Indianapolis Times, Volume 41, Number 237, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 February 1930 — Page 9

FEB. IZ, 1930.

Class Will Give Party at College Intermediate class, Teachers college, will entertain students with a Valentine party tonight at the college. Miss Rose 11 a Hall is chairman oi the committee in charge, and Miss Meta Foga, president of the class. Mrs. Alice Corbin Sies, president of the college, addressed the students Wednesday at assembly on Education for the New America.’’ This was the first of a series of three lectures on aims of education which Mrs. Sies will give. She presented a brief review of the changes in physical conditions in the last twenty years, and gave a detailed account of the spiritual difficulties in modern life. In commenting on the changes in family life -she said: “Formerly the family was a unit, with man as head of the house. Each member of the family now is pursuing different interests, and some time during marriage woman is going out to become an economic unit. Young married people are unwilling to give up luxuries enjoyed in their parents' homes, and this either delays marriage or necessitates both earning money. We can not prophesy what the effect of this will be on the children. “Another factor that contributes to the instability of modem life is the fact that the average family doesn't live a quarter of a century in any one place. Our leaders are our successful men, not old families. “Religious conceptions are changing, and after talking to hundreds of students I’m convinced that the old struggle of the spirit toward good remains. Asa teacher you are supposed to be a stabilizing influence, presenting the best in the past and seeking the best in the new.” Miss Esther West, national secretary’ of international student committee of the Y. W. C. A., spoke briefly on “World Fellowship.” Nurses Will Be Honored With Party Mr. and Mrs. F. R. Kautz will be hosts for a party tonight at their home, 4059 North Pennsylvania treet, to be given by members of the board of directors of the Public Health Nursing Association for nurses of the association. John I. Kautz has arranged for a play to be given by members of the Players’ Club in the recreation room of the Kautz home. Members of the cast are Mrs. E. Blake Francis, Robert Wild, Percy Weer, Morris M. Andrews and Maynard Halverson. Mrs. Frank T. Edenhartcr will lead the ensemble singing. Decorations and appointments will be carried out in Valentine idea. The committee in charge includes Mrs. B. J. Herrell. Mrs. Robert Bryce, Mrs. Mortimer C. Furscott and Miss Deborah Moore.

CARD PARTIES

Women of Mooseheart Legion will give a euchre party at 2:30 Thursday afternoon at the hall, 135 North Delaware street. Ladies’ Auxiliary to the General Protestant Orphans’ home will give its monthly card party at the home, 1404 South State street, at 8 Thursday night. Euchre and bunco will be played. The committee in charge is composed of Mrs. Melinda Kolthoff, Mrs. Samuel Barringer, Mrs. Edward Rahe, Mrs. Louis Brandt, Mrs. Sophie Graber, Mrs. F. Brown and Mrs. W. F. Mowwe. Banner Temple, No. 37, degree staff, wall give a card party at 8:30 tonight at the home of Mrs. Alice Sponn, 322 East North street. Mrs. David F. Newman is chairman of the card and bunco party to be given for the benfit of Quigley council, Y. M. I-, at Miller's lunchroom. Fifteenth and Main streets, Speedway City, at 2:30 Sunday afternoon. Door prizes will be given. A. D. Streight circle. No. 16, will give a party at Ft. Friendly, 513 North Illinois street, at 2 Thursday. A meeting has been called for 1. Members of the committee in charge of the card party are Mrs. Bartlett, Mrs. May Stum, Mrs. Ida Rushton and Mrs. Lillian Wharton. Girls’ auxiliary of the Shelterhouse will give a card party at 8 Thursday night at the home of Mrs. Robert Beilach, 5141 Kenwood avenue. Proceeds of the affair will go to the maintenance of the Shelterhouse and old home The ladies’ auxiliary will assist the junior organization. Prizes will be awarded. Maccabee lodges will give a card, euchre and bunco party at 8:15 Thursday night at Eagle's hall, 43 West Vermont street. Fred Eisenhut is chairman. Sacred Heart Charity Club will give a bunco and lotto party Thursday at 2 o’clock in Sacred Heart hall. Drama Guild to Meet Indianapolis Catholic Dramatic Guild will meet at 8 Thursday night at the Severin. Does Not Suffer From Asthma Now Every Sign of Trouble Gone, Works .All the Time Now. People who suffer from asthma or chronic bronchial coughs will be interested in a letter written by Wm. F. McKinley. 649 Arbor Avenue, Indianapolis, Ind. He says: “I tad asthma for 15 years. Was unable to work for months at a time, had to ait in a chair unable to lie down. I tried different medicines, and finally started on Xaeor in September. 1923. I hadn't taken half a bottle until I could sleep in bed. I hare no signs of asthma now and my health is good again.*’ Hundreds of people who suffered for years from asthma and bronchial .-nughs. state that their trouble left and has not returned. Their letters and a booklet of vital information will be sent free by Xaeor Medicine Cos., Scat* Life Bldg., Indianapolis. Ind. Call or write for this free information, and find out how thousands have found lasting relief.—Advertisement.

