Indianapolis Times, Volume 43, Number 104, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 September 1931 — Page 6
PAGE 6
WINNERS NAMED IN VEGETABLE LISTS AT FAIR Farmers Honored for Fine Displays of Garden Products. What's a mangelwurzer? Prize-winning farmers with displays In the agricultural building know. You might ask one of the following prize-winners for vegetable exhibits who are listed in ranking order: STRING BEANS 'Half PfrK) Wax —Elmer W. Stumph. Indianapolis; J O. Mundell. Edith Timmons. Elmer tv* non. C. A. Smith. Elmer W. Stumph. J O. Mundell. Edith Timmons. DRY SHELLED BEANS 'Half Peck I •ur W s. i,e Kidney—M. K. Gleason. Elmer w Stump. Colored Kidney—M. K. Gleason; Frank E Clanin. Swayzee; A C. Hainlcn. Elmer w Stumph Marrowfat Type- W. Schaentrup, M K. Gleason. White Navy—Edith Timmons. Frank E. damn. W. Schaentrup. a. C. Halnlen. Small Lima—Mrs. John H. Ziegler, Recd b MundPll - M K Gleason,* Raleigh Large Lima -Ira D Reed. Elmer W. Stumph. CABBAGE Round Head Type— M. J. Harr. Elm-r w. Stumph: Carl Lentz. Indianapolis: Frank E. Clanin. Head Type—A Clanin. Swayzee. Hat Head Type M J Harr M. K. Gleeton Elmer W. Stumph. A. Clanin. Red Type—Carl Lentz. Elmer W. Stumph. I rank E Clanin. A. Clanin. CELERY Twelve Stalks—Elmer W. Stumph. Grant Mltchel & Son. Windfall. Carl Lentz. Frank E. Clanin. CORN Sweet. Yellow, Roasting—J. O. Mundril. Edith Timmons Sweet. White. Roasting—J O. Mundell. Randolph Adams. Martinsville; Elmer W Stumph. Rov Snoeberger. CUCUMBERS „ Slicing—M. K. Gleason. Elmer W. Stumph, Carl Rippv. Indianapolis: John E. Snoeberger. Pickling-Walter J. Harpel. A. C. Ha,r.len. Converse. J, O. Mundell. Ciauae £. Talbert. EGGPLANT Black or Purple—Edith Timmons. Elmer W. Stump. A. Clanin. Carl Lentz. White —M. J. Harr. Elmer W. Stump M K. Gleason. Margaret A. Dorrcll MUSKMELONS Large Type, Yellow Flesh—N. J. Hastings & Son. R. R. 5, Box 103. Martinsville: Bevlngton Bros., Galveston: Elmer w. Stumph: Carl Lentz. Small Type. Yellow Flesh—Carl Lentz. N, J. Hastings & Son. Randolph Adams Large Type. Green Flesh—Charles Stevens Jr., Oaktown: A. Clanin, B. T. Bond. Box 20. Oaktown; N. J. Hastings & Son. Best Display of Tiptops—Carl Lentz. A. Clanin, Charles Stevens Jr.. N. J Hastings & Son. WATERMELONS Light Green—-Charles Stevens Jr., Gene Adams, B. T. Bond. Randolpn Adams. Dark Green—B. T. Bond, A. Clanin, Charles Stevens Jr.., M. K. Gleason. Striped—B. T. Bond, Frank E. Clanin. Charles Stevens Jr., Randolph Adams. Largest Display thome varieties, properly named l—Randolph Adams, Charles Stevens Jr., B. T. Bond, M. K. Gleason. Largest Commercial Display (not more than three varieties I —Charles Stevens Jr., Frank E. Clanin, Gene Adams, Randolph Adams. Largest—Randolph Adams, M. K. Glea•on, Carl Lentz, Robert Simpson Jr. PEPPERS Green, Sweet 'half peck) - Frank E. Clanin, Swayzee: Carl Lentz, A. Clanin, Ira D. Reed. Red, Hot (half peck)—Frank E. Clanin, A. Clanin. Elmer w. Stumph, Carl Lentz* Best Dsiplay on Stalk—Elmer W. Stumph, Frank E. Clanin PUMPKINS Sweet Pie Type—Gene Adams, B. T. Bond Elmer W. Stumph, Jacob Mundell. Field Type—lra D. Reed, Gene Adams, A. Clanin, Jacob Mundell. Largest—Raleigh Reed. Ira D. Reed, Charles Stevens Jr., Margaret A. Dorrell. Best