Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 November 1937 — Page 2
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High Barometer and Late Autumn in
Cities Using
Soft Coal Are Favorable
To ‘Smog’ Formation, Armington Says
Survey Made Here and in Chicago by Local Meteorologist.
(The following article on "City ‘Smogs’ in Periods of General Fair Weather” was written for the Indiana Academy of Science in 1924 by J. H. Armington, In. dianapolis meteorologist, U. §. Weather Bureau).
Many cities using a large amount of soft coal are, under certain condi-
AID TO BUSINESS NOW DEMANDED BY PETTENGILL
‘Says Predictions He Made Of Profits Tax in 1936 Have Come True.
Dimes Special WASHINGTON, Nov. 24.-—Presi-dent Roosevelt's plea to “put first things first” should result in special session action on taxation as first aid in halting the business recession, Rep. Samuel B. Pettengill (D. Ind.) said today.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
56 ENROLLED IN MERIT SCHOOL FOR FIRE FORCE
Candidates to Compete for Appointments to Fill 10 Vacancies.
The Safety Board today completed plans for the Fire Department Merit School to open next Monday. Fifty-six candidates were [scien to compete for the 10 vacancies in the Department. They were:
Indigent Wards of
special holiday dinners tomorrow, J ers will have a choice of chicken trimmins’ will be prepared. “Prisoners can't expect what they would get in a downtown hotel, but they will eat well,” George Vases, chief jail cook, said.
WEDNESDAY, NOV. 24, 1937
There’ll Be Thanksgiving In Jail Tomorrow—Menu Offers Chicken Repast
Duck, Pork and Meat Loaf to Be Main Dishes for
State, County and
Charity Organizations,
Even persons spending Thanksgiving Dav behind Jail bars in Ine dianapolis will have something to be thankful for.
They are to enjoy ail dieticians announced that prisons= or breaded pork chops with all the » ———————
land Girls’ School are to feature seve feral tasty dishes.
| Here's what une
lcook will prepare at the Women's And here is what they will eat Prison: Baked ham. glazed sweet tomorrow: Chicken or breaded pork | potatoes, creamed peas, cabbage and chops, creamed gravy, candied sweet (carrot salad, pickles, hot rolls and potatoes, creamed carrots and peas, jelly, pumpkin pie and coffee slaw, coffee, bread and butter.| The Thanksgiving dinner table at
tions and during periods when fair weather prevails generally over t heir respective regions. subject to VISIta-) tions of smoke and fog combinations | —recently called “smog—of such] density as to become quite annoy-|
He cited an address that he made in the House on June 19, 1936, against the undistributed profits tax, and claimed that predictions he made at that time have come true.
Francis Ackerman, Albert C. Aldrich, Salvatore 8. Amato, William | E. Arbuckle, Charles O. Britton Jr.
| Burnell E. Brown, Richard Bryant,
tax Raymond L. Burke and John T.
ing, interfering much with usual activities of the area affect. yl and causing considerable personil discomfort. At such times the darkness night settles over the business or industrial section, artificial light is usually necessary in buildings, street lighting is sometimes required and, somewhat more rarely, the density and penetration , of the smoke-fog are such that a peculiar pungent odor similar to that of burned gunpowder is distinctly noticeable even within inclosed rooms. An inspection of the weather maps over a period of several years at Indianapolis, and previously at Chi- | cago, during the periods of these smog conditions, makes it apparent that the conditions favorable for the formation of smoke-fog are (wo: 1. A high barometer, the sea-level reduction ranging from 30.1 to 30.6 | inches, with the accompanying field | of high pressure of faint gradient central over the city, or just passing | over it, during the night preceding | the occurrence; and, 2. A late autumn, winter or early spring season, when the longer | nights under clear skies render | radiation especially effective in chilling the atmosphere to a point near saturation. The late autumn | appears to be particularly favorable, probably for the same reasons that cause the more frequent occurrence of ground fogs during that time,
Calm Conditions Noted
of |
| |
This slowly drifting area of high | barometric pressure gives rise to clear skies over the general area in which the city is situated, while the faint gradient actuates but ttle | lateral movement of the mass of surface air. In fact, the wind in such conditions often drops to two miles an hour or less, and sometimes appears to be altogether stagnant There is, of course, often slow settling of cooled air toward the ground as its density increases | under radiation, and this slow settling may have some slight effect in retarding the initial rising tendency of the smoke volume. However, in any case, the lateral movement is entirely too slow to carry | away the smoke as fast as it is vomited into the air. | The formation of the smog does not necessarily require a certain temperature, although usually the readings on the previous afternoon are moderate for the season and drop during the night to 10 degrees above freezing point or somewhat | lower, With such temperatures at | the lower end of the diurnal range— particularly in autumn, when the range is rather large—ordinarily a point near saturation is reached during the latter part of the night or early morning. The chilling due to night radiation, however, is in the | case under consideration of itself sufficient to produce very little or no fog, and the surrounding and residence sections of the city remain practically clear of both fog and smoke,
Furnace Firing Starts Smoke
Now, sometime before daybreak, and usually attendant upon the unbanking and heavy coaling of large furnace fires in the business district in preparation for the coming day's activities, there is poured into this chilled atmosphere dense
o @
volumes of smoke from the numer- |
ous chimneys. The countless soot particles, rising at first and slowly spreading out, are chilled rapidly by conduction and radiation to temperature somewhat below that of the surrounding nearly saturated air. Condensation results upon these
passes the dew point, and with them as nuclei the formation of fog begins and proceeds increasingly. At the same time, this added moisture increases the weight of the particles sufