Indianapolis Times, Volume 38, Number 125, Indianapolis, Marion County, 31 August 1926 — Page 3
ATJG. 31, 1926
BLAME WIND FOR ’SPREAD OF BORER Pest Has Gone as Far West as Lagrange County. Had it not been for a strong wind from the northeast, which swept Indiana continuously for ten daj’s during the latter part of June and the first of July, the visit of the European corn borer would not have been so premature, according to State Entomologist Frank N. Wallace. Most of the moths, through which the borer is propagated, came from Canada, Wallace believes. Due to the direction and force of the wind, the pest has spread as far west as Lagrange County. Wallace has spent the last two weeks in the heart of the infested area, which comprises twenty townships in DeKalb, Steuben, Allen and Lagrange Counties. He will be in charge of the experimental laboratory to be established soon by the Department of Conservation in the heart of the stricken area. No quarantines have been established as yet, owing to the fact that the borer has not been found in sweet corn or any early field corn ready for shipment. INVENTS GRAIN DRYER Engineer Receives Prize for W Apparatus. Bi/ United Prc<B MALMOE, Sweden, Aug. 31.—A vacuum process for the drying of grain has been invented by a Swedish engineer, Edvard Jonsson, of Lidingoe, who before the war spent many years in Russia as manager of the Nobel plant at Astrakhan. After exhaustive tests his method has been awarded a prize of 3,500 kronor by the Swedish government. Usually grain is dried artificially by means of hot air, but the Jonsson apparatus does it cheaper and more quickly by pumping the air out of a revolving cylinder in which the grain is heated by means of hot water pipes.
HER LIMBS WERE NEAR HELPLESS SEVERAL YEARS Was a Victim of Awful Rheumatism; Konjola Brings Blessed Relief. Another Indianapolis lady who strongly indorses this Konjola medi cine for the relief it has given her is Mrs. Flora Carman, 1 1539 Reisner Street, this city, formerly of 1236 Bellefontaine Street, who recently made the following statement to the
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MRS. FLORA CARMAN
Konjola Man at Hook's drug store, Pennsylvania and Market Streets, [illianapolis, where he is meeting large crowds of local people daily and explaining this surprising new medical compound. “I suffered so badly from rheumatism that my limbs were nearly helpless for several years,” said Mrs. Carman. "The pains would draw up my legs and make them so stiff that l couldn't think of walking any disat all. My ankles were swolen and the muscles in the calf of my legs would get hard like stones. The pains were terrific, keeping me awake every night, and besides the awful rheumatism, my bladder and kidneys were affected, causing awful burning sensations, night rising and pains in my back which seemed to extend up between my shoulder slacks. I also had liver trouble, which brought on dizzy spells, and Peveral times I have fallen full ength on the floor. Oh, I tell you, my health was just completely .vrecked, and I never thought it was possible to get well again, for nothng would help me, and I believe I tried everything. "Anyway, I decided to test your Konjola, for it seemed like everybody was talking about this medicine. It only took half a bottle to convince me that I had found just the right remedy for my suffering. Now I’ve taken five bottles, and I know it has made a greater change in my health than I ever hoped for. All of the pains and aches are gone now, and the swelling has left my ankles, the stiffness is gone from my limbs, and I can take a long walk ind never feel tired. It seems like Konjola started my whole inner*ystem to working properly, because i don’t have any trouble with my kidneys, have been relieved of the back-aches and burning pains; I never have to rise at night, and my liver is active now, so that I am not bilious like I was before, and I haven’t had a dizzy spell since I look the first bottle. I also notice my stomach i- in better condition, as I can eat many things I wouldn’t flare to eat before, and my digestion 's fine, bowels are regulated, and the whole truth is that I feel better than i have for several years. Konjola has teen a sound blessing to me, and 1 cannot help but indorse such a medicine.” The Konjola Man Is at Hook’s lrug store, Pennsylvania and Market StreGßl Indianapolis, where he and explaining the mer/ of this remedy. Konjola is sold at every Hook drug jtore, and by all leading druggists in surrounding towns.—Advertisement.
A POPULAR TEST
You shouldn't find it hard to answer a majority of the questions here. In fact, you may be able to answer all of them. The correct answers are found on page 12: 1. Who is the State Governor shown in the accompanying picture? 2. What is a decade in time? 3. How long did it take Gertrude Ederle to swim the English channel? 4. Rearrange the following letters to spell the name of a popular moving picture actress: INGFRIOCRFTTHEN. 6. Who is Irvin S. Cobb? 6. What is an autograph? 7. What baseball club is Nick Altrock with? 8. In what State is the San Isabel National Forest located? 9. What State is nicknamed “Sooner"? 10. Where is the Army-Navy football game scheduled to be played this fall? (Copyright, 1926, NEA Service, Inc.)
C.O.PJNOUNCES THREE SPEAKERS Davis, Capper and Lowden to Aid in State. Secretary of Labor James J. Davis, Senator Arthur Capper of Kansas and Frank O. Lowden, former Governor of Illinois will speak in Indiana during the coming campaign, Frank E. Rozelle, chairman of the Republican State committee speakers’ bureau, announced today. Rozelle also said that Horace E. Ellis of Chicago, former State superintendent of public instruction, now connected with G. O. P. western headquarters, will speak and that Arch G. Graham, opponent of Senator Arthur R. Robinson in the primary, has volunteered for service on the oratorical firing line and will be used. The Republican speaking campaign will open Thursday at Tri Lake: . six miles' north of Columbia City, where Robinson, Senator James E. Watson and others will spealc.
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Statutes Won’t Make Saints, Says Reed Bn United Press KANSAS CITY, Mo., Aug. 31. Declaring “you cannot make a saint by statute,” Senator James A. Reed, Missouri, Democrat, has come out in favor of the State dry law and for regulation of the liquor traffic. The Senator wrote Mrs. Nellie G. Burger, president of the State W. C. T. U., that.he was a “wet” in that he believed in regulation of the sale of liquor. “We both want this to be a sober Nation,” Reed wrote. “We differ in methods and perhaps in degree. You believe in compulsion. You repose to make people good by statute. “I agree with you that drunkenness is beastly and that temperance is desirable. I disagree with your that prohibition by law is the remedy. “There is a stund middle course. The liquor business should be str otly regulated—not outlawed. Temperance and prohibition should be taught—not forced.’’
THE INTDIANAPOLIS TIMES
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