Indianapolis Times, Volume 40, Number 15, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 May 1928 — Page 7
MAT 29, 1928.
CITY TO HONOR DEAD SOLDIERS MEMORIAL DAY Program Includes Services * at Monument and Parade. Members of the general Memorial day committee put finishing touches on the program by which local citizenry will honor their heroic dead. services at the Soldiers and Sailor-* Monument are to be held at 9 an. Wednesday, the annual para: e at 2 p. m„ and services at Cro ~n Hill cemtery at 3 o'clock. All have been arranged on central standand time. Secretary George Hawkins of the committee urged all motorists who will aid in transporting members of the G. A. R. to report at Ft. Friendly, 512 N. Illinois St., at 1 p. m. The old soldiers will assemble there at that hour. Five Divisions to Parade Grand Marshal Wilson C. Oren will be in command of the parade, which will be in five divisions. First division, commanded by Capt. A. J. Ball, will be made up of the Grand Army of the Republic, escorted by Sens of Veterans, guard of honor, and a firing squad from the United Spanish War Veterans. Col. Willard S. Boyle will be marshal of the second division, composed of the reserve officers training corps, American Legion, Veterans of Foreign Wars and Disabled Veterans of the World War. Third division will be commanded by Maj. Thomas Cathro. It wi'l be made up cf Shortridge High School students led by Cadet Major Arthur Brown and students from Manual, Technical and Crispus Attucks high schools. Scout Executive F. O. Belzer will be marshal of the fourth division, consisting of Boy Scouts, Camp Fire Girls and grade school pupils. Cathedral High School students will compose the fifth division. All divisions will assemble along the east curb of Meridian St., with streets on the right as follows: Memorial Rites Held First division, St. Clair St.; second, Walnut St.; third, North St.; Fourth and Fifth, Michigan St. The G. A. R. in automobiles will pass along the front of the line, the remaining units turning successively into column. Line of march will be south on Meridian St., around the Circle to the west to Market St., then on Market to Pennsylvania and south on Pennsylvania to Georgia, where transportation to Crown Hill will be provided. Members of the Service Star Legion conducted services today at the Grove of Remembrance, Garfield Park. Mrs. Cora Young Wiles, president of Hamilton Berry ohapter, and Mrs. Henry Coerper of the memorial committee were in charge. The Rev. George Arthur Frantz pronounced the invocation and the Rev. J. Floyd Seelig delivered an address. Few Silver Dollars Used By United Press WABASH, Ind., May 29.—Out of several thousand dollars paid at the office of County Treasurer Amos Smith in taxes only twelve silver dollars were used. There was once a time when silver dollars circulated freely, but it is unusual to receive one now. Divorces “Easy Mark’’ Bil Times Special EVANSVILLE, Ind., May 29. William Axton was such an “easy mark” that he often had to pay notes he signed for others and failed to support her, Mrs. Ada H. Axton testified in obtaining a divorce.
St-S v.a' 1 ® P u a cti° n baW \ 1 \ $&&&& \ \ -*** Resinol CAN’T PRAISE IT ENOUGH Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound Helped Her So Much “I have not taken anything but Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com-
pound for 18 months and cannot praise-if enough. I weighed about 100 pounds and was not able to do any kind of work. My housework was done by my mother and my outdoors work was
-=o r , done. I have taken four bottles jf the Vegetable Compound and now I am wdllOnd strong and feel fine. I got my sister-in-law to take It after her last baby came and she is stronger now. I cannot praise it enough.” Mrs. Hattie V. Eastin, R. 1, Kingston, Missouri.—Advertisement,
’Chute Jumper
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Ethel Pritchett Ethel Pritchett, Indianapolis girl, will attempt a three-para-chute leap from a balloon at Riverside amusement park Wednesday afternoon after the 500-mile race at the Speedway, the hour having set to allow race visitors time to reach Riverside after the Memorial day classic. Adopts Daylight Saving By Times Special UNION CITY, Ind., May 29. Daylight saving will become effective here Saturday under an ordinance adopted by the city council.
This special offer ends this week This is positively the last week of our unusual offer of a dollar for your old iron—any kind or condition—to apply on the purchase price of a wonderful, brand-new, shining, good-for-a-lifetime American Beauty electric iron —The best iron made !| You pay only one dollar down and the balance at a dollar a month. But you must act at once. Remember, this is the | 1..1 ...k, G,l j 0,,. .1 one,
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Take a Spring Tonic for a very GOOD REASON You feel sluggish—lack pep—appetite gone, you do not care to eat when you should enjoy your meals pimoles and boils may appear. You need an alterative tonic. Why it should be S.S.S. Because S.S.S. is the one remedy tested by time and perfected by science, which has been demonstrated by the experience of literally millions of satisfied users and by scientific tests in clinical laboratories to increase the appetite and build up to normal the count of red cells in the blood. This is the true basis of health and strength the bright eyes, the clear unblemished skin, the glow and joy of bodily vigor, and resistance to disease.
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‘TOO GOOD TO BE TRUE’ Comment of Terre Haute Man on News of $15,000 Legacy By United Press TERRE HAUTE, Ind., May 29. When the Terre Haute Post informed Benjamin Pine, of this city, that it had received a telegram from a news service in New York stating that Pine had just inherited $15,000,
Doctor Found What is Best for Thin, Constipated People
Asa family doctor at Monticello, Illinois, the whole human body, not any small part of it, was Dr. Caldwell's practice. More than half his “calls” were on women, children and babies. They are the ones most often sick. But their illnesses were usually of a minor nature — colds, fevers, headaches, biliousness —and all of them required first a thorough evac .ation. They were constipated. In the of his 47 years' practice (he was graduated from Rush Medical College back in 1875), he iound a good deal of success in such cases with a prescription of his own containing simple laxative herbs with pepsin. In 1892 he decided to use this formula in the manufacture of a medicine to be known as Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin. and in that year his prescription was first placed on the market. The preparation immediately had as great a success in the drug stores as it previously had in his private practice. Now’, the third generation is using it. Mothers are giving it to their children who were given it by their mothers. Every second of the working day someone somewhere is gcJng into a drug store to buy it. Millions of bottles of Dr. Caldwell's Syrup pepsin are being used a year. Its great success is based on merit, on repeated buying, on one satisfied user telling another. There are thousands of homes in this country
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
he commented, “It’s too good to be true.” The telegram, the Post said, did not say who left Pine the money, and when they inquired of Pine who it might be, he said: “That’s anew one on me. I have heard nothing of it. I have relatives in New York but I do not think any of them would want to do a thing like that. No matter where the word came from, it must be false.”
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that are never without a bottle of Dr. Caldwell’s 3vrup Pepsin, and w’e have gotten many hundreds of letters from giateful people telling us that it helped them when everythig else failed. Every drug store sells Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin. Keep a bottle in your home,—wnere many live someone is sure to need it quickly. We would be glad to have you prove at our expense how much Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin can mean to you and yours. Just write “Syrup Pepsin,” Monticello. Illinois, and w’e will send you prepaid a FREE SAMPLE BOTTLE —Advertisement.
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