Indianapolis Times, Volume 40, Number 72, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 August 1928 — Page 9
AUG'. 14, 1928_
DEMOCRATS TO BATTLE HOOVER ON PROSPERITY Will Use Statistics Trying to Show Unemployment on Increase. Bu United Press WASHINGTON, Aug. 14.—The Democratic party will meet Herbert Hoover on a battlefield of statistics, so far as the issue of “prosperity”' is concerned, it was indicated today. Close senatorial friends of the New York Governor, it was learned, have perfected to their satisfaction h campaign argument of “increased unemployment under Republican rule,” which they will use in the effort to elect Smith. They will attempt to employ Hoover’s own words against him in their speeches for Smith. The Republican candidate said, in reviewing eight years of his party’s tenure: 'Any Kind of Pail’ “Great progress has been made in stabilization of commerce and industry. The job of every man thus has been made more secure. Unemployment in the sense of distress is widely disappearing. ... A general reduction in the tariff would fill our streets with idle workers ... At one time we demanded for our ‘a full dinner pail.’ We now have gone far beyond that conception. Today we demand larger comfort and great participation in life and leisure.” The Democratic Senators plan to quote these statements to their audiences, and then to declare that they are incorrect. They will assert, on the basis of United States Bureau of Labor statistics, that though there are more potential workers in the country now than three years ago, there are 1,874,050 fewer employed. They will say this proves that the job of every man is growing less secure and that millions of idle already fill the streets, and will agree with Hoover that the issue, for some, is not “a full dinner pail,” but any kind of dinner pail at all. Can Blame Age Republicans, if they reply, may do so by saying increased unemployment is due, not to something inherent in their party, but to modern industrialization wherein machines tend to displace hand laborers. Saying this they would be using the same kind of logic as some Democratic newspapers, which have said the enlarged comforts of American homes nowadays are attributable to the American system and not to the Republican party, as Hoover intimated. Hoover, in citing 6,000,000 more telephones, 7,000,000 radio sets and 14,000,000 additional automobiles as evidences of prosperity under republican presidents, had access to correct Commerce Department figures. The Democrats, in their unemployment argument, have no exact figures to go by. There was talk about an unemployment survey during the last Congress, but no appropriation of money for such a survey. No Exact Figures The Bureau of Labor statistics can only say what it said to Secretary of Labor Davis when he reported to the Senate last March—that 1,874,050 fewer men were em--ployed then than three years before. There is no accurate figure for unemployment in 1925,. and there is nothing better than a guess as to how many men and women took status as potential workers since then. To discover the actual number unemployed would require a house-to-house canvass, bureau experts said. They pointed out that a recent house-to-house survey in Baltimore, Md., disclosed only 15,473 unemployed, whereas the State federation of labor had estimated 75,000 out of work in that city, and the Baltimore Chamber of Commerce had guessed 33,000. The bureau’s employment index, issued monthly, does not try to estimate unemployment. It merely is based on pay rolls of factories in fifty-four selected industries and shows the trend only in those industries. Would Shoe President’s Feet Bn Times Special EVANSVILLE, Ind., Aug. 14. John Groscurth, a shoemaker for forty years, wishes to make a pair of shoes for the next President of the United States, whether he be Herbert Hoover or A1 Smith. Groscurth has made shoes for many prominent men, including Mayor Goodlet, this city’s first mayor, and believes a pair for presidential feet would be a fitting climax to his career. Memorial to Cost $7,000 B>l Timrs Special FT. WAYNE, Ind., Aug. 14.—The contract for erecting a memorial to oe erected to this city’s World War veterans has been awarded the Muldoon Memorial Company, Louisville, Ky., on a bid of $15,000. The memorial will be erected in Memorial Park. Its motif will be three arches, one each for the military forces of the land, sea and air.
