Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive

The Culver Citizen from Culver, Indiana • Page 5

Location:
Culver, Indiana
Issue Date:
Page:
5
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 7, 1928 THE CULVER CITIZEN. PAGE FIVE TOBEY and TYKE Built to Travel 200 Miles an Hour By REDNER WWifc 0)rSV. NOV) KJwacst VYW SSNTT NOV) PsrTCK7V)0! WW rA LALffla Here is the Bluebird, Captain Malcolm Camobell'a new English rin Qn. wonders." which is coming to America in an effort to establish a new speed reco'rd at Dartona Beach on w.v.vuo. uiv tavc.

me oiucohu i ceniiy iraveiea 187 miles an hour a wet beach- in England. The present auto speed record is 203.79 miles per hour. They're Opposed to Third Terms CHAINS FOR THE BORER! Mao Jb- aa)W Everett Marsha, baritone and youngest male singer with the Metropolitan Opera Company, is enthusiastic about the musical possibilities of the violiphon a combined violin and horn invented by a Swiss musical instrument maker which recently made its appearance in this country. The new instrument increases the volume of the violin, yet retains the CuU wood tone of that instrument. I iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiin SHOP irou WHEN uWv- I 0 i 22U For years farmers hare attached heavy chains, as in this photograph, to plows to get trash well plowed under.

The practice la especially useful now, the U. S. Department of Agriculture says, in order to bury larvae of the European corn borer which winter over in cornstalks. Long wires properly attached to the plow will do the same thing. These three senators are opposed to third terms not for senators, but for presidents.

Senator Robert L. La Follette of Wisconsin (center), whose bill against the third presidential term was adopted by the Senate, is shown with two of his able supporters'. Senator George W. Norris of Nebraska and Senator Pat Harrison of Mississippi. EGGS A LA GOLDEXROD Hard-cooked eggs are made as Put eggs into boiling water RECIPES FOR THE WEEK and keep hot (but not boiling) 20 minutes.

Eggs cooked in this way ETHER it's for a shoe 1 are better than when boiled. Allow one egg per person for a generous serving. Remove shells and cut into halves lengthwise; cut each half into four lengthwise strips. Over a piece of well-buttered hot toast, pour a hot medium cream sauce 1 cup Cream s-hortening, add 1 cupful sugar gradually, creaming mixture thoroughly. Beat eggs until light, add the other cupful of sugar to the eggs, mixing well.

Add this egg mixture to the creamed shortening and sugar and beat hard. Sift flour once, measure, add baking powder, add salt and sift three times. Then add to the first mixture, alternating with the sour milk, beating batter hard after each addition of flour'and milk. Into the boiling water stir the soda and the melTed chocolate or cocoa, and beat into the cake mixture. Add vanilla.

Bake in three layers in a moderate oven (325 F. Spread a white icing between the layers and on top and sides of cake. PRIZE DEVIIS FOOD 1-2 cupful butter or substitute. 2 cupsful light brown sugar 2 eggs 2 1-4 cupsful prepared cake flour 1-4 teaspoonful salt 1-2 cupful sour milk 1-2 cupful boiling water 1 teaspoonful soda 1 1-2 squares chocolate, melted (or 1-2 cupful cocoa). 1 teaspoonful vanilla 1 teaspoonful baking powder milk to 2 tablespoons flour and 2 tablespoons butter.

Arrange strips of egg white in circle (like petals). Force the egg yolk through a fine sieve and place in mound in centre. Peas may be added. Garnish with parsley. "East Is East and West Is West, But Ednionston 's Mayor Is a Little of Each lace or five tons of coal- buy from the firms that advertise in the CULVER CITIZEN.

