Muncie Post-Democrat, Muncie, Delaware County, 26 January 1940 — Page 3

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THE POST-DEMOCRAT FRIDAY, JANUARY 26, 1940,

MINE VENTURE GIVES ARIZONA NEWTOWNSITE Copper Project to Cost 30 Million When Ready in J 42.

Morenci, Ariz.—A great copper mining venture is being undertaken eight miles from here by the Phelps-Dodge Corporation at a cost estimated at more than $30,000,000. Site of the project is a huge mountain from which engineers expect to scoop out more than 250,000 tons of high yielding copper ore. Development of the site already has been underway for two years and the gigantic project is not expected to be completed until Jan. 1, 1942. Mills, laboratories, concentrators and smelters are not all that are being constructed. So confident are engineers of the possibilities of this copper deposit that they are building a model community, complete with the most up to date houses and conveniences, to shelter the 12,000 workmen who will be employed on the project. Town Christened Stargo The new company town will be known as Stargo—named after an old prospector who was one of the first men to exploit the copper properties of this area. Although Stargo will be a model community* in all respects, company officials have taken a more realistic view about its future and have built complete quarters for a police department. A library, /ire department and a $270,000 hospital also are going up. It is difficult to realize the true magnitude of the project. The mineral mountain can be likened to a gigantic copper ball—a mile long and over a half mile wide— with an outside coating of waste dirt and rock measuring 200 feet thick. To reach the 250,000,000 tons of copper ore, gigantic steam shovels are at work biting through the 200-foot layer/of waste matter. Engineers estimate that 37,000,000 tons of non-commercial material must be removed before blasting on the ore body can be started. STATUETOMARK GALLATIN FAME

Washington.—An impressive and prominent addition to the building which houses the Treasury department in Washington will be the new statue of Albert Gallatin, a native of Switzerland who became fourth Secretary of the Treasury. Made of bronze, the statue is to stand 10 feet high when completed, and will be mounted on a green granite base, in the north forecourt of the Treasury. Plans for dedication ceremonies have not yet been completed since the statue is in the hands of the sculptor, and Treasury Department officials said they had no definite indication as to when his work would be finished. Special Fund Set Up Responsibility for erection of the monument is placed with the Albert Gallatin Memorial Fund Commission, which body, in connection with the supervising arch--itects’ office of the Federal Works Agency, was active in planning and designing the memorial. The statue itself is being cast by James Earl Fraser, an American sculptor of prominence, much of whose work enhances public buildings in Washington. It was he who modeled the statue of Alexander Hamilton now at the south- steps of the Treasury. Gallatin himself proves a fitting man to stand in front of the institution which he served. Born in Geneva, Switzerland, in 1761, of Swiss parents, Abraham Alfonse Albert Gallatin became an orphan when only 9. Left Home at 19 At 19 he decided to leave the household of his aunt, with whom he had been living, beca'use being dependent upon others for any part of his livelihood “galled his pride.” His decision to come to America was influenced by the strong sympathy which he felt for Americans and for the political liberty which was the motive of their conquest. “His sympathy,” one writer said, “was rather a matter of reason, than of passion.” Gallatin arrived at Cape Ann, Mass., in 1780, one year before the battle of Yorktown. Choosing, as his work to serve in the government of his adopted epuntry, he rose steadily in public office, successively holding positions of representative and senator, until 1801, when he was appointed Secretary of the Treasury by Thomas Jefferson. TRUTH OATH \l MARRIAGE Alviso, Cal.—Judge James Bacigalupi admits he was nervous and confused when he performed his first marriage ceremony here. More than by force of habit than otherwise, before beginning the marriage ceremony, he administered the oath. “Do you swear you will tell the truth, J;he whole truth and nothing but the truth?”

Quick CHICKEN PIE with Sweet Potato Biscuit Cover by Dorothy Greig TF there is anything that brawny I. males and youngsters alike cheer over it is a deep dish main course pie, with hot gravy bubbling through the tender crust.

