Indianapolis Times, Volume 34, Number 103, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 September 1921 — Page 6
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WINNIPEG IS GOOD CITY, BUT NOT BALANCED (Continued From Page One.) posed to consider that we hare any rights to lands, oil, natural resources within our territory, but claims them for the Dominion. Besides, the government is most extravagant and one-sided.” Together with objections to Ottawa, the Winnipeg people say that the government at Washington blunders egregiously in its attitude toward Canada. OBJECT TO tT. S. wheat embargo. “Naturally,” they say, “much of our commerce is with yon. yet by your embargo on Canadian wheat you force our grain through Canadian ports. Tour tariff puts a heavy impost on our prodacts. Our own tariff makes onr Imports too costly. Some of us thought our tariff would aid ns, especially as it Would broaden our market for some goods we make in competition with you, but our eastern Canada people have taken advantage of the situation to raise their prices so that they get larger profits by reason of the duties. An instance is furnished by some machinery bought in the States on which transportation from Pennsylvania to Winnipeg together with the duty was paid, and even then the price was a fraction below that which a Canadian manufacturer charged.” Unquestionably Manitoba is somewhat critical of its treatment at the hands of Ottawa and Washington. It speaks plainer in its complaints against Ottawa, but feels more resentment against Washington. One of the most prominent man of Winnipeg said his trade attitude, and he thought of most of the people was: First, preference for Winnipeg product*. Second, for East Canada. Third, for Great Britain. Fourth, for the United States. They are stamping goods now “Made in Canada." “Made in Winnipeg,’’ “Made in Calgary,” etc. WAR BRINGS BIG CHANGES IN CANADA. A great change has come In Canada owing to the war. There was a big movement of men from the farm to the -rmy When the men came back they remained in the cities. There has been a mistake in Immigration, too. Thousands of families from Europe have been permitted to come' to Western Canada, eastern Canada, too, who are not equipped physically or financially for farm work and who will not take up industrial activities. The vast number of wounded aoldieri has aggravated this situation. AU this will be adjusted in time but at present it is troublesome. Os the persons who had to be supported in Winnipeg last winter 52 per cent were ex-service men. I But western Canada is so big and its production so large and its news so g:eat that their troubles are not of major consequence. The credit people of Winnipeg say they are satisfied the slump is over. From July 16 there was a gradual but ■ steady improvement in business. Or ders for goods increased and these are being sustained. Buying started earlier than expected. There has been an improvement in collections and a good demand for general supplies dry goods especially. Boots and shoes are selling well. Perhaps as good a review of the present situation as any possible to obtain i* that furnished by James M. Ashdown, one of the earliest residents and most prominent citizens of Winnipeg. He , started in business in 1869 with SI,OOO. Today ha had a groat establishment and employes many meu. He handles more hardware than any other man of the western country, wholesale or retail. “Are conditions better?” he asked. “Oh, yes, they are better. They are pret- j ty good and make a fair average. We are beyond danger. The business outlook is brighter and we will get back slowly and gradually to a sound basis. This is a growing country, quick tc respond to any change. The farmer, in some instances, vas very hard hit, but he averages up well. All things con- ; sidered, we should have twice the population between here and the Pacific that we have today—yes, conditions are ber- j ter.” i Mr. Ashdown has been mayor of Win- i nlpeg twice. He is an ultra conserve tive, as one would expect of a great mcr- 1 chant and very rich man, but he shares the belief of many others that Canada is going to have a Parliament r,on dominated by the agriculturist*. Some big construction work is under way or contemplated in Winnipeg. The Winnipeg River Power Company is con | structing a $10,000,000 hydro-e!ectr> plant and the Hudson Bay Company is about to start work on a retail store building to cost $5,000,000. There is nothing particularly the matter with Winnipeg or Manitoba. —Copyright, 1921, by Public I.edger Cos.
