Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 June 1944 — Page 3

we

ol summer robe, masculine way. e robes add up colors, stripes,

maroon, brown

00—10.00 9520.00 S0--14.530

\

h maroon, 10.00 tripe. .....7.95

sevessees]10.95

ng, Second Floor

asad

Here s Gi

inch high.

Remove iss flowers as soon as they have faded, do not permit any of them to go to seed. German Iris may be dug up, divided and planted soon after they have finished blooming. Be sure to

7b-Be of Advice

For ror Your Plants

BY HENRY L. PREE Scripps-Howard Staff Writer

Keep ahead of the weeds by getting at them before they are an

fertilize the soil before replanting.

Peony foilage must not be cut until it has yellowed and wilted

in early sutumn, A feeding with i

a 4-12-4 mixture will greatly improve the plant © and insure beti ter blooms next spring. Tulip and narcissus foilage must not be cut until it has turned brown and wilt ed. Tulip bulbs then may be lifted and stored until planted again in November, but narcissus bulbs should be (if replanting is planned) placed in their new location at once. Hollyhocks, phlox, delphinium, and other plants affected by mildew and rust should be dusted frequently with fine sulphur. Fertilize the asparagus bed, after the last cuttings have been made, with a liberal top dressing of well rotted manure or Victory Garden fertilizer. , Potatoes must be dusted or sprayed every 10 days with bordeaux mixture. Include calcium arsenate if flea beeties and Colorado potato beetles are bad. Tomatoes can be grown with. out dusting or spraying, but be on the lookout for disease and insects. Dusting with cryolite, dutox or rotenone will control flea beetles, while fixed copper helps prevent leaf spot in wet weather. The best control for the big green

GOLF OUTING ARRANGED Members. of the Indianapolis Traffic club will have a golf outing

the Silver Fleet Motor Express, sell.” winners. Part of the proceeds will/in the picture, bers of the club wha are in service.|

STRAUSS SAYS: ..

After fertilizing and cultivating | between vegetable rows, wash plant food into soil by watering slowly, with hose placed on beard to distribute water and prevent erosion.

worm is to pick off and destroy him.

Protect your cabbages, peppers and tomatoes from cutworms by sprinkling a peison bait about the plants. Beans are given splendid protection by dusting or spraying with a rotenone sulfur mixture. Dust cucumbers lightly with cryolite, dutox or rotenone until the runners are 10 to 12 inches long, then change to fixed coppertale - calciuth arsenate mixture, sold as a commercial dust. Aphisinfested plants should be sprayed at once with nicotine-sulfate in soapy water. Side-dressing of Victory Garden fertilizer should be worked into the soil along the vegetable rows. Use nitrate of soda or other sources of nitrogen only for lettuce, spinach and other leafy crops.

June 28, 1944

WARTIME LIVING—

Many New Sources Found For Spices to Supply U. S.

By ANN STEVICK { NEA Staff Writer i WASHINGTON, June 28.—History is repeating itself in the spice trade, experts say, with U. 8S, cooks having a wartime spice hey-day. Spice brokers are expecting, however, that peacetime appetites will also follow previous trends and go back to bland foods. That may lead to a campaign to find new uses for spice in U. 8s.

menus. wartime sources to replace ship- | ments from enemy-held terri tories. Many new sources have turned out so

kept up after supplies from old sources get

going this way ‘again.

Pepper came mostly from Java, Sumatra, and Formosa, but {t now comes here from the West Indies. and Austria used to supply most of this country’s mustard seed. Now western states are more than making up for lost foreign supplies,

Ann Stevick

Crops Increased

Nutmeg, mace and ginger which formerly came across the world now come via the short West Indian run. Thyme, sage and herbs came from the Mediterranean area. Wartime developments have increased Mexican and South American crops to take care of this country's demands. Experts predict that chili will continue its wartime boom after the war. Thousands of army trainees are picking up the taste for this product of Mexican sage in Southwest training camps. Nothing much can be done now about regulating the cost of penicilin at civilian hospital. The drug is so new that costs of making it vary widely, but office of price administration announces that civilian costs are expected to come down closer to the low prices paid by U. S. government for its supplies. . . . Your cleaning service may be less hard-up for supplies in the next few months. Some types of solvents are being given out in greater quantities as military demands decline,

