Muncie Post-Democrat, Muncie, Delaware County, 2 June 1927 — Page 4

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THURSDAY, JUNE 2, i.

i

DeWiTT’S

GARAGE

Walnut At Big 4 R. R, # MODERN AUTO LAUNDRY / Tires Batteries Greasing J Drive-In Tire Service

FRED S. DeWITT Phone 5330

TIRES

.wiv* ' ri ^ i LARGE STOCK OF RECLAIMED TIRES AND TUBES Prices Ranging from One Dollar up. Tubes 50c and up. ALL SIZES AND KINDS. Stick Tight Tire Patch, $1.00 can for 35c Gibson Auto Polish, $1.00 bottle for 50c $1.00 Spark Plugs for any make of car 25c New Bicycle Tires 75c Ford Auto Parts. Prices will surprise you. Vulcanizing and Quick Tire Service. Open Sundays. GIBSON & SON 601 West Williard St.

Orpheum Theatre VAUDEVILLE

AND

PHOTOPLAY

“STARS COME FIRST”

Pathe News Comedy Best Entertainment in the City at Admission Charged.

HOOSIER

TIRE Shop

CHAS. EICHER, Prop.

RELIABLE TIRE REPAIRING

Hood Tires and Tubes

PHONE 3051 320 East Main St. Muncie, Indiana

Jood Seed Potatoes Necessary In State

Good seed is the basis of successful potato production. A care-°-fully selected foundation stock is, absolutely essential. A foundation stock of potatoes is hard to maintain in Indiana, Purdue men have found in their work with farmers. Early potato varieties run out quickly because of climate conditions and unless the grower holds the cobblers of Ohios in cold storage and plants what is called the second crop it is impossible to build up a high producing strain of early potatoes in Indiana. Many growers have failed in the attempt and have become disgusted with the Indiana potato game as a result. . This second crop planting should be made three months previous to killing frosts. The crop harvested i,s used as seed for next years early crop. Such a system requires that hill selections be made every fall and that this selected stuff be kept in cold storage until the following July at which time the process is

repeated.

In hill selecting potatoes the grower retains only tubers from high yielding disease free hills The easiest way to do this is to pull up and remove every sick looking plant. Any plant with yellow leaves or with deformed leaves or with dwarfed or abnormally large vines. This should be done when the vines are coming into blossom and repeated a month later. This second removal should include any tubers that have formed. At digging time the entire crop is free

D. C. STEPHENSON PROBE WILL OPEN WITHIN 10 DAYS

creating the state board of charities gives the board authority to make the investigation and report, according to W. H. Eichhorn of Bluffton, board member, who acted as chairman yesterday, in the absence of Governor Jackson. Mr. Eichhorn said that no special appropriation has been made for such investigation for the work of the charities board.

Business and Professional Directory

MURRAY’S ST. JOHN HOTEL

Ohio Corn Borer Law Upheld in Fulton Co.

Watchmakers And Jewelers

New Management

GOOD WORK FOR THE RIGHT PRICE

ALBERT REES, Prop.

Charities Board To Hold Secret Quiz on Charges; To

Question Prisoner.

Indianapolis, Ind., June 3!—ir thorough investigation by the entire membership of the board of state charities of charges of alleged mistreatment at the Indiana state prison of D. C. Stephenson, serving a life term for murder, will be started within the next ten days. This was announced yesterday following a meeting of the board at which a petition for a parole submitted to Governor Ed Jackson several days ago and later referred by Governor Jackson to the board of trustees of the prison, was com sidered in detail. The petition for parole asked that Stephenson be granted a ninety-day leave in order to gather evidence and prepare for legal action which would have as its object his permanent release. The investigation will be confroxn 1 duoted secretly-and no newspaper

Wauseon, O., June 3.—Corn borer control, officials scored a legal victory here when the temporary injunction of J. W. Pugh, farmer, restraining Charles V. Truax, director of agriculture of Ohio, and L. W. Worthley, administrator of corn borer control, from entering his premises, was dissolved in

common pleas court.

