Indianapolis Times, Volume 39, Number 132, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 October 1927 — Page 9
OCT. 11, 1927
$722,800 WILL i BE HITS GOAL i IN FUND DRIVE Increase of $64,944 Over ,1927 Made Necessary by Growth of Population. A total of $722,8C0 will be asked of Indianapolis citizens in the 1928 Community Fund drive, Walter C. Marmon, general chairman, announced Monday night at a dinner of Columbia Club members and guests. This represents an increase of $64,944 over last year's total and is made necessary, Marmon explained, by the increased population and growing needs of the city. “This must be our goal for the welfare of 60,000 citizens who are directly benefited by the thirtyeight organizations sharing in the fund,’' he said, “and for the welfare of each of us, for we all benefit directly or indirectly by this movement.” Lilly Lauds Fund To raise the amount authorized by the board of directors for the coming campaign will require a per capita distribution of $2.02 as compared with the per capita gift of $1.79 a year ago. The dinner was arranged by the Columbia Club as evidence of its interest in the Community Fund. J. K. Lilly, one of the founders of the club, presided and paid tribute to the fund and its administrators. “It has been said,” declared Marmon, “that this is an expensive way in which to help people. This statement is made because the makdr does not understand the true facts. The first fact is that it cost, in the last year of operation, only 7.1 cents a dollar of contribution to conduct
IS RESTORED TO HEW HEALTH AffD PRAISES KONJOLA Illinois St. Man Tells How This Medicine Ended His Suffering. “I have the best reason in the world for praising Konjola, because this medicine actually cleared up the catarrh of my stomach and my weight has increased from 122 pounds to 142 pounds during the time I took the six-bottle treatment.”
—Photo by Bretzman Studio.
MR. THOS. C. HEWITT This remarkable statement came from Mr. T. C. Hewitt, 130 S. Illinois Street, Indianapolis, who recently called on The Konjola Man at Hook’s drug store, Illinois and Washington Sts., this city, and volunteered to testify that this new Konjola medicine had completely ended his health troubles. Mr. Hewitt’s statement further reads: "I had one of the very worst cases of stomach trouble that any one could suffer. My ‘system was full of catarrhal poisoning and the food I ate never did me a bit of good. As a result, I was losing weight very rapidly. I couldn’t sleep at night or any other time, and it was almost impossible for me to do any kind of work. My kidneys were disordered, which caused rising at night, and I was suffering almost constantly with headaches. This was mostly due to constipation. My health was going down hill, and, worst of all, I couldn’t find a medicine that would help me. I didn’t know what to do next. "Then I noticed the reports other people were making about Konjola, and I decided to try if simply with the idea of finding out if all these claims could be trtie. I had no idea this medicine would end my troubles, but the first week I was surprised at my new feelings of health. I could actually see a difference in the way I looked. The tired, drawn look was leaving my face, I began to eat like a hungry child and my food was doing me good because the stomach trouble was disappearing. At the same time, Konjola seemed to clear my system of poisons that amazed me. I could sleep better at nights, and when I got the second bottle my faith in this medicine had increased a hundredfold. Now I have made a fair trial of Konjola and I am completely out of misery and restored to new health. I am never troubled with night rising or any kidney disorders. Headaches od not come and I am free of constipation. There is no sign of catarrhal poison in my stomach and my digestion is perfect. "I want to say once more that my weight increased from 122 to 142 pounds, a gain of 20 pounds, in less than two months. This alone is worth a hundred times the price of Konjola to me. I am indorsing this compound because I know what it will do.” * The Konjola Man is /at Hook’s Drug Store, Illinois and Washington Streets, Indianapolis, where he is daily meeting the local public and introducing and explaining the merits of this remedy. Konjola is being sold by every Hook drug store in this city and the best druggists of all nearby towns.—Advertisement.
