Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 September 1937 — Page 28
PAGE 28
NIGHT DELIVERY OF MILK HELD OLD-FASHIONED
Distributors’ Chief Defends Day Plan; Hearing Is Scheduled Soon.
Both man and beast, Winfield Hunt says, object to night time delivery of milk in Indianapolis. Mr. Hunt is Indianapolis Milk Oouncil secretary, a i organization. A public hearing on a proposal to institute daylight milk delivery is
te be held under auspices of the |
Marion County Milk Administration on or near Sept. 30. > Mr. Hunt explained that Cincin~ nati and other large cities have delivered milk in the day time satisfactorily for [several seasons, and that they “would not consider returning -to the night delivery system.” Terms System Old
In the first place, he said, the only reasons for night delivery have long since been outgrown. It used to be, he said, that when a man had a cow he fad to route the beast out early in the morning, milk her rapidly, and then scurry around to deliver the milk before it soured. But today there is Pasteurization and such helter skelter methods are no longer necessary. Daytime delivery, he said, would mean that the housewife ‘would receive her milk supply not later than 1 p. m, in most instances in time for luncheon. Everyone these days, he said, has refrigeration in the home and there is no issue on the preservation of the supply until used. Now for the other side of the picture. Milkmen, he said, must leave their beds at midnight and go get their horses up. They deliver from then until the middle of the morning, which is conceivable in the summer time but which is hard on both in the winter.
Drivers Get Colds
In the winter, for instance, practically, all milk deliverers have constant colds because as they slush around in the dark they invariably get their feet wet and sometimes their trousers and other clothing. The horses sometimes have to stand for more than an hour on icy streets waiting for a blacksmith to rush out to them and sharpen their metal ice breakers, whereas if they. delivered in the daytime the sun usually would soften the ice just enough to make Sich operations unnecessary. Milk deliverers have no family life, Mr. Hunt pointed out. They must retire in the middle of the afternoon, before the children are home from school, and they are up and gone before the children get up. Mr. Hunt said there is almost no opposition to the plan and that * many of the city’s women’s clubs have long been after the distributors
to institute daylight delivery on
humanitarian grounds.
COUNTY MILK CHIEF
ANNOUNCES PRICES |
Leon C. Coller, Marion County Milk Administrator, today announced milk prices to be paid by distributors for the delivery period from Sept. 1/to 15, inclusive. They are: Class 1, $2.54 Sach hundred pounds; Class 2A, $1.98; Class 2B, $1.74, and Class 3, $1.54.
Reaped No Ride
“Ride, mister?” But no shuddering motorist cared to offer a lift to death, portrayed by this ghastly figure of the grim reaper shown thumbing a ride on a much-traveled Arkansas highway. The figure had such a sobering effect on motorists that a tour of all the State’s main highways was proposed for it.
SINGER OPERATED ON
BOSTON, Sept. 16 (U. P.).—Shirley Lloyd, 23, of- Pueblo,” Colo., radio singer with Ozzie Nelson's dance orchestra, underwent gn emergency appendectomy today. She was stricken aboard a New York-to-Bos-ton train and given emergency treatment before being! iaken to City
Hospital.
APPEAL NOTICES ON SCOTTSBORO SENTENGE FILED
| Defense -to Contest Terms
Given Two Defendants At Last Trial.
DECATUR, Ala., Sept. 17 (UU, P)). —Defense attorneys today filed a formal notice of an appeal for Charlie Weems and Andy Wright, Negro Scottsboro defendants convicted on rape charges at the July term of Morgan Circuit Court. The notice was filed by Attorneys Samuel Leibowitz and Osborne K. Frankel of New York. Wright was sentenced to 99 years in prison and Weems to 75. New trials for Weems, Wright and Clarence Norris, sentenced to death of the same charges, were denied
by Trial Judge W. W. Callahan in
a hearing here last month. Norris’ execution has been. stayed by an appeal. A 75-year sentence given Haywood Patterson, another of the defendants, has been appealed to the U. S. Supreme Court. Four of the nine Negroes accused of mass attacks on two white women aboard a freight train in March, 1931, were released at the conclusion of the July trials here. A fifth defendant, Ozie Powell, was sentenced to 20 years in prison for Siabbing a deputy sheriff.
NOTE WEDDING ANNIVERSARY
Mr. and Mrs. Fred W. Schakel, 329 N. Euclid Ave. are to celebrate
their 50th wedding anniversary Sun-
day at the home of their son, Walter Schakel, 1401 N. Jefferson Ave.
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It must be the drink he is mixing which brought this happy smile. to the face of Gilbert Romagnino, former bodyguard to the notorious Parisian swindler, Alexandre Stavisky. It hardly could have resulted from racketeering - and gambling charges which police are pressing against Romagnino,
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
BARRIE'S WILL IVES ACTRESS $10,500 FUND
$150,000 Left Lady Cynthia Asquith, His Secretary for Many Years.
9 LONDON, Sept. 17 (U. P.).—The will of Sir James Matthew Barrie, playwright, was probated today, showing a gross estate ot $887,300. Among his bequests was $150,000 to Lady Cynthia Asquith, for many years his ‘secretary, and $10,500 to “my loved Elizabeth Czinner, known professionally as Elisabeth Bergner, for the best performance ever given in any play of mine.” (Miss Bergner appearsd in Barrie’s “The Boy David.”) Lady Cynthia also inherits all rights to Barrie's plays and books, including all amateur rights to the plays except “Peter Pan,” which was bequeathed to the hospital for sick children.
HEIRESS SIGNED TO CONTRACT IN FILMS
HOLLYWOOD, Sept. 17 (U. P.) — The movies today put under contract Joyce Mathews, pretty heiress to a fortune that her father said was “enough for me” when he sold
and retired at the age of 32. The 18-year-old girl, who camg to Hollywood for a career as a dancer,
was put under contract by Paramount studio as a junior player.
a New York Stock Exchange seat!
S. MERIDIAN ST. SITE LEASED BY RUSSET The Russet Cafeteria has leased the first floor and basement of the four-story building at 37-41 S. Meridian St. Upper floors of the building are to be converted into salesrooms. Approximately $50,000 is to be spent on new furnishings and equipment for the cafeteria, it was said. The Russet was established here 16 years ago.
PLANS PROBE OF ‘DUMMY’ FIRMS McNinch to Begin Duties With FCC Monday.
WASHINGTON, Sept. 17 (U. P.) t —Chairman Frank R. McNinch of
| the Federal Power Commission will
assume his new post as “trouble
shooter” head of the Federal Com- |
munications Commission Monday with his first task indicated as an inquiry into charges concerning creation of “dummy” broadcast corporations. The charges concern allegéd efforts by attorneys to obtain commission broadcast authorizations through use of corporate “dummy.” Taking temporary leave of his regular duties McNinch will use the
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VOTE TO FIGHT C. 1. O. CINCINNATI, O., Sept. 17 (U. PD. —Delegates to the 18th biennial con-
vention of the Metal Polishers’ In-
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