Muncie Post-Democrat, Muncie, Delaware County, 20 May 1921 — Page 4
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FRIDAY, MAY 20,1921
HELP BOOST POST-DEMOCRAT SUBSCRIPTION We have a suggestion to make to the live democrats of Muncie and Delaware county which, if carried out with the right kind of enthusiasm and concerted effort, will add thousands of names to the Post-Demdcrat’s subscription list. Our plan is for those democrats who can afford it, to order and p^y for a certain number of subscriptions to this paper, to be sent to individuals who would be benefitted by the wholesome* truths published weekly in its columns. There are thousands of men out of work in Muncie at the present time. These men are having a hard time of it finding money to buy the necessities of life, consequently it is impossible for many of them to take the paper at this time. Later, when the factories resume work, these men will not find it a hardship to pay the two dollars subscription price. The publisher is making a special club rate of $1.50 a year for five or more yearly subscriptions paid in advance. At the top of the editorial column appears a blank club subscription form. If you have interest enough in a worthy cause to do your bit toward enlarging the Post-Democrat’s sphere of influence, fill out the blank and enclose a check covering the amount required to„pay for the number of subscriptions ordered, and mail to the Muncie Post-Democrat. We will pledge you that every dollar sent in will be used in adding to our subscription list. Do you remember how you cussed during the last campaign because there was no democratic newspaper here to refute the flood of republican misrepresentations? Now is the time for you to do your part toward the establishment of a newspaper that will tell the truth to the people of Muncie and Delaware county. Without the undivided support of Delaware county democracy, no democrat newspaper can exist in Muncie. Without a strong newspaper democracy here has ho chance to win in the coming city election or any other election in the future. It will not cost you much to stand sponsor for the sending of the Post-Democrat to five, ten or twenty persons for one year. The republican line is already wavering in Muncie. The PostDemocrat has a campaign mapped out that will command the attention of republicans as well as democrats. Do your part. Mail it in today.
You Can Never Tell How a Racing Crowd Wil
GIRDLING STOPS GROWTHS FROM ROOTS OF TREES
How can undesirable trees be killed so as to prevent their roots from growing? This is one of the questions that frequently comes to the department of forestry at the Ohio Experiment Station. , Foresters state that undesirable shade trees, such as Norway Poplar and Balm of Gilead may be killed by girdling the trees about four feet from the ground; then the bark should be stripped to the roots. ! This will cause the tree and its roots ( to die; later the entire tree may be re- ! moved and the stump grubbed,out. | When a tree is sawed off at the ground without girdling, the stump and roots of the popular variety may 1 immediately send out hundreds of small sprouts which are difficult to destroy. ! Lawn trees of the popular variety j are not satisfactory foy extensive planting, foresters state. Their extensive root system may lead to the filling of sewers, tile drains, cisterns and cellars with.fibrous roots.
IN SPITE OF HARD TIMES MANY JOBS AWAIT OHIO STATE GRADUATES
Columbus, Ohio, May 19—-Three times as many applications for graduates as there are members of the outgoing class is the record of the College of Education at Ohio State University. Other colleges of the university with a total of 1045 graduates have received numerous requests for college men and women to fill various positions throughout the country. Officials of the university feel that every student in the outgoing class will have a position awaiting him immediately after his graduation in suite of the financial depression existing at the present time. Last year there were ten positions open for each graduate of the College of Engineering alone.
SCORN SOCIETY OF OLD FOES
Berlin—At a family reunion of the numerous Counts, Countesses, Barons and Baronesses Von der Goltze, this was adopted as a family law: “It is considered beneath dignity of the members of the family to enter into social relations with subjects of exenemy states or to frequent the houses of families who have social relations with the subjects of ex-enemy states, _ or receive them, unless professional or official duty requires it.”
POOR CLOVER STANDS IN MANY OHIO SECTIONS
DUSE RETURNS TO STAGE
Turin, Italy—Eleanora Duse, one of the greatest actresses of Europe, who retired from the stage because of illhealth, has now fully recovered and decided to resume her stage career. She will appear in Ibsen dramas next month.
, Serious injury from a disease to stands of clover over the State is reported to the department of botany Ohio Experiment Station, Wooster. Clover in many sections has not grown quickly and appears to be stunted. Serious killing out in fields is also noticed. This condition is believed to be brought about by the disease known as clover root rot, according to botanists at the Ohio Station. There is believed to be a close interrelation of this disease with the scab of wheat and root rot of corn. The corn and wheat diseases have been severe for several years. Specimens of diseased clover from all parts of the State are solicited by the department at Wooster in order that a complete survey of the trouble may be made.
PUPILS TO READ NEWSPAPERS
Chicago—Teaching pupils to read the daily and weekly newspapers with economy and discrimination was outlined as ai part of the new English program of the National Council of Teachers of English, which was in session here recently. It was pointed out that the newspapers are the most powerful factor in forming opinion in a country government by public opinion.
A HEN WITH A RECORD London—A hen belonging to Mrs. A. Bigbee of Beaconsfield, has laid a large double-yolked egg each day for 10 consecutive days.
LITTLE MACHINERY NOW BEING BOUGHT BY OHIO FARMERS Columbus, O., May 19—Farmers in Ohio are buying little new Machinery, reports received by the Ohio bureau of crop estimates indicate. This is due, it is claimed, to a desire to economize to the fact of a reduced farm income and an unwillingness to purchase at what farmers generally consider exexcessively high prices as compared to the prices which they are being paid for their products. The reports indicate a reduction of from five to 10 per cent in the price of machinery and farm implements, but this reduction does not compensate, the farmers say, for the increase last year after the close of the crop season, so that prices for farm implements are practically; on the same level as a year ago. The* average rate per acre for tractor plowing for the state as a whole ,is $3.37 where the operator furnishes the fuel. The weekly report of the bureau of crop estimates indicates that the weather during the past week has been too cool and wet for the satisfactory growth cf farm crops, except for the southeastern part of the state. Hessian fly is reported in some parts of Ohio, while wheat yellowing is mentioned also, one-third of the farmers in the northwest section reporting it. Oats sowing is well along and hay and pasture continue in favorable condition. Seventy-one per cent of spring plowing is completed, held up by unfavorable weather last week.
PREACHED 7,000 SERMONS London—An evangelist of the Sussex Home Missionary for 50 years, Faster W. Crich, has resigned. In Sussex he preached nearly 7,000 sermons.
CAN TRIP TOES ONLY Camden, N. J.—Thirty days in jail is the penalty here for all dancing above the waist, which means the shimmy, the ^Washington toddle and other importations from Barbary Coast. The City Council passed an act prohibiting such dancing, closing dance halls at midnight and making
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SUBSCRIPTION ORDER Post-Democrat, Muncie, Ind.
Enclosed find $2.00 for one year’s subscription, paper to be sent to my address below.
Signed
Address Z * ❖ ♦i* Fill out the above blank, enclose two paper dollars, and mail J to Post-Democrat. Clubs of 5 or more $1.50 for each sub- ❖ scription.