Chamber Chief
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John E. Frederick, Kokomo manufacturer, elected president of the Indiana State Chamber of Commerce for the sixth term, at the annual meeting here.
the campaign, collection and administrative activities of the Community Fund. Operation Is Explained “This proportionate cost has beeh decreasing year by year as the Community Fund has grown and promises to decrease proportionately as the Community Fund continues to grow. Seven and one-tenth cents a dollar may be compared with an average of 15 cents a dollar for this financial overhead before the Community Fund was created. A varied program was given at the dinner, the work of severa>l agencies benefitted by the fund being shown. Operation of the fund was explained at luncheon meetings of the Service Club and the North Side Lion's Club, Monday noon and at a meeting of the Knights of St. George at Sacred Heart school, Monday night. CAVE TO BE MADE PARK 8,000 Volunteer Workers to Seek Funds in Kentucky Drive. Bu Times Special LOUISVILLE, Oct. 11.—During the coming two months a great State-wide organization of approximately 8,000 volunteer workers will be formed for the purpose of raising, by public contribution, the money /necessary to purchase Mammoth Cave and the surrounding area and transform it into a National Park. The cave region is to be presented to the United States Government, which already has authorized its acceptance and perpetual maintenance and development as a national park. Two million dollars will be needed. Creation of the vacation area In the heart of Kentucky will bring a tremendous influx of tourists. It will lead to the building of h network of good roads intp every portion of the State, ana will result otherwise to the advantage of the entire State and its individuals*
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GARYTOMARK 21STBIRTHDAY Steel Leaders Wilt Attend Event Wednesday. Bu Times Special GARY, Ind., Oct. 11.—Leaders of the nation’s steel industry will join in the twenty-first birthday celebration of Gary, the heart of the Calumet region, Wednesd^. Repeating an historic event of twenty years ago, a banquet to be held in the Hotel Gary Wednesday night will be attended by industrial leaders and high State official:. As the banquet in the first Hotel Gary in 1907 marked the transition tents and shacks of the city’s beginnings to more stable structures, the affair in the new $2,000,000 hotel Wednesday night marks the new change in the city’s building. James A. Farrell, president of the United States Steel Corporation, will be the principal banquet speaker. In addition to opening the new hotel, the day will include laying of the cornerstone for a $500,000 public school war memorial auditorium and formal opening of a $600,000 publishing plant, the home of the Gary Post-Tribune. Articles of clothing that are not up to the mode of the moment, if in good condition can be sold to people not so fastidious through a “for sale” Want Ad in The Times.
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HEAD ACTED LIKE MERRY-GO-ROUND
MAJOR quite a"while I was affected A with dizzy spells and everything would seem to dance before my eyes,” says Mr. T. H. Bohannon, 841 E. Jefferson St., Louisville, Ky. “Little black specks would flicker over everything I looked at. Sometimes I would feel as if the floor was going to come up and hit me in the face. At the same t ! me I had a feeling like chills. My digestion had not been good and I had spells of constipation. Every morning I would wake up with a bad taste in my mouth. “I got quite worried about myself. One day I was talking to one of my about my health. I told him how bad off I was, and that nothing I was doing seemed to help me. At once he asked me, ‘Have you tried Thedford’s BlackDraught?’ I told him that 4 had not, and he said: ‘Well, why don’t you
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Some Yawn Bu Times Special SANDBORN, Ind., Oct. 11.— Everett Selby yawned so expansively that suffered a dislocation of thejaw. A doctor who put it back in place was compelled to use an anesthetic. Selby had the same sort of an experience a year ago this month. \
JOB BUREAU TO REPORT Third Annual Meeting and Dinner Set for Oct. 20. The third annual meeting and dinner of the Indianapolis Employment Bureau, maintained by the Indianapolis Foundation, will be held at 6 p. m. Oct 20 at the Columbia Club. George E. Gill, employment bureau director, will report on the year’s activities, and Dr. Lewis A Wilson, New York assistant commissioner of education, will speak on “Education and Industry.” STEAL FROM SICK MAN Hospital Patient Reports $125 Taken From Room. Dr. Charles Sanders reported to police today that $125 was stolen from the room of his patient, Pierre Goodrich, at St. Vincent’s Hospital. Mrs. Elizabeth Frunwald, Apt. 2, of 314 E. St. Clair St., said a sneak thief took S7O in cash from her apartment.
