Indianapolis Times, Volume 42, Number 118, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 September 1930 — Page 2
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REDS’ INDUSTRIAL GROWTH IS THORN TO NEIGHBORS
EUROPE FEARS RUSSIANS MAY CORNER TRADE Soviet Experiment Seen as Threat to Undersell Entire World. BY WILLIAM PHILIP SIMMS Scrimin-Howard Forrirn Editor WASHINGTON, Sept. 25. Russia’s “flve-year plan”—which she now is moving heaven and earth to put through—succeeds, there is no reason why she should not undersell every other nation on earth, whether it is wheat she tfT selling, or automobiles. Having reached this conclusion. Europe, if not America, is watching the unprecedented Soviet experiment with increasing uneasiness. Knowing that she. is watched, Russia is convinced that, rather than let her succeed, the capitalists’ powers are rady to unite to crush her. Today the League of Nations, at Geneva, has before it the complaint of Rumania and Finland that Russia is dumping her agricultural products in those countries to the undoing of their farmers. The United States and Canada are excited over alleged Russian short sales of wheat. And so on.
Coal Mines Opened But suppose everything works out In Russia as her leaders are planning for it to do, including the collectivization of farmers as well as industrial workers? European economists are asking. What is to prevent the Russians from underselling any and all other nations in the markets of the world, thus virtually monopolizing trade? Under what is known as the "fiveyear plan,” Soviet Russia expects to invest more than $10,000,000,000 to speed up industry and $11,000.000,000 more to put agriculture on a mass production basis. Russia is to be converted into one huge “factory,” the great state farm being known as “grain factories.” Town and country are to be electrified with current obtained mainly from a chain of forty-two great water power stations. Upward of 100 new coal mines are to be opened and between twenty-five and thirty great blast furnaces. Enormous electro-chemico-metal-urgical “combines” are in process of formation, and motor factories are going up. One of these is to turn out 100,000 automobiles a year to start with, a second is to turn out 40,000 tractors, and a third 50,000. annually.
Farms Are Merged Some fifty-five oil-cracking plants are being set up, with pipe-lines, also a $100,000,000 locomotive works and a $25,000,000 plant for the manufacture of heavy machinery. These figures afford the merest glimpse at the industrial picture. On the farms, the preparations are no less grandiose. Two things are in process. First, the government is organizing a number of gigantic state plantations and, second, the peasants generally are being induced to collectivize, or pool, their holdings. Those land holdings range from several hundred thousand to a million or more acres in extent. By 1932 it is planned to have at least 55.000,000 acres thus cultivated. Farmers and their families are to live together in villages. These are to be lighted and heated in common and. whenever possible, there is to be a general dining room. Living quarters are allocated, so many cubic feet per person. Tractors and other machinery for working the gigantic farms intensively, are divided into squads, companies, regiments and battalions, like an army, and move from farm to farm performing the job required in a jiffy. Life already has been made a very simple matter in Russia. Clothes and such things are mere incidentals. Wages lack the importance that they have in other lands and so, in European eyes, the Soviet Union soon may be in position to produce everything from wheat to razor blades, 50 per cent cheaper than her closest competitor, and will, if her plan succeeds. On the other hand. Soviet officials are not blind to the situation. They are expecting Europe to try to throw a monkey wrench into the works. They are looking for war. They are preparing for war.
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A Harmless Prescription, but HOW IT RELIEVES CONSTIPATION!
DoN’T you want this way of making the bowels behave? A doctor’s way to make the bowels move so well that you feel better all over! Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin doesn’t turn everything io water, but cleans out all that hard waste clogging your system. It cleans you out without any shock, for it's only fresh laxative herbs a famous doctor found so good for the bowels combined with pure pepsin and other harmless ingredients. A doctor should know what is best for the bowels. Let Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin show you how soon you can train the ,bowels to move freely, every day, the way they should. It’s wonderful the way this prescription works, but it’s perfectly harmless; soyoucaauseit L
Century-Old Thorntown Celebrates
„-s. G. Leslie for reappointment, it was H'Jlllif JUI T■ \# Jl I” ATI A&I the situation today, but it was un-■-■Wilil?. is 5 U 2 Mai i rl IPI lev derstood ile has agreed to trade * ■3 0* places with Barr, if that meets with V' al OEDWCffI under*lhe ‘regime* o'A orme r GovJ " HU I IUL uCIIVLU ' hange^va J made" g Bl b **~ I mi! ft v C- ,y \ State Holds Bus Line Owes E ben v. wo/cott, resfgne^andThen l '"TTTnlTnTniii 1 T „ . Symons, who was assistant, was
Above (left)—A view of Main street, the midway of the centennial celebration; (right) scene at dedication of memorial fountain to General Ansoll Mills on Oct. 7, 1909. Below (left)—Miss Mildred Barker, centennial queen; (right) the Mills fountain.
