Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 April 1945 — Page 9
f
TUESDAY, APRIL 10,
Grapes Forgotten Fruif in
1945
7
Backyards of This Country
The Concord grape is probably isfactory.
the best known American grape, but, unfortunately, too few -gar-
"deners include this and other good grapes in their gardens. The grape
is the forgotten fruit. In the yards of this [i _a county. Grapes and ourrants are perhaps the only fruits which will ripen without a maximum of sunshine. Grapes can ‘be grown on many types of soil from light sand to heavy clay. They can be grown on
ck
Henry Pree trellises, arbors, along the boundary fence and on steep hillsidés, Vigorous varities, such as. Cone ¢ord and Niagara, should be spaced
10 feet apart in the row. Less vigorous varieties, like Delaware, may be set seven feet apart in the row. Rows should be about 10 feet apart: - - Weak Plants One-year No. 1 grade plants with a well-developed root system
” are most satisfactory for planting.
‘ named Edwin J. Dingle found the answers to these questions. A great
ed
Two-year plants are often unsate
——— aio——
[FOR Jewelry 11s Ta VELS] ‘Watch Repairing
10-DAY SERVICE! =
They may have been {weak plants the first year, reset and grown another year to obtain salable size, or else overgrown stock that does not plant as readily at well-grown one-year plants,
Plant as soon as possible after
| [nursery stock is received. If plants
arrive in somewhat -dry condition, they can be plumiped by soaking in water for several hours before
fi | planting or heeling-in, Prune roots f| only enough to cut away broken i] portions and ragged ends,
Top Cut Back Place and arrange roots well in hole, firmihg soil around and over them. Top is cut back after plant ing to two buds on best single stem, Fertilizer, at the rate of one-half pound per plant, should be worked into the soll prior to planting. An additional half pound may be apolied during mid-summer. The soil should be cultivated rather frequently, while a mulch extending two or three feet about each vine will help moiture and reduce growth. In selecting varieties be guided by your local county agricultural agent and select different types so that they will not all ripen at the same time. ~~
Leads All Varieties Concord is the standard blue grape and leads all other varieties |in acreage. It succeeds under.a | wide variety of soil and climatic | conditions. The vine is vigorous,
'§ hardy, highly productive and fairly
ROACHES
BED BUG
Use SHUR-DETH for Quick Results
Amott Exterminating Co.
{resistant to attacks of insects and
| diseases. » Fredonia is a blue grape with at[tractive bloom which ripens three | weeks before Concord. Portland is a high quality white grape which {ripens about three weeks before | Niagara. Worden is a high quality blue variety well adapted to home plantings. Golden Muscat is a yel{low hybrid grape whieh has many
lm ————pn mara...
~ 7
TEUR TUTILY PRIZE WINNER
Purdue’ University ‘Sponsor, of Drawing Contest.
Two Technical high school pupils were among prize winners in the annual high school drawing contest sponsored by the division of
ment. They are Robert F. Casse, who placed second in machine drawing, and Richard A. White, who took third place honors in drawing problem solutions. " » " A sale each month of one weasel, costing $4815, is the goal of Tech's [student affairs’ organization in con[nection with war bond and stamp |sales. The weasels will be named | “Spirit of Tech High Jr, 1; 23, 8, {etc.,”” as the army vehicles are pur [chase.
» » » Only 40 per cent of Technical high school pupils are eating the [right kind of. lunches, a survey Imade at the beginning of the se-| | mester revealed. |, To correct this, membefs of Miss | | Ruth Emhardt’s home economics II | | classes will give a series of three! lectures on: nutrition next week, | Newcomers will be ‘acquainted with [the victory lunch and trays in the |lunchreom will be checked for sta- | tistics to be compared with those of |the first campaign. | Seniors Learn to Dance | Technical seniors will have a dance class for the first time at the i 8chool this semester. | ‘Organized by Miss Leunice Horne, |classes will be supervised by Miss] | Mabel McHugh and Miss Mary Mc- | Oracken, physical education instruc tors, during the 10th class period in the girls’ gymnasium. | Yvonne Akers is chairman of the student, committee with Harry Mann [and Paul Reams, assistants. a ae Extensive training in payroll work
\ WASHINGTON, April
Technical Institutes in co-operation || with the Purdue drawing depari-
characteristics of the European type will be given Tech pupils in ma[grape. It is suggested only for trial chine calculatipn II classes. Com-
249 Mass. Ave. LI. 7458 |
Why P
{for home and roadside markets in| putations on regular and overtime | those seasons where the growing earnings under typical wage agree-
season is long.
