Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 121, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 September 1933 — Page 22

PAGE 22

U, S. WITHOUT STANDARD FOR PUREJVHISKY Repeal Will Find Brands of Varying Content and Quality. By S r ripps-fl otrord Xetcspnper AW~nce WASHINGTON. Sept. 29 —Until the new proposed pure foods and drugs bill is enacted there are no \ government standards for beverage whisky, and If prohibition is repealed this year the spirits then available for consumption will vary j in content and quality.* Whisky. It appears, is manufac- j tured by several processes, some j quick, others slow; and not all the ! resulting beverages are what Is \ knofcn medically as "spiritous frumenti.” Definition of thus polysyllabic i Latin name is included among j government standards. It is medi- j cinal whisky, defined as an “alco- t holic liquid obtained by the distil- i lation of the fermented mash of wholly or partly malted cereal grains, and containing not less than ; 47 per cent of < alcohol). It must : have been stored in charred wood containers for a period of not less than four years.” Difficult to Obtain This is the “bottled-in-bond aged-in-the-wood” that has been practically unobtainable since prohibi- ; tion, except on prescription. And when repeal is voted, at least for a time, this type of whisky probably will continue to be difficult to obtain, although a beverage of practically the same chemical make-up, the same taste and aroma will be obtainable as whisky. Most of the post-prohibit ion liquor apparently will be blended or rectified whisky, about which long and elaborate controversies have been wagid. Issues Printed Decision President Theodore Roosevelt had a hand in one controversy. President Taft and Dr. Harvey Wiley, then head of the pure foods and drugs administration, were involved also. It was back in December, 1909, that President Taft issued a nine-page printed decision answering the question “What is the meaning of the term whisky under the pure food act, and the proper regulation for branding various kinds of whisky under the internal revenue act?”. Not a little of the lore of this j ancient beverage is included. Derived From Irish Whisky, President Taft pointed ' out, is a term derived from the Irish word "Usquebaugh,” and for “more than a century has been used in Ireland, Scotland, England and m ; this country to mean ardent spirits distilled from grain reduced to potable strength.” The pure food and drugs bureau : has no fixed standards for beverage j whisky. It is unable to say whether rectified and blended whiskies—the sort America is likely to see most often for at least a time after repeal—are any better or any worse than straight aged-in-the-wood ; whisky. j

I COFFK® | Your h '*<?•'((' ■ |f Choice of 3 Delicious COFFEES Buy the Blend You Like Best. 19c to 30c per lb. V\7’HETHER you like your coffee * ▼ mild, medium or extra-rich—-whether you usually pay 19c or 30c a pound—you can now obtain better flavor and greater value for your money by buying one of these three finer coffees—KO-\\ E-BA, LILA or NEW DEAL brands. All are perfectly blended, freshly roasted, and guaranteed to give you real coffee satisfaction, or money refunded. Try one of them this week-end! IKO-WE-BA de luxe brand—a supreme- • ly delicious, extra-rich, mellow coffee; packed in air-tight tins. Sold Only by _ LILY brand —a medium-priced, fullindependent bodied coffee of unusual richness and Grocers delightful flavor. In 1-lb. tins. 3 NEW DEAL brand ■ fastest-seliing. new, low-priced coffee! An amazing value in a fine, mild, smooth-drinking coffee In 1-lb. bags. All these coffees are roasted and packed by Kothe. Wells & Bauer Company, in Indianapolis. i ifIQhWE’BA COFFEES . . . TEAS . . . OATS . . . CANNED ~ FRUITjS AND VEGETABLES . . ,|PICES, ETC.

MRS. WINKLER'S TOUGH

m 4,1 SI i\ <x| * j HDII

Anger is registered by Mrs. Gus Winkler, above, wife of the Chicago gangster, as she marches back to her cell after being quizzed, with her husband, in connection with the federal reserve mail robbery and killing of a policeman in Chicago. Tuxedo W. C. T. U. to Meet The regular meeting of the Tuxedo W.< C. T. U. will be held next Tuesday at 2 p. m. at the home of Mrs. F. P. Myers, 2068 Broadway. Visitors are invited. * Fishermen often discover schools of fish by watching the sea birds that noisily pursue the fish for food.

SATURDAY ONLY! BOILING f| CHICKENS Lb tJ c Hesty Breed, Milk Fed itocks A • anil Beds. R R FRYS Lh 1O c LEGHORK A C FRYS_ 14 10 C CITYPOULTRY MARKET . 111-113 N. New Jersey St. Corner Wabash —the Red Front Phone Uncoln 49*9 The Largest Poultry House In City FREE DRESSING Parking Space

BRANDS DREAM OF SOUTH SEA LUXURYFALSE Average White Man Soon Would Tire, Says Professor. ! By United Press SAN FRANCISCO, Cal., Sept. 29 —Disillusionment awaits the American, who views the South Seas as a place where a pet monkey will bring him a bunch of bananas for lunch, Dr. Albert W. Herre, Stanford university professor said as he set out on his tenth exploration trip ; into the islands. “To the tourist the islands of the | east seem full of glamor, romance and beauty,” Herre said. “He longs for the uncalendared I luxury of living among simple, ! harmless natives, gathering rich i food only by reaching for it, hear- ; ing the song of golden orioles and breathing the perfume of orchids. “All these things are true to a limited degree but only for the natives and the tourists who look on from the decks of comfortable liners.” . The “average white man,” the

,, r Week-End Only Dd Monte CORN 2“ 23 ( COFFEE\ Del Monte PEAS “ 2 29 Del Monte PEARS = 2 39 IjEBgBSi / Del Monte Spinach O£°2 Ar II Del Monte Apricots O Q7 r 6 NO. 2 cans. 73cT 4 4l|C j 6 No. 2<A Cans, *1.09. 4 ’O * C Del Monle Asparagus O cans, 40- Del Monte Grapefruit O 07* Medium Green. No. 1 ® cans. Z 4,10 " Tree Ripened Z LanS ’ 4m I*• Little Sport _ , COFFEE 14 HC Del Monte Pineapple O c IQ p _____ ___ _ _ Quality in every drop. ’ Sliced. No. 1 flat cans. £ I fll OflT ATAt O' BUTTER “SKT' ** ■ u -23 al 10-19 c Tokay Grapes 2 Lbs. 15c Sp | TRF AT Gelatin M >i A Leaf Lettuce Lb. 5c I" I IKr u I Dessert 4 Pkgs ' I tfC Jumbo Celery 2 Stalks 9c “ ■ ■■■■ ■ ■ ■ ■ * " W Head Lettuce Large Heads 3 Hds. 25c SUNBRITE -17. I Another SIO,OOO FREE for 488 answers to this ■ H wL Wl Mm II I question, “What is the reason so many pkg, M Ift Cut from JP | women are changing to Oxydol?” I Tender Rounds Lb. RED CROSS MACARONI O PI IC. MINUTE TAPIOCA Pkg. 12c 2 , .*„y FURTERS Llrße ' Ju ‘ cy 2 “ s „, l9c CANNED SPAGHETTI Q _ IQ p BAKER'S COCONUT Can 12c k ‘" Co “® Lb l2c Big 25-oz. cans. £ Cane I JJC southern Style. ■ FRESH PICNICS Meaty Lb. S l / 2 C SWANS DOWN 9Q< SANIFLUSH Can 1Q c CREAM CHEESE u>. 17c M,nMr - 29 .T-lau a 1Q FRESH GROUND BEEF I 111 ■■■■■■ n- I. AM A Y 4 cakes IHe A meat loaf made from our fresh 44* ITIT I TIT 11 ' W n Bfl n I ■ ■ w ground beef will be a real treat for jh | 71/ . 1 I I I 1 I I or Ivory' Soap Sunday dinner. | ■— GOLD MEDAL KiJtJvui'teAted flour 'B C f \ Cheese Thins Z4SI-is | - j 2c [ HOOSIER GOLD | „,. 1 FINEST CREAMERY BUTTER I g< ■ \ You>ll like its 'mm am a SBAibi? f I _f? ods tafite 2I C J Maple flavored. lb. can. 12^ VI McKenzies. lb. pkg. 10® INDIVIDUALLY OWNED QUALITY FOOD MARKETS * ' f 1

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

professor said, could not endure life on “one of these lonely islands.” “He could not overlook the monotonous diet and insufficient water supply, or resist intestinal infections and parasites. He’s too accustomed to ice and a varied diet,” Herre said. In 65.000 miles of tra\ r el in the Far East and the South Seas the Stanford teacher has seen cannibals and head-hunters; monkeys that eat crabs; bats that eat cocoanuts; a village where a well sunk in a graveyard provides drinking water; and harems of chieftains containing white, bro vn and yellow women. f He has seen schools of sardines “seven miles long”—the schools, not the sardines, he explained— and has counted 3,060,000 ripe eggs ready to spawn by one female bango, a fish 23 inches long.

SELECTED EGGS ■ 20c | as. FRYERS lb. 15c I SSr” FRYS lb. 19c I FREE DRESSING Hoosier Poultry Market! 107 N. Alabama St. Ll-j

OCEAN DATA OBTAINED 1 Naval Vessels Used In Study of Alaskan Waters. By United Press SEATTLE, Sept. 29.—The four naval vessels which left Bremerton Navy Yard several months ago for Alaska waters returned with a mass of information on Alaska seaports and bays. The ships were the Gannett, Argonne, Kingfisher and Swallow. Weather conditions, the ocean floor, and other information, was gathered. STAfE HERD SETS PACE Pennsylvania Dairy Cows Produce More Than 100,000 Quarts. By United Press HARRISBURG. Pa.. Sept. 29. Pennsylvania’s own dairy herd has

produced anew record—the thirtyfive cows owned by the state each

gets so much use as the bathroom basin. And nothing Ww I*"'' 1 *"'' v^ can brighten it quicker or \ M® easier than BAB-O. It is the world's best beautifier for enamel and porcelain. Dull film, \ \*m&m dirt, rust-marks vanish in- • stonily . . A wipe I B nlqhtenb .quickly, .ec&nifmicallif

l having produced In excess of 100.000 quarts of milk. The state is keep-

SEPT. 29, 1933

ing a lifetime record on the animals.