I'm Tim> x Snn inl THORNTOWN. Ind., Sept. 25. Former residents of Thorntown registered today as the midway point was reached in a celebration of the founding of the town, oldest in Boone county, 100 years ago. The celebration, which opened Wednesday, will close Friday. Other numbers on today’s program include a historical parade, a concert by the Kraft Novelty, Lebanon and Thorntown boys’ bands and the second presentation of a pageant which is being given daily. The pageant has a cost of 500 persons, and depicts life in Thorntown during pioneer days. Registration of former resident will end at 9 Friday morning. At 10 churches of the town will present a centennial ServiceGovernor on Program From 2 to 4 in the afternoon there will be a program of addresses, the speakers to include Governor Harry G. Leslie, Fred Purnell, representative in Congress: Paul V. McNutt, dean of the Indiana university law school and former national commander of the American Legion; Dr. E. K. Westfall, grandson of Thorntown’s founder, and Forest' Harness, Kokomo, state commander of the American Legion and great-grand-son of the first settler here. C. C. Lafollette of the centennial executive committee will preside. There will be a children’s parade at 4. At 6. there will be a banquet sponsored by the Boone County Service Club, with E. J. Barker, president of the Thorntown Chamber of Commerce, presiding. Guests will include members of the Rotary and Kiwanis clubs at Lebanon and the Lions club of Zionsville. Dancing on Street The pageant will be given its final presentation at 8 and from 10 until midnight there will be street dancing. Miss Mildred Barker, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Jr Barker, an instructor in the Thorntown high school, is the centennial queen. Her attendants are Lucille White, Gladys Gillan, Dorothy Campbell, Lucille Fisher, Mary Frances Cissell, Eula Merle Jaques, Ellen Jane Lafollette and Jean Heaton. A fountain, dedicated Oct. 7, 1909, is a tribute to General Anson Mills,
whenever a coated tongue or sick headache gives warning that you are bilious. Fine for children, too (it tastes so nice) and they ought to have a spoonful the minute they seem fretful, feverish, or sluggish’, or become stuffed up with a’cold. You can get the original prescription Dr. Caldwell wrote so many years ago; your druggist keeps it all ready in big bottles. Just ask for Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin, and use it any time anyone in the family is constipated.
Or. \V. B. Caldwell's SYRUP PEPSIN A Doctor's family Laxative
one of the chief benefactors of Thorntown. who gave it a waterworks system. He is buried in the National cemetery at Arlington, Va.
FAILS TO COMMENT Farm Buyer Is Silent on Power Plant Rumor. In f orqiation from Newcastle, Ind., that Robert J. Owen, vice-president of the Thomas & Skinner Steel Products Company, 1120 East Twen-ty-third street, had purchased a farm of 160 acres south of Newcastle recently for the purpose of erecting a large electric substation could not be verified from Owen today. Owen refused to state to what use the land or farm would be put. Reports were current in Newcastle that an agent from a large electric power company had approached a number of land owners southwest of the Owen farm seeking a right-of-way. FUNERAL RITES SET FOR MRS. PECKMANN Resident of City 45 Years Is Dead After Long Illness. Last rites for Mrs. Caroline Peckmann, 71, widow of Edward C. Peckmann, who died Wednesday after a long illness, will be conducted at 2 Friday at the home of a daughter, Mrs. David Clark, 5409 Carrollton avenue, with burial in Crown Hill cemetery. First treasurer of the women’s auxiliary of railway mail clerks in Indianapolis, Mrs. Peckmann was a resident of the city for forty years. She was a member of the First. Lutheran church and of the Broad Ripple chapter. No. 315, Order of Eastern Star. Survivors are Mrs. Clark, another daughter, Mrs. Charles V. Eichholtz; a sister, Mrs. Mary Moran, San Diego. Cal.; two brothers, Rudolph Lederer, Bloomington, 111., and Enos Lederer, Denver, and two grandchildren.