ment conditions will be made,
rayers Alone
Did Not Stop Hitler
Millions of people daily practice | mediation, prayer, and other spiritual exercises. For | many years, people of good will have been praying for the over-|
bones, near blindness, privation and
new thought | danger had made a human wreck of |
him, physically and mentally. He was about to be sent back to England to die, when a strange message came—"They are waiting
HONOR STUDENTS SCHEDULE BANQUET
New members of the National Honor society at Broad Ripple high [school will be received at a banquet
By NED BROOKS . Scripps-Moward Staff Writer 10.—The | Veterans Administration has prepared its budgets on the assumption |
that its guarantee of loans to exservicemen will approach the bil. lion-dollar mark by July .1, 1946. Its record “of loan making to date, however, in#8 dicates that the ® volume will fall far short of that estimate. The administration has calculated that 226,000 veterans will avail themselves of loans by June i 30, end of the ocurrent fiscal Mr. Brooks year. It places the average guarantee at $1260, making the total government liability $281,250,000. Yet with only three months to go, loans thus far executed for buying homes, farms and businesses are fewer than 2600 and only about 800
- _ THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES — vets" Administration Behina17§
unprocessed applications are pending. Commitments are less than $3,000,000. . Fewer than 15000 veterans have been issued certificates of eligibility, the first step in the intricate process of qualifying for the government guarantee provided by the G. I. bill of tights, Estimates Uncertain During the fiscal year beginning July 1 the Veterans Administration has estimated 525,000 more borrowers will qualify for guarantees totaling $666,250,000. Volume of business thus blueprinted would reach $937,500,000 by July 1, 1946, and the number of benefited veterans would be 750,000. Some veterans, officials point out, would receive more than one loan; the total number of loans to the 750,000 men is estimated at 857,000. The Veterans Administration has conceded to congress that these figures are only “guestimates.” Many Misunderstandings Congress, however, has accepted the estimates as authentic, appro-
er
printing $11,350,000 for interest and the “reasonable normal value as fe Mas made an original .loan, . or $7,082,560 for losses on its guaran. termined by proper appraisal” | 3
. [guaranteed or insured one, a vets tees. Under the-O, I. bill the Vet. | Most property, authorities agree, ran iy Tre mo eh guar erans. Administration pays the tirst (0% Se an Pelee |
Se
| and the Veterans Administration is 8nteed in its entirety by the vets | year's arent on the portioy, of ‘the prohibited from approving guaran- erans administration, provided the loan for which it assumes responsi- tees if it'adheres to the letter of the amo bility. “THé agency itself lends no law and insists on “normal” hood iii not (oest $2000 or money but guarantees 50 per cent of | parm land in particular is high |... Per cut of Ye Overall privately made loans up to a maxi-|anq few desirable properties are on [purchase price. ; mum liability of $2000. the market, agriculture department Under this system it is possible Misunderstandings of the G. I.|officials say. -| for a veteran ‘to start buying a bill provisions, the mass of paper Reflecting this situation, Veterans home with no down payment. The work required to close a transaction | 5 yministration records show that|Federal Housing Administration can and prevaliing economic conditions only 18 farm loans have been ap- insure the first loan and a second
have combined to hold the volume hroved. Similarly, only 50 loans Mortgage’ can be covered by the of loans to its present low level.
Many congressmen have concluded |
nesses. With some modifications, similar that loan privileges of the law have Mostly for Homes transactions are possible In rh been oversold and that government The G. 1. bill has been law for Purchases under the Jones-Bank-
publicity has led many veterans to| . oo oc ona regulations cover. ead: form tenancy act.
{believe that loans were theirs almost | for the asking. {ing farm and business loans have
|been in force three months. PLANS ALL-DAY MEET Farm Land High Most of the loans closed to date! Corinthian auxiliary, O. E. 8. has One restriction of the law which have been for buying homes and an all-day meeting tomorrow .at is certain to hold down the number some authorities believe this cate- Evergreen hall. Hostesses will be of approved loans is the provision gory will be the only one of meas- Betty Irvin, Ida Gritton, Mary { barring the govefnment guarantee |urable benefit to veterans. Home Mitchell, Sally Hearn. Esther News {in deals where the purchase price of |loans to date total about 2400. {born and Lora Keeley. New mems ia home, farm or business exceeds! In cases where a feferal agency! bers are invited. ?
and special induction ceremony { April 20 at the school. : | Betty McKinley, president of the| | organization, will be mistress of! ceremonies. Miss Elizabeth Roberts, | faculty sponsor, will act as regent
throw of Hitler, Hirohito and what | top you in Tibet.” He wants to tell | of honor.
they stand for. Why has the answer Leen so long delayed? Why do| 80 many other prayers remain unanswered? Why does calamity often | befall us in spite of our prayers?