A new one I have been trying out lately is thick with sweet young carrots and celery in a special gravy made of condensed chicken noodle soup. This gravy has that rich yellow chicken color. It is rich in chicken flavor, too, and tender pieces of chicken meat. Topping the pie are biscuits made with mashed sweet potatoes. It’s a lovely dish—and a quick one! This is how it goes: The Pie Filling: 2 tablespoons butter 3 tablespoons flour 2 cans condensed chicken noodlo soup 1 cup water % cup cooked celery Me cup cooked carrots 1 teaspoon lemon juice Melt the butter, then add the flour and blend thoroughly. Add tha chicken noodle soup and water and cook until thickened. Then add the cooked celery, cooked carrots and lemon juice. Put into a casserole dish and cover with “Sweet Potato' Biscuits.” Serves 6-7. The Sweet Potato Biscuit Cover: 1 cup flour (sifted) 3 teaspoons baking powder 1% teaspoons salt 3 tablespoons shortening 1 cup mashed sweet potatoes 3 tablespoons milk Sift the flour, baking powder and salt together, then cut in the shortening and add the mashed sweet potatoes. Add 3 tablespoons of milk to make a soft, but not moist dough. Roll about % inch thick and cut with a biscuit cutter. Arrange over the chicken pie and bake in a hot (425°F.) oven for 15 minutes or until done.

EQUIPMENT TO LOCATE ILLEGAL STATIONS ASKED

Washington, Jan. 15.—The Federal Communications Commission has asked for additional men and equipment for use in tracing unlicensed radio stations and maintaining “an effective neutrality patrol of the entire radio spectrum.” In its annual report to Congress, the FCC said that, since the outbreak of the European war. Among other duties, the FCC is charged with preventing unlawful transmission of information to belligerents or to belligerent warships. o BY CHEMICAL PARALYSIS

POEM ‘WRECK OF HESPERUS' 100 YEARS OLO

Ballad Based On Fact But “Fair Daughter” Was Woman, 55 Gloucester, Mass., Jan. 26. — Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s poem, “The Wreck of the Schooner Hesperus,” published 100 years ago, was based on fact—only he write about the wrong ship and the skipper’s “fair daughter” whose cheeks were like the “dawn of day” was a woman of 55. It was several days after a severe storm along the New England coast that Longfellow conceived the idea of the poem while reading a clipping from a Boston newspaper which said: “From Gloucester we learn that of a large number of coasting vessels and sloops which had put into Cape Ann Harbor when the storm came on and for the most part anchored in the outer harbor, 20 went ashore, and 16 of that number went to pieces. Many lives were lost as 17 bodies had already been washed ashore. One of them was reporfed to be a female who was lashed to the bitts of the windlass, of a coastline steamer.” Grizzled Skipper Lost From that iniormation, Longfellow wrote his first ballad,, the story of the Schooner Hesperus being wrecked on the Reef of Norman’s Woe. It tells of a grizzled captain who took his daughter with him on a voyage. The skipper, confident that he could bring his 'ship through any storm, disregarded the warning of an old sailor and failed to enter harbor when a gale began. The captain headed for Gloucester Harbor when the gale became more severe—but it was too late. He lashed his daughter to a mast, hoping she would float to safety. Research by Longfellow’s grandson, Henry W. Longfellow Dana shows that a sihooner Hesperus was wrecked in the storm—but that the accident occurred in Boston Harbor 40 miles from Gloucester. Schooner Was Favorite It was the schooner Favorite from Wiscasset, Me., that “like a vessel of glass, stove and sank’ on the Reef of Norman’s Woe. The woman was not identified, but it was well known that she was about 55, Dana said. The first mention of the now famous ballad was in the poet’s journal. He wrote, “News of shipwrecks horrible . . . twenty bodies washed ashore near Gloucester. . . . One female lashed to piece of wreck . . . There is a reef called Norman’s Woe . . Among others the , schooner Hesperus . . . Also the Sea-flower on Black Rock. 1 must write a ballad on this.” Less than three weeks after that entry the magazine New World accepted the poem, saying it would “resplendently coruscate in the glorious paper on Saturday next.” . o . NEW GRADER BLADE IS TESTED ON ICY ROADS

Augusta, Me.,—Fish and game officials have drowned .thousands of fish by paralyzing their gills with a chemical solution In an attompt to improve fishing conditions. The new technique has been tried before restocking Sabbathday Lake where the feeding of salmon and trout had been hampered by other fish. The unwanted varieties —white perch, suckers, shiners, smelts and a few pickerel—were suffocated by the chemical and floated to the surface. Trout and salmon apparently are not affected by the solution, say authorities, for no salmon and only five small trout were found dead.

