Indianapolis Times, Volume 39, Number 273, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 March 1928 — Page 7

MARCH 12,1928.

SMITH, HOOVER LEAD FOR FIRST 1928 PRIMARY New Hampshire Voters to Name Their Delegates at Polls Tuesday. /V/ United Press CONCORD, N. H., March 12.The first of the presidential primaries will be held in New Hampshire tomorrow. Republicans and Democrats will go to the polls to choose delegates to the June conventions of their respective parties, but because of the stringent State laws it is doubtful whether any of the candidates of either party will receive officially the full delegation. Political leaders of the two parties generally believe, however, that the sympathizers with Secretary of Commerce Hoover, Republican, and Governor A1 Smith of New York, Democrat, will be elected to control the delegations in their respective parties. The State law permits election of three classes of delegates; (1) those pledged definitely to a single candidate who can not vote in convention for anyone but that candidate no matter what happens; (2) those who pledge themselves to no candidate, and (3) those who announce they are “favorable” to a candidate, but not definitely pledged to vote for him. One Republican candidate has announced himself pledged to President Coolidge for re-election.

FREE OF HEALTH TROUBLE SINCE SHE GOT KONJOLA Indianapolis Lady Tells How the New Medicine Benefited Her Entire System. Reports of what Konjola has done in actual cases are appearing every day in the Indianapolis papers, and at the same time, vast crowds arc calling daily at the Hook drug

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MRS. JENNIE HOLDING

store, Illinois and Washington Sts., ) this city, and interviewing the Kon- | jola Man, where he is personally j explaining this new medicine to the | public. “Konjola is first of all anew, ad- I vanced remedy,” explained the Konjola Man, yesterday. ‘‘lt is a liquid containing medicinal extracts from twenty-two plants of nature. This compound works with the sufferer’s own food, restoring the stomach, liveri kidneys and bowels to better action. It removes the poisons which cause most of the chronic aches and pains, and therefore, the people who take Konjola nearly always report new feelings of health over their body in general. Another surprising statement has been received, which shows more clearly what Konjola is doing for the stomach sufferers in this vicinity. The statement came from Mrs. Jennie Holding, well-known Indianapolis lady, living at 240 Blake St. “Konjola certainly made a great change in me,” said Mrs. Holding. “I don't, look like the same person, and I feel better than I have in years. “My worst trouble was with my stomach. My food did not agree with me and shortly after I had eaten a meal a hard rock seemed to form in the very pit of my stomach, Soon afterwards gas would form, causing severe pains and bloating. “I also had much trouble with my liver. This caused me to have a very yellow complexion and to feel sluggish at all times. I was con- j stantly constipated, which caused j me severe headaches. “I have now taken one and a half bottles of Konjola and feel improved over my entire system. I was able to eat sauerkraut today for the first time in five years. During the past five years I was forced to stay on a diet and it certainly is a pleasure to be able to eat any and all food you like. The gas and bloating has all disappeared and I do not have any more headaches. My complexion is now cleared up, and to look at me you would think I was in perfect health. I never believed that such a small amount of medicine would perform such a miracle. It has really improved my health so much that I gladly offer my statement for publication, in order that other sufferers may benefit by my experience. I cannot begin to give your medicine the praise it deserves, as words will not express my thankfulness. The Konjola Man is at Hook’s drug store, Illinois and Washington Sts., Indianapolis, where he is daily meeting the public and introducing and explaining the merits of this remedy. Konjola is being sold in ’arge quantities at all Hook stores pud by all the best druggists in all* \o- - ,f n-q s entire secAcb. c. .Lenient.

COL.CHAS.A.LINDBERGH'S OWN LIFESTORYiS2

CHAPTER XXV ’T'HE trans-Atlantic non-stop flight between New York and Paris was first brought into public consideration by Raymond Ortieg, who, in 1919, issued a challenge to the aeronautical world by offering a prize of $25,000 to the first successful entrant. Details of the flight were placed in the hands of the National Aeronautic Association and a committee was appointed to form and administer the rules of the undertaking. I first considered the possibility of the l\ew York-Paris flight while flying the mail one night in the fall of 1926. Several facts soon became outstanding. The foremost was that with the modern radial air-cooled motor, high lift airfoils and lightened construction, it would not only be possible to reach Paris, but under normal conditions, to land with a large reserve of fuel and have a high factor of safety throughout the entire trip as well. I found that there were a number of public-spirited men in St. Louis sufficiently interested in aviation to finance such a project, and in December, 1926, I made a trip to New York to obtain information concerning planes, motors and other details connected with the undertaking. In connection with any important j flight there are a number of ques- j tions which must be decided at the start, among the most important of' which are the type of plane and the number of motors to be used. A monoplane, although just coming into general use in the United States, is much more efficient than a biplane for certain purposes, due to the lack of interference between wings, and consequently can carry a greater load per square foot of surface at a higher speed. A single-motored plane, which it is more liable to foicea landings than one with three motors, has much less head resistance and consequently a greater cruising range. Also, there is three times the chance of motor failure with a trimotored ship, for the failure of one motor during the first part of the flight, although it would not cause a forced landing, would at least necessitate dropping part of the fuel, and returning for another start. The reliability of the modern aircooled radial engine is so great that 1 the chances of an immediate forced j landing, due to motor failure with a single motor would, in my opin- j ion, be more than counterbalanced j by the longer cruising range and ; consequent ability to reach the ob- | jective in the face of unfavorable j conditions. After careful Investigation I dc- 1 cided that a single-motored mono- j plane was. for my purpose, the type j most suited to a long-distance flight, ! and after two more trips to the I East Coast and several conferences | in St. Louis, an order was placed with the Ryan Airlines of San I Diego, Cal., on Feb. 28, for a plane j equipped with a Wright Whirlwind J. 5-C. 200-H, P. radial air-cooled motor and Pioneer navigating instruments. including the Earth In- ! ductor Compass. I went to San Diego to place the t order and remained in California during the entire construction of the | plane. The personnel of the Ryan airlines at once caught the spirit of the underetaking, and during the two months of construction the or-, ganization labored as it never had before.

