Indianapolis Times, Volume 39, Number 275, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 March 1928 — Page 7

MARCH 14, 1928.

INDIANA GROUP OF WALTONITES TO BOOST PARK Support Is Pledged Project for Banks of Upper ' Tippecanoe. Support of the Indiana Chapter of the Izaak Walton League for the proposed plan of the Department of Conservation to turn the banks of the upper Tippecanoe into a great river park, affording saiictuary to birds and game, will be pledged at a.meeting of Waltonians at Rochester, March 27. Announcement of the meeting and its purpose was made known today by Charles Bicderwolf. Supreme Court clerk and president of the Indiana division of the league. Many chapter heads have taken the matter up with Biederwolf since announcement of the plan for the sanctuary, and “because conservation work in general and augumentation of wild life in particular are part of our organization’s creed, we are firmly behind this movement,’’ he said. The Tippecanoe river park ar proposed will extend on either side of this typical Indiana . stream for about eighty 'miles, . through Pulaski, Fulton. Marshall and Kosciusko Counties. “This river,’ 5 said Biederwolf, “is one of the few existing great river tracts wherein wild life may reproduce and find sanctuary without molestation. In turn, as small wild animals and game birds multiply, it I is only natural the increase will j spread to the surrounding country- i side, to stock the land for many j miles. “The placid, peaceful river is un- j spoiled by the usual contamination i of modern cities and with its strip ! of natural woodland on each side ; will form a beautiful park for Hoosiers and tourists.’’ More Residents of Indianapolis Praise Konjola Another Local Man Says It Was the First Medicine That Ended His Health Troubles. Thousands of testimonials have j come to the Konjola Man from people in every section of Indiana. Most of these testimonials are from the city of Indianapolis, because the Konjola Man is here in person at the Hook Drug Store, Illinois and

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MR. TERRY HOCKERSMITH Washington Sts., where over a hun- j dyed people visit'him daily to find; out fdr themselves about this surprising new compound. Many druggists in this section declare that nothing like Konjola was ever known to the public before. This medicine is helping thousands of men and women who were never benefited by any remedy or treatment before. This accounts for the great number of voluntary indorsements by the people of Indianapolis. Just a few days ago Mr. Terry Hockersmith. 136 W. New York St., this city, made the following statement about Konjola: “I can tell the world that I feel like anew man since taking Konjola,” said Mr. Hockersmith. "I was certainly surprised to get such results from one small remedy after spending a fortune on other treatments and getting nothing for the money I spent. My main trouble was a heavy feeling in the stomach. which was followed by gas and terrible pains, which seemed to settle in the pit of my stomach. I could not sleep but a few minutes at a time. I was always tired, sluggish and dizzy. My bowels were very inactive and I was troubled with headaches. This trouble kept getting worse and worse until I hardly knew what to do. "My mother first , began taking Konjola for a trouble similar to mine and in a short time her entire system was very much improved. After seeing what this medicine was doing for her, I decided I would try it, and that decision proved to be worth very much to me. As the results I have obtained, you can judge for yourself. I eat what I want without suffering any pain, my bowels are regular, the headaches are gone, I sleep like a top, the tired, sluggish feeling is gone and the heaviness in my stomach is a thing of the past. I give all the credit to Konjola for this wonderful relief. I highly recommend this medicine to all sufferers, as it has proven to be a blessing to humanity in our city.” The Konjola Man is at the Hook Drug Store, Illinois and Washington Sts., Ifldianapolis, where he is da'ily meeting the public and introducing and explaining the merits of ttoi? remedy.—Advertisement.

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John Mortimer Coward. 111. 5, our youngest multi-millionaire, who is to inherit $4,000,000 from his late father, the shoe king. CAMPAIGN WON’T HURT BUSINESS, SAYS SPEAKE General Motors Executive Is Guest of Rotary Club. I The presidential campaign will ! not upset business. Floyd A. Allen, ! assistant to the president of the :of the General Motors Company, | predicted in an address to the ; Rotary Club luncheon at the Olay- ! pool Tuesday. “I never expect to see big panics I come again such as we used to have,” he told the club members. | “The time of the presidential year I bugaboo is past." ASKS $50,000 FOR LOVE Pulaski County Husband Charges Affections of Five’s Mother Stolen lli/ Timm Special RENSSELAER, Ind., March 4. The $50,000 alienation of affections suit brought by Chance Wilson, Pulaski County resident, against David Barnhill, has been brought to the Jasper Circuit Court here on a change of venue. Wilson alleges he and his wife, married twenty-five years ago and the parents of five children, were happy together until Barnhill began his attentions to Mrs. Wilson in June, 1925. Lightning Kills .Man at Grave By Times Special VEVAY, Ind., March 14.—Lightning killed Jacob Spicer, 50, while he was filling the grave of a child in a cemetery here. The bolt struck during a light shower, tore the earth a distance of seventy-five feet and tore a three-foot deep hole in a grave near the one where Spicer was killed. Child Swallows Coal Oil By Times Special PORTLAND, Ind.,. March 14. Rosemary Orr, 2, is in a serious condition as the result of swallowing coal oil at the home of her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Wiley McLaughlin.