Banker’s Auto Will Be Sold at Auction Special to The Time*. KFTF-r/RYVI I,LE. Ind., Spt. 9.—An agreement wae reached here today In the case In which the auttomobtle, owned by William Newton Drybread, vice-president of the Farmers' National Bank, of Edinburg. was attached as State property, by which the automobile will be sold at public auction here next Tuesday by the sheriff of Shelby County . Mr. Drybread was arrested at the Shelby County fairground last week for violation of the prohibition law and later the automobile was seized as State property when a quantity of Intoxicating liquor was discovered in the car. Madison Teachers Favor Constitution Special to The Times. ANDERSON, Sept. !).—The new constitution of the State Teachers’ Associatitu was favored by a vote of 190 to 9 the Madison County Teachers' Institute. Dr. Earl Barnes in addressing the institute presented problems which he said confronts foreign nations as a result of the high Republican tariff which prevented them from making money to pay off the great debt to this Nation.
RIGHT HERE IN INDIANAPOLIS The Largest Second-Hand Furniture Store in the U. S. BUY HERE—SAVE ONE-HALF Cash or Payments BAKER BROS. 217*219 East Washington Street
IN THE REALM WHERE WOMAN REIGNS
Keeping House With the Hoopers
FBIDAT. “I'm glad we are to tackle the question of budgets this afternoon,” said Mrs. Chapin, as she took her sewing from her workbag and settled herself comfortably with the other club women for their afternoon conference with Mrs. Hooper, “because I’ve come to the conclusion that I’m really only the clearing Tious* for the family bills in my household, and that the fact that 1 have the entire management of my husband's salary gets me nowhere at all. I run up bills one month and pay them the next, and if I have a cent of balance it is mere luck, and it Is more likely than not that I find the sum total of my bills more than my current income and I have to economize the next month to make up the deficit.” “I have the same trouble,” Mrs. Campbell added; “my husband gives me aa allowance of SB3 a week to run the house, and he pays certain bills and his own personal expenses out of the sls a week that he keeps himself. I keep track of every cent I spend; my husband is just as careful as I am and yet we never know where we are from one month’s end to mother. Once in a while we have a balance left over at the end of the month, and then something happens and we pay it all out iu one lump sum. We never get ahead, and know it is on account of these unexpected demands, and not because either of us is deliberately careless or wasteful. I’ra very anxious to give the budget system a trial in hopes that it will be as successful as my experiment of scheduling my time has been.” “I always have kept accounts, too,” said Mrs. Owen, “and I've been as economical as possible, without being able to save anything to put in the bank out of my husband's salary, but I have kept out of debt. I know perfectly well, however, that there is no system about my spending, and that the percent of our income which goes for food is never the same for any two months.” “Well,” ventured the Bride, “my husband pays all the bills. X just hand them over to him, and he sends a check from his office, an’d outside of filing the reI don’t have any housekeeping accounts. He gives me an allowance for j my clothes and my own personal needs j and I spend It as I please. The record j of that in my account book, If I kept j one, might read, ‘Received SSO from Bob.’ j and then In the other column, ‘Spent it all.”’ They all laughed at this account of the Bride’s bookkeeping which Mrs Hoover said was still a very prevalent fashion of keeping household accounts. “The main differences between just keeping track of your finances, tbe way most of you are doing." continued Mrs | Hooper, “and the new fashioned budget system, Is that in the old way you simply record what you have paid out after you have spent it and with a budget you plan in advance, what is to be spent in the future. This pjlan also necessitates that the husband and wife cooper- i ate equally in carrying out the plan and \ it eliminates the allowance Idea, where j the wife pays for two or three items, and ; the husband manages the remainder of j the income.” “Well, now suppose we begin on re- i organizing my way of living." suggested , Mrs. Wright, “and work out a budget I from the haphazzard system I've always , followed. I get every cent of Mr. ; Wright’s two hundred dollars a month, j Some months I spend ninety dollars for ' food, and then the next mot th (he whole ; family needs winter clothes, and if I don't want to go in debt I have to cut. way down on the food, until we all seem ! to be starving. If I squeeze out even j at the end of the month, it is only j because I have run way down on my food allowance—sometimes to fifty dollars. I know