Indianapolis Times, Volume 38, Number 187, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 November 1926 — Page 3
NOV. 11, 1926
TO BE AT COAL t RATEHEARINGS Commissioner Will Represent State in Matter. Public Service Commissioner Clyde H. Jones will represent Indiana at hearings Nov. 16 and 17 before the Interstate Commerce Commission at Washington, D. C-, on a petition to revise the schedule of freight rates on coal shipments from the Indiana fields to Chicago. Present rates, it is contended, are too high and impose a burden on the Indiana coal industry which stifles competition with the West Virginia, Kentucky a*fft Tennessee fields. Affecting both producers and consumers of Indiana, the case is regarded as extremely important. The Indiana commission has suggested a revision of rates, which, if carried into effect, will revive operations at a number of Indiana coal mines. Jones was representing the Indiana commission today at the annual conference of the National Association of Railroad Utility Commissioners, at Asheville, N. C. COITZENS FOR SHORT WEEK Bv United Press WASHINGTON, Nov. 11.—Business generally Would do well to adopt at this time a real five-day lyeek with six days’ pay for five days P’ork, according to James R. Couzens, Republican .United States Senator from Michigan, who amassed millions and a title of “The Business Builder” as executive of the Ford Motor Company, in its rise to power.
SUFFERING OF 13 YEARS RELIEVED BY THE KONJOLA Rheumatism and Neuritis Pains End for Local Lady; She Praises New Medicine. “I have been restored to wonderful new health since I got Konjpla, and I can't hardly praise this medicine enough.'’ said Mrs. Carrie E. Edler, well-known Indianapolis lady, living at 1128 W. Eighteenth St., this city, while talking a few days ago
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MRS. CARRIE E. EDLER with the Konjola Man at Hook's Drug Store, Pennsylvania and Mar ket Sts., Indianapolis, where he is explaining this surprising new medicine to large crowds daily. ‘‘l had my first attack of neuritis and rheumatism thirteen years ago,” aid Mrs. Edler. “It was during the flood of 1913. I was trapped in our home on Oliver Ave. and was forced to wade through water up to my waist. Ever since then, until I got Konjola, I had been almost constantly a victim of rheumatism. Then in the last three or four years, I developed neuritis, too, and this settled in my arms and shoulders. The pains would draw my head backward until I could hardly move It. My arms nnd hands were affected and so painful I couldn't raise them to eoVnb my hair. Sometimes I had to be fed. My knees and ankles were swollen about twice their normal size, and T always had to buy my shoes several sizes too large. “Besides the rheumatism and neuritis, I also had trouble with my stomach. Large, painful knots would bulge out on both sides of my stomach. I would become so bloated up with large quantities of gas that J could hardly get my breath. You can imagine ho'fr I was bloated and swollen when I tell you that Konjola has reduced my waistline 11% inches. Black spots would appear in front of my eyes, and I would get so dizzy and light-headed that T would nearly faint. One time I fell in the middle of the street at Pennsylvania and Washington and had to be carried to a drug store. "Well, I can't begin to tell you everything I tried, but I suffered so much I felt nothing would help me. Then I found Konjola, and as I said, this medicine gave me such wonderful new health that I can’t hardly praise it enough. “I am fully relieved of all neuritis pains, and can use my hands the same as any one else, and my head never hurts like it did before. The swelling has gone down from my knees and ankles so that I can wear smaller shoes and I don’t limp when I walk like I used to. My stomach has also improved, so that I can digest a meal without suffering afterward. All the gas and bloating pains are gone and, as I said, my waistline 1-as reduced 11% inches. I have never had a dizzy spell since I finthod taking half of my first bottle 'f Konjola. I am never short of breath, and I can work around the bouse all day long without getting tired. , * “After all this wonderful relief, I certainly want to praise Konjola. I have already recommended it to several of my friends, and now I Indorse it to the raiblic.” The Konjola Man is at Hook’s Drug Store, Pennsylvania and Market Sts, Indianapolis, where he Is daily meeting the local public and introducing and explaining the merits of this remedy. Konjola is sold by every Hook Store in V>dianapolis and by all good druggists in the nearby towns throughout this section.—Advertisement.
