Indianapolis Times, Volume 40, Number 65, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 August 1928 — Page 7
AUG. 6,
‘FOUR SONS’ RATED THE PERFECT FILM Margaret Mann Scores Outstanding Achievement of Year in War Film Shown at Indiana. BY WALTER D. HICKMAN THE most human characterization ever given on the screen is the victory of Margaret Mann in “Four Sons.” I believe in all honesty that Margaret Mann has done the outstanding single accomplishment upon the screen. I have told you for many, many years p! out what has been going on upon the screen. It is today that I tell you ..hat I have seen the perfect picture. It has sound. It has life. It has motion. It has vision and above all it has the theater of life. •, I am telling you about “Four Sons." Here is a war picture that lad Cullen Landis falls into the
is life. It is beond life in the neaning of its nessage. Here is a mother love protest against war that becomes a symphony. Here is the classic of good and all theater. To me it is the most compelling theater ever created. Here is a picture that will make you want to go to the movies. I
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Margaret Mann
believe when Margaret Mann gets into your heart when she sees the four empty chairs at her humble table, I honestly believe that the greatest dramatic moment the screen has ever offered is before you. I cried and I cried some more on the shoulder of the best friend who goes with me to the theater. He cried honestly. I cried honestly. I laughed honestly. He laughed honestly. There is the melody of sound—the sob, the cry, the longing, the laugh of life, and above all the tragedy of life in the way the four men do the four sons. There is Mansfield acting in the way Mar-' garet Mann does the mother. Here is, to my way of thinking, the most compelling dramatic human performance that the screen has ever revealed. . It is not necessary for me to tell you that this is a story of the World War. It has hate. It has love. It has death. Three sons are clipped. It is death and that death is registered in the soul box of Margaret Mann. Here is the tragedy of a great story. Here is symphony of acting and melody that creates an appreciation of the best. This is “Four Sons.” This is the victory of Margaret Mann and all who are with her. This is the triumph of the screen. It is greater in its scope than “The Big Parade.” It is more individual, powerful, than “The Birth of a Nation.” Here is the victory of the screen up to this hour. And that is “Four Sons” with Margaret Mann. Now at the Indiana. nan FIRST OF ALL TALKING MOVIES HERE The present rage in entertainment circles is now the talkies and sound pictures Warner Brothers first crashed into Broadway with Vitaphone musical effects and vaudeville done by Vitaphone. This firm, with its Vitaphone, was the first one in this country, as far as I know, to bring this form of ent' ~inment to the movie theater. • to the time that “Lights of ’ York” was placed into produc-
Lion we have never had the ’’all talking movie.” And so now in “Lights of New York,” at the Apollo, we have our first all talking picture where every word that the characters have to say is spoken and every sound recorded. This probably is the most farreaching achievement cf Vitaphone, because it
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is the pioneer in this line. Now we are going to have the majority of our movies made as talkers and sound pictures, because all the leading film makers are announcing such pictures. “Lights of New York” is human melodrama as to theme. We have the country boy and a small town barber being lured to New York, by two gentlemen with a lean and hungry look. The two gentlemen are bootleggers and are hooked up with a night life case operator called Hawks. So our small town
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lad Cullen Landis falls into the bootleg trap and he is framed so the man who killed a policemen could escape. Here is tense melodrama and with the sound effects and the spoken work, you are as near to live actors speaking and acting their parts as one could hope to get. I am sure that ’t is going to take a little while for most of us to get accustomed to the all talking movie. “Lights of New. York” is v a guarantee, I believe, that the all talking movie has come to stay as a regular form of movie entertainment. The chief speaking handled by Helene Costello, as the small town girl, whc takes a fling at chorus and cabaret work; Cullen Landis, our small town hero; Gladys Brockwell as a wise woman, who knew her New York, only too well and payed the price; Mary Carr, noted for her mother roles; Wheeler Oakman as Hawks and many others. The two men who have been cast as the hardboiled detectives are wonders. I don’t know their names, but they have real talking voices and they know how to act this type of role. Landis seems not to mind the j talking game, but it is Wheeler j Oakman as the villain, dressed up i as a night case operator, that j probably will demand most of your attention. “Lights of New York” is sensational entertainment, true to type j most of the time and having lots J of realistic crook and police dia- j logue. “Lights of New York” is rip j snorting entertainment. People are going to rave over this one, first as a novelty, and then will go back to see it as a standard by which future screen entertainment is going to be judged. The musical score running through the picture has been well