since I can digest everything I eat. that heavy, bloated feeling is gone, the cold sweats have disappeared and T sleep good at nights instead of suffering as I did before. The pains in nij stomach, and burning feeling in my tjiroat, all are gone now, and so, after the blessed relief I have gotten from the use of Konjola, I’m glad to indorse such a fine medicine to the public, for it has put me on my feet after hundreds of dollars worth of other medicines and treatments failed to help me.” The Konjola Man Is at Hook’s b ug store, corner Pennsylvania and Market St., Indianapolis, where he is daily meeting the public and introducing and explaining the merits of this remedy. Free samples given. Konjola is also for sale at every Book drug store in Indianapolis and by druggists in each nearby town. — Advertisement.
BENITO’S FORMULA FOR SUCCESS GIVEN ‘One May Go From Hutto Palace If One is Always Ready to Go Back From Palace to Hut.’
EDITOR’S NOTE: Tills ts the last of three articles by Milton Bronner, European correspondent for NEA Service, on the human side of Mussolini. Isy Milton Bronner NEA Service Writer Copyright, tOZS, NEA Service ROME, May 3.—“One may gc from hut to palace, provided one Is always ready to go back from palace to hut." This is one of Mussolini’s favorite sayings, repeated to me by a close friend of the dictator. It expresses, perhaps as well as anything could, the formula for success which the iron man of Italy has evolved while on the path to power. It is a philosophy natural to the man. He has lived In a hut — he has. In fact, lived in the very streets and begged his food. He has known the bitterest depths of poverty. He has been hungry without money to buy food, tired and sleepy without money to hire a bed. He has been lodged in jails, hounded by the police, driven from country to country like a criminal,, And lie knows, too, that some day something may happen to cause him to leave the seat of the mighty and return again to poverty. Doesn't Care Who Knows Mussolini is not at all reluctant that people know of the depths from which he has arisen. Some time ago, a friend of' his tells me. Mussolini was in Lausanne, Switzerland.. lie
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| /PRICE X. SALE jjj? Jr* Women’s New 4% SUITS j r , Poiret Twills, Tweeds and Novelties Mm $Q7.50 SUITS O § Wl t!!m $9 coo W&fjp 1 SUITS Ld U ffrfl Soo $10.50 it 3S SUITS Ready-to-Wear—Second Floor Women’s Brassieres Sizes 32 to 44 Attractively brocaded brassieres in pink •W H only. ' They are well W made and are rare If values at es® Women’s Boys’ Ribbed Gauze Vests Union Suits (food quality, serv- Finely ribbed units iceable gauze vests, with short sleeves, some have .. vmt Sizes n/\ bodice I Lm ’-’6 to tops XIIL IB Main Floor
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directed his auto Into a certain mean, dingy street so- that he could get a look at a very unprepossessing little two-story brick house. One of his secretaries asked him what he found interesting in “such an ordinary house." “It wasn’t very ordinary to me once,” said Mussolini. “Poor and down and out, I found a bed In the corner of it while it was in the course of erection.” Sleeping in the corner of an unfinished building was only one of the marks of poverty Mussolini went through. At one time, out of work, he had to beg his bread in the streets and sleep in a ditch. At another he got a job as porter in a wineshop in order to keep body and soul together. At another he worked as a day laborer in default of anything better. Again, he worked as a mason’s assistant, lugging a hodful of mortar around and living chieflly on bread and spaghetti. Always Ix>vod Books The son of a blacksmith, who was also something of a revolutionary socialist. Mussolini had from his youth one advantage that even poverty could not deny him. That was his love for books. No discussion of his philosophy and his life can be complete without mention of the things he has read. For no statesman or bur time has