IN so doing you will support the merchants jj who take the lead in community progress and who try constantly to make Culver a better place in which to live. For the merchant who is a leader, pro- gressive and a booster is usually a consistent adver- tiser. They go hand in hand. THE advertiser is the man who is trying to attract more trade to Culver and do his share in helping Culver grow, instead of taking all he can out of the community and sitting back with his jg hands folded. OVE laughs at almost anything.

including parental squawks, exclusion laws and solemn warnings about "east is east and west is west." Passing over all these obstacles. a Japanese-American romance pro-. Mm 4k it -pM vV-V -4wj4 moved finally to East Hyattsville, where they died. Meanwhile, Kinjiro had married an American girl. Four years ago, Edmonston, tired of paying all its taxes to the county, cut itself off from East Hyattsville and obtained a charter as a separate township.

Matsudaira was a leader in the separation movement. Edmonston jelected mayors named McQuinn, James and Mc-Leod. Meanwhile Matsudaira had been elected to the town council for two years. Edmonston has two wards. Ward One and Ward Two, and Matsudaira represented one of them.

"I usually ran for mayor when the other candidate had no opposition, so my election was more or less by accident," says Matsudaira. McLeod ran for re-election on a platform calling for new streets and bridges' which would have made us borrow $50,000 ahd put us In debt. "My platform was for improve; ments within the reach of the peo pie." So. in the election this summer, Matsudaira beat McLeod. He hopes for new improvements, including at least one bridge, and he wants a community stadium, but he also wants to keep the taxes down.

Thus, he is having his troubles like any other mayor, but Edmonston likes him. He's a registered Democrat. Edmonston has but 1100 citizens, so his mayoral duties are not arduous. Matsudaira, who Is an official in a large Washington department store, has always maintained that he would rather be a citizen of Maryland than anything one might suggest in Japan. He is 42 years old.

has been here 27 years and has never once felt the call of the east. He has three children, Haru Caroline. Ellen and Robert Ford Matsudaira two girls and a boy. iO every week read the advertisements of duced a future mayor of Edmons-ton. which explains why the town's present mayor bears the unusual name of Kinjiro Matsudaira.

He is the son of Tada Atsu Matsudaira. who came from Japan with his brother. Tada Nori, to attend Rutgers College in New Brunswick. N. nearly.

50 years ago. Tada Atsu and Tada Nori were heirs to wealth and title. Behind them in Japan they left much land and much to which Tada Nori later returned. Tada Atsu took a civil engineering course. He expected to go back to Japan, too.

But William Sampson, a bookseller and stationer operating near the college campus, had a beautiful daughter named Carrie, and after Tada Atsu had become well acquainted, the Matsudaira family's plans to "marry Tada Atsu to a Japanese girl were ruined. He married the booksellers beautiful daughter, and his family kept its promise to disinherit him if he did. The young Japanese continued his studies" at Harvard' and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, while his brother went back to take over viscount's title and the family domain. He made a good engineer, working first on the Manhattan Elevated lines in New York and helping out in the building of Brooklyn bridge. While he.

engineered for an oil firm at Bradford, his second son. the future mayor of Edmons-ton. was He helped survey the Union Pacific railroad and became assistant engineer at Denver. Later, while working for Colorado Bureau of Mines, he was regarded as one of the best engineers ever employed by the Kinjiro Matsudaira, mayor of Edmonston, whose Japanese father was disinherited for marrying the girl of his American college days. state.

He had gone to Denver and taken these positions only because his failing health demanded it, however, and he died in Denver and was buried in Riverside cemetery. The Japanese Society of Denver, undertaking to identify the grave two years ago, reported that here was the rightful heir to the crown of the lord, of Daimyo, for Tada Nori had "died and the father, having lost track of Tada Atsu had adopted another son as his heir. AH this, however, meant nothing to the future mayor of Edmonston. who refused to return to Japan. Little Kinjiro, on his father's death, was sent to Mrs.

Mfctsu-daira's parents in Virginia: They these live merchants, see what they have to say to you, learn who they are, and go to their stores to g' trade. By so doing you are helping boost the town and increase the community's prosperity. Read the Advertisements Every Week in THE CULVER CITIZEN Iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiir.

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

About The Culver Citizen Archive

Pages Available:
34,932
Years Available:
1903-1964