Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 September 1936 — Page 9
ila fu
{PAGE 8
Fk D.R'S STATE "FARM LEADER ~ APPOINTS AIDS
1 Directors 5s Are Named to “Serve in Agriculture Movement.
+ ior Hemmer
Crown
1 a fo u director, o be estab-
tem-
lished in por: Ary h es adgt ie
yh 1e Indiana week. he livid between and Democr i oosevelt’s farm proand benefits derived by the he program are fo be agrari group in Ks-:iand press
prar m
d the group is to iculture and Democratic State briniging to President's
for: mer Indiana ident, is director ommittee,
$6186 FOR WELFARE SPENT BY AUXILIARY
i The Tweli American _ Legion reported
3 ) “ph Irie that its -welfare expenditures dur-
of i
| race-track touting, and after [ years,
{ i {
bumped in
said, |
la roll,
} fay iarm |
Tp ISTEN,
| about to climb into bed,
HEN Tony Peretti arrived |
from Italy, he lost no time | | investigating the money-making op- | portunities in America. He took up| five he was well on the road to | success. i It was at Belmont .that I first} 1fo him, and he cost me a chunk. He talked fast; and the picwas rosy. The fifth race was sewed up, he said, for a maiden 3-vear-old named Stop And Look. That was three years ago. Stop And Look is still stopping and look- | ing, instead of running. However, my troubles are beside the point. This story’s about Tony, and what I'm aiming to get across | you can't always be an apple is rotten at because it’s bruised on the outside. Out at the track one fine afternoon in October, between the third | and fourth, I'm eating a hot doz, when all of a sudden I see Tony near by, leaning against the fence, | talking confidentially into the ear of one Benny. 2 a2 = VERYBODY at the track knows | | -« Benny. He's an ex-jockey. He was one of the best riders on the] American turf, but one day he: got! into a jam at the first turn, and his | mount stumbled and threw him on! his head. He has never been quite right since. He was now peddling papers for a | living. I happened to know, more- | over, that he had a sick wife and | Was trying to save enough to get ’em both to Arizona. Naturally, I'm sore | when I see what Tony's up to. It’s bad enough to take a sucker with but bleeding nickels out of Benny was going too far. I head for the fence and slide up, unnoticed, behind Tony, “I tell you, keéed,” I hear him say, “it’s the chance of a lifetime.” “But this ten dollars,” protests Benny, weakly. “I can’t afford to | lose it.” { I'm just on the point of reaching | out and wrapping my hands around | Tony's neck w When he goes; on, = n Reed.» he crbaks, “I'm i: 4 on the inside. You know where I live—the Avalon. Well. last ‘night, I put up the window and am when 1 loud voices from the next room. Steiner, the jockey, lives there, I listened close and got the whole set-up. Steiner rides the favorite in the next race. He's bought off. The horse’ll get a bad start, and this monkey they been holding for a spot will romp home and pay |
ture
is. that 3, Wildl
ertain | the core J 1Sy |
hear
| off from here to China. rs. Grace |’
Ifare chair- | ldren and |
| eraftily
mounced we Bruce P. Rob president; Mrs Barcus unit Collings, F Mrs. unit, ci Memorial Mrs. Vance junit, sergeant-at (Fae Lemson, Irvington itorian.
second vice | Joe o Lu utes, Hayward- + Mrs. Maude it treasurer; | High Copsey Clyde Beatty, rliamentarian; Broad Ripple | and Mrs. | unit, his- |
nson u
1Wilkinen Vv 1IKINson,
rms
“EMPLOYMENT STAFF . TO GET NEW OFFICE
| Offices of the Indust fof the Indiana State iService are to |New York-st to E. land Virgini: F4 accord- | ing to Keith Vincer sion mantager. . | The skilled i strial men’s diviat 127-129 'E. | the unskilled | mens m is tp located at 20 Virginis v. The women's industrial and service divi 1 is to be located | Fat 24 Vi {. James 1 both comthier | sions; i floor Office S i more : Spa
rial Division | Employment moved from 58 W. Washington-st
be
manager of
1 the fifth gion-st.
to provide |
"ROBBERY SUSPECT
| stop him. { are feelin ‘round for my own bank-
{ Benny's ten on the line, and I hear him mumble,
smackers and push ‘em over. | same—on the snozzle!”
| sideways and appears like he might
ndustrial divi- |
“Which one?” asks Benny, {0 suppress his eagerness. “I'm not letting it out,”
unable
says Tony | “It might get around and | they 'd beat the price down. Trust} me, keed. Let me bet your ten. It’s a lead-pipe cinch!” Believe it or not, I stand right { there while Benny hands over his 10 bucks, and don’t make a move to Fact is, my itchy fingers
roll. Tony heads for the ticket window and I trail after him. He lays
“Number Six.” When he moves on, I pull out 50 “The
= ” =
FEW minutes later, I see Tony and Benny back down by the fence, watching the nags parade., I | amble up nonchalantly, and take | my stand near by. I look at No. Six. He's a big chestnut gelding. He's prancing
be hopped to go. I glance down at | my program to find out his name | and grab the fence for support.
{ I've laid my 50 berries on—Stop: and | | Look!
For me, it ain't so bad. A guy
| with a roll expects to get stung
once in a while. about poor
But when I think Benny's hard-earnec di—
| 10 being wagered on this phony, I | begin to see red.
Then I begin arguing with myself. | After all, you can’t ever tell about | | a horse race. Anything can happen. What if it is fixed? The horses have now reached the |
HELD UNDER BOND ne gate on 1s opposize sis
Estel Kinnerman, 83 Buchianan-| i st, was held here today 1 000 bo nd in connect | Jeged. robber; vy of a
ion with the allocal man and as a Florida road camp |
undey $10,- |
1 to have robbed John | |
Ww. Smith. 2 Buchatr
ions in 1934,
1an-st, of $105 and is al- : from the re he was serving
( Richmonn MILKMEN. ASK PRICE INCREASE
Producers and distribu
area asked for
ors of the |
an |
prices in a petition |
Milk Cont { Board tod The petitioni asked that the price per 100 weight be increased 1:81.92 to 52.30 8 be bi costed a. ept
YES, THIS FOOD ENDS YOUR CONSTIPATION
Took out for those fic those half-sick days, when you feel listless, headachy, out-of sorts. Your trouble may be constipation. The real cause of common con stipation is too little “bulk” in meals. Your system: misseg its regular exercise. Get this needed “bulk” in a delicious cereal: Kellogg’s ALL-BraN. Within the body, its “bulk” absorbs | moisture, forms a soft mass, gently sponges out the system.
rol |
. Why keep on feeling bad when |
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gutran teed. Try it a week. If not | satisfactory, your money will be |
it _ refunded®y the Kellogg Company. Two tahlespoonfuls daily are usu. ally sufficient. * Serve as a cereal, - with milk or cream, or cook into
recipes. Remember, Ar1-BRAN also |
- supplies vitamin B and iron." Certainly you'd rather eat a food than Jake pills and drugs. Buy at your grocer's, Made g in Battle
the track. It's a six-Jurlong
Tony Picks a Winner BY KEN KAY KELSO Daily Short Story
{ chestnut gelding.
| they
it has closed at 15
| em. | eyes. | nose of every horse in the race—and
sprint. A few minutes are taken to: line ’em ‘up. Then, they're off! Qut of the pack, He cuts to the rail and takes a lead of two lengths at the quarter. " 4 n
streaks a biz |
It’s Stop And Look! |
E'S burning up the track. At |
the half, he's three lengths out. still in. front and Saired jackrabbit. I let out a wild yell of joy. “Look!” | I Vows ¢ “Look at Rim! It’s Stop And Look!” I spoke too soon. At that very instant, a hundred yards from the wire, the big tramp clamps .on the
brakes. Four horses sweep past him :
running like a
iin ‘la blanket finish.
I swing round to Tony. He is staring expectantly at the board where | hang up the mumber of the winning hor se, Suddenl
got him, ‘Benny I”
Coming into the stretch he's |
RESETTLEMENT HEAD ANSWERS 6. 0. P. CHARGE
Claims Man an Deschibed . Radio Talk Given Fair Chance.
in
The Refettlement Administration |
i today answered a Republican criti- |
| |
ism of its operations in. connection |
with Kenneth Blackburn, 906 Cof- | fey-st. Mr. Blackburn was described" by radio commentator William Hard | Tuesday, under G. O. P. national | committee’s auspices, as an unem- | | ployed painter who was moved to | ia southern Indjana farm by the RRA, who was given no seed he | | plant, who was given no food for | | his horse that eventually died of | starvation and who. quit owing the |
| } | { l
, he “lets out a holler. “We | government money.
. E. H. Shidler, state rehabilita- |
I look up at the posted numbers. | tion ‘director, said that Mr. Black- |
is No. 2—Easy Boy. to 1.
The winner
He burn came to the RRA for help
after he had rented a farm in south- |
“What did I tell you!” cries Tony | ern Indiana. |
jubilantly, handing ‘Gp get your dough, hundred and sixty clinkers!
keed.