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been quite as much Influenced by his reading. His father, largely' self-taught, managed to keep his son in contact with good books despite the pinch of poverty. * And his mother, a village school mistress, was careful to Introduce him to the great literature of the world as soon as he was old enough to assimilate It. Indeed, the first time he was ever away from home was when, as a boy, she took him to Ravenna, where ho visited the tomb of Italy’s greatest poet, Dante. Translating for a Pittance When Mussolini worked as a day laborer he continued to study. He nearly starved to death, a little later on, when he went to Switzerland and studied at the Universities of Lausanne and Geneva —but, hungry and ragged, he imbibed the best that the libraries of those great institutions had to give. Asa young man his favorite books were the famous Italian poet Carducci and the great German Heine. At one stage of his career he translated the Latter poet into Italian for a publishing house at Milan —getting about as much for this monumental job as an American bricklayer gets for three days work. A little later, he turned to the poetry, history and drama of ancient Rome. And that Is something worth remembering. It was only a few weeks ago that he stirred Italy and worried the rest of Europe by his speech about Italy's destiny as the successor of imperial Rome. His passionate absorption In the deeds of the Caesars is bearing fruit. But the works that influenced him most of all were the writings of threo men he studied after reaching [ mature > f ears. They' are the works [of Macchiavelli, the medieval Italian;
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Georges Sorel. the Frenchman, and Friederich Nietzche, the German. From Macchiavelli he learned the art of politics and government. Mussolini, to be sure, reverses the famous Macchiavelllan theory of fooling your opponents by saying the opposite of what you mean; Mussolini generally says just exactly what he means, bluntly and without fear. But he learned from the old fox. nevertheless. Sorel, the father of modern syndicalism*- was one of Mussolini’s idols in the pre-war days, when he was an ardent Socialist. Sorel taught the desirability’ of using force to bring about a revolution, and Mussolini preached this doctrine so earnestly' that he landed in a number of jails, both at home and abroad. But when he turned from socialism to conservatism he still remembered Sorel’s words about force. ; This explains the manner in which I he rode down all opposition roughI shod and stamped out dissent with an iron heel. Incidentally. Mussolini has fulfilled a prediction Sorel made of him years ago—that some day Mussolini would be found fighting against the Socialists, not tor them. Believes in Destiny | Nietzsche, with his creed of the j superman and the will to power, j was a philosopher after, Mussolini’s | heart. It was from him, perhaps, as I much as from any other one source 1 that Mussolini drew his belief in his I Callouses |1 Quick, safe, sure relief from BI painful callouses on the feet. F Bh At all drug and i her starts HH DZ Scholl's —_ , j Put cm* on—the Ztino-jpaas E° inu *° ne
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star, his conviction that he and his cause were destined to triumph. At the present time Mussolini reads mostly for utility’, studying “fact books” and histories to aid him in the task of governing Italy and getting along with other nations. A friend of his told me that he once asked Mussolini if he ever, read romances. Mussolini replied that ho had no time for mem, life itself being romance enough for any man, and adding proudly; “I shall make my own life my romance and my masterpiece." PHONE HEARING SET Indiana Bell Seeks to Acquire Five Small Companies. Petition of the Indiana Bell Telephone Company to acquire five smaller companies in which it is interested will be heard Thursday by Public Service Commissioner Clyde H. Jones. The Bell is seeking complete ownership of the Citizens’ Telephone
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iiiiMMriiiiii i nAwmmnrfiw’M "im, political advertisement Clip This Good Citizens Ticket Take it with you to the polls and vote for these well-known and recommended CANDIDATES FOR NOMINATION PRIMARY ELECTION, MAY 4, 1926 The names proposed below, among the several candidates to be nominated at the May primary election for the various oiflees, have been carefully selected by public-spirited citizens who are interested only in the welfare and good government of Indianapolis, the State of Indiana and the Nation. While there are many candidates for the several offices, it is believed that those here recommended are especially worthy of consideration.