DEFENDANT FREED IN GARAGE BOOZE CASE Evidence Against Notary Public Is s Held to Be Insufficient. Case of James L. Pedlow, 2215 East Riverside drive, notary public held on a liquor conspiracy charge in connection with arrest of seven persons at the Johnson garage, 723 North Illinois street, has been dismissed on motion of John W. Kern, United States commissioner. Special agents of the bureau of prohibition, department of justice, based their charge against Pedlow on his notarization of applications for certificates of title for autos alleged to have been used by rum runners, but there was no evidence Pedlow was aware of the alleged liquc# conspiracy, Kern held. DONATES WALNUT SEED Hammond Man Gives Ten Million Nuts for Planting; Ten million walnuts have been donated by Frank S. Betz, Hammond, to the state conservation department to distribute to boys and girls, sportsmen and civic organizations for planting on abandoned land throughout Indiana, it was announced today by director Richard Lieber of the state conservation department. u. s. womanTsTreed Bu rHi ted Press BERLIN, Sept. 25.—Mrs. Robert Chittenden, wife of a Chicago electrical engineer, was released today after more than ten days in custody on the charge of a CzechoSvolakian physiciam who claimed her bill at a Czech had not been paid. Chittenden is in Russia, serving as a technical, expert, l
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
TAX COLLECTION NOTICE SERVED State Holds Bus Line Owes for Bootleg Gas. Although Chicago officials of the Greyhound Bus Lines, Inc., vigorously deny any connection with the defrauding of the state of Indiana of the 4-cent gasoline tax by using bootleg gasoline' in their busses filled at the Daly street garage, State Auditor _ Archie Bobbitt is holding them accountable, it was announced at his office today. Leland K. Fishback, state gasoline tax collector in Bobbitt’s office* has served notice on the Greyhound manager here that payment of sll 906.90 back tax must be made at once. The,notice set out that only SSOO has been paid on the bootleg gas bill by the North American Oil Company of Chicago, from whom the Greyhound Lines made the purchase through C. J. Christie, Chicago, agent. The bootleg business was disclosed several weeks ago by The Times.
BUTLER WILL CHEER COACH AT •PEP-FEST’ Songs and Y’ells to Greet Harry Bell o n Campus Friday. Songs and yells from Butler university students will greet Harry M. Bell, new director of Butler athletics, at the all school pep session
in his_ honor Friday noon on the Fairview campus. All members of the varsity team, which Friday night is host to the Indiana Central Greyhounds in the Butler bowl, will be present. Russell Townsend, Wendell Shullenberger and Don Youel are members of the committee in charge of the pep cele-
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bration. Friday night at 7 a monster bonfire will be lighted. Students- will march en masse to the bowl to watch the Bulldogs defend home territory against the Greyhounds. Freshmen are assembling a huge pile of boxes and barrels for the bonfire. Democrats Name De Prez John De Prez, veteran editor of the Shelbyville Democrat, today was named head of the Democratic state committee’s publicity bureau by R. Earl Peters, state chairman.
