Indianapolis Times, Volume 39, Number 318, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 May 1928 — Page 9

MAT S, 1928

REALIZING ART AND SERVING WITH ‘B’ Bernice Marsolais Is Not Only a Good Artist but She Can Tantalize a Kitchen Into a Great Success and Her Salads Are Wonderful. WALTER D. HICKMAN JUST put an apron on an actress and you will find out the woman. Oh, yes, they wear aprons on the stage and play around a gas stove with no gas and they serve food that other members of the cast only look at instead of eating. But just get Bernice Marsolais in the kitchen and you forget that she is one of the best acting members of the Berkell Company..

You have asked me to get certain people of the stage just as they are and your desire is an order. And so I am bringing Bernice Marsolais, in private life Mrs. William Hull, (Bill being the technical and stage director of the Berkell Players at English’s), to you just as she is in private life. “B,” as she is called by her husband and members of the company, has that honesty of life which does not prevent her from putting on an apron, going into the kitchen and tantalizing a dinner into, fterfection before the night performance. Oh, yes, they dins out many times. The Hulls go here and they go there when “B” gets on her apron and starts to work on a salad, I am telling you that here you have a performance that does not come far back of her performance on the stage. I am glad to take you back into the kitchen while Bernice is making a salad or an entire dinner. People of the stage must “eat” and they must be human. Take one of those highbrows that you read sometimes and I pity them. Sarah Bernhardt once told me through her secretary that “being honestly human and oneself off the stage was the real test of greatness on the stage.” I have seen Miss Marsolais do both the big and the little things in a show and the “mountain” has had the- same consideration as the “hill.” And when you see her in a kitchen (and that is the right word) you realize more than ever that women of the stage are human, just like all the rest of us. She does not use gloves to peel a tomato nor does she find fault when the steak begins to talk its own language. The butter may sputter and it may jump, but, Miss Marsolais stays right near the stove

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and also do all my garden work and I have a three-year-old girl to look after. I have told quite a few others to try the Vegetable Compound and I am willing to answer letters about It.”—MRS. ED. BEHR. R. 4, Plymouth, Wisconsin. Advertisement.

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just as she does every characterization that she does on the stage. Here is one woman who never leaves her character, regardless of the fact that she is acting on the stage or just being herself over a salad, spreading the table linen, pouririg the water or placing sweet peas in a vase that fits the flowers. There is beauty in the life of Bernice Marsolais, both on the stage and even in the kitchen. She is human. She is great and growing in power on the stage and when it comes to making a salad, talking the language of perfection, she is there. And so I have given you Bernice Marsolais of the Berkell Players as she does exist in her own life with her husband and friends. And she will probably “kill” me for this because she never realized that she was being interviewed. Remember you asked it—and that is enough. v a it Indianapolis theaters today offer: Libby Dancers at the Lyric; “Mary's Other Husband” at English’s; “Tenderloin” at the Apollo; “Laugh, Clown, Laugh” at Loew’s Palace; “Love and Learn” at the ( Circle; “The Smart Set” at the Indiana; “Speedy” at the Ohio; burlesque at the Mutual and “Pitfall of Passion” at the Colonial. Find Fish That Carries Watch CAPE MAY, N. J„ May 3.—Capt. Francis Holmes heard a ticking inside a croaker when he hauled in the fish on the end of his line. Opening the croaker, Holmes found a watch w r hich a member of the fishing party had dropped overboard a short time before.

Bloating Spells and Indigestion Pains All Ended Indianapolis Citizen Tells How the New Konjola Banished His Stomach Troubles. “After the wonderful way Konjola ended my stomach trouble and restored my health in general, I want to indorse such a medicine to others,” said Mr. Chas. R. Finley, widely known Indianapolis citizen, living at 134 East Twenty-Second street, this city, in a statement he made about this remarkable new

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—Photo by Northland Studio, Indianapolis. MR. CHAS. R. FINLEY

