Indianapolis Times, Volume 39, Number 212, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 January 1928 — Page 8

PAGE 8

NINE HOOSIERS WILL RECEIVE FARMHONORS Master Awards to Be Made at Purdue Friday. Bn United Press LAFAYETTE, Ind., Jan. 12. Nine Hoosier farmers have been chosen as recipients of the master farmer awards for 1927, and will be given master farmer gold medals at a banquet under the auspices of the Prairie Farmer Magazine here Friday. Men hmonored this year are Frank Plass, Vincennes; W. E. McCartney, Shelbyville; M. P. Jones, Liberty; Burl Mougler, Butler; Ed V. Hagan, Rochester; Fred Goddard, New Salem; Jesse Brooks, Rushville; Claude Wickard, Camden and Leo Van Hess, South Bend. Praised by Jardine The master farmer awards have been given to a limited number of Indiana farmers since 1925. Last year ten were selected; the year previous only two. Similar awards are being given by farm papers in seventeen States. The master farmer plan, devised in 1925 by the Prairie Farmer, is the finest thing of its kind in the world,” according to Secretary of Agriculture William Jardine. Farm papers have started many excellent projects, but none can compare to this one.” High Requirements Requirements for a master farmer are that he must be an all-round man, with plenty of experience. Winning candidates are selected from a large group of farmers nominated each spring by bankers, county agents and fanners. Candidates are graded under the following heads: Operation and organization of the farm; business methods and ability, general farm appearance and upkeep, home life and citizenship. Winners are selected by a board of judges composed of Director G. I. Christie, Purdue University; W. T. Martindale, organization director of the Indiana Farm Bureau Federation, and W. Lloyd Keepers, managing editor of Prairie Farmer.

“KONJOLA WORTH ' SI.OO A BOTTLE” THIS MAN SAYS “I Am in Perfect Health,” He Declares, Indorsing the New Medicine “I know what Konjola will do, and I honestly believe this medicine is worth SIOO a bottle to anybody who needs it,” said Mr. Z. T. McMullen, Roachdale, Ind., (near Indianapolis) in a recent letter delivered to The Konjola Man at Hook’s Drug Store, Illinois and Washington Sts., Indianapolis, where he is daily explaining this surprising new compound to large crowds.

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“My suffering was due to one thing—bowel trouble,” reads Mr. McMullen’s statement. “I suffered with constipation for years, trying numerous remedies, but only got temporary results. I was continually taking a laxative every night, and even with all this, I was sometimes unable to get a bowel action. My stomach would bloat and get very tight. I have gone as high as five days without any action whatsoever. The tablets I have used for this purpose would fill a drug store shelf. All these different remedies were taken to give me relief, but I can truthfully say that they seldom did so. “It was just through accident that I happened to buy Konjola. I really did not have much faith in it, but thought it deserved a trial as well as the others. I have taken three bottles of Konjola and can truthfully say that I feel like a different person through my entire system. The best I can say for this medicine is that I am in perfect health, if there be such a thing, and naturally I give credit to Konjola, as it is the only thing that has relieved me during all these years of wiffer'ia;. I really feel twenty years younger, and at my age twenty years means much. As I said before, I really think that this medicine is worth SIOO.OO a bottle to any one who needs it. “Any one desiring to know more of my experience with Konjola can do so by calling on me. I am more than glad to give this testimony, hoping that by so doing I will help others to regain their health.” The Konjola Man is at the Hook Drug Store, Illinois and Washington Sts., Indianapolis, where he is daily meeting the public and introducing and explaining the merits of thi§ remedy. Konjola is also for sal* by all Hook stores in this city and by all druggists throughout this faction.—Advertisement.-

Thirty Bell R inging Years

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C. R. Woods, Indiana Bell Telephone Company general superintendent of traffic, presenting thirty-year service emblem to J. Lloyd Wayne 111, 1834 N. Alabama St., supervisor of traffic. Wayne was given the emblem, to which he became eligible Dec. 20. Wayne began work with the New York Telephone Company immediately after graduating from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1896. He joined tire Central Union Telephone Company, which later joined the Bell system, in 1904. Wayne has been active in the American Institute of Electrical Engineers and is president of the Indianapolis Scientech Club. A thirty-year service emblem also was awarded F. O. Baad, Kendallville, Ind.

