Muncie Post-Democrat, Muncie, Delaware County, 10 November 1933 — Page 4

\ YOU CAN ALWAYS BUY INTELLIGENTLY BY READING THE

mSEMENTS

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1933.

COURT OF

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(Continued From Page One) ilized society, organized your chambers of commerce and super government for their own greedy interests that, you have unemploy-

ment.

“Those whom you favor sometimes become wolves when well fed and bite the hand that fed

them.i

“Your people listen to the voice of these aflse prophets and then blame your troubles on otheds. ‘‘You fail to think and permit unscrupulous politicians to fill offices with their tools, thereby bringing all your troubles on your-

self.

“You sit idly by and allow the chamber of commerce to dictate the policies of your town—policies whih are benefiial to themselves

only.

“You fail to think. “Go back to your earth and use what the Creator has given you, the intelligence with which you were imbued. “Organize and work for each other. “Carry out the principals of your president’s NRA. “It is not perfect, but it is a step in the right direction. “Give it a chance to become experienced and develop. “It may be a method by which you will emerge from the troubles you have brought on yourselves. * “Put the standard of humanity above gold standard and of the hypoerital prophets. “You have on earth all that man should desire. Use it.” RAMBLING RAY (Continued From Page One) ments, that the total levy has been increased over the present year, but it is due to the fact that the assessed valuations have again been lowered and it requires a higher levy to raise an equal sum of money as now expended. What Report Shows City Controller Uester E. Holloway presented the statistical defense of the civil city tax rate of 90 cents on each $100 of assessed valuation and proved from records that the present administration had done more for the reduction of taxes than any other taxing unit in the community. A comparative report of total expenditures or costs by the civil city of Muncie during 1929 and on down to the. proposed total disbursements for 1934 will show that the present administration could operate two cities the size of Muncie as economical as the Hampton regime required for our city which at that time was one-third less in

area

The actual expenditures in all funds of the civil cily as taken from the controller’s record for the year 1929, show that $779,411.33 was disbursed during that last year of the Hampton admin istfation. In 1930, the first year of the present government, the total amount expended from all funds was $598,541.78 or $181,000 less money used than the previous year. For 1931, $37,000 more was chopped from the total disbursement and it required $561,826.97 to pay all hills for that year. Another $50,0(0 was reduced from the total expenditures in the civil city during 1932 and the records will show $511,295.16 used during that period of time. Verified Facts For the present year, 1933, still greater reduction has been been made and the entire budget for this year will approximate the expenditure of ouly $414,000, $97,000 drop over the previous year and $365,000 less than was spent during 1929. This new lower level of governmental costs has been reduced again for next year until the proposed expenditures for 1934 will total $409,000. These are facts that can be verified by examination and a record for reduction of governmental costs that has never been equalled nor Is ever likely to be. In addition to actual costs of government saved to the taxpayers the present administration has prevented inestimatable sums to property owners by completely destroying the paving trust who clutched the pocketbooks of nearly every home owner in Muncie and would have continued to rob the citizens had the mayor not broken down their playhouse. The open gambling houses were exterminated by the present administra tion which might rightfully he considered as a tremendous savings to many taxpayers who were often relieved of their earnings by crooked dice and marked cards. —— o NOTICE OF FILING SUIT TO QUIET TITLf TO REAL ESTATE AND THE TIME AND PLACE OF HEARING THEREOF. State of Indiana, Delaware Conn ty, ss: Yorktown S:ate Bank, a Corporation vs. Ephriam Crane et al. In the Delaware Superior Court September Term, 1933. No. 9143. Notice is hereby given to the fol lowing named defendants in said cause, to-wit: Ephriam Crane, John Love, Mary F. Love, William S. Brundage, W S. Brundage, Henry F. Brennan, Henry F. Brenan, Jonathan Clark, Sarah E. Clark, Edgar D. Morse. Caroline M. Rader, William Warfel, — 1 Warfel, his unknown

wife, Charles Donovan, Flora Donovan and , her unknown husband. The unknown children, descend ants, heirs, surviving spouses, creditors and administrators of the last will and testament, success ora in interest and assigns respect ively of each of the foregoing per

sons.

