Indianapolis Times, Volume 41, Number 17, Indianapolis, Marion County, 31 May 1929 — Page 25

MAY 31, 1929

HIGHWAY WORK IS SPEEDED UP DESPITE RAINS / Contractors Now Laying Concrete on Road 29. Out of Two Towns. Despite normal rainfall. Indiana *'ate roads are the scene of much expansion activity, and soon contractors will dot the state as they proceed to lay some 275 miles of pavement already contracted by the commission as part of this season's program. In the state highway commission’s traffic bulletin issued today. John J. Brown, director, calls attention •hat contractors are laying cement on Road 29, working out of both Sheibyville and Greensburg. In a few- days the cotractor will start paving the same road between Napoleon and Osgood Road conditions the week of June 1-6: Peed I—Batesvil.e to Metamora. narrow end many sharp turns. Traffic asked to drive carefully Between Brookviile arid Conners'ille account of oil treatment Road 2—B:ida* tin-a round at one-half tr e cast of state line Road 3—Detour tjom Hanford CUv to m:*fs north, accoun* construction, eight o iie? Detour from Fiat north of Petroleum. eight miles Road 7 Dero ,r frr.ro tnre* and on.-hall !*■;•*> north of Wirt to DuPont. Detour Near Bas hake Road to -Detour from one and on-half rv.lr, oev of Bass lake to east end of Fa.-' la** account construction on Hoad Road 15—Detour at LaFontaine. account of bridge out. one mile. Detour from L'Fontune to three miles south of Wabash. account of consuuctton. Detour from Wabash north. a:count construct.on. three miles Hood is—Detour from one-fourth mne treat of Junction of Roads 18 and 9. *wo eri>s south of Marion account of bridge construction two miles. Detour from Kaibec to Pennville. account pavement construction. U. S. Read 24 —Pavement from Montire’.io for fourteen miles east, then detour one-hair mile north to old route to Logansport. Detour Just east of Hunt- * Road 55-Bridge run-around, three and one-half miles north of Fulton Road 26—Detour from one-haif mile east of Monitor east account of bridge construction, three miles. Run-around a t-ro miles *est of Ross< tile, account of bridge construction. Bridge run-around ju.t, west of Middlefork. TT 8. Road 27-Detour from one-ha.f mile north of Richmond to Chester, count construction, four and one-half miles Detour from Winchester to eight miles north, account construction. Detour from one mile south of Ailen-Adams rountv iine. to seven miles southeast ot pt. Wayne Oelour Near Frankfort Road 28—Detour from Junction with Road 52 to four miles west of Frankfort paving. Detour from Junction of Roads 31 and 28 to one mile west or Ttpton-Clinton county line, account paifrjf and bridge construction, eleven and one-half miles. Road 29—Watch for grading gangs just east of Greensburg Detour from Osgood •o Napoleon, construction. Detour from Greensburg to Sheibyville. paving, twentynine mites. Detour from intersection with Read 28 to Michigantown. construction. Bridge run-around near Middlefork. Bridge run-around five miles south of Kirklin. Detour from south end of Bass Fake to three miles south of Knox, construction. Detour from four miles south of FaPortr *o the south corporattn l'ne of LaPorie. account, construction, nine miles. Detour fr r,m one mile north of Le. Porte to Michigan CUv. construction. TT S Read 30— Run-around at Erie railread crossing, two miles east of Schereri ille _ . , n S Read 31—One-* a" traffic Jus* south of Kokomo Drue carefully pas' workmen between Peru and Mexico. Roan 34—Detour from Crawfords, :11c to New Rose, is about sixteen miles, six of which Is pavement. Read 35—Detour from three miles south of Salem to one mile south of Sa.cru account, bridge construction, is three miles, narrow read, but in fair condition. Road 38— Detour in Rockville. Five-ton load limit on temporary bridge. Road Is Narrow Roa.d 38 Detour a' fi'r and "Pe-balf miles west of Richmond v four miles ci'er road. Road 3? Detour at Mechanlcsburg is teod; changeable. Detour from Ross-ill* to IX end one-half miles north is seven end cr.e-half miles. Good cndi'ion. F F Rqad 40—One-way trcffie around workmen between Cumberland and Greenfield Tj r Read 41 -Three-fourths mile detour in Evansville. Detour from four miles rertb of Rockville to fire and one-half miles north is three miles. Road 43 Run-around two miles north Cf Franclsv ille. Rood 4X Detour from Jasper to Road

