Indianapolis Times, Volume 38, Number 108, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 August 1926 — Page 3
AUG. 11, 1926
SAHM MENTIONED [OK SENATORS! Urged as Successor to English by Democrats. Albert Sahm, former postmaster and county auditor, and now a di rector of the State Life Insurance Company, today loomed as a probable Democratic nominee for jdlnt State to succeed the late William E. English. Candidates on the Democratic ticket Tuesday decided to urge Sahtn to allow his name to be presented at a convention of precinct committeemen of Marion and Johnson Counties which will be assembled soon by County Chairman Leroy J. Keach. Cithers mentioned for the nomination are: Mark Gray, Moose lodge secreary, and Albert E. Schmollinger, unsuccessful candidate for the nomination for Probate Court judge in the -last primary. TO PURIFY FALL CREEK City Officials Talk Over SanH&ry Survey at Meeting. , Fall Creek was added to Pleasant Run as a subject for sanitary survey at a meeting of city officials and others interested in purification of local streams held in Mayor Duvall's office Tuesday. John E. Milnor, park board president, who heads the special sanitary survey committee, was directed to survey Fall Creek to the Hamilton County line. Thorough cleansing and changing the water in Garfield Park lagoon was a program decided upon to relieve an insanitary condition which has caused many illnesses on the south side of the city. The park board’s committee discovered that thirty-three sewers empty into Pleasant Run from Meridian St. to the Pleasant Run golf course. . / Rubber is obtained in French Guinea, Africa, from vines which grow wild without the colony. Only human beings and certain kinds of apes have flat nails on their fingers and toes.
COULDN’T RAISE LEFT ARM ABOVE HER SHOULDER Local Lady Suffered Misery From Neuritis, but She Says the New Konjola Relieved Her. In the more severe cases of neuritis the pains are piercing—just like hot daggers cutting into the nerves. Many authorities have stated that the agony of neuritis is likened unto an electrical shock; the shooting pains may grab the sufferer at fre-
MRS. W. H. BUTTS
quent intervals. Some call this affliction neuralgia, others say it is like rheumatism, but, in Either it is a terrible affliction ana one of the most agonizing diseases that mankind is heir to. It is surprising what this new medical preparation, Konjola, will accomplish in so many instances of neuritis suffering. By invigorating the inner-organs to healthy action, and stimulating the liver and kidneys, the poisons throughout the system are eliminated; the nerves become stronger, and within a brief space of time this Konjola brings amazing relief to the neuritis sufferer. Where drugs and heartweakening chemicals only produce temporary relief, this Konjola seems to go to the very seat of the trouble, and restores a healthy, normal condition in a natural way, so that the pains do not return. Many Indianapolis people have taken Konjola for the suffering pains of neuritis, and instances of complete recovery are reported day after dajt. Just recently, Mrs. W. H. Butts, well known Indianapolis lady, living at 1401 Naomi Street, this city, made the following remarkable statement; “I had neuritis over a year,” said Mrs. Butts. “It centered in my shoulders and arms, and my left arm was so badly affected that I coqldn't raise it above my shoulders. Mj, arms b?*ame numb and feeble, and my hands would swell up so I couldn’t close my fist. Pains would start in the fleshy part of my arm, then go to my and shoulder blade, and then into the muscles of my breast. Both night and day I was almost a constant sufferer; and, worst of all, I kept trying ev-> erything to get relief. But, I tell you, I 'never knew what relief was until I got Konjola. This medicine seemed to relieve me like magic, and the most wonderful thing about your remedy is that the relief It gives is lasting. All the soreness, swelling and awful pains are 'conquered now, and my shoulders feel free once more. I give Konjola credit for the great relief I have enjoyed and gladly pay my highest praise to this medicine. The Mag is at Hook’s drug store, Pennsylvania and Market Streets, IndfSnapolis, where he is daily meeting the public and introducing and explaining the merits of this remedy. Konjola Is also for sale by evlry Hook drug store in this city, and by all druggists in outside towns.— Advertisement.
To Keep Highways Safe •
I
Machine guns are to be used by highway police of Cook County, Illinois, to keep rural roads safe. This picture shows Sergt. George Ulrich and Chief L. R, Davidson examining the new weapons.
