Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 March 1937 — Page 26

FRIDAY, MARCH 5, 1937 HARTMAN'S—A Furniture Store Since 1893

TWIN BED OUTFIT *2 Beds °2 Springs 4.6

®2 Mattresses, 6 Pieces

PAGE 26

DUST NOT PERIL TOWHEAT BELT, EXPERTS CLAIM

Normal Weather Will Mean Bumper Crops, Say Authorities.

Junior

ling hens, and contented cows graz- + out by the Forest Service and ‘indicate a slight variation from

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES : U. happy" farmers holding Govern- Plains Region” also came in for a Prom Queen at I. LUDLOW FLAYS og ane 3 i 1 lv. : aad ng plasidly o 5000 copies cost $4011.64 he said, Should They Be Purple? “Here we have two reports,” Mr. nature, as all the cows are a bril- | ordinary sty le of plain printing 'liant red. The report contains 173 | which usually characterizes Gov- ' | pages printed on highly calendered | ernment reports but decorated and | embellished in the nth degree and

ment grants in their hands, cack- | panning by Mr. Ludlow. It was i HS : | “In one respect the illustrations |y..qjow concluded, “not in the | paper and illustrated copiously.”

"A document entitled “Possibilities | the cost of the two was $8062.89— [lustrated Report IS TOO of Shelterbelt Planting in the the price of a good Indiana farm.”

Eo ©. Fancy Is Complaint of | cd Hoosier.

To Alkalize Acid Indigestion Away Fast

PEOPLE EVERYWHERE ARE ADOPTING THIS REMARKABLE “PHILLIPS” WAY

| Times Special WASHINGTON, March 5.—Dr. Rexford Guy Tugwell's farewell | brochure, the illustrated annual | report of the Resettlement Admin- | istration, was held up to the] | House today as an example of | waste by Rep. Louis Ludlow (D.!

By United Press MANHATTAN, Kan. March 5.—| The return of normal weather and | rainfall conditions will provide the | springboard on which wheat growing sections of the Southwest will bounce back to bumper crop production, agricultural authorities here believe. Dust storms that have ravaged R : | Ind.). fields in western Kansas and the : ? ; | Rep. Ludlow had figures from Texas and Oklahoma Panhandles ; ; | the public printer to show that indicate that improvements are | 3494 copies of the document cost needed in farming methods and not $4051.25 and without the illustra- | that crop production in the area is | tions it would have been but | doomed, experts at Kansas State ; | $3108.86. |} College and the U. S. State Experi- 3 Ba p R ¥ | So he is for a proposed law that | ment Station here say. ; : | will require all printing of such | They scoff at reports in the East | booklets, estimated at more than 8 that the southwestern wheat belt ig | $500, to have approval of the House | | gradually is becoming a desert. § : 3 3 5 | and Senate Joint Committee on | Some farmers, discouraged by re- i J 3 | printing. curring dust storms, have moved | Describing the Tugwell

from the affected areas, but they : | Rep. Ludlow said: are few. G ; | “The front and rear backs of

Conditions Held Temporary | this document are medleys in col- | or, showing attractive homesteads, The experts base their predictions

on the fact that only a part of the wheat belt is in the dust bowl: not all the land within the dust bowl is affected by the blowing, and on be- | lief that the condition is only tem- |

porary. | The blowing does not affect fer- | tility of the soil, experts say. The same thing has happened before and has been followed by the greatest wheat crops in the history of the Southwest. The only differ- | ence is due to the fact that more land is under cultivation.

“Soil blowing is not general,” ac- | cording to Dean H. Umberger, col-

tM CERTAINLY GLAD DR.JONES Tow | ME ABOUT THESE PHILLIPS MILK OF MAGNESIA TABLETS FOR MY ACID STOMACH.THEYRE MARVELOUS !

Single

or Double

SIGNS WHICH OFTEN INDICATE “ACID STOMACH” PAIN AFTER EATING FEELING OF WEAKNESS INDIGESTION SLEEPLESSNESS NAUSEA MOUTH ACIDITY LOSS OF APPETITE SOUR STOMACH FREQUENT HEADACHES

POSTER or JENNY LIND DOUBLE DECK

BED ..... 7° SPRING. 7° 50-Lb. Felt MATTRESS, $7.95

and Cotton Free Parking—Tickets at Door Open Tonight, 7 to 9—Sat. until 9 P. M.

report, And try it particularly, for quick relief, if you are using a less natural or less effective alkalizer. Get either the liquid ‘‘Phillips’” or the remarkable, new Phillips” Milk of Magnesia Tablets. Each tablet equals a teaspoon of the liquid form. Only 25¢ for a big box at drug stores.