SGHLOSfi£R 5 OyspofiovE Sutter Churn'dfrorntyeshOtam

poultry Fret While son 44 ait MILLISER POULTRY CO. 11 N. 44 ENT ST.—RI ley 6996 2 Block* 44’©at of 2 Door* North of State Capitol 44a*h. St. Open Saturday Evening*

POULTRY Hens, Roasters, Spring Chickens, Fresh Eggs 637 Mass. Ave. Lincoln 5207 1027 Virginia Ave. DRexel 2795 Wm. Luckey

WATERMELONS Fresh Carload Arrival* Daily Call LI. 2710 POTATOES Idaho Rus**otti. SO Ibs. VV V Brine Your Sacks and Basket* HAMILL BROS. Carload Distributor* of Apple*—Oran***—Potato©# ISO Tir*inia Avenue B, i O. Erei*ht House

ROWS 8.000 MILES B'J Cnitr'i Press CAMBRIDGE. Mass.; May 31. For forty-nine years Professor Emeritus Charles Rockwell Lanman of Harvard has kept himself in physical trim by rowing in an 11foot shell on the Charles liver. During that time he estimates he has propelled his craft approximately 8.000 miles. _ jg s pe r* or.e mile *a*t of Haysvllle T se en miles 'This detour is narrow and 3.3 of . : dir'. Heavy traffic should avoid t. - detour. Goes into effect June 3 Detour from Bloomfield to Bloomington is thirty miles over narrow route. Road 46—Detour from Columbus east, account grading is eight and one-half mil'' This for through traffic.i Detour three mile' eas‘ of Columbus is three miles. : This for local traffic.! Many sharp turns ar.d narrow bridges between Columbus and Greensburg. Watch for (-jading gangs iu.it. east of Bloomington and between Columbus and Greensburg Road oiling Just east of Nashville. Surface Fair: Road Narrow Road 49—Detour from three miles north of Valparaiso to Chesterton is eight miles. U 8. Road 50—Dtour from four miles east of North Vernon to Dillsborro is thirty-two and one-half miles: surface : fair, but narrow in p.aces. Cincinr.atiLouUville traffic should go by way of Road j 58. through Vovav Madison and Scotts- j h T s. Road ."-2.--Dclour from eight J mile-- west of Metamoro to Brookviile is, eighteen and one-half milest. Part of ; detour over Road 1. Road 53—Detour from Remington to ■ one mile of Rensselaer, construe- i tion twentv-onc miles, and only fa.r , condition Five ar.d one-half miles of this ; detour i* over State Road 24 ftoad 54 —Detour from Bloomfield to Bloomlgton over Road 45 is thirty miles. , narrow and crooked. Road 56—Detour from Princeton to j three and one-half miles oast io seven miles. Bridge run-arounds two and onebalf miles north of Jasper and one-half mile south of Haysvllle. Run-around two miles east of Salem. Detour around earth slide two miles west of Vevay Is two and one-half miles and only fair condition. Road 58—Surface, very narrow in places, several one-way bridges. Careful Driving Advised Road 59—Detour two and one-half miles north of Linton north is four and one-half miles over narrow gravel road. Drive carefully between Brazil and Carbon. Road 62—Three and one-half mile detour from Mt. Vernon east. Three-fourth mile detour in Evansville. Run-arounds at three miles west and two miles east of Sulphur for one-way traffic only. Road 64—Drive slowly between Troy and Newtonvllle. which requires one-way traffic. Road 66—Impassable between Newburg and Hatfield with no detour. Through traffic avoid Road 66 and route via Roads 45 and 62 until further notice. Road 67—Detour 4from Worthington to four miles northeast, account construction, is twelve miles. During dry weather the regular route may be used, in wet weather the detour must be used. Detour from five miles northeast of Muncie to three miles. Detour from Albany to Portland is twenty-one and one-half miles. U. S. Road 150—Run-around five miles east of Paoli. Roads not mentioned and parts of roads mentioned, but not specified and all detours not otherwise described, are in good condition.

l r e y— 9 _rf_ gv -g m and parochial schools, who I? -1 SOi"l haw shown high proficiency and illjjllmiltim excellent grades m their studies during the past school year are elim. UtlXtU cXP gihle far consideration by a com-’ mittee of judges for the Kroger Scholarship Award of $500.00. Character, intelligence and grades are the factors upon which the judges will make their decision in T*i - Im3 & givmg this .award to some deserving of ted dartefa*: sttKient. You must be a graduating senior of some high school class m Mr, Ray D. Everson this city, this year, and your grades „ . _j. x must be high to entitle you to con^ money must be used for educational purposes in some university or Judge Thos. E. Garvin * +k ° Send in your application to the Judge Municipal Court Scholarship Committee of the Kroger Grocery & Baking Cos. at the Prof. R. C. White *""" Indiana University - ( KROGER I "r The Kroger Grocery fit Baking Cos. SdidarAip SIUKtS °f 5500.00 Mail Your Application mi or before June 7, 1929 I X3Sw ’ U ' Phtmc I To School Attended ‘ Prmcxpcl I Scholarship Committee The Kroger Gfocery & teKff&CoiPftffY 1011 E. St. Clair St., Indianapolis, Ind. Appxx*ma .wrf £>oi “ ,j,u Tcar

Prize Winning Recipes

Sour Cream Pie One cup o{ sour cream. 3 eggs, 1 tablespoon of vinegar. IVi cups of sugar. 1 teaspoon of cinnamon, h teaspoon of cloves, 1 -j teaspoon of salt. Mix together and let stand for a moment. Then bake in one crust ' until consistency of custard. MRS. WILLIAM CREECH. East Franklin street. Spencer. . Eggs a La Suisse Put 2 large tablespoons of butter and 1 tablespoon of milk in a shallow baking dish to melt. Then add a layer of grated cheese. Break a number of eggs carefully and put them in the dish, being careful to keep them separate. Season with salt and pepper, sprinkle cheese on top. Bake in oven until cheese is brown and serve hot. MRS. MARY LONG. 810 Jefferson street. Crawfordsville. Brown Stone Fiont Cake One-half pound of butter, 2 cups Os sugar, 5 eggs, 3 c uds of flour, 2 teaipoons of baking powder, cup of sweet milk, M cup of melted cocoa. Cream buttei and sugar thoroughly, add egg yolks beaten until light. Stir well ar,l add cocoa. Mix until smooth. Sift flour and baking powder twice and add alternately with milk. Beat and pour in layer paps. Filling: Fourth pound of butter. Gradually mix into it 1 pound of powdered sugar, which has been ! sifted until fine. Add a few drops i of cold coffee to keep it moist. When this is well mixed, add I cup of brown sugar, and mix smooth with j diops of coffee. Beat until smooth !

[SATURDAY SPECIALS | 3 Per pout and, RD Creamerjr jjj pi Sugar Cured 1 q Choice Yea! n> pi Breakfast Bacon 15/C Roast uJC 4 B ' ca * 1Q „ Choice Cut nrv B Veal nr Tender o 9 4 B Chops Chuck Steak L .• C B Shoulder Bones. 6 lbs. . .250 Standard Special *y p J B Boiling Beef KJ'uC Blend Coffee jg FT Call Your Orders In and They Will Be Waiting For You yj E Riley 9948

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

and of right consistency to spread on cake. MRS. HAZEL JOHNSON. East Franklin street, Spencer. Celery and Scalloped Corn Chop 1 cup of celery very fine and dice 1 small green pepper. Butter baking dish and pour in a layer of corn, a layer of peppers and a layer of celery, alternating until pan is full! Add two tablespcous of butter and 1 teaspoon of salt to 1 cup of hot milk and pour over the vegetables. Cover with buttered crumbs and bake one-half hour. LAVON LITCHFIELD. Route 7, Rushville. Jellied Fish Salad Four cups of tomato, 1 cup of hot water, l ! j teaspoons of salt, '•. teaspoon of pepper, 4 cloves, 1 bay leaf, I small onion, \’z oup of chopped celery, 1 teaspoon of mustard, 3 tablespoons of granulated gelatine, U cup of cold water, 14 cup of shrimp or any kind of canned fish, 1 tablespoon of sugar, !4 cup of chopped green peppers. Cook the tomato, onion, sugar, and spices together for fifteen minutes. Soak the gelatine in the cold water. Prepare the fish and celery. Strain the tomato mixture, add the gelatine, and stir until it dissolves. Cool the mixture until it begins to thicken, then add the fish, celery, and pepper. Pour into wet chilled molds and set in a cool place until solid. Turn out on lettuce and garnish with salad dressing. MRS. LOUIS W. WEBER. R. R. 2, Box 49. Jasper.

ACT OF KAISER WRECKED OWN spy SUCCESSES Killing of German Officer by Wilhelm Resulted in Collapse, Bu Times kDecial NEW YORK, May 31.—How Kaiser Wilhelm, by killing one of his own officers during the early days of the war, opened the way for the crash of the great German spy system, is a hitherto untold story of the American intelligence division, related by Thomas M. Johnson, former war orrespondent, in the American Magazine. The German espionage forces which played havoc with all allied plans and made possible the successful German drive in March, ISIB, was Anally traced to Switzerland, where it operated under the guidance of a single man, known as “the master.’’ So frequently were allied plans upset that the American intelligence officers were called in to aid. The American assigned to the task at last met in Berne one of two German brothers he had known in Germany before the war. From him he learned that the German’s older brother had become a member of the kaiser's military staff early in the war. An attempt was made to assassi-

K>OD9?ZaMi\|BHjjf jHHS ijpff ipil |||||| Potatoes Ue-i3a jgjf [Mm* •M®© K No, 1 A Peck M> _____ Coipst Fr ® sh T *“ dr 4 Ears ISN Radishes Any Kind % Bchs- ' Careen C^**i© ns S Bchs, - Cauliflower Hd 15© | Beansrender J ibs. chuck | Oranges * % ando *- 35c ROAST 1 rANANAS Cut From Choice Corn Fed Beef sj mS mmm mTWb | 2: 5 Lb*. 24c SHOULDER ROAST Lb. 5Qc | ROLLED POT ROAST | / Prime Plate Bee£—No Bone—Ho Waste a / M*' 3 Pa- 1 Lb. 2Se 1 / Pick : wt aees WmTI —-s—— —s / tSc i Fresh Ground Beef Lb. 25c § / Con, p, yS / BreakEastßacon ’°r:. r J".; , '!.l;l h 5 / iT**wyp L FOR YOUR LUNCHES i / W *%, H Baked Loaf Sliced Lb. 32c Stf 4/fi 50 nrf ®&$L m H Boiled Ham Sliced Lb. 65c |C- r Cro,n ' <S| Minced Luncheon Sliced Lb. 3 5e a f MmJ CHICKENS 1% m Choice Quality—Fresh Dressed ££ young hens 1929 fryers | KBLOCER SfORES i

nate the emperor, end when he withdrew to his hunting lodge, he took the young officer with him as \ a trusted bodyguard. One day the kaiser came upon the soldier who, being off duty, had unbuttoned his tunic. The soldier's attempt to faster, it was mistaken by the nervous monarch for an attempt to reach for a weapon and the kaiser shot him dead on the spot. The shock killed the officer's mother and made an invalid of his father. His younger brother, though in frail health, was forced into the

Rye Bread By m ' - Uiat You’ll like the improvement —pleasing, fresh hop flavor Belgian peasants bake into rye bread—using both malt and hops. You get the same result from the flavor of fresh hops processed by the patented Wennersten method. f WENNERSTENC •"Rich Malt Extract *

army and than into the spy service. He was one of the few who knew of the workings of “the master." and finally tola the American, out of revenge for the killing of his

Delicious flavor for vegetable foods Any woman interested in appetite appeal can use it Cooking history was made recently when four famous cooking experts met in a kitchen high up in a New York skyscraper. The question before the house was what could be done to make vegetable dishes as delicious as they could be. The result of the experiments, which 'j were carried on for several days, was the far- <• reaching new discovery of an old secret. The best way to cook vegetables is in a small f amount of water, and with the addition of sugar. In every case vegetables so prepared received the unanimous vote of the experts. For luncheon or dinner cook 6 medium carrots with a level tablespoon of sugar in the least boiling water possible. Slice, reheat and let simmer 10 minutes in 2 teaspoons of butter, pinch of salt, and 1 level tablespoon of sugar. For delicious stewed tomatoes, peel, slice ar.d stew 6 ripe ones, then add a lump of butter. 3 teaspoons of salt, 2 level tablespoons of sugar, and 1 tablespoon of bread crumbs. Cook 10 minutes longer and serve. Just try sugar with vegetables in your own kitchen and notice how much better it makes these healthful foods. Try a dash of sugar with lima beans, string beans, corn, peas, parsnips, squash, onions and tomatoes. It makes children and adults like them. Most foods are more delicious and nourishing with sugar. Thi Sugar Institute.

PAGE 25

j brother. The American, withal--1 lied officers, rounded up the spits in ! Zurich. The master spy escaped from a hospital and into Germany, but his system was completely shattered and never was rebuilt effectively.