The suit was the outcome of the opposition to the clean-up campaign directed by Worthley and Truax and resulted when Pugh ordered J. C. Burr, county corn borer control supervisor, from his

farm last Thursday. o

OVER COLUMBIA THEATRE

327

EAST JACKSON Telephone 162

ST.

representatives will be permitted to attend any of the visits or*interviews which the board of charities

been done thoroughly. Any growerl^ 0 ^ 8 w 'ih any of the prisoners, it

diseased tubers and is in every way equal to certified seed stock from the northern states if the work has

not willing to follow this system should buy a new supply of “certified seed potatoes’’ every spring. The Indiana late potato grower can build up a strain of potatoes that will out yield the average “cer tified rurals if he will follow a plan similar to that of the early potato raiser. Here again, unless some

was announced following the meeting by John A. Brown, executive

secretary of the board.

The,board decided to make the investigation when the board of trustees of the prison adopted a resolution asking that this be done after the Stephenson petition ' for parole had come before the latter board for consideration. Yesterday’s

INDIANA NEEDS TOLERANCE SAYS ATTORNEY GENERAL

Laporte, Ind., June 3.—Indiana needs conservatism, tolerance and a revival of citizenship, according to Attorney General Arthur L. Gilliom. Speaking before a largely attended meeting of the chamber of commerce here yesterday, Gilliom insisted that only by bringing back the uprightness of the middlewest, can respect be engendered for its .raditions and ideals. o

TO HOLDERS OF

SECOND LIBERTY LOAN BONDS

Remember the Old Seed Store.

Est. 1890 PERSHING’S 205 N. High St.

ROOMS

BOARD

DAY OR WEEK.

ALL MEALS 25c

HOME COOKING

HANEY

ALL BUSES HALF BLOCK OF HOTEL

825 S. Walnut St.,

Phone 720

Plumbing, Heating and Gas Fitting.

CLARK BROS. Phone 247 317 E. Main

REAL HOME FOR WORKING MEN.

FREE

Kindling with pach ton of (JUPP’S Coal (f requested, ksk for yours.

HUPP COAL COMPANY.

Phone 1206

EXCHANGE OFFERING OF NEW TREASURY BONDS.

special hill selection or field rogu-

ing plan has been followed it jg meeting was of a preliminary na. much wiser to buy “certified seed”| ture ’ according to Mr. Brown, and because it has been hill selected,* 10 definite dale was fixed when the

us healthy and ^ oar( ^ wou ld start it work. MemHealthy seed will| ,>ers saitl they could not tell how

true to variety.

put any Indiana potato field back in the potato game. o

AVIATOR KILLS COW IN FORCED LANDING

Huntington, June 2.—One valuable cow was the only casualty resulting from the forced landing Sunday of Lieutenant John Z. Hart of the United States air force, on a farm owned by Mrs. Minnie Blatchley of near Warren. Lieutenant Hart was forced to land when his plane ran out of water. As he skimmed across a field, a cow ran in front of the plane and was struck by one of the wing tips. The cow died. The aviator, who had left Rantoul, 111., early Sunday morning, obtained the water patched the plane and took off for the balloon races at Akron, O. He assured the irate Mrs. Blatchley that the government would pay for the cow.

long the investigation would continue as they would be required “to enter the prison and visit various places and interview different

persons.’’

Report Goes To Jackson.

The report of the board, with its recommendations, will be sent to Governor Jackson, who is chairman of the board, and to the hoard of trustees of the prison and if made public must come from one of the latter two sources, Mr. Brown said. Members of the board yesterday declared that an investigation of a rumor that Stephenson was not actually in the prison, current a year ago, was made at that time, but that no information on this report had ever been made jmiMic.

The members said that their investigation showed that there was absolutely no way in which Stephenson could escape and that they found him still within the prison

walls.

A state law enacted in 1889

Notice is given of a new offering of UNITED STATES TREASURY BONDS, dated June 15, 1927, and bearing interest from that date at the rate of 3% per cent. The bonds will mature in twenty years, but may be called for redemption after sixteen years. Second Liberty Loan Lends will be accepted in exchange at par. Accrued interest on the Second Liberty bonds offered for exchange will be paid as of June 15, 1927. Second Liberty Loan bonds have been called for payment on November 15, 1927, and will cease to bear interest on that date. Holders of such bonds who desire to

take advantage of the exchange offer should consult their bank or trust company at once. The exchange privilege will be available for a limited period only, and may expire about June 15th. Further information may be obtained from banks or trust companies, or from any Federal Reserve Bank. A. W. MELLON, Secretary of the Treasury. Washington, May 31, 1927. o

USED CARS FOR LESS MONEY

ARTHUR CRAIG €18 N. Walnut. Phone 2364

WANTED TO DO—Interior decorating, painting of all kinds. Old work a specialty. Wall paper samples shown in your own home. PRICES RIGHT.

