Indianapolis Times, Volume 41, Number 281, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 April 1930 — Page 11
jrmw 1, rm.
MARK HANNA’S DAUGHTER NOT ASKING FAVOR \ Making Senate Race Solely on Merit, Disregarding Claim as Woman. BY RUTH HANNA McCORMICK Sonrrrson>an and Senatorial Aspirant Written for The Vnlted Press CHICAGO, April 4 —1 realize that being one of the few women who has sought a place in the senate, X shall be regarded as something of a pioneer, just as I was in the days when we were making the campaign for women's suffrage. To day there are eight women participating in the work of the lower house of Congress. The men of the house have taken us for granted. They have observed that the women have proved themselves capable and that they give conscientious attention to their work. This much having been gained, I know that I express the sentiment, not only of the women of Illinois, but of women In all the states, when I say that u T e desire now to be given the opportunity to serve in the upper house also. Rejects Rex Angle I do not favor the election of any woman to any office for the sole reason that she is a woman, and I hope nobody will vote for me simply because I am a woman, or vote against me solely because I am a woman. I believe the time has t arrived in this country when no such discrimination will be made ■ in public service. I have found no suggestion of! Ruch discrimination in the house of j representatives since my election in j 3928, and therefore anticipate no j such suggestion should I be elected ! to the senate. Asa farmer and as a representa- j live of a state whose greatest in- j dustry is agriculture, I have taken j a deep interest in both farm relief j end tariff. I voted for the farm j bill but my own idea is that co- j operation among the farmers is! their best method of assisting the j board in bringing about a more | uniform market condition. Undecided on Farm Bill I can not say how I shall vote Upon the new tariff bill after it j comes out of conference, but I have j FAMED KONJOLA SPEEDILY ENDS DREAD NEURITIS iWHiteland Man, 75, 111 Five Years, Finds New Health Through Power of New Medicine. Surprising as it seems, Konjola, the new and different medicine, is at the peak of it's powers in those stubborn and obstinate cases that have defied and resisted all other medicines and treatments tried.
e 4 : USSSS V /' ?W2MM: E S XHK \/ SW3BW 4 ' ~-.*v. ,\.W ,-jfei'V.Ev *■■
►-Photo t>v National Studio Illinois Bldg MR. WILLIAM GALUSHA Yet this is not to be wondered at, lor Konjola Is really thirty-two jm iicines skillfully blended into one. All who suffer and who would be well again, are urged to get the facts about this medicine from the Konjola Man at Hooks Dependable drug store. Illinois and Washington streets, Indianapolis, where he is daily telling the wonderful story of this amazing medicine and giving out free samples and literature. Life teaches no finer lesson than that it Is wise to profit by the experience of others and there are many such, ■who, to their everlasting joy, have (found relief in Konjola. A typical example of Konjola at work, is seen (n the case of Mr. William Galusha ■who recently said to the Konjola Man: “I am now 75 years of age and am feeling better than I have in five years. My kidneys were in a terrible condition and I had to rise many times during the night. This broke into my rest and I became nervous and worn out. My stomach, too, was in bad condition and gas formed causing me a lot of misery. This last- fall I had neuritis so badly that I could hardly stand the pain. My shoulders ached constantly and my knees were so stiff that f could not walk. I had been bothered with constipation for years. “I had been reading for a long time of the things Konjola was doing for others, and I thought it might do the same for me. This medicine made me feel like anew man and today my illness is over. My ‘stomach condition has cleared up and today I can eat without fear of pain from gas. My kidneys are in perfect shape now and I can sleep through the night without interruption. The aches have all gone from my limbs and I get about as I please without effort. Constipation has passed and I am again in the best of health. I wished to give this statement so that others could be helped in the same way.” This fci-ent medicine has made an amaztne record In stubborn cases when given a fair trial. Six to etgbr bottles of Konjola are usually all that Is required to bring ru-.jlth and happiness to sufferers who have been ill for years The Konjola Man 1* at Hook’s Dependable Drug Store. Illinois and Was'. Instor streets, Indianapolis, where he is meeting the puhlle dally, explaining the merits of this new and and i Horeni medicine. FREE SAMPLES GIVEN —Advertisement.