Tibét, behind the highest mountains | in the world, a young Englishman
mystic opened his eyes. A great)
there under the guidance of the greatest mystic he ever encountered during his 21 years in the Far East.
gh He wants everyone to experience Thirty years ago; in Forbidden | 1 greater health and the Power, |
which there came to him. Within 10 years, he was able to retire to this country with .a for. tune. He has been honored by fellowships in the World's leading
change came over him. He realized |
the strange Power that Knowledge gives. . That Power, he says, can transform the life of anyone, Questions, whatevef they are, can be answered. The problems of health, death, poverty and ‘wrong, ean be solved. In his ewn case, he was brought back te splendid health. He acquired
wealth, too, a8 well as world-wide
professional recognidon. Thirty years ago, he was sick as & man could be and live. Once his coffin .was bought. Years of almost continuous tropical fevers, broken
geological societies, for his work as a geographer. And today, 30 years later, he is still 80 athletic, capable of" so much work, so young in ape pearance, it is hard to belleve he has ‘lived so long.
bg «#F As a first step in their progress
gives, Mr. Dingle wants to send to readers of this notice a 9,000-word treatise. It is free. For your free copy, send your name and address to the Institute of Mentalphysics, 213 South Hobart Blvd. Dept. R-162, Los Angeles 4, Cal. Write proniptly.
“YOLA VIN RELIEVED ME OF GAS BLOATING AND
5
MRS. PEACOCK
Mrs. Georgia Peacock, Cambridge City, Ind, Says Fast-Aoting “Natural” Medicine Also Relieved Her Daughter of Stomach Distress and Constipation,
If you've been unable to find relef from gas bloat, aches and pains, or.other miseries caused by faulty elimination, by all means try the
marvelously successful “patural” medicine, Vola-Vin. Mrs. Georgia Peacock says:
“Yola-Vin Mas Regulated My
Bowels . . . Improved My Sleep” |"
“Vola-Vin relieved me of awful gas’ bloating and torturing backaches. It has also regulated my bowels, improved my sleep, and has
' given me much more energy. I am
giving Vola-Vin to my, high-school daughter, too. Recently she was
bothered with stomach trouble and1
constipation, and Vola-Vin has relieved both conditions. I certainly can recommend this fine medicine.”
vag y Vola-Vin Depen
and by Other Leading Druggists i
~~ TORTURING BACKACHES”
DO YOU NEED VOLAVIN?
Check your symptoms on this chart. If you have no organic or systemic ailment, yet suffer from any of these common miseries, your trouble Is most likely due to faulty slimination— and Vola-Vin can bring you fast relief.
[) Night: Rising
[C] Bloating Gas [J Sour Stomach [2 Low Energy J Indigestion [2 Poor Sleep CJ Dizzy Spells ~~ [CJ Muscle Aches 2) Batkache [2] Leg Pains C1 Headaches [2 Low Spirits
Helps Nature Work RIGHT! Vola-Vin is made from the juices {of 12 natural herbs. Long famous |for their health-giving properties, these fine ingredients are now combined in ONE remarkably effective medicine. Taken as directed. Vola-| Vin has brought relief to countless sufferers from bloating gas, consti-| pation, muscular pains, upset liver, night-1ising, low energy, and other non-organie, non-systemic {ills where due to faulty elimination. Yet this famous medicine costs only a few cents a day! A special Vola-Vin representative is now at Hook's Drug Store at Illinois and Washington streets, Indianapolis, Ind. Here he Is iIntroducing and explaining the.properties of the “naturally made” VolaVin compound. Vola-Vin Is ‘rec ommended and sold by leading druggists, and endorsed by count. less grateful users. Help yourself to health. Start today by buying
is Sold by All
dable Drug Stores
toward the Power. that. MROWIedEe(
a bottle of fast-acting: Vols-Vin.| New low price, $1.10, or 3 for $3.00.)
{the whole world what he learned | Representing the four characters
{istics of the society will be Paul] | MeCloud, service; Philip Neff, schol- | |arship; Jacqueline Oakes, leader- | |ship, and Betty Roesti, charagter. [Edgar Stahl, Broad Ripple vice president, “will be the "torchbearer in the ceremonies. . 8 ” The annual Pan-American ball will be held by the Broad Ripple high school Spanish club at 3:45 p. m. April 19 in the school cafeteria, : ’ . Jackie Jenner will be general chairman, assisted by .Jack Hanley, ‘decorations; Joe Hayes, entertains ment; Pabricia Rothhaas, refreshments; Pauline Steinhilber and Nancy Lake, tickets, and LeCarda Johnson and Marilyn Kimberlin, publicity,
Ration Calendar:
MEAT—Red stamps T6 through X5 good through April 28; Yb and Zb and A2 through D2 good through June 2. E2 through J3. are valid through June 30. K2 through P2 are valid through July 31. Meat dealers will pay two red points and 4 cents for each pound of waste fat,
SUGAR-Stamp 35 valid for five pounds through June 3. Another stamp will become valid May 1.
