Indianapolis Times, Volume 40, Number 220, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 February 1929 — Page 11
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SPEED GOAL OF 240 MILES AN HOURJS SET Major Segrave Will Try to Recapture World Auto Crown. By TiEA Service LONDON, Feb. I.—Major H. O. D. Segrave, dashing young Britisher who isn’t satisfied with dashing 200 miles an hour in an automobile, will sail for America in a few days with his latest wheeled projectile. On the hard, level sands of Or-mond-Daytona Beach, Fla., he and his Golden Arrow will attempt to recapture the world’s speed crown. To be successful, Major Segrave will have to drive his giant car more than 208 miles an hour, for that is the mark set less than a year ago by Ray Keech of Philadelphia. But the English driver expects to travel at the rate of 240 miles an hour—a velocity undreamed of four years ago. In fact, careful calculations and tests in a wind tunnel show that the car is capable of making 246 miles an hour. The last possible square inch has been pared from the frontal area “MONEY COULDN’T BUY THE HEALTH KONJOLA GAVE ME” Liver and Kidney Trouble That Had Made Life Miserable, Quickly End by Herbal Compound. However stubborn the ailment, regardless of what medicines and treatments have failed, Konjola, the new medicine, comes like the rain after the long drouth, brngnig into being new life, new erergy—new and lasting health.
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MR. JOHN P. WOLSIFFER —Photo by National Studio.
Wherever Konjola, the supermedicine of 32 ingredients, is known, there are happy hundred.', eager to tell what this master medicine has done for them. How this advanced remedy accomplishes its amazing victories over ailments os the stomach, liver, kidneys and bowels and rhematism, neuritis and nervousness is being explained daily by the Konjola Man, who is at the Hook Drug Store, Illinois and Washington streets, Indianapolis. There he is meeting every day those who, having heard of the amazing results that Konjola brings, wish to know what this medicine will dc for them. The Konjola Man car not make promises nor claims—no does not need to. He merely points out case upon case in which this remarkable medicine has triumphed when hope of ever seeing another well day had been abandoned. A typical case of how Konjola works is that of Mr. John P. Wol sifter, 1411 East Southern avenue, Indianapolis, who said to the Konjola Man recently: "Money couldn’t buy the health that Konjola gave me and I fee. 1 it my duty to tell of the splendid experience I had with this medicine,” said Mr. Wolsiffer. "For the past two years I had been failing in health, and afte.trying prescriptions, medicines and treatments without end, I came to the conclusion that my case was hopeless. I had low olood pressure and poor circulation that caused a numbness in my arms and legs. Kidney and liver troubles were additional ailments. Constant night rising prevented me from getting the proper rest. My eyes had large puffs under them and my complexion was covered with liver spotu. Severe pains in my back and shoulders made work almost impossible. In fact I was so rundown and tired that even if I sat down for a minute I was sure to fall asleep. I am a baker in one of the largest depart ment stores in Indianapolis and I felt certain I would be forced to give up my work. “One of my friends, knowing of my condition and that I had met only with disappointment in all my efforts to find relief, urged me tc give Konjola a trial. Naturally I was doubtful, for all had faili i me. Bat he was so insistent that I ’-egsn the treatment. Right from the start I began to feel better. The liver and kidneys responded ruickly to the medicine, and six bottles taken in the course of six weeks, erased every vestige of my health troubles. I can sleep vt night, my complexion is clear and healthy. All aches and pains are ended. 1 dc my work with more energy and take a greater interest in life. Today I am enjoying perfect healtn something I exacted never to have again. It is indeed a pleasure to recommend Konjola, no wonder it is known as the master medicine” Konjola contains no harmf'u drugs, yet ft soothes the tire nerves, cieanses the system, stirn ttlates the organs into aormaJ activity, banishes pains and makes room for new health. Visit the Konjola Man at Hook's Drug wtore Illinois and Washington streets, this city, where he is meeting the public daily, introducing and ex praiihcg the merits of this master medicine.—Advertisement.