it's wrong, but I've never been able to avoid it.” “Well, the first thing to do to straighten you out,” said Mrs. Hooper, “is to apportion in advance the amount, of your income that you ought to spend for food, clothing and your other needs, for the entire year, because the Idea of j a budget is not to skimp or even to ! save, but to establish a balanced system Os spending. The family expenditures i falls naturally into five divisions —food, shelter, clothing, operating expenses and advancement. A sixth division may be made for luxuries where the income permits of it and a seventh for ‘savings.’” “Well then how can I tell what per cent of my two hundred dollars should be spent on each of these items,” asked i Mrs. Wright, dolefully. “Those percentages have all been fig- | tired out by experts,” answreed Mrs. ' Hooper,” and In applying them to your own budget you have to take into consideration not only your income but the conditions that prevail in your own family. 1 ’ “Then each one of us will really have to work out an individual budget the way we did our time schedule—is that the idea?" inquired Mrs. Owen. “Yes.” replied Mrs. Hooper, “but if you ; begin with a typical budget, you can URe j it as a guide or pattern in outlining your ! own. For instance, we can take the one j I use for a sample. It is as if you were i making a dress from a pattern which only fits you perfectly after you have j taken in seams and darts to make it j right for your own particular figure.” “I see what you mean,” said Airs. Owen, “and for the next meeting we can take up \ your budget as a type and outline our I own from that.” “We will begin then, with the item of shelter,” concluded Mrs. Hooper—which j includes rent or its equivalent in Interest on Investment if your property is owned; taxes, insurance, repairs and the upkeep of that property. ’ The menu for the three meals on Saturday are: BREAKFAST. Sliced Peaches Rolls Cereal Vegetable Hash Coffee LUNCHEON. Baked Beans Brown Bread and Butter Cake Watermelon. DINNER. Bean Soup (To be warmed.) Ham en Casserole
Men Yon May Marry By E. R. PEYSER lias a man like this proposed to you? Symptoms: Not attractive to -women—But he wants to be. He writes to you how he’s had a bath in a November sea and feels like a Goliath, then he has climbed two mountain peaks and feels like Sandow. When he’s with you he runs up hill, singing to develop his chest! IN FACT Takes little to make him feel chesty with women. 7WS Prescription to his bride: fv Build a gym In your house. f Make him think he is a feminine magnet. Absorb This: PLAY YOUR CARDS THROUGH STRENGTH. Copyright, 1921, by The McClure Newspaper Syndicate.
Baked Potatoes Sliced Green Peppers Peach Pie (All prepared on Friday.) —Copyright, 1921. BOSTON BARED BEANS. Soak one quart of beans over night in warm—not hot—water. In the morning cook them until the skin curls on a bean when you blow upon i;. Pack them in an earthen pot. Score the skin of a pound or streaked salt pork and almost bury it in the beans. Pour over this one desert spoonful of molasses, mixed with as much vinegar, a goon pinch of pepper ands teaspoonful of mixed mustard. Cover closely and bake six hours in a good oven. MINNEHAHA CAKE. Cream a half cupful of butter with ane and a half cupfuls of sugar, add the beaten yolks of four eggs; a half pint of milk, and the stiffened whites of the eggs alternately with three even cupfuls of prepared flour, or enough to make a good batter. Bake in layer tins. BOSTON BROWN BREAD. Mix thoroughly a cup each of Graham flour, wheat flour and corn meal, and stir In a teaspoonful of salt. Warm together a cup of milk, in which Is dls solved a small teaspoonful of soda ands teacupfnl of molasses. Pour over the mixed flours and meal a cupful of boiling water, and then add the warmed milk and molasses. Beat hard and long,
AMUSEMENTS. KEITH’S extra PERFORMANCE IN ORDER TO ACCOMMODATE THE EXTRA DEMAND FOR SEATS THE OPENING WEEK OF KEITH’S 38TH ANNIVERSARY AND ENABLE EVERY ONE TO SEE SINGER’S MIDGETS THE. WORLD'S BIGGEST SHOW OF LITTLE PEOPLE AND THE EXTRA VAUDEVILLE ACTS, ONE EXTRA SHOW WILL BE GIVEN SATURDAY, SEPT. 10, STARTING 12:30 P. M. SHARP AT REGULAR SATURDAY MATINEE PRICES. SECOND SATURDAY MATINEE STARTS AT 3 P. M. REGULAR EVENING SHOW AT 8:15 P. M. THE ENTIRE TOWN IS TALKING ABOUT SINGER’S MIDGETS
MOTION PICTURES. r NOW PLAYING! . GLORIA SWANSON c L —ln 5 A Elinor Glyn’s Love Story jf “THE GREAT MOMENT” 1 COMING: SUNDAY, SEPT. 11TH J First Time at Popular Prices S D. W. GRIFFITH’S E j “WAY DOWN EAST” , to " to 11 The Same Production Presented 1 1 Recently in Indianapolis at Prices Topping $2.00
America's “Handsomest” Man BEN TURPIN IN PERSON Appearing at 2:00, 4:00, 7:30 and 9:30 O’clock. “Courage” MM I dT*! with NAOMI CHILDERS URQ
BETTY COMPSON and MILTON SILLS In “At the End of the World”
INDIANA DAILY TIMES, FRIDAY, SEFIEMBEK 9, izi.
and turn into a greased pudding molf] with a closely fitting top. Cook in an outer vessel of boiling water for thre hours. Remove from the fire, take th* cover from the mold and set In the over for ten or fifteen minutes, or until thf bread is dry about the edges. Turn out, wrap In a napkin and send to th* table.
PUSS IN BOOTS JR. By David Cory
“That’s a hard task," said the old owi, when little Puss Junior asked him how he was to kill the great mouse that lived in the Giant’s house, as I mentioned in the storv before this. “But the little canary bird who sings every day to the Giant told me you would help me, and I've come ’way up here on the roof of the castle to ask you," said little Puss Junior with a sigh. "Please help me, Mr. Owl.’’ "Oh. very well,” said that wise old bird. “Now listen carefully, for that mouse Is as large as a dog and very fierce, and you would have a hard battle with him, let me tell you. If you tried to catch him the way you would an ordinary mouse." So Puss kept very quiet and pretty soon the wise old owl said: “Ton wait here while I fly up to the moon for some green cheese. And then you can put some ly the hole In the wall, snd as soon as the mouse eats It, he will become as
om<X yneatre yj
small as an ordinary mouse. After that you can catch him easily enough—that is, if you are still a good mouser.” And then the old owl flew up t,o the moon and knccked on the front door of the Man In the Moon's house. “1 want a piece of very green cheese, Mr. Man In the Moon, as quick as you please, 'Way down on the earth in a giant's house Lives a monstrous thief, a gray-colored mouse. And little Puss Junior must catch him tonight Or the giant will give him a terrible fright.” "Well, if that’s the case,” said the Man in the Moon, “I’ll give you a piece of green cheeso. But mind you, don’t you ever tell anybody, for moon cheese is not for sale nor is it for use on earth.” So hs went out and broke off a piece Just Inside the rim of the moon so it wouldn’t show, you know, and then he handed It to the old owl, who took it In his beak and flew down to earth as fast j as he could. Maybe he slid down a moon- j beam, for it took him such a short time i that Puss was surprised to see him so j soon. “Here's the cheese,” said the owl, and I then Puss went inside the castle and down the stairs till he cams to the room where the great hole was. And then he laid the piece of cheese on the floor and hid behind the door. (Well, after a while the giant mouse j poked his head out of the hole and looked i all around. And aas soon as he saw the ! cheese he said : “Oh, doesn't that cheese smell just divine? I know Its flavor is mellow and fine; I How nice of the giant to place It here. I'll gobble It up while the coast Is clear.” | And he took three bites and a half and I swallowed the cheese. And after that he ! grew smaller and smaller, until at last j he was no bigger than an ordinary mouse ! that runs around your grandmother's ! house. “Ah, isn't this fine?” he said. “Now j I ran crawl through the smallest bole j in the castle wall,” and he ran across | the room. And then Puss jumped out ! from behind the door and caught him, and in the next story you shall hear what I happened after that.—Copyright, 1921. AMUSEMENTS.
rypi |C|| tonite sal lULI 011 and Tomorrow I Mat. Sat, “'.y, $1.50 | HENRY W. SAVAGE OFFERS HARRY BERESFORD “SHAVINGS” ( ape Cod Taken from Joseph C. Lincoln's Novel, ORIGINAL N. V. (AST Trice*—Night*. 50c to $!.O0. Hat. Mat., Me to $1.50.
fNext Week. Mat*., Wed. and B*t. Jojodj Return Droll Mu*tcal Hit. \ “Abe Martin’ 5 PRICES; Night*. SOe to $1.50 M,.t*, 25c to *I.OO. SEATS NOW SELLING
MURAT —Tonight— 8:05 Last 3 Performances I,ee and J. J. Shobert Present Willie and Eugene Howard in the New York Winter Garden * Most Stupendous Itevne PASSING SHOW I of 1921 , I.V> People—22 Muhlfe Scene* ALL-STAR CAST WITH 75 WINTER GARDEN BEAUTIES I PRICES—Night, *I.OO, $1.50. $2.00,1 $2.30. Saturday Matinee, 75c, I Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday I SI.OO Matinee Wednesday SI.OO I Max Marvin Preientf 3 Live Ghosts ITh* lunching hit of th* dergde I On yoar In vr York PRICES—SOc to $2.00 SI.OO Matinee Wednesday SI.OO I
mm STATE FAIR WEEK —GALA BILL—ARTHUR ANDERSON PRESENTS DOLL FROLICS A Breezy and Mulc Concoction MOREY, SENNA &. DEAN 6 OTHER SNAPPY /J BIG FEATURES O Dancing tn the Lyric Ballroom Afternoon and Evening.
PARK Lena Daley and Her Famous KANDY KIDS MOTION PICTURES.
ffifitmftu Entire Week WALLACE REID In “THE HELL DIGGERS” Ilall Room Boy* Farce—For Newa Weekly . . Atta Boy I How about attending the World Merle* Buaebal! Gamre aa the guemi of the Alhambra, with all expenses paid? Get Into the Alhambra Content, now going on. For further Information are Mr. Young, third floor, Lyric Theater Building.
IC[C ENTIRE 1010 WEEK Wm. S. Hart In “THE WHISTLE” Roscoe (Fatty) Arbuckle in “The Garage”
Final Clean-Up on All Merchandise Left From the FIRE SALE We must dispose of all goods left from the fire before we move into the back part of the store, allowing the carpenters to finish their work. Consequently, we are offering the following inducements: MEN LOOK! Men’s Suits NOT EVEN SLICHTLY DAMAGED Cl O no CIO QR wMts <p I / %V O lota, flannels. J) I /.VO I /. thibeta, herring- T I g a JmMrnL Fn * fc* bone weave and JL wJ 1 M all popular ma- 1 S /■; terials. Suits made up in all styles and sizes for joung V t men and old men. Suits that formerly sold from $25 to *45, ONE PRICE— Save Money on Children’s School Clothing and Shoes Boys’ Suits $3.98 School Shoes $1.98 Ready-to-Wear and Shoes for All at Great Savings Granger Department Store 336-338 West Washington St.
A clearance of all our brass beds tomorrow at prices that will save vou money. Be on hand bright and early if you want first choice. Terms to suit.
Hjglpl Money Saved Is Money Earned ■7 Cole’s K Range HEATS—IT COOKS-IT BAKES t: saves the cost of an extra heating stove. It gives warm floors f ° r th ® ,ltt,e folks ' ° ven shoulder high— saves stooping and backaches. Oven and flues made of copper alloy Iron, the strongest rustresisting Iron known. We personally invite you to see this remaxkable fuel saving modern range. See It Now! Buy It Now! W Terms to Suit!
A Very Special Purchase of This Three- $/JQ.BS Piece Duofold Suite Brings the Price Down to Each suite, consists of a full size duofold, chair and rocker to match. Frame finished in imitation mahogany and seats and back upholstered in imitation Spanish leather. If you would economize, by all means take advantage of this wonderful value. TERMS TO SUIT. 231-2j57 W.WASHINGTON,ST.
SATURDAY