chosen and the sound effects are as realistic as if they were being j made in real life. “Lights of New York” is entertainment for the whole family. And it will be a treat for all of ’em. Edward Everett Horton and Lois Wilson have a standard vaudeville skit produced on Vitaphone under the title of “Miss Information.” Horton is a real talker and the vehicle is good for many laughs. The other Vitaphone subject has the services of the Three Brox Sisters, and these girls voices record splendidly. Movietone news complete the bill. Don’t pass up seeing “Lights of New York,” because I am sure that you will call it corking and sensational entertainment. Now at the Apollo. a a u LOOKING OVER SHOW AT THE CIP.CLE Publix spends a lot of time and money telling people what a good show “Seeing Things,” at the Circle this week, is, and then Dick Powell steps in and steals all the thunder. And that is just as it should be, Powell is the Circle’s one stage attraction, and be the show good or bad, the audience will remember Dick after they have forgotten what the rest of the attraction was all about. “Seeing Things” has a number ©i novelties to its credit, among tiiom
being a clever pair of dancers and comedians, Castleton and Mack. These two men have good dance routine and offer an acceptable brand of, trick comedy to wind up the act. The Felicia Sorel Girls are just so-so in regards to ensemble dancing. John Maxwell in a peculiar costume puts over a song number more by
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appearances than real merit. Allan Raymond, in our opinion, should thank the man when the Raymond pay check is presented. Les Klicks is a marionette act done with great emphasis placed on colored lights. Is a pleasing novelty in this line. Norman Kerry with the help of Lewis Stone stages a strong comeback in the picture “The Foreign Legion.” These foreign legion pictures are all pretty much of the same color and type, but it just happens that the cast in this one gives it a different angle of appeal than one would expect. Lewis Stone, of course, is what he always is in a military' picture, the last word in perfect poise and action. If we had an army we would want him for the general, he would add so much to appearances. Mary Nolan has a wicked pair of eyes and knows how to make them up for disastrous results. She has the part of the Captain’s wife, who j cannot be satisfied with what she has and needs continual diversion, with the always unhappy result of getting someone’s fingers singed. She’s a whizz when it comes to highpowered vamping. June Marlowe gives the picture the sweet, wholesome type so necessary for good love interest. She looks the part of the little sister who loves her sister’s lover, and acts it. In order to allay your curiosity will have to tell you that i she gets him in the end. So if you like romance under a hot sun, intriguing wives and snappy uniforms this picture will appeal to you. Ed Resener and the Circle Orchestra have a pleasant musical offering in their overtime from the “Student Prince.” It would be better if the boys would leave all the singing to Dick Powell and con-
10,000 PATRONS TO OHG SHIP ON WEEK-END More Than $125,000 Pass Over Green Tables of Craft, 7 Miles at Sea. BY GEORGE H. BEALE United Press Staff Correspondent LOS ANGELES, Aug. 6.—The good ship Johanna Smith, the amazing gambling craft seven miles off the California coast line, enjoyed a favorable week-end. Some 10,000 persons passed over its gangways and some $125,000 over the green felt-covered tables of the main deck forward. Since the official backers of the Johanna Smith never have been publicly announced, the week-end figures came from one of the many semi-official attendants that tramp the floor where the games of chance run on a twenty-four-hour basis. “We had at least 10,000 patrons since Friday midnight,” the attendant said. “That number paid about 125 grand. If we keep operating until the end of this month we’ll be ready to give the boat away.” Operating Wide Open The Johanna Smith, once a proud j schooner in coastwise lumber trade, has been operating as a wide open gambling palace for more than a month. “We use the law to beat the law," the semi-official explained. “The law can’t touch us. We can run here until we’re ready to quit. “Our crowds? Well, a good many feme from the Pacific Southwest Exposition and the rest are attracted from all over southern California by the publicity that came with our defiance of officials.” Before the Johanna Smith was made accessible to the gambling element and the curious, it was in drydock in San Pedro harbor for seventy-two days while $65,000 was used to equip it with the most modern gambling paraphernalia, a dining room and other equipment. An entire new top deck was constructed. the only one permitted to the visiting gamblers. The forward half of this deck was equipped for gaming. Thirteen tables for craps, roulette, twenty-one, poker and chuck-a-luck and thirty-eight slot machines were installed. There appears to be no limit at the various tables. The slot machines play from 5 to 50-cent pieces. No Liquor Permitted The middle part of the deck was rebuilt with gangways, checkrooms and cigar and soft drink counters. A modem dining room with twentyeight tables and a dance floor of night-club proportions took the place of the original after deck. The food served also is of night-club proportion and prices. While the 265-foot Johanna Smith tent themselves with their