ALSO IN TABLET FORM:

Each tiny tablet is the 4 equivalent of a teaspoonful P”.u=3J : of genuine Phillips’ Milk of [~"M ; ,

ra 72h 0 PR rons

315-17-19 £.WASHINGTON ST.

On all sides, people are learning that the way lo gain almost incredibly quick relief, from stomach conditions arising from overacidity, is to alkalize the stomach with Phillips’ Milk of Magnesia. You take either two teaspoons of the liquic. Phillips’ after meals; or two Phillips’ Milk of Magnesia Tablets. Almost instantly “‘acid indigestion” goes, gas from hyperacidity, “acid- headaches’—{rem over-indulgence in food or smoking — and nausea are relieved. You feel made over; forget you have a stomach. Try this Phillips’ way if you have any acid stomach upsets.

She was

Queen of the prom—that’s Emily Croxton of Angola. : as | chosen yesterday to reign over the junior class dance at Indiana University. She's 21, five feet five inches tall, has blue gray eyes and light |

IMPORTED CHENILLE TYPE

SCATTER RUGS

Size 20x40 6 3

brown hair. She's a Kappa Kappa Gamma, Pleiades and coed sponsor of the R. O. T. C. Peggy Failing, Indianapolis, and Dorotha Applegate, Carmel, were chosen as her attendants.

produsts in 1934, despite the great | HUGHES OFF ON FLIGHT drought, Mr. Umberger said. Dur- ny United Press | Regular ing the past+20 years the same NEW YORK, March 5.—Howard | S100 Vane counties produced $811,705,000 worth, p,.0hes millionaire sportsman and | he ly { motion picture producer, took off in’ Yas! Increase | his plane from Floyd Bennett Field The produced 3,295,820 bushels of fy). 35 ynannounced destination to-

wheat in 1933 and 6,231,681 bushels day. Airport officials said they be- | reer _— ren et es in 1934. Production jumped from lieved Hughes was bound for Miami. | a TRY A WANT AD IN THE TIMES. THEY BRING QUICK RESULTS.

3

Shown

lege extension director, “it usually affects scattered fields. begins on land that is poorly farmed, and is primarily the result of low rainfall and high winds.

Farming Methods Improved

“During wet years of the rainfall cycle it is not a problem. Proper farming methods will reduce soil blowing even in dry years. The effect of improvement in farming methods will be to make the Southwest a more reliable wheat-pro-ducing area, year in and year out, than it has been in the past. “To say that dust storms and | wind erosion have destroyed the | Southwest as a wheat producing area is as absurd as to say that the recent flood has destroyed the Ohio Valley as a corn producing area.” Dust storms have been blowing in the Southwest for several million years, Mr. Umberger said, building up from deposits of the windblown soil some of the best land in the area. They are not of major importance in soil destruction, he said. More Land Tilled

Lack of sufficient rainfall, prevalence of high winds blowing across the level unprotected fields | and increased tilling of the land are the principal reasons for the! increased amount of soil blowing in recent years, Mr. Umberger believes. “There are some relatively small areas which must be returned to grass because they are unsuited to! cultivation.” he said. “But in most of the Southwest, farming will not | need to be abandoned. Abandon-! ment would be uneconomical.” Fourteen southwestern Kansas counties, generally referred to as being in the dust bowl, produced | nearly $14,000,000 worth of farm!

| Blair

10,301,850 bushels in 1925 to 52,640, | 108 bushels in 1931. | Reports of the State Board of! Agriculture, which go back to 1860,

| show that yields dropped during

years when there was a moisture deficiency but immediately climbed back to high levels when weather and moisture conditions were nol mal.