All of the women known by any of the names and designations above stated whose names may have been changed and who are not known by other names, of all

rFHANKSGIVING Dinner la one of the big meals of the year—a competitor of Christmas Dinit Is so delicious that we often too heavily. Light and tasty dishes containing milk, fruits and vegetables—those three alkalinereaction foods—win go a long way toward balancing the heavier foods ! which we would not go without for anything. Try these recipes- this year: I A Thanksgiving Economy Fruit Cup (Serves 6-8) 1 cup orange segments or pieces % cup orange Juice 1 cup long. Blender, red-skinned apple pieces (unpeeled) £ cup shredded dates | 2 tablespoons lemon Juice 2 tablespoons sugar Combine and serve very cold, as first course for the Thanksgiving menu. This is very decorative served in cups made from orange shells. Cut tops from large oranges and remove fruit and Juice. Use this fruit and Juice in recipe. Delicious Pumpkin Pie Pie crust 1% cups shredded coconut 2 cups cooked mashed pumpkin 1 cup sugar % teaspoon mace w -f~ ■ teaspoon cinnamon ’ ’“H f - & teaspoon allspice 3 tablespoons butter, melted 5 eggs, slightly beaten 2 cups milk, scalded Line pie plate with pastry. Combine Ingredients in order given and mix thoroughly. Pour into pie shelL Bake In hot oven (400*F.) for 15 minutes, then decrease heat to moderate (350°F.) and bake 30 minutes longer. Prune Stuffed Baked Apples 6 cooking apples 1 cup cooked prunes 3 tablespoons peanut butter *4 cup brown sugar , 3 tablespoons butter 1 " T ’ Cloves Water j Pit prunes and cut into small pieces; combine with peanut butter, mixing thoroughly. Remove

of apple to allow for stuffing. Fill cavities with prune and peanut butter mixture. Place apples in a baking pan and stick 3 or 4 whole cloves into each. Sprinkle with sugar, dot with butter, add about 1 cup of water, and bake in a hot oven (425 to 450 degrees F.) for about 55 minutes or unto apples are tender. Serve while hot, plain or with cream. "Apple Crystals" Apple crystals are a delicious Thanksgiving confection and so easy to make! ‘Hie crispy. Juicy Jonathan and Delicious apples from the State of Washington now on the market are ideal for this recipe: Two cups granulated sugar, 1 cup water, 1 medium sized sound apple. Make a syrup of the sugar and water by cooking over a very slow heat until boiling. Pare, core and cut the apple into quarters, and then cut each quarter into three slices. Drop these pieces into the boiling syrup and allow them to cook gently until they are transparent and easily pierced with a toothpick. Remove from the syrup, drain, and place on a piece of waxed paper. Allow them to remain twenty-four hours, then roll in granulated sugar, roll well again at intervals of twenty-four hours. If moisture accumulates on the waxed paper, renew it. Allow the pieces of fruit after the third rolling to remain on the paper until no moisture exudes and they have a dry crystalline appearance. Pack In a covered container and keep In a cool dry place. This amount of syrup makes about five dozen crystals. Add one-fourth cupful of hot water to the syrup after removing each batch. It is not necessary to make all the apple crystals the same shape. To make them more decorative, cut the apple crosswise before coring, then remove the core, and cut fanciful shapes from the rings, with a vegetable cutter. These crystals have other uses, too. Use them as a garnish on fruit salad or use them to top Ice cream

Answers to Inquiries

Q. Can the minimum wag’e be divided be I ween two employees at a soda fountain? A. Not unless each is worked only part time. Q. It is permissible for trade association to require a deposit which would be forfeited, in case of proved violation of codes or agreements, both from members and nonmembers ofNlie association? A. It is for the industry to provide its own regulations. It may set up such police measures as it desires, subject to approval of the NRA membership on the Code Authority (governing body) of the industry. ■ Q. How are costs and prices computed under the NRA? A. The National Industrial Recovery Act provides (section 3 (a) that “The President may, as a condition of his approval of any such code, impose such conditions (including requirements for the making of reports and the keeping of accounts) for the protection of consumers, competitors, employees, and others, and in furtherance of the public interest.” Q. Please advise status of code or modified Presidential agreement as to hotels. A. There is no substitution for the President’s Agreement applying to the hotel industry, and a code for hotels has not been approved. Q. Where is Ihe line drawn between North and South in fixing minimum wage schedules in codes? A. That depends upon where the difference in labor costs and other costs occur, to be agreed upon within the industry, after which such differentials either are approved or disapproved by the NRA. Q. How are artists, including commercial artists, to he classified under PRA? A. If their work is creative, they are professionals; otherwise, if their work is of routine nature—filling in. coloring, lettering—they are subject to maximum-hour provision.

and ammunition seems to he a pop-i Attendance at the Chicago ular indoor sport this 'year. There world’s fair-has eclipsed that of every reason why policemen 11893, just as Sally Rand attracted ;should be provided with l)ullet-[more attention than Fatima, proof vests, hut what protection hre they going to have for the rear when f.eeing from bandits?

The editorial remarks in the Albany “Bazzoo,” remind us of the classic comment of the editor of the Seribberdeen, Eagle, who remarked: “We have our eye on the czar of Russia.”

After the next senatorial election and a new United States senator takes over the toga now held “Li’l Arthur,” thousands of peo tple in 'Indiana will, no doubt, be asking: “Who Killed Cock Robin (son)?”

GLENN’S Sheet Metal Shop See us for Skylights, Metal! Ceilings, SJat.e, Tile and Metal j Roofing, -Blowpipe and Jobj Work Gutter and Leader Pipe. Rear 213 E. Main St. Phone 310

By the way, girls, could you use, [that ten-spot you turned over to Daisy “Doodle” Barr, to better advantage these days? They say Daisy is sti 1 doing her “Doodle” Stunt and getting by with it. How are you-all doing? There is one good thing that can he said about the nudists, and that is, nothing is done under cover; ‘neither is there any cover charge. o

Full Pack No Slack Filling SAME PRICEfefe? AS 42 YEARS AGO 2Sounces for251 to" 1 ’ 1 * fytik Action!,

TAUGHINBAUGH CO. Funeral Directors Our Phone never sleeps 4014 DAY or NIGHT Lady Attendant Howard at Proud St.

JEWEL CLEANERS Quality Work 11B No. Mulberry St. Ph. 8221

W. H. DORTON & SON PLUMBING, HEATING AND GENERAL REPAIR. 900 Wheeling Ave. Phone 4816j

BETTY BARCLAY’S HELPFUL HINTS

eorw Iran tpplea, removtaff ——f*- or whipped cream on desserta.

Pith B y y S the ngSGOSSIPER

Uncle Jeb Pruden sez: “Ever since the navil con’frence at Washin’ton, when Hard’in wuz Pres’dem an’ they indused us to sink all our ships, the Brit’sh hev been tryin’ to git us to make ’em a quit clanie deed fur all our right, titel an’ int’rest in the Atlantick an’ Pasifick oveans. It ’pears like they don’t want us to hev even a lane to git back and fo’th to our work. Pres’dent Roosevelt sho’ld wave a 1 future con’frenees on navil af’airs. an’ it orter be what yer call a pur m’nent wave.”

Employes who constantly keep one eye on the clock and the other on the boss, and who fail through this reason, to see prospective customers when they enter, seldm, if ever, become members of the firm employing them. ,

Baldheaded men, so the barbers tell us, are more particular about getting a good haircut than other men who are not so afflicted. But. how in the heck can a fellow expect to get a good haircut unless he’s got good hair?”

“Tastes better than mayonnaise!" soy critical hostesses

Whenever a motorist tells us that he drives his automobile 250 miles every Sunday, apd never buys more than 10 gallons of gasoline, we always rush home and examine

our gas tank to see how much gas .. . *

. , x times daily and also one cake of

is missing. If we are short, thenj,_ J ' “ v

we feel that he has been doing a

TO COMBAT HAY FEVER D Y consuming fresh yeast and codliver oil, K. Kitsuta of the Ohio Agricultural Experiment Station at Wooster, Ohio, has found an effective means of combatting hay fever. Mr. Kitsuta, recommends four teaspoons of cod-liver oil three

9 And thousands agree! Kraft’sMiracle Whip Salad Dressing is an entirely new type—not too tart, not too bland, not too oily in flavor. Made of choicest ingredients, mixed to new crcaminess in the Kraft Miracle Whip.

lot of “free wheeling” at our expense, but if it’s a.l there, then we think lie’s a dura liar.

The escape of so, many prisoners from the Michigan City prison leads one to believe thaf there are a number of “Quirks” connected with the institution which should be straightened out by the governor.

"The Melon season is over,” says a headline in a Pittsburgh newspaper. Correct, brother; it ended March 4, 1933, when a large Pittsburgh Mellon was “plugged” at the White House and found rotten. It was afterward returned to Pittsburgh, the only place that could endure the stench.

Robbing police stations of guns

Jresh yeast daily.