Masons fo Open New G. I. Center

“QG. 1. PARADISE,” new recreational center on the south lawn of the Masonic Service center, will be officially dedicated Saturday at 8 p. m. Sponsored by the Indiana Grand Lodge of Masons, headed by Julian T. Lett of Marion, the center will offer archery, Rowing: darts, croquet, horseshoes, punching bag, a basketball ery tice beard, softball, and a miniature golf course. A tent will house

facllities for reading, writing and | way gasoline at filling station A.

a snack-bar, Mrs. Nina G. Sims will have charge of the snack-bar aided by the 1944 Victory club, Young East-

~ ern Star members will ‘act as

dancing partners for the service men.

MRS, GALLUP TO SPEAK

< Mrs. Marian F. Gallup, superintendent of the Indiana Women's

prison, will address the Association

of Retired Railway Employees on

the subject of “Women ‘in Trouble”

at 2 p. m. Manday in the Big Four building. *

i ————————— FINDS RING LOST FOUR YEARS JAMESTOWN, N. Y., June 28 (U.

P—Bmest L. Lawson wore a 5 Ppy expression yesterday as well diamond ring which

well they are | likely to be |

{ the Christian Youth be given by the ycung people of {the Downey {church the lawn of Hilton U. idence, 5087 E. Washington st. iceeds will be used to send delegates

Enterprising globe-trotters of the spice trade have found new

PLAY TO BE GIVEN

BY CHURGH GROUP

An outdoor play sponsored b council will

Avenue Christian Wednesday on Brown's resPro-

next

{to the Disciples of Christ confer{ence at Bethany Park in July.

Holland | { Crazy.”

“Who Wouldn't Be and di-

The play, is in three acts

[rected by Mr. and Mrs. H. H. Arn-

holter. {Smith are in charge. | Earl Davis have charge of stage | properties, Mr. and Mrs. L. E. Mee-!

Mr. and Mrs. Willard J. Mr. and Mrs

{han have charge of ticket sales,

|

{and Mrs. Duke E. Hanna will have {charge of programs.

In the cast are Donald H. Payne,

Ronald Roach, Ruth Audry Mee- | {han,

Kenneth E. Boles, Juanita |

| Davis, Betty McClintic, Robert C.|

| Bennett, Jane Gossom, Muriel Meehan, | Gosson, Patricia Stutz, Allen Smith, {Albert Arnholter, Thomas Dyer and {Herbert Barnard.

Joan Bruckman, Ruth Ann |

| 0. E. S. UNIT MEETS TODAY | A stated meeting of Nettie Rans- |

ford chapter No. 404, O. E. S,, will | be at 8 p. m. today.in the Prather | Masonic temple, 424 st. until September. is matron and Ray N. Howard is patron.

‘College ave. at

This is the last meeting | Mrs. Vera Cones

Ration Calendar

(sugar should send

MEAT-—Red stamps A8 through

W3 in Book 4 good indefinitely for 10 points each.

CANNED GOODS—Blue stamps

A8 through V8 in Book 4 good in. definitely for 10 points each.

SUGAR—Stamps 30, 31 and 32 In

Book 4 are good indefinitely for § pounds. Stamp 40 in Book 4 good for 5 pounds of canning sugar.

Applicants applying for canning in one spare

| stamp 37, attached to the application for each applicant.

_GASOLINE—Stamp A-12 is good

for 3 gallons and exples Sept. 21.

'B3 and C3 and B4 and C4 good for

|5 gallons. T good for 5 gallons

| through June 30, E and. El good

for 1 gallon; R and Rl not valid at filling stations but consumer may exchange R for E at his local board {if he wishes to purchase non-high-

B.C. D and T coupons are not valid until they have been indorsed tn ink

or pencil with autcmobile registra.

tion number and state Motorists should write 1944 numbers on book and coupons. FUEL OIL—Period 4 and 5 soupons valid through Sept. 30. Al chéngemaking coupons and reserve

coupons are now good.

