Indianapolis Times, Volume 34, Number 103, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 September 1921 — Page 9
NAME LEADERS IN FOUNDATION IN 27 STATES Organization to Perpetuate Woodrow Wilson’s Ideals. NEW YORK, Sept. 9.—Twenty-seven States are now organizing to promote the successful endowment of the Woodrow Wilson Foundation, according to a statement of Franklin D. Roosevelt, national chairman of the undertaking to perpetuate the former President's ideals of democracy and human freedom. “We are particularly pleased with tha interest shown in this undertaking by American women, who are organizing jointly with the men.” Mr. Roosevelt said. “This was expected, in a sense, however, since the idea of perpetuating Mr. Wilson’s ideals by means of a foundation wag, first. conceived by woman.’’ The following list of State chairmen was announced: Frank P. Glass, formerly United States Senator for Alabama : A. H. Favour, editor of the Prescott Courier, for Arizona ; John L. Barnett, for Colorado; Prof. Irving Fisher of Yale I'nlverslty, for Connecticut: Robert W. Wooley of the Interstate Commerce Commission, for the District of Columbia: John C. Cooper, Jr., of Jacksonville, for Florida; P. A. Stovall, formerly minister to Switzerland, for Georgia: James H. Hawley, formerly Governor of Idaho, for Idaho; Jouett Shouss, formerly assistant Secretary of the Treasury, for Kansas: Robert W. Bingham, publisher of rhe LouisTille Courier-Journal, for Kentucky; James Hamilton I.ewis, formerly United States Senator, for Illinois; Edwin T. Meredith, formerly Secretary of Agriculture, for Iowa: Judge Charles F. Johnson of the United States Circuit Court, for Maine; Oscar Newton, for Mississippi: Tom Stout, formerly Congressman. for Montana: William F. Baxter, for Nebraska; .fudge Thomas G. Haight of the United States Circuit Court of Appeals, for New Jersey : Summers Burkhart of Albuquerque. United States attorney, for New Mexico: Newton D. Baker, formerly Secretary of War, for Ohio; Judge Charles B. Ames of Oklahoma City, for Oklahoma: Samuel Jackson, publisher of the Portland Journal, for Oregon; Ronald S. Morirs. formerly ambassador to Japan, for Pennsylvania: Richard Comstock, for Rhode Islnd; R. Goodwin Rhett, formerly president of the United States Chamber of Commerce, for South Carolina; Edwin S. Johnson, formerly United States Senator, for South Dakota: John Spargo, author and lecturer, for Vermont: United States Senator Carter Glass, for Virginia; Karl Matbie. for Wisconsin: T. C. Diers, State food administrator, for Wyoming; Mrs. E. D. Christian of the Democratic National Committee, for Washington. These chairmen, Mr. Roosevelt said, assume leadership in their several States of the movement to raise an endowment fund, the income from which would bo used to grant the Woodrow Wilson Awards comparable in significance to the Nobel Awards. The awards will be granted for “meritorious service to de-
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mocraoy, public welfare, liberal thought or peace through Justice.’’ National headquarter# for th* Foundation have been established at 150 Nassau street. New York. Hamilton Holt, editor of the Independent, is executive director. MANAGER NAMED FOR NEWBRANCH Fletcher Savings and Trust Cos. Outlines Plans. Herbert Wedewen, for several years a member of the forye of tellers at the Fletcher Savings and Trust Company, has just been named branch manager for the new branch the downtown trust company is establishing at Rural and East Washington streets. The new branch is to be opened for business about Oct. 1, in a building specially constructed by the trust company cn ground just south of the Lucretia Mott School No. 3. The branch Is the fifth to be opened by the trust company in various parts of Indianapolis within a year. Other changes in the trust company personnel at Its branches were announced today by Evaus Woollen, president of the company. Homer Bowers, another toller at the downtown offices, has been named assistant manager of the West Indianapolis braneh at 1233 Oliver avenue. Evans Woollen Jr. is .the manager at this branch. Real estate, rental and insurance departments have been established at the Thirtieth street branch, at Thirtieth and Illinois streets, and at the West Indianapolis branch Charles Maxwell, for many years attached to the real estate department of the trust company, is the new manager of the real estate department at the Thirtieth street branch, and Robert Hackley, a real estate man of West Indianapolis, is the new manager pf that department at the West Indianapolis branch.
SEEKING MARKET FOR WAR SALVAGE Special to Indiana Dally Times and Philadelphia Public Ledger. WASHINGTON, Sept. 9.—Sale of War Department salvage, material purchased ly the Government during the war, out declared surplus since, is rapidly nearing the $1,500,000,000 mark. The Treasury was enriched to the extent of sl,599,000 by sales completed lass week, John W. Weeks, Secretary of War. has announced, and the total returned to the taxpayer through material sold since the armistice is now $1,456,846,000. The War Department still has on hand munitions of war and goods of other character worth between one and two billion dollars, for which it would like to find a market. It faces just the same proposition now that any commercial house does, In that markets are hard to find. They are especially hard to find when In search of some place to dispose of $600,000,000 worth of ammunition, the amount that the United States has on band as the result of contracts placed during the war.—Copyright, 1921, by Public Ledger Cos.
