Indianapolis Times, Volume 39, Number 19, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 June 1927 — Page 7
JUNE 2, 1927
JUDGES CHOSEN iREVUE CONTEST t J Artist, Pastor and Woman President of College to Pick Winner. Judges for The Indianapolis Times and Publix Theaters Opportunity Contest were announced today. Three were named, as follows: Dr. Frank S. C. Wicks, pastor of All Souls Unitarian Church. Mrs. Henry Schurmann, president Indiana College of Music and Fine Arts, former president of the Indiana Federation of Music Clubs. Randolph L. Coats, Indiana artist. This completes arrangements for the contest in which an Indianapolis girl, to be known as Miss Indianapolis, in a stage revue, will be chosen. Tryouts Next Week Tryouts and auditions will begin at the Circle Theater next Monday evening, June 6, and continue the entire week. From the winners each nigmt Miss Indianapolis will be chosen on June 14. Coiftestants will be notified of the hour at which the tryouts will take place. If you can sing, dance or play some musical instrument and have personality and talent, you can become Miss Indianapolis. A contract * for nineteen to twenty-one weeks at a salary of $75 a week and railroad fares awaits the winner. “Young America,” the new personality revue, in which Miss Indianapolis will have a part and be starred when the show comes to Indianapolis—opens at the Paramount Theater, New York, on July 9. A tour of America’s largest cities has been booked. New York Trip Included Miss Indianapolis will report in New York on June 24'for rehearsals. A wonderful program of entertainment has been arranged for the girls chosen from the various cities. They will be entertained by stage and screen stars, have their work watched by producers who ever are seeking new faces for their productions and make trips to points of interest about New York. While on tour many of the hotels will have the “personality” girls as their guests. Newspapers will play host in some of the cities. It is an opportunity that does not come often. must be submitted before midnight, June 4. If you do not have a photograph, Dexheimer will make one free for this contest.
KIDNEY TROUBLE BROUGHT PAINS OF RHEUMATISM This Man Say# He Was Down in Bed Before He Got the New Konjola. This celebrated new Konjola compound has become the most highly recommended medicine in the State of Indiana and all other States, wherever introduced. The people of
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MR. DENNIS A. MURPHY
Indianapolis are strongly indorsing Konjola in cases of stomach, liver, kidney and bowel disorders or rheumatic troubles. Just a few days ago, Mr. Dennis ' A. Murphy, well-known Indianapolis citizen, living at 915 Indiana Ave., this city, made the following statement in a signed report which he gave to the Konjola Man at Hook’s Drug Store, Pennsylvania and Market Sts., who is meeting the public daily and explaining this medicine. "I had kidney trouble for several years,” said Mr. Murphy,” and I was never able to find anything tq. help me, so in recent years the kidney trouble brought on rheumatism. My knees and ankles were swollen and my back was sore and achy at all times. I was told that my kidneys had poisoned my whole system. This led to rheumatism and the pains were getting worse all the time. Finally I was taken down in bed and for six weeks I could barely move myself. The pains were sharp and terrific. “I had been hearing about Konjola and so I sent for this medicine. It seemed to drive all kinds of poisons from my system and improved my kidneys the first week. I was able to get out of bed and my rheumatism was beginning to ease up. 1 kept right on with Konjola and-now I am able to go down town. The pains in my back are gone, and my kid"neys never give me any trouble. I also notice that I am free of indigestion and stomach trouble. My appetite is increased. ”1 think Konjola is a wonderful medicine to bring all this relief and I strongly 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 merit* of this remedy. Konjola is sold in every hook drug store In this city and all druggists throughout Ufais section. —Advertisement.
They'll Choose Contest Winners
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Above, !)r. Fn.tnk S. C. Wicks; bo low (right), Mrs. Henry Schurmann and Randolph L. Coats.