RABJSjSgssI WHO.® LIMIT® _■ est 1 3alkitesl I i RAblO "fw S?: tg£S£Ss cotwlete I radio at insignificant v pr ice _. . I bo y cabinet. Look at J because £ f>OWH I these terms .•• of t bese sensation. - I we have only a f Tbe phenomena I — I ElectPic
SYMONS, BARR READY AGAIN TO SWITCH PLACES State Bank Examiner and Assistant Willing to ‘Trade’ Once More. BY DANIEL M. KIDNEY Luther F. Symons, state bank examiner, and his assistant, Thomas D. Barr, may resume the game of “battledore and shuttlecock” with the job of department chief, it was indicated at the statehouse today. Symons’ four-year term expires on Oct. 1. and he has not made formal application to Governor Harry G. Leslie for reappointment, it was learned. Symons refused to comment on the situation today, but it was understood he has agreed to trade places with Barr, if that meets with the Governor’s approval. Under the regime of former Governor Ed Jackson that same exchange was made. Barr had been appointed head of the department to serve the unexpired term of Eben V. Wolcott, resigned, and then Symons, who was assistant, was made chief. This was attributed to Jackson’s indebtedness to Symons, wno at one time was said to have aided in obtaining the then Governor a Henry county judgeship appointment. Ready lo Step Back Up Barr now is reported ready to step back up to the top, and Symons to become assistant. Symons’ term of office has been marked by more bank failure than any simliar period in the history of the department, it was said. But Indiana banks have suffered less than certain other mid-western and western agricultural areas, a tabulation of failures show. Recently the bank closings have shifted from the agricultural to the industrial areas, largely in Lake county. Another appointment for Oct. 1 is that of the state insurance commissioner. Report has it that Leslie nas agreed to let Clarence C. Wysong remain in the office until for the first of the year, or after the legislature meets, without reappointment. Fuller Also Seeks Place Wysong was elected head of the national organization of insurance commissioners at a meeting two weeks ago, and to lose his post would mean to forfeit this office. Among applicants for the place are Bert Fuller, Leslie's successful campaign manager. Leaving department heads in office without reappointment almost amounts to a policy with the Leslie administration. Outstanding example of this procedure is his failure to reappoint or discharge the state fire marshal, Alfred E. Hogston, pioneer Leslie campaigner. Hogston’s term expired Oct. 1, 1929. Another holdover from the Jackson era, without reappointment, is Dailey McCoy, state purchasing agent.
HOOSIERS ABLE TO FOIL TICKET SCALPERS Can Buy Gotham Theater Seats by Telegraphic Reservations. Hoosiers may circumvent Broadway’s ticket scalpers by means of a telegraphic reservation service announced today by 'the Postal Telegraph Cable Company. Having selected the play he wishes to see, the person intending to visit New York may call a messenger, or himself file a telegraphic money order, and Postal Telegraph .11 purchase the desired tickets at box office prices. These, then will be held for the purchaser or delivered to his hotel upon his arrival in New York.
82 CAUGHT IN VICE RAIDS GET STAY OF TRIAL Gaming, L quor Cases Are Continued to Tuesday by Judge Wetter. Eighty-two persons caught in police raids Wednesday afternoon on suspected gambling and booze joints were given continuances until Tuesday. Sept. 30. when arraigned before Municipal Judge Paul C. Wet- , ter today. First continuances was granted in [ cases against Mrs. George Chappell and Mrs. Lulu Ross, both of 26 East ' Eleventh street, charged with operating a blind tiger and gaming device. Continuance was granted on request of police who said they have a “man who will testify to buying liquor and playing a slot machine in the place.” Cases against Virgil Morris, 24. of 526 West Morris street, and/Morris Becker, 2402 West Morris street, held for liquor, speeding and vagrancy charges after a gun battle with police, were continued until Oct. 7 on a defense motion. Evidence Is Demanded Persons who know the outcome of gambling cases in municipal courts do not believe more than a halfdozen of those held for gambling after the raids will be convicted. From past actions, it is known that raids on places of this kind generally mean nothing because evidence must be produced to show that the tickets held are on an actual ball game or horse and that money was won or lost through the retention of the ticket. In some instances, evidence that the game was played or the race run have been asked. Newspaper reports or wire press stories on races and ball games have been refused as evidence. Large Haul in Poolroom. Twelve squads of police were called into Kinney’s office and given instructions that netted the arrest of eighty-two persons in the raids Wednesday afternoon. The first squad returned from Tom Dillon’s place, 111 West Maryland street, empty handed, after they forbad Tom playing solitaire, watched by two onlookers. Largest haul was made in a poolroom irf the basement of the Hotel Edwards on South Illinois street. Thirty-nine men were taken into custody. All were charged with visiting a gaming house with the exception of Otis Roberts, 37, of the Denison hotel, who was charged with keeping a gambling device and a gaming house. Horse race forms and tickets were found, police said. Holmes Is Chided Nineteen men were arrested in a place operated by