—71 MAN MAY LIKE JAZZ BUT ANIMALS DO NOT
|NDIANAPOLIS, IND. — Automobile 1 race crowds sure single out their heroes.,- It will be interesting to note the manner in which the crowd that will witness the Ninth International 500-mile race, to be held at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway, Monday, May 30, acts toward Ralph DePalma and Dario Resta, .speed champion in 1916. Each driver has won an International race at Indianapolis and both have pushed their mounts to the pits after their cars had broken up, with victory within their reach. Their achievements have been parallel in many ways—but the crowds have performed differently for each. Ralph DePalma became a hero in defeat at Indianapolis in 1912. With two laps to go a connecting rod on his flying Mercedes broke, tossed him out of the race and literally knocked the $20,000 purse out of his hands. DePalma jumped out of his car and pushed it down the home stretch to his pit amid the cheers of the excited thousands. When ‘Joe Dawson, in No. 8, whizzed past him, DePalma waved him on to victory—and kept on pushing his disabled car—and smiling. Joe Dawson won the race—but Ralph DePalma was the hero of the day. That’s that. But with Resta it was different. Resto and Johnny Aitken were providing the major portion of the thrills in the Harkness trophy race at Sheepshead Bay in 1915. First Aitken would be ahead and then Resta would come storming down the
stretch in theilead. The crowd was on its feet most of the time. The race was for 100 miles. At 56 milets Aitken stopped for a tire change. Twenty seconds later he was off, butithe fleeing Resta was nearly a lap ahead of him. Aitken was soon racing tat his old pace, facing the task of vovertaking Resta, when the Italian was seen to slow up on the back stretchtand at 60 miles he limiped into his pit. A speedy change, and in lessdhan 20 seconds he was in flight again. Aitken gjoto 4 seconds lead on Resta, the nextTap Resta cut it down to \2.5 seconds (and it appeared as though 66 miles'would see the two runnings radiator to radiator. But it never came. Reista slow’ed entering the back^stretch aaid his pace dwindled and dwindled. When he reached the third tiurn he stopped. A broken crankshaft Iliad put him out of the race. Resta vand his mechanic valiantly pushed tba silenced race car nearly half way around the course to the grandstand, butithe thousands of spectators did not even greet the heroic gladiator and i splendid sportsman with a faint cheer.
Test Was Made by Group of Scientists Before Central Park Zoo Family, N. Y.
may
New York, May 19—Humans like jazz, but animals don’t.
This was the conclusion reached by a group of scientists who recently assembled in the Central Park Zoo to see what a saxophone and traps would do to the the emotions of monkeys, lions, leopards, elephants and other
jungle beasts.
A quintet of musicians guaranteed to rag anything from Wagner down was massed in front of the monkey i cages for the first laboratory test to determine whether the line “hiusic hath charms to soothe the savage breast” was, after all only poetic li-
cense.
According to a corps of unscientific reporters who journeyed to the zoo with scientists from Columbia University, American Museum of Natural History and New York Zoological park, the monkeys registered emotion all right—but of a rather savage kind. Then the latest jazz was banked into the ears of lions and their mates. All hopped to their feet, with fur brist-
ling.
As for Mrs. Murphy, hippopotamus, she merely wrecked the experiment by diving into her tank and shutting out the racket. The elephants seemed to tremble with rage. Only one beast was found that apparently was able to endure, if not enjoy jazz. That was Bagheeta, the leopardess. But when a hymn was played, she started a six-day race around her cage, spitting sparks. The scientists, however, put a question mark after Bagheeta’s tes!;, for attention was called to the fact that, at the moment, a keeper whom she chose to relish only as a potential meal, had just passed her cage.
SOME TURKEYS Falmouth, Ky.—Mrs. A. H. Stephens has a blue turkey hen that laid eighty eggs last spring and then raised a brood of young turkeys. She has a bronze turkey hen that began laying April 17 and laid continuously up to November 17, a total of 176 eggs. During all this time the hens did not show any inclination to “set.”
WANTS TO HIKE THROUGH WILDEST PARTS OF STATE
Cleveland Man Asks Superintendent of Department of Public Works for Unusual Itinerary Covering Two Weeks’ Trip— Reply Includes Several Historical Points
PREDICTS WIRELESS PHONE OVER OCEAN
Marconi Says New Invention Make Cables Obsolete
will
London, May 19—Signor Marconi, inventor of wireless, pins his faith to tranp-Atlantic telephonic communication by wireless instead of by /able despite the recent successful experiments in America connecting Cuba with the mainland in a telephone circuit extending 5,000 miles. “I still think,” he said, “that the only satisfactory method of telephoning across the Atlantic is by wireless. At present we can only do a short distance by cable telephone—from London to Paris is as far as we can do now. In attempts to communicate with Spain we have failed. Up to 100 or 200 miles of cable it works. With 1,000 miles or more of cable it won’t work. “Wireless telephony, of course, has not yet been developed to the same extent as the wire telephone, but it is being rapidly improved. We have not done anything like 5,000 miles thus far. We have spoken successfully from London to Rome, and we have got words through to America, but not in a commercial or practical way. At present there are certain disturbances of the waves in space, the cause of which hag not yet been discovered.”