Corns safe instant relief WA Wo waiting —in one minute Dr. Scholl’s Zino-pads end the worst com pain. They do it scientifically, natorally —by removing the cause— friction and pressure of shoes. They are thin, soft, protective, healing, positively safe and sure. Buy a box ofZino-pads today. At all drug, shoe and dept, stores. m Scholls Zino'pads Put one on-the pain is goncl
PAPERS STILL HAVE CRUSADING MISSION, SAYS TIMES EDITOR
Boyd Gurley Gives Address at Politics Institute in Virginia. UNIVERSITY, Va., Aug. 14. Newspapers have a greater opportunity than ever before to aid in driving corruption out of Government, Boyd Gurley, editor of The Indianapolis Times, declared in an address here last night before the Institute of Politics. “The battle to preserve the purity of Government and its integrity is a continuous one, and the problem never can be answered by enactment of a single law or the enforcement of all laws relating to the ballot,” said Gurley. “Corruption is persistent and adroit.” An intelligent and informed electorate is necessary, Gurley said, and it is here that the newspaper which assumes the duty of protecting its readers from imposition and misinformation has its opportunity. The Indianapoluis Times, under Gurley’s editorship, led the fight against political corruption in Indiana which drove numerous public officials from office. The Times was awarded the Pulitzer prize last year for disinterested and meritorious public service. Gurley described the exposure of corruption in Indiana, and told how incriminating documents which had belonged to D. C. Stephenson were obtained and published. Stephenson was organizer of the Klan in Indiana, and had been a political power. During the crusade of The Times, Stephenson was serving a term in the penitentiary in connection with the death of a girl. INDIANA NO EXCEPTION Gurley called attention to the fact that in the past eight years there have been brought to light more instances of political corruption. both national and localized, than had been exposed in the previous half century, and said: “Asa deterrent force we must reach the conclusion that the modern newspaper signally has failed. It seems incredible, even impossible, to believe that men, either holding or seeking political power, would dare to challenge the constant threat inherent in those 35,000,000 of potential accusers, if the traditional restraints and fears which once formed the protection of society were operative. “This year the Puli>er prize was awarded to The Indianapolis Times for the most disinterested and meritorious public service. The particular citation recited that the award was made because of the efforts of The Times in exposing and prosecuting the guilty and in creating a better public sentiment. This award does not bring unmixed pride. It is an indictment as well as a compliment. “There is an implication, which is most unwarranted, that the newspapers of the United States have gone off watch, or that Indiana had become more corrupt than other States, which is even more unwarranted. It truthfully may be asserted that in material cost to the citizens, the corruption of Indiana was negligible compared to that of misgovernment in other States. It had a more dramatic background. But any government, even an efficient one, which obtains its authority by corrupt methods, ceases to be a democracy and represents a form of despotism. I am privileged to make this statement because I am the editor of The Times, which received this recognition.” FACTS COUNT MOST The modern newspaper bears little or no relationship to the newspaper of the days of Greeley and Dana, Gurley said. The earlier newspaper was founded on the intelligence, genius and principles of one man. The personality of the editor meant everything. The newspaper itself represented a small investment. Now the power of the individual editor has been largely destroyed by the advent of machinery, said Gurley. The linotype, the rotary press, the telegraph and telephone, have changed the character of the newspaper. Emphasis has been taken from the editorical column to the first page. News of the world has become instantly available, and the success of a newspaper depends on the speed and completeness with which it handles news. Advertising has become a factor. The establishment of a modern newspaper requires large capital. “Newspapers have become, in one sense, business enterprises, corporate in character, in which the personality of the editor is lost and submerged,” said Gurley. “Readers may know the name of the owner. They seldom know the name of the editor. "Editorial opinion no longer has the personal message. Editorial writers may be changed or replaced with tew, if any, regular readers being aware of the fact. 1 “It is for that reason, perhaps, that astute men in public life care very little as to what is said or not said about them and their affairs in the editorial column but are very much concerned over any reference in the news columns. “As evidence of this fundamental change in newspaper-making, pause for a moment and remember if you can, the names of five editors of important newspapers in the United States at the present time. Neither can 1., “The work of the editor of today is entirely different from that of Greeley, or Dana, or Watterson. He is the vendor of news, of entertainment, of the comic strip, of household recipes and radio programs. “With the news of the entire world at his disposal, his success depends upon his selection and hiss enterprise, not upon his philippics “If he is to mold -bli. opinion, he must do it through the presentation of facts, rather than arguments. If he is to lead public thought he must convince .with