THETA SIGMA DELTA INITIATION FEB, 28

Beta chapter, Theta Sigma Delta sorority, will hold rough initiation Feb. 28 for Miss Degarmo Spear, Miss Ann Mueller and Miss Helen Twyman. Miss Lucille Cook will act as temporary pledge mistress during the absence of Miss Marie Losche. A committee composed of Miss Dorothy Porter, Miss Gertrude McNece, Miss Mabel Skinner, Miss Mildred Van Horn and Miss Helene Meikle will have charge of arrangements. Miss Mabel Pressley is president. The chapter will meet Friday night at the home of Miss Meikle. Card Party Arranged at Propylaeum Among those who have made reservations for the Valentine card party to be given Friday afternoon at the Propylaeum by members of the Propylaeum Association are: Mesdames: Herman Munk James Cunning Harrv Murphy Winfield Miller Walter R. Mayer Jesse C. Moore James W. Sturgis Charles Wood Edward Eerier George P. Meier Edwin H. Forrv II H Wheeler Russell Fortune Albert Gall Jam* 1 * H. Taylor F. Ellis Hunter F H. Jungclaus Fletcner Hodges William M. RockwoodE. D. Clark Paul Simpson Noble Dean Irving M. Fauvre Charles A. Edwards Charles P. Lesh Frank Ross Ralph Lemcke T. R. Kackley Arthur V. Brown W. H. Kennedy Edward Knight John Kern Jr. Gavin L. Payne William A. Moore Kin Hubbard Samuel L. Shank Jackson Landers John R. Wilson Ernest C. Barrett Augustus Cobum William H Coleman Frank Powell Fannie Morrison Harry Fitton Benjamin D. Hltz Gideon Blain. Harry Mlesse Misses Mary Sullivan Emma Claypool.

PARTY HOSTESS

kl

Miss Marcella Smith

Alpha chapter, Omega Phi Tau sorority will give the first of a series of rush parties Wednesday night at the home of Miss Marcella Smith, 712 North Emerson avenue, rush captain. Decorations and appointments will be in St. Valentine day motif. Rushees are Mrs. Roberta Huffard. Miss Helen Calloway and Miss Jeanette Snyder, Rossville; Miss Margaret Deal, Miss Clara Wilhelm, Miss Kathryn Mitchell. Miss Alice Brady, Miss Thelma Heckler, Miss Margaret Casey, Miss Cecelia Stark, Miss Martha Fusener, Miss Phyllis Dragstrewe, Miss Emmaline Keller, Indianapolis, and Miss Frances Wiese, Cumberland. Miss Smith will be in charge of all rush parties.

BRIDGE PARTY GIVEN FOR MISS LEIBER

Mrs. Leo Hollander entertained on Tuesday afternoon at her home 1247 Southeastern avenue, with a bridge party in honor of Miss Mildred Leiber, Detroit, who is the house guest of Mrs. Sam Nash, 2333 North Delaware street. Guests with Miss Leiber included Mrs. Nash, Mrs. Lillian Epstein. Mrs Manuel Dobrow, Mrs. Sam Rosen Mrs. Jacobs, Mrs. Jack Berger, Mrs. Nathan Tamler. Mrs. Benjamin Leiderman, Mrs. Sam Hoffman, Miss Sara Cohen, Hollywood, Cal.

PERSONALS

William Robinson, 1512 North i Meridian street, is spending the i week in Chicago. Mrs. Michael A. Ryan, 2266 North Meridian street, is in Florida, where she will spend the remainder of the winter. Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Schaf Jr.. 4101 North Pennsylvania street, left last Friday for California. Alumnae to Meet Zeta Tau Alpha alumnae will entertain with a valentine bridge party following the short business meeting Thursday night at the home of Miss Ruth Anne Carson. 2936 Bellefontaine street. The hostess will be assisted by Mrs. Noel Nitterhouse. Mrs. Hans Jacobsen and Miss Helen Ocker. Reservations may be made with Mrs. Nitterhouse. Entertains Friends Miss Mabel Landlord, 423 North Tacoma avenue, entertained mem- : bers and pledges of the Kappa ! Gamma Alpha sorority with a Val- | entine party Tuesday night at her | home. Hold Business Meeting Miss Dorothy Julian, 834 North Dearborn street, will be hostess for j the regular business meeting of Phi Tau Delta sorority, Friday night. ; Miss Julian, newly elected president, will preside. Mrs. Ford to Entertain Mrs. Marie Reynolds Ford, PennArts apartments, will be hostess at 8 Friday night for a meeting of the Indiana unit of Women’s Overseas Service League. Honor Founder Members of the La Phyllis Club will celebrate Founder's day with a banquet Tuesday, Feb. 18. Plans were made at a meeting Monday : night at the home of Mrs. Ray I Lydia, 15 North Campbell avenue.

Immigration Is Topic of Dr. Stoddard

'

Dr. Stoddard

“Neither jingoism nor sentimentality can be used in America’s treatment of the immigration problem. With this declaration Dr. Lothrop Stoddard of Brooklyn, N. Y., spoke before the Woman's Department Club, 1702 North Meridian street, this afternoon. Dr. Stoddard urged that each country be treated as a • separate problem from an immigration standpoint. He pointed out the wave of unrest passing over the Orient during the present era. “If western powers do get out of Turkey, changes will continue to occur because of the civilization of western powers. “We must treat immigration and racial problems in a realistic manner and neither jingoism nor sentimentality will suffice.” Personally a strict exclusionist in regard to immigration, Dr. Stoddard upheld the nation’s continuance of the locked gate to Orientals. His subject this afternoon carried the title of his book, “The Rising Tide of Color.” It has been translated in numerous foreign languages. Dr. Stoddard has traveled throughout Europe. Asia and the Orient. He is a contributor to the Saturday Evening Post, Atlantic Monthly and other magazines and is a graduate of Harvard.