Day and night, seven days a week, the structure grew from a few lengths of steel tubing to one of the most efficient planes that has ever taken the air. During this time it was not unusual for the men to work twentyfour hours without rest, and on one occasion, Donald Hall, the chief engineer. was over his drafting table for thirty-six hours. I spent the greater part of the construction period working out the details of navigation and plotting the course, with its headings and variations, on the maps and charts. After working out the track on the gnomonic and Mercators charts. I checked over the entire distance from New York to Paris with the nautical tables. The flight from San ITego to St. Louis and from St. Louis to New York was comparatively simple, and I took the courses directly from the State maps. From New York to Paris I worked out a great circle, changing course every hundred miles or approximately every hour. I had decided to replace the weight of a navigator with extra fuel and this gave me about 300 miles- additional range. Although the total distance was 3,610 miles, the water gap between Newfoundland and Ireland was only about 1,650 miles, and under normal conditions I could have arrived on the coast of Europe over 300 miles off of my course and WHY EVERY USER BECOMES A FRIEND “Never has any other cough medicine acted so quickly and satisfactorily as Foley’s Honey and Tar Compound; and it gives complete satisfaction to friends who use it on my recommendation,” says J. D. McComb, Toledo, Ohio. It spreads a healing, soothing coating in an irritated inflamed throat, stops coughing; raises phlegm easily. No opiates to cause constipation, no chloroform, no “dbpe.” You take no chances with cough or cold when you buy Foley's Honey and Tar Compound. Ask for it.—Advertisement.

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still had enough fuel remaining to reach Paris. Or I rsiglit have struck the coastline as far north as northern Scandinavia, or as far south as southern Spain and landed without danger to myself or the plane, even though I had not reached my destination. With these facts in view, I believed the additional reserve of fuel to be more important on this flight than the accuracy of celestial navigation. For the flight from San Diego to St. Louis and New York I carried

Is 30 the Love Deadline? Men Past That Age Have Proved Their Devotion. Says James Montague, Replying to Durant’s Contention.

BY JAMES J. MONTAGUE 'T'H ACKER AY accounted for a famous British general's popularity with women by explaining that he allowed them to give him money. There is no devotion comparable that which is engendered by the bestowing of favors. I have known elderly theatrical managers to bankrupt themselves trying vainly to make stars out of their wives. And the more money they lost the more ardent became their affection for the pretty little dumbbells, who never could learn to do anything but stand still and look beautiful. If love means unselfish devotion—and it ought to—men who are past 30 are more capable of possessing it than men under 30. And their capacity increases as they reach maturer years—which often are years of indiscretion. The youthful husband thinks a good deal about himself. When his “passions once have lost their brutal force,” as Tennyson said in a mean poem he wrote about a girl who refused him, he begins to wonder what kind of a break he is getting out of wedded life. He “looks out of the window” oftener than an older man does. He thinks tenderly of the girls he might have had. and is prone to imagine that they wouldn't have taken him as a matter of course so early in the game, and scolded him for leaving cigaret ashes around the house and spending so much time on the golf course. After that he begins to feel sorry for himself, and the fine edge of the romance is over. But there is something almost maternal in the affection of a man of more advanced years, and there is no greater love than mother love. He is transported to think that this lovely creature—even though she were a spinster of 30 or more when he married her—has really consented to let him give her flowers, and take her to the theater, and sit patiently around modistes’ shops while she tries on costumes. He thinks up little surprises to delight her. He gets out of the weekly poker event, and actually takes her around the golf course with 1 im every day. I have yet to •see a froung man doing that more than a couple of times in a year. ts a MOST young men arc fairly swollen with conceit if, before attaining 30 they have accumulated enough money to support a wife in reasonable comfort. Such a man wants her to listen and understand him when he brings home the figures on the balance sheet, and tells her how the advice he gave the sales manager resulted in a record business for the year. He expects that she will be thrilled with all the shop talk which he can get no one else to listen to, and that she will remain attentive even when he relates the struggles of his early youth. And when she yawns through his conversation, suggests going out to the theater or the movies, he begins to think that he is not appreciated, and she is no longer as beautiful or as intelligent in his eyes as she was in the days of the courtship. He may get used to her after that, and regard her with a sort