Display—M. K. Gleason, M. J. Harr. Eugene Trover, A. Clanin. SQUASH Largest—A. C. Hainleu, Eugene, Trover. Robert Simpson Jr.. Charles Stevens Jr. Summer lescalloped tvpei Eugene Trover. N. P. Harr. M. K. Gleason. A. Clanin. Summer (crock neck type)—A. Clanin, Carl Lentz. A .B. Langston. Carl Rippy. Golden Hubbard—Elmer W. Stumph, M. K Gleason. E J. Snaugh. Green Hubbard—Elmer W. Stumph. Gene Adams. M. K. Gleason. Any Other Variety—Gene Adams, Frank E. Clanin. Elmer W. Stumph. Hasting & Son. Best Disnalv Squashes—M. K. Gleason. Eugene Trover. TOMATOES Purple (one peck)—W. K. Gleason, Claude E. Talbert, Elmer W. Stumph. Red (one peck)—A. C. Hainlen: A. B. Langston, Camberidge City; Jacob Mundell: Winfield Mundell. Yellow (one peck)—M. J Harr. Largest and Best Display—M. J. Harr, M K. Gleason, A. B. Langston. RHUBARB Twelve Stalks—Walter J. Harpel, Crawfordsville; Carl Rippy: Carl Lentz; Elmer W. Stumph Largest and Best Display of Vegetables • exhibited by One Individual!—M. K. Gleason. Elmer W. Stumph, Carl Lentz. Frank E Clanin. POTATOES N Early Ohio (peck)—Randolph Adams, Gene Adams. Jacob Mundell. Walter J. Harpel. J. O. Mundell. Irish Cobbler (peck) —Randolph Adams, Winiflcld Mundell. W. W. Stauffer. J. O. Mundell. Gene Adams. Rural New York (peck)—H R. Stauffer. Jacob Mundell. Winfield Mundell. M. J Harr. Gene Adams. Anv Other Variety Properly Named (neck)—M. J. Harr. Ciaude E. Talbert. M. K. Gleason. John Ott. Best Ten Pecks Irish Potatoes (Rurals. Ohios or Cobblers)—Randolph Adams.
So Listless. •. What's the Matter?
Mi w& aV. : jKffßj|Ps A Despondent Young Girl SHE looks despondent, listless; Young girls budding into womanhood often get quiet, wistful and they should be watched. During this "trying time” every young girl needs the helpful benefit of a strengthening medicine like Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. Mother, won’t you give your daughter the Vegetable Compound? Records show that it helps 98 out of every 100 women who use it. Ask your druggist for a bottle of the liquid or the convenient tablets. £. VEGETABLE COMPOUND
HIS PIGS TAKE PRIZES AT SWINE JUDGING Lebanon Boy’s Berkshire Gelt, Barrow Held Best. Pigs is pigs. Byron Powell. Lebanon tlnd.) boy admits, but, he points out, there
are ordinary pigs, good pigs, and best pigs. No w, ordinary pigs might content some boy raisers of swine. Others might be satisfied with producing good pigs. Not Byron, however. Only the finest will win hi s enthusiastic interest. And he proved it. His Berkshire gelt and barrow
\ ***
Powell
each won championships in their breed at the pig club show at the Indiana state fair. MRS. M. B. FARRELL CLAIMED BY DEATH Illness of Two Weeks Is Fatal to Prominent Fraternal Woman. Mrs. Mary Blackwell Farrell, 31, died Monday night in St. Vincent’s hospital, having been ill for about two weeks. Mrs. Farrell was born in Indianapolis. She was a member of SS. Peter and Paul Cathedral and of Ladies’ auxiliary, No. 3, Ancient Order of Hibernians. Funeral services will be held in the homft, 1945 Broadway, at 8:30 Thursday morning, and in the cathedral at 9. Burial will be in Holy Cross cemetery. Survivors are the husband, Edward M. Farrell; an infant daughter, Mary Jane Farrell; her mother, Mrs. Jane Blackwell, and a brother, William C. Blackwell, all of Indianapolis. Charles Stevens Jr.. W W. Stauffer. H R. Stauffer. SWEET POTATOES Anv Tvpe (peck)—Charles Stevens Jr.. Edith Timmons, A. B. Langston, Roy Snoeberger. JohnlE. Snoeberger. ROOT CROPS Celaric (six roots)— Elmer W. Stumph. Salsify (six roots) —Carl Lentz, Carl Rippv. A. C. Hainlen, Elmer W. Stumph. Beets. Long Red Table (six)—M. A. Mundell, Elmer W. Stumph, M. K. Gleason, Raleigh Reed. Round or Turnip Table (six)—M. K. Gleason. Carl Rippy, Elmer W. Stumph. M. J. Harr. Sugar (six I Elmer W. Stumph, M. K Gleason. M. J. Harr, Carl Lentz. Carrots, Table (six)—A. C Hainlen. Roy Snoeberger. Elmer W. Stumph. Stock .six’) —M. K. Gleason. Elmer W. Stumph, Carl Rippy, H. H. Gilliland. Mangelwurzers (six)—M. K. Gleason. M. J Harr. H. H. Gilliland. Onions (White, peck)—Elmer W. Stumph. A C. Hainlen. P. J. Harpham. Carl Lent/. Red ipccki— P. J. Harpham. Elmer W. Stumph. M. K. Gleason. A. C. Hainlen. Yellow (peck)—Jacob Mundell, Carl Rippy. Elmer W. Stumph. Carl Lentz. Onion Sets (red. half peck)—Elmer W. Stumph. Carl Lentz. Carl Rippy. A. C. Hainlen. White (half peck)—Carl Lentz. A. C. Hainlen, Carl Rippv, H. If. Gilliland. Yellow (half pecki—H. H. Gilliland. A. C. Hainlen. A Clanin. Elmer W. Stumph. Winter (half neck) —Elmer W. Stumph. Carl Lentz. Carl Rippv. H. H. Gilliland. Onion (50 pounds commercial saxoline sncksi—Yellow globe variety. W. W. Stauffer. A. C. Hainlen. Howard Emme, Elmer W. Stumph. Red globe variety—P. J. Harpham. Elmer W. Stumph. White globe variety—Grant Mitchell & Son. Indianapolis: Howard Emme, Elmer W. Stumph. P. J Harpham. Turnips, Globe (six)—Carl Rippy, Carl Lentz, Raleigh Reed, Ira D. Reed. Flat (six)—Carl Lentz. Carl Rippy, William Criss, Gene Adams. Horseradish (six roots)—Elmer W. Stumph, M J. Harr, M. K. Gleason, Carl Lentz. Parsnips (any variety, not less than six)—Carl Lentz, Elmer W. Stumph, M. K. Gleason. M. J. Harr. Largest and Best Display of Root Crops (potatoes Included, to be exhibited by one individual) —Elmer W. Stumph, Carl Lentz, M. K. Gleason. Retail Roadside Market Display (showing collection of vegetable products by organizations of vegetable growers, etc.) —Terre Haute Vegetable ana Fruit Growers Association; Indianapolis Vegetable Growers, by Eugene Lentz.
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BRITISH LAUNCH ECONOMY BILL IN PARLIAMENT Financial Reform Started; Riot Attempts of Large Crowds Curbed. By United Fret* LONDON, Sept. 9.—Prime Minister J. Ramsay MacDonald, speeding the new coalition government’s drastic financial reform program, presented the national economy bill in parliament today. The legislation was designed to provide the government with a quasi-dictatorial emergency measure for rushing through its financial program. It would “authorize making orders in council to effect economies in expenditure and improvements of arrangements for meeting such expenditure.” Attempts to incite riots outside the houses of parliament were curbed by a thousand police early today after Communists and other agitators unsuccessfully harrangued a large crowd to demonstrate against the coalition government, which won a vote of confidence Tuesday night.
a My sweetheart smokes 'em .., NOW, you know, Bob was raised in a I|l iPI^ISf tobacco county. He has worked in two ciga- • IB& rette factories; and I have heard him say all of - them are just the same. He says there are a lot #sr P'P es things like that running through the roofs of the factories and sometimes they look different, but that the way cigarettes are * Bob says all tobaccos receive the same sort ' V °f drying—heat treatment, he called it. In one he says, they may talk about ‘baking* l^e to^accos an( * * n anot her they call it another name. He says what they actually do is to ‘dry* •<. fke tobaccos—reduce the moisture in them—and l^at l^e mac^‘ne t^iat the y a N use is called a • , v tl But when it comes to the quality of tobacco, ; that’s quite a different story, so Bob says; some & factories use mild, ripe tobacco, while others K think that thick heavy tobacco is good enough. .' :^ Bob knows tobacco and he tells me that it takes good tobacco—mild and ripe—to make a ciga**Y°U know how it is when a piece of fruit tastes just right— not raw or sharp or too ripe Tmln^ f w// IpillliK.- gßHWgMwaa&g&ga , . . . r ° r taSte CSS ~^ US ! P * eas | n S and satisfying. Well, they just suit me right down to the ground—- ' —And HIS sweetheart smokes ’em tool Bn| Bj|>; : - ; I ' J \ ©1931, Liggett & Mvers Tobacco Cos.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
STAGE SHOWS WILL RETURN TO LYRIC Saturday Will Mark Return of Vaudeville to Illinois Street Theater After a Variety Vacation. STAGE shows are coming back to Indianapolis. The welcomed announcement comes from the Lyric and states that beginning next Saturday they are going to resume their former popular combination policy. This policy was and will be six acts of RKO vaudeville, including a name headliner attraction in conjunction with the pick of three companies’ program pictures. The Lyric took a short respite during the last few weeks of the summer* to enable them to play up the excess amount of the so-called big pictures and to also bring them right up to national release date on all of their films.
The management of the Lyric further announces that all Lyric vaudeville shows are to be booked from New York this season. William Berger, who is considered to be one of the foremost vaudeville bookers, has been engaged and will collaborate with the manager of the Lyric in selecting the type of shows and acts which are best suited for this locality. The RKO Vaudeville F.xchange, located in the Palace Theater building in New York, will be the headquarters for Berger. This means that the Lyric will have an opportunity to accept or reject as they see fit any and all of the outstandings name attractions from musical comedy, variety and the film studios, as they are submitted to the central office in New York.
| The RKO officials in New York ; have started a movement to revive the “big time” this season, but in | a different way, presenting five to six outstandings acts, in addition to pictures, at popular prices. The Lyric has been joined to the already former mid-west circuit which includes Louisville, St. Louis, I Cincinnati, Cleveland and Chicago. The opening bill for the Lyric starting has not yet been completed and will be announced in these columns later in the week. The feature picture which will be shown with the first vaudeville bill of the new fall season is the Fox movietone version of “The Brat,” Maude Fulton’s well-known stage success. Sally O’Neil and Alan Dinehart are the featured ! players.
BUCK'S BACKERS SWELL DERBY BALLOT TOTAL Sheriff Looms Sure Winner of Brown Kelly; Last Chance to Vote. Sheriff Charles (Ruck) Sumner 23, fi1l Jesse McClore 1.201 Ira P Haymaker #53 Frank C. Riley fis Hoosier Pete (lot It’s the last chance to ballot for 1931's Brown Derby king. Only a mountain of votes can hope to defeat Sheriff "Buck” Sumner for the right to appear at the coronation ceremonies at 8 p. m. Friday in front of the state fair grandstand and receive the bronze plaque and the dun-colored “kelly" as the city's most distinguished citizen. Victory is conceded by the most partisan of partisans in the ranks of Jesse McClure. “It’s their year, but wait until 1932 then there’ll be a different story,” declared one McClure lieutenant. Buck’s henchmen seemed unperturbed by the apathy in the ranks of the McClure boys. They continued even today to roll ‘ up a
higher vote total than 1930’s victor, George L. Winkler, former sheriff. Winkler won from Mayor Reginald H. Sullivan with approximately 20,000 ballots against the mayor’s 11,000. Ballot boxes for the derby melee close at 9 a. m. Thursday. Every vote must be in The Times office by then or it will not be counted.
Many other new WIDTHS Fall styles at this AAto C price ... see them r Wktn Q—luon and M ~ Charles ..,J
SEPT. 9. 1931
The winner, who looks like “Buck,” unofficially will don the darby for a photo in Thursday’s edition of The Times. Watch for the “mugging” of the winner and then Friday night attend the coronation on Indianapolis day at the fair and see the victor try to keep that schoolboy blush as he receives the crown of crowns.
