Indianapolis Times, Volume 40, Number 214, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 January 1929 — Page 11

JAN. 25, 1929.

CAUTION SHOWN BY POLICE IN TAGGINGAUTOS Stickers Handed Out Less Freely, With Traffic Code in Tangle. Police are using more caution these days in tagging with stickers the automobiles of motorists who violate parking provisions of the new city traffic code. Officers have been ordered not to hand out stickers as promiscuously as they did during the first few days of the ordinance, according to Police Chief Claude M. Worley. They have been instructed to put stickers on machines only for flagrant violations of the ordinance, such as parking in safety zones or by fire plugs or in extreme cases of overtime parking, Worley said. But police still are tagging ears and making a heroic effort to enforce the new traffic code, in spite of the dismissal in municipal court of cases against motorists ignoring stickers, police records show. Since the new traffic ordinance •went into effect Jan.. 1 through Wednesday, traffic police have put stickers on 1,587 cars, according to records of Traffic Captain Lester Jones. Os this number only approximately 350 have obeyed the sticker summons and paid $2 fines at the traffic office. The remainder have ignored the stickers. License numbers of 650 cars tagged during the first four days of the year whose owners failed to pay the $2 fines were turned over to “SIX BOTTLES OF KONJOLA GAVE ME GLORIOUS HEALTH” Happy Lady Relates How Super-Medicine Ended Eighteen Years of Stomach and Liver Troubles. What a wonderful thing it would be for all who suffer, and who would be well again, to know the world of health and happiness that the new Konjola has brought to uncounted thousands who suffered for years,

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MRS. DEMA MONSON —Photo by National Studio.

seeking in vain for the remedy they needed, before finding Konjola. There is no mystery, no magic, no secret about Konjola. The whole story of this astonishing medicine is being told daily by the Konjola Man, who is at the Hook Drug Store, Illinois and Washington streets, this city, where he is meeting those who are ill and who would be well again. See the Koujola Man; hear from him just what this master compound of 32 ingredients—22 of them the medicinal ;r. ces of roots and herbs—is doing. That’s the best test, after all, of a medicine —what it has done and what it is doing. Those who are sick want to get well. They want health, not promises. Konjola comes recommended by its performances. Take, for instance, the experience that Mrs. Dema Monson, R. R. H., Box 238, Indianapolis, had with this super-medicine. Happy to be on the road to health again, Mrs. Monson said to the Konjola Man just a few days ago: "Six bottles of Konjola gave me glorious health after I had suffered fifteen years from two ailments—stomach and liver troubles. These ailments made me extremely nervous. In fact, my health was in a very bad state, generally speaking. My sides were sore and achy, sharp pains pierced my back and under my shoulder blades. I had no pep or energy, cared not a whit for amusements, or whether I did my housework. Every day I was subject to dizzy spells that lasted for an hour or two. tunct , p?.ti r >n made my health all the worse, 'ey refusing to eliminate the poisons that, gathered in my system. I was wearied for fear that there was no hope for me. ••I had been reading the papers about the wonderful accomplish ments of this new Konjol* The indorsements were so sincere that I felt it might benefit me and I decided to find out what it would do. I have now taken six bottles and with the completing of each one, I could feel a wonderful change stealing over me. A warm glow of health seemed to flow through my body. 1 gained in strength, weight and energy. I am free of all pains, dizzy spells and that worn-out. tired reeling. My liver and stomach function perfectly. I will be glad to personally recommend Konjola to any one who cares to call me at Cherry 4312, Ring 2. for information.” Just another proof of Konjolas merits, of its amazing powers in cases that have resisted all other medicines. One does not have to wait long fox results and when they do come, they are not merely temporary. Take this road to health—every day of delay simply means another day of suffering. The Konjola Man is at the Hook Drug Store, Illinois and Washington streets, this city, where he is meeting the public dally, introducing and explaining the merits of this master medicine—Advertisement.

City Prosecutor Herbert Spencer some weeks ago. Affidavits for the arrest of some 254 of this number were prepared by Spencer and his assistants and returned to police for arrest of the defendants. He and his aids are busy at the laborious clerical tas' of checking names and addresses of the remainder and preparing affidavits. Eighty-eight of the 204 have been taken before Municipal Judge Clifton R. Cameron. A week ago Cam-

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eron continued indefinitely, which which amounts to dismissal, sixtytwo of the cases on the ground that the public should be allowed at least thirty days to learn the provisions of the ordinance. Thursday he dismissed twenty-six charges on the motion of Louis Adams, deputy city prosecutor. But his office will continue to prepare affidavits as long as police continue "sticking” cars and bringing

him stubs of unpaid stickers, Spencer said. Even after the lengthy clerical process of preparing the affidavits has been gone through, police are running into unusual difficulties in serving them, according to Captain Jones. • A surprising number of addresses given by auto owners when they obtained licenses have been found

NORMAN’S

mm PHILIP JOSEPH, Founder, 1917 9

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

fraudulent, or the owners since have moved, Jones said. He displayed a large stack of affidavits for persons police could not locate. They bore such notations as "vacant lot,” “No such number,” “this man moved six months ago." One affidavit was for Elgin Moorehead, 208 East Washington street. The officer seeking to serve it had marked it, “This is where the courthouse is.”

SHOALS LEASE ASKED Tennessee Congressmen to Press Demand. Bu Times Special WASHINGTON, Jan. 25.—Backed by the entire Tennessee delegation

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in the house, Alabama representatives are planning to demand that the house military affairs committee approve leasing of Muscle Shoals to the American Cyanamid Company. The Tennesseeans have pledged support to the movement after informal conferences for several days. The American Cyanamid Company, which seeks a fifty-year lease on the Shoals, has offered anew proposal with a recapture clause

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that has been accepted by the twg delegations. It Is said. In addition the Tennesseeans at? being given a special clause In the proposed Shoals bill relating to Cove Creek dam. The plan Is to have that dam built by the government and to lease it to the cyanamid company with the understanding that Tennessee can buy It at the termination of the lease.