Indianapolis Times, Volume 38, Number 270, Indianapolis, Marion County, 16 February 1927 — Page 5

1/IRS. HAYWARD’S FUNERAL FRIDAY Ifife of Baptist Secretary Succumbs at Home. Lottie L. Hayward, wife of the Rev. F. A. Hayward, secretary of Federated Baptist Churches, died Tuesday night at their suburban home six miles south of the city. Mrs. Hayward has been in ill health for several years. Surviving are the husband, and six children, Ranald Lodge Hayward, Lois Winnifred Hayward, Gladyis Crosier Hayward, Doris Bascom Hayward, Alis Lyons Hayward, and Gordan Batchelor Hayward; two brothers: Rollin Crosier of Binghamton, N. Y., and John Crosier of Rochester, N. Y. Funeral will be held Friday at 2 p. m., at the First Baptist Church, the Rev. Frederick E. Taylor, officiating. BOTTLERS SEEK CONFAB Seventy bottlers from over the State hope to bring the national convention to Indianapolis in the near future, according to L. H, Yuncker, local bottler. The Indiana bottlers are in ccftvention at the Athenaeum. SLAYER IS INDICTED Bu Times decrial GREENFIELD, Ind., Feb. 16. Indictment, charging first degree murder, has been returned against Robert Lafollette, 29, who shot and killed his brother-in-law, Raymond Revilee, 26, here in a family quarrel.

LOCAL LAOY FREE * OF INDIGESTION AND NEURITIS Konjola Produced Amazing Relief After 18 Months of Health Troubles. “I want to indorse Konjola, because this medicine has delivered me from my health troubles, after I had been suffering eighteen months with stomach trouble and neuritis pains,” said Mrs. Verna M. Ploughe,' well known Indianapolis lady, living at

I

MRS. V. M. PLOUGHE

Rll Sangster Ave., this city, in a cent statement to the Konjola man at Hook’s drug store, Pennsylvania and Market St., Indianapolis, where he is meeting large crowds of local people every day and explaining this remarakble medicine which is being sold at the rate of a hundred bottles daily, in this city alone. “I was troubled with indigestion and neuritis ever since I had intestinal influenza 18 months ago,” said Mrs. Ploughe, "and yet, as bad as I was, this Konjola produced relief in three days, and since I have contiuned with it, I am entirely well and feeling better than T have in years. "The worst things about my suffering was the terrible pains in my shoulders. This neuritis had centered in my arms and across my back. I was bedridden for a whole month, and practically helpless, because I couldn’t even hold a spoon in my hand. For six and eight weeks at a time I never slept over an hour'at night. I seemed to be in constant misery, and my Stomach was also causing me so much trouble that I thought I would never get well. I had no appetite, and my food never tasted right, so that after I had eaten a few bites I would get up from the table. “I got Konjola for my troubles and the third day I was benefited. Now I am entirely rid of stomach trouble, and every ache and pain that I had from neuritis is completely gone. My arms and shoulders are active, and I can go about my •work as though I never had a sipk Hay in my life. My appetite has increased, and I sleep soundly every night. It is wonderful to be relieved of all the miseries I suffered, and I wish to give full credit to Kcnjola, for ft is the only medicine I found that helped me. I gladly indorse it.” 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 for sale by all Hook drug stores in this section, and is sold by all druggists everywhere.—Advertisement.

