Indianapolis Times, Volume 41, Number 175, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 December 1929 — Page 9
DEC. 2, 1020
BURGLARS GET JEWELS WORTH SI,IOOIN HOME Operator of Lunch Stand Foils Negro Bandits, Grabbing Gun. Jewels valued at more than $l,lOO were stolen from the home of Mrs. Jewell Williams, 428 North Pine street, by burglars Sunday. The loot Included three diamond rings valued at $250 and another diamond ring, set with garnets, valued at SBSO. In addition, the burglars got a wrist watch and clothing. The burglary was the most lucrative of a number over the weekend. Loot totalling more than $1,475 was reported taken in burglaries and holdups. Grabs Gun Hlldred Howard, lunch stand proprietor at 923 West New York street, foiled a holdup of the lunch stand by grabbing a revolver pointed at him by one of two Negro bandits Sunday night. He was cut on the head when the second bandit slugged him with a revolver butt. Howard was robbed of his $2 watch, but the bandits fled without taking any money from the cash register. Howard was sent to city hospital. Four groceries were entered by burglars who took a wide variety of foodstuffs and merchandise. Steal Groceries At the George Hildner grocery, 901 Harrison street, the burglars got ham and bacom valued at S2O. A connecting door into the F. H. Pops' machine shop, 903 Harrison street, j was forced but nothing taken. Cigarets valued g.t S4O, shirts and ; stockings worth $2 and $4 in cash comprised the loot at the Harry Lin- j der grocery, 847 West Eleventh street. At the Lee Cooley grocery, 1553 Cruft street, $25 worth of silk hose and several cartons of cigarets were taken. A small quantity of foodstuffs was taken by burglars from the M. M. Dell grocery at 2228 North Nev; Jersey street. Tvvo Negro bandits held up and robbed Elzie White, 33, of 2231 Wheeler street, conductor on a Co-lumbia-Indiana street car, at Thirteenth and West streets Sundaynight, escaping with $22. A third Negro drove the car in which the two escaped. Druggist Is Robbed Glenn Kennedy was robbed of S3O and his wife of $2 by two bandits at his drug store at 4001 Shelby street Saturday night. Carl Shores of 937 Lexington avenue. operator of a West Indianapolis bus, was held up and robbed by a passenger at Howard and Lamb streets. The armed man got $lO and stole the bus. Two Negroes held up Mrs. Eleanor Klasing of 1620 Naomi street and Samuel Nose of 1615 Villa avenue in the Klasing Coal Company office, Bethel avenue and the Belt railway, Saturday night,, escaping with $25. A radio valued at $l5O and $22 in rash were reported stolen from the home of Theodore Patterson, Negro, of 2261 Indianapolis avenue. Sunday. Twelve dozen shirts and large quantities of neckties, caps and silks, valued at $225. were stolen from the Harry Denker store, 1112 Prospect street, by burglars Sunday night. HELD ON CHECK CHARGE C. T. Bragg, 2602 North Illinois street, is held on charges of vagrancy and will be charged with passing fraudulent checks as a result of private detective work by Lewis Elkovitz, fruit stand proprietor at 1305 North Illinois street.. Elkovitz traced Bragg by his automobile license number after a $5 check Bragg gave for 20 cents’ worth of fruit, was returned as worthless.
|jj||ft As Pure as _ .-*^S
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At 16, Miss Evelyn Mathewson, above, of Detroit, is said to be the youngest licensed girl airplane pilot in the United States. She has been flying with her father, a restaurant owner, for five years and received her own license from the department of commerce a few days ago.