SOCIAL SEASON OPENS More Than Score of Distinguished Guests to Visit Coolidge. Bu United Press PAUL SMITH'S. N. Y.. Aug. 11.— With arrival of General Lord, director of the budget, the executive summer entertainment season has begun at White Pine camp. More than a score of distinguished guests will visit the President and Mrs. Coolidge for social or political rea-
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© Hoover Art Studio • \ Adel a Rogers St. Johns has looked deep into the heart of a modem young Woman—a Girl who demands freedom —and has seen what has not been seen by any other living writer. She tells it dramatically in her new novel
Interesting—and True T ESS than one-eighth ofihe income tax / j payers of the United States control more than one-half of the reported'income. It is vitally important to a na.ional advertiser to cover the people who represent onehalf of the nation’s buying power. Years ago we set out to make Cosmopolitan a magazine which would appeal to these people. We engaged t;he most distinguished authors ana illustrators. We set up our own machinery for distributing the magazine so we could send it to those newsstands, and only those newsstands where it would be purchased by the people we were trying to reach. Recently, we again checked the results of this policy. You would be interested to know the proportion of the last 100 purchasers of Buicks in St. Louis who ard subscribers to Cosmopolitan. And how nearly our subscription lists check with the charge customers of Sibley, Lindsay & Kerr, Rochester’s leading department store. Alsp, the number of his customers the biggest retail jeweler in the South found to be our customers. Facts like thi*s* that prove Cosmopolitan goes to people with buying power, we can quote you endlessly.
sons. Secretary Hoover will come on Friday for a week-end sojourn at the summer white house. The President's visitors are left to seek their own diversion in fishing, motoring, open-air bowling, tennis. swimming apd golf. Six cabins are available for guests. The Department of Agriculture reports that more than 683,000,000 fruit and vegetable containers were manufactured in the United States in 1925.
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
MY STARS! THIS WOULD BE A YARN This Reporter, However, Couldn’t Get Hit by | Gas ‘Meter.’ By Ross H. Garrigus Folks here in The Times office have been kicking about the lack of news. Os course there’s the Mexican church war. But that's pretty far away and only a couple of hundred have been killed. Clemenceau, who spells his first name George, like he was twins, wrote a right snappy letter to Mr. Coolidge, trying to ease out on some I. O. U.s France gave Uncle Sam inthe last well known “craps’’ game. Not Even a Revolution Roumania* kicked through the other day with the dope that there was a revolution In Russia. Some of us got excited, but then the Russians denied that story and said Roumania was Just peevish. Some Kentucky miners are en, tombed, but Floyd Collins has had his day. So, being a member of The Times staff and supposed to contribute to the day’s news, I had one swell hunch. Tuesday, the weather bureau an-
nounced that for the next three nights, a couple of million, young stars would make a Gertrude Ederle for the earth. About this time of the year, these stars get restless and hike out for new worlds, like Alexander the Great. Here was my hunch. Just Get Hit Get myself hit by a falling star. “Stunned by a falling star.” What ,a yarn. Killed, of course would be better, but I’m not keen about dying to make a living. The weather bureau said I had about one chance in ten million. But I’m game. I even buy baseball pools now and then. I’ve got two more chances. Last night, T stayed up to 10 p. m., praying for a star to hit mb. Last night, they weren't stars at all. They were bush leaguers. They couldn't hit a barn. Buy the Tonies tomorrow. Maybe I’ll be successful tonight. TO REPRESENT SCHOOL X i Girls Named for State Fair Event • This Fall. \ Two girls from Warren Central High School have been selected to represent the school at the Indiana State fair this fall, It was announced today by Clarence Henry, Marion Ccyjnty agricultural agent. They are Miss Zetn Mae Willey, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. O. S. Willey, and Miss Dorothea White, daughter of Mr. and Mrs H. N. White. Both girls have been.active in the Warren Township Girls' Club, sponsored by Purdue University.
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Straw Hats " $1 Choice of the House
Specially Priced Men’s Socks 7c Choice of navy or* black. Limit 10 pairs to a customer.
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T urkish Towels 19c S 1 I ■ 18x40 Inrhes; up to 390 values. —Third Floor.
These Smart Summer Weight Men’s Caps 59c S e v e ral hundred. All redeuced from higher prices.
