Indianapolis Times, Volume 48, Number 35, Indianapolis, Marion County, 21 April 1936 — Page 9
APKIL 21, 1036
BUREAU LEADER CLAIMS CRITICS ARE INACCURATE Farm Group Official Says Foes Statements Are Exaggerated. Hassil Schenck, Indiana Farm Bureau, Inc. vice president, today charged that exaggerated and inaccurate statements have been made in criticism of Farm Bureau sponsored agricultural legislation. Untrue statements, he said, have been made about imports of agricultural commodities, and the cause has been laid at the door of the bureau. He said: "While these importations were greater in 1935 than in 1932, the to'al value of our agricultural imports during the last fiscal year amounted to less than one billion dollars. The past 10-year average was one and two-thirds billions, and the last 20-year average was one and three-quarter billion dollars. "In practically every instance, the total volume of our princi-tl competitive agricultural imports during the last fiscal year constituted a small percentage of the total domestic consumption, amounting to four-tenths of 1 per cent in the case of cattle, butter, 1.4 per cent; cheese. 13.9 per cent; beef, 1.5 per cent; hay, one-tenth of 1 per cent; barley, 4 per cent; corn, 8 per cent; oats. 1.2 per cent, and wheat, 2.8 per cent.
Decrease Is Shown "In 1920, agricultural imports amounted to $3,410,000,000. However, there was a gradual decrease until the low ebb of $612,000,000 was reached in 1933. There has been an increase in both 1934 and 1935, totalling $969,000,000 last year. It is to be noticed that as farm prices in this country become lower, agricultural imports diminished and as prices of agricultural commodities became higher, imports increased. In general, low prices discourage imports, high prices encourage imports. “Regardless of the amount oi any farm commodity which we produce, if the price is high in this country it is to be expected that foreign nations will seek our market,” stated Mr. Schenck. "Legislation in the last session of Congress gives the Executive Department of our government the authority to place quotas on amounts of agricultural commodities coming to our shores. It is the duty of the Farm Bureau to see that farmers have a fair deal under this legislation.” OFFICIALS TO WATCH SCHOOLBOOK EXPENSE Sta.e Superintendent Urges Care in Text Acquirements. Careful attention to keeping down schoolbook expenses is urged by Floyd I. McMurray, state superintendent of public instruction, in a letter to superintendents and other school executives. Following recent adoption of new texts by the state board of education, Mr. McMurray’s letter points out that superintendents and teachers throughout the state should use discretion in making demands for additional supplementary material. He also announced the board has decided that children already owning two-grade texts in English, hygiene and Wealth, physiology and hygiene, elementary American history and elementary home economics may continue to use them next year to complete the course. SHOW IS TO BE GIVEN Carlile Dance Studio to Present Entertainment Tonight. A program of music, comedy and floor show by the Carlile Dance Studios is to be presented by the Marion County Recreation Bureau at 8 tonight in the Knights of Pythis Hall. 612 E. 13th-st. Performers are to include Maxine and Dorothy Christie, Violet Sexson, Elsie Lou Martin, Wyoma Cochran, Marjorie Boyer. Betty Grizzell, Bobby Quackenbush and Jac and Dot, adagio dancers. Veteran’s Body Is Found LAFAYETTE, April 21.—The body of Walter W. Randall, 56, SpanishAmeriean War veteran, missing for several weeks from the United States Veterans’ Home at Marion, was found yesterday on the banks of the Wabash River seven miles south of here.