FIREMAN HURT IN AUTO CRASH Motorist Arrested: Truck Dashes in Home. A false alarm early today resulted in a collision with injury to one fireman, arrest of a motorist and an unset breakfast table in a home at the northwest corner of Howard and Harding streets. Pumper truck 13, speeding to the neighborhood from which the false alarm was pulled, collided with a sedan driven by C. H. Shaw, 2717 Allen avenue. D. A. Crume, 257 South Gray street, city fireman, suffered back injuries and a mashed thumb. Swerving after the collision, the fire apparatus dashed over a curb and through a lawn into the residence, where startled members of an unidentified family were taking their places at the breakfast table. Shaw, whose car was traveling fifty miles an hour, according to firemen, was charged with failure to give the fire truck right-of-way, and assault and battery. He said he was in a hurry to get to his grocery. The house was damaged S2OO. LOSERS TO PAY PENALTY American Legion Team to Sweep Steps of Monument. „ Armed with brooms, members of the Bruce P. Robison post, No. 133, American Legion, will pay forfeit for losing in a membership contest by sweeping the south steps of the soldiers’ and sailors’ monument at 6:45 tonight. Charles W. Owen, membership contest captain, will head the sweepers. When the steps are clean, losing members will entertain the winning membership contest team at a dinner in the Central Christian Church. Oldest Resident Dies By Times Special ROSSVILLE, Ind., Feb. 12.—Mrs. Rachel H. Gunkle, 93, oldest Clinton county resident, is dead at her home here. She had lived in the same house sixty-four years. City Takes Airport TERRE HAUTE, Ind., Feb. 12 The municipal airport commission will take over Dresser field here at noon Saturday. First action preparatory to the transfer to municipal ownership was appointment of John Haxton as superintendent.

Honor ‘Abe’ Bu I’nitcd Press SPRINGFIELD, 111., Feb. 12. —The capital of Illinois led the nation today in tributes to the memory of Abraham Lincoln. Special programs were presented at the tomb of the sixteenth President of the United States, and at the old courthouse where he defended his first client. The custodian of the Lincoln home at Eighth and Jackson streets, where Lincoln received delegations of well-wishers on the day he left for Washington to be inducted into the presidency, prepared for an unusual number of visitors. The house, now the property* of the state, is a small museum of Lincoln relics. Furniture which ’Abe” used still is in place, although the chairs have been roped off to prevent visitors i'-om sitting in them.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

INDIANA PENWOMEN TO HOLD LUNCHEON

Members, of the Indiana branch of the League of American Pen Women will meet for luncheon at 1 Saturday afternoon in the Lincoln room of the Hotel Lincoln. Mrs. Frank N. Wallace will read, “With Jean Stratton Porter When She Wrote ‘The Harvester,’” and Mrs. Minnie Olcott Williams will give a talk on “Ethics of the Dust.” Mrs. Loretta Sheridan Ritter Hill sing, accompanied by Mrs. Lawrence Jessup. Preceding the luncheon there will be a business meeting at 11. Reservations may be made with Mrs. Myron R. Williams. Mrs. Rabbis Renamed by Press Club Mrs. Kate Milner Rabb was reelected president of the Woman’s Press Club of Indiana at the annual business meeting and luncheon held Tuesday at the Columbia Club. Mrs. Hugh H. Hanna was chosen historian, the only change in officers for the year. Other re-elections were: First vice-president, Mrs. Edward C. Toner, Anderson; second vice-president, Mrs. Francis C. Tilden, Greencastle; third vice-presi-dent, Mrs. William Herschell; recording secretary, Mrs. James R. Branson; corresponding secretary, Mrs, Johny B. Collins; treasurer, Mrs. A. A. Kist, and auditor, Mrs. Edwara Franklin White. Applications of Mrs. John Hayes Bailey and Miss Edna Levey were read and voted to membership. The luncheon tables were decorated with red carnations and lighted with red tapers. Place cards were valentines. Mrs. E. E. Neal, I Noblesville and Mrs. Harmon W. I Marsn. members of the decorating | committee, were in charge. Next meeting will be held Tuesday, March 11. Zonta Club Meets “Insurance as ail Investment,” ; was the subject of a talk given Tuesday night by Mrs.. Ruth Hil- : kene at the dinner meeting of the ! Indianapolis Zonta Club. Miss Sue ! Stuart, president, presided. Miss | Olive Kiler is program chairman. | Next meeting will be a luncheon I Tuesday. Give “Pal” Party Alpha chapter. Delta Chi sorority, ! will entertain with a “pal” party | tonight at the home of Miss Ruth I Adams, 1316 North Oakland avenue. Decorations and appointments will be carried out in valentine colors and design. Sorority Meeting Set Mrs. John Kelley, 5354 Winthrop avenue, will be hostess for a meeting of Theta chapter, Phi Peta Psi : sorority, at her home tonight. Mrs. ; Thelma Schneider and Miss Mar- : garet McCarthy will assist the hostess. *New V/ay to Hold Lower FALSE TEETH Firmly in Place Do false teeth Annoy and bother by dropping and slipping when you eat, talk or laugh? Just sprinkle a little Fasteeth on your plates. This new, tasteless powder holds teeth firm and comfortable. No gummy, gooey, pasty taste. Makes breath pleasant. Get Fasteeth today at Hook Drug Cos., Ltggett’s or any other drug store.—AdvertiseI ment.

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TAXI DRIVER IS STRUCK, ROBBED DY NEGRO PAIR Lull in City Crime Wave Is Shown in Tally of Burglaries. Felice breathed easier today when a tally of Tuesday night’s crime showed a let-down in holdups and burglaries. Robert Heldenbung, 311 East Tenth street, taxi driver, was slugged with a pair of pliers by a Negro man and woman and was robbed of $1.70 at Twenty-fifth and Rader streets Tuesday night, he told police. The two had engaged his cab, he said. Guy Coy, 3210 West Washington street, taxi driver, reported two bandits held him up late Tuesday afternoon and got $3. Clothing and other articles valued at $590 were reported stolen from the residence of Mr. and Mrs. George Stamper, 824 North Meridian street, Apt. 3, by burglars Tuesday night. Deputy Sheriffs Clifford Lee and Joseph Lancaster, after following Frank Ashby, 50, of 741 Worth avenue, to the Hendricks county line 1 Tuesday night and remaining in hiding until he returned, arrested him on charges of bringing stolen goods into the country. It is alleged three chickens in his car were stolen. About a year ago he was arrested on a chicken stealing charge, but was acquitted in Putnam county courts. George Jones, Negro, charged wit a assault and battery and robbery, was held to the grand jury in municipal court Tuesday afternoon under $9,000 bond. He is charged with slugging and robbing O. Frank Musselman of the MusselmanSinger Coal Company, in the company’s offices, 2075 Martindale avenue, Monday afternoon. WILKINS’ BASE SILENT Efforts to Communicate With Explorer Prove Futile. Bn United Press BUENOS AIRES. Feb. 12.—Efforts to communicate with the Australian explorer, Captain Sir Hubert Wilkins, who has been making exploration flights in the Antarctic, have proved futile recently, the Trans-Radio Company announced today. The company said a message from the whaling ship Ernesto Tornquist, stationed near South Georgia island, reported unsuccessful efforts to call Wilkins’ party at its base at Deception island. The message said there had been no news from the explorer for fifteen days, Canners in Session Bu Times Special LAFAYETTE. Ind.. Feb. 12.—Attendance of 100 is registered today for the annual meeting at Purdue university of Indiana canners and field men, which opened Tuesday to continue through Thursday.

AMUSEMENTS 1 yo advance ! IN PRICES TODAY Here’s Ifce Funniest YH fc Picture Ever Produced, w “HARMONY 1 I at HOME” Ail Talking-Laughing Comedy of True Ufa nncl Love hHra William Collier Sr. MsSj§ Elizabeth Patterson Marguerite Churchill and Big Star Cast A Knockout Stage Show “LONESOME CLUB” Riotous Comedy Revue FRANCES KENNEDY “Voice of Steel City’* 6 MARTINELLI GIRLS Sensational European Stars BAKER & KNOX Tipping the Top Piece /\^scs. llElii. /mm ENGLISH’S Night, Sl-SS; Mat., 50c-$2.80 MAT. TODAY at 2:30 Tonight at 8:30 LAST TIMES |% ETHEL Barrymore I la LUI Hatvany’a Modern Play, “THE LOVE DUEL” Adapted by Zoe A kin a THCRS.. FBI., SAT., FEB. 13-14-13 MATINEE SAT CROAT OTIS SKINNER t'xPPPffJIMN A COMEDY OF CHARACTERS, RICH iy HUMOR "Mr. Skinner gives one of the most compelling of his performances In recent years.” —yew York Times.