Reflected Fame By Times Special MARION, Ind., Feb. I.—lt may be a far cry to fame for some persons, but not for Joe Kneller of Marion who has sent the following notice to a local newspaper: “Mr. Joe Kneller, 1919 George street, wishes to announce that Mr. Harold Redmon of Columbia City, who won the U. S. A. gum chewing championship is his great nephew.”
which offers resistance to the wind. The body itself and even the wheels have tapered shields at the back to prevent the creation of air suction which would retard the car. A downward-sloping plane at the front will hold the machine to the ground whereas, without it, the Golden Arrow might actually fly. Eighty Miles in Low! So great will be Major Segrave's speed that the slightest deviation from his course probably would mean overturning. So he has arranged front and rear sights along the top of the Golden Arrow and will aim his car at a distant target just as he would point a giant gun. The Golden Arrow weights two and a half tons, and the wheel base is thirteen and a half feet. Power is furnished by a twelve-cylinder Napier engine which, at 3,400 revolutions per minute, is designed to generate about 900 horsepower. Major Segrave will be able to make eighty miles an hour in low gear! Second speed will be 166 miles, and high—-well that remains to be seen. White’s Car in Race Opposed to the. Golden Arrow in its attempt to take the speed crown back to Great Britain will be J. M. White’s mighty thirty-six-cylinder Triplex racing car. The Triplex is equipped with three Liberty airplane engines, one of which is in front of the driver’s seat, the other two being set side by side behind the driver’s seat. The Triplex, which won the world’s record, with Ray Keech driving, will presumably go into the race with a higher potential speed than ever before. COOLIDGE WILL MAKE 2 MORE APPOINTMENTS Wishes of Hoover Not Likely to Be Consulted for Big Posts. By Times Special WASHINGTON, Feb. I.—President Coolidge is likely to make two more old line Republican nominations before he quits office. Two resignation vacancies on the radio commission are to be filled. The resignation of Commissioner Caldwell of New York does not take effect until the end of the ppresent term for all commissioners, Feb. 23. But Sam Pickard, commissioner for the fourth zone, left today to assume his new duties with the Columbia Broadcasting Service. Nominations made by President Coolidge since the November election conspicuously have been not nominations in which the wishes of President-Elect Hoover were consulted. Those for the radio commission are expected to be along the same lines as those for federal judgeships in Florida, and Charles M. March of Minnesota to the federal trade commission, none of whom were Hoover men. After-Effects of Flu More Dangerous Than Flu Itself One of the peculiarities of influenza is that its toxins leave the digestive system upset. Constant “dosing” for the colds which come so frequently after a flu-attack still further disturbs the digestion and lessens the appetite, just when the body needs nourishment more than ever. And yet these colds are so apt to develop into bronchitis or pneumonia that they must be treated at the first sign. Vicks Vapoßub is especially valuable here, because it is applied externally and so can be used freely with no risk of upsetting a delicate digestion. Just rub it on the throat and chest at bedtime.—Advertisement.
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SIX WILLS ARE AIRED IN FIGHT FORJLLIONS Daughter Seeks to Break Mother’s Bequests to Step-Father. Bv United, Press GREENWICH, Conn., Feb. I. New sensations were looked for today in the contest over the $7,000,000 will of Mrs. Margaret Huntington McCarthy after two days of testimony branded as a “scandal seeking expedition.” To Mrs. McCarthy’s five wills, the last of which cut off her 18-year-old daughter, Margaret Gowan, with $200,000, was added Thursday, a new document stranger than them all. It was revealed that on the morning of Jan. 9, less than fortyeight hours before she died of pneumonia, Mrs. McCarthy signed a paper permitting her 31-year-old physician-husband, James, to transfer more than $5,000,000 to a joint bank account leaving all to the survivor. This transfer was made next day. Seeks to Enforce Will With a wave of the hand Homer S. Cummings, the physician’s attorney, said he would press to enforce this agreement, but that his client was content to abide by the will Mrs. McCarthy signed the night of Jan. 9 leaving him the bulk of her estate. Cummings reserved the right, however, to protest against the “scandal-seeking” methods employed by Mrs. Gowan’s attorney, H. G. Crawford of Cleveland. Crawford had spent' the day questioning James, debonair -\nd coon-collared, and his younger brother George, who had acted as Mrs. McCarthy’s financial secretary. He found that the elderly woman had paid George, a former radio salesman, S3OO a week to advise her on money matters. Asked About Whisky The Cleveland lawyer also wanted to know more about the whisky given Mrs. McCarthy the night she signed her will. He painted the young husband as having been divorced for drunkenness by a previ* ous wife and said his second marriage united “two dipsomaniacs.” Crawford then sought to elicit that James had been instrumental in estranging his wife and her husband and even intimated he had intercepted the daughter’s mail. “This man plied his wife with liquor, although he met her in a hospital while she was being treated for that dreadful habit,” Crawford said. “We’ll show his sole purpose was to acquire for himself this fortune.”