Scientific research has shown that hay fever is paitly due to the lack of certain vitamins in the diet and this is corrected by the consumption of yeast and cod-liver oil Scores of hay fever sufferers have tried this remedy and found it effective in getting quick relief. One sufferer recently tried it and said it was the first time he was free hay fever in 37 years. In most cases the symptoms of hay fever disappear within two dava after this treatment is started.

of ivhom are unknown to plaintiff; the spouses of all the persons above named, described and designated as defendants in this action and the names of all of whom are unknown to plaintiff. All persons or corporations who assert or might assert any title, claim or interest or lien upon the legal estate described in the complaint in this action, by, under or, through any of the defendants ofj this action named, described and designated in said complaint, the names of all persons who are unknown to the plaintiff. That the plaintiff has filed its complaint herein to quiet title to the fo lowing real estate, in Dela ware County, 'State of Indiana, to-

wit: .

Lots numbered 3, 4, 5, 6 and 7, in Block numbered 1; also Idts numbered 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, fi and 7, in Block numbered 7. in E. D. Morse Addition to the Town of Yorktown, Delaware County, Indiana, which said addition is described, platted and recorded in Plat Book No. 3, at Page 10 in the Record of Plats in the Recorder’s office'' of said County. Also lots numbered 120, and the south half of Lots numbered 1 and 2, all in the Original Town of Yorktown, Delaware County, Indiana, which Plat is recorded in Deed Record “a2,” pages 351 and 352, in the Recorder’s office of said County, as to any defect occurring in the title thereof and against all persons whomsoever, together with an affidavit that the residence of said above named defendants are unknown to the plaintiff and cannot be learned by diligent inquiry, and said defendants are thought to be non-residents of the State of Indiana; that where the full name of the defendant is not stated, it is unknown to the plaintiff,, and that unless they he and appear in the Deaiware Superior Court of said County and State, on the th day of January, 1934, the 1st day of the January Term, 1934, of the Delaware Superior Court, af. the Court House in the City of Muncie, in said County and state, said cause will he heard and determined in their absence. Witness,' the Clerk and Seal of said Court affixed at the City of Muncie, Indiana, this 9th day of November, 1933. MABLE B. RINGO, Clerk Delaware Superior Court. Dimer E. Botkin, Attorney for Plaintiff. Nov.10-17-24 o

We are not vitally interested in the result of the election in North and South Carolina, but it does seem to us that the people of these states have little 'consideration for their governors. Otherwise they never would have voted to keep them waiting so long for a drink What’s the governor of North Car olina going to say to the governor of South Carolina now, when the>

LOSE UGLY FAT YOU TOO CAN EE SLENDER and VIGOROUS Do Not Risk HEALTH or Money Mrs. C. Wilson of Fort Wayne, Ind. report* a loss of 28 lbs. six weeks after starting JU-VAN CAPSULE TREATMENT NO DIET, EXERCISE or MASSAGE NEEDED The Simple, Easy and Safe Treatment for REDUCING d-ii/a nf-0«k • H after taking a 60 day treatment yon are not VJUetJ absolutely satisfied your monayNirdl keireftuuled. Send $1.00 for 20 Day Treatment of JU-VAN CAPSULES MID-WEST DRUG CO., Fort Wayne, Indiana

Cook Thanksgiving Dinner On A NEW GAS RANGE

Oyster Cocktail, Roast Tom Turkey, Chestnut Dressing, Cranberries, Baked Sweet Potatoes, Mince Piesounds just like a menu at a fine hotel ! But, it can be your Thanksgivingmenu with less toil and unpleasant work providing you have a new gas range with which to cook your dinner. These new ranges have all the latest improvements making it possible to prepare whole dinners with little trouble. You will notice, too, the small down payments and the convenient terms for the balance.

When You Need SAND or GRAVEL Phone 100

Good Sand is very important for the purpose of Quality Construction. OUR SAND IS THE BEST

Muncie Washed Sand & Gravel Co. Burlington Pike W. M. Torrence, Prop.

mmammommZ

GG,,.

CENTRAL INDIANA GAS

CO.

, _N C77/ its Best Enjoy the comforts of this fine hotel - close to theatre and shopping districts, convenient to all Government buildings and other points of interest. The utmost in hotel luxury at a moderate rata 300 ROOMS

$9

fROM ‘ ^

One dollar extra for each additional person

HOTEL

HARRINGTON HARWNGTON MILLS, PRESIDENT • • • DOUGLAS C. SHAFFER, MANAGER

ELEVENTH AND E" STREETS NORTHWEST j