Arthur Rahke, at 120 West Ohio street. Rahke was charged with keeping a gaming house and a gambling device, police declaring they found baseball and lottery tickets. Eighteen slot machnes were confiscated in a raid in a place at 23 North Liberty street, operated by Pete Brown. Brown was charged with keeping a gambling device. A search for liquor was unsuccessful. Ira Holmes, Brown’s attorney, made an unsuccessful effort in municipal court to recover the confiscated slot machines. Judge Wetter chided him for his assertions “the police will pry them open if they’re left around here.” Holmes said he would file a replevin suit to obtain them. Morris and Becker were arrested after a running gun battle with police over streets and alleys during the raiding spree. Police said they found a can of alcohol in the car. Seize Slot Machines Morris was slated on a series oi charges including transporting liquor and Becker was held on vagrancy charges. Liquor was found by police in raids at the rooming house of Mrs. Chappelle and Mrs. Ross and at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Orville Burgess, 27 East Eleventh street. In the former raid police said they confiscated thirty-four dozen quarts of home brew, five quarts of gin, thirty gallons of brew ready for bottling and a slot machine. Mrs Chappelle and Mrs. Ross were charged with operating a blind t’ger and keeping a gambling device. Police who raided the Burgess home said they found 116 quarts of beer and thirty gallons bewing,and a slot machine. Mr. and Mrs. Burgess were charged with operating a blind tiger and keeping a gambling' device. Albert Bluestein. 122 South [
New Author
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Booth Tarkington Jameson
When “Those Hitch Hikers” is released by Bobbs-Merrill Company today, it will mark the literary debut of Booth Tarkington Jameson, nephew of Booth Tarkington, and son of Mrs. Ovid Butler Jameson, 1035 North Pennsylvania street. Mr. Jameson, who bids fair to follow in the footsteps of his famous uncle, has been writing stories for the Saturday Evening Post and Scribner’s since he was graduated from Princeton university. He is at present running for the state legislature, having a flair for politics, along with his writing ability. This marks the second Indianapolis resident who is author of a novel published by Bobbs-Merrill this fall. Margaret Weymouth Jackson’s “Jenny Fowler,” was released last month.
TWO HURT IN CRASH Woman Injured Seriously as Car Overturns. Two persons were injured today, one seriously, when a coupe overturned in attempting to pass another auto at 5700 Madison avenue. The accident occurred when a car driven by Thomas Glenn, 49, of 815 Eastern avenue, attempted to pass an auto driven ,by Samuel Workman. 43. of 4802 East Twenty-first street. Glenn’s car overturned. He was bruised on the right arm and his companion, Mrs. Eliza May King, 38, of 841 Lord street, suffered a broken right leg and possible internal injuries. Neither driver was arrested. Mrs. King was taken to the St. Vincent’s hospital where physicians said her condition was “dangerous.” OTTO RAY LEGION HEAD Election of Otto Ray as commander of Police Post 56. American Legion, was announced today following a meeting in Municipal court, Room 4, Wednesday nght. Other offeers are C. B. Crouch, first vice -commander; Leo Troutman, second vice-commander; Louis Geiger, third vice-commander; Harry Smith, finance officer and Edward Jordan, chaplain. Illinois street, was nabbed on charges of keeping a gambling device, gambling, and keeping a gambling house. Thirteen men in the place were held. Earl Cox, Democratic attorney who resigned recently as a special prosecutor in charge of the Marion county grand jury which failed to return indictments in its primary election fraud investigation, appeared at attorney counsel for Bluestein and Rahke, explaining he has been “Bluestein’s attorney for years.” Fourteen men were taken from a place at 122 East Ohio street, operated by Lasky Farb. Police held John Jackson, Negro, 935 Paca street, in this raid after they al- | leged he attempted to bet $lO on I several horses while the raid was : in progress. A squad arrested Burley Roselle, ; 801 Massachusetts avenue, on a lottery charge after they alleged he had baseball pool tickets in his place. Raids on a soft drink stand operated by Jerry Agnew, 135 East Ohio street, netted police nothing, as did another on a second place operated by Farb at 41 West Maryland street.
IN A PAINFUL, ‘WEAK CONDITION i Lady Took Cardui On Advice of Her Mother and Greatly Improved. Mrs. Beatrice Stephens, of 421 | North Main Street, Mound City, ! ill., says she greatly improved in | health after she had Cardui. i Mrs. Stephens’ report of her use j of Cardui follows: “I suffered constantly with a i pain in my back. Many nights I ; could not sleep. I had nervous i spells. I was weak and trembled, and would have to lie down. “I had no appetite at all, and lost in weight. “My mother had taken Cardui and found it so good that she toid me to try it. After I had taken Cardui a little while I began to feel much better. I was so improved that I kept on taking it for some time. I gained in weight and looked like a different woman. I slept fine and no longer felt weak and down-hearted. “I praise Cardui for what it did for me. I have told my friends about it and what it did for me. It is a splendid medicine.’’ Cardui may be just what you need. It is a reconstructive medicine of long established value.