band instruments. The drinking played by them takes a real kick in the voices when it is sung right, and the orchestra members are not just exactly trained for this sort of work; we liked the way they played the music, however. Now on view at the Circle. (By J. T. H.) a b LEW IS NOW VERY MUCH THE GENTLEMAN Lew Cody is now again in his good mannered, but worldly attitude. In other words, Lew is the dress suit fight promoter in “Beau Broadway,” a title which indicates what the story is about as much as a “com” label would tell the contents of a can of tomatoes. But the title in no way effects the breezy little story that is*told in “Beau Broadway.” Cody this time has two leading women, Aileen Pringle, playing the type of a woman who would take an excursion for “love,” especially when daddy had an arm load of money. The other female lead is played by Sue Carol, cast as one of those innocent little girls whose relatives, some of them, were prize fighters, but she didn’t know it. Little Sue is welcomed into Cody’s smart New York apartment when she was willed to him by her uncle, a prize fighter. Uncle always spoke of Sue aj? the baby and we again have the good old hokum of seeing a nursery all dolled up for the “baby.” But “baby” turns out to b© a beautiful young girl. Lew decides that his ward must never know that he is a fight promoter and a gambler. The battle then centers between Aileen and Sue to get their man. Os course, the grand dame is the loser and our little Sue is more than happy to call Lew “husband” instead of “daddy.” The picture gets most of its real thrills in several well-handled fight scenes. There is some real fighting going on and of course there is a love interest present on the part of one of the boxers. Lew doesn’t do any fighting. He is just a promoter. There are some nice comedy scenes, especially when Cody introduces some typical fighters to Sue under assumed names such as Professor So and So, and the like. Miss Carol and Cody have a cute little tender moment scene when Sue cooks a birthday cake for her daddy'. It is a small little cake and Lew, not knowing who baked the cake, put cold water on the whole idea, including the cake. Then Daddy, Sue and the butler stage a. clever crying scene. “Beau Broadway” is clever, light movie entertainment. It meets the demand for entertainment, light summer fare. It accomplishes that and nothing more. It is announced that Harry Fox has just one more week as master of ceremonies after this week, at the Palace. This week, the stage show is called “Hoosier Frolics.” Cast includes Collins and Peterson, Emil Seidel and his orchestra. Now at Loew’s Palace. Other theaters today offer: “Kempy” at Keith’s; Robert St. Clair’s unnamed comedy-drama at English’s, and, “Garden of Roses” at the Lyric.
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Fears Guns No More
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Mary Brian . . . learns quickly how to shoot HOLLYWOOD. Cal.. Aug. 6.—The roar of a gun once sent Mary Brian, movie beauty, scuttling for shelter—but not these days. The film folk often go through trying ordeals in the making of pictures, and Mary just has gone through one of them, to emerge a braver if not a better girl. Mary learned to handle a six-shooter, in her latest film, and now the thunder of the “gat” is music to her ears. She likes the sport of gunmanship so well that every time she goes to the beach nowadays she has to stop at a shooting gallery and test her aim. And it’s good. Mary's no longer gun shy.
was outfitted for gaming, attorneys for its unannounced backers were going over the various statutes. They arrived at the decision that, provided liquor was barred, the boat could operate beyond the three-mile limit without interference. There for gambling and dining only, it is beyond the touch of city, county, State and Federal authorities. So careful are the proprietors of the Johanna Smith not offend Federal notions of propriety that patrons of the gambling craft ordinarily are searched for liquor. Stacking Up Money Five miles more at sea might put the ship beyond the twelve-mile-limit of Federal authority, but, it is pointed out, the transportation problem is about as bad as possible already. And the owners are so busy stacking money now that their interest in liquor profit is faint. From 10 p. m. Sunday night until 3 a. m. this morning there was a continuous line of people on the P. and P. dock. Sometimes there were as many as 200 people in the line—all waiting for the speedboats which ply between the shore and the Johanna Smith. The trip is made in a little over thirty minutes. Perhaps 40 per cent of the patrons are women. The crowd is typical of that which frequents Tijuana. RED CROSS SWIMMERS RESCUE TWO LIVES Ex-Policeman Saves Girl; Boy Resuscitated. Miss Agnes Cruse, secretary Indianapolis branch American Red Cross, has received word of two reacues by Red Cross life savers. W. A. Paul, 1340 N. Olney Ave, former policeman here, attracted by screams while passing a Kokomo, Ind., pool, dived in with all his clothes on and rescued a drowning girl. Last week at Winona Lake, Francis Poucher, Indianapolis, anew life saving examiner, instructed two youths in life saving. The lessons over, the youths had opportunity to demonstrate their competence by rescuing and resuscitating a drowning boy. Leon Teetor, Y. M. C. A. instructor, was awarded a service bar to add to his life saving medal for 100 additional hours life saving service.
