Indianapolis Times, Volume 41, Number 23, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 June 1929 — Page 24
PAGE 24
NEW DATA TO BE GATHERED WITH CENSUS Number of Unemployed and Indigent Poor Will Be Determined. By f ri'nrr f r i(•< WASHINGTON. June' 7 - nveasingy valuable sociological information us lihely to be gathered during the course of the talcing of the census in 1930 and succeeding census years. Though so far as the 1930 census is concerned, there arc not so many new questions to be asked, nevertheless it seems probable tha* ’Studies oi unemployment and ol sthe indigent poor, at least, will be 'made. I It is expected that information will be gathered during the course of the taking of the census whicU twill show the number of men 4nd .women in the United States more than 65 years of age who possess less than $5,000. or less annual income than is usually derived from & $5,000 investment. Will Show Institutions Tt is expected also to show the number of such persons living in institutions for the aged. In addition to the unemployment studies and a tabulation of the aged [lndigent to be taken in connection with the 1930 census, the census bureau of the department of commerce reports that a tabulation will be made of all veterans of all wars. Furthermore, since an agricultural census is* made every two years, the present one will be made bv regular census workers in connection With the 1930 census. Another line of inquiry which may be included is a complete census of distribution. Made in Cities Such a census was made in 1926 Jn a few large cities .such as Chicago. Kansas City, Syracuse. Denver and Atlanta. The. subjects on which statistics were gathered included complete inventories of all retail establishments.
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Aids in Relief
Mrs. Jessie Wilson Sayre, daughter of the late President Woodrow Wilson, has been active recently in charity work for the Far East Relief. She is pictured above at her home in Cambridge, Mass.
volume of retail sales by all kinds of businessnessl sales per capita, number of inhabitants per store, employes in retail distribution, their salaries and the relation of their salaries to sales, and the same subjects as applied to wholesale distribution.
ANCIENT INDIAN PUEBLO FOUND Prehistoric Tower Located in Colorado. Bn Bri'tf* DENVER June 7.—Discovery of a type of architectural plan used by
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Pueblo Indians more than a thousand years ago and never before noted by scientists has been reported by Paul S. Martin, of the State Historical Society of Colorado. The architectural arrangement was discovered during excavations of an Indian ruin in Montezuma county on the Ed Herrin farm. It consists of a round tower and a round underground ceremonial chamber built some feet apart, but linked secretly underground by a narrow plastered tunnel which
spread out at one point to form a lit*le subterranean room. It may be imagined that when the Pueblo was occupied in prehistoric times, the men of the Indian clan gathered in the mysterious atmosphere of the ceremonial chamber for special rites and that the priests used the adjoining underground passage and round tower for various mystifying purposes—dis-
C- yV-. / \ . .ju—vwv ffjlt Dare, as she was photographed .at the famous Bal de !a Couture in the Paris Opera, where she was the guest of the Worths. Exponent of the Modern Mode J World's Salons of fashion I DARE— Fashion Ooimselloi’ Extraordinaire of the Women of America —writes and illustrates her nationally famous daily column on style and dress for the women readers of The Indianapolis Times. Interpreting the mode and everything of interest to woman, Dare’s daily articles and sketches are of unusual interest to , all who would be “Lovely Ladies,” and who are interested in the modern trends of the mode. Dare Interprets the Mode is read by ten million women readers from coast to coast. Thousands of women depend on her expert advice and intimate counsel. Dare’s original style suggestions present the solution for all perplexing problems in personal adornment. Starting Monday, June 10 Read "Dare Interprets the Mode ” and k?ep step with style —. Appearing exclusively every day in The Indianapolis Tin ies
tant voices, changes of costume, and sudden appearances out of the darkness. The Indians sitting around the ceremonial fire may have been unaware of the underground passage, since the more customary entrance to a ceremonial chamber of this sort was by way of a hole in the roof.
HAY DRYER INVENTED Machine Poes Nature’s Work of Weeks in Few Minutes. fit/ T'nitf-4 /’rr, GENESEE. Wis.. June 7 —Arthur W. Koon has nearly completed work here on an invention with which he expects to shorten the normal
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: period of time required to dry hay. Koon s machine, which is 2<X) feet ! long and fifty feet high to accommodate large quantities of hay. is | expected to complete in two minutP3 I the hay-drying process that takes : nature several weeks. Aside from additional speed h drying the hay the new- device it ! said to retain the original green colot 1 in the forage.
