Indianapolis Times, Volume 38, Number 182, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 November 1926 — Page 22

PAGE 22

ROYAL WOMAN’S EAR EVER TUNED TORI OF WAR Red Cross Heroine of Three Wars Warns Against War as Drug. I'm V/vVI Sir rice NEW YORK, Nov. s.—'"Once fitted for war—unfit for peace.” Dagmar Ruin, Red Cross heroine and veteran of three wars, sounds this warning against war as a drug. “I hate war,” she says. “I’ve suffered untold misery because of it. Rut I can’t get along without it—that is, I am unfit for all but the military phases of peace. I must go on working for veterans, fighting the tragedy war has loft behind it, because there is nothing else to fight. • “The shipwrecks of peace are far worse than those of pombat, ' JNliss Ruin believes. “A period of war service unhinges the soldier’s mind and body for peace and leaves him a derelict while still young. It is mucheasier to fit into the army than into civil life.” In her own case, the tragedy has been just as great. Reared as a noblewoman at the court of the Czar >f Russia, Miss Ruin plunged into the vortex of war as soon as she had finished her musical course at the University of St. Petersburg. Since then, she has known only the front lines for more than four successive years of war, taking part in the Russian-German struggle before the revolution in Russia, in the Finnish war of independence against the Bolsheviks and in the fighting on the western front. She has received a dozen medals from grateful governments, includ-

STILL PRAISING KDNJOLA AFTER 7 MONTHS OF HEALTH Kidney and Bladder Troubles Left Him in April—Never Returned, Local Man Says. “Yes, I made a public indorsement of Konjola last April. At that time I said this was the only medicine that really ended the kidney and bladder troubles which I had suffered, and now I will state that my old miseries have never returned.

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MR. HARRY NORTON Besides I am feeling wonderful in every respect, and everybody I have met who took this Konjola on my recommendation is still enjoying the best of health after taking this medicine a long time ago. I think it is wonderful how Konjola is helping people right and left here in Indianapolis, and when I see so many pictures in the papers of the homefolks, it all seems to me like the greatest remedy ever put in a drug store.” This remarkable statement was voluntarily issued just a few days ago by Mr. J. 11. Norton, rfsidence 447 East Tenth St., Indianapolis, Telephone number Tilley G 163. It was sent to the Konjola Man at Hook’s Drug Store, Pennsylvania and Market Sts., this city, where .the Konjola Medicine has been creating a sensation among drug men and the general public alike. The statement of Mr. Norton id typical of hundreds of other testimonials, <UI from men anil women in this vicinity who strongly indorse Konjola for stomach, liver, kidney and bowel disorders. Continuing with his statement, Mr. Norton said: “T have enjoyed 7 months of blessed health, for which I give Konjola full credit, because I had the/ 1 est medical attention and tried numerous remedies before I found Konjola. It proved to tie thp medicine T always needed, and I know what helped me will certainly help another.” Konjola is non-alcoholic. It is different than any medicine previously known. Where many ordinary remedies contains only 7 or 8 herbal ingredients, which merely act as a laxative, this new Konjola contains twenty-two juices extracted from natural plants which invigorate the stomach, liver, kidneys and bowels to more healthy action. The effect cf Konjola on the whole inner-sys-tem brings amazing relief in cases of suffering that had been going on for years. At the same time, many weak and run-down systems have been restored to anew state of health thru the use of this compound. Such a vast number Os men and women in this city have benefited by taking Konjola, until now it has become the most highly indorsed medicine that is known in this vicinity. The Konjola Man is at Hook’s Drug Store, Pennsylvania and Market Sts., Indianapolis, where he is dally meeting the local public and introducing and explaining the, merits of this remedy. Konjola Is sold by every Hook Store in Indianapolis and by all good druggists in 'he' nearby towns throughout this section.—Advertisement.

ing the Cross of St. George “for bravery," an honor seldom conferred on a woman. Throughout Finland, her own country, though a countess, she is known as "Sister Dagmar,” the title she used in the various armies with which she served. Wore Officers' Chevrons She held officers’ rank in the Finnish war of independence. But she carried only one bullet —to he used on herself. “We would never have allowed the Bolsheviks to take us alive,” she says. Dagmar Ruin’s eyes have seen such sights as have made them grave and qniet for all time*to come. She doesn't smile easily. There was the gruesome slaughter of the Mazurian Lakes, in which Dagmar and oue other woman nurse tried for days To extricate the dead and dying Russian soldiers from the frozen bog into which their own artillery wheels had crushed them. Therv was her flight, as the only woman among 40 men who walked for three days across the Bay of Finland on thin ice, to escape the Bolsheviks. Dagmar helped to carry (ho boats needed for the rifts in the ice, and she still bears the scars where the boat edges rubbed thru the flesh of her shoulders. And there was her escape from a

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firing squad, during her spy-work among the Bolsheviks. Broken As War Ends The end of the war found Dagmar Ruin, noblewoman, patriot ahd hero ine, broken, aged at 22. She could not enter the social life to which she was born, and she could find no work in the world that seemed worth doing. Then she returned to Finland, and found the other derelicts of the war. Many of them were armless, legless, blind. This work seemed worth while. She established a home for crippled veterans, and supported it by collecting money from tlyt few people in Finland able to give. She taught the cripples various crafts, to dull the edge of memory and keep them sane. A year ago she came to America seeking knowledge of American treatment of veterans, and hoping to collect funds for her home. Thru the influence of Dr. Harry Garfield, president of Williams College, and a son of the late President James A. Garfield, of the United States, she gained permission to make an extended stay. Dagmar Ruin hates and fears war. She has published five books aiming at universal peace. Slip hates it because she can't give it up.”

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

TO DEDICATE CEMETERY Prince of Wales to Officiate At Burial Place of Soldiers. Itu T'nitrd Press JERUSALEM, Nov.. s—On5 —On the slope of Mount Scopus, facing the Mount of Olives and Jerusalem, the Badly Inflamed Varicose Veins Relieved and Reduced by Simple Home Treatment that Must Give Relief or Money Back. No sensible itfrson will continue to suffer from dangerous swollen veins or hunches when the new powerful yet harmless germicide called Emerald Oil can readily be obtained at any well stocked drug store. Ask for a two-ounce original bottle of Emerald Oil (full strength) and refuse substitutes. Use as directed and in a few days improvement will he noticed then continue until the swollen veins are reduced to normal. Tt is guaranteed and is so powerful that old chronic cases are speedily healed. Honk Drug Go. is selling lots of it.—Advertisement.

final resting-place ,of 2,400 English soldiers will be dedicated by the Prince of Wales next April. The war cemetery has been established there

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by the Imperial War Graves Commission. More than half the soldiers burled there were members of the London regiments.

A psrfsctly yniwvtd woodn bridge found at Kasrde (near Dortmund) is estimated to tme 6,000 years old and to dat back to the les age.

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AH kinds of domestic utensils, from drinking mugs to washtubs, aif made In the English town of Thetford.