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Letter to Cal By Times Special GARY, Ind., Feb. I.—President Calvin Coolidge can get a letter if he will call at the general delivery window of the Gary postoffice, and pay 4 cents postage due. The letter bears two 2-cent stamps cut from stamped envelopes, a violation of postal regulations.
I. 0. 0. F. TO ELKHART Northern Indiana Meeting Saturday Expected to Attract 1,000. By Times Special ELKHART, Ind., Feb. I.—This city will be the mecca for a pilgrimage of Odd Fellows and Rebekahs from eighteen counties of northern Indiana and three adjoining counties in Michigan, for the February meeting of the Northern Indiana Odd Fellows Association which will be held Saturday in the local Odd Fellows temple. Invitations have been sent to about 200 Odd Fellows and ninety Rebekah lodges, and it is expected that about 1,000 will attend. Officers of the association are: John S. Martin, La Porte, president; L. G. Wilson, Mishawaka, vicepresident, and E. G. Emerson, Elkhart, secretary. Asks $5,000 for Pneumonia By Times Special TERRE HAUTE, Ind., Feb. 1— Mrs. Lydia H. Morris asks $5,000 from the Southern Limited, Inc., in a suit filed here, alleging that she suffered an attack of pneumonia after riding on a bus the defendant owns. She says a driver left a bus door open four hours while the machine was parked on a road, he having left to obtain chains for the wheels.
A Sneeze Calls for HILL’S! JMf an oncoming cold! That’s the time to stop it. And the way to do it is with HILL’S CASCARA-QUININE. These fIK ; I WS2 well-known tablets stop a cold in twentyfour hours because each tablet combines the four helps needed. | f 1. It breaks op the Cold 2. Checks the Fever WmM il||u SmM 3. Opens the Bowels wm 4. Tones the System Only HILL'S gives you these f|L four effects in one. So be sure it’s HILL’S you get. red box aii Dmggist* mmm&mMwmmßrnml mMm S HILL’S CASCARA-QUININE
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OPEN ROAD TO WINTER-BOUND lOWAVILLAGE Provisions Carried to Town Isolated by Snow for Last 12 Days. By United Press COLESBURG, la., Feb. 1.-Three hundred and fifty residents of Golesburg, isolated by snow for twelve days, tramped the icy streets joyfully today watching bobsleds and trucks enter their village with much needed fuel and provisions. The supplies came over a narrow road cut through huge snowdrifts and ice between here and Garber, by a state highway snowplow after a twenty-four-hour battle. Mayor H. F. Hoot and the villagers gathered at the northern end of the village last night to greet their rescuers. The fuel and provisions in the village were near exhaustion. Numerous attempts to cut a path from the north had been unsuccessful, two plows abandoning the atsso Reward SSO will be paid if R. V. Turner's Quick Relief Salve fails to relieve croup, bead colds, catarrh, sore throat, headache, earache, eczema, itch, burns, risings, bruises, cuts, sores, rheumatic pains or piles. One of the most powerful, penetrating, germ-killing, painrelieving, healing salves known to science. Removes corns without pain; also seed warts. 30c, 60c, $1 at drug stores. 60c and $1 sizes by postpaid mail. Agents Wanted, write tor special terms. R. V. Turner, Box. 1122, Montgomery, Ala.—Advertisement.
tempt in a blizzard Thursday morning. Acquitted on Murder Charge By United Press LOGAN, W. Va., Feb. I.—Levi Lane, 34, accused with his halfbrother of the murder of Mrs. Rissie Perdue in 1926, has been acquitted. Clyde Beale, the halfbrother, was tried previously, convicted and sentenced to death. The woman died as the result of an assault made upon her. General Smedley Butler to Retire. By United Press HONOLULU, T. H., Feb. I.—Brig-adier-General Smedley D. Butler, recently relieved from duty as commander of United States Marines in
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How Doctors Treat Colds and the Flu
To break up a cold overnight or to cut short an attack of grippe, influenza, sore throat or tonsilltis, physicians and druggists are now recommending Calotabs, the purified and refined calomel compound tablet that gives you the effects of calomel and salts combined, without the unpleasant effects of either. One or two Calotabs, at bed-time with a swallow of water—that’s all.
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he said on his arrival here from the Orient.
No salts, no nausea nor the slightest interference with your eating, work or pleasure. Next morning your cold has vanished, your system is thoroughly purified and you are feeling fine with a hearty appetite for breakfast. Eat what you please—no danger. Get a family package, containing full directions, only 35 cents. At any drug store.—Advertisement.
