Indianapolis Times, Volume 38, Number 210, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 December 1926 — Page 2
PAGE 2
NEW HOTEL FOR DUNESPLANNED State Conservation Department May Build. tin Timm £nr rial MICHIGAN CITY, Ind., Dec. 8— Constructon of a 150-room hotel unit in the State Dunes Park at Tremont will be started in the spring if the State Legislature acts favorably on the budget request of the State conservation department, Richard Lieber, director, declared here. Os the $750,000 requested for the park along Lake Michigan, a major amount wquld go for a hotel near the beach, Lieber said. Eventually, the department hopes to build a 400-room hotel, building a 150-room unit, first, Lieber explained. Other plans call for a bathhouse jind commissary, he said. DEMAND SAFE CROSSING Civic League Aroused by Number of Fatal Accidents. A movement to force the Belt Railroad to make its Madison Ave. crossing safer is being contemplated by the Garfield Park Civic League, as a result of the number of fatal accidents at that place. ‘‘A number of fatal ‘accidents have occurred at this crossing during the last two years,” H. F'. Kottkamp, league president, said. “Residents of the south side are aroused and in tend to see that safety gates or some other devices are adopted, in order to protect human life ijt the crossing.” “If necessary we will file suit sagainst the board of works.” HEALTH TROUBLES ENDED 6 MONTHS AGO;STILL WELL “Konjola Ended Stomach Misery,” She Says; Feels Better Than She Has / in Years.
“There was never a time in my life that I felt better than I have the past six months, since Konjola ended my stomach trouble, and my general health is improved so much it is hard for me to realize I am the same person,” said Mrs. Mary
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MRS. MAMIE SCHWARTZ Schwartz, well-known Indianapolis lady, living at 433 Haugh St., this city, while talking a few days ago with the Konjola Man at Hook's Drug Store, Pennsylvania and Market Sts., Indianapolis, where large crowds are calling daily to hear his personal explanation of this celebrated new medicine that has been helping thousands of sufferers all over this vicinity. "I was in poor health at least ten years," continued Mrs. Schwartz. "I always had to take something after meals for indigestion, and of course I only got temporary relief—every time I ate, I would suffer. Nothing would really end my stomach trouble until I started taking Konjola. and now it has been six months since I finished with this medicine, and I haven’t had a minute of worry with my stomach to this day, so I ■foish to indorse Konjola for the great, lasting relief it has given me. "I have suffered cramps so severely I would double over. Sharp pains would center in the pit of my stomach, and large quantities of gas would circulate around my Iseart, causing it to palpitate and tremble like a leaf. I would be short of breath, have dizzy spells, and dreadful headaches. “Well, everything is different now, and as I said, these miseries have not troubled me in six months. I can rest better at nights than I have in years. I can eat anything I want and my digestion is perfect. Before I found Konjola I was on a restricted diet all the time, but since this medicine has put my stomach in healthy condition. I can eat just any. thing put on the table. It gives me great pleasure to praise a medicine that does so much for suffering people." . Konjola is non-alcoholic. It is different than any medicine previously known. Where many ordinary remedies contain only 7 or 8 herbal ingredients, which merely act as a laxative,>4hiß new Konjola contains twenty-two juices extracted from natural plants, which invigorate the stomach, liver, kidneys and bowels to more healthy action. The effect of Konjola on the whole inner system brings amazing relief in cases of suffering that had been going on for years. At the same timi, many weak and run-down systems have been tutored to anew state of health uiru the use of this compound. Such a vast number of men and women in this city have benefited by taking Kanjola, until now it has become the most highly indorsed rftedicine that is known in this vicinity. The Konjola Man is at Hook’s Drug Store, Pennsylvania and Market Sts., Indianapolis, where he is dally meeting the local public and introducing and explaining the merits of this remedy. Konjola is sold by every Hook Store in Indianapolis, and by all druggist* in the nearby towns throughout this section.—Advertisement.