truths, not pleas. If he is to render any service in the protection of the public from evils in Government or corruption in politics, he must rely upon presentation of facts.” LIGHT ON GOVERNMENT Gurley told how the modem newspaper touches every activity of life, and pointed out that all these activities are affected in some degree by the manner in which the Government is operated. “A grafting city council may be the means, through which taxation, of robbing the industrious citizen,” he said. “His children, when that home is confiscated to the greed of thieving officials, may find their way to prison farms. Later they may become the gunmen and the thug. “A state of administration veering from the channels of public interest may produce conditions which bring havoc and disaster to the lives of hundreds. “A national government, in the hands of corruptionists, might endanger the future safety of the Nation itself through the sale of national resources. “We have had bad government because only a minority take any interest in government until it becomes bad. “Even then ,the cynicism of the times, so swift and changing, often accepts bad government as a necessary evil, something which always has existed and always will. “Distrust of all governmental institutions is not an exclusive Indiana symptom. “At the masthead of The Times is the slogan, ‘Give light and the people will find their own way.’ It is, we believe, something more than a motto. It is a bargain with the readers that light will be thrown upon the one institution which should be of the most interest to them, the one institution which the people may change as they desire. “No news, therefore, seems to be more important than the news of the government which belongs to all the people. “If that government performs according to the public will, the record of its acts give confidence and faith. If it swerves from the path of public conscience or fundamental law, the duty of the newspaper is to print the news, without prejudice or without bias.” POWER OF BALLOT Gurley told of the activities of The Times in exposing the political situation in Indiana. “I have related in some detail the incidents of this event, but only for the purpose of indicating that whenever there is a real menace to Government, it can be disclosed if there be a purpose to force exposure," he said. “I have related it also as some evidence of faith that the people still are to be trusted and that corruption in government comes from ignorance of facts, rather than complacency on the part of the majority. The first result was indignation on the part of those who had been misled and used. But I am convinced that the editor, entrusted with news rather than opinion, has a greater duty than the mere exposure ,of corruption after it once has fastened its tentacles upon politics and Government. Today as never before the great menace to public opinion comes from the prepared propaganda* of interested and selfish interests which use government for their own interests as against the interests of the many. Only through silence and the printed propaganda which disguised hateful force in the garb of patriotism was it possible for the control of Indiana to slip away from its people into the hands of the venal and the selfish. “This is the hidden and subtle enemy of real government—this disguising of truth and the suppression of truth, which sends the voter to the ballot box drugged with misinformation or in ignorance. • “It is not too much to say that the editor of today has done a fair job if he protects his own columns from the sinister, often the powerful. “Is it important? Is it worth whiie? “We boast of our civilization, with its material advantages and its luxuries. We are proud of our achievements in finance and in industry. We have made advances which are beyond the miraculous. And yet the whole history of man can be written into the ballot itself. TRUTH IS SAFEGUARD “The only certificate of equality and of liberty is that little ballot which the citizen deposits on elec-
WALL PAPER (VALL SILK FOR IQ AV WG Interior Decoratine uT fulal JL tS ft OSER-ALLEN Paint and Glass Cos. la 33 South Meridian Street
HANNING BROS. The Bus j Dentist* Cor. Washington and Penn. Bta. 204 KRESGE BLDG.
DEEP CURVED LENSES examination and -so- nrtlJff iniijfc vaa e, |U|I. y *llon complete. 55.50 to $7.50 Ir. ,to. E. Kernel Optical Dept. WE H. BLOCK CO.
3 Room Outfit s I K' nr* Hit ion id Fuiiiituii ■ ■ rrwi.tFvßNiri'RECo ■■ J limit d'Ti'adc-l/i Stott Ts Psis
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
OPEN BIDS ON STATE-FEDERAL SHAREJ*AVING Estimate Cost $1,500,000 for 60 Miles of Road Improvement. Bids were opened today by the State highway commission for the paving of sixty miles of State and Federal share roads at an estimated cost of more than $1,500,000. When contracts are signed the State will have under construction 253 miles of concrete pavement for this fiscal year. Low bidders on today’s projects and improvements were: Road 6 from Missouri St. in East Gary to three miles east of Lake County line, 7.6 miles in Lake and Porter Counties, Calumet Paving Company, $169,208.03; Road 6 from tnree miles east of Lake County line to four miles west of La Porte County line, 7.8 miles in Porter County, Dull Bros., Arcanuns, Ohio, $187,779.93: Road 6 from four miles west of La Porte County line to Westville, seven miles, in Porter and La Porte Counties, Wabash Construction Company, Vincennes, $154,916.29. U. S. Road 24 from Logansport to j Peru, 12.8 miles in Casse and miami Counties, McCoun Construction Company, Noblesville, $267,474.84. U. S. Road 24 from two miles east of Peru to Wabash, 9.6 miles in Miami and Wabash Counties. The new road from Logansport to Peru will be