2,000 VETERINARIANS MEET FOR CONVENTION Animal Experts From U. S. and Canada Gather in Minneapolis. Sn United Press MINNEAPOLIS, Aug. 6.—Leading veterinarians of the United States and Canada met here today for the sixty-fifth annual convention of the American Veterinary Medical Association. Included among the 2,000 delegates were some of the world’s foremost experts in the scientific care and treatment of animals. During the convention sessions, which will continue through Friday, forty-three papers will be read treating with veterinary education, disease control and investigation and the preparation of foods. Diseases of horses, cows, pigs, sheep, dogs, cats and the smaller pet animals will be explained and diagnostic clinics conducted. merchlnts of u. s. OPEN CONVENTION National Association Meets in Minneapolis. Bn United Press MINNEAPOLIS,, Aug. 6.—The National Merchants Association opened today its fifth semi-annual convention which will continue through Saturday. Under the leadership of Sam P. Christenson, Lemon, S. D.., the merchants are expected to conduct a number of field surveys in the Twin Cities. Small groups of the visitors will be guests of wholesale and retail merchants here during field study. Directors of the association will hold an executivce session in St. Paul tonight while the annual dinner of the entire organization will be held in the samec ity Wednesday night.
LILLY ESCAPES DEATH Clings to Overturned Sailboat in Lake Squall Until Rescue. Eli Lilly, son of J. K. Lilly, president of the Eli Lilly & Cos., narrowly escaped drowning at Lake Wawasee Saturday when a sailboat in which he was sailing with two Negro servants was oveturned by a squall. Lilly and the servants clung to the side of the boat until rescued.
c k Sediment 7 Trap ly MAYTAG Cast Aluminum Tub Keeps the water clean
For homes without elec- w triclly the Maytag is fej available with in-built gasoline motor.
for a Maytag. Do your next washing with m it. Experience the thrill of a washing done in an hour or so, done with so little work that it is really fun, done the safe sanitary way in your own home, and sweetened by the sunlight of your own back yard. If it doesn’t sell itself, don’t keep it. THE MAYTAG COMPANY, Newton, lowa Founded 1894 >
MAYTAG RADIO PROGRAMS / k WHT, Chicago, Tue.. Wed.. Thur., FrL, 5at.,9:00 P.M. Chicago I U Daylight Saving Time. KEX, Portland, Ore., Tues., 8:30 P.M. Pacific Standard Time. KDKA, Pittsburgh, Wed., 10:00 P. M. Eastern Daylight Time. CFCA, Toronto, Can., Tues.. 7:30 P.M. Eastern Standard Time. WBZ, Boston, Fri., 7:30 P. M. Eastern Standard Time. WCCO, Minneapolis, Fri., 8:30 P. M. Central Standard Time.
L. S. Ayres & Cos. INDIANA Anderson, Hoosier Maytag Cos. Bloomington, Hoosier Hardware Cos. Brazil, Maytag Sales Cos. Clay City, John Weber <fe Sons. Cloverdale. Cloverdale Hdwe. & Lbr. Cos. Columbus, Slmmen Hardware Cos. Crawfordsvllle. Crawfordsville Maytag Cos. Danville, R. & W. Maytag Cos. Ellettsvlile, Ellettsvllle fldw. and Lbr. Cos. Elwood, R. L. Leeson & Sons C4>.