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

maps of the individual States and one of the United States with the course plotted on each. For the flight from New York to Paris I had two hydrographic charts of the North Atlantic Ocean containing the great circle course and its bearing at intervals of 100 miles. In addition to these charts, I had a map of each State, territory and country passed over. This included maps of Connecticut, Rhode Island, Massachusetts, Novia Scotia, Newfoundland, Ireland, England and France. Also a map of Europe. (To Be Continued)

of desperate tolerance, but it would be somewhat inaccurate to term that sort of a feeling love. The word “dote” means to love, and the word “dotard” means an old gentleman. Perhaps there is some etymological coimection between them. Anyway, men who get married after 30, while they are far more easily the victims of female fortune hunters, are far less likely to try to break out of the trap, and far more apt to glory in their fetters. ana WHEN there is a break it usually is due to the lady, for she is always romantic, and seldom can help regretting that she didn't meet John Barrymore a little earlier. About women. I am not so sure. Nobody is, or ever has been. Yet I know of a number of them who have married after 30, and who still believe that little, ugly husbands have the physical attractiveness of a movie star, the strength of Gene Tunney. and the mentality of all the world's greatest thinkers—including philosophers—rolled into .one. It is the maternal instinct in them that makes them love the men they married. And men, born of women, inherit maternal instincts too. That is what makes them ardent lovers after 30, provided they marry girls who do not try to boss them, but continue to be clinging vines. Far bo it from me to enter into an academic argument with such a scholarly gentleman and profound thinker and observer as Mr. Will Durant. In default of equipment, all I can say is that I believe he is wrong. His reasoning sounds lick that of a young man, and a young man naturally has his own point of view, a point of view' which is beautifully expressed in the song of Mr. Vernon Dalhart, "Never marry an old man For h<* Is Torn and Kray. But a vounc man's heart is full of love Oo way. old man. ko way." (Copyright. 1928. by Bell Syndicate. Ine.) P. T. A. TO PRESENT PLAY Washington Group Arrange Show for Pipe Organ Fund. “His Honor Abe Potash,” hailed as the greatest of the famous Potash plays, will be presented at Washington High School auditorium at 8 p. m. Monday by Arthur Mac Murray's Community Theater Players, under auspices of the school ParentTeachers’ Association. Proceeds will start a fund planned by the association to purchase a pipe organ for the auditorium. Baby Chokes on Watch t',;i I Hit id Press BLUFFTON. Ind„ March 12.—The 10-months-old baby of Mr. and Mrs. Dale Ulner, seven miles southwest of here, is recovering after attempting to swallow a wrist w’atch. Services of a physician were required to remove the watch from the baby's throat.

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Instalments big chan ge 1 <*<>* 18 £ses and by 1 °“ c m St ot the Costume f< S> er 10 actual others ft rLJ form* ot defer or 1 uUon s. Cu Europe. As \ ou r L#^^ etter . Un** { m&rm- At?, which and ent book on ins talrt*b\ rC Thc new ' vl^° crC ated a de-# _■ _V ( not so jm trough BU ® ,„„ busi-1 1 Museum of A and# / ~M/\ [ 5 ha3 through va jf^ qua U- P oU '\v early. e°'° n ; all ov ermu f . W tesss. /• — a acceptance- Bu3 ‘ eoo d since 19 { 0 art is a <■£ Aft M | V*Strain has bee* put l&ht. V • Kj*arSWl# (lO U 1 Starting. Taaday, y .to Every Thrifhy Woman! 1 As welcome and timely as the first warm breeze • Kf‘ml I of spring! A deep thrill of genuine savings will SI thv.l I he felt by every woman fortunate enough to mS jpg" IV Sp'l I share in this event. The wise will come early J|J| il \ There Is No Dress in the Lot ( ftl fil V Worth Less Than $10.00! H , pt | Nk Others Worth Mach More! Judge for Yourself! \ Apt! Picture any new style you’ve heard about— I \ Trrfft recall the most popular shades you have 1 \ usl COME seen — t^ien remem^er the usual Miller- 1 1 v* s ;! PREPARED Wohl quality materials. This happy I \ don. 1 fqr BA RGAINS\. combination will greet your visit and 1 \ gesttol send you away with satisfaction. | \ / Disappointed r & The quality will be remembered I \ / l° n 8 after price is forgotten. I \ I b £;l So come early for I • o > \ \ The Season *s I jI ( I Jk (Dresses/) j N ™ ST J WS7 /MODELS!/ | bu*h| As each new shipment was un- / u\d ro " w I packed we realized more and / * {more how ridiculous it is to AT vsW > de offer such dresses for only $6.60. AL I dtt* • Ljkl Rut price tags are printed and A s Atncrft announcements already made. a. "5o On With the Sale Say it Wrtfi ValueV/ o ure bobble Fkl CcgflVfefMH W i 1 91 MH ft fW f M ill . ro rrchaut L , ui ■ BiH ki aII 1 i &wsk Al WI ■ I r aste : l m mI 1 1 age I 45 Eagt Washington St. jfegg

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