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CHrt&Mrws BY LAURA LOU BROOKMAN © ** nea Sw*o, U
Brow HERE TODAY Tohr Brat), in. I* photographic model, poking for photograph* to he o*ed in adTertUrment*. fnknown at first, *he it fhoicn at ’’Tht Hillyer Soap Girl.” Toby share* an apartment with HarRiet Holm, another model, engaged to marry Clyde Sabin, whom Toby distrust*. Wealthy Tim Jamieson shower* Toby with attentions for a time and then seem* to forget her. Toby's aldest friend ta Rill Brandt. advertising salesman. She is fond of Bill, but has never thought of him romantically. Jay Hillyer, president of the Hillyer Soap Company, tee* Toby posing for some photographs. He takes her to dinner and later she baa frrquent engagements with him. Clyde Sabin marriea a wealthy widow, and Harriet, heart-broken, attempta suicide. She recover* and later goes to the country for a rest. Toby goes to dinner with Hillyer and he tells her about his youthful marriage, his wife’s death, and his recent discovery that he has a daughter. NOW GO ON WITH THE STOR^ CHAPTER THIRTY-FIVE TOBY’S eyes searched Hillyer’s. "You mean ” she said, “that it’s someone I know? She’s your daughter, and you've only just found out about it? She doesn’t know It. either?” "No,” Hillyer said, “she doesn’t know either. I suppose it will be a shock to her.” He smiled. "How do you suppose she’s going to take it? What do you think of me as a father, anyhow? Think I’ll make the grade?” "I don’t know why not. I think you’d make a wonderful father.” He was silent a moment, his eyes directly on hers. “Do you really mean that, Toby?” "I certainly do. But where is she. and when am I going to see her? I’m terribly excited about all this. Did you say I know her 9” "Yes, you know her. Very well. I’ll tell you her name a little later. You’ve heard my life story, Toby—or most of it. The rest can be jtold in a few words. Since there seemed to be nothing else to do, I went to work to make money. The Hillyer Soap Cos. was a small concern when my father owned it; I’ve made it bigger. u "IJUT we’ve been talking about my -D affairs all evening. Now won't you tell me about yourself?” She smiled. "There's nothing to tell. You know that I used to live with my aunt in Jackson Heights. When she died I had to leave school and start earning a living—” "But your parents. What about them?” "I don’t know much about them,” Toby said soberly. “I wish I did. Aunt Gen never seemed to want to talk about them. I've wondered so many times what my mother was like and wished that I knew someone who used to know her. It’s strange, isn't it: her name was Mary, too. It was a pretty name. I think— Mary Fern.” "Avery pretty name,” Hillyer i agreed. "And what about your i father?” “All I know about him is that he was Aunt Gen’s brother. My father and mother both died when I was so small I don’t remember anything about them at all. I have a picture of my mother, though. It’s in a locket.” "A picture?” Hillyer asked. From a pocket he took an old-fashioned, yellow gold watch and snapped the case open. He held it toward Toby. "Was the picture,” he said, "like this?” an tt WHY— why—!” She stared up at him. That’s my mother's picture,” she exclaimed. "Where did you get it?” Her hand lay on the table. Hillyer covered it .with his own. “She gave it to me,” he said gently. (Paid Political Advertisement.) Vayne M. (Army) Armstrong for STATE SENATOR Subject to the REPUBLICAN Primary May 5, 1936. BALLOT 24
“Toby, my dear, your aunt evidently didn’t want you to know the truth about your parents. She changed the story. Don’t you understand what I’ve been trying all evening to tell you? Yoip-e the daughter I’ve found Toby. You!” .‘‘l’m—l'm your daughter?” "Yes, Toby. I’ve had detectives at work for weeks—ever since I first suspected the truth. They’ve pieced together the whole story; all the legal documents are in my office. Toby, you said a while ago that you wouldn't mind having me for a father. Do you still mean it?” She could not speak—not for a few moments. She was smiling, yet her eyes were filled with tears. “My father!” she said, almost in a whisper. "My own, real father —!” Hillyer drew out a handkerchief ai\d sneezed. His eyes, too, were suddenly suspiciously moist. "And my Toby,” he added. "But how did you know? How did you ever find me? Oh, I want to know all about it—?” a a * SHE had to hear the whole story, then, from the beginning. And the beginning when a dozen photographs were, laid on Jay Hillyer’s desk—photographs of models’ from whom the "Hillyer Soap Girl” was, to be selected. “It wasn’t your photograph—not at first—that decided the question,” he told her. "It was your name. I was curious about a girl whose name was Toby. You see, it happens to be my name. Jay T. Hillyer. The T. is for Tobias and it was my grandfather's name. "I was ‘Toby’ as a boy and that is what your mother called me. Later when I went into business I thought Jay was more dignified so I took to using it instead. It’s the name I’ve used for 20 years how. "Your mother gave you my name, and it was that that led to my finding you. Your mother—and my Mary—bringing us together, dear, after all these years. You see, your aunt misled you when she said you were her brother's child. “I suppose she did it because she thought, as she had said so often, that the annulled marriage was a disgrace. She didn’t want any connection with the Hillyer name, so she called you Toby Ryan. Your mother’s name was Mary Fern— Mary Fern Ryan. That was before I changed