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NEW GUIDE BIG AID TO MOTORISTS Directions to Reach Any Point in City or State Plainly Shown. Directions how to start from Indianapolis to any town or fcity in the State is one of the new features of the Dreher’s Simplex street and rhap guide of Indianapolis, the 1927-28 edition of which is now on salp. v “The sixteen “highways leading from Indianapolis, the cross-roads of America, will take you to any part of this country,” says D. F. Dreher, publisher of the guide. Shows Distance The guide’s map of twenty-one counties of central Indiana lists all roads in the district. With the map is the motorists’ directory, giving routes, distance from Monument Circle and population of every town on the map, and all county seats, towns and cities of 5,000 or more population in the State. The map of Indianapolis has been extended two miles east and two and a half miles west. Southport, Mars Hill and several other new suburbs are shown. A total of 2,864 streets, roads and additions are shown. Street Directory The principal feature of the book is list of streets and directions how to reach any street number. Bus and street car routes, apartments, public buildings, churches clubs and other public institutions also are listed. publishes street directories of Toledo and Columbus, Ohio. The Indiana News Company distributes the guides here. A photograph may be transmitted between Boston and San Eralicisco in seven minutes, including a telegraph description. WHEN YOU DONT WiNTTO EAT Or What you Eat Hurts or Makes you Sick Try a little diapepsin. It’s powerful in the stomach—contains real digesters that lend a hand to do the work a strong and healthy stomach would do naturally. It digests such foods as fresh bread, pastry and rich cake. It enables you to get away with sausage, baked beans or mince pie. But no matter what you eat, even if you can’t digest milk or meat makes you bilious, or your stomach gets gassy, with heartburn or sour risings, diapepsin almost instantly makes your stomach sweet, absorbs the gas, makes you feel comfortable and enables you to digest and emply the stomach on time and ready for the next meal. Get a 60-cent package of Pape’s Diapepsin at any drhg store. It wiil surely bring you stomach comfort. —Advertisement.

c\St Orleans^ Qulf Coast H BILOXI • GULFPORT • PASS CHRISTIAN Golfing in sunshine every day. Fishing, hunting, horse '■*33BEw riding, yachting—all year round in a spring-like climate. Accommodations to suit everyone. Hotels palatial or quiet and unpretentious—boarding houses, cottages. / Excellent opportunities for home or investment 21 Hours from Chicago * 1/ / ///A Manama Limited The last word in elegance and luxury—leave Chicago 12:30 p m f / iil l arrive New Orleans 9:30 a.m., Gulfport 9:50 a. m„ Biloxi 10:30 a’. m!| * /* W I Pass Christian 10:30 a.m. Not a day lost from business or pleasure. / W'' /' /ft Extra fare. Convenient connections at Mattoon and Effingham.’ A y/ Two other finealbsteel trains daily to New Orleans leave Chicago ~~ ~~*T"* Ninth Mid-Winter Vacation party to Mardi Qras at blew Orleans / / ~ d,Tect OT yo.'JX' - beautiful Mississippi Qulf Coast-will leave / / ' Mattoon and bflmgham, February 20, six days, only $81.65, ail / X expense, ;rom Mattoon; $80.21 from Effingham. s / Mardi Gras at Biloxi. March 1. Two mammoth parades with Sieur / \ D Iberville in historic setting. / / \ Delightful cruises on the enchanting Caribbean from Flew Orleans. f / \ Mpfisoy. Dijtfkt PiMenger Agent 1 J f \ . 315 Merchants Bank Building, Indianapolis, Ind. I i \ II Send me, without cost, complete information and ill Atnted literature indicated. | ft / □ New Orleans Book □ Mississippi Gulf Coast Book 1 Ja fl3\l □ Mardi Gras Circular O Caribbean Cruise Circular I __ For fares and reservations, ask J. M. Morisey, District Passenger Agent, Illinois Central Railroad 315 Merchants Bank Building, 1 South Meridian Street Phones Lincoln 4314-4315, Indianapolis, Indiana • \ 04-n Illinois Central THE ROAD OF TRAVEL LUXURY

Freckles and His Friends

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Hoosier Briefs

Rev. George Bragg of Windfall has had twenty arms offered to him by the United States Government. The pastor, a civil war veteran, suffered amputation of his right arm in battle and the Government in 1865 r 9\ r 9 him an artificial one and 150 for anew arm every three years. Rev. Bragg preferred an empty sleeve. He has collected the SSO twenty times. Postoffice survey shows Anderson now has a population of 41,000. Wabash persons are walking with their eyes on the ground. Ross Collins of Phio, an auto tourist, lost a purse containing $4,000 there. Three Rushville boys, aged 8, 9 14 years, were arrested for entering the country home of Henry Hobbs and carrying off the Saturday baking of pies. They were caught with evidence on their faces. William H. Jones of Marion, claims he has discovered a deposit of natural glass in New Mexico. He is preparing to develop the mines. No one claimed a fat possum found by Steve Stalcup, highway superintendent, near Linton, and it was turned loose. There was a reason. It’s a closed season now. Good old days are being recalled