CANNED GOODBS-Blue stamps C2 through G2 good through April 28; H2 through M2 are good through | June 2. N2 through 82 are valid | through June 30, T2 through X2| are valid through July 31.
GASOLINE-A-15- coupons good for four gallons each through June 21, B6 and B7 and C6 and O17 are good for five gallons; E2 and E3 each good for one gallon; R2 and R3 each good for five gallons.
SHOES—No. 1, No. 2 and Nb, 3 “airplane” stamps in Book 3 good indefinitely.
FUEL OIL—Periods 1 through § of 1044-45 heating season good.- Ap proximately 87 per cent of fuel ofl supply should be used as of March 26.
TIRES-—Commercial vehicle tire fnspection every six months or every 5000 miles.
{ money [ LOANED
Quiekly, Confidentlally No Red Tape
On Diamonds, Watches » Jewelry, Radios " Musical Instruments " Cameras, Shotguns n Anything “sw
-We Buy DIAMONDS, WATCHES, JEWELRY!
Lineal
Aust Vs Libro 201 W. Washington, $1,
glans
Inc, Indianapolls, Ind.) Vin ; Sr : }
J Cor. Capitel Ave. and Wash. St.
HANDSOME!
WASHABLE!
Boys’ SLACKS
For rugged times on the baseball field, carefree back-yard games or in the victory garden, these carefully made slack sets will be sturdy standbys! " shirts and pleated front slacks to match. Tan shade in sizes 2 to 12. ]
Short sleeve, crew neck, knitted polo shirts with colorful all-around stripes. Small, medium and large sizes.
Rugged herringbone weave in green shade! Protective bib front for the sand pile constructors! Sanforized. Fast.color. 3 to 5.
1.98
Bturdy washable cotton slacks
“washing. Popular; blue cut sizes 4 to 18.
TTL
and snug!
. nayy and red. Sises 9 to 10.
PENNEY’S—Downstairs Store,
ve 18 ¥
Hep For Summer Timel
Girls’ Colorful ANKLETS
| Pair De
Popular coarse gauge anklets that fit trim ° Comfortable cuff tops so practical and cool for summer activities! Fine mers cerized heel and toe to bring gitls extra wear in every single pair! White, maize, copen, rose,
for work or play-days! “Well
made and neatly finished to give extra wear all summer long! Every pair is sanforized shrank to allow better fit after or brown shades, hard‘to soil! Full .
VIN HEADS
Sugar
cooler sheer color treatme
3 to 6x
“Miss Prep” elastic waist
GIRLS' FAST COLOR Cotton Dresses
A select group of crisp new cotton dresses in fine count percales or
every mother will find joy in tubbing!
Rayon Panties
All reinforced. Dainty tearose shade in sizes 2 to 14.
WASHABLE
Slack Sets
FOR ON-THEGO BOYS! ~~ JB
2.68
Sanforized shrunk
PENNEY'S—Downstairs Store.
Jr. Boys’ Polo Shirts o vi 8 59
Boys’ Cotton Jimmies
1%?
PENNEY’S—Downstairs Store
Snappy Sport Shirts
> Cool colors of blue, tan or green. Helping in ‘the viétory garden or at summer - games boys will like the ay-back collars énd shoit sleeves. Sizes 8 to 18.
PENNEY'S—Downstairs Store.
a > ! 2 \ . . - a ih hak ERS :
mr OVARY | | gus 19 vout¥ wipe fe
»
pavARTERS
AV
Ti
s 15. YOUT
and Spice—Pretty and Nice!
1.00
fabrics! A flower garden of dainty patterns in sestful nts to delight every little Darling! Wonderful washables All carefully made in sizes
PENNEY’S—8econd Floor
Rayon Blouses
2.98
Tailored multicolor stripes or snowy white rayons, high at the neckline with-a frilly front. Pre cisely styled and neatly finished. Sizes T to- 16.
29°
panties with half and french leg.
The Short Story Favorite for Summer! Girls’ GABARDINE SHORTS
Girls' want several pair of useful shorts for - y summer! These favorites are cool, comfortable
and so smart In’ trim tailored gabardine snd
'have been approved for buying busi- | veterans administration guarantee.
"a
twill. Navy, brown or white in sizes 1 to 16. © | FENNEYS—Ssont: Floor
LJ
