Indianapolis Times, Volume 40, Number 174, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 December 1928 — Page 16

PAGE 16

FOUNTAIN OF YOUTH* POT OF ONION BROTH Celery Patch, Not Monkey Jungle, Urged to Fight Off Old Age. BY GEORGE KENT United Press Staff Correspondent PARIS, Dec. 11.—The path to the fountain of youth winds through the onion and celery patch and not through the monkey jungle. The legendary fountain is the bubbling pot of vegetable broth, according to Dr. Benjamin G. Hauser, Viennese physician, with a knifeless rejuvenation creed. “Glandular operations,” said Dr. Hauser, “are no longer effective after two or three years. The patients then relapse. Their state of health is what it was before, and frequently is worse.” Dr. Hauser explained that by his method old age could be eliminated, and life prolonged. Eat Onions and Celery "Old age is purely conventional,” said the physician. “We have come to believe that it is necessary for men and women to grow old, acquire wrinkles, gray hair and toothless gums. We have not yet discovered how to make life everlasting, but we can make life vigorous and effervescent until the end. The way to do it is with food, specifically food taken according to the chemical requirements of the individual.” The body, according to the physician, is made up of seventeen chemicals, which it receives from the different food substances it absorbs. Onions, for example, are rich in phosphorous and sulphur. Celery likewise. Anything with a sharp flavor has sulphur, such vegetables as carrots, turnips, cabbages and kohl. Milk is rich in calcium, which is the bone-building chemical. Few Potatoes for Hoover “Individuals fall naturally into chemical classes,” continued Hauser. “Henry Ford, for example, is a pure phosphorous type, the man with the high broad forehead, slender and nervous, with a quick and inventive mentality. Lincoln, the rawboned, slow-moving individual, leisurely in making decisions, but immovable once they are made, was the calcium type. Hoover is the vital type. The source of his energy is the vital organs, and it is these he must watch. Not too many potatoes for Hoover. “The Ford type should take plenty of phosphorous. Onions, celery, etc., should form the staples of his diet. He must keep the directive agents of his organism supplied with the chemicals they need.” Dies in Plane Crash Bn TJuited Press HICKVILLE, L. 1., Dec. 11.—Marvin Van Voorhis, 22-year-old student pilot, of Canton, Ohio, was killed when the airplane which he was flying fell and burned, near here late Monday afternoon.

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In the Air

Weather conditions at 9:30 a.m. at Indianapolis airport: South wind, 8 miles an hour; barometric pressure, 30.30 at sea level; temperature, 37; ceiling, unlimited; visibility, one-half mile; ground fog. DISTRICT TO PICK BOSS Bit Times Special GARY, Ind., Dec. 11.—Elza O. Rogers, Republican state chairman, is expected to call a Tenth district convention this week to elect a successor to the district chairmanship, made vacant by the death of John Killigrew, Dec. 2. Walter E. Schrage, Lake county chairman, and mayor of Whiting, is regarded as holding the inside track, although other counties of the district could control the election.

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OUTBREAK OF COLDS GROWS MORE SERIOUS Epidemic Conditions Again Threaten Danger to Thousands

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Planning a Winter Cruise? Why Not the Mediterranean Sailing from New York, Mediterranean cruises take you to Madeira, Casa Blanca, Gibraltar, Algiers, Naples, Monaco, Marseilles, Barcelona, Palermo, Tunis and the Azores—all the famed and interesting spots on this great sea. Early spring is incomparably delightful on the Mediterranean. Thus a perfect climate—and famous cities and countries—combine to make this a cruise you’ll remember. Why not plan to go THIS season? Complete details may be obtained from RICHARD A. KURTZ, Manager Travel Bureau The Leading Travel Bureau of Indianapolis J Bunion trusts

Aviation MISTAKE SEEN IN OPERATION OF AIR MAIL U. S. Suffers Revenue Loss by Giving Up Control, Congressman Says. B,t/ Times Special WASHINGTON, Dec. 11—Congress made a serious and costly mistake in turning operation of the airmail over to private contractors, in the opinion of Representative John C. Speaks of Ohio. Speaks said that not only is the government losing millions of dollars in revenue in not operating the airmail system, but that development of commercial aviation is not nearly as rapid or as expensive as it would be if the government still held control. He said steps should be taken again to gain control of the lines. ’“Government control and operation of the airmal was making splendid progress at the time the business was turned over to private operation and a real source of revenue thus taken away from all the taxpayers, who must continue to dig down, however, to keep up nonpaying branches of the mail system,” Speaks said. So extensive has the use of air mail become that one pound out of every sixty handled now is carried by airplanes. Last week Representative Clyde Kelly of Pennsylvania predicted that within a few years one pound out of every ten of letter mail would be carried by airmail and that $60,000,000 would be expended annually for postage on this class of mail. Make Air Trip to Chicago Captain H. Weir Cook and Lieutenant Fred Maibucher of Curtiss Flying Service of Indiana, returned Monday from Chicago, where they attended the Chicago air show. The trip was made in Norman A. Perry’s new Fairchild cabin monoplane. They were accompanied here by Colonel Jorn Fishback, One Hundred Fiftieth field artillery commander and Walker Winslow. Passengers on Planes Passengers on the Capitol Airways passenger plane from Detroit Monday night included Clinton Noblitt and Fred W. Sparks of the NoblittSparks company, and T. L. Chambers, of New York City. Miss Catherine Deam, Indianapolis, was a passenger on the Chicago plane. Elmer H. Jose, Capitol Airways president, was a passenger as far as Ft. Wayne on the Detroit plane today. Bring Planes Here Lieutenant Fred Maioucher of Curtiss Flying Service of Indiana went to St. Louis Monday night to fly anew Curtiss Robin cabin monoplane to Indianapolis for the Curtiss school. He was to arrive here today. Another plane was to be brought here this week by Captain Charles E. Cox Jr., of the Curtiss company,

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Lindy on Trail of Quail

• ••••••••• •XOOyv> ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••• 11 ■' ' ' " M i : ■ ■ ■* .. ; '/ ' .. ' \ | /1 .1/ 1 ■ \f \ ■ SB

Real birdmen are Colonel Charles A. Lindbergh, upper left, and Harry F. Guggenheim of the Guggenheim Foundation for the Promotion of Aeronautics. Here you see them taking off from New York for a quail hunting trip in Virginia with Governor Harry F. Byrd. Colonel Lindbergh piloted the Loening amphibian, shown below as it took off from East River.

and Captain H. Weir Cook, active head of the company, expected to bring anew Curtiss Fledgling training ship here from St. Louis within two weeks. Curtiss will start its ground school of instruction Jan. 7, but will not get into full swing with actual flying instruction probably until April 1. The company will use several of

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the Curtiss Fledgling planes for instruction work. Flies Here to Drill Captain L. I. Aretz, Lafayette, flew to Indianapolis airport Monday afternoon, in a Waco 10 biplane, to attend drill of the One Hundred Thirteenth observation squadron, Indiana National Guard.

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HOHLT BANDIT DEFIESPOLICE Alleged Holdup Leader Pleads Not Guilty. Arraigned today on charges of auto banditry and robbery, Lloyd Amos, 24, alleged driver of the bandit car used in the attempted holdup of the F. H. Hohlt & Son Dry Goods Cos., in which two bandits were shot to death, pleaded not guilty in criminal court. His trial was set for 9 Monday morning by Judge James A. Collins. Amos’ plea came as a surprise to attaches of the prosecutor’s office, for he had intimated he would plead guilty. The maximum penalty on the charges that face Amos is twentyone years in the penitentiary. Amos’ companions, Thomas C. Kittrell, 28, of 838 Bates street, and Otto Price, 40, of 835 East Georgia street, trapped in the store by police, were killed in the resulting gun battle.

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