Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 February 1937 — Page 28

FRIDAY, FEB. 26, 1937

NYA GETS FUND

TO HELP YOUTHS

INFLOOD AREAS

Students in. State Colleges Engaged in Disaster Relief Work.

Robert S. Richey, National Youth Saninistrarion acting director, today announced that additional funds have been appropriated by | Federal

| | | | | | |

| | |

officials and are available |

for Indiana schools and college aid |

programs. The new sult of the flood. in schools were not personally affected, in the main, by the high water, the economic support

appropriation is a re- | Although pupils

of |

some of them was curtailed because |

of property losses. Students from families whose in-

comes have dropped to virtually

nothing cannot expect usual allow- |

ances for college expenditures and must have some outside financial assistance to enable them to continue their education, Mr. said. NYA flood relief funds

Richey | are |

to be granted following submission

of lists of applicants to the State office. Wherever possible, these tional students receiving from flood relief funds are placed on work projects under supervision of welfare that are over-burdened at this time by relief work.

Students on Flood Projects

benefits to be

Evansville and Hanover colleges, in direct contact with the flood, already have their students employed on direct rehabilitation work. They are assisting in the general headquarters and in division offices interviewing applicants for relief, doing Red Cross secretarial and clerical work, issuing supplies, answering telephones, ing other types of assistance under the supervision of the Red Cross. Many high schools that were participating in the school aid program, although not touched by the flood, were closed and lost time because they housed refugees. An additional appropriation also has been granted to meet the request of these schools for the needs of high school whose families suffered losses. Authorization also has been given to youths already employed on NYA projects to make up lost time, caused bv the closing of schools because of high water or because of the necessity of housing refugees. Funds have been received from Washington for NYA work projects for 300 youths in river counties affected by the flood. They will be assigned to projects dealing with all phases of rehabilitation work.

PARLEY DUE TODAY ON LIGHT CUT ORDER

Perry McCart. Public Service Commission Chairman. announced there would be a general conference on Indianapolis Power & Light rates today, a temporary order. There will be, he said, no further testimony and no chance for a Commission order in the case until perhaps next week. Yesterday testimony on income, rates and valuations brought the commission's data on these points up to Dec. 31. GU ARD LIEUTENANT DIES Bul nited Press CARTHAGE, Ind., Feb. Leslie A. Terhune, 30, Anderson, died at the home of his parents here today of pneumonia brought on by

26.—Lieut.

funds to satisfy | pupils |

addi- |

Eye- Witness Students of Spain

Two men, outstanding in

ness students of the Spanish scene, war in the Indianapolis J. C. C. A. Open Forum at 8:15 p. m. Sun-

day in Kirshbaum Center. Maxwell S. Stewart left),

give the Loyalist side of the question. ner (right), Quigley Seminary professor of English who lived in Spain for Several years, is to present the Rebels’ Side.

One of the best fishermen in Indianapolis, who came out of his den | | the other day like a groundhog and saw a trout, has been preoccupied |

| ever since with the Spanish trouble.

the | agencies |

and render- |

| for next

Co. | preparatory to drawing |

| Weekly Cadet, edited and published |

exposure during 18 days of |

flood duty with the National Guard

at Evansville.

It works out this way.

Trout fishermen open the season May 1 with & good deal of splashing | In order to to this splashing scientifically, | s&s they need fine line leaders, tapered |

MEDICAL GROUPS

about in Micign streams.

their respective ficlds

associate editor

Spanish War to Give Adv: antage, Fisherman Says

TO HOLD PARLEY:

Arrange Series of Meetings For Local Physicians Next Month.

Members of the Indianapolis Medical Society and the Methodist Hospital Staff Society are to meet at the Hospital nurses’ home at 8:15 p. m. Tuesday. The meeuing is the first in a series month announced by Dr.