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LEGION BILL IN HOUSE BOOSTS MEDICAL COST Report of Director Hines Shows Increase of $160,000,000. r.y ROBERT TALLEY WASHINGTON, March 14.—Free hospitalization and medical treatment for all ex-soldiers, sailors and marines would require $112,577,500 for hospital construction alone, General Frank I. Hines, director of the Veterans' Bureau, reports to Congress, in an analysis of the bill sponsored by the American Legion and other ex-service men's organizations. The increased cost or hospital maintainence would be $46,960,000 a year for operation, $1,106,000 for clothing, travel and invalids’ appliances, and $1,110,000 for out-pa-tient treatment of minor cases. The bill, drawn In accordance with resolutions adopted at the American Legion's convention in Paris last summer, would extehd

DANGER fa Your tongue is the best barometer ol your physical condition. Look at it every morning before breakfast, if it is coated with white, yellow or brown coloring, and does not have a clean red appearance you are constipated and not well. Heed Its Warning Constipation causes more ailments than all other diseases, and is the result of not having a daily bowel movement Sick-headache, indigestion, biliousness and sallow complexion follow. Ask your druggist for a 25c red paper package of CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS “Safe Laxative”. Take a dose to-night and continue one pill after each meal. Don’t stop —until your tongue is clean. You will be surprised at the tonic effect this doctor's formula will have on you. CARTER’S ESI PILLS Corns Pain gone at a touch That** how instant is your relief from corn pain whenyou apply Dr.Scholl’s Zino-pads. It’s the world’s fastest, safest method. They remove the cause friction and pressure of shoes—the only method that acts on this scientific principle. Old ways—powerful liquidsor caustic plasters—ignore the cause—often leave the toes sore from acid burn. Zino-pads won’t irritate the tenderest skin. At all drug, shoe and dept, stores—3s c. DXSchoIVs 'Zino-pads Put oneon—the pain is gone!

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free medical service to all veterans, regardless of when, where or how the injury or ailment was contracted. Broadly, it covers all cases of all veterans of all wars. The Veterans’ Bureau now has fifty hospitals, containing about 25,000 patients. The $112,577,500 additional construction, it is stated, would be offset to some extent by the taking over of soldiers’ homes by the bureau as recommended by the American Legion. These homes are now operated by the War Department. Another feature of the American Legion’s bill, it is estimated, would affect 75.674 veterans and their

INSURER or automobiles in Indiana I J jgp. TT.Bi4.ivb- Vice President II ■ H Secretanj | Saks jj v 14 The men . . who are responsible . M Jw for the extraordinary growth and ' mm the remarkable financial strength I /| M|H of “The State’’.. now the largest WJh insurer of automobiles in Indiana I /I \ISI ** * anc * one outstanding b automobile underwriters of the ffl nation. Ii OUR GROWTH IN ASSETS fj 1918. $2,407.15 n 1919. .$36,688.94 3 1920. .$195,335.37 i fj 1921...5357,783.22 € 1922,,.5555,159.58 I J 1923 . $832,676.55 1 f 1924 . . $1,150,222.48 I | 1925 .. $1,407,602.59 I ! 1926 .. $1,637,975.67 II 1927 .. $1,659,835.33 Jj 1928 . . $1,806,814.72 tj Tfch Floor f rwn Home Office I OCCIDENTAL ■ /W ■ Hi INDIANAPOLIS H Building 1 AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE J ASSOCIATION

families and add $4,365,000 a year in disability compensation. Another change contemplated by the American Legion bill would permit applicants for disability compensation to file their claims at anytime. It is estimated this would cost $3,342,516 the first year. Capital Doubled to $1,000,000 Ba Times Special GREENWOOD, Ind., March 14. This town now has the largest building and loan association in Jackson County, as a result of doubling the capital of the Greenwood Building and Loan Association, making it $1,000,000.

DEMOCRATS WILL HOLD REGIONAL MEETINGS Complete Tickets in Every County Aim of Leaders. To insure complete tickets in every county and extend organization into every precinct, six Democratic regional meetings will be held throughout Indiana the last two weeks of March. R. Earl Peters, Democratic State chairman, announced meeting dates as follows: Ft. Wayne. March 19; La Porte, March 20: Lafayette, March

23; Indianapolis, March 26; New Albany, March 27, and Evansville, March 28. County, district and State organization heads, men and women, will attend the sessions. Counties embraced in the Indianapolis meeting at the Claypool are Vermillion, Monroe, Wayne, Vigo, Marion, Fayette, Sullivan, Brown, Union, Greene, Johnson, Decatur, Clay, Hancock, Bartholomew, Owen, Madison, Shelby, Putnam, Delaware, Rush, Hendricks, Randolph, Parke, Morgan, Henry and Franklin. Nebraska has more than 4,500,000 hogs, valued at $60,000,000.

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NAME TRAFFIC MANAGER E. E. Mills Appointed to AdTMcr Transport Company President L. G. Wilson, of the Advance Motor Transport Company, Inc., with headquarters at South Bend, Ind., announced today that E. E. Mills, former traffic manager of the Fairbanks, Morse & Companyplant here, has been appointed general traffic manager of the Advance Company with offices at 340 S. Delaware St. The company has a truck freight service coveting four States.