TALK TRADE ISSUES State Commercial Group to Meet Jan. 20-21. Representatives of more than thirty chambers of commerce, boards of trade, commercial and automobile trade organizations will attend the Indiana Commercial Secretaries’ Associations winter meeting, Jan. 20 and 21, at the Board of Trade. Problems facing smaller towns and means of bringing new industries to the State will be discussed. Fred Hoke will speak on “City Manager Government” at a banquet Jan. 20. Mayor L. Ert Slack has been invited to speak. J. E. Frederick, Kokomo, Indiana State Chamber of Commerce president, will preside as toastmaster. Association officers are: A. L. Taylor, Elkhart, president; S. A. Warner, New Albany, first vice president; J. U. Nichols, Gary, second vice president; James W. Cole, Huntington, secretary; W. H. Howard, Indianapolis, treasurer. Directors are: French Ragsdale, Frank-

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

MOVE TO CUT VIOLENT DEATH TOLLJN CITY Group of 50 Business Men Back Organization of Safety Council.

Announcement is to be made soon of date of a public meeting to carry out organization of an Indianapolis Safety Council which will carry on educational work to cut down the number of accident deaths and injuries In Marion County. A group of fifty business, industrial and civic leaders are backing organization of the council. Secretary of State Frederick E. Schortemeier. Public Service Commissioner Frank T. Singleton and Dixson H. Bynum, former State industrial commission chairman, sponsored preliminary steps. A steering committee composed these men and Robert I. Todd, C. R. Baker, John Lichtinberg and O. E. Blanford was appointed several weeks ago at a meeting of thirty of the council backers at the Chamber of Commerce.

The National Safety Council Is formulating plans for organization of the local body similar to those of councils in sixty cities over the country. Paul F. Strieker, national council field representative, is here aiding in the work. In pointing out need of such an organization here Secretary of State Schortemeier cited that 341 persons were killed in accidents in Indianapolis in 1926 and declared, “I am convinced that law enforcement in itself is inadequate in coping with this situation.” In St .Louis and Kansas City, where safety councils have been at work for eight years, the accident death rates for 1926 were 50 and 53 a hundred thousand of population compared to 93 a hundred thousand for Indianapolis, Schortemeier said.

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Claude C. McCoy, Republican, today resigned as secretary of the safety board, effective Feb. and the board named Howard E. Robertson, insurance salesman, 5050 E. Washington St., Democrat, to succed him. Mayor L. Ert Slack recommended Robertson, defeated for councilman of the First dist rict in 1921. McCoy is considering several offers from insurance companies. Eighty million pounds of Ice cream were produced in the United States in 1926.

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DUAL MURDER OF 1921 AGAIN UNDERJROBE Statement of Kentucky Prisoner Interests Police at Newcastle. By Times Special NEWCASTLE, Ind., Jan. 12.—Police here are engaged in a renewed investigation of a double murder committed in Henry County seven years ago. Sylvester Denton, under arrest at Hopkinsville, Ky., on a jail breaking charge confessed to officers there that he killed two persons near Newcastle, afterward repudiating the statement. Mr. and Mrs. William Shaffer were beaten to death in their home near Middletown, Henry County, in 1921, and police here are considering Denton in connection with that case. According to officers of the Kentucky town, Denton went into lurid details of his alleged crime in Indiana, only to deny it all the next day, declaring he had talked while drunk. ASKS CONTROL BY U. S. Direction of ToU Bridges Asked in Bill in Congress 811 Times Sneciat WASHINGTON, Jan. 12. —The Agriculture Department has approved the bill of Representative Burtness of North Dakota, which would institute close public control over the finances, building ana charges of toll bridges on federal aid highways. Burtness said today. He plans to ask hearings on the bill by the House Interstate Corn-

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IF RHEUMATIC EAT NO SWEETS Says glass of salts help to overcome Rheumatism acid. Rheumatism is easier to avoid than to cure, states a well-known authority. We are advised to dress warmly, keep the feet dry, avoid exposure, and above all, drink plenty of good water and avoid eating sweets of all kind. Rheumatism is caused by body waste and acids resulting from food fermentation. It is the function of the kidneys to filter this poison from the blood and cast it out in the urine; the pores of the skin are also a means of freeing the blood of this impurity. In damp and chilly cold weather the skin pores are closed, thus forcing the kidneys to do double work; they become weak and sluggish and fail to eliminate this waste and acids, which keeps accumulating and circulating through the system, eventually settling in the joints and muscles, causing stiffness, soreness and pain, called rheumatism. At the first twinge of rheumatism get from any pharmacy about four ounces of Jad Salts; put a tablespoonful in a glass of water and drink before breakfast each morning for a week. This is helpful to neutralize acidity, remove waste matter, also to stimulate the kidneys, thus often ridding the blood of rheumatic poison. Jad salts is inexpensive, and is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with lithia, and is used with excellent results by thousands of folks who are subject to rheumatism.—Advertisement.

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