CHICAGO SOCIALIST TO TALK TOMORROW

Ray Sparrow, Young People’s | Socialist League leader in Chicago, | is to discuss “Why the Moscow | Trials?” at a meeting of the Socialist Party tomorrow night at 8 p. m. | in the Holliday Building. He is to discuss the background, the men involved and international significance of the trials. Mr. Spar- | row is a member of the American | Committee for the Defense of Leon |

, Trotsky. |

TECH DEBATE TEAMS |

WIN DISTRICT TITLE

By winning all four of their de- | bates, the Arsenal Technical High |

| School debate teams have been de- |

clared winners of the local dis-] trict of the Indiana High School | Debate League. { The teams are composed of | Dorisann Johnson and Guy Car-| penter, affirmative, and Eldeen| and Alan Gripe, negative. | William G. Moore is alternate. Charles R. Parks is coach. i Tech will meet Bedford in the | zone debates. |

! i

|

Limited Time Only!

; S475 For

Your Old OR Watch

!

MORE

Now BROILING

is Easier than Frying with the

“3 ks : , ; A CN ADA BN SS

. in Down Payment on Either of These Beautiful

GRUEN

WRIST WATCHES

Nothing so desirable either as a gift to another or to ones self, as one of these really fine timepieces. Distinguished in design and reliability.

MOL

i 18, EY: |

(Left) Newest men's design . . . jewel. Case curved to the wrist. Yellow

filled. Complete, $29

PIAA IN 3.8

181 NORTH ILLINOIS STREET

Gruen 1s A Aig C Week Kh] 0 , (Right) A dainty ladies’ WA f¥ A design. Silk or metal & >e band. Yellow gold filled c Week ase. 17-jewel movement. § Beautiful and reliable 23.75.

Other Gruens $24.75 to $75.00

SINCE 1884 y LINCOLN 8121 Vs

$29.

TN

Ni like most housewives, have probably always known that doctors recommend

broiled foods for health. You probably have always agreed with famous chefs that

broiling makes good steaks and chops more delicious, more flavorful. But you've

realized, far more than they, that broiling has been a disagreeable, difficult, smoky

task.

See Your GAS

RANGE

L. 8S. Ayres & Company Banner- Whitehill Wm. H. Block Company B. & W. Appliance Shop Colonial Furniture Fulwider Radio Sales Gibson Company

Hartman Furniture Company

Idea! Furniture Company Jackson Sales Company

DEALER

Mt. Jackson Tire & Battery Shop

Pearson’s Hardware Company

Pearson Company, Inc. Peoples Outfitting Company Rich and Company Sears Roebuck & Company Shelby Furniture Company Star Store Stewart’s Radio, Inc. VanJelgerhois & Company Victor Furniture Company

But now all that is changed. The improved gas range broilers make broiling easier than frying. The new broilers are smokeless. Their burners are designed for the sole purpose of broiling. They increase efficiency,

cut broiling time and work in half.

The new gas range broilers have started

the modern trend toward broiling all sorts

CITIZENS GAS

AND CORE UTILITY

Our Salesrooms are open until 9 P. M. on Saturdays

THERE'S NOTHING LIKE GAS FOR

of foods—not just steaks and chops but also chicken, fish, vegetables and fruits. (Try broiling pineapple rings or sliced apples—

they're deliciously different.)

Examine modern gas ranges. Pay particular attention to the new, improved broilers. When you do, you'll know why so may housewives are trading in their old stoves

now on modern gas ranges.

Kasper Furniture Company Kirk Company Koch Furniture Company Charles Koehring

Vogel Brothers

Vonnegut Hardware Company

Wilson Furniture Company

BROILING=—Gas gives the intense heat needed to brown meat so fast that loss of juice is prevented. Full flavor is saved.

ROASTING—Gas gives you the oven ventilation which produces crisp, juicy roasts, Excess moisture is allowed to escape.

BAKING — Baking requires even heat throughout the oven and unlimited range of baking temperatures. Gas

gives both.

FRYING—Perfect, speedy frying requires instant high heat—even spread of heat under the skillet—=numberless heat variations. Gas gives all three.

Phone our Home Service Division for the

RECIPE OF THE WEEK

Doctors Say:

BROILED FOODS Are More Healthful

As you probably know, doctors and dietitians have always recommended broiling as one of the most healthful ways of cooking food.

And in Indianapolis most of the doctors “take their own medicine”. Neatly every doctor’s home here is equipped with a gas range . . . the type of cooking appliance that makes broiling easier,

faster and more convenient.

BOILING—Faster! Gas brings foods to a boil in 25 of the time or less of other fuels. More flexible.

WATERLESS COOKING—= Gas gives you the exact cone trol over your cooking heat you need for waterless cooks

ing.