All That lAm I Owe to My Angel Mother

Editor The Times—Today is the j one hundred twenty-first birthday anniversary of Abraham Lincoln. Millions of mothers, wives, and maidens will remember the words of the immortal son, spoken before a visiting party in the White House when he was President of the United States. “All that I am, I owe to my angel mother.” This loving tribute was tendered reverently by her son. whom the mother gave to the nation, and to all humanity, as her gift. She gave him from her store of mountain-gathered vitality, and imbued him with strength and sweetness of character. She stimulated and encouraged him to study and learn, lighting the fireplace so that he could read the printed words in books at night, thus laying the foundation for the name of Abraham Lincoln to be enrolled among the immortals. No mother in history has had so potent an influence on the life of her progeny. Imagine the thoughts and feelings of the boy on that day when he followed the few neighbors of the Lincolns who carried the rude coffin containing the body of his mother up a hill and buried it in a forest grove. Deep grief and silent prayers closed the ceremonies; there was no preacher there to speak an eulogy and prayer for the departed soul, gone to eternity. From that memorable day to 1879 her body lay in an unmarked grave. Peter Studebaker of South Bend, a great admirer of the Emancipator, had a small stone placed on the grave, with suitable inscriptions. j Later, citizens had a large granite ' monument erected and placed in its j present position. For years the i name and grave seemed doomed to j oblivion. Gradually, the story of Nancy j Hanks Lincoln, the mother, became J known and honored, and patriotic : men mid women have spread the wonderful story of her life throughout the nation, thereby creating universal demand that Nancy Hanks Lincoln be accepted as the greatest mother in history. The state of Indiana has taken over the 100-acre property, naming it the Nancy Hanks Lincoln Memorial Park. It is already a beautiful spot,, visited by thousands yearly from all over the world who come to the shrine to pay homage to the memory of the mother who gave to the world her immortal son. A beautiful tribute was given by a patriotic mother on a pleasant day in the month of May, 1927. at the grave. A party of Indiana mothers had come there to pay their respects, bringing with them a wreath of flowers to lay on her

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grave. The inscription on the wreath was: “This wreath is dedicated to the deathless, because of the divine force of the mother whose ashes lie buried here. It is a pledge that the ground ever shall be sacred to the memory of Nancy Hanks Lincoln, mother of her immortal son.” The dedication was made by Mrs. Anne Studebaker Carlisle, whose words deserve to be perpetuated as a beautiful effusion of love of a living mother to another mother who made world history by her sacrifice while on earth. “Here at your altar on this peaceful knoll, mother of Lincoln, we pause today to meditate upon the thought that from this humble environment your influence through your immortal son, has radiated around the world, a challenge to motherhood. In the name of Indiana mothers this wreath Is placed on your grave as an acknowledgment of our debt of gratitude to you, and, as a pledge that this hallowed ground shall be dedicated as a fitting shrine, in recognition of your contribution to the world, where all may come to pay homage to you, and drink at the fountain of your inspiration.” As the years counted by, centuries come and are blended into the past, the name of Lincoln, mother and son. shall become the bright stars to light the way for humanity, so that the goal of reaching peace on earth shall be attained forever. LOUIS CRAFT FREY. Author “Trinity of the United States of America.” Teachers Elect Bill Times Special FRANKLIN. Ind., Feb. 12. Stanley Porter is the new president of the Johnson County Teachers Association. Other officers are Custer Baker, vice-president, and Miss Gladys Mullikin, secretary treasurer. Former Resident Killed Bu Times Special EVANSVILLE. Ind., Feb. 12. Peter Wallace, former Evansville resident, who has been an inmate of a soldiers home at Dayton, 0., was killed there when struck by a street car.