Raising, Chickens Do you raise chickens? Ever get the urge to start a small or large poultry farm for profit? If you do, you will want all the information on the subject of‘poultry raising that you can get. Our Washington Bureau has a comprehensive and at the same time condensed bulletin on the subject that gives the fundamentals of chicken raising and egg production. All about poultry houses and fixtures, hatching and brooding, chicken feeding, fattening poultry, killing, dressing and packing, marketing, poultry diseases and other facts, including a list of literature on the subject. If you are Interested In chicken raising, fill out the coupon below and send for this bulletin: CLIP COUPON HERE POULTRY EDITOR, Washington Bureau, The Indianapolis Times, 1322 New York a\enue, Washington D. C. I want a copy of the bulletin POULTRY FARMING, and inclose herewith 5 cents to cover return postage and handling costs. NAME STREET AND NUMBER TANARUS. CJTY STATE., \ I am a reader of The Indianapolis Times. (Code No.)
said that if the bill after it finally is completed, does not more nearly fulfill oiu party pledges to the farmer in 1928, I will cast my vote, against it. Labor legislation presents many problems and many opportunities from time to time and I have approached proposals relating to wages and working conditions with a sympathetic attitude which, I am sure, may be credited in part at least to the example and influence of my father, Mark Hanna, who was a piqijeer irt the movement to bring abopt arbitration between capital and labor and who expressed
No Free Gifts afesa Th Crown U ConTWientir No ?“* Lowest Cash Prices * " OpJsN SATURDAY on Easy Credit Terms! NIGHT TILL 9 O’CLOCK
his view of the whole problem in the McKinley campaign in the slogan which he originated and which still is remembered as the “full dinner pail.” Injured Man Asks $5,000 By Times Special NEWCASTLE, Ind., April 4 Hobart Shaw, badly injured Oct. 20, 1927, when a county highway truck he was driving was struck and demolished by a Nickel Plate railroad locomotive, east of Newcastle, is pressing his damage claims against the railroad In Rush circuit court. Shaw, in a suit, demands $5,000 damages.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
TOTAL ECLIPSE VISIBLE FROM SMALUSLAND Naval Observatory Party Preparing for Trip to Samoa. Bv Science Service WASHINGTON, April 4.—While one of its offices is making lastminute calculations of the path of total eclipse of the sun visible in California on April 28, other astronomers at the United States naval observatory here are preparing for an expedition to a remote ifjli id in the south Pacific to observe another total eclipse Oct. '. Niuafou island, a tiny bit of land in the Tonga group, not far from Samoa, is the only accessible location from which the October eclipse can be seen. It is not frequented much by travelers, for the ordinary contact with the outside world for its few hundred inhabitants is a tin can full of mail thrown overboard by the monthly inter-island steamer. A native swims out and gets the can, which has given Niufou the local name of “Tin Can Island.” Despite its inaccessibility, the naval observatory has decided to sponsor an expedition there to observe the eclipse, Captain C. S.
Freeman, superintendent of the observatory, told Science Service today. This will not be strictly a naval observatory expedition, however, for astronomers from various American observatories will participate. Dr. S. A. Mitchell, director of the Leander McCormick observatory of the University of Virginia and veteran of seven previous eclipses, will head the party. The remainder of the personnel Is yet to be selected, said Captain Freeman, but he especially desires some astronomer who can make photometric observations of the brightness of the eclipse. If some-
New Spring /^Charge lvN SHOES Your Credit For the entire family. Ton, l I too, can now wear better shoes \ f** - _ J / and pay a little each week. \ / latest styles _ ' Jo*}. you walk DAVIS CREDIT SHOE STORE 236 Massachusetts Avenue—First Block
one can be found who Is willing and ible to make such observations, he will be given a place, it was stated. Starting in the summer from San Francisco, the party will proceed to Pago Pago, in American Samoa, by naval transport, whence a smaller naval vessel will transport the party to Niuafou, several hundred miles distant. April 28 will bring the year’s first total eclipse, and. this also is occupying* the attention of the nautical ilmanac office at the naval observatory. This eclipse crosses Calitomia, Nevada and Idaho, but is of /ery short duration, and not nearly
as favorable astronomically as the one in October. It will last only about a second and a half at most, and the path over which it will be total, where the dark disc of the moon hides the sun, will only be about half a mile wide. Anew pocket magnifying glass is in the form of a pencil and can be retained in a pocket with a clip.
Good Used Furniture Easy Terms!
PAGE 11
Wood Choppers Compete By Times Special NOBLESVILLE, Ind., April 4 In an old-fashioned wood chopping contest held here, Peter McLarin cut a green beach log, 49 inches In circumference, through with an ax in 3!*> minutes. His nearest competitor was Bert Small, who did the job in 13 minutes and 3 seconds.
