Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 284, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 April 1933 — Page 16
PAGE 16
LOST ARTICLES NUMEROUS AT CITY LIBRARY Assorted Collection Is Amassed Daily at Closing Time. Traditional forgetfulness of college profesors who wind the cat and put out the clock" at bedtime, apparently has its counterpart among patrons of the Indianapolis public library. Closing time at the main library invariably results in collection of a varied assortment of articles left by absent-minded readers, most of which are called for in a few days, but some of which are left in hands of the library staff until the semiannual cleaning out. "If we kept all the articles left here in a year, we would have enough to start a second-hand store,” one member of the staff said. Umbrellas rank at the top of the list of forgotten articles, followed closely by scarfs. Mild Scandal Created Articles frequently turned over to the library lost and found department include bracelets, manuscripts, fountain pens, automatic pencils, overnight bags, brief cases, galoshes, keys, knives, reading glasses, children’s coats and playthings, compacts, jackets, spectacles and gloves. A mild scandal v,as created one day recently when some ladies’ lingerie was found in a dark nook of one of the library's reading rooms. The lingerie was new, and still bore the store tag. Ladies hosiery, men’s overcoats, two swimming suits, a package of men's collars, a salesman’s sample case and belts are among the odd articles turned over to the lost and j found department recently. Most! of these have been claimed by their j owners. Even books are left at the library, j including fiction, text and school j books. Many Articles Await Owner Among the articles awaiting owners is a somewhat bedraggled- j looking doll which plaintively wails “mama” when it is picked up. Others include a dozen boys’ caps, a leather helmet, scarfs, gloves, an apron, towel, soap, kodak pictures.! reading glass, pocket knife, pair of; spectacles, fountain pens, pencils,! key cases, art prints from a magazine, notebooks, pencils and brooches. Most purses found are returned easily because of identification through letters, cards or other notations inside. Librarians report that the number of articles forgotten by library patrons is much smaller now than it was a few' years ago. "Maybe it’s the depression and people have learned to be more careful of their things now because they are harder to get,” one of them commented. SAVE MONEY; buy good used furniture; see classification 35 on j the Want Ad page.
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Let’s Explore Your Mind BY OR ALBERT EDWARD WTGGAM, D Sc.
y\- — 16 it TRUE THAT MOfeT 1 GEN lU6E6 WERE 6LCW TOM ~ ‘ J AND BACKWARD A6 CHILDREN") •60W.ET I +2- —— N - WONDER ; cfl flj DOES A \ v m f knowledge cp . _ ' -(\ * JB| k PSYCHOLOGY x /'n—/L | iiHr i Iv|plj /jjj \\'' v . //J\ OTHERS? do NOT PARENTS BY THEIR ATTITUDES y./\ TOWARD EACH OTHER OFTEN DEVELOP . /yfJ A ISA -'W&m in their children antagonism,that V ;(// A \jj ■£ 7¥ioS m RE&ULT IN UFE-LON6 HANDICAP6P \-L-. M rWrflaitt-Ijit YBane
1. Dr. Paul Popenoe, biologist, and director of the Institute of Family Relations of Los Angeles, has studied this matter and says, “Thomas Edison usually was at the foot of his class, and one teacher called him “addled.” Charles Darwin was considered dull. The poet Goldsmith's teacher said that he was the dullest boy that ever lived. The mother of David Hume, the philosopher said, “Our Davie is uncommon weak-minded.” Many other great geniuses have been considered dull but they w'ere not. They either were brighter than their teachers and parents, or else were not interested in their school studies. No really dull boy ever became a genius. 2. Yes, if it is real, scientific psychology and not mystical nonsense of which there is just now’ an avalanche. Dr, H. L. Hollingworth, former president of the American Psychological Association, says in his book, Abnormal Psychology”: “The practical personal value of a knowledge of abnoi-mal psychology in dealing with people
PLAN SUMMER SCHOOL Butler Registration for Classes Will Be Held June 12 and 13. Registration for the summer session of Butler university wil be held June 12 and 13 and classes will open June 14, it is showm in the 1933-1934 calendar announced today by Dr. Ray C. Friesner, chairman of the schedule committee. For the of the regular term, special examinations will be held Sept. 16; registration, Sept. 18 and 19, and classes wdll begin Sept. 20. Registration for the second semester will be held Feb. 5 and classes will open Feb. 6.
YBBTJB scarcely can be exaggerated . . . There are few families that do not contain eccentric, neurotic, dull, perverse, unstable, or psychotic members or relatives, and few individuals who do not have abnormal moments . . . The one single thing w r e can do about all abnormality is to understand it . . . To understand it usually solves half the problems.” 3. Yes, because for years a child's entire world is furnished by his parents. Their friendships, antagonisms, loves, hates, ideals become his basis for judg ng all other people. Psychologists in our nursery schools find that children even come wuth the food aversions of their parents, such as dislike of fish, or milk etc. Yet these expert teachers often can connect these antagonisms in three days. I saw a boy who vomited at the sight of milk—his mother had scolded him for not drinking it—yet within week the boy had become a "heavy drinker” —of milk. The same happens with emotional and moral, antagonisms.
HOUSE GIFT TO SCOUTS Home Show Structure Will Be ReErected at Reservation. The housing problem for scoutmasters at the Indianapolis Boy j Scout reservation has been solved by a gift by the Indianapolis Horne Show. The new home for scoutmasters will be the Holiday house, one of three structures being featured in the 1933 Home Show at the fairgrounds. At the close of the show, April 29, the materials used in constructing the house will be taken down and re-erected at the reservation. PREDICTS SEA FLIGHTS Sikorsky, Famed Plane Builder, Expects Regular Trips in Five Years. By United Press STRATFORD, Conn, April 7. Igor I. Sikorsky, famous designer and builder of airplanes, has no doubt that planes will ply a regular passenger schedule between the United States and Europe within five years, but he does not believe the route will be in the stratosphere. To fly in the stratosphere, Sikorsky pointed out, the planes would have to be hermitically sealed. Sikrosky believes luxurious and roomy planes, speeding at 200 miles i and hour, will form the basis for | the inter-continental passenger | routes. Planes now being manufactured have attained Pullman-like luxury, he says. BARLEY GROWERS UNITE Montana Farmers Plan Co-opera-tive Market for Beer's Arrival. By 1 nited Press HELENA, Mont., April 7.—A domestic market for approximately 500.000 bushels of malting barley will be created in Montana through | legalization of 3.2 per cent beer, farm leaders estimate. This will require extensive new | planting of malting varieties, since | a majority of barley raised in Montana has been of feeding types, | used in fattening livestock. Nine breweries, which once em-1 ployed 250 men and produced 325,- ! 890 barrels of brew per year are | ready to resume operations, and j will depend on Montana farmers | to supply them with malt barley. ' PHONE TO HOLY LAND New Service to Palestine Is Opened by Indiana Bell Company. Telephone service to Palestine ; and the Holy Land was opened to-; day by the Indiana Bell Telephone Company. Messages will be transmitted to r ondon by the regular trans-Atlan- j -c channels and thence to Cairo, j 3gypt, by short wave stations. Jer-' usalem, Haifa and Jaffa will be | served by land wires. A three-minute conversation from all points ip Indiana will cost $40.50.
NOW Riley 7373 A FAMILY WASHING As Low As 51c PROGRESS LAUNDRY
NOTICE: Durinr 1933 the following low prices will |>re\all on Mayer's tine WATCH REPAIRING M\ IN >I’RINGS , _ SJt.ll 1 '" QQ r >TAI l'S i/V WATCH HANDS, 15c All Matches Taken Apart M hen ('leaned. Not Hipped. Me do only first-class work! ""MaWIEK*"*1 Jru rlei / ,-i—----42 W WASHINGTON
me: INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
MANY PROJECTS ARE GOMPLETED BY‘MADE WORK’ Labor Is Confined to Tasks That Otherwise Could Not Be Done. Useful labor performed by men reporting to the emergency work committee had mounted to 5.166 123 hours of service in the last 121 weeks since the plan was started, it was announced today by George Gill, director. Anew peak was reached in the week ending March 25 when 6.909 men reported for work. Os these, 5,819 were from Center township. Nearly half of the hours ol work performed by these men was under supervision of the Indianapolis park department, where they have been engaged in cleaning and preparing parks, playgrounds and golf links for opening of the summer season. The men work two days a week in return for food baskets. Other governmental departments using large number of emergency w'ork committee men include the Marion county highway department,
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city street commissioner, sanitary J department, school board, hospitals, 1 Sunnyside sanatorium and others. Among the work performed by these men which could not have been done otherwise, is the protecting of school children at dangerous intersections, cleaning and beautifying of 70 acres of the Indiana university medical center, building of the new Coffin golf course and extension of Pleasant run boulevard. They also have cleaned the Tom- j linson hall basement, collected ashes which work would have been greatly j handicapped without their services because of lack of funds, cleaned city dumps and developed munici- j pai airport. COPS FIND GOLD HOARD Secreted Wealth Discovered During Search for Opium. By United Pros BAKERSFIELD. Cal.. April 7. Police raiding a Chinese residence here in a search for opium, uncovered a hoard of $1,500 in gold coins, hidden in a stove. Women of Family, 948 Pounds By I nited Press TYLER. Tex.. April 7—There are only five members fall women) in the Bickley family, but it's the largest family in Smith county. Their aggregate weight is 948 pounds, or an average of more than 189 pounds each.
GIRL, 14, SHOT; POLICE SEARCH MINERSJOMES Fifty Put Under Arrest in Hunt for Gunmen in Illinois Town. By ? hit f and Prcs * DU QUOIN, 111.. April 7.—Perry county officers raided the homes of fifty Progressive mine union leaders today and took half a hundred men into custody in hunt for the gunmen who fired on the home of Deputy Vernon Miller and critically wounded his daughter, Laverne. 14. The girl is not expected to live. She was shot in the right lung as she sat in her home studying. Witnesses said a carload of gunmen spsd down the street firing at the homes of Raymond Weingart. president of the United Mine Workers union local, mine guard Glenn Canada, and the Miller home. The city was put under virtual martial iaw as raiding squads hunted for the assailants. More than 100 special deputy sheriffs and state highway police armed with
MOSES IS REPORTER
I l mi J, A Aim George Moses By Times Special CHICAGO. April 7.—Former Senator George Moses of New Hampshire, who coined the phrase, “Wild Jackasses." referring to progressives in the senate, has become a newspaper reporter. He will be stationed in Washington as a member of the foreign news staff of the Chicago Daily News. shotguns and machine guns started a house to house search for the gunmen.
.APRIL 7, 1933
TORNADO SCENES IN CURRENT NEWS REEL Wreck of Express Also Is. Shown in Film. Thousands of families made hompless by a devastating tornado sweeping three southern states; the wreck of the crack Pennsylvania express train, carrying the Boston Red Sox , baseball team; and the dedica' ert of Cincinnati's $41,000,000 railway terminal are among the in the current Indianapolis Times-* Universal Newsreel. Graham MeNamee. ace of radio announcers and the screen's most popular talking reporter. vividly describes the events shown in the reel. The newsreel’s latest release also furnished thrilling and spectacular events from California, Illinois, Great Britain and Washington, D. C. Important pictures from the v nation's capital show President ! Roosevelt being heartily welcomed by newspaper men of the country as he joins the press club. In Court 74 Times By l nited Press CAMBRIDGE. Mass.. April 7 Antonia Ferriara. 48. made his i seventy-fourth appearance in court, when he was give na two-and-a-half-to-three-year jail term here recently.
