Indianapolis Times, Volume 39, Number 285, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 March 1928 — Page 14
PAGE 14
UNCLE SAM IS AT TOP OF LIST OF EMPLOYERS Survey ShoVs Great Variety of Positions Paying up to SB,OOO. Uncle Sam’s civil service department, employing 500,000 men and women in the United States and possessions, is the greatest employer of labor in the world. The 1,200 classified civil service positions cover nearly every known occupation, ranging from messengers, ratcatchers and dairymen to medical officers, prohibition agents and postal workers. A recent announcement sought Junior biologists for investigation of cooperative campaigns for control cf rats and other injurious pests. Jobs Await Qualifiers Whether you want to be a nurse, mail carrier, stenographer, teacher, buffalo herder or lithographer. Uncle Sam can and will provide the position, if you can pass the examination.
Among the high-sounding openings announced recently are junior agronomist, animal husbandman, mycologist, nematoligist, pathologist, pomologist, aquatic biologist and occupational therapy aid. Duties of a buffalo hei-der or assistant buffalo keeper include making roundups, riding herd, capturing for shipment, winter feeding and slaughtering. Three years general ranch experience and three years experience as horseman in handling livestock on the open range is required. Need Men Stenographers The Government can’t get enough male stenographers despite frequent examinations. Miscellaneous openings include junior messenger for service at Washington, with salary ranging from S6OO to $750 and age limits of 36 to 20 years, superintendent of brick plant and guards for Government penitentiaries. Medical officers for the Panama Canal, coast and geodetic survey, public health service, Indian service, Veterans’ Bureau and other departments are needed. There is always a. shortage of dietitians, whose duties include purchase of food supplies for hospitals end preparation of menys and diets. Rigid Rules for Dairymen Openings for dairymen require two years practical experience and
a college course. Thirty thousand persons took examinations last year for the railway mail service, although there are only 22,280 positions in the servicewith few openings. One of the most popular positions seems to be prohibition service. Nineteen thousand would-be dry sleuths took the recent written examination, more than 6,300 passing to the oral and character tests, where many of them met stumbling blocks. There are only 2,433 positions in the service, 251 in Washington and 2,182 in the field service. Tay Reaches SB,OOO Civil service positions range in salary from a few hundred dollars to about $3,000 a year. Starting in a low position is no handicap. The present civil service commission includes two members who worked up from the ranks. A man now Interstate Commerce Commissioner began in 1908 as a $1,500 inspector. The present Governor of Alaska, with a salary of $7,000, started as a practical miner for the Government in 1903 at $1,320. The chief of the children's bureau, a woman, started as special agent in 1915 at $1,200 and now earns $5,200 a year. Information on the multiplicity of Government positions available may be obtained from Henry M. Trimpe, local civil service board secretary, on the fourth floor of the Federal building. Three Accused in Bombing HAMMOND, Ind., March 26. Harry Ames and Dean Malloy are imder $40,000 bond each today, charged with bombing the State Theater here Nov. 8, last. Other arrests are expected shortly.