it to Mary Fern Hillyer. "There’s a record of your christening among the papers I’ve gotten together. I’ll get them all out and show them to you in a day or so. a a u •‘■T'vO you remember the afterI 1 noon I walked into Duryea’s studio when you were posing for a photograph? You had on a blue dress with a long, full skirt and ruffles. You can’t imagine the shock it gave me. “Your mother wore a dress like that years ago. Oh, I suppose you would see differences, but the dress ; you wore looked to me exactly like your mother’s. You looked amazingly like her. “I asked you to have dinner with me that night. After I’d talked to you, I made up my mind that I hac. to know more about it. I had to find out who you were and where you came from. "Next morning I got in touch with a private detective agency and put them to work. They pieced back the facts—but it took time. You see, trying to find your mother, I had no clews to work with, but tracing your story was simpler. After a while when we were able to put the two stories together,
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
BY LAURA LOU BROOKMAN $ 1916 NGA Servk*, fa*
the jig-saw puzzle began to show a pattern.” * # a ** A ND all this time,” Toby said reproachfully, "you've known and never even given me a hint!” "How could I until I was sure? That’s why I went away on this trip. To establish the truth of the last link in the proof. I was able to do that.” Toby shook her head. “You can’t know what It means to me,” she said. “To have a father—a real father of my own after these years when I haven’t had any one!” "Don’t forget, Toby, that I’m finding out what it’s like to have a daughter—after all these years when I’ve had nobody either. My parents are dead now. The breach that developed between us as a result of my broken marriage was never healed, I’m sorry to say. I’ve been alone for a long while, Toby.” She smiled and her eyes glistened mistily. "You asked what I thought of you as a father, didn’t you? I hope that, as a daughter, you're going to find me acceptable.” "Asa daughter,” Hillyer told her. “you are everything in the world I could hope for. Asa daughter, Toby, you are eminently a success. In the last weeks J have come to know you better, I believe, than many a father who has lived in the same house with his daughter, all her life.” a a a TOBY said, as she had before, “My own fathe l *—my own real father—!” "We’ve missed a lot,” Hillyer told her, "but we have a great deal ahead of us, too. We’ll have to make plans together. I’ve made some of my own, but perhaps you can improve on them.” They talked for half an hour longer. Suddenly Toby said, "Fa-ther-look! Every one else has gone. We’re the only ones left!” Hillyer glanced about the room. Except for themselves, the dining room was deserted. Weary-looking waiters were eyeing them from a distance. “So we are,” Hillyer said. "Well, we’ll have to fix that—” He dug into his pocket for a tip, then turned to Toby, beaming. "Do you know what you said?” he asked "You called me ‘Father.’ I've been a father for 19 years and this Is the first time I’va ever been called that!” (To Be Continued) Townsend Club 37 to Meet Townsend Harmony Club No. 37 is to meet at 7:30 tonight in the Central Universalist Church, 15th and New r Jersey-sts.
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MODIFICATIONS IN HOUSING ACT ARE EXPLAINED State Director Earl Peters Points Out Important Changes. Five important changes in regulations governing the National Housing Act were pointed out today by R. Earl Peters, state director of the Federal Housing Administration. Modifications affecting the purposes for which insured modernization credit may be used are: Extension of modernization credit provisions of the act for one year, until April 1, 1937. Borrower either must be owner of the property or hold lease extending for six months beyond loan period. Abolition of insurance for loans for new construction on vacant property. Abolition of insurance for loans on machinery or equipment of any type. Inclusion of churches in the eligible list for Class A loans. Structure Is Necessary Under the new regulations, property upon which the proceeds of an Insured loan are to be expanded must be improved by some type of
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building at the time the loan Is negotiated. Previously, under Title I of the Act, new construction on vacant property could be financed by loans not to exceed S2OOO. Another important change made by Congress, Mr. Peters said, makes it impossible to use money obtained on loans of S2OOO or less for the purchase and installation of equipment and machinery. Loans of this size are to be eligible for Insurance only when they are to be used to finance structural repairs, alterations or additions to existing building or for equipment and machinery to be so installed as to become a part of the real property. Loans in excess of S2OOO, however, may be used for the purchase of
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such equipment as refrigerators, washers, ironers, cooking stoves, scales, counters, bars, show cases and other articles providing they are to be installed in Class A properties, according to Mr. Peters. Card Party Scheduled Daughters of Union Veterans, Tent 9, are to hold a card party for members and guests at the Sears, Roebuck Cos., April 29. m ref eczema,rashs,chafing, 1 dryr.ess-quickly checked atw r# promoted with— Resinol
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