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Talk Is Broadcast A talk on the work of the American Red Cross in eradicating tuberculosis, made possible by Christmas seal sales, was broadcast Sunday from a national guard airplane piloted Lieutenant Paul A Zartman. Arrivals and Departures Curtiss-Mars Hill Airport—Walker W. Winslow, Curtiss sales director, J 6 Travel Air monoplane, to Louisville and return; O. A. Brandt, Waco, Kokomo to Columbus;, Lee Schoenhair, pilot, and Mrs. Schoenhair and Miss Dorothy Kunkler, Indianapolis, Lockheed monoplane, Los Angeles to Akron, 0., overnight; T. A. T. passengers included A. Kiefer Mayer of the Kiefer-Stewart Company to Los Angeles. Capitol Airport—J. A. Julian, Bellanca monoplane, Wheeling, W. Va„ to Tulsa, Okla, over night. Hoosier Airport—N. B. Ison, pilot, and two passengers. Fairchild monoplane, St. Louis to New York. Observe Anniversary Second anniversary of the start of the Cincinnati-Indianapolis-Chi-cago air mail line will be observed Dec. 17 by the Embry-Riddle Company, Cincinnati, operators, Evan W. Chatfield, local traffic manager, has announced. A special cachet is being prepared
UNTIL FURTHER NOTICE Rite’s Cioz Shop OPEN EVENINGS -=r Until Bp.m.-^r And ■ And Women’s Women’s Cioz RITE’S I cioz On Easy pi f\7 CHOP On Easy Payments wIT v ? r Payments
A THREE DAYS’ COUGH IS YOUR DANGER SIGNAL
Coughs from colds may lead to serious trouble. You can stop them now with Creomulsion, an emulsified creosote that is pleasant to take. Creoniulsion is a medical discovery with two-fold action; it soothes and heals the inflamed membr.-nes and inhibits germ growth. Os all known drugs, creosote is recognized by high medical authorities as one of the greatest healing agencies for coughs from colds and bronchial irritations. Creoinulsion contains, in addition !o creosote, other healing elements which soothe and heal the inflamed membranes and stop the irritation, while the creosote goes on to the stomach, is absorbed into the blood, attacks the seat of the trouble and checks the growth of the germs.
CREOMULSION FOR THE COUGH FROM COLDS THAT HANG OS
*4.22 EXCURSION *4.22 JNL Bound Trt jKb Konnd Trip * ° Trip CHICAGO Saturday Night, Dec. 7 ?ta CHICAGO, INDIANAPOLIS A L 'IISVILLE RY. Tickets Good in Coaches Only REGULAR TRAIN Leaves Indianapolis 1:00 A.M. (Sunday) Leaves Boulevard Station 1:15 A.M. “ Arrives Chicago 7:10 A.M. ** Returning. Regular Train Leaves Chicago Bunday Night. December t, 12:00 Midnight Arrives Indianapolis 5:50 A. M. Purcha** Tickmtt mt City Ticket Ottes, linloa Stattoa. or Igglwl Stitiea
by the company for benefit of stamp collectors. Unsealed lectors may be forwarded in an enclousure to Chatfield, at the Mars Hill airport, or to Carl R. Anderson, Embry-Riddle Company, Cincinnati, to be dispatched over the line on Dec. 17. Alaska Leads in Airports By United Prate CHICAGO, Dec. 2.—The Alaska gold rush days has been lost in the wash of scores of airplane propellers, and the northermost possession of the United States stands now in the enviable position of leading the world in the number of airports and landing fields in comparison to its population. With some 60,000 people and sixty-five airports, Alaska has one of the latter for each 908 inhabitants. In the Air Weather conditions in the air at 9:30 a. m.: West wind, twelve miles an hour; barometric pressure, 30.16; temperature, 10; ceiling and visibility unlimited; field good. The world s first long tunnel was built by the Roman Emperor Claudius nearly 2,000 years ago and was about four miles long. It. took 30,000 men eleven years to do it. Today 400 men with modern devices would be able to do it in six months.