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Easy questions are asked in this test, as it is written especially for children. The correct answers appear on page 1G: A. What is inconsistent in the accompanying picture? 2. Does light shine through opaque material? 3. What is a shamrock? 4. What political position does "Jimmie” Walker hold? 5. Who is referred to in college slang as “Prexy?” 6. What governing body makes the laws for the District of Columbia? 7. What is the capital of Illnois? 8. Does light travel faster than sound? 9. How many sides has a hexagon? 10. On which of the Great Lakes is Cleveland located? BANKRUPTCY IS PLEA Two More From T v ok onto File Petitions—Sixteen Total. Two more Kokomo bankruptcies were filed in Federal Court here Tuesday, bringing that city’s total to sixteen since Jan. 1. Tt is estimated the average liability is $5,500, with assets of but a small fraction of that amount. Tfye petitions filed today are from Harry E. Albright, operating under the firm name of the Kokomo Glass & Decorating Company, and Layke V. Howett, a Journalist in the Ann-strong-Larulon Bldg at Kokomo.* Albright lists $6,010.03 In liabilities, and $3,425 in assets; Ilowett listing liabilities of $1,407.37 with no assets. BLADDER MISERY Backache, Kidney i?ains No matter how severe the bladder and kidney pains and distress, backache, abdominal and bladder pains and misery. HOMODYNK affords prompt, complete relief and control of the suffering. lIOMODYNE is the harmless oil analgesic (pain remedy) for the bladder and kidneys that acts like magic. Ask Hang's and other druggists for lIOMOPYNE Capsules.—Advertisement.
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WEEKLY book review Dorothy Dix Explains Mystery of Married Men
By Walter U. Hickman Dorothy Dix has let the cat out of the bag concerning the lure of the married man. Taking it for granted that there is a “lure,” and a certain amount of mystery, then we may proceed with Dorothy Dix and her chapter on this lure in her book, “Dorothy Dix, Her Book." This book of a widely read woman newspaper writer is published bv Funk & Wagnalls Company, selling for $2. Miss Dix has this to say about, the “lure” of the married man: "A man wants to know why married men have such a fascinatioln for girls, and wherein a benedict’s wooing differs from that of a bachelor. “The first part of this double barreled question was answered by Eve in the Garden of Eden, £nd every girl takes after her greatest grandmother. Mar Vied men are for bidden fruit, and that alone whets tthe appetite of the foolish little Evelyns for him, and makes them seem the prize pippins of the whole matrimonial orchard. “The thing that a woman cannot have, that she has no right to have, and especially the thing that some other woman possesses, is always the thing that she wants most. “If you have ever watched women fight over a common place and unattractive article on a bargain table, where each was determined to have it Just because the other desired it. you have the psychological explanation of why a girl falls for a mar ried man that she wouldn't look at If he were single.” It does not personally matter what the highbrows think of Dorothy Dix and the advice that she han.ls out to hundreds and hundreds of people. My contact with reading this woman forces me to realize that she is a good saleswoman of what everybody wants to know in some form or other. And .yet I was* very bold yesterday when I carried this book in plain view of everybody onto a street car. I guess about everyone pres-
Best Sellers Following is the list of the six best* sellers in fiction and nonfiction in Bretano’s New York stores for the week ending Dec. 4. * Fiction “Revelry.’ Samuel H. Adam* Bunt * l.iveright. “Galahad." John Erskine. Hobbs Merrill. "Cesuarina Tree.” Somerset Maug ham Doran. "Show Boat.” Edna Etrber Doublr-dav Page. “Early Autumn.” Louis Brumfield Stokes. ’ "Sorrell and Son." Warwiek Deeping. Knopf. Nonfiction "Beniamin Franklin: First Civilized American,” Phillips Russell. Urentano's. "Story of Philosophy.” Will Durant Simon & Schuster. “Translations and Tomfooleries. " O Bernard Shaw Brentanos. “Book of Marriage.” Count Kcvserhng. ITareourt Brace. “The Captive,” Edouard Bourdet Brentatto s. “Read 'Em and Weep.” Sigmund Sjaeth. Doubleday Page.