MW.bM <1 Helps Women p
SEPT. 25, 1930
PROMPT REPEAL OF DRY LAW, IS JIM REED PLEA Former Senator Fires Fierce Blast in Demand fer Immediate Action. Hi/ Lniteii Trtsii WASHINGTON, Sept. 25,-For-mer Senator James A. Reed of Missouri today stood sponsor for one of the strongest anti-prohibition platforms thus far proposed. His program calls for: Immediate repeal of the Volstead act. Repeal of the eighteenth amendment as soon as possible. State control of liquor without federal assistance, but with each state having authority to seize liquor imported for distribuiion within its boundaries in interstate commerce. This declaration by Reed, who returned several days ago from Europe, places him ahead of other possible Democratic presidential nominees on the prohibition repeal program. . “Was Drawn by Fanatics” Governor Franklin D. Roosevelt of New York has declared for repeal of the eighteenth amendment, but for substitution of an amendment to protect state enforcement of prohibition. Senat or * Joseph T. Robinson ol Arkansas, vice presidential nominee in 1928, is a prohibition supporter. “The Volstead act should be repealed immediately,” Reed declared ip announcing his program. It, should have been written in blood, by Draco, and not by a modern legislature. “It was drawn by fanatics who crowded into it all of the atrocities from all of the state laws.” Reed said he expected little to come from President Hoover's law enforcement commission. ’ “It’s Ghastly Failure” “It is obvious now that the people of the United States have given this ‘noble experiment’ a thorough trial, and that it has been the most ghastly failure of the century, it, has created more crime than any other law in the last 100 years.” Reed' provided another campaign issue by charging the business depression to the tariff and government interference with business.
86 Miles on I Gallon? New Auto Gas Saver Walter Critchlow. 3059-A Street. Wheaton, 111., has patented anew Damp Air Gas Saver for all autos. This invention uses the moisture principle that makes engines run better in the cool evening. New Fords report up to 40 miles on 1 gallon; old Fords up to 66 miles; other makes report up to R to Va gain. Mr. Critchlow wants County and State Agencies to make $250.00 to $1,000.00 a month. Write him today for his 1 free to introduce offer.— Advertisement.
“KONJOLA GOOD FOR INFANTS AS FOR ADULTS” Says Indianapolis Mother Who Restored Child’s Health Through New Medicine. Men and women of all ages, even infants, have found in this mastermedicine the end to their health troubles. Konjola is free from alcohol or harmful drugs—-anyone 4, can take it.
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MASTER WALTER SIMPSON Photo by National Studio.
Imagine the happiness of Mrs. Walter Simpson, 447 Arbor avenue. Indianapolis, mother of Walter Simpson, aged 3, when, after trying since early babyhood to restore the child’s health, she at last turned to Konjola and found the happy answer to her worries. The Konjola Man at the Hook Dependable drug store, Illinois and Washington streets, this city, is passing out free samples and literature and explaining the use of this master medicine. Now read the experience of this happy mother: “My little boy Walter, was in poor health almost from b>rth. He was unable to keep food on his stomach and bloated terribly after meals. Medicine or even water would not remain in his stomach and he cried and suffered all the time. He* did not sleep as a healthy child should and was weak and sickly. “I tried many medicines and treatments but nothing seemd to help him. Finally I decided to try Konjola. This medicine soon began to show results. He began to brighten up and his appetite returned. He now retains his food and is rapidly taking on weight. His stomach no longer bothers him and he is like another child, I am certain that, had I not given him Konjola, he would not be with us now. Konjola is as good for infants as it is for adults.’’ This is not an exceptiontal case. mothers have restored their children to health through the use of this pure medicine. Konjola is truly a medicine for the entire family. The Konjola Man is at the Hook Dependable drug store, Illinois and Washington streets, Indianapolis, where he is meeting the public daily. FREE SAMPLES GIVEN —Advertisement.