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THIS HAS HAPPENED SALLY FORD is left at the State { o! phaiiace when she is t by a woman ! who savs shi is the child's mother, but who never returns. At Hi, Sally is ] "farmed out" to CLEM CARSON and cocs lo her new home with the status I of servant. Sally forgets her cares when j she meets DAVID NASH, handsome younsr student of scientific farming:, who is working: on the Carson farm for the summer. PEARL. Clem's daughter, hates Sallv | because David plainly prefers Sally to j her, and heaps insults on the defense- | less orphan. David asks Sally to go for j a walk with him so he can show h r how lovely the farm is bv moonlight. On a sudden impulse she tells him that Clem Carson has warned her to have nothing to do with David as he and Tearl arc practically engaged. David stoutly denies this and sees in Clem's remarks a scheme to unite his grandfather's place with the Carson -acres. As they talk nuictly they anc startled by Carson’s voice. NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY CHAPTER X DAVID and Sally had been sitting at the end of the corn- ! field, in plain sight of any one who ; cared to spy upon them. When Clem Carson's harsh bellow startled them out of their innocent confidences David jumped to his feet, offering a hand to Sally, who was trembling so that she could hardly stand. “Were not in the corn, Mr. Carson,” David called, his voice vibrating with indignation. ’’l'll have to ask you to apologize for what you said, sir. There’s no harm in two young people watching the moon rise at 10 o’clock." Carson came striding out of the corn. David, feet planted rather far apart. looked as if he were braced for attack, and the farmer, after an involuntary shrinking toward the shelter of the corn, advanced again, an apologetic smile on his brown face. "Reckon I spoke hasty,” he concede, "but Jim said he seen you two young ’uns sneakin’ off into the corn and it got my dander up. I'm responsible to the orphanage for Sally, and I don't aim to have her going back in disgrace. Better go back to the house, Sally, and go to bed, seeing as how you’ve got to be up at half-past 4 in the morning. You stay back a minute, Dave, I want to have a little talk with you.” “I’m taking Sally out to the house, Mr. Carson,” David said grimly. On the walk back to the house there was no opportunity for David to reassure the frightened, trembling girl, for Carson plowed doggedly • along behind them, as they walked single file between the rows! of corn. When they reached the! kitchen, where Mrs. Carson was i setting great pans of yeast bread | to rise on the back of the range, j Sally ran to the stairs, not pausing for a good-night. Ten or fifteen minutes later, while she was sitting on the edge of her j cot-bed, she heard David's firm | step on the back stairs, and knew that he had cut short the farmer’s “little talk” with him. of consequences she slipped out of her door, which she had left ajar, and crept along the dark hall to David’s door. He did not see her at first, for she was only a faint blur in the \ dark, but at her whispered "David!” he paused, his hand? groping for hers. !"It’s all right, honey,” he whis- I pored. "I told him pointblank if i he sent you back to the home I’d | leave, too. And that will hold him, | because he can’t do without me at this busy season. He couldn’t get another hand rig! , now for love or money, and he knows it. Go to sleep now, and don't worry.” The next morning at breakfast it was plainly evident that David had said one or two other things to Clem Carson, and that he in turn had passed them on to Pearl. For Pearl’s eyes bore traces of tears shed during the night, and the high color of anger burned in her plump cheeks. Carson’s anger and chagrin at losing all his hopes of David as a son-in-law and of acquiring. through his marriage to Pearl, the neighboring farm for liis daughter, expressed itself in heavy “joshing,” each word tipped with venom: “Well, well, how’s our Sally this morning? What do you know about this. Ma?—our little ‘Orphunt Annie’ is stepping out! Yes, sir, she ain’t leting no grass grow under her feet! Caught herself a feller, she has!”
| “Eat your breakfast, Clem, and let Sally alone,” Mrs. Carson commanded impatiently. “She’s old enough to have a feller if she wants one.” Tears of gratitude to the woman | she had thought so stern gushed into Sally’s eyes, so that she could not see to butter the hot biscuit she held in her shaking hands. “She's cut you out, Pearl, beat your time all hollow! And looking | as meek and mild as a Jersey heifer | all the time! I tell you, Ma, it takes these buttery-mouthed little angels to put over the liighjinks!” “I’m sure I wouldn’t have looked at a hired man,” Pearl cried an- ! grily, tossing Her head. “Sally’s | welcome to him. But I can't say I j admire his taste.” j Sally's eyes, drowned in tears, | fluttered toward David. I “Don’t you think you're going pretty far, Mr. Carson?” David asked abruptly. “No offense, no offense,” Caison protested hastily, with a chuckle that he meant to sound conciliatory. “I'm a man that likes his joke, and it does strike me as funny that a fine, upstanding college man like you, due to come into property some day, should cotton to a scared litTc rabbit of an orphan like Sal’y here—” "That'll do. Clem!” Mrs. Carson interrupted sharply. “Get ahead with your breakfast and clear out, all of you! Sally and me have got a big day's work ahead of us. Pearl, I want you to drive to Capital City for some more Mason jars for me. I’m all out.”
