Indianapolis Times, Volume 40, Number 30, Indianapolis, Marion County, 15 June 1928 — Page 10
PAGE 10
57 RECREATION CENTERS, POOLS OPENSATURDAY Equipment Repaired for 45 City Playgrounds; Plan Pageants. Fifty-seven playgrounds under the direction of Recreation Director Ijesse P. McClure ■will be opened if weather does not prevent. Playground equipment for fortyfive municipal playgrounds has been repaired and painted during the winter. Seven private grounds will be under McClure’s direction. “Our equipment is in good shape and the department is planning a banner year for all sections of the city. If everything works out according to our program we will have a few pageants in some of the playgrounds this summer,” McClure declared. Plan Summer Pageants Miss Hazel Abbott, Technical High School physical instructor, will direct the pageants. McClure has an additional supervisor this summer and will divide the city into three sections. Supervisors will tour the various playgrounds by autos and motorcycles. Robert Nipper, Lew Skinner, Henry Long, Miss Lola Pfeiffer, Miss Ruth Emhardt and Miss Abbott will assist McClure in directing the city’s recreational program. Activities on the playgrounds will include basketball, baseball, volleyball, track, broad and high jump and swimming. Slides, sand piles, merry-go-rounds and swings will be provided for the younger children. Arrange Seven-Day Program A seven-day program has been arranged for the summer season, McClure said. McClure Beach, which was closed last season, Warfleigh Beach and Rhodius, Willard, Ringgold and Douglas pools will be opened under direction of competent life guards and swimming instructors. McClure Beach and Warfleigh will not open Saturday because White River is too high for swimming. McClure was closed all last season by Dr. Herman G. Morgan, city health officer, because of Broad Ripple sewage pollution. City Engineer A. H. Moore ordered pumps repaired and additional sewage lines installed to relieve the pollution. RARE DISEASE STUDIED Only Six Cases of Malady of “Great Unwashed” Discovered. Bu Science Service MINNEAPOLIS, June 15.—A disease so rare that only six proved cases have been discovered by the Mayo Clinic in eight and a half years was described to the American Medical Association here today by Drs. Frederick A. Figi and Luther Thompson of Rochester, Minn. Rhinoscleroma, a disease of the “great unwashed,” is an infection that causes hardening of portion:: of the respiratory tract- It is found nearly exclusively among those of the Slavic races. Only two cases were found in 1,500,000 cases treated during thirty years at Johns Hopkins Hospital.
OUCH! My feet—Me for a pair of Heid’s Health Shoes. to EEC HEID’S sv w 1546 N. Illinois
TOO WEAK TO ENJOY VISITS OF HER FRIENDS Had Dreadful Pains, Swelling and Headache—Neighbor Suggested Cardui, and It Helped Her. “I had been very much rundown,,” says Mrs. Hannah Hodges of Livingston, Ky. “I could not do my work, and was so weak I could not do any visiting with my friends. In fact, I was in such a condition that, when they called on me, it was too great an effort to talk to them. “I had dreadful pains up and down my legs. At times this would become so acute it was as bad as toothache. My legs swelled, and sometimes I could hardly put my feet to the floor. “Often I had headache, and had to lie on the bed days at a time. I had a dreadful bear.ng-down feeling across my abdomen that l can not describe, and if I stood on my feet for any length of time, this became very much worse. “Cardui had been recommended to me by several of my friends, but somehow I had never gotten right down to the point of taking it. However, my health had gotten so bad, something had to be done, so one day, when one of my neighbors said, ‘I wish you would try Cardui,’ I said, ‘Well, I will,’ and I did, and it has made the difference between a sick woman and a well woman in me. I would say to every woman who is suffering from womanly troubles, ‘Try Cardui.’ ”
i-* ——TAKE ■■■■ fCARDUI USED BY WOMEN JFOH OVER 50 YEARS, Cardoseptic, for hygienic reasons, should be used by women as a mild, harmless detergent; 50 eta.
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
JUNE 15,1023