J. A. Driscoll. Phone 1448

THE TRUTH HAS

PURITOX

E. P. GARRISON

622 Wysor Building Representing the HOOSIER CASUALTY CO.

Insurance

Phone 3178.

Muncie, Ind.

Financing

Earl Everett

Auto Insurance

109 S. High St.—Phone 2642

FLOUR - FEED SEEDS POULTRY SUPPLIES

J.H. Williamson Co.

Phone 1079. 124 N. Walnut

(Lastingly Effective) KILLS MOTHS

Eastside Pharmacy E. Main St. — Phone 3179

1101

THE BEST PINEAPPLES

pineapples m the! and add sugar enough to make 1 are the b m o o t h | quite sweet. Mix with this drained

crushed pineapple, and just befor

serving fold in

For Results Advertise In Post-Democrat

JT^HE best j world

Cayenne variety which were originally grown in English hotHouses as a rich man’s luxury. In 1893 a plant-lover named Captain John IQdwell began experimenting jntfa pineapp’os outside of HonohiHe obtained some of the iynoath Cayenne variety from Jamaica, and, as a result of his experiments this is now the only jvaiMiy grown in Hawaii, and is I w*ed by all the cRoningr com-

panies In the Islands.

The Captain tried canning pine- “ 1 in a small way, but the real vnent of the pineapple in» dustry which now exports nearly two hundred million cans a year, did not start till a. young Harvard graduate, James D. Dole, came to Hawaii in 1900 and built a small cannery. From this small beginning grew the Hawaiian Pineapple Company's cannery—the greatest *nzit cannery in the world, and pineapples are now the second c y m ^d fruit in the world in point of quantity, being exceeded only

by Oafilnnria peaches.

m- j 8 ^ sfcary of how tt has become possible for eoerys to h&»e this Insrriopa fruit for a breakfast dish, and at other raeafa vn many different comfahm™*ns. It can be eatea separately or combined with meats, gwAwa q? rfher fruits The fallowing recipes

®ostrate this.

Riet^PineappU C«^TCbek rim Vmted water

whipped cream

Serve in sherbet glasses. Thi makes a very nice company dessert Epicure Solad \ Arrange oj plates shredded lettuce or lettuo leaves, and on them place an oute: ring of sliced pear, an inner on* of thinly-sliced orange, and center of canned pineapple, either crushed or sliced. Top the mounc or ring of pineapple with whipped cream or with cream cheese. Scat

ter halved.

seeded white grapes

over the dish. If cheese is usee instead of cream, mayonnaise oi French dressing should be used.

Supper Salad: Mix diced lamb or veal with chopped celery and peas, and bind with an oil mayonnaise. Place a mound of this on a'foundation of lettuce and crushed pineapple. This is an excellent salad to use as a main course at

supper or luncheon.

Curry with Pineapple: Cut chicken, veal, or lamb Into pieces about an inch in size. Blend two tablespoons butter and one of dour in a double boiler, and add salt and pepper to taste, one and a half tablespoons cony-powder, and frraduaRy one cup chicken or meat stock. Simmer till sauce is smooth; add meat and eook five minutes) k»geK. Surround the carry on m platter with rings of Hawaaian ‘ | g^T^^and mounds «f fcofled.

(Continued From Page One)

money and property they speak of in the National call for Convention. There is more that could be said| about how the funds were transferred. Last year the K. K. K.j through an injunction suit enjoin-) ed them from using the word Klan, then it was that they took the name K. A. P. which I am informed that each chapter was to pay $3 per head for each member. Since that time the record shows that each* chapter must pay on the home $75. It seems as though the name has| been changed since the convention | adjourned last June.. It also seems) that the deed to this national home was deeded to S. H. Bemendefer and wife. The home was contracted for and bought by the National Convention in June, 1925, and first payment was reported made by funds collected by donations, and each one who donated as much as one dollar was to receive a certificate showing his ownership to the

extent of his donation,

Notice to Property Owners If you are thinking of roofing, call phone 3956 and ask us to bring our samples and quote prices. Terms if desired. All Material and workmansi i ip guaranteed. .W. J. DANIEL Phone 3956

DOMESTIC COAL and SUPPLY CO.