medicine, Konjola, which is now being introduced and explained to large crowds of people by the Konjola Man in person at Hook’s drug store, Illinois and Washington streets, Indianapolis. “For the past few years my health seemed to be getting worse all the time,” said Mr. Finley. “The condition of my stomach was so bad that bloating spells and indigestion pains came over me just as regular as I ate. I had no desire for food and what little I managed to eat always brought on miseries of the worst kind. It seemed like a tight rope was drawn around my waist. The pains felt like sharp knives gouged into my sides and back. “I decided to try Konjola and at the very start this medicine made me rest a great deal better at nights, and I noticed that I had a real desire for food and everything tasted right. In a very little while the indigestion pains were entirely gone and all the other miseries disappeared. Now I don’t have pains of any kind, and I can enjoy a full size meal without hardly knowing I ate a thing. I feel better in every way than I have in several years. I don’t think there is another medicine in the world that could make such a change in a person like Konjola, and since I'have taken this new remedy it seems only right to indorse it to everyone.” Konjola is not a cure-all,, not a pill or capsule, but a remarkable liquid compound, which contains the juices extracted from twentytwo of Nature’s finest medicinal roots and herbs. These cleanse and ivigorate the inner-organs (stomach, liver, kidneys and bowels) to a more normal, healthy action, thus bringing new feelings of health over the system in general in a natural and safe way. The Konjola Man is at Hook’s drug store, Illinois and Washington streets, Indianapolis, where he is daily meeting the public and Introducing and explaining the merits of this remedy. Konjola Is sold at all Hook stores in this city and by all druggists throughout this entire section.—Advertisement.

Pick ’Em Out Because All Are Yotlr Friends

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Here are your friends. All members of the Berkell Players at English’s this season. Also in the picture is Charles Berkell himself. You will find your favorites, including Mildred Hastings, Idabelle Arnold, Edythe Elliott, Bob Fay, Milton Byron, Larry Sullivan, Bernice Marsolais, Robert St. Clair, Harry Hoxworth Mr. Berkell, William V. Hull, Harvey Schlueter and Williah Worswick. The Times photographer took this picture in front of the 'Monument on the Circle j ust about noon the other day. (By W, D. H.)

AUTO TOLL SEVEN Fatalities Occur in City During Month. Seven persons died in Indianapolis during the four weeks ending April 21 of injuries received in automobile accidents, and the accidents which caused the deaths, occurred in the city, according to figures of the department of commerce announced today. During that period auto accidents were responsible for 525 deaths in seventy-seven large cities, according to the Federal department report. In the same period a year ago

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

there were eight automobile accident deaths here. In the fifty-two weeks ending April 21 there were eighty auto accident deaths, a death rate of 21.4 a 100,000 population. HOMEOPATHS TO MEET Indiana Institute Holds Yearly Convention Tuesday. The Indiana Institute of Homeopathy will hold its sixty-second annual convention at *'he Columbia Club here Tuesday and Wednesday of next week. Speakers will include Dr. Lester Liemon of Cleveland, who will tell of plans to establish a middle western homeopathic college; Dr. Claude A. Burrett, dean of the New York Homeopathic College; Dr. J. H. Renner, president of the Midwest

Herbert Hoover s Republicanism By Harry S. New Postmaster General of 'he United States

“You ask my opinion of Herbert Hoover as a Republican. I think the quality of my own Republicanism has been fairly well established and there is no more question about that of Mr. Hoover. He has been criticized by some of his present political opponents for having asked the country to stand by President Wilson. If he did, he was doing what all the rest of us were doing at that time and as every good American should have done in time of war. It is to the great credit of the Republican Party that with practical unanimity it stood by the President of the United States in that emergency, our domestic political differences notwithstanding.”

V Herbert Hoover is a good Republican but he is not primarily a politician. The true statesman is seldom that. Politics is to him not a main end but a useful tool. The best recommendation for Hoover is that professional politicians are opposed to him. Illinois Republicans recently voted to clean out the political gang.

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FIGHT DISABLED OFFICERS BILL Opposition Active in House Against Measure. By Times Special WASHINGTON, May 3.—A lastminute attempt has been launched to defeat passage in the House of the Tyson-Fitzgerald bill for giving disabled Army officers the same rate of pay already provided for eight other classes of World War officers. The bill has passed the Senate, and is to be taken up in the House after farm relief and merchant marine measures have been disposed

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Ohio Republicans voted overwhelmingly for Hoover and against the professional politicians. Indiana Republicans have the same supreme opportunity at next Tuesday’s primaries, to redeem Indiana and to serve the nation, by voting for the nomination of Herbert Hoover for President.

of. Evidence of a determined fight against it has been found by legislative representatives of the American Legion. “Congressmen are being flooded with printed circulars attacking the bill,” says the current Legion bulletin. Representative G. Simmons of Nebraska, though formerly a department commander of the Legion, is said to be opposing the measure.

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HAYWOOD NEAR DEATH Bn United Press MOSCOW, May 3.— William D. (Big Bill) Haywood, American radical, who has been ill for several weeks, has suffered a relapse and was said to be in a serious condition today. He has been returned to the Kremlin Hospital and has been in a comatose state for several days.

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