1
Benny a ticket. One | farm,” he said,
| i
Benny pumps his hand while the |
tears stream down his face, “I c-can’t thank you enough,” he stammers. “You—you don't know what this means to the missus and me.” “Forget it, keed,” grins Tony. u » un STAND with my mouth open, watching Benny run toward the cash-in window. When I come 10
| myl senses, I see Tony staring down
at something in his hand. As I rush
{ up, he tears up several tickets and
lets ’em slip through his fingers. I pick up the pieces and examine But I can hardly believe my He has bought a ticket on the
the winner he's given to Benny! “Hey, what's the idea?” I blurt, dumbfounded. . Tony looks at me and sighs. “Poor Benny—a swell guy. He helped me once when I was broke—and Tony never forgets. & tried to loan jhim a hundred, but no, Tod proud. So I hag to pick him a winner!” But how about Stop And Look? T heard you telling him the race was fixed, and I saw you buy that ticket on No. 6!” Tony grins sheepishly. “I had already bet every horse in the race except Stop And Look. I figured he didn’t have a Chinaman’s chance. Then I got to worrying. Suppose he upset the dope? So just to play safe, I bought a ticket on him too.” “Then that line you handed Ben-
{ny iwas all baloney?”
“Sure, keed.” Tony’s eyes light up. “Say, don't tell me you “still fall for
| thase old gags? Maybe I can get my
dough back from you, eh? this next race, I know sleeper ..,.” THE END
1936, by United Feature Syndicate, Inc.)
Now, in a real
(Copyright,
(The characters in this story are fictitious)
GERMANS ARRANGE LABOR DAY OUTING
A fall festival on Labor Day has been arranged by the Federation of German Societies at the new German Park on S. Meridian-st. The outing is to be similar to the one held by German Societies at
| the park July 4.
A special bus has been engaged to leave the south end of Meridian-
| st levery 40 minutes starting at 2 | p.m. The. program is to include | novelty “ entertainment, dancing, a | concert and contests for children,
| JOINS JORDAN STAFF Norman F. Phelps, Madison, ‘Wis., has joined the staff of the Arthur
Jordan Conservatory of Music\as in-
structor in the French horn and brass instruments, it was announced today.
[SEIN SUFFERERS “> ATTENTION « | Use Resinol Ointment to relieve the maddening itch of eczema, psoriasis, | poison ivy, and irritation about rectum or
personal parts. Helps healing. ol
GRA
KNOWN
b..they 21%, “Sizes 14 »
FOR
EK
VALUES
| not make a living off it.
i horses, one plow, one set of harness, |
| Blackburn, who said he had been
“Qur district men looked over the | “and saw he could | So we | suggested he get additional land | and he and W. J. Howe, land owner, signed a lease, which Mr. Howe drew | up” for 35 acres of land. | Equipment Furnished “The ease provided that Mr. | Blackburn pay one-third of the harvest to Mr. Howe for rental. We | furnished Blackburn with two |
one set of doubletrees, one wagon, two orders of groceries, one, cow, corn and hay. “Our supervisor made several at tempts to call upon Mr. Blackburn, but could nbt find him at home during a season when the land should | have been worked in preparation for seeding. | “When he asked for seed, we had, upon inspecting the farm, no rea- | son: to believe that he would have his land ready for planting. “Of the 35 acres, he plowed but five. We operate on limited funds and did not believe that we should throw good money after bad money in this case, since obviously Mr.
| |
born and reared on a farm, was not expert enough farmer to earn back | what we already had loaned him. 4000_Cases in State
“So we closed out bocks on Mr. Blackburn Sept. 14, 1635. We have more than 4000 rehabilitation cases in Indiana, and naturally some of them will turn out badly. But a great majority are success- | ful. Mr. Blackburn just simply was not a good enough farmer to niase ic | go. “As for the ‘horse dying of starvation, our records show that Mr. Blackburn turned in some hay after the horse died. ''The hay had been available for feeding throughout the experiment.”
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CRANKCASE CHECKED to make sure ofl Jevel is up to the safety mark.
YOUR GH DEALER WILL PUT YOUR CAR IN for your Labor Day- Trip
BOVE is just a partial list of the simple but needed things your dealer in Standard Oil products is anxious to do to make your holiday trip a success. They're little things, quickly done, but they may save you a lot of annoyance and incon-
venience on the road.
GASOLINE: When it comes to gasoline, you'll find that Standard Red Crown gets
ACCESSORIES: Your Standard Dealer has a surprising stock of automotive accessories of high quality. If you need anything —spark plugs, windshield wipers, . tire valves—or even some very unusual accessory, ask him for it; chances are he carries it in stock. 5 And many Standard dealers offer com= plete chassis lubrication, with certified | lubricants.
you there as fast as you care to drive, delivering as many miles to the gallon as any gasoline you can buy, quite possibly more.
MOTOR OIL: If the oil level of your crankcase is down, he’ll bring it up with fresh, clean ISO=VIS “D*’ Motor Oil. It is all oil—lasting! That’s why it’s the largest selling premium motor oil in the midwest. |