Tests of a new. saw-tooth type grader blade for cleaning ice and packed snow from state highway surfaces are being made in various parts of the state, T. A. Dicus, chairman of the State Highway Commission said today. The blades have two-inch teeth set about an inch apart and are claimed to be more effective than the ordinary grader blade or snowplow in cutting layers of packed snow or ice from the road surface. Removal of picked snow and ice presents the chief problem of highway workers attempting to keep the roads open and suitable for traffic, and is almost impossible during periods of low temperatures.

Schools Urged To Make Study Fit Life Needs

Pittsburgh. — How to select a balanced diet, pick a mate, choose a becoming necktie, and correct a golf slice should be subjects included on the high school curriculum. That is the opinion Oj G. C.

Skim Milk Processed Into WooFLike Cloth

Washington. — Scientists o? the U. S. Bureau of Dairy Industry have discovered valuable new uses for skim milk and whey that may add millions of dollars to the in-

come of dairy farmers.

These are former waste products that were either thrown away or

of'^choS 0 and th e e dUcXraE ! ^ d

Drexel Institute, Philadelphia, who addressed a regional conference of high school principals here. Galphin believes that subjects such as these, streamlined to fit the practical needs of modern youth, should augment the timehonored English and mathematics and history. “We need to give more attention in secondary schools to forms of recreation which can be followed throughont life,” Galphin said. “I am in favor of teaching golf in high schools.” Galphin also stressed the need for more “intelligent hiking,” remarking that “a lot of people don’t see a thing when they walk through the woods.” To prevent graduates from “getting girth” in middle age, he suggests diet courses. Plis program, Galphin believes, would help students develop “social competence” and better “home

living.”

o Youth of 21 Has Composed 20 Selections Pittsburgh—George^ Garratt, 21, of Mt. Lebanon, a suburb of Pittsburgh, has ‘composed 20 selections and has conducted a 90-piece orchestra in Chicago. Garratt si a senior in the Chicago Musical College, an affiliate of the University of Chicago. He is a pupil of Rudolph Gahtz, former conductor of the St. Louis symphony, who now conducts the Children’s Series, New York Phil-

harmonic.

Ganz accepts only students of outstanding musical ability. Garratt is studying piano, composition and conducting technique. Already played in public concerts in Texas, Detroit anJ Chicago, two of Garratt’s compositions are being considered for publication by the Composers Press in New York. “Many people ask me if I’m worried when my compositions are played in public without first being published,” Garratt said here recently. “I’m not, because there is only a slight chance of classical pieces being stolen; there is-a- much greater chance with

popular pieces.” i o

“MOPPING UP” MACHINE USED ON BOLL WEEVILi Columbia, S. C. — An invention which he claims will mop cotton stalks with boll weevil poison and also catch loose weevils has been displayed bj' J. J. Allen, Allendale

farmer.

E. Reed tells of the many new and improved uses for the milk byproducts in a report of discoveries

during the past year.

In seeking ways of converting skim milk and whey into marketable forms, the bureau scientists are following two lines of attack. One is to develop new methods of incorporating these by-products into other foods and the other is to convert them into industrial

products.

Some of the products include “substitute wool” clothing; coating for printing paper, plastics, paint and glue ingredients. Other uses are in bakery goods, canned soups, puddings and candies. Most important of the new developments is the conversion of casein found in skim milk into a durable

cloth.