at Marion. Five cent street car service between there and Gas City has been restored. Ellis Learner, township trustee at Kokomo, was shocked when he read in a newspaper society column about an elaborate party givefT by a woman whom he had aided on her plea she was a paupeY. PURDUE MAN SPEAKER Seventy plumbing contractors and foremen heard Prof. G. F. Buxton of Purdue University Monday night at the Linepin, in the first of a series of six addresses. “Foremanship Training” was his subject. Edward Green of Technical High School and William Lynn, Chicago, union organizer, spoke. ?5>.T. Watson. business agent for the Master Plumbers’ Association, said it was decided to allow apprentices to attend day school at least one day a week. Frank E. Irish is president. BOOSTERS' CLUB ELECTS W. E. Chance was ejected “big chief” in os: or of the Boosters’ Club, an int :v : h organization of the Hoo'a- t'liii), at the annual

—By Blosser

meeting at the club Monday night. Other officers elected wore: H. C. Mitchell, "little chief booster? Robert Loy, esquire booster; W. E. Metzger, secretary: Ike Riley, treasurer; Ross Mitchell, Harry Williet and Homer Archer, councilinen.

The Onward March of Aircraft

4554

MINE QUIZ IS ASKED House Resolution Provides Probe of Francisco Tragedy. A resolution requesting a grand Jury investigation of the Francisco mine disaster In which thirty-seven were killed and twenty-eight seriously injured, Dec. 7, near Princeton,

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Ind., was presented to the Indiana House of Representatives Tuesday. The resolution was framed by Representative Edgar Livingston (Dem), Knox and Pike, a miner. Livingston scored the pending Wright bill, Introduced by the author of Indiana’s "bone dry” law, which seeks to annul safety features of Indiana’s mining code and permits the hiring of

Manufacturing special gasoline and lubricating oils for airplanes has been the contribution of the Standard Oil Company (Indiana) to aviation. The cooperation of the Standard Oil Company (Indiana) in the development of aviation has been the logical course for an organization which devotes its entire time and resources to serving the people of the Middle West. The onward march of aircraft is recognized by this Company as an asset of signal importance to business generally. Industry in general, and all the people whom industry serves must ultimately be benefited by the growth* and expansion of aviation. The benefits to the entire world from the development of transportation on land and sea are appreciated by every thoughtful person. Swift trains and ocean liners have reduced distances on our earth, bringing about a shrinking of the world for purposes of commerce and communication, and making possible the present state of our civilization. The use of the air for transportation marks a new era in the history of the world. It is man’s most sensational triumph over the elements. \ For centuries men dreamed of flying, but the natural law of gravity proved an obstacle unlike anything encountered on land or sea. V Finally science triumphed and the obstacle was overcome. With the first controlled flight of Orville Wright on Dec. 17, 1903, man entered anew element, beginning the conquest of the air. During the first decade of the 20th century, the pioneering work in aviation was done. Roughly speaking, the speed of the airplane has been increased at the rate of 60 miles per hour every four years since 1910. Designers have increased the climbing powers and fuel capacity of their machines. They have improved the ease of control and the rapidity of manoeuvre. Rapid improvement in reliability has been made. Sensational records of performance have been established —the flight around the world was perhaps the most gripping and appealing to the imagination. Today it is possible to fly around the earth! During this 20th century distances on our globe are being reduced startlingly by aviation. For all practical purposes the world is growing smaller. The importance of this shrinking of the world, to industry and to the welfare of mankind generally, is appreciated by the Standard Oil Company (Indiana). For the success of its own business and in the interest of the thirty million people whom it serves, the Standard Oil Company (Indiana) gives its support to the development of aviation, believing that as distances are diminished, with the shrinking of the world, understanding and prosperity will be increased.

Standard Oil Company ( Indiana) General Office: Standard Oil Building 910 So. Michigan Ave., Chicago, 111.

"green” labor in mines. The resolution was referred to Judicary A committee.

You Feel a Cold Coming On §BromQ I \QuinineJ Grip, Influenza and many Pneumonias begin a 3 a common cold. Price 30c. The box bears this signature /339 '