Indianapolis Times, Volume 41, Number 227, Indianapolis, Marion County, 31 January 1930 — Page 17
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RECORD PINOCHLE HAND Ft. Wayne Player Had Complete * Double Hun of Clubs Du L nitrd I’rt FT. WAYNE, Ind . Jan. 31.—Tlien. too, there are the pinochle players who will prick up their ears at this one. Walter Lupke. while entertaining members of the city Walfher League
SAVE MONEY AT * ure Qla I Creamery Lard J2C\ Hutter ' 34C H nil Mwit Onlir. 4-I.l>. Limit I COMBINATION Boiling 1 9i/ 2 Lbs. Spare Ribs. IT Beef 2 Lbs. Sauer Kraut, TdC Standard Coffee OC_ Hog Liver, Os Compound, 2 lbs ... OOK, 3 lbs LtDC. Smoked Ham. Pure Pork 1C- Sliced LtOK. Sausage 13C Mutton 1 C Breakfast OA Stew IJL Bacon Mutton OA Machine Sliced 3()C Leg
CARLOAD SALES SATURDAY POTATOES Round, White; Small Size. I 100-Lb. Sack 60-Lb. . (tl 9C Round (tO Bushel I White. . . wu Also Many Other Varieties of Potatoes BALDWIN APPLES Good Cooking and "I 7C Bushel Eating Apples VA• • 3 Basket OPEN ALL NIGHT EXCEPT SATURDAY NIGHT At Car Door —230 Virginia Ave. Just South of B. & O. Freight House or a bjt v? 7 m pas car load tlAMlJLili oaU9 distributors | % PURE LARD PORK 1 91/ p ® I =;~. IQ.IBB. • gw Young Reef Center Cuts f a3ggV &'<■ i CHUCK! Qc DmctZZ* • % roast [Roast • gW Choice Cuts A-gg Rest Cuts |SS& gjfc © SIRLOIN*2,*/c ROUND 2>fflc © STEAK < * Bg STEAK "" * Breakfast- I LAMB If | BACON C roast | $ Veal Roast 22? Neck Bones 7Vz? ® © Veal Pocket 17c Sliced Liver 10£ • ® Veal Chops 25? Spare Ribs 17? ® g Veal Steak 30<- Fresh Side .19? & Beef Boil lo? Lamb Legs *24? $ # Hamburger Lamb Chops 24? & ® r i Strictly Fresh © treamery f* COlllltry ® • EGGS ®“ C •
Buy at A& P Markets (tm\ WHERE ¥H/ ECONOMY ECONOMY RUIIS” | RULES! Friday and Saturday, Jan. 31st and Feb. Ist Pork Loin Roast I Chsice Lamb Whole or Halt I Shoulder Roast Lb. 21c j Lb. 29c Pork Chops Farcy Center Cuts Lb. 32c Choice Lamb Breast For stewlne Lb. 19c Beef Ppt Roast cholce Chuck Lb. 25c Beef Shoulder Round For S,lss OT "<** Lb. 27c Bacon Squares Sal,> Ue Braud Lb. 19c Breakfast Bacon MacMne S11 “ d 1)0 Elnd Lb. 33c Hamburger Fr 2 Lbs. 35c Pure Pork Sausage 0 2 Lbs. 35c 32, AnANTIC*nMIFK
held a complete double fun of clubs down to and including the jacks. for a meld of 1.500. His partner held the two nines, bringing the total club meld to I,s2o—the maximum meld of a suit. In Lupke's next hand he held a double pinochle—the two Jacks of diamonds and two queens of spades. More than a million dollars a week is said to be spent in the Ur.i’ed States for chewing gum.
BOOZE MAKERS OF MOONTAINS BACKWARD LOT * Producing Inferior Brand of Corn Whisky, Says Dry Agent. ! Bi! Scripps-lloicard Xctcspaper Alliance > KNOXVILLE, Tenn., Jan. 31. j Moonshiners of the Tennessee mountains have not kept up with modern times. Their methods of j manufacturing are the same today as they were ten years ago, local federal agents say. Two changes have come about in the Tennessee moonshine industry; the quality of the product and the method of distribution. , The quality is very inferior. Although the old name “com liquor” still sticks, the name “white mule” is much more appropriate. For very little of the moonshine being made in the hills and mountains of east Tennessee today is made of corn; cow and mule feed are used—and much raw sugar, with which hootch can be made much more quickly. Activities of the federal prohibition agents account for the change in distribution. Slow to Learn The east Tennessee moonshiners I are slow to learn. For instance, I they still put up their liquor in half--1 gallon fruit jars. The' more pro- ; gressive ones at Chattanooga use i five-gallon tin cans as containers, j They, too, used to use the fruit jars but found they broke too easily. The moonshiners are almost all mountaineers. They are reputed to be quick on the trigger, but actually they’re a submissive lot. Most of them either surrender or run. The dangers of a dry agent in these parts are highly exaggerated. There are exceptions. The moonshiners of Cooke qounty are feared, especially those operating in a rugged section of the county known I as Cosby, back in the Great Smoky Mountains. They consider the region theirs, and strangers are not wanted. They believe that the stranger is a dry agent, otherwise he would not be there. These Cocke countians have a way of letting each other know when a stranger is about tc be in their midst. A charge of dynamite is set off on a mountain side; then another, and another, until all the moonshiners know. They put out | the fires and leave their stills. WithI out the aid of the blue column of smoke rising from the still, the dry | agent is seldom able to locate a plant. Most of the stills are of copper, and the usual capacity is thirty to forty gallons. Some are as large as 200 gallons, and some are down to ten-gallon milk cans. Quality Poor “The liquor is of poor quality,” I McCarter explained, “because the average moonshiner wants to get his run off as fast as possible. The longer it takes the more chance he takes of losing it.” Lye is used to speed the fermentation. Another reason for the poor quality is the price. As one old moonshiner, no longer in the business, explained; “I used to make real whisky and got S2O a case. Now | they get $4 and $5 a case. The public won’t pay the high price. Moonshine generally Is known to be a poor grade liquor and the public won’t pay fancy prices for it. Even if a moonshiner made good liquor —the kind I used to make—he couldn’t get the right price for It,” Girl Dies of Stove Bums Burns suffered a week ago, when her clothing was ignited accidentally while she tried to start a kitchen stove fire in her home, were fatal Thursday to Mary Simmons, 14. of Rockville, In Riley hospital. She was the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Simmons.
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Prize Recipes by Readers
Coffee Cake One-half oup sugar. 1 heaping tablespoon of lard, 1 egg. two-thirds cup of sweet milk, 2 cups of flour, 2 teaspoons of baking powder, pinch of salt. Mix sugar and lard, add beaten egg and milk. Sift flour and baking powder together and add salt. Beat well, sprinkle with brown sugar and cinnamon and bake in moderate oven. MRS. MATTIE E. CRAWFORD. 728 East Twenty-first street. Butter Scotch Cookies Two cups of brown sugar, 1 cup of shortening, 3 eggs, 4 cups of flour. 1 cup of raisins, Vi cup of nut meats, 2 teaspoons of baking powder, 1 teaspoon of soda, 1 teaspoon of vanilla, % teaspoon of walnut extract, H teaspoon cf salt. Sift flour, baking powder and soda together, grind raisins, crush nuts and sugar and mix these together dry. Beat eggs, add flavoring to them and mix shortening and remainder of ingredients together in a smooth soft dough. Roll and bake in moderate oven. MRS. NETTIE PARKS. Lizton.
Pecan Pie One cup of syrup, Vi cup of sugar, 3 eggs, Vi teaspoonful of salt, 1 teaspoon of vanilla, 1 cup of broken pecans. Beat the eggs slightly, add sugar, syrup, pecans, flavoring and salt. Mix well, put into partly baked pie crust and bake in a moderate oven 40 to 50 minutes. MRS. MARY GRAHAM. Morgantown, Ind. Route 4. Mock Chicken and Dumplings Take 6 or 8 pork specials, cut them into strips about one-fourth inch wide, put them into a well filled kettle of water and cook until tender. Salt and pepper and then add 3 eggs which have been hard boiled and chopped fine. Make rolled out dumplings with 4 cups of flour, lard about the size of a walnut, pinch of salt. Knead together and then add enough water to make a dough that can be rolled out. Roll and cut into strips about 1 inch wide. Add slowly to the meat and egg mixture until done. MRS. VIRGIL** C. HILL. 631 West Twenty-ninth street. Egg Plant A La Creole One large or 2 small egg plants, Vi onion grated, 1 teaspoon celery salt, 1 tablespoon butter, 1 egg, Vi cup bread crumbs, Vi cup minced boiled ham, 1 tablespoon chopped parsley, and salt and pepper to taste. Boil egg plants until tender, scoop out inside, and hash very fine. Add remaining ingredients. Fry by spoonfuls on a hot greased griddle, browning well on both sides. Serve hot. MRS. C. M. SCOBBEE. 318 North College avenue, Greencastle, Ind.
HOLD WARD FUNERAL Former Adjutant, of- State Dies at Hospital. Funeral services for John R. Ward, Indianapolis attorney and former adjutant-general of Indiana, who died Thursday in St. Vincent’s hospital, will be held at the family residence, 3309 Ruckle street, at 8 tonight. Burial will be in Monticello, his birthplace. Pallbearers will be Dr. J. William Wright, Dr. Karl R. Ruddell, Charles N. Elliott, K. K. Woolling, W. Blaine Patton and E. W. Harter. Honorary pallbearers will be Samuel E. Rauh, George J. Marott, \I. Bert Thurman, Henry Dollman, L. J. Welch, William J. Moonel Sr., G. A. Efroymson, C. L. Kirk, E. J. O’Rielly, C. W. Wells, Frederick Brown, L. O. Hamilton, W, K. Cooper, Boyd Gurley, John Shelby, Charles L. Smith, C. L. Buschmann, Carl Mote, R. D. Brown, Dr. Joel Whitaker, William H. Barrere Jr., Earl Cox, Dr. J. O. Ritchey, Ralph Knode, William H. Lincoln, Frank B. Ross, Robert Pythian, Charles Roemler, Charles S. Rauh, R. H. McClelland, H. I. Cutsinger, Lee B. Smith, Frank F. Woolling, John Owens, Mark Margolis, Charles Syone, P. C. Reilly and J. H. Trimble.
The Best Pound You Ever Bought!
L MEANS THE BESTj COFFEE KOTHE. WELLS & BAUER CO. INDIANAPOLIS
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FIGHTS OFF RESCUERS SANTA MONICA. Jan. 31— A woman who had refused to reveal her identity after attempting sui-
THE CHOICE OF THE PERFECT HOSTESS AT All ijjj Fresh as ‘hide- if MflJt \ the hour pendent [J ■■ Ras Grocers > Jok Roasted PHOENIX COFFEE Packed by • Schnull & Cos. Indianapolis
KROGfRlpi ...IS \MOII!IK ^ NAME Tomatoes or Corn i Standard Pack, 12 Cans, 99c JpK jpijj |J||l 3 No - 2 Cans 25* * SCOTT COUNTY RED I Tomatoes 3 <•”* 32s Cans JILIS Pel Monte 12 clay*-. 343 e ' - Country Club —.-• Illinois iSL *“>• 2 Asparagus' A T"p“ e . 2r: : 49 c W <lB% Square Can, 25c—12 Cans, $2.85 JlfP*** |f |§| OS, |f|l Jg| ill If Avondale Large I£T f Xfcjrttlll 2 Lbs. in Can Cans SMALL SIZE—TENDERLOIN IN Large Can, 12c—12 Cans, $1.37 Peas 3-. 3s- SOc • Lb . sl|© No. 2 Can, 18c—12 Cans, $1.90 Half jJ||g§ v °lue Beans c cir 3 25 —ST .n rh A < Choice Cuts [_|j No. 2 Can, 9c—l2 Cans, SI.OO POTii C**topS % ’ “ ; ~~ Fresh Picnics small and Lb - lS^c Spinach ciS?2£-x5 u Gru 3 37® v N : r Chuck Roast - 27* Vegetables A JSxS 3 Cans JSC rrert .Beef 2 No. 2 Cans, 25c—12 Cans, $1.37 Beets Av Red ale 3 ©Tif® 35® Round Shoulder A of c ßeV u Lb -3®c —n r- ■ A- Chickens 's 37c Sweet Potatoes BSA 3S4l* Large Can, 14c—12 Cans, $1.63 FRESH FRUITS AND VEGETABLES \ Milk F r 7© Cauliflower COFFEE FIRM, SNOW WHITE HEADS Now—at these reduced prices—use MORE FllCh W V Coffee—Make BETTER Coffee jj% Frfnrh & - Lb. EXCEPTIONAL LOW PRICE Brand Phg. ~ qggpr eUwP IcOA APR Country Club With That , _ "n<>uie-Mad” Taste., Lb. Loaf Loaf Country Club Steel Cut r.b. Tin 39c SUS A Genuine Bourbon O• Jewel Santos; Lb. Fkg., * * • • OC Macaroon Snaps c ”il7 Cocoanut Bar Cake Delicious, Eaf-h 23* The money that K-Tuger cus- Mints 7 Lb. 17* | tZTZSJnJSJZ Fruited Ovals ■Kft'.ffi* 2 cbs. 25* ' rr: • Soap Chips K K r ,'is te 15* T tremendous sum of money, /a f'5.993,983.33, represents the % difference between the amount hZ- ■ -** rtvifi r hoiZ. The world’s champion cow once gave thirty-seven of money that Kroger cus- ’ ***' thousand pounds of milk in one year’s time. Seven li! ‘oniers paid for their foods “* V ' hundred such cows would have to equal that quantity f kind Os foods would have cost t /fjt every year for f.ve years to produce enough for them at the average grocery Kroger’s 1929 sale of evaporated milk. 43 store la the Cnited States. M Based on the Food Cost Buit / letins Issued monthly by the I sk >
cide by drowning, told hospital authorities today she was Mrs. Grace Hurst. 27. a divorcee whose parents live in New York. Mrs. Hurst was rescued from the ocean Thursday by Allan Law- and
E. H. Carroll. She struggled violently against their efforts to lift her into a boat. Law said the worn-
always with ———— — j* —. PRODUCT OF SUPERIOR QUALITY*
PAGE 17
an ran out into the surf after destroying a letter she had been reading.