“Whey from cheese making contains nearly half the food solids of the original milk and at least one important vitamin, which makes it highly desirable as food,” Reed said. “New discoveries are making whey and skim milk valuable commercial products.” The bureau has developed several eandy formulas containing 20

to 40 per cent whey solids. The whey solids not only reduce the excessive sweetness of these candies, and increase their nutritive value, but, by displacing some of the more expensive ingredients, tend to lower the cost of manufacture. The manufacture of clothing from milk has.passed beyond the experimental stage. Clothing made from milk casein has a fiber with many of the characteristics of wool. Patents on the process developed by the bureau have been made available to all manufacturers. Casein fiber is not as strong as wool, but it has the same resiliency and takes the same dyes. It is not likely that it will become a serious competitor of wool, but rather that it will serve to extend the outlet for wool. By mixing casein fiber and wool it is possible to make fabrics having the desirable properties of wool but at a lower price. When skim milk is used to make casein, whey is left as a byproduct. This is fermented to recover a chemical called lactic acid, used chiefly in the tanning industry. The bureau is trying to find new uses for it. The most notable success has been the preparation from lactic acid of a water-clear resin with remarkable elasticity and other properties which make it valuable for impregnating cloth, dressing leather, insulation and other uses.

“FORGOTTEN” OCTOGENARIAN LEAVES $2,000,000.00 ESTATE

DEVICE IS MADE TO ROUT SMOKE

Salt Lake City, Utah.—A device to cut the pall of smoke hanging over American cities is being developed by scientists at the U. S. Bureau of Mines’ new experiment

station.

By use of high frequency sound waves, Hilary W. St. Clair, assistant metallurgist, has developed a system which has been proved for its efficiency in clearing smokeladen, dust-filled or otherwise contaminated atmosphere. Dr. R. S. Dean, chief engineer of the metallurgical division, who came here from Washington to take charge of the experiment station, predicted that the day is not far off when St. Clair’s device will be marketed commercially at a price low enough to enable every householder and industrial operator to connect one to his chimney. ’ * St. Clair’s progress toward generating high frequency sound waves on a large scale opens a new field for clearing smoke, fumes and dust in mines and other

industries.

Heretofbre the apparatus for

creating the high frequency sound waves has been too expensive and impractical. St. Clair’s apparatus is a big step toward solving both

'these problems, it is said.

* iho The device that performs the A mule puils the machine be- .. _ , tween cotton rows, Allen said, and , f’ act stands about a revolving wheel of spokes, with ^ inches high and has a diameter a mop at the end of each, drags of 5 ° r 6 M mch f es ‘ 11 resembles a the stalk down and puts the poison ! small section of sewer pipe. Inside on it. A tank on the machine 18 a 23-pound cyhiider of alumm-

num. At one end is a loud speaker attached to what is virtually an

seeds the poison to the through the hollow spokes.

mops

WAR HITS BABY ADOPTION

London—Baby boys, once at a premium, now are unwanted for adoption. Everyone seems to prefer a baby girl. Adoption societies are swamped with letters from mothers who want to find child-

ordinary radio set.

The radio set§ up a magnetic field that causes the cylinder to vibrate, producing a powerful, high-pitched sound that creates high frequency waves. These waves are directed to a glass filled with smoke-laden air. After a brief turbulent motion, the solid particles in the atmosphere form

less couples willing to relieve [ flakes resembling soot, which fall them of the responsibility of j to the bottom of the glass tube, bringing up infant sons. The atmosphere is left cleared.

KANSAS INDIANS HAD 3 CULTURES

Washington. — Three types of primitive men lived on the western Kansas plains in three different prehistoric eras, according to Dr. Waldo R. Wedel, who conducted excavations in the region for the Smithsonian Institution last siftmmer. Evidence of three successive occupancies of the plains area was found in stratified layers. Scattered on the surface, uncovered by recent dust storms, and in two pithouses, Dr. Wedel found relics of the so-called Upper Republican culture—arrowheads and pottery dating from the late prehistoric period. The Indians who left them apparently were ancestors of the Pawnees present in the country when the first Spaniards arrived. " ' Beneath this was found a layer of barren soil overlying artifacts of the so-called Woodland culture, similar to cultures of some prehistoric Indian tribes east of the Mississippi. Culture Ebbs and Rises Dr. Weddl said these cultures apparently had advanced as far west as western Kansas long before the appearanee of white men, and then had retreated. On the basis of present evidence. Dr. Wedel said, the Woodland represehts the earliest pottery-bearing culture in the central great plains. Beneath the Woodland level was another strip of barren soil about a foot thick overlying a layer of soil interspersed with fire-cracked stones and charred and broken animal bones—apparently the remains of some primitive kitchen. Careful search reveqled no artifacts. The primitive race had left no arrowheads nor fragments of pottery. There were no bits of charred corn indicating a partial vegetable diet and a settled agricultural life.