Coal, Cement, Roofing, Brick, Plaster, Tile, Sewer Pipe, Etc.

500 S. Monroe St. Franklin E. Fantz, Mgr.

PHONE 271

Thomas Y. Miller

Attorney-at-Law

512 Wysor

Phone 1535

Guy Perfect Denied Parole for 90 Days

Dr. Rollin H. Bunch

Specializes in Diagnosis and Treatment of

Chronic and Blood Disease

Office 201 the Johnson Open 10 A. M.—8 P. M.

anyone

never heard of any certificate.

The deed to this Home was supposed to have been made in August or September, 1925, however, on the 9th day of February, 1927, S. H. Bemendefer and wide deeded to the Trustees of the National

__Indianapolis, June 1.—Governor Ed Jackson yesterday overruled one of the first recommendadions submitted by the state prison board, acting as a pardon board, de- , nying a 90-day parole to T. Guy

but I have p er j ec ^ 0 j Huntington county. The

Home Association of the Knights

receiving j3 0ar( j h a( j recommended that Per-

fect be granted the temporary leave from his 2 to 21-year term in state prison for criminal assault. Three other recommendations of the board, including the suggestion for postponement until July 1 of I the petition of D. C. Stephenson,

EXTRA FINE ROSE BUSHES 3 to 4 Ft.

25c and 35c RIVOLI FLOWER SHOPPE. Rivoli Theater Bldg. Phone 2200

YOUNG MAN—GO WEST ON JACKSON STREET And see the New Patterns in Tailored Clothes— MARVELOUS $25 TO $50

ROYAL TAILORS 121 W. Jackson St. “Ed Bender Knows Clothes”

k ‘

DEPENDABLE

SHOE REPAIRING Ladies’ Turns and McKays Our Specialty FLEXIBILITY GUARANTEED By use of U.S. Stapling machine “NIGHT BOX AT YOUR SERVICE” SERVICE SHOE SHOP 8th St. and Hoyt Ave.

of American Protestantism, this so called Home, and is Recorded in Deed Record 201, on Page 453. There are two sets of Trustees. One set is known at Trustees of The National Home Association of the Knights of American Protestantism. The other set are Trustees of The Knights of American Protestantism. There is also a Mortgage recorded in favor of the Merchants Trust and Savings Company for $13,677.05 on said Home. Articles of Incorporation can be found in Miscellaneous Record Q.

Q. on Pages 79 to 82.

I would like to ask how many charters or chapters this organization has in Indiana. They tell us about California and New York. I just wonder how many they will

have this time next year.

former klan grand dragon, for a 90-

day parole from Michigan City prison, where he is serving a life sentence for murder, were approved. The other recommendations approved were for denial of a 90-day parole sought by Homer Dasey, of Hancock county, and postponement until July 1 of the appeal of Alois Geis, of Dearborn county, for a 30day release. Dasey is serving 2 to 20 years for auto banditry and Geis is imprisoned for possession of a still.

In 1570, in England, there were scarcely a dozen distinct kinds of dogs. Bpines and prickers on a desert plant serve to protect it from thirsty animals seeking its water store.

Established 20 Years

Electrical Construction Supply Co.

and

The House Electric

Hotel Delaware Bldg. Phone 609

Phone

Office 1345

812 South Mulberry

FRANCE COAL CO.

It’s a Black Business But We Treat You White

Wm. F. France, Mgr. Muncie, Indiana.

Window Screens

MADE TO ORDER, PRICES REASONABLE

Phone 1466-W

Harry J. Stoneberger Lawyer

119^ East Main Street Phone 4700

WHY BOTHER

About preparing a meal on these Warm Evenings? When you can enjoy a REFRESHING DINNER AT

PARTLOWS CAFE 317 E. Second St.

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