Indianapolis Times, Volume 42, Number 46, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 July 1930 — Page 12
PAGE 12
MILITARY PLANE CIRCUS FEATURE OF CIJY FOURTH Program at Mars Hill Is Slated; Lakes to Draw Big Attendance. Virtually every recreational and amusement facility in the state was ready today for three million Hoosiers’ celebration of the Fourth of July. Hundreds will leave Indianapolis for the week-end. In the city one of the largest organized celebrations will be an air and military demonstration at Mars Hill airport, where the One hundred thirteenth Observation squadron, Indiana national guard, and planes of the Curtiss-Wright Flying Service of Indiana will stage an air circus. Five national guard planes will race thirty miles over a three-mile course. The winner will receive a cup. second place a wrist watch and third place a pair of goggles. The race is limited to the Douglass observation planes, powered with 400horsepower Liberty motors. Two formations of national guard planes will circle the city Friday morning. At 2p. m. Mrs. Margaret Maibucher will lead the commercial section of an aerial review and national guard pilots will put on special formation flights. Captain Lee Brutus. Troy, 0., in a taper-wing Waco biplane, will stunt, and the army f,: '*rs will attempt to bomb a dummy fort while artillelry i is directed against them. Spotlanding dead-stick landing and parachute leaps also will be on the program. Traffic to Mars Mill airport will be regulated by police and deputy sheriffs. East-bound traffic on Morris street, between Holt read and Tibbs avenue, will be forbidden until after the show, and north traffic on Holt road, between Morris and Lafayette streets, likewise will be prohibited. Major Richard F. Taylor, commanding the national guard squadron, will lead a flight in combat formation over Ellenberger park, where post No. 38, American Legion, today began a three-day French fete. The planes will drop a large American flag. A military parade, crowning of the Legionnaires’ “Miss Indianapolis,” swimming events, and other features will make up the program there. At Ft. Benjamin Harrison scores ; of relatives and friends of C. M. T. C. cadets will be guests at cere- j monies including a polo match, en- j tertainment, dinner, and an ad- j dress. A parade is scheduled for j 10:30 a m. All departments of the Indian- j apol*s postofflee will be closed Friday, Robert H. Bryson, postmaster, 1 has announced. General delivery | windows, however, will be open from 8 a. m until noon. Riverrde park offers a balloon ascension, fireworks and boxing exhibition. Walnut Gardens promises an entertainment of balloon ascensions, pony rides for children, and a night fireworks display. Diving exhibitions in addition to fireworks is planned at Broad Ripple. State road 67 will be open Friday, without a detour, to Walnut Gardens, the state highway commission said today.
I FLETCHER AVENUE SAVING & LOAN ASSOCIATION 40 YEARS of 6% DIVIDENDS ■ FROM 1890 TO 1930 Fletcher Avenue Saving & Loan Association received its charter 1891—1895 in 1890. Since that time this as- $35,718.75 sociation has made over 13,200 1Qn _ loans on homes. Its total ac- '° counts number well over 20,000. $lO 1,19 1.01 \ On July first this year, 1.303 y dividend checks will be mailed Cl 1 fi° 9fi 9 o c to present savers. If a share of plob,Zb6.oO this 45,054,C9P.58 is not yours To 1910 now . . . mane it to be so next <rioo . _ January. Safety, sure return, $ 1 88,7 1 6.67 convenience are an unfailing j . 9 * 5 part of Fletcher Avenue service. 10 5,10 Place your savings with this I . O 4 5.5 5 SOUND institution and keep on GROWING WITH US. To 1920 I $537,209.28 opened on or before To 1925 july 12th d* -i CQ/j CO will earn dividends A£ • O O * OX• 9 O as of July Ist " * ' 8 Total Dividends Paid Over 40-Year Period $5,054,099.58 I We Charge No Membership Fees Resources $16,700,000.00 FLETCHER AVE. SAV. & LOAN ASSN. I„_ In the Heart of the Business District _ .. 10 E. Market St. CHARLES R _ YOKE, President Ind.anapolis
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ARTICLE TEN Prohibition, the Alcoholic Educator THERE is one thing for which prohibition never has been given proper credit. It has provided the American people with an excellent alcoholic education. It has added extra-curricular studies in brewing and distilling in the domestic arts as practiced in the home by mother and the girls. Prohibition has taught more people how to make liquor in ten years than theretofore had learned this art since the birth of Bacchus. The saloon is gone. Brewing and wine-making have returned to their place in the home as domestic arts. The rathskeller has merged with the family cellar. The secrets of the hofbrau have been handed over to the hausfrau. The prohibition schoolmaster has demonstrated to the housewife that she car. make excellent wines and champagnes in thirty days. Before his advent the best wine chemist in the world could not make champagne fit to drink in less than eight years. Grape concentrate companies advertise that they will sell you a home wine and champagne making outfit, including the grape juice concentrates, yeast, bottling and carbonating devices, under a strict guarantee that you can not fail to make as good champagne in thirty days as the best wineries could produce in eight years. Thus, do science and prohibition join to form anew higher alcoholic education. The results rival those of extension courses in home economics. The prohibition home institute has taught citizens by the hundreds of thousands how to make ten-year-old whisky in a week. nun THE process of converting sugar and molasses into whisky is simple and the results are astounding. The prohibition schoolmaster has taught the housewife, along with some millions of other people, that a hundred-pound bag of ordinary cane sugar, four pounds of
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yeast, such as she uses in baking bread, and four gallons of molasses, can be transformed quickly into twenty gallons of moonshine whisky, of dubious quality, perhaps, but with a terrific voltage. Why the molasses and the four pounds of yeastv The molasses gives the alcohol the effect, of two years of ageing. The four pounds of yeast will ferment all the alcohol out of the sugar and molasses mash in thirty-six nours. The hundred pounds of sugar and four gallons of molasses will yieid ten gallons of 180 to 190 proof alcohol, the equivalent of twenty gallons of liquor. Twenty-four to forty-eight hours of oscillation in a charred barrel, the addition of flavoring extract and coloring matter, and a highly flavored, richly colored whisky is the result. The American public is drinking this product today in the belief that it is fully aged, authentic whisky, and it is unable to detect the difference between the home-made product and the genuine smuggled article. Great has been the progress of education in the art of making booze under the tutelage of the prohibition schoolmaster. The universal spread of the people's knowledge in the art of making alcoholic liquors is proved amply by certain known facts. Unquestioned statistical records prove that five to ten times as much wine is being manufactured in the homes
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today as In all the wineries of the United States before prohibition; that more than twice as much whisky is being manufactured illicitly as was produced by the 507 licensed operating distilleries in 1917 (the year of maximum withdrawals of whisky for consumption in the United States), and approximately one-half as much beer as was made in the 1,217 operating breweries that turned out 60,000,000 barrels of beer in 1917. nan THE prohibition schoolmaster therefore has been a busy man during these ten prohibition years. His task has been to teach the people how to make a sufficient quantity of alcoholic liquor to take the place of the 91,958 r,44 gallons of whisky, rum, gin and brandy withdrawn on payment of taxes for consumption in 1917; the 55.000,000 gallons of domestic and imported wines withdrawn for consumption that year, and the 60.817,379 barrels of beer brewed by the 1,217 breweries. As in 1917 there were only 507 registered operating distilleries, 1,217 breweries and a comparatively small number of wineries, it becomes apparent that few people knew any-
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thing about making alcoholic beverages during that time. . Even the largest breweries in the United States seldom had more than j one expert chemist and one expert i brewmaster. The knowledge of making alcoholic beverages therefore was limited to a very small number of people—perhaps not to exceed 5,000 in the entire United States. I have stated that the report of the prohibition commissioner shows that the principal ingredients now being used in the manufacture, illicitly, of whisky in the United States are com, cane and beet sugar. Records of the census of manufacturers of the United States department of commerce show that the com sugar production increased from 152,055,872 pounds in 1921 to 904,830,682 pounds in 1928. From trade sources it was learned that the 1928 production amounted to 968,000,000 pounds and the 1929 production has been estimated at more than one billion pounds. The maximum legitimate use of corn sugar in the baking, textile and a few other industries does not exceed 250,000,000 pounds. Perhaps 150,000,000 pounds would be nearer
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the correct figure. There is at least 750,000,000 pounds of com sugar annually available for conversion into moonshine whisky. nun CHEMISTS of the prohibition bureau are authority for the statement that two pounds of com sugar will make one pound of alcohol. As one pound of alcohol will make two pounds of moonshine, so 75,000,000,000 pounds of corn sugar is the exact equivalent of 750,000,000 pounds of 95 to 100 proof moonshine whisky. To reduce this to gallons, divide by 6 2-3. The result is 112,500.000 gallons of moonshine whisky. Prohibition enforcement bureau records also indicate that 90,000,000 gallons of moonshine whisky are manufactured from ordinary household sugar. The foregoing records indicate that 202,500,000 gallons of moonshine whisky are produced from corn, cane and beet sugar alone in the United States, to say* nothing of the additional quantities made
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from grain, molasses and other sugar products. Compare these figures with the 83.590.951.8 gallons of whisky withdrawn on the payment of taxes for consumption in 1918 and you will get a rather accurate picture of the educational activities of the prohibition schoolmaster during the last ten years. (Copyright. 1930. bv James A. Reed: distributed through Current News Features. Inc.)
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