Later, when Sally was washing dishes. Pearl bounced into the kitchen," dressed for her trip to the city, her arms full of soiled white shoes, stockings and silk underwear. Sally, raking the suds from the dishpan off her arms and hands, accepted the pile of garments dumbly, but resentment gushed hot- ; ly in her throat. “I’ve got enough work laid out for Sally to keep her busy every minute today,” Mrs. Carson rebuked Pearl sharply. "Why can't you do your own cleaning. Pearl?” “Because I’ve got a luncheon date j and a matinee in town today and I need these things for tonight. I'm ] going to a party at the Mullins’ j Good by, Mom. Two dozen jars enough?” When Sally was again bent over ; the dishpan she heard the little old j grandmother's uncertain, quavering | voice: “It isn’t fair, Debbie, the way you j let Pearl run over Sally. She’s a! nice, polite-spoken little girl, the ! best worker I ever see.” “I know, Ma.” Mrs. Carson an- j swered in so kind a voice that fresh ; tears swam in Sally's eyes. “Pearl’s j been spoiled. But I’m too busy now to take it out of her. I wonder, Ma, j
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
| it you couldn’t rip up them other ! two dresses that Pearl give Sally? j The child really ain’t got a thing to wear. If you’ll just rip the seams, I’ll stitch ’em myself at night, if I ain't too tired.” Sally whirled from the dishpan, stooped swiftly and laid her lips for an instant upon Mrs. Carson's hand. Then, flushing vividly, she ran back to the kitchen sink, seized the big flour-sack dish towel and bejan to polish a glass with intense energy. Although Mrs. Carson made no comment on Sally’s shyness, the girl felt that from that moment the farmer’s wife was her friend, undcc'arcd, but staunch. Knowing that any day might prove to be her last on the farm, for Carson never let slip an opportunity to threaten her by innuendo with the disgrace of being sent back to the home, Sally found a ray of comfort in the fact that Grandma Carson, probably because she felt sorry for Sally, constantly hectored as she was by the jealous, vicioustongued Pearl, was slowly but surely completing the necessary alterations upon the other two dresses that Pearl had given her. The vague-eyed. kindly little old woman finished the alerattons on Saturday morning and Sally sped to her garret room with them, there to try them on and gloat over them. Then, her eyes darting now and then to the closed door, she hastily made a bundle of the three new dresses and hid it under the cornshuck mattress of her bed. Maybe it would be stealing to take the dresses if she had to run away, but she couldn't hope to escape in the orphanage uniform— Early Saturday afternoon Mrs. Carson announced that she had to go into the city to do some shopping. The farmer suggested that Pearl drive her in. since he himself was to be busy setting up the cider mill in a shack he had built at the foot of the lane, whero- it ran into the state highway.
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“And you might as well take the Dodge and let Ma and Benny go in with you. They haven’t seen a picture show for a month,” Carson suggested. The thought of seeing a movie overcame Sally’s timidity. “Would there be room for me, Mrs. Carson? I could help you with your shopping. help carry things—” “l don’t see why not,” Mrs. Carson answered. "I got a lot of trotting around to do and it's mighty hot—” “Mama, if she goes, I won’t go a step!” Pearl burst out shrilly. “I won’t have her tagging after us all afternoon, making eyes at every man that speaks to me!” “Pearl, Pearl, I'm afraid you're spoiled rotten!” Mrs. Carson shook her head sadly. “I'll bring you a pair of them fiber silk stockings, Sally, to wear to church tomorrow night with your flowered taffeta,” she offered brusquely, by way of consolation. When the car had swept down the lane and Sally was left alone in the house, she busied herself furiously in an effort to dissipate her loneliness and disappointment, and a fear that grew upon her with the realization that Carson had not accompanied his family to town The two hired men had left the farm for Capital City immediately after the noon meal, wages in their pockets, bent on an afternoon and evening of city pleasures. On the entire farm there was no one but herself, Carson and David. And
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where was David? If she needed him terribly, would he fail her? To Be Continued) Something happens in the next chapter, and Sally and David run away. Unused articles of furniture—dollar i that are marking time—sell with a want ad.
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Arrest Speeder After Chase After a chase, Leiut. Patrick O'Connor and squad of police arrested Harry Dunlap, 22, of 807 Lexington Ave., and charged him with speeding, driving while intoxicatd and failure to have a tail light on his car. Paul Henderson, 21, of 418 Harlan St„ and Ray Gordon, 24, of 552 Fletcher Ave., passengers in - the automobile, were charged with intoxication.
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