Creomulsion is guaranteed satisfactory in the treatment of coughs from colds, bronchitis and minor forms of bronchial irritations, and is excellent for building up the system after colds or flu. Money refunded if not relieved after taking according to directions. Ask your druggist. Send coupon for free sample. : 28- F J CREOMULSION CO.. Atlanta. Ga. J . Send frfe bottle of Creomulsion for tbe * * ccugb from colds that bang on. • ■ * Name • J Street .. ! . : ; City State . ? One bottle to family. Write plainly. •
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
MILLION-DOLLAR
SUIT FOR LIBEL IS UNDER WAY Texas G. 0. P. Leader Says Articles on Patronage Damaged Him. Bn United Prcet BROWNSVILLE, Tex., Dec, 2. A suit for $1,000,000 against P. F. Collier & Son, publishers of Collier's weekly, filed by R. B. Creager, Republican leader and Texas national committeeman, charging libel in articles carried by the magazine concerning alleged patronage, opened in federal court here today. Creager objected to an article written by William G. Shepherd, called “Jobs for Jack,” and another by Owen P. White, called “HighHanded and Hell-Bent,” charging they involved him in asserted political corruption rnd injured his reputation. The Republican leader, who was a chief witness before the recent patronage investigation committee of the Senate, asked $500,000 from the publishers and a similar sum from A. P. Collier and Son, a distributing company. Creager’s home is in Cameron county, which was affected by the charges said to have been made in the magazine articles, as was Hidalgo an adjoining county. The latter county was referred to, the complainant said, as the land of "Grapefruit and Graft,” and White was accused of charging Creager and Sheriff A. Y. Baker were in partnership in a political organization which offered an “advanced course in vote switching, jail dodging, plain and fancy grafting.” Operate on Former King TWICKENHAM, England, Dec. 2.—A slight operation was performed here today on former King Manuel of Portugal.
LADY, 74, SAYS RONJOLA ENDED STUBBORN ILLS cther Remarkable Triumph Scored by New and Different Medicine. No wonder Konjola is so highly praised; no wonder it is a medicine with more than a million friends, when it continues to win amazing victories over stubborn ailments that for years resisted and defeated all other medicines and treatments
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MRS. MART SULL | —Photo by National Studio Illinois Bide. tried! Nor is it so very remarkable ; that Konjola scores such triumphs, i for it is, in reality, 32 medicines in | one, and of these 32 ingredients, 22 are juices of roots and herbs long j known for their medicinal value. i Konjola is made to make good, and | it makes good, as it did for Mrs. . SuH, 2178 North Rural street, IndiJ anapolis. Would you know all about i Konjola, this remarkable medicine? j Then talk with the Konjola Man, who is at the Hook Dependable Drug Store, Illinois and Washington streets, this city. He can and gladly will give you the facts about this medicine and cite instances of the remarkable results it is giving in the relief of stomach, liver, kidney and bowel troubles, and of rheumatism, neuritis and nervousness. Learn of and be guided by such happy experiences as Mrs. Sull had with this medicine. Grateful for her newly-found health, she said to the Konjola Man: “Konjola is a medicine that is well worthy of my praise. For several years I had a very bad case of stomach trouble. Misery and distress seemed to be my lot at all times. Acid reactions in my stomach caused a world of misery. A hot. sour liquid often came up in my throat after meals producing a burning sensation. Gas formed and I bloated terribly. Smothering spells were common. My liver became disordered and I suffered with dizzy spells. At times black spots floated before my eyes. My tongue was badly coated. I could not sleep well, and was weak, nervous, and badly run-down. “Konjola was recommended to me by friends, and as I had read a great deal about this medicine in the newspapers I thought it must have more than ordinary merit. But I was surprised at the merit it actually did have as proved by the results it gave me. I have taken, in all, seven bottles, and although I am 74 years old and had suffered with my trouble for several years, today I do not have a symptom of stomach trouble. I can eat practically anvthing I wish without the least bit of discomfort. Smothering spells, dizzv spells, spots before the eyes, and all the other troubles are things of the past. My nerves are quiet and I sleep soundly. 1 am glad to recommend Konjola to all who are afflicted as I was.” After all, what is wiser than to be guided by the experiences of others? Why not let such an experience, as that of Mrs. Sull point the way for you to new and glorious health? The Konjola Man is at the Hook Dependable Drug Store, Illinois and Washinirton streets. Indianapolis, where daily he is meeting the public, introducing and explaining the merits of this new and different medicine.—Advertisement. .
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