Crew That Missed Drink in Brest to Be Rewarded Forced to Go onto Scotland With Thirst Unslaked, Sailors Did Gallant Work.
Special to Indiana Dally Times and Philadelphia Public Ledger. PHILADELPHIA, Sept. 9.—Tbe relationship of hooch to heroism, of sausage to salvage, what is it? The sturdy crew of the good ship West Isleta, with their belta full of the last and what was inside their belts lately full of the first, can tell you, messmates, if any one can. The salvage end of the story is late and up to date, but the hooch and heroism part dates back to last New Year's Eve, when a thirty crew and a prohibition captain lay off Brest. The crew had been looking forward to a fitting celebration, but the captain. S. E. Hansen by name, had no sympathy with those aspirations. It was a Shipping Board vessel, and whatever his private desires may have been his expression of them was grim. He looked in their expectant faces and said: “My gallant crew, good morning. I hope you're all quite well?” “Quite well; and you, sir?” responded the crew, who were thoroughly up in the libretto of Pinafore. “I a—' In tolerable health.” replied the captain, but there he diverged from the libretto long enough to add, “and In order to keep you so I hereby ston all shore leave.” Wherewith, smiling still more grimly, he turned on his heel and traveled gft and below, leaving ? speechless crew behind him. There was no mutiny, but there was s hasty council, and the upshot was that the cook was pitched on as the secret messenger of the Vehmegerioht. It was his Job to foil events, to make real the duel of wits between the cook and the captain bold. COOK’S .JOB WAS TOO MUCH FOR HIM. Somewhere near the shore was a temporarily abandoned boat, abandoned because Its crew was ashore celebrating the advent of 1921. though, considering taxes and the cost of living, there appears no special reason why they should. It was to be the cook's task to slip Into the icy waters, stripped to the skin, and, with a knife, which was lashed to his waist, cut loose the boat, bring it alongside at the dead of night and let the crew, or so many of them as were not prohibitionists, desert the good ship West Isleta and search Brest for hooch The scheme would have worked all right If it had not been for an unexpected circumstance. The ’ey waters turned out to be cold.
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INDIANA DAILY TIMES, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 1921
That was something the cook had not counted up.a when he first put his uniform off. He stood It as long as he could and t.ien yelled for help. A kindly disposed French revenue cutter heard the uproar Ls was making in the harbor and pun*.! him in. Finding him cold and Indeed Icy. the kindly Frenchman poured cognac into him until he became the only member of the West Isleta's crew who caD be said In any true sense to have celebrated New Year's Eve. Then they asked him for bis story, and when they got it ttey became pained and disgusted. They took him up to the West Isleta. and Inserting a tarry hahd or Iwo in the back of hls ueck and others In the slack of his breeches—thia is metaphor, for bis breeches were where he left them—they hurled him, with unerring aim, back whence he came. Hls reception by the crew of the Wet Isleta was cold, not to say Icy. It was a frigid night for the cook, all except that memory which nothing could take from him, the memory of that heaven-sent cog-
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nac that made Now Year’s Eve a holiday for a moment. Next morning the ship was on her way to Glasgow, with the glummest craw, the sourest cook and the most gleeful captain on the seven seas. On the way a Danish vessel, the Uffe, came Into sight with a lost propeller and frantic signals. The West Isleta gloomily annexed her and took her Into Glasgow, where shore leave could not be withheld and where the crew
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assembled Into Its midst as much Haig and Haig and Bass as would makeup for the lost cognac of Brest, and then'began all over again to celebrate their entry into Glasgow. The captain got them together ultimately and uneasily and took them across the ocean to the Inhospitable port of Boston, which they gloomed over considerably until the owners sent them out again to the Pacific, The shtlp touched at Galveston.
where the captain received the news that the shipping board had declared the salvage of the Uffe to be "the most meritorious salvage service rendered by any shipping board vessel,” and at Savannah came the news that the crew were to be made fat with salvage meney. The cook gets his, of course. So does the captain, which the crew cannot help regarding as just a bit unjust. But after all, what’s the odds? Salvage and sousage, hooch and
heroism; the motto of the good bhlp West Isleta. Stranger cruise had no vessel since canoes began.—Copyright, 1921, by Public Ledger Company. OBKEGON HELP* NEW SHOT*. MEXICO .CITY,. Sept. *—President Obregon has Instructed the Treasury Department to expend 226,000 pesoe la building a home for newsboys in the Santa Julia colony.
