Indianapolis Times, Volume 40, Number 17, Indianapolis, Marion County, 31 May 1928 — Page 9

MAT 31, 1928.

RIVALS FIGHT FOR SEATS AT G. (^PARLEY National Committee Hears Delegates’ Claims Monday. Bu United Press KANSAS CITY, Mo., May 31. The Republican national committee will begin hearing contests Monday over the seating of rival delegations in the national convention, which opens here June 12. Contests have been declared in a half dozen States. Seats of seventytwo delegates are at stake. Dlegations which fail to prove their claims* for seats before the national committee may appeal to the credentials committee or take a second appeal to the floor of the convention. Fight in Texas C. C. Littlctone of Ft. Worth, Texas, leader of the uninstructed delegation ,in that State, arrived' in Kansas City Wednesday armed with documents to prove his delegation was legally selected. Littletone contends the uninstructed delegation was chosen in district conventions, according to law, while the Hoover delegates, head by R. B. Creager. national committeman, were selected at a State convention. “Texans in favor of an uninstructed delegation have put up a strong fight to combat the attempt of a group of Republicans headed by Creager to control the Texas delegation for Hoover,’’ said Littletone. “That our fight has been fruitful is indicated by the fact we have received more than 80,000 responses, pledges and petitions.” Dr. D. W. Sherrod of Meridian. Miss.. Negro member of a contesting delegation from Mississippi, arrived here Wednesday to lay the credentials of his group before the committee. Negro Delegates Split The delegation is headed by Sher rod, Charles U. Gordon, former postmaster of Chicago, and George

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Jailed for an Editorial

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Arrested and sentenced to ten days in jail and fined S2O by Justice of the Peace E. W. Boerstier of Lancaster, Ohio, W. T. Lewis, editor of the Lancaster Gazette, was freed by common pleas court on his request for a writ of hebeas corpus. Lewis was fined and sentenced for contempt of court as a result of a Gazette editorial deploring the small fine imposed on a Columbus man in an assault and battery case. Lewis is shown above in his cell, in which he spent two hour*, with Justice Boerstier in the inset.

L. Sheldon, Pettit, Miss., former Governor of Nebraska. They were elected delegates-at-large at a Staie convention, April 20. Perry W. Howard, Negro national comntitteeman, heads the opposing delegation. Neither delegation is instructed, but the Howard faction is understood to favor the candidacy of Secretary of Commerce Herbert Hoover. ORDERS COPS TO SHAVE Well-Groomed Officers Goal of Lynn Mayor. I'm I nitr<l Pri ss LYNN, Mass.. May 31.—Mayor Bauer has ordered Lynn policemen to observe the following routine before reporting for duty: Shave, shine and a wash behind the ears. “It wouldn't do any harm if policemen powdered their noses when they are shiny,” the Mayor said.

t Goes to School Macon, Georgia. —“My daughter goes to school and also helps me with the housework when she is able. For some months she has rundown and I am giving her Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound as a tonic. Her health is improving and she feels better in every way. We are willing to answer any letters from girls and women asking about it.”—Mrs. D. L. Lindsey, 79 Wilder St., Macon, Georgia.

DAILEY RIVAL QUITS Wells Drops Out, Leaving Four in Race. Withdrawal of Samuel B. Wells, Scottsburg publisher, from the Democratic gubernatorial race leaves four to contest the nomination in the Democratic State convention m Cadle tabernacle, Wednesday. The four are: Frank C. Dailey, who attained a plurality of 50.000 ir the primary; John E. Fredrick, Kokomo manufacturer. Dailey’s chief rival; Earl Crawford, of Milton, who may withdraw cn the eve of the convention, and George Dale, Muncie editor. Wells did not make an active ! campaign and polled but 7,635 vote.,. In a report of campaign expenditures filed with the Scott County clerk he listed his expenses as $22.17. MUSIC CRIPPLES POLICE When Band Is Away, Force Is Cut to Four Men. [i'l United Press MAPLEWOOD. N. J.. May 31 Too much music on this town's police force is not good for the safety of the community, according to Police Commissioner Runyon. Out of twenty-eight members of the force, twenty-four of them are on the police department band and when the band is playing an out-of-town engagement, it leaves only four men to guard the town. Lawyers to Meet at Ft. Wayne But nitre/ I'rcß* FT. WAYNE, Ind., May 31.—The Indiana State Bar Association will hold its annual convention here in July. L. B. Harper, secretary of the Allen County Bar Association, has been ofTcially informed by Joel A. Baker, State secretary. The exact dates’for the convention have not yet been detrmined, but it will last two days. No Stork Limit at Wabash Bu VniteO- Prrem WABASH, Ind.. May 31.—N0 Wabash woman can prosecute her husband because he insists upon having a large number of children in their family, attorneys here agree. A divorce or limited divorce, attorneys held, is the only relief a woman can obtain from a man who demands additions to the family.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

TWO CAPTURED IN GUNBATTLE Ohio Youths ‘Shoot It Out’ With Hoosiers. Bii Times Special LAGRANGE. Ind., May 31—Lananir Thomas, 20, and Steve Estock, 20, Cleveland, Ohio, are prisoners here after a five-mile chase, climaxed by a gun battle with Sheriff Clarence E. Minich and son Warren. The youths, according to word received by the sheriff, drove away from Middlebury without paying for five gallons of gasoline for their auto. With his son, the officer took up the chase, during which the fugitives abandoned their car due to a flat tire, and commandeered another car occupied by two men and two women from Tremont, Ohio. They ditched the second car and from behind it “shot it out” with the sheriff and his son. but were captured. No one was injured. Two Local Men Held Bn Times Special TERRE HAUTE, Ind.. May 31Two Indianapolis men are held here suspected of plotting a filling statipn hold-up. The prisoners gave their names and addresses as Clyde Brown, 522 W. New York Ave., and John Faulk, 722 N. Price St.

HARD ARTERIES Hardet ing arteries indicate high blood pressure, which means that the blood in the heart and blood vessels is under too great a tension —a condition which may end life suddenly. High blood pressure, indicated by hard arteries, heart palpitation, dizziness and difficulty in breathing, is the penalty of our abnormal habits of living. We place too great a strain on the vital organs, especially the liver. The liver becoming “limp” or sluggish, fails to cleanse the blood of the toxic poisons formed in food waste. The whole system then becomes toxic, with stomach, kidneys, heart and blood vessels affected. It is generally recognized that the • liver occasionally needs a little help. There is nothing better for this, as medical men know, than a little ox gall. Ox gall has been found to be a great stimulant for the liver. The genuine, pure ox gall is to be had, dainty and tasteless, in the form of Dioxol tablets. Each tablet represents 10 drops of pure ox gall and costs less than 2c at good druggists. To be sure of getting the genuine, look for the name Dioxol and picture of ox’s head on the package.

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THOMAS TAGGART HOST TO LIBRARY DELEGATES More Than 2,000 at Informal Reception by Former Senator. Bp Times Special WEST BADEN, Ind., May 31Delegates to the fiftieth annual meeting of the American Library Association were guests today of Thomas Taggart, former United States Senator from Indiana, at an informal reception. Attendance at the convention Wednesday exceeded 2,000. Speakers included Charles F. D. Bleden, director of the Boston (Mass.) public library, who urged greater efforts in educating the public to library service. Herbert Putnam, librarian of Congress, and Senorita Esperanza Velazquez, head of the library department of Mexico’s ministry of education, also spoke. Breaks Rib Escaping Death Bij Times Special PERU, Ind., May 31. Elmer Youngblood, Huntington, is suffering from a broken rib and bruises in a local hospital received when he fell through a Wabash railroad bridge at Rich Valley, having swung from a tie in the span on which he was trapped by a train.

Would Refuse Any Price for Health Konjola Gave Her Indianapolis Lady Feels This Medicine Was a Godsend to Her. “I wouldn't take any amount of money for the new health Konjola has given me,” said Mrs. Katie Jessup, 2011 Wilkins street, Indianapolis, in a recent statement she made to the Konjola Man at Hook’s drug

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MRS. KATIE JESSUP —Photo by Northland Studio. store. Illinois and Washington streets, this city, where he is daily I meeting the public and telling them i of the merits of this celebrated; compound. t “Only one who has benefited as I have can realize what a wonderful medicine Konjola really is," continued Mrs. Jessup. “It has done more for me than I ever thought any remedy would do. If I had known before what I know now about this remarkable remedy, I would nave been willing to pay $50.00 a bottle for it, bee luse it is the only remedy that has given me lasting relief from all my health troubles. “For years I had a severe case of stomach trouble and my kidneys 1 were also affected. I suffered ter-' ribly from the acid .condition of my j stomach. In fact, the doctors told | me that I had six ulcers. At times j I didn't think I would be able to I stand the pain. Immediately after j meals I would get a feeling that 11 was going to vomit and there would be a burning sensation start, from the pit of my stomach and rise all the way up to my throat. I would eat as often as ten and twelve times a day, trying to settle my stomach. This really made my condition worse, but it gave me temporary relief. About a half hour after meals gas would start to form and bloat me up until there was a heavy, riraggy feeling In the pit of my stomach. At times my heart would beat so fast that I could hardly get my breath. Besides a'l this stomach trouble, I suffered a great deal from bladder and kidney trouble. I was subject to having chills during the night and had to get up in order to warm myself. Between this and frequent night risings. I was never able to enjoy a full night's rest and consequently I always felt tired and miserable the next morning. I suffered like this nearly four years and during that time I spent hundreds of dollars trying to find relief, but i nothing seemed to help me until I started to take Konjola. “After I had taken the second ! dose, I quit vomiting and that ter- I rible burning sensation around my I heart stopped. By the end of the I first week I was feeling much better and I could notice an improvement every day from then on. I realized I was in a serious condition and didn’t expect two or three bottles to end all my health troubles, but I j was confident that this Konjola j medicine was helping me. In fact, it is the first medicine that gave j me such relief in such a short time. After my stomach became settled, I began eating my meals regularly again and there was never the least bit of misery afterward. This remedy also ended my kidney trouble. Night risings and chills have left me and that her.vy feeling in my bladder has disappeared. All the neuritis pains have gone out of my arms and shoulders and I never feel so tired and wornout like I used to. I have now full treatment of Konjola and the relief it has given me from all my health troubles is really a Godsend. I cannot help but feel enthusiastic about Konjola and I strongly recommend it to everyone who suffers.” The Konjola Man is at the Hook drug store, Illinois and Washington streets, Indianapolis, where he is daily meeting the public and introducing and explaining the merits of this remedy. Konjola is also sold in every Hook store in this city and by all the leading druggists throughout this entire section.—Advertisement. __ u

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