He was George Firmenich, 83 years old. His estate w r as valued today at more than $2,000,000. J. E. Beach, attorney for the estate, said Firmenich built his fortune in his youth in Chicago’s grain pip and in the cereal business, and retired at 40. A chronic illness prevented him from mingling with friends and finally he was forgotten by his old associates. The bulk of the wealth was left to a sister, Mrs. Emma F. Hull of Los Angeles, Cal. RIFLES TRAINED ON WILD HORSES

Williams Lake, B. C.—War has been declared on the wild horses that infest the cattle ranges of British Columbia’s Cariboo district along the course of the Fraser River. Because the wild steeds consume valuable pasture land tn^ government and ranchers have s worn to slaughter them to the last stallion. Again, after 15 years of desultory skirmishing with the wild horse, Indian and white man alike are oiling their repeater rifles in preparation for the big drive. “Kill the wild horse!” is the slogan of the posters tacked to hitching posts and pasted to gas pumps from Lone Butte to Red

Rock.

10,000 Already Killed In the past 12 years more than 10,000 wild steeds have been slain in the vast ranges of the Cariboo, chiefly in the land west of the Fraser River. The last great roundup was in 1925. The animals were driven into corrals and offered for sale at $5 a head. The leftovers—thousands of them—were shot. At the same time the government'posted a bounty of $2.50 for a pair of horse ears and a scalp. The bounty system has lapsed and the only inducement to professional horse-hunters has been the cent-a-pound offered by dog-food canners and fox ranchers. Notices are posted that owners i of horses loose on the range should remove them immediately bcause permits are to be issued to horse-chasers to clear the range of the wild breed for all time. Under the existing method of grazing control any rancher who wants to dispose of horses at large, contrary to the range law, can get a permit from the forestry department of the provincial government for $2.50 which entitles him to assemble all the horses he finds on a certain section of the range. > The owner of a horse carrying a

FARM AID CUT RUT CONGRESS MAY ADD FUND

Parity Payments Depen On Voting Special Appropriation

Washington — President Roosevelt’s 1941 fiscal year budget providing $500,000,000 less than the current fiscal year for operation of the farm program is puzzling some farm leaders. A casual perusual of the President’s figures indicates a reduction of more than one-third in the various forms of farm aid. His budget totaled $908,000,000 for 1941, compared with an estimated $1,4 l 01,000,000 appropriated for this year. In |his message accompanying the budget, he indicated that another $125,000,000 will be asked in the general relief appropriation for the Farm Security Ad'ministration. That still would leave the 1941 appropriation 25 per cent smaller than in 1940. Parity Fund Likely But, said the White House, even that figure may be misleading. It does not take into account a probable appropriation for parity payments—a matter' of $225,000,000 last year. Mr. Roosevelt said he was not opposed to parity payments “in policy,” but he made no provision for them in his budget. First reaction in Congress indicated that an extra-budget appropriation will be made for parity payments. That was done in 1938 and 1939. Farm leaders are asking, “Did ’Mr. Roosevelt anticipate that Congress would do the same thing again this session?” Mr. Roosevelt said he hoped that an increase in farm commodity prices would bring them to 75 per cent of parity and thus make government subsidy payments unnecessary. Most farm leaders who have expressed an opinion doubt it. They think that the increase, especially in wheat and cotton prices, will bridge part of the gap between market prices and parity, but not by 75 per cent. Talk already has begun in agricultural circles of a $100,000,000 parity appropriation.

WARDENS CONFISCATE FUR TAKEN ILLEGALLY

A large number of pelts, taken illegally by trappers or held by dealers who did not have proper licenses, has been confiscated by the game wardens and will be sold at auction after the close of the

registered brand may, on Payment t trapping se ason, Virgil M. Sim-

of $2.50 to the rounder, redeem his horse. If the owner fails to buy back his animal, it will share the

same fate as the rest. o

The thirty pieces of silves for which Judas betrayed Christ is said to be exactly $11,28 in Amer-

ican money.

mons, commissioner of the Department of Conservation, reporfed to-

day.