OHIO GAVE 67 CARS OF CORN
TO EUROPE
The Farm Bureau Federation Warns Farmers Against Magazine Solicitors
Columbus, O., May 19—Ohio contributed 67 cars in the American Farm Bureau Federation gift corn project, according to a bulletin of the Ohio Farm Bureau. Four hundred and thirty-twu carloads of shelled corn, the total gathered in the country, ha/;, stricken areas of Europe and the Near started on its way to feed the hungerEast. The finished product of a dollar’s worth of the gift corn has a momentary value of $12 in Europe, says the bulletin. The American Farm Bureau Federation hasn’t any official organ, and farmers are urged to be on the alert for solicitors representing certain magazines, who say they are official organs of the Federation says the Ohio Bureau. DYE AS CUPID’S LURE
Paris—Twice as many brunettes as blondes are marrying in Paris. The brunettes say that the reason is that blondes are cold-natured, fickle and frivilous. Many enterprising blondes are dying their hair to improve their matrimonial chances.
‘WALLFLOWER” SIGNAL
Paris—The latest innovation in dancing palaces is a small red electric lamp to signal that a lady is disengaged and desires to dance. The lamp is attached to one of the tables, and the lady merely has to press a button. The method is said to have been a great success and the number of “wall flowers” in the establishments where the lamp has been introduced has been appreciably reduced.
Things We Think
puts on
When the son
his best clothes after sitpper, polishes his shoes, spends ten minutes in an endeavor to make his hair lay down and leaves the house with a mysterious air and flushed cheeks, pater familias has a vision of some young damsel in the other end of town exhibiting unusual alacrity in clearing away the supper dishes.
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It has been discovered 'that Rockefeller is descended from kings. Besides this, John D. drags in a few millions in royalties every year.
He * *
The majority of folks laugh at eugenics and other so-called fads, but if such fads were more generally adopted there would be fewer people getting married just to be doing something, and, consequently, fewer
divorces. * * *
It’s poor policy to take your spleen out on the office force, but it’s better to do that than to take it home with
you.
* * * • You may be brilliant by nature, but never brainy. * * * Divorce suits are becoming the rage. The dear ladies certainly need something to wear. * * * j To be happy, make others happy. * * * Remorse seldom comes from success. * * * Do not laugh at other people’s mistakes. You are making a mistake when you do. ♦ * * Man’s confidence in himself is expressed in the good resolutions he makes. * ns * A person who is always making a show of his superior wisdom doesn’t have any. , * * * Sometimes it is pleasant to a young man to have a young woman sit down on him, and sometimes it isn’t—it depends upon whether she does it figuratively or with her figure, * * * Men who can’t manage without a wife will find that they don’t mange with one. Nothing goes without saying with a voman. * * * Some people cast their bread upon the waters and expect it to come back buttered. sp # # There ought to be some statutory provisions about admission to the hall of fame. a * # It takes a patriot to fill a public job in these days of investigation, but there is no dearth of patriots. a * * , It’s peculiar how the secrets of a young couple in love, told only in the lowest whispers in the darkest corner of the room, seem almost as well known to the world at large as to the two directly concerned. * * H: Many a young man who has hiked away from the farm has had reason to be glad that dad hung* onto the old place. • * • Rockefeller sayg he is always glad to see a man live within his income. He must be well satisfied with himself.