get a package of it and begin taking it? That is what you need.’ “I did as he told rae, and in a few days I noticed a decided improvement. The dizziness disappeared. I was no longer troubled by my head acting like a merry-go-round when I got up quickly. My indigestion straightened out and my appetite picked up wonderfully. “That was two years ago. Since then 1 always keep Black-Draught in the house. It prevents biliousness and constipation and keeps ms in good physical condition. I take a dose every now and then, just to keep my system clean. It is a splendid medicine. I have told many of my friends about it and those who have tried it think like I Thedford’s is made from pure, medicinal roots and herbs. It contains no harmful, dangerous mineral drugs. JA-66
HONOR WRIGHTS WITH AIR FIELD New Dayton Flying Field Tribute to Pioneers. Bu United Press DAYTON, Ohio, Oct. 11.—Near the first flying field in thtf world, Wright Field will be dedicated tomorrow as a monument -to the progress of aviation. Secretary of War Dwight Davis
How to End Corns in 3 Minutes There’s au amazing new corn remedy called Shur-Off that will remove sore, painful corns and callouses in only 3 minutes. No 3-day treatments or foot soaking. Complete relief comes at once. The instant you apply Shur-Off all pain and soreness stop. It positively will not irritate or affect healthy skin, yet so quickly softens a corn or callous that in 3 minutes you can take it out — root and all. Anyone can do it easily bv following the simple directions. Why let your feet, cause further misery when you can get a bottle of Shur-Off sufficient to remove eight corns or callouses for only 50 cents at Hook's Dependable Drug Stores, or of any other good druggist ?—Advertisement.
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Dangerous innocence / ?nd a good time" made her day when would awake, her brain paralyzed was stiU to come; and when it did, it was only ths ho started toward. IN the foreward of a recent novel, the In no other magazine will you find such Yt t author 6ay9: “In this book none of the amazingly frank and powerfully dramatic * ("W > characters represent real persons, living or narratives of real life. In these compelling JmmffiAgMHHm ■ f f iraKUl ivvM dead. They are wholly imaginary.” stories, the very heart3 and souls of the PjHßliflF Which is just another way of saying: writers are revealed. Their struggles, temp* M Jmß vAuISBb “This story isn't life, it is simply a product tations, defeats, triumphs, loves, hates, joys '<• *// cf my imagination.” and sorrows beccme an open book to all 3ft- mSmKknxjmflSwr ’’fink What a striking contrast to this and all who wish to read. l'' fl g£l9!lLsß ether fiction is presented by the stories that JB appear each month in True Story Magazine. The November issue of True Storv con* x s>. id. ' A’jjiijnffP.b The characters are not fictitious; they are tains fifteen gripping true-life chronicles that niHHHI *■'. aft real. The events are not imaginary; they fascinate, startle and thrill. Your newsdealer JrpHßßKpljSßk 1 Wassily really happened. has it. Get your copy today. jS&fe, “MY HEART SEEMED TO STOP"— Married to Gust ere. hero of thm York CUf air, Beryl was happy until the fascinating Mist Swift c amaon tha scene. Mlb Stowt ul Brodw.Jr. . ofv.w One day Gustave took her on a mysterious flight. What happened ta I wish to besom* familiar ■ 3 -i, h revealed in “Secret of the Sky," True Story for November. thillff ™ " moom * . _ rtf TOO nrfpr to .xunin. tb mai,aaln. h.for. iubceriblng. ■lmply [cwjwiiH November ““*• w * wm **“ l3,ooun * co9T 01 **** N °” mb * r iMu * •* True atory i. JL On Sale At All Newsstands UHT-
and Assistant Secretary F. T. Davison will assist in dedicating the field to the honor of the Wright family. The tract of land on which Orville and Wilbur Wright pioneered in the science of flying with heavier than air machines is near the present site of Wright Field, the largest aviation center in the United States. The field is a gift of the citizens of Dayton to the Government. It was presented in the cause of aviation some years ago and recognition from the Government came in a letter of thanks from President Coolidge. Frederick B. Patterson, president
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of the National Cash Register Company, headed the campaign In which citizens raised $400,000 for the field. On acquisition of the land the Government immediately began equipping it and now over a million dollars has been expended and more than $2,000,000 will be expended In the near future. A special feature of the dedication will be an aeronauctical exhibition in the laboratories of the material division, showing the latest developments in airplanes, airships, engines, instruments, armaments and materials.
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DRY CHIEF’S SON GUILTY Gets Ten Oays in Jail for Room In Anti-Saloon League Car. Bu United Brest RICHMOND, Va., Oct. 11.—Carroll V. Hepburn, 23, son of Dr. David Hepburn. Anti-Saloon league superintendent in Virginia, was sentenced today to ten days in jail and a SSO fine for transporting liquor in an automobile belonging to the league. He will not appeal, but will start his sentence at once. A jury acquitted the youth of driving a car while under influence of liquor.