Gordon W. Batman, program committee chairman. On March 9, hear Dr.

the doctors are to Rudolph Schindler,

|

[Spain has interrupted the business |

Chi- |

cago, during an afternoon clinic at |

City Hospital. A meeting at the

Hotel Antlers is to follow at 8:15

p. m., Case reports are to be given at a meeting in the Hotel Antlers March 16. Dr. Charles P. Emerson, Karl R. Ruddell and Dr. ter are to speak at the March 23 night meeting in the Hotel

cal and Oto-.Laryvngological Society

is to sponsor the March 30 meeting | in the ‘Hotel Antlers.

PAPER PUBLISHED BY

Dr, | x ’ I's st wor n LaRue Car- | Wayne County's oldest woman and

Antlers. | as 101 The Indianapolis Ophthalmologi- | She Was ;

| died 50 years ago. | was active in church and women's | | club work for many years.

FIFTH CULVER CLASS

Times Speciai

CULVER, Ind, Feb. 26-—The

|

by members of the fifth class at Cul- | ver Military Academy has made its |

appearance. Members of {include Werner Janssen and Arthur | Twente, both of Indignapols.

CL

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the staff |

} and eye-wit-are to discuss the Spanish civil

of The Nation, The Rev. Fr.

is to

INDUSTRY ASKED be this means a revision of the anti- » to enlarge the channels of in- | studied privately—not as an official | He told the United Press that the By United Pres: | FE SONS |industries under certain specific legislative program designed to aid mission Act to define as “unfair | “cut to ribbons by selfish interests.” [that industry “throw itself whole- | James A. Magthe country as a whole rather than |

trust laws, let us revise them.” Studied With Richberg 10 ADOP | ternational trade. Draper, with Donald R. Richberg, | | former NRA chief, and A. M. Ferry, a Assistant Cirmares Secre- | The interrelated problems of | rade practices, child labor and tary Pleads for Trade study so far has revealed the need for establishing minimum wages NEW YORK, Feb. 26--Assistant | | conditions. A step in this direction = of Commerce Ernest G.|might be accomplished, he said, by oh 2 RCBS~ | economic recovery. He pleaded with She Tons hors Ro PD, Ses | industry not to stand by and see it — In an address before the Amer- | lican Paper and Pulp Association | | heartedly behind some form of con- | | structive legislation which aims | gee just one group.” He outlined the following ad

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES 3. Continue the Trade Agreement trade association organizer, has | bwin and wages. Practice Ban. {and maximum hours, by regions and Draper has proposed a three-point [amending the Federal Trade Com- | convention, Mr. Draper demanded | | primarily at improving conditions in | T rout or

| 1. Outlaw child labor, excessively | | low wages and long hours, . Clarity laws governing compe- | titi on “so that honorable business | {men may join together in voluntary | agreements, not to fix prices nor to | | control production, but for the pur- | pose of wiping out wasteful, un- " | necessary and uniuir trade practices.

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| | down to a hair, and made of silk- |

worm gut. These leaders are so fine, so the | idea goes, that even the trout can- | not see them and that's how the fish get caught. Now then, the best | of those leaders come from Spain, | where the silkworms seem to be! more adaptible to this sort of thing than any place in the world. | The silkworms in Japan, where one would expect them to be just about perfect, are not, this fisher- | man said. But it seems that the civil war in

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of making fish line tips and there are none on the market. This fish- | erman said Japanese tips are top | much of a handicap in favor of the | trout and that the whole thing is no | fair. At least until May 1 he will be brooding about the situation, he | said. He looked uneasy.

RITES ARRANGED FOR | HOOSIER WOMAN, 101

Times Special { CAMBRIDGE CITY, Ind. Feb. 26.—Services were being arranged today for Mrs. Barbara Barefoot,

only centenarian, who died yester- | day at the home of her son here, |

Mrs. Barefoot was born March | 28. 1835, in Lancaster, Pa., was mar- | ried at 21 to Samuel Barefoot, who | Mrs. Barefoot

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