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PAGE 9

HUGHES TO BE CONSERVATIVE IN HIGH COURT Previous Service Index to Stand Chief Justice Will Take. Editor'* Note—Hero is the last of the (cries on Charles Evan* Hnehes and the Chief Justiceship. BY HERBERT LITTLE United Press Staff Corresp.Tident WASHINGTON. Feb. 12.—Apparently Charles Evans Hughes will be as conservative a chief justice as his predecessor, William Howard Taft. Apparently the appointment preserved unchanged the six-to-three division of the supreme court, with the conservatives In the saddle. The real index to what Hughes will be as chief justice probably will be found in the record of his six years, 1910-1916, as associate justice of the supreme court. As might be expected. Associate Justice Hughes was not the reforming liberal that his New York friends might have expected; neither was he the ‘'reactionary” big business defender that those with radical beliefs now’ hold him to be on the basis of his big business connections. In his six years on the court Hughes wrote 150 opinions. He dissented from the majority in thirty cases. In only six did he write dissenting opinions. He participated in more titan 1,000 cases during this time. Columbus Girl Honored Bu Times Special COLUMBUS. Ind., Feb. 12.—Miss Ruth George of Columbus has been crowned “Tourist Queen" in a contest at Bradenton. Fla., where she has been spending the winter with her mother, Mrs. Carrie George. The coronation was witnessed by 800 persons, members and guests of the Bradenton Tourist Club.

“IT WAS KONJOLA THAT GAVE ME FIRST RELIEF” Other Medicines And Treatments Failed . . Konjola Banished Stomach, Kidney and Liver Ills. Triumph after triumph, victory after victory, that is the record of Konjola, the new and different medicine. No matter how many remedies have been weighed in the balance and found wanting, Konjola makes good.

:

MR. LEON GREEN —Photo by National Studio.

And why not? Konjola is more than “just another medicine.” Compounded of 32 Ingredients, 22 of them the juices of roots and herbs of known medicinal value, this su-per-medicine attacks the very source of the ailment, sweeps the system free of accumulated poisons and builds up new and abundant health. Its record in the relief of ailments of the stomach, liver, kidneys and bowels, and rheumatism, neuritis and nervousness is without parallel in the history of medicines. Consider the case of Dr. Leon Green, 1122 Sterling street, Indianapolis, then see the Konjola Man at Hook’s dependable drug store, Illinois and Washington streets, Indianapolis, and hear the entire story. It is one every sufferer should know. Here is the experience of Mr. Green: “I have suffered for the past eight years with stomach trouble. My kidneys, too, were weak and gave me much trouble. Bladder actions interfered with my sleep. The accumulation of gas in my stomach after meals so bloated me that I became short of breath and my heart action was affected. Belching spells frequently brought on a severe heartburn. My nerves became weak and shaky and finally a swelling developed in my lower limbs. Even my liver and bowels became weak and bilious attacks and constipation were added to my miseries. * “I gave Konjola a real chance because the first bottle helped me. I kept on regularly with this medicine and the result is that my health troubles are over. I have no gas accumulations or bloatnig after meals. My kidneys are normal and bladder actions as they should be. My liver and bowels responded just as readily to the action of this great medicine. I am no longer constipated, nor do I suffer from bilious attacks. My general health has improved marvelously and I am actually in better health tnan I have been in years." Konjola accomplishes these seeming wonders as a pure, powerful medicine. It contains no alcohol, no nerve-deadening drugs, no heartdepressing chemicals. Even infants can take Konjola The Konjola Man is at Hook’s dependable drug store, Illinois and Washington streets, Indianapolis where he is daily meeting the public explaining the merits of this new and different medicine. FREE SAMPLES GIVEN jHd. --AdTertiseßieat.