on relocation the entire distance, therefore when it is constructed, will not interfer with traffic on the old road. , The distance between Logansport and Peru will be shortened two miles and sharp turns and steep grades eliminated by relocation. Low bidder was J. C. O’Conner & Sons, Inc., Ft. Wayne, $246,973.72. State Rd. 15 from Milford to New Paris, 6.9 miles in Kosciusko and Elkhart Counties. This relocation will avoid two crossings of the Big Four Railroad and an adjacent electric road crossing. Bergen & Bergen, Franklin, $123,273.74. State Rd. 19, from Nappanee north for eight miles, to connect with pavement already in use to Ewkhart, in Elkhart County. Elkhart County is to pay a portion of the cost of this improvement. Hinsey & Dull, Portland, $131,843.81, tlon day. History presents a moving picture of its achievement. There is the slave writhing under his master’s lash, protesting against not only the cruelty, but his ownership by another human being. “Upon the fields of battle men have died rather than submit to rulership by an authority which came from other than their own assent. The mad houses and the prison cells, the torture racks, the sobs of exile are the dreary dirge to the dead hopes of those who hoped and dreamed of liberty and equality. “Implanted in the soul of the first man was that dream that some time and some place, he would rule himself and not cringe before the lash of sharp command of those who called him slave. “The hope came true when from this State there came the immortal Jefferson, who put into written words all the hopes and all the dreams of all the centuries. What did he give? The promise that men were free and equal in their participation in government, that no man should suffer for his thoughts or words, that he might work out his own destiny in accord with his own conscience. “What weapon did he give? Only a ballot, a little slip of paper to stand between the citizen and all the tyrannies and all the injustices of the ages, past or future. “What stands guard over that ballot; Only an intelligent and informed citizenship. We can stop the thief who steals the ballot. Can we stop the thief who steals the intelligence behind the ballot? “As never before there is a magnificent challenge to the newspaper which assumes the responsibility and duty of protecting its readers from imposition and misinformation, because it alone has the facilities and the means by which truth may be disseminated in a manner which may be effective. “Any newspaper which is discouraged by the indifference or apathy toward government on the part of its readers merely admits its own lack of skill in making government interesting. , “Any newspaper which, through fear or self-interest, disguises or suppresses the truth concerning government lists itself among the traitors to liberty/'
SPECIAL USED PIANO BARGAINS BALDWIN ON THE CIRCLE
Orthophonic VICTROLAS . Trade In your old A Phonograph. IV PEARSON’S SfErjgaßk ”i N. Penn. St.
Expert Truss Fitting at 129 W. Wash. St. Store Abdominal Supports and Shoulder Braces HAAG’S CUT-PRICE DRUGS
Dress Up on CreditTake 20 Weeks to Pay THE LIBERTY Credit Clothing Cos. 30 North Pennsylvania Street
THE INDIANA TRUST CO. Pay 4% Savings CAPITAL $2,000,000
Scoot Way Into Finals of Derby
—. . . j three classes will'go to the finals nl pA
No Legal Bar to City Airport, Raub Reports
1920 Law Enables Immediate Steps Without Special Legislation. The 1920 law providing for acquisition and operation of municipal airports gives Indianpolis legal authority to act to obtain a municipal field, Edward B. Raub, Jr., park board attorney, will report to the municipal airport board at its luncheon Wednesday. Raub has spent several days conferring with other attorneys in preparing an opinion on the statute. With this law effective, tne city will not need to wait until special legislative authority is granted before taking steps to establish a municipal flying field. The law* provides for acquisition of airport sites by municipal bond issue or deferred payments from the general fund, or for leasing sites with option to purchase at a future date. It is probable, committee members said, that the local airport may be placed in the hands of private operators, temporarily, at least, which also is provided for in the law. With several satisfactory sites available and legal difficulties ironed out, committee members feel the biggest problem now facing them is public opinion. The joint city-Chamber of Commerce board has invited several represpentative business men to attend it luncheon Wednesday in its attempt to sound out public opinion. It is possible, it was said, sentiment of various civic organizations may be sought. A sub-committee to make recommendations on a site may be named at the meeting Wednesday. A. Kiefer Mayer, industrial commission chairman, will preside. Mayor L. Ert Slack has said that New Method of Healing The most powerful method ever devised for healing and relieving leg troubles was developed by Europe’s famous leg specialist. Dr. Clason of Germany. His methods were introduced into America five years ago. A new Illustrated book, “The Story of Vlscoe Method,” tells how leg sufferering is quickly banished while the person works and tvalks instead of “laying up.” It is sent FREE to all leg sufferer who write for It. if Dr. Clason's Vtfcoe Home Method will help them. His methods have a history of continuous success, (especially In varicose troubles) stopping painful vein suffering, reducing swollen legs and increasing circulation in the legs. Send for this free book today. Address nearest office. Dr. I. T. Clason Viscoe Cos., 1038 S. Alvarado St., Los Angeles, Cal. or 140 N. Dearborn St., Chicago, 111.— Advertisement.
