Indianapolis Times, Volume 38, Number 62, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 July 1926 — Page 2
PAGE 2
BRITONS RALLY TOILS. DEFENSE, TOURISTS FIND Not Right to Foist Franc Crisis on America, Says Earl of Denbigh. Kdttor’g Note: Ed. 1.. Keen, vice president and general European manager o( the Un'ted Press, who is writing tor American readers of the situation in Europe, today flints the British spirit of fair play coming: to tho assistance of . tlie Unied States which a certain section of the London Press has villifled as a shylock. By Ed L. Keen, General European Manager United Press v Associations Cobvriyht, 1956, by United Pre as LONDON, July 23.—My friend Logan Frasier, a manufacturer of TMqua, Ohio, who is vacatioriing in Europe with his family, has just returned to London after a fortnight's motor trip of 1,500 miles through England, Wales and Scotland, during which he conversed with him dreds of Britishers of all classes. ‘‘There was not the slightest indication of hostility to Americans,” Frasier told me. "We met nothing but the finest courtesy and kindness everywhere. If any of them were sore at America they were too polite to mention it.” Believed Typical Frasier's experience is cited because I have every reason to believe it to be typical ot' what is being experienced by 'thousands of other Americans who now are engaged in tours of Great Britain similar to his. As an Indication that tho British spirit of fair ,play is being resur, rected, subscribers have begun writ-' ing to the newspapers protesting against the anti-American campaign of a certain section of the press. For instance, the Times today prominently displays a letter from the Earl of Denbigh in which the Earl says: "May I express the concern which
SUFFERED WORST FORM OF STOMACH MISERY, SHE SAYS Bedridden Weeks at a Time; “Konjola Quickly Relieved Me,” Says Local Lady.* "There is no doubt in my mind about the power of this new lvonJola, for I believe I suffered the worst forms of stomach misery, but I began taking this medicine after everything else failed and now my digestion is perfect and my whole
MRS. MARY H. RUSSELL. system is benefited,” said Mrs. .Mary HS* Russell, popular Indianapolis lady, living at 1024 East Washington Street, this city, tohile talking ,a few days ago with The Konjola Man, who is meeting large crowds daily at the Hook drug store, Pennsylvania and Market Streets, Indianapolis. "Yes, I had stomach trouble 10 years, and I would be laid up in bed for weeks at a time,” continued Mrs. Russell. "I would have vomiting spells that lasted 3 and 4 days. Nothing I ate would digest or stay in my system. Such quantities of gas would form in my stomach that I felt like I would burst. I wotfld have terrible attacks of cramps, and just double over in pain, and I would have burning spells from my throat down to the pit of my stomach. Awful pains would center in my chest and back, and my heart would pump so hard I became frightened. Worst of all, I couldn't eat a thing that would stay on my stomach and digest right. I lost’- weight and my health kept going down faster every day. "Now, T have tried about everything possible for my suffering, and when T started Konjola I admit that T didn’t expect it to help me any more than the other* and treatments. Well, no person could be more surprised than I was the Recond day. I felt better than T had for a long time, but of course T was still afraid to eat. I kept taking Konjola and a few days later my appetite became almost ravenous.' I ate a much larger meal than I ever did in several months, and it digested fine. That gave me confidence, and I improved more and more each da y, Now I can eat fried food, beans or just anything that I couldn't think of eating before, and my food is giving me plenty of nourishment, so that I have gained a great deal of weight. I never have the vomiting spells, or cramps, and my digestion seems to he as perfect as anyone could hope for. I have gotten relief from the gas and burning feeling in my throat and chest, and %>y heart doesn’t feel like it is running away as *t d'd before. “Conjola quickly relieved me of all the stomach suffering, and improved my health in every other way at the same time, so I cheerfully indorse this medicine.” The Konjola Man is at Hook’s drug store, Pennsylvania and Market Streets, Indianapolis, where he is daily meeting the local public and introducing and explaining the merits of this' remedy. Free samples given. Konjola is sold in every Hook drug store in Tridlanapolis and by all druggists In tJhe other towns of this vicinity.—jfelvArUsenMnt.
Bet Other Hens Were Jealous
'? w ’"*4: v* w* ink mil
“Giant” Egg and One of Usual Size.
There are several omelettes in a "giant” egg, laid recently by a hen belonging to Ralph Sloan, R. R. 9, Lebanon, Ind. The huge "hen fruit”--- weighed six ounces, its was said at the Blubaugh &
l know to be widely felt as to the probable effects of the anti-American campaign. As regards the delay in coming into the war, a point so consistently resurrected, to my mind It is rather wonderful that the Middle West of the United States which is so absolutely ‘insular’ and parochial in its ideas and mentality and which is ■ peopled largely by a stock essentially non-British and completely divorced from all association with European politics should ever have come Into the war at all.
f 1 1 ii| Weeks in which to WT AJL A (Ride Rough Roads iTjl rp ■■■ ri $1 or $2 DOWN B 1 14 Weeks \ Are all heavy duty, oversize, long mileage , V k 1 KS tires. The Mlchelin Tire la known the LO Jn \ l country over for Its splendid riding quail- v \' K lies, Its nonskid tread and Its low price. pny T \ 'tv L The Falls Rubber Cos. has specialized for. wll* a J • \ 5J years on Bus and Truck Tires. Their pas- V W ' R senger car tires are built Just the same way. niWll in The Falls Balloon averages from Bto 13 Csll2klat#<*A \ K f# per cent larger than equipment tires built \ A yW kj to sell at a price. The 32x4 Falls measures We absolutely guarantee 1? 33x4% yet rated as 32x4 and sells at that - s r „__ a ‘ . a £ price. You can not go wrong on either of tree lire repairs tor six Vfc these splendid tires- Buy them now WHILE on all blow-outs, cuts KJ PRICES ARE 9TILL DOWN. or stone bruises. " STORE OPEN EVERY NIGHT UNTIL 9 O’CLOCK | pbblicSmce^ e new your Mdindfii Between N. Pennsul wa it ia £ Ddaware St^Moixidlil
Warren general store, at Mechanicsburg, where it was sold. The hen which laid the huge egg is of normal size and the eggs she usually lays are no larger than ordinary ones, Sloan said.