If You Are a REPUBLICAN Vote This Ticket -U. S. SENATOR (Long Term) James E. Watson U. S. SENATOR (Short Term) , Arthur R. Robinson CONGRESSMAN—Seventh (Vote for One) Merrill Moores James M. Ogden Ralph E. Updike STATE SENATOR—(Vote for One) Sumner Clancy Thomas A. Daily STATE REPRESENTATIVE (Vote for Eleven) Frank Borns Russell V. Duncan Lloyd D. Claycombe Robt. E. Eby John W. Ebaugh William Henry HarJoseph W. Haley rison Sylvester A. Morgan Samuel K. Ruick Wm. Bosson, Jr. Frank E. Wright JOINT STATE REPRESENTATIVE Thos. C. Whallon JUDGE MARION CIRCUIT COURT Harry O. Chamberlain PROSECUTING ATTORNEY William H. Remy JUDGE SUPERIOR COURT, ROOM 1 James M. Leathers JUDGE SUPERIOR COURT, ROOM 2 Linn D. Hay JUDGE SUPERIOR COURT, ROOM 3 Maurice E. Tennant JUDGE SUPERIOR COURT, ROOM 4 Clinton H. Givan JUDGE SUPERIOR COURT, ROOM 5 Joseph M. Milner JUDGE PROBATE COURT Mahlon E. Bash JUDGE CRIMINAL COURT James A. Collirs JUDGE JUVENILE COURT Frank J. Lahr CLERK CIRCUIT COURT George O. Hutsel COUNTY AUDITOR Harry Dunn COUNTY TREASURER Clyde E. Robinson COUNTY RECORDER Frank R. Childers COUNTY SHERIFF Omar Hawkins COUNTY CORONER Paul F. Robinson COUNTY SURVEYOR W. W. Southard COUNTY ASSESSOR James C. Douglas COUNTY COMMISSIONER (2nd District) George Snider COUNTY COMMISSIONER (3rd District) Chas. O. Sutton COUNTY COUNCILMAN-AT-LARGE (Vote for Three) Frank Cones George N. Montgomery Sollis Runnels COUNTY COUNCILMAN (Ist District) John E. Shearer COUNTY COUNCILMAN (2nd District) James F. Edwards COUNTY COUNCILMAN (3rd District) Oramel H. Skinner COUNTY COUNCILMAN (4th District) Paul S. Dunn TRUSTEE, CENTER TOWNSHIP Robert N. Harding ADVISORY BOARD, CENTER TOWNSHIP (Vote for Three) William C. Kassebaum Rollin W, Spiegel Boyd W. Templeton ASSESSOR, CENTER TOWNSHIP Michael L. Jefferson
Vote Early and Urge Your Friends to Do Likewise Every patriotic citizen should exercise careful choice In thef nomination of capable men for public office—men of known integrity and ability for whom you will be glad - to vote next November, and who stand four square on the Constitution In defense of true American traditions, ideals and principles in our governmental affairs and In our business and public life. GOOD CITIZENS COMMITTEE OF INDIANAPOLIS
Company of Clumbus, the Parke County Telephone Company, the Greene County Telephone Company, the Indiana Telephone and Telegraph Company of Clinton and the Consolidated Telephone Company of Danville. MEANDEFIED LAND~SOLD Tracts in St. Joseph and La Porte Counties Are Bid In. Approximately 800 acres of meandered land in St. Joseph and La porte Counties has been bid in at Its appraised price of from $6 to $lO an acre. Offers were opened by State Land Clerk Ed Spray. The land. In twelve sections along the old Kankakee River bed, must be surveyed before the exact acreage is known. Charles F. Holmes and George W. Brown. abutting land owners, bought the twelve tracts. Spray said the State should realize about $6,000 on the sale.
If You Are a DEMOCRAT 1 Vote This Ticket U. S. SENATOR (Long Term) John E. Frederick U. S. SENATOR (Short Term) Evans Woollen CONGRESSMAN (7th District) , William D. Headrick STATE SENATOR William Clay Bachelder STATE REPRESENTATIVE (Vote for Eleven) George N. Burkhart Fred Shumaker Edward W. Hohlt Henry H. Winkler John R. Williams Marshall Williams Silvey P. Leach Howard Albert RobMarion Swartz ertson Edna M. Christian Bertram Riffle JOINT STATE REPRESENTATIVE Floyd E. Williamson JUDGE MARION CIRCUIT COURT Joseph R. Williams PROSECUTING ATTORNEY Raymond F. Murray JUDGE SUPERIOR COURT, Room 1 Frank T. Brow^n JUDGE SUPERIOR COURT, Room 2 Stephen A. Clinehens JUDGE SUPERIOR COURT, ROOM 3 Woodburn Masson JUDGE SUPERIOR COURT, ROOM 4 Carl E. Wood JUDGE SUPERIOR COURT, ROOM 5 Thomas D. McGeeJUDGE PROBATE COURT * ; Hardess Nathan Swaim JUDGE CRIMINAL COURT James D. Ermston JUDGE JUVENILE COURT Jacob L. Steinmetz CLERK CIRCUIT COURT Richard M. Coleman or Albert H. Loesche COUNTY AUDITOR Lawrence Willhoff COUNTY TREASURER Mark V. Rinehart COUNTY RECORDER Edward P. Barry COUNTY SHERIFF Fred G. Hess COUNTY CORONER Robert Dwyer COUNTY SURVEYOR Henry B. Steeg COUNTY ASSESSOR Edward D. Boren, Jr. COUNTY COMMISSIONER (2nd District) Fred W. Vehling COUNTY COMMISSIONER (3rd District) George D. Hardin COUNTY COUNCILMAN-AT-LARGE (Vote for Three) Fred A. Beck Frank S. Flshback A. Leroy Portteus COUNTY COUNCILMAN (Ist District) John E. Webb COUNTY COUNCILMAN (2nd District) Edwin Bookstahler COUNTY COUNCILMAN (3rd District) Edward W. Pierson COUNTY COUNCILMAN (4th District) Fred A. Jones TRUSTEE CENTER TOWNSHIP Albert F. Walsman ADVISORY BOARD, CENTER TOWNSHIP (Vote for Three) Fred R. Hukriedo f Dick Miller Persifor F. Tall ASSESSOR, CENTER TOWNSHIP John C. McCloskey
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HEADLIGHTS FAIL, TWO LOSE LIVES Woman Drowns in Ditch — Another Fatally Hurt. Du United Press . „ _ FT. WAYNE, Ind., May 3.—Two women lost their lives in an auto accident on the Bluffton Rd. south of hero Sunday night. Headlights on an auto driven by Charles Cohagen of Bluffton burned out suddenly and the auto went Into a ditch filled with water. Cohagen’s wife, 56 years old, died on the way to a hospital, and Mrs. Amanda Augenbrlght, 56, drowned. Cohagen was slightly injured, hut his two children escaped unhurt.