666 Kills Malarial Germs and quickly relieves Biliousness, Headaches and Dizziness due to temporary Constipation. Aide tn eliminating Toxins and ts highly esteemed for producing copious watery evacuations.—Advertisement.
LEARN Evening Law School OPENS SEPT. 17TH f, JH for 31st Tear. 1 Two-year standard I /gap t® iff legal course leads to ■ ■ LL. B. degree. Catalogue Opon Request BENJAMIN HAKKISON LAW SCHOOL 1152 Consolidated Bldg. Riley 6887
—— Ask for —. Furnas Ice Cream “The Cream of Quality” At Your Dealer
SAFE DEPOSIT BOXES The Meyer-Kiser Bank 128 E. Washington St.
eJhe (DIAL FURNITURE Ca •V 141 WEST. Washington st.‘ OURIOtMION SAVES
The race of the older boys in the Times-Capitol Dairy scooter derby at Brookside Park Monday, was closely bunched, and it was not until the last few feet that Peter Patterson (above), who is third from the right, won out. The boy in second place is Robert Klingensmith. Little Robert Pierce (left, below), was an easy winner in the race for small boys. He took the lead at the start, following an accident which eliminated several contestants. Helen Wickstetter won the girl’s race at Brookside, with many feet to spare. All three winners in the three classes will go to the finals of the scooter derby.
if it is shown public opinion is strongly behind the venture, necessary funds can be arranged, despite the substantial increase inevitable in next year's city tax levy. Committee members feel no time should be lost in taking definite action, if public sentiment is favorable, in order to have the airport ready for use by next spring. Col. Charles A. Lindbergh, who inspected several sites for an airport here Friday, urged the airport site be acquired this fall. While the transcontinental air transport air-rail 48-hour coast-to-coast passenger route, of which Lindbergh is technical advisor, probably will not start operation before spring, it is necessary to obtain the field this fall and have it graded and prepared ready for use by spring, he said. “The transcontinental is only one
"Within a Week My Baby Was Entirely Healed ”
Humble,Tex. —“My baby suffered from a malignant, form of eczema which had failed to respond to many treatments I had tried. I used Resinol Soap and Ointment, and within a week my baby was entirely healed.” —(Signed) Mrs. J. K. Morrow. Bothersome itching,which children tend to scratch and so infect, is in most cases quickly stopped
the cham of a cleat <j/1H , p§ ..JflHEftdk - ; n . imPy4v v^n [sX :m£s^ x -
Q/ou cannot be attractive> without a clear shim
EVERYBODY wants to be aftractive. It is a great and Just ambition. But no one can be attractive without a clear gkin—you know that. Do you realize the importance of pure, rich blood in preserving the health, and that the source of most skin disorders is in the blood? Remove the cause, which is not in the skin itself, and pimples, boils, eczema and that sallow complexion will disappear. You may have tried many things without relief. Why not try S.S.S.? S.S.S. is extracted from the fresh roots of medicinal plants.
—-purely
a clear skin comes from within
of several great airplane developments that will materialize by next summer,” C. L. Harrod, industrial commissioner, said in pointing to need for a large airport. Several memberes of the airport committee were included in a party of ten which flew to Detroit today in the Stout-Ford monoplane which has been carrying passengers at Indianapolis airport. While in Detroit they will inspect the Ford airport and obtain data which may prove useful to the airport board in planning a municipal field here. The party included A. Kiefer Mayer and Norman A. Perry of the airport board Walter Kuhn, Henry L. Dithmer, Harry D. Hartley, P. L. Forgan. St. Andrews, Scotland, and Carey Granger, E. R. Holdson, Robert E. Walker and J. Harvey Wheeler. They planned to return here this evening. Scarlet snow, due to the presence of small and very thin worms, has fallen at Halmstead, Sweden.
with Resinol. Put on the Ointment at night; then wash off with Resinol Soap in the morning. Recommended by doctors. Resinol Soap, too. for general toilet use. At all druggists. For free sample of each, writs Resinol, De.pt.3l, Baltimore, Md. Resinol
and herbs, and gives to Nature what she needs in building you up so that your system throws off the cause. When your system i9 filled with rich, red blood, you don’t have that tired, languid feeling when you awake in the morning. Instead, you feel refreshed, ready to meet the world. Your appetite is keen—you enjoy work or play—your skin is clear, cheeks naturally rosy. ’ All this because rich, red blood builds and sustains the body. For more than 100 years S.S.S. has been giving relief In thousands of cases, as testified to in unsolicited letters of gratitude.
