Indianapolis Times, Volume 40, Number 14, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 May 1928 — Page 7

HAY 28, 1928_

BANDITS. YEGGS OBTAIN LOOT OF $1,300 IN CITY Safe-Breakers Fail Twice; Greenfield Man Robbed sos $lB, Attacked. Three holdups and a number of burglaries yielded yeggs and bandits about $1,300 over the week-end. Two men held up John McCabe, Greenfield. Ind., Sunday night at the rear of 316 W. Washington St. After obtaaining sls, they struck him on the head with the butt ends of their guns and ran, he said. Three men, whom police believe tot be the trio who held up a score of laundry, milk and grocery wagon j drivers a few months ago. early J Sunday held up the Standard Oil j Company filling station, Fifty-Ninth j St, and College Ave. R. H. Schlecher,! attendant, said he was forced to open the safe and 1 hand over $125. While Arthur Embry, manager, was out of the Standard grocery, McCarty and West Sts., Saturday night, three gunmen held up Henry Young, 16, of 433 W. McCarty St., clerk, and took S3O. Yeggs were unable to enter the safe at the Browder Ice Cream Company, 918 N. Senate Ave.. after j knocking off the combination. They also failed to get into the

Suffered With Headaches and Neuritis Pains Says Konjola Has Made Her Well Again; Glad to Indorse Such a Remedy. Konjola is a medicine that you fm depend upon for stomach, "liver, idney and nerve disorders, or rheumatism and neuritis Many prominent men and women all over this section have indorsed this new compound and hundreds of people are [

MRS. MARY KERNS —By Northland Studio. still calling every day to see J e Konjola Man at Hook’s drug sti _, Illinois and Washington Sts., Indianapolis, tvhere he is daily explaining the merits of this remarkably remedy. Among the latest to make a public statement of the benefits derived from Konjola is Mrs. Mary Kerns, living at 825 Chadwick St., this city. “I have Konjola alone to thank for the new feeling of health over my whole body,” states Mrs. Kerns. “It relieved me entirely of the terrific neuritis pains I had all over my body and it also ended the dreadful headaches I had nearly every day. When a person can enjoy such health as I do now, as a result of taking a single medicine, I believe they owe it to their friends to tell them. “I could never appreciate what suffering other people had to endure when they told me of their attacks of neuritis and what agony they went through, but now I can sympathize with them. For two years I had this dreadful ailment myself and it touched every part of my body. Sometimes this pain would nearly kill me. A quick move of either my arms or legs would make me cry out in pain. It was the worst suffering I ever went through. In addition to this I suffered kidney and bladder trouble. This weakened my whole system. I had to get up three and four times every night and the next morning I felt just as tired as I did the night before. Hardly a day went by that I didn’t suffer with bursting headaches and sometimes everything seemed to blur before my eyes. In spite of all the remedies I had tried, for relief, my condition only seemed to get worse and I was about to believe my case was hopeless. “In this rundown condition I made up my mind to give this new Konjola a trial as a last resort. So many Indianapolis people had indorsed it and eVen some of my friends recommended it to me that I felt it really must have some merit. However, I didn’t expect it to give me the relief it did. I was surprised when I felt the neuritis pains leaving my body after taking this medicine for only two weeks. I wouldn’t have stopped taking Konjola for nothing in the world. Within another two weeks nearly every ache an<l pain had left my body, the headaches were gone altogether and my kidneys were functioning normally again. Now I have finished the treatment and it is astonishing how this one remedy affected my whole system. I enjoy new health in every way. I eat better and feel better than I have for several years. If Konjola only helped every other person like it did me, it would be worth the chance to give it a trial.” The Konjola Man is at Hook’s drug store, Illinois and Washington Sts., Indianapolis, where he is daily meeting the public and introducing and explaining the merits of .this remedy. Konjola is sold in every Hook store in this city and by all the leading druggists throughout this section.—Advertisement.

money compartment of the safe of the William H. Williams tailor shop, 2431 E. Washington St., after knocking off the combination. Thieves who pried at five windows in the rear of the Belmont furniture store, 2125 \V. Washington St., before they* were opened took an $8 tire. They pried open a desk and cabinet, doing $25 damage. A saxophone and clothing valued at $3Bl were stolen from the auto-

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mobile of Edwin Hayes, Detroit, whilp it was parked in the garage in the rear of the home of Miss Mabel Auter, 2617 W. Washington St. The thieves also syphoned the gasoline from the machine. George W. De Haven and family. 3033 Broadway, returned home late i Saturday to find a burglar had j taken two diamond rings, valued at I S6OO.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES _

Clothing and a diamond pin, value $l5O, were taken from the automobile of W. H. Thom, Indiana University coach. The thieves broke a glass on thecar parked at Chesapeake and Illinois Sts.

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Predict 23,400 Auto Fatalities CHICAGO, May 28.—Approximately 23,400 Americans wall be killed in auotmobile accidents during 1928. two professors of Chicago University predicted on the basis of fatality statistics last year.

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