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES _
ent, including the conductor spotted what I was carrying. About half way to town, a man sitting near me said, “Pardon me, may 1 look at that book.” I handed it over. Fnally he said to me, “Guess I will get that book for my wife.” “Yes?” I asked. “Yes,” he said, “And I will read it too.” There is lot of human honesty to everything that Dorothy Dix has written in her book. It may be applesauce to the high literary class, but I read it from cover to cm-er. She is able to build up in page after page that intimate feeling which g.res one the impression that you ore talking and confiding to this woman who has seen and knows life. In .her introduction, Dorothy Dix writes; "Above all I have acquired a sense of humor, because there were so many things over which 1 had eithej to laugh or cry. And when a woman can joke over her troubles Instead of having hysterics, nothing i can ever hurt her much again. “So I do not egret the hardships I have known because through them I have touchel life at every point. I have lived. And it was worth the price 1 had to pay,” Probably I should have turned DON’T LET A COUGH OR COLO GO DOWN' If you let a cough get down Into your bronchial tubes or lungs,’it stops being merely a nuisance and becomes a real danger A "head cold” is only a bother while it stays In your head. But j once it gets down into tfie danger zone, serious trouble threatens. Act promptly to check the cough; i to keep the head cold from “going ; down.” Sure and lasting relief is | as near as the nearest drug store. Quickly and unfailingly Ay*r*s ; Cherry Pectoral goes straight to ! the seat of danger. Real medicine, reaching deep with its soothing, healing power, penetrating through and through the irritated mem- , branes of your throat, chest and bronchial tubes. If you arc catching cold; If you have a "head cold”; if your chest is tight; if you have a cough—- : even if bronchi Us has developed— Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral at once! Keep your cold from going down into the danger zona. Cherry Pectoral is pleasant, safe and dependable—for children and grown people. At all druggists—--00c; twice as much, SI.OO. 1&1 -f Advertisement.
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Dorothy Dtx and her book over to Martha Lee on the Times to'review. And Martha writes a lot of things about life also. GET REIDY FOR RUSH % J’ostoffice Department Heads Confer With Bryson. Final plans for the hardling of Christmas rush mail were completed Tuesday at a meeting of postoffice department supervisors with Postmaster- Robert H. Bryson. "Beginning Dec. 15, we will employ extra help,” Bryson said. “About 400 persons wil be used during our rush season.” FINE FOR CHILDREN! Give them a good start in life, with happy smiles ami healthy little bodies Children need a mild corrective occasionally to regulate stomach and bowels. Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets are a safe vegetable compound mixed with olive oil. They tone up and regulate the eliminative tract. Not a nasty cathartic or a habit-forming medicine, hut a safe pleasant remedy for constipation, sour stomach, torpid liver, had breath, and similar disorders. Dr. Edwards. a widely known family physician of Ohio, prescribed these tablets for many years in bis own practice. Children’from six years ujxarc greatly helped by them and like to take them. Recognised by their olive color. Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets overcome those irritable spells that many children are SUbjeCf to, keep their bodies in active healthy condition, skin dear and eyes bright with the light of perfect health. 1.-c, 300 and Ooc sizes.—Advertisement. /I Scratch Feed rtf 100 lbs., *2.05: 60, KiV \ *1.40 Kse Music 100 i’V l )>.. 52.80; 50. sl.s<>. J \ A Cracked Corn. 100 lbs I \ Jtl *2.10: 60. 51.20. De g ml J livered. Everything 'or ’ poultry Phone MAi" A JEveritt’a Seed • Stores 227 W. Washington 1 ~■■ J ft N. Alabama
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CHORUS TO REHEARSE Masons Plan St. John’s Day Celebration Dec. 26. Preparation for the St. John’s day celebration Dec. 26 at Murat Theater, under auspices of Indiapapolis chapter of Rose Croix, Scottish Rite Frcenlisonry, will begin this week with rehearsals of both the massed chorus of fifty male voices and the Scottish Rite orchestra. A call has for the
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members of the chorus to meet with Arnold F. Spencer, musical director, at the Scottish Rite cathedral, 29 S. Pennsylvania St., at 7:30 tonight. This will be the largest choir the Scottish Rite ever assembled. The music for St. John’s day will include the chant of ' the Lord's prayer, two cantatas and Christmas carols. The orchestra will begin Its rehearsal at the Scottish Kite cathedral at 7:30 Thursday evening. The
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