/ / XT' V?s,v/ All drug stores sell S.S.S. in two size*. Get the larger eize. It is more economical.
PAGE 9
OPEN SEPARATE LESUEJFFICE Campaign to Be Conducted Apart From G. 0. P. Chiefs, Abandoning tactics of secrecy in welding intimates of Harry G. Leslie, Republican gubernatorial nominee, into a separate State organization in his behalf, Leslie managers will establish headquarters at the Severin in close proximity with Republican State headquarters, it was announced today. Bert C. Fuller, Leslie’s primary campaign manager and close adviser, who quietly called the stanchest Leslie adherents to a secret meeting in the Lincoln a few weeks ago, will be in charge of the new headquarters, to be opened Wednesday. CORNS' off in 3 Minutes Here’s a New, Painless, Anti, septic Remedy Isn't it foolish to suffer the stabbing pains of sore corns when you can take them out in only 3 minutes—root and all—with Shur-Off? No foot-soaking now—no waiting. Just get a 50c bottle of Shur-Off at Hook’s Dependable Drug Stores or any other good druggist and wet your corn with It. Keep It wet 2 minutes. Now all pain has stopped, the corn is softened and you simply peel It off. Tou’lJ bo amazed how easy it is to do—how painless. Don't put up with corns another day, Rhur-OIT Is sold on a money-back guar, antee. Get a package now. Shur-Off Ends Corns in 3 Minutes 1 NERVOUSNESS AND ] STOMACH TROUBLE ENDED BY KONJOLA Gladly Indorses This Medicine as a Product of Merit. Konjola’s popularity is due only to one thing—MEßlT. A little over two years ago this medicine was unknown to the people of Indianapolis, but today it takes its place among the leading proprietaries in
MR. F. R. MAURICE —Photo by Northland Studio.
every drug store In this city. Thousands of men and women from all over this section have indorsed it as the only medicine that gave them lasting relief from disorders of the stomach, liver, kidneys and bowels, and rheumatism and neuritis, and the Konjola Man at Hook’s drug store, Illinois and Washington Sts., this city, is still receiving one report after another from former sufferers who have been restored to new and glorious health. There can be only one reason for this great demand and that is the fact that Konjola in most cases does everything claimed for it. One of the latest reports of the benefits received from tnis celebrated compound is from Mr. F. R. Maurice, a well-known Indianapolis citizen, living at 334 Cable St. Mr. Maurice enjoys a wide acquaintance among the merchants of this city because of his frequent contact with them as a tobacco salesman. “This is the first time I ever made a public indorsement of a medicine,” said Mr. Maurice, “but I am satisfied Konjola is a product of merit and worthy of all the praise it is receiving every day from the people of Indianapolis. It completely ended my stomach trouble and nervousness and filled my whole system with new Ufa energy. “Ever so often I was subject to attacks of stomach trouole that finally made life miserable for me. In fact at times the suffering and pains were almost unbearable. Gas bloating caused me the most misery. Every time I ate a full meal, my stomach would swell and feel like there was a heavy rock at the bottom of it. This gas often caused burning pains around the heart and at night I was subject to smothering spells. Soon my nervous system was affected. The least little thing would set my nerves on edge and a terrible feeling would come over me. Sound sleep was out of tha question and consequently, 1 always felt tired and drowsy. 3ut Konjola relieved all this misery, and now my stomach is in good shape and my nerves never bother me. At night my sleep is sound and restful and I wake up in the morning full of new energy and feeling fine. “Konjola was the first medicine to relieve my illness and it worked so effectively on all the organs of my inner-system that I beUeve my relief will be permanent." The Konjola Man is at Hook’s drug store, Illinois and Washington Sts., Indianapolis, where he is daily meeting the public ind introducing and explaining the merits of this remedy. Konjola is sold in every Hook drug store in this section and by aU the leading druggists throughout this section*— Advertisement, _