"All this fastening on America of the serious crisis in France is already causing most unwarranted and shortsighted hostility toward large numbers of tourists who benefit France enormously by spending foreign currency for which the French are clamoring when one hears on every hand of the way applause is meted out to the average Frenchman, v.’ho successfully evades the tax collector, it seems to me hardly right to toist the whole of the franc crisl onto the United States.”
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
LIQUOR LAW FEE SYSTEMASSAILa Remy Rapped for Method of Handling Fund. tli© lucrative system through which three deputy attorneys general received $21,544 for prosecuting liquor law violations during the first six months of this year was assailed by Raymond F, Murray, Democratic nominee for prosecutor, at a Twelfth ward Democratic organization meeting at 352 S. Illinois St. Murray urged placing the officials on a salary basis in order to restrict the profits of prohibition to reasonable sum. “William H. Remy, as Marion County prosecutor, is employed on a salary fixed by statute and can not legally benefit one cent by these fees collected by the deputy attorneys general," Murray said. "What I shall expect Mr. Remy to is why this $21,544 was paid by the Marlon County clerk to Attorney In Fact Jack .Hayes, who lumped the fund, Instead nf the same being paid direct to the legally appointed deputy attorneys general.” The crude oil production in the United States for the week ending June 5, 1926. was 2,009,450 barrels.
HEAT WAVE HARD UPON MOSQUITOS Breeding Places of Insects Dried Up, Says Entomologist. Dry weather may not have its charms, but lt_ certainly serves an admirable purpose in reducing the number of mosquitos, according to State Entomologist i*rank N. Wallace. During' the recent wet spell, a veritable plague of the insects’ swarmed Indiana, choosing the lake districts as their favorite feeding ground. The resultant howl from vacationists could be heard from one end of the Stat<& to the other. No one seemed to know just where they originated. During rainy spells, mosquitos multiply by the millions. According to Wallace, they choose.rain bar--rels and eave troughs for their 1 birthplaces. If the eaves become clogged, the mosquitos flourish. The recent dry spell has served to eliminate their favorite breeding place, Wallace declares. "If the eaves were to become clogged for a period of twenty days, you’d have a plague of mosquitos that would make Job scratch In his grave,” Wallace declared.
BITES HAND THAT FED HIM BROOKLYN, N. Y.—Nathan Glatt has admitted that he bit the hand which fed him by stealing jewelry from Mrs. Marji Bernath, to whose j
End-of-the-Season Clearance! All Refrigerators Entire stock of the CELEBRATED GIBSON refrigerators. Both porcelain and porceloid (a heavy white enamel) interiors. • ; (Ice capacity given in the actual capacity. . . the actual weight of ice that can be used) $16.50 TOP ICER REFRIGERATOR, 30-pound Ice capacity $8.25 $24.75 TOP ICER REFRIGERATOR, 65-pound ice capacity $12.38 29.85 SIDE ICER REFRIGERATOR, 65-pound Ice capacity $14.93 $38.50 SIDE ICER REFRIGERATOR, capacity $19.25 1544.00 SIDE ICER REFRIGERATOR, 50-pound ice capacity, porcelain interior $22.00 $46.00 SIDE ICER REFRIGERATOR, 100-pound ice capacity $23.00 $52.50 SIDE ICER REFRIGERATOR, 125-pound ice capacity % $26.25 $69.50 SIDE ICER REFRIGERATOR, 125-pound Ice capacity, porcelain Interior $34.75 $133.50 ALL-PORCELAIN REFRIGERATOR, outside and interior, 75-lb. Ice capacity... $66.75 $147.50 ALL-PORCELAIN REFRIGERATOR, outside and interior, 100-lb. ice capacity*. .$73.75 “ The Old Center L _ *3T ® J % Furniture power-rosters re Row” R .. _ , ... New 37 to 41 South Meridian Street
VfkA PRICES SPATTERED TO ROCK BOT - ,< 11 ST'ZBr TOM TOMORROW DURING OUR | Clean Sweep of Dresses! I J|l YourCrwlk’a I i . , ",, ■ jpwk — y ° nr cr ® dits Off Former LIDCFty 0101*6 g I All Ladies’ Coats, Hats Shattered in Price! OB Special!—Most of Our Finest L. & N. tomorrow —save on this 22=fflLL|J a IS! THESE BARGAINS AT 30 N. PENN. OPPOSITE PALACE THEATRE^*^ 6 ®^ l _ EVENING UNTIL NINE - ,-*■*&> J
home he was brought by a young woman with whom he flirted. His attorney told tbe court that Glatt had aroused sympathy because he was penniless, hungry and out of^
JULY 23, xyzo
a job, and had been brought to tho Bernath home to live. Chiba was the first nation to use wall paper, 2,000 years ago, _____