Maytag dealers everywhere follow the standardized rule of sending a Maytag to a home to do a week’s washing free, and without obligation of any kind. This is the way all Maytag Aluminum Washers are sold. The Maytag must sell itself solely upon its performance in the home. It must wash everything to your entire satisfaction. Must wash everything quicker, easier and cleaner than other washers. Must wash collars, cuffs and wristbands, without hand-rubbing. Must prove to you, in your own home, that it is the most helpful home-laundering unit you have ever seen or used.
BOSS OF LIGHT PLANT HIT AS UTILITY FRIEND Opponents of Power Grab Point to Manager as Favoring Insull. Bn Timei Special NEWCASTLE, Ind., Aug. 6.—Persons opposing the contract between the Newcastle city government and the Interstate Public Service Company, an Insull utility, through which this city abandons its municipal lighting plant and purchases powe rfor five years from the company pointed to Luther Younce, light and water superintendent, today as one of the supporters of the contract. It is said Younce has been in favor of the contract for more than i year. He has produced figures for the public showing that it will ost the city $19,000 to manufacture power to light the city’s streets while it can be bought for about SII,OOO annually. However, persons in opposition claim these figures are in error and that Younce has allocated to much expense on the electric plant and not enough of the water plant, which are operated together. The public service commission will pass on the contract Tuesday, when a hearing is held on a remonstrance signed by three citizens. They feel that through execution of this contract the city will lose its rights to manufacture power again and the city will be in the grip of utility interests. They believe if this is the case the low rate now offered will be increased. Thursday Younce could not be found here but it was learned later he had been in the office of the Interstate Company in Indianapolis. Newcastle business organizations have taken no action in the matter. The Chamber of Commerce, whose office is in the same building with the Interstate Company, has publicly not taken sides in the controversy. In the folder published by this organization concerning the city it states: “Newcastle har the Inter-
ONE of the important features of the Maytag tub is the cone-shape bottom which forms a sediment trap to collect the loose dirt that is flushed from the clothes. It keeps the water clean, and also permits the tub to drain itself thoroughly without tipping the washer.
The effective shape of the Maytag tub was scientifically planned to promote vigorous water action in every inch of the tub all the time, so that the washing is done by water action clone — an action that keeps the soap thoroughly mixed with the water and removes even stubborn edge dirt without handrubbing.
Wringing the clothes is easy and effective with the Maytag. The large, soft rolls of the new Roller Water Remover hug every fold, lump and seam, removing both soap and water evenly from all parts of a bulky garment or a thin handkerchief. The tension adjusts itself, the drainboard reverses itself and the safety feed makes it e<tsy to start the clothes through the rolls.
Meridian and Washington Streets INDIANAPOLIS Gaston. Shaw Maytag Cos. Greenfield, Frank Loudenback. Gosport, Gosport Hardware Cos. Greensburg, The Corbett Rohe Cos. Greenwood, Wm. M. Carson & Son Kokomo, Miles Maytag Cos. Lapel, Woodward Hardware Cos. Lebanon. Lebanon Maytag Cos. Mulberry. Flaningam & Booher. Muncle, Shaw Maytag Cos. Newcastle, Ice Hardware Cos.
Fears; Murders
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Because she could not protect her 4-year-old daughter, Virginaßose, from poverty and unhappiness, Mrs. Adeline Lethermon of Dimondale, Mich., strangled the girl to death. Mrs. Lethermon, who is 23, had been crippled ever since an attack of typhoid fever two years ago and was separated from her husband. “She won’t have to suffer like I have, and she’s happier than I am now,” she said after she was arrested.
SPEED HIGHWAY TRAVEL Louisiana Raises Limit to FortyFive Miles An Hour. By United Press BATON ROUGE. La., Aug. 6. Louisiana has taken a more liberal attitude toward speeding on country highways. On Aug. 1 the State speed limit was increased to forty-five miles an hour and the State highway commission was given authority to regulate the speed on main highways.
state Service Company, which furnishes gas and electricity, in unlimited quantities at low rates.” The company now lights most of the houses in- this city and also lights the city hall. There are about 650 street lights which would come under the contract. If the remonstrance had not been filed, the contract would have been effective Wednesday.