Wanted—An itinerary for a twoweeks’ hiking trip that will take one into the wildest sections of state; keep one away from people and big cities as much as possible, and afford wild fruits and berries upon which a gentleman tramp might subsist. Could you furnish this? This unusual request came to Superintendent John I. Miller, of the department of public works last week. He was taken somewhat aback at first, but having successfully assumed the role of judge week before last to settle a case of alleged profiteering at one of the state-ow v ned summer resorts, he was game enough to try anything once. Superintendent Miller had heard of auto tours, railroad travel tours and steamship tours, but never before a request for an itinerary for a hiking tour in the wilds. The man seeking the information is a Clevelander, W. H. Sheldon, who spent two weeks last summer hiking in the wilds of Michigan and two weeks the year before in New York. He was specific in asking for an itinerary that would take him through unfrequented regions where there are high hills, rushing streams, plenty of berries and wild fruit. The Suggested Tour The itinerary suggested by Mr. Miller is interesting, not only because it is the first of its kind, but also because it includes not only -wild sections, but places of historical interest. It is as follows: Start at Zanesville and follow the Muskingum river south to McConnellsville; strike across country to New Lexington, thence to Lancaster, to Logan, to Chillicothe, to Jackson, to Athens and to Marrietta. This itinerary takes the traveler into 10 counties and bring him to two old capitals of Ohio, Zanesville and Chillicothe; the home of General Sheridan at New Lexington; the home of General Sherman and the Ewings at Lancaster, and the oldest settlement west of the Alleghenies, at Marrietta.
GOLD TEETH FOR DOG New Castle, Pa.—Mogul, t/ie thoroughbred airedale belonging to Harry Kiser, is sporting two large molars made of gold. Mogul lost two teeth in a fight and Kiser ordered them replaced. The dog was given chloroform in order to have the teeth inserted, and is now able to chew a bone as well as ever.
CUPID UNDISMAYED New York—John F. Quayle, deputy city clerk in charge of the Brooklyn office, said that there was no diminution of business anticipated in marriage licenses, in spite of the bill increasing the fee from $1 to $2. A few persons were surprised, he said, but made no protest.
HAWAII WILL GROW LEPROSY OIL TREES Honolulu, T. H., May 14—The territory of Hawaii plans’to grow on an extensive scale the chaulmoogra tree, from whose nuts are derived the oil specific which has demonstrated its ability to definitely arrest leprosy. Already one thousand seedlings are thriving vigorously on this island and more will be planted in favorable locations when the seeds are received from Burma, according to C. S. Judd, superintendent of forestry. The present supply of the chaulmoogra oil specific, produced by Dr. A. L. Dean, president of the University of Hawaii, is much too small even for the needs of Hawaii ah.mo while applications for the specific are being received in increasing numbers from all parts of the world where' leprosy has gained a hold.
SOLONS ARE STUCK Wheeling, Va.—Molasses will hereafter be listed as a v/eapon in Williamson. The last meeting of the City Commission had to be postponed because some irreverent citizen had smeared molasses on the chairs of the j city fathers.
LORD’S DAUGHTER IN MOVIES
London—Lord High Chancellor Birkenhead’s daughter, Eleanor, is said to be going into the movies to eke out the family income, like several other daughters of titled families. Judgeships recently have been refused by practicing lawyers on the ground that they couldn’t afford to accept the honor. Income and super-taxes ars the cause of the refusals.
'MtiiMiiiHimisfitimifimfifmimuiifimiiiiuiimmitiiimiiitiiiiiifinuifiiitiiiiiHn O. KILGORE | Attorney-at-Law and Notary Public | | Real Estate, Rentals, Loans | | Fire and Tornado Insurance 1 1 Phone 2380 255-257 Johnson Blk. I MUNCIE, IND. = s (iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimmiiiiimiiiimimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil
J. * »J. .J. .J. .J. .J, .j. .t. »*., .♦< »♦. .jn f <♦ i Po'itical Announcements I ❖ ❖ »J* »$■ ♦J* *$• *Jm$« .J. vj» «$. »♦. .J. »♦, „♦« *♦, »♦. .J. .J..« FOR CITY JUDGE Ambrose D. Gray, candidate for city judge, subject to the votes of the democrats of Muncie at the city primary to be held Tuesday, May 3, 1921.