The trapping season ends on Wednesday, Jan. 31, and trappers must dispose of all untanned hides within five days after that date. Dealers have 60 days to dispose of their stock.

0. W. TUTTERR0W

STORES

411 No. Elm. Phone 3241 Formerly J. E. Hays Grocery 901 No. Brady. Phone 2-3458

in Whitely

Quality Fit for Rings Our Price is Within the Reach of All

Salem

Mt.

Pleasant

Harrison

Washing-

ton

Monroe

Centre

Hamilton

Union

Perry

Liberty

Delaware

Niles

Town of Albany

Town of

Eaton

Town of Gaston

Town of

Selma

Town of Yorktown

City of Muncie

TAX RATE FOR DELAWARE COUNTY, YEAR 1939, PAYABLE 1940

OFFICE OF THE TREASURER OF DELAWARE COUNTY, INDIANA, JANUARY 15, 1940.

Notice is hereby given that the tax duplicates of Delaware County. Indiana, for the year 1939 are how in my hands, and that I am ready to receive the taxes charged thereon and now due. The following table shows the rate of taxation in the various townships and corporations on each $100 taxable property; also the amount of tax on each poll. Ail male citizens between the ages of 21 and 50 years, inclusive, are subject to the poll tax.

1939 PAYABLE 1940

II On |l $100

Poll

II On I I! $ioo | Poll

II On I !! On I II $100 I Foil ||$100 I Poll

1 || State Tax || .047511.00 2 || Com. School Relief Fund j| .07 | .50

3 || St. T’chers Pension Fund || .024 | 4 |j Ind. Board of Agri jj .0035| 5 ij State Forestry Tax j| .002 | 6 || Ind. Wolf Lake Park Fd. || .002 | 7 || New Harmony Memorial || .001 8 || Total State I| .15 9 ii ii 10 || County Tax |j .39 111| Coimty Bonds || .05 12 l| County Welfare Fund ... || .085 13 j| Total County || .525 14 || Township [i .06 15 || Tuition '. || .31 16 || Special School i| .47 17 || Ad. Spec. Sch’l B’ds, etc. || -06 18 || Poor Ij .20 119 || Poor Bonds jj -025 | 20 || Poor Judgment Bonds ... |l | 21 || Voc. Sch. Fd., Twp. & Cor.|j • 22 || Civ. Rd. Judgment Notes j| 23 ||. Library i|. -01 24 || Total Township & Schools ||1.135 25 11 Corporation || 26 jj Street || 27 || Bnd. Fd. Al’y, Yktn.,Mun.|j 28 jj Improvem’t Dis. Bnd. Fd.|| 29 || Water || 30 [[Park || 31 || Light !! 32 || Policemen’s Pension || 33 |! Total Corporation || 34 || Library City of Muncie .. || 35 || Tot. Lib’ry City of Muncie j| 36 || Each Installment || -905 37 j| Total Year 1939 ||1.81

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1137

Salem

Pleasant

Harrison

ton

Monroe

Centre

Hamilton

Union

Percy

Liberty

Delaware

Niles

Town of Albany

Town of Eaton

Town of Gaston

Tow n. of Selma

Town of Yorktown

City of Muncie

Auditor’s Office, State of Indiana, Delaware County, rs: . , I, Gus August Meyers, Auditor of Delaware Craw, hereby certify, that the rfco-.C is a correct copy of all Tax Levies for the Taxes collectable in the year 1940. GUS~ AUGUST MEYERS, Auditor. All taxes for the year 1939 are due on the first, day of January, 1940. Each taxpayer may pay in full*anv time between January 1st and the first Monday in May, 1940, inclusive, or, if the taxpayer prefers, he may pay one-half the tax on or before the first Monday in May, 13 ' \ ard the remainder on or before the first Monday in November, 1940. U the first installment of taxes is not paid on or before the lirst Monday hi May, 1940, an eight per cent penalty is immediately added, together with all costs and charges provided by law.

IMPROVEMENT ASSESSMENT PAYMENTS CANNOT BE RECEIVED BY THE TREASURER BUT MUST BE PAID TO THE CITY CONTROLLER. J. KENNETH FOSTER, Treasurer of Delaware Coimty, and the Citf of Muncie, Indiana, January 15, 19411