PENAL GROUPS SHARE $2,800 Balance of Defunct Pardon Board Divided, Trust', sos Indiana penal institutions met with State Auditor Lewis S. Bowman today and divided up $2,800 remaining in the Indiana pardon board fund. The pardon board was abolished and its work taken up by the trustees when the last legislature's acts went into effect. The Indiana State Farm. -Indiana Prison, and State Reformatoiy will get SSOO each and'' the Indiana Woman’s Prison 8400. Tii? trustees will meet in October to divide the SB,OOO pardon board appropriation for the year beginning Oct. 1. AUTO KILLS PEDESTRIAN George Higgins, 65, Injured Fatally Near It;" ’ ”!e. Bn United J'rer,* RUSHVILLE, 1 June George Higgins, ' was killed on U. S. highway No. 52, four miles west of Rushville today, when he was struck by aVi automobile driven by Harold Long, 25, of Arlington. Higgins, employed by contri rtors completing the road, walked from behind a truck into the path of the automobile. Higgins was n Jj for the Democratic nomination for mayor of Rushville in the 1925 primary and previously was postmaster at New Salem, south of many years. \CHEVROLET SALES TOP Fr .'.‘ext. With Buick Third, Service Reports for May. Chevrolet led in number of new cars sold in Marion County in May, with 322, according to the monthly report of new car purchasers by the Indiana Clipping Service. Ford was second with 298 and Buick third with 102. A total of 1,347 new passenger cars and 110 trucks were sold in the month. MORRIS PLAN ELECTION Walter B. Harding Chosen President at Board Meeting. Walter B. Harding, president of the G. & J. Tire Cos., is the new president of the Indianapolis Morris Plan Company. Other officers elected at annual board of directors meeting were Joe Rand Beckett, F. J. De Grief, O. B.
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Indianapolis Power & Light Company “An Institution of Service” 48 Monument Place Lincoln 2371 Meridian and Washington
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lies, L. M. AVainwright, vice presidents; f. M. Akin, secretary treasurer; B. A. Joiner, assistant treasurer. James A. Hoyt, Ne\y York Morris Plan Company president, formerly was president.
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
BRITISH BREAK AIDS U. S. TRADE Rush of Orders Reported for American Goods. Bn Times Special WASHINGTON, June 2.—The break in British-Russian relations is ■booming United States trade with Russia. Since the “Arcos” smashup in London, there has been a great increase in Russian orders for American gods, according to Harold Kellogg of the Russian Soviet Information Bureau here. All Soviet trading companies which lia/idle Russian purchases here, he said, report marked in- ; creases in orders. x It is understood that one of th< important shifts will be in machlner. to equip the rapidly expanding Ru.71an textile industry. Durng th, perod of Russian recognition by Eng land, textile machinery was pur chased there. Now, it is reported, the purchases will be made in the United States. It is expected that the volume of | Russian trade with the United States substantially will exceed last year’s total .of approximately $75,00Q,000. Last year’s United States-Russian trade, although affected by the lack of diplomatic accord between the two countries, was almost twice as great as the total in 1913, the year before the World War. Cotton accounted for almost half of the total trade. Dr. Cregor on Committee Dr. Frank W. Cregor, Indianapolis, has been appointed a member oL. the American Medical Association special committee to arrange for the first International Dermatological Congress to be held within thenext two years. Dr. Cregor is Indiana State Medical Association president.
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Survivor of 133 Wounds at Veterans' Reunion
WASHINGTON. June 2.—Veterans of the fighting 2nd Division, who swapped tales at their convention here today of ghastly hours in Belleau Wood nine years ago, saw many changes in comrades of those days, but had most difficulty recognizing Private Wallace H. Smith, “the most wounded man in the A. E. F.” Smith, who lives here, came back from France almost a skeleton, weighing ninety-five pounds, his body shot through with sljrapnel, suffering from 133 wounds incurred in the battle of Belleau Wood. whei4 the Second helped stop a mighty German drive for Paris in June, 1918. The man who called old buddies today by their first names weighed 245 pounds, and did not look like one who was given up by physicians
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and underwent forty operations. He was once reported dead by the War Department. Two officers of the division have since gained literary fame with graphic pen pictures of war days. Capt. Laurence Stallings, author of “What Price Glory,” and Capt. John W. Tlmmason, Jr., author of “Fix Bayonets,” still in the service and now stationed here. But these men told no stories so horrible as the experience of Smith, only survivor of a party of replacement troops which lost its way one night and found itself at dawn in "no man's” land, a half-mile from the German lines. “When the Germans saw us they let us have everything they had,” he said today.
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GREATER-CITY DRIVE TO FOLLOW CAMPAIGN Realtors Discuss Inauguration of Movement. Plans for inauguration of a Greater Indianapolis movement were discussed by Indianapolis Real Estate Board campaign committeemen at a special meeting today. The campaign will be an extension of the “Buy a Piece of Indianapolis" drive, just ended. What form the campaign will take an dwhen it will be started will be decided next week. Real state prizes probably will be offered by Real Estate Board members. TO HIM WHO WAITS Marriage After Plighted Troth Fifty Years Ago. Bn United Press WASHINGTON. June 2.—Fifty years ago Sarah Ryan, 16, and J. F.
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Shipley, 20, plighted troth, but decided they weren't old enough to marry. Last night they were, and today started a. honeymoon. The bride, a widow with two married children, is willing to overlook her 70-year-old husband's rheumatism, which made him stop blacksmlthing a year ago.
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