TIRES— Inspection on passenger

automobiles discontinued. Commer-

ciai vehicle tire inspection every six

months or every 5000 miles. Inspection certificates still will be a requisite in obtaining replacement tires

B card holders are now eligible for

grade 1 tires if they can prove extreme necessity. All ‘A holders are eligible for grade 3 tires, including factory seconds. if they find tires he found | which | backyard.

local recruiting office will appear on oy is Shire), stage of the Tndiana theater at off will be supervised by J. C./8:20 p. m. today in connection Nichols, chairman of the golf com-|with the opening of the motion mittee, and a trophy, donated by|picture ~The Stary of Doctor Was: | Lt. Cmdr. B.

IT'S

‘rays of the sun!

Red Cross blood bank. A group of WAVES will also be present to tell of the need for women in their branch of the service. on the program are

Ga., and |

ONE DAY

not the Immortal Scotch Poet—but Bob (Robin) Burns of Radio

( That's what comes from listening to Robert Burns—meaning fame—who has a grandpappy named Snazzy—or some such name )

CLOTHES that are surely smart —tor Shore wear—to decorate the Sands—to knife through the water—to receive the glowing tonic

THEY SURE ARE SMART— for general outdoor wear, for an active life or a casual one!

TT Decorcted Sailors to Aid Blood Donor Drive Here

A group of navy men from the [to ald the drive for donors to the

Coxswain Robert Heaps of Taft, Cal, who was in 16 major actions

CONCERT IS SCHEDULED ‘Barbara Wilghiy,

A concert by the Indianapolis News Diane Willams, Janet

in 17 months on a destroyer in the | Meridian sts. playground at 8 p. m.

Pacific. Mrs. Mary L. Pierce, local commander of the Navy Mothers clubs,

Fog Ha ast Li K. Rust, a former will be given an award from Cecil! ne o e sailors Indianapolis pediatrician; Chief |B. DeMille by Lt. Cmdr. W. Inc., will be awarded to one of the have served in capacities portrayed Pharmacist’'s Mate Leonard Henry! Chapman Jr, navy recruiting of- | and each has re- of Columbus, Pharmacist’s be used to buy presents for mem-! ceived the presidential unit citation. | |1-c Ross Betner of Indiana The purpose of the appearance is Robert Miller of Jakin,

done by the Navy Mothers clubs.

NEARER

Junior Dramatic club. The Hilton U. Brown post of the American Legion will be in charge

A. {of appropriate flag ceremonies.

The Junior Dramatic club host-| man

land Sadelle Camhi, Betty Jo and!

VICTORY

|today will be sponsored by the

and Nina Logsdon and Betty Clare

Lukenbill,

at a card party given by the m.

Mated | cer for Indiana. The award is esses will be Bella and Daisy) cast of Sahara Grotto at 8:30 p. polis and | {being made to recognize the work | Eskenazi, Marlene Aroesti, Sylvia| tomorrow in the grotto home, 4107

E. Washington st.

if

CIELLA JERSEY PLAY DRESSES—(the "heavenly

Jersey'}—gorgeous prints at 14.95

N JUMPER DRESSES— in considerable selection, a featured group at 7.98

SHORTS— Particularly

appealing are the whites of gabardines and

twills—2.50

-AND a knockout short of glo-twill white—with double pleat front and back at 5.98—

SLACKS of various fabrics

o +. variously priced

SLACK SUITS—Californta sends some Butcher Rayons—in eye-arresting

shades—saddle stitched, 10.98

BRAS—adjustable—at 2.00

SUSPENDER SHORTS—

“PALM BEACH” sends slack

suits—in white, natural

some particularly effective and blue—finely tailored numbers from California high-bred in lines and at 3.50 and 4.00 detail, 22.50 T SHIRTS—in a nice series ANKLETS and Fooflets. of sipse 31 and 1.50 and choice and select

ZiPEzE pay Y oREsses—

A £ 7 i Be: