Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 168, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 November 1934 — Page 4
PAGE 4
ROOSEVELT TVA VISIT IS SHOWN IN TIMES FILM Yale-Princeton. Navy-Pitt Games Also Feature Newsreel. President Roosevelt’s vast to the gigar/ie construction activities under way at Wheeler dam near
at Kay’s Now! The Amazing 1935 wwj Emerson Kadio A F'M ___— * .... - - - -■
The .Marvels f World-Wide Reception-Rich Krautv og Design F ~ I-idelitv <f l one aind l'erformancc—Outstanding Value / IHHBHHHHH ]Vtr I MOhO V Model (at Left) J? a JHrK ing circuit. Dynamic speak- „,. . , ort-a lk * and Lr a cl)lT.^l n om°e KO ITP Aprfin anp Amafaur and many oth>r advance feature.. w W ■MB ’u or performance and walnut cabinet with butt ■ ■ fell I Wpl rAlllalCUl Cabinet of straight grained walnut I %w * 9 nuk+nfwJiiwi uniiu. JHR ly - ML*. VT-'- ; ' n.• , All,. n , throughout. 17%* Inches high. Cm- #■ ■ outstanding vohie. walnut overlays and carved lß|f > orations—ln Addition to Regular plwe wUh * ca B.diotmn.. base. 21 inches high. Broadcast Programs PAY oyLY 75c EACH w EEK I pay osly $1.50 each })eek AC-DC EMERSOX Model (Above) 4-Tube Superheterodyne TJff’ ~HT Wt Kar Jewelry to. 01 Beautiful Bakelite cab- iY V ■ 9/lf Mr W W ■ ! inet—9' 4 in. wide. Com- 0 ' PAY OSLY 50c EACH WEEK •
Town Creek. Ala., is to be seen ir. the cufrer.t issue of The Indianapolis Times-Universal Newsreel, which has Graham McNamee. noted radio annonucer. as it* talking reporter. The President, accompanied by Mrs. Roosevelt, inspects the progress of the Tennessee valley development on a swing of the southland. Cheering multitudes greet the chief executive at every stop along the way. Other important events to be seen in the current reel include Yale s surprise football victory over Princeton: Navy’s defeat by Pittsburgh and Notre Dame's successful grid drive against Northwestern: submarines off the Pacific coast testing new machine-gun maneuv-
ers designed to ward off aircraft; Toronto's hockey victory over the New York Americana at Madison Square Garden; the strange ‘kidnaping’ case at Darien, Conn., in which three “suspects" were captured by police; the ruins of the old village of Santo Stefano. razed by fire; the colorful revival by 3.000 school children of the ancient Samurai sword dance at Yokohama, Japan; the remarkable feat of a man at Pine Bluff, Ark., who balances the entire weight of his body on his thumbs; firemen pumping tons of cleansing water on the federal Capitol at Wasington in its annual renovation, and the blueblooded does exhibited at a gala show presented by Kennel Club of Philadelphia, Pa.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
DRY SPELL TO END, WEATHER EXPERT SAYS Heavier Rains Again Will Be in Order in U. S., Is Forecast. Sjf United Prrt* WASHINGTON. Nov. 23—Last summer's drought is nothing to
worry about, climatically speaking, the weather bureau reported today. There probably won’t be another dry spell like it for thirty or forty years, the bureau indicated. The climate really hasn't changed much for years, W. R. Gregg, chief of the bureau, wrote Henry A. Wallace, secretary of agriculture, in his annual report. He said that while rainfall has shown a “marked tendency" to be lighter in the north, this condition has been counter-balanced by heavier rains in the south. Droughts and rainy seasons, he continued, are marked on the wreather bureau's charts over the years in long curves, with three or four decades of dry weather followed by
the same number of comparatively rainy years. He predicted tentatively therefore that the country may have reached the end of a long dry spell. “There is nothing at this time to indicate that history in this respect will not repeat itself with a return to another temporary period, not now predictable, when much heavier rains will again be the order of the day," he explained in the cautious language peculiar to the weather forecasting fraternity. He was more definite in asserting that “we now stand on the threshold of an era of real progress ’ in the making of reasonably accurate long-range weather forecasts.
MANUAL SENIOR EDITORS NAMED Editorial Staff Members Are Selected for Booster. Editorial staff members of the Manual high school January '35 Senior Booster were announced today by Samuel Gordon, editor-in-chief of the publication. Alex La-
NOV. 23, 1934
zar and Earle Wilson were selected as associate editors. Special feature writers to write | the class day, ivy day. class play and athletic accounts are Jdward i FYltchie. Mary Aldea, Hazel McI Carty and Frieda Greenwald. Glen Roth and Helen Pappas will act as art editors. Personals will j be taken care of by Ralph Baase, Herschell Duncan, Joseph Fogle. I Carl Haas. Max Harris, Evelyn I Spangler, Sophie Blase. Virginia Lyons. Rose Resnick and Iva Ruark. Belle Less and Edythe Hall will be typists for the publication. Miss Elizabeth Hodges is faculty editorial , advised and Miss Helen Haynes is faculty business advisor.