Remember Tha Maytag is the washer with —Safety - feed, Soft Roller Water Remover, which spares the buttons, automatically adjust the tension and reverses the drainboard. —Cast-aluminum, heatretaining, non-breakable tub; removes all the dirt, without hand-rubbing. —Handy Hinged Lid and adjustable, legs. —Enclosed, silent steel gears. —Big capacity, an entire washing in an hour. —Compact; occupies a space 25 inches square. —Lifetime construction, beautiful lacquer finish. One o%xt of every three toothers told is a Maytag
Phone Riley 9441 Noblesville. Wm. M. Carson & Son. North Vernon. W. H. Anger.. Oolitic. Miller Furn. and Hdwe. Cos. Richmond, Richmond Electric Cos. Rushville. Frank Loudenback. Sedalia, Sedalia Hardware Cos. Seymour. Cordes Hardware Cos. Shelbyville. J. G. DePrez Cos. Spencer. Spencer Maytag Cos. Tipton. Compton & Son.
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CROP OUTLOOK IS BAD, DESPITE HIGH ACREAGE Yield Will Be Small, Survey Shows; Price Prospects Look Up. Bv Times Special WASHINGTON, Aug. 6.—More acres are planted to crops this year, but smaller yields are expected, according to reports to the Department of Agriculture. - Acreage has increased about 2 per cent this year over last but the condition of thirty-five principal crops is about 6 per cent below the average for the same period last year. Recent rains will help production but the showers have interfered with harvesting of hay and wheat. Com acreage is estimated 4 per cent greater than last year; barley will show 30 per cent; cotton will be 11 per cent bigger; potatoes, 9 per cent; tobacco, 18 per cent; beans, 7 per cent, and peanuts, 5 per cent. Some other important crops show a decreased acreage. Wheat is expected to show a decreased harvested acreage of 1.5 pr cent; hay, 4 per cent; rice, 5 per cent; sweet potatoes, 8 per cent and flax, 3 per cent. Spring wheat Is headed and fairly well filled except where It has been hurt by drought as in some of the northwestern States. *
KONJOLA PRAISED AS REAL MEDICINE BY LOCAL PEOPLE Indianapolis Lady Rtf* stored to New Health When This Remedy Ended Stomach Trouble. “The high praise this new Konjola medicine is receiving from the residents of Indianapolis and surrounding communities is only what I expected,” said the Konjola Man the other day at the Hook Drug Store, Illinois and Washington Sts.,
MRS. ANNA KIDWELL —Photo by Northland Studio. where he is interviewing the public and explaining the merits of Konjola. "I predicted that when I came to Indianapolis that the citizens of this city would soon recognize the unusual ability of Konjola to relieve the common ailments such as stomach, liver and kidney troubles or rheumatism and neuritis. Now my predictions have come true because there is not a day that I don’t receive startling statements from people in Indianapolis telling of the relief they gained from health trou - bles thru the use of Konjola. As an example, the other day Mrs. Anna Kidwell, well-known local lady, living at 31 North Walcott Street, told the Konjola Man how this new compound benefited her. “After twenty years of suffering I can at last say that I have found relief from my miseries thru the use of Konjola,” said Mrs. Kidwell. "It was the first medicine that has ever helped me and I feel that I owe it to this medicine to tell just what it has done for me. “My trouble was mainly caused by the disordered condition of my stomach. Food always brought on such intense suffering that T really did not care to eat anything and then when I did force a few mouthfuls down they simply refused to digest A terrible amount of gas would form which caused considerable bloating and awful pains in the pit of my stomach. Along with this trouble I was forced to endure severe headaches which always nauseated me. Quite often my health got into such a bad state that I had to remain in bed and when I was again able to get up it was no pleasure to me because I suffered constantly. “After following all kinds and manner of advice, without the slightest relief I became very discouraged and decided to follow my own inclinations. I tried one medicine after the other without any sign of benefit and had just abouc begun to think I would give up all hope when Konjola was brought to my attention. I bought a bottle, and although it did not completely relieve me I continued until I had finished the second bottle. Then i could see a very marked Improvement. Now I have completed the treatment and this medicine certainly worked miracles upon my system and health. It has dona more than all the other medicines and treatments, and so I naturally feel that I should give it my testimonial. Konjola ended every trace of stomach trouble, headaches, indigestion, gas bloating and that tired feeling. I can truthfully say that my health is in perfect condition and I can not praise Konjola high enough as it is the most wonderful medicine on the drug store shelf today.” The Konjola Man is at Hook’* Drug Store, Illinois and Washington Streets, Indianapolis, whero he is daily meeting the public and Introducing and explaining the merits of this remedy. Konjola is sold in every drug store In this section and by all the leading druggists throughout this vicinity.—Advertisement.
