Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 March 1937 — Page 29
FRIDAY, MARCH 12,
REPORT MADE ON FOOD SENT FLOOD VICTIMS
750,000 Pounds Shipped to State by Federal Surplus Corp.
| Ind, March 12.—| Approximately 750,000 pounds of food products were shipped into Indiana for flood victims by the Federal Surplus Commodities Corp. in co-operation with the Agricul- | tural Adjustment Administration and the Governor's Commission on Unemployment Relief, it was learned here today. | Most of the commodities were re- | moved from overburdened markets | under surplus - removal programs supervised by the Corporation and the AAA to stablize markets and increase returns to growers. Special shipments of surplus commodities to Indiana during the flood included 162,000 pounds of eggs! (108,000 dozens); 69,600 pounds of evaporated milk; 120,000 pounds of canned beef, and 80,000 pounds of rice,
Times Special
LAFAYETTE,
Pork Included In addition, 201,423 pounds of hog products derived from the slaughtering and processing of 1500 hogs, | which were stranded on high ground | in the flooded area, were shipped | to Indiana. Special shipments also included 51,384 units of clothing. These commodities supplemented 655.400 pounds of canned beef, 316.900 pounds of prunes, 253,200 pounds of grapefruit, 144880 pounds ol cotton, and 414.000 yards of ticking | which previously had been turned | over to the Governor's Commission | by the Corporation. In addition to the foregoing food products and clothing available for Indiana flood sufferers, the Corporation shipped substantial quantities of cotton and ticking into Iowa, | Georgia, Nebraska, Minnesota and! Oklahoma for processing into mattresses for distribution in the flood area.
1937
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
PAGE 27
School Honor Group Officers
Eugene Leak is the new president of the Washington High School chapter, National Honor Society. Elnora Martin (right) is the secretary. Other officers are James Hardin (left), vice president; Mary Dugan, treasurers and Dorothy Hoover, program committee chairman. Twenty-five members are to be initiated April 22, according to Principal W. G. Gingery.
GIRLS TO GIVE MINSTREL The Comet-teens of Castleton High
School are to sponsor a girls’ minstrel at 8 p. m. tomorrow at the
school. Participants are to include
Edith Roberts, Alma Shumaker, | Maragaret Brunson, Kathryn Pickett, Dorothy Draga, Eloise Whitesell, | Betty Dove, Alice Buck, Orah Rice and Maryellen McKenzie,
"There's something about them
you'll like” and the Tareyton
bik 707
oesn’t stick to your lips
“"TAREYTON
CIGARETTES
Now ONLY
1
Special Values in DINING ROOM or
8-Piece Dining Room
CS LL ossssioi, ini LL A
h 38 i
Suite
SOVIET STILL TESTING ~~ RUST COTTON PICKERS
|
| By United Press | MOSCOW, March 12.—Adoption | him, indicating that the adoption |
)
| chine, returned to America early | in narrower rows. Before leaving | this month, leaving his brother and | for the United States, John Rust | coinventor, Mack Rust, in Tashkent, | said he is still confident of the maTurkestan, to conuvinue experiments |chine’s success under Turkestan in adapting two of the cotton pick- | conditions. | ers to Russian conditions. | The Rusts sold two experimental | Mack Rust is expected to remain machines here for test purposes | 0 & month or two working on the (and have a contract under which | problem. John Rust arrived in| the Soviet Union will buy the | Tashkent last September, planning | Patent rights and manufacture the to stay only about two weeks but | machines in this country if they remained six months, during which |are adapted successfully.
time his brother arrived to assist | YOUNG JOURNALISTS MEET pn NEW YORK, March 12, — Two was more difficult than had been |), sand youthful journalists repreexpected. | senting school publications attended The main problem is that Turkes- | 45 sectional meetings today spon-
FL
U. S. Inventors Attempt t
Adapt Machines. S
ceeded
| of the Rust mechanical cotton pick- | | er by Soviet Russia has not yet been | i decided upon, pending further tests, | it was learned today.
John Rust, coinventor of the ma- than the American, and is planted | press convention.
| Jersey
' demic
VACCINATION FOR
Effectiveness
By Science Service PHILADELPHIA, March 12.—Vaccination against influenza has suc-
{ A group of men and boys at New
human influenza virus, Drs. Joseph Stokes Jr., Alice D. Chenoweth, Arthur D. Waltz, Ralph G. Gladen and | Dorothy Shaw of the University of L Pennsylvania and Children's Hos- | pital here, now report.
U IS SUCCESSFUL ci: 22
Serum | break of the influenza epidemic in (and around Philadelphia in Febru- | ary and March last year. In the | vaccinated group of 110 men and | boys, 3 had typical influenza with fever. In an unvaccinated group | of 550 at the same institution, 12,5 | per cent developed influenza with | fever. Scientific details of the vac- | cinations and interpretation of the | results appear in the current issue
of hown in Practice.
in actual practice.
State Colony were protected
{tan cotton grows on smaller stalks |soreq by the Columbia Scholastic | against this disease during an epi- | of the Journal of Clinical Investiga=
by vaccination with active | tion.
@ Tomorrow D
|
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