Foch Takes Credit for Victory Drive Bv United Press PARIS, Nov. 11.—General John J. Pershing, Field Marshal Haig and Marshal Blain, commander, respectively, of the. American, British and French armies on the western front, opposed Marshal Foch’s plan to begin the final drive against the German in July, 1918, Roch said today in an Armistice day interview in which he explained how he “talked them around to believing” his plan was best. Here’s what the commanders first said, Foch declared: “Petain: ‘The French army is bled w r hite. How can you demand another effort?’ “Haig: ‘The British army, so to speak, no longer exists.’ “Pershing: ‘The American army is not yet ready. Do you want to rtish them into the fight?’ ”
Community Fund Contributors
Additional subscriptions of SIOO and more reported in the Community Fund campaign follow: Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Coleman. $1,800: G. & .1. Tiro Company. SI.000: Mrs. Varohnc V. Collins. $600: Mrs. Mary S. Boyd. $•>00: Pure Oil Company. $300: Mrs. Kate B McGowan. $250: Wisnard. Hamer & Mertz. $250; Motion Picture Distributors and Producers of America. $250: Dr. Charles P. Emerson. $200; Gordon Furniture Company. $200: Frank J. Geiger, $200; Great Western Furniture Company, $200;. Charles L. Hartman, $200: Supreme Oil and Refining Company, $200: Charles E. Holloway. $150: Georere M. Cornelius. $150: Walter J. Roth. $150: S. E. Fenstormaker & Cos.. $120: Cornelius E Holloway. $120: Dr and Mrs. Charles Latham. $l2O. Dr. and Mrs. E. Buehler. $100: Martin M. Huge, $100: Mrs. Robert Lone. $100: Joso-Btlz Company, $100; Jose-Kunn Lumber Company. $100: George L. Paetz, $100; Robinson. Symmes It Melson. $100; Ryan, Ruckelhaus & Ryan, $100: Mrs. Theodore Stein, $100: Frederick Wallick, $100: Walter B. Harding. $100; H. J. Heinz Company. SIOO. Dr. O. N. Torian, $100: W. H. Tennyson. $100: Mr. and Mrs. George B. Eehley, $10Q: J. Frank Holmes. $100; Garvin & Garvin. $100; H. J. Herff. $100: T. M. Ci-itcher/lnc.. SiOO: Emsley W. Johnson. SIOO- J. Logan Thompson. Ino.. $100; A. C. Dunn. SIOO. Indtanapolis News. $100: Aetna Trust and Savings Company. $158: State Auto Ineuranee Company. $297; Day A Cos.. $143: Breed, Elliott A Harrison. $101.50. Advance Paint Company. $232: MartinParry. $362- Herff-Jones Company. $300.50; Madden Manufacturing Company. $347.40: Prest-O-Lite Company. $502.50: L. Strauss & Cos.. $471.50: Central Rubber and Supply Company. $161.10: Central Supply Company. $349.80: Peoples Outfitting Company. $271.35; Indianapolis Union Railway executive office, $150: United States commissioner's offices. $1.00: finance executive office. $352.50: public schools. $3,503.50. $2,000,000 FUND PLAN Winona Beneficiaries. Winona institutions will create an endowment and extension fund of $2,000,000, through a plan et tered into by the Fletcher Savings and Trust Company and the colleges and Chautauqua associations there, William T. Carmichael, president of the institutions, announced today. Under the agreement, the trust company will receive gifts, payable in ten installments. When payments are ended, a life insurance policy for each donor, Equalling the total amount pledged, will be issued, with Winona and the donor as beneficiaries. If the donor dies before completion, the Winona institutions will receive the total amount of the policy, but will refund to the heirs the amount actually paid. If the donof lives until payments have been completed, the amount of the pledge goes to Winona and the proceeds of the j policy to the beneficiary.
Gone, but Not Forgotten
Automobiles reported stolen to police belong to: Louis J. Bailey, 735 Middle Dr.. Woodruff Place, Buick, 605-058, from Ohio St. and Senate Ave. Harry D. Meyers, 31 S. Dearborn St., Ford, from Sixteenth and Bellefontaine Sts. Mary F. Baker, 1628 N. Pennsyl-' vania St., Chevrolet, from In front of that address. Bell Taylor, 604 N. Senate Ave., Ford, from In front of that address. William McCurdy. 1537 E. Le Grande Ave., Overland, 9-565, from Market and Davidson Sts. Harry Waldner, Kokomo, Ind., Ford, from Sixteenth St. and Capitol Ave.
BACK HOME AGAIN
Automobiles reported found by police bekthg to: Edward Campbell, Bos&rt Ave., Buick, found at North and Davidson Sts. Monroe Roadster, 585-784, found at Palmer and Shelby Sts. Herbert Lee, 623 Roanoke St., Ford, found at North and Roanoke Sts. TAKES BISHOP’S PLACE Professor Will Be Substitute at De Pauw Alumni Banquet. Because of a change of plans in his duties, Bishop Francis J. McConnell, Methodist bishop and former president of De Pauw, will be unable to be the principal speaker at a banquet to be given by the Indianapolis De Pauw Alumni Association tonight at the Chamber of Commerce. Prof. Francis Tilden, professor In English at De Pauw, will take the place of Bishop McConnell. William P. Evans is president of the association. Special music will be given by the Alpha Chi Omega quartet, under the direction of Mrs. James Ogden and by George Kadel, tenor. DENIES BURGLARY REPORT Former Mayor John W. Holtzman today denied that his apartment at 321 N. Meridian St. had been burglarized, as reported by police Wednesday. He explained that some articles were missing from his former home at 1010 N. Meridian, when he moved to his present address, and he had reported this to officers. NEW MINISTER-NAMED By United Press OTTAWA, Ont., Nov. 11.—Vincent Massey, one of the wealthiest men in Canada, has been appointed the dominion's first minister to Washington. ''
Sun and Smog Battle
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There was smog, and plenty of it, in Indianapolis this morning. Even those who did not rise till 8 a. m. must have noticed it. This picture, taken about 8:30 a. m., shows the sun doing its best to shine through the smoke and haze, and not- getting very far.
GUARDS FOR QUEEN One Hundred Boy Scouts Will Aid in Reception. On© hundred Boy Scouts will have a chance to swell their public service record when Queen Marie of Roumania comes to Indianapolis, according to an announcement made Tuesday night at the November session of the scout court of honor, by
Secrets o/*Wiite House
The one person in the world who knows what has gone on in the private—the home —part of the White House during the stirring last 17 years is Elizabeth Jaffray, housekeeper of the Executive Mansion during the administrations of Taft, Wilson, Harding, and Coolidge. She now tells her story. Tells of the home life of the Tafts, the crisis of Mrs. Taft’s illness; the coming of the Wilsons, the languishing of the first Mrs. Wilson, and her death; the first visit of Mrs. Galt; Mr. Wilson’s boyish courtship; the wedding; the stirring days of the war; Mr. Wilson’s breakdown, and what actually happened during those months when a curtain of mystery hid the stricken Executive from the public; the astounding happenings while the Hardings were in power—in some ways the most extraordinary ever made concerning a President; the Coolidges, strangest of all the White House families she knew so intimately. The fifst instalment of Elizabeth Jaflfray’s memoirs appears in the December issue >of Cosmopolitan.
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. . . Edna Ferber Directly on the heels of the success of her novel, “SHOW BOAT,” Mis* Ferber has written another of her extraordinarily human short stories the form of writing that won her first fame. The new story is called “PERFECTLY INDEPENDENT.” -
Also in December Cosmopolitan . . . “The Old Countess,”a new novel by Anne Douglas Sedgwick, who wrote" “The Little French Girl.” Another novel by Peter B. Kyne . . . And Short Stories by Kathleen Norris, Gouverneur Morris, Arthur Sorters Roche, Montague Glass, Don Marquis . . . Features by Homer Croy, George Ade, Or O. Mclntyre . . . And a dozen more. It is because of outstanding features like these that 1,500,000 people buy Cosmopolitan .... a 35c magazine . \ . . every month in preference to magazines that they can buy for 25c, 10c, or even only sc. J
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
F. O. Belzer, scout executive. Two guards of honor of fifty scouts each for the Queen’s reception now are being enrolled, he said. Merit awards, totaling 128, were given to scouts at the meeting, which was held in the First Presbyterian Church. Indications are that last year’s record of 2,215 merit awards will be exceeded, when the court of honor holds it final session on Dec. 15, the present total already being 1,996.