William A. McClellan, judge of the city court, announces his candidacy for renomination to that office, subject to the decision of the voters in the democratic primary, May 3, 1921.
PEOPLE OF OUR TOWN
The Cheerful Idiot who laughs at the Wrong Time has made More Enemies by his Untimely Cachinnations than the Kaiser. He laughs when you Brag of your Son, and of the Fish that Got Away, and when you Fall on (he Ice he nearly Busts a Rib. The only Time he gets Serious is when you Spring a Funny Story.
ONE-TWENTIETH OF U. S. ALIENS LIVE IN OHIO
Foreign-Born People in State Number 678,647, Americanization Head Told
One-twentieth of the foreign born population of the United States lives in Ohio. This is the information received by State Americanization Director E. C. Vermillion Saturday from Washington. Out of 13,703,987 alien-born citizens in the United States, 678,647 live in Ohio, with German-born citizens outnumbering all others. The number of alien born in the United States has increased 2.6 per cent since 1910, The principal races represented in Ohio are as follows: Germany 111,308; Hungary, 73,188; Poland 67,578; Italy, 60,645; Austria 47,974; Russia, 43,692; England 43,134; Czecho-Slovakia, 41,928; Jugo-Slavia 30,385; Canada 24,171; Greece 13,537; Roumania 13,067; Scotland 12,147; Switzerland, 9,656; France 8,056; Wales, 7,771; ; Sweden, 7,266 Finland 6,403; Asia, 5,674; Lithuania, 4,193; Holland, 2,529; Bulgaria, 2,358; Belgium, 1,902; Norway, 1,487; Spain, 1,281; West-Indies, 1,084.
TO TEST SCIONS FROM OLD INDIAN PEAR TREE
Seeking to test old varieties of pears, Paul Thayer, assistant horticulturist at the Ohio Experiment Station has secured scions from an old pear tree near Sandusky, Erie County said to be more than 150 years old. The tree, to which early settlers came a long distance on horseback to get fruit, has withstood the blight so fatal to many pear trees. It exidently bore fruit during Indian days and may be a remnant of Indian orchards confiscated by General Wayne in 179V. About 40 years ago hunters dug beneath the present tree and exposed some of its roots so that only a frail shell with sprouts remain. However, scipns for future propagation are available.
E: L. SHELL Fire, Health, Accident and Automobile Insurance Square Deal to AH. 622 Wysor Building
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Grand Barber Shop Five Live Barbers Always on the Job No Waits Call and See Me Lew Stillson, Prop. 506 S. Walnut St. Phone 3431
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Oils, Grease, Paint, Roofing Let us figures on your —;— wants: Harry A. Kleinfelder 1207 S. Walnut Street.
Phone 2774.
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FIVE POINTS | Cigars, Tobacco, I Candy and I allSo ft Drinks,
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I James M. Woodroof
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City Coal Yard Best Grade of Coal at Right Prices > PHONE 313
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MOTOR CARS
1 Of the latest models no display at |
I our salesroom.
| We invite your inspection and I I we shall be pleased to demonstrate I MAXWELL CHALMERS | them for you at any time. WALNUT AUTO CO. 1 I Phone 238. 220 N. Walnut 1 FRANK N. REED, f
Sales Manager.
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QUALITY FEED AND COAL A clean store, a clean stock, prompt service, a square deal. We thank you for your patronage. T. L. WILLIAMS 425 North High. Phone 790
OLD AGE ROMANCE London—George Moulder, aged 7.3, and Miss Eliza Rootes, aged 68, were married at Ramsgate. The grobm is a grandfather and lost his first wife two years ago.
BUDWEISER
—in— Bottles
Brown ! | & |
Shaw 110 E. Adams St.
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Shad’s Smoke House Cigars, Tobacco, Candies and Soft Drinks The Home of DELICTO 210 N. Walnut St. PJione 4860