Beginning also in this December issue .... A Novel of a .Woman with a Devil in her Soul, by Robert Hichens, author of “The Garden of Allah” and “Bella Donna”
AIDS LEGION TRAVELERS Fletcher Company Names Paris Representative for Convention, American Legion members, their relatives and friends, arranging to atetnd the Legion’s convention In Paris, France, in 1927, can have the service! of a representative of the Fletcher Savings and Trust Company foreign and travel department. Baron A. V. Patterson has been chosen as special representative and will maintain an office in Paris. He will handle extension tours for Americans priorto the convention and otherwise serve foreign and travel department patrons of the Fleteher Company. The Fltcher Company is official depository for "On-to-Paris” savings clubs now being organized by members of Indianapolis Legion posts. FALSE PRETENSE CASE Maid Used Employer's Nam* to Got Goods, Is Charge. Pearl Vaughn, 28, Negro, 942 N. California St., employed as a maid ir. tho home of Mrs. Donald Morris, 3059 N. Illinois St., is held by police today on a charge of obtaining goods under false pretense. Quigley-Hyland Detective Agency operatives charge the woman used her employer’s name in obtaining merchandise to the value of $301.30 from a downtown department store. PATENT ATTORNEY TO SPEAK Arthur M. Hood, patent attorney, will speak on “Patents and the Engineer” before the Indianapolis section, American Society of Mechanical Engineers at Its meeting in the Chamber of Commerce Bldg, next Tuesday evening.
Hmsts International combined netth ' q . December Just Out
LIFE SPAN INCREASES Result of Health Teaching, Insur ance Convention Is Told. "During the last eleven years, the average length of life among our policy-holders has increased eight years. This is the result of intensive health teaching,” declared F. O. Ayres of New York, second vice president of the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company, at the triennial State convention dinner of tho company at the Claypool Wednesday night. More than 350 agents, assistants and company managers of Indiana attended the dinner. SAD DAY AT LA PLATA Eight of Children Killed by Storm to Be Buried. Bv United Press LA PLATA. Mrt., Nov. 11.—This |ls probably the saddest Armistice . day for this town of 400. Nine of the thirteen victims of the tornado which crushed a schoolhouse here Tuesday were being buried. Three of the children were to be placed In tiny Mount. Rest grave- | yard, many of the stones of which were knocked down by the storm. Five other children and one adult were to be buried In the Catholic burying ground. The number of injured is placed at forty, all children. LOSES GIRL AND MONEY And Negro Is looking for Herb Doctor, Who Has Both. Doss Wade, Negro, Twenty-Sev-enth and Annetta Sts., is out his girl and $l6O, and today asked police to locate a Negro herb doctor as the
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... Irvin S. Cobb . . . Before Mr. Cobb could write this story, he had to wait for two men to die. Now that it may be written, we have a Drama from Police Headquarters which will probably rank as the best of Mr. Cobb’s famous nev*.paper stories. It is called “THE WOODEN DECOY.” %
man who has the girl and money. Wade said while he was In Cleveland, Ohio with the girl he met the herb doctor, who took the girl with him to Toledo, Ohio. To get her back, Wade said he paid the $l5O, but never has seen either of the two since. PROGRAM AT PURDUE Exercises Held to Honor Students Who Died in War. Bv United Press LAFAYETTE. Ind., Nov. 11.— Armistice day exercises were held In the Ross-Ade stadium today to honor
TjjStOiMdi lIUT-.pwustm %/" of Magnesia
Instead of soda hereafter take a little “Phillips Milk of Magnesia” in water any time for indigestion or sour, acid, gassy stomach, and relief will come instantly. Better Than Soda For fifty years genuine “Phillips Milk of Magnesia” MSs been prescribed by physicians because it overcomes three times as much acid in the stomach as a saturated solution of bicarbonate of soda, leaving the stomach sweet and free fVom all gases. Besides, It neutralizes acid
ELIZABETH JAFFRAY
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the Purdue men who died in the World War. The Purdue cadet corps passed in review before Governor Jackson am*( President Edward C. Elliott and after reading of the roll of honor two minutes of silence were observed. Y FIND HOME BREW; NO OWNER Sergeant O'Connor and squad found an ownerless lot of homo brew Wednesday night. In an empty house at 1228 Booker St., twenty gallons of home brew was found fermenting. In addition, empty bottles, caps, capping machine and corks were found and confiscated by po lice.
fermentations in the bowels and gently urges this souring waste from tho system without purging. It is far more pleasant to take than soda. Try a 25c Bottle Insist upon ‘‘Phillips’* Twentyfive cent and fifty cent bottles, any drug store. “Milk of Magnesia” has been the U. 8. Registered Trade Mark of The Charles H. Phillips Chemical Company and its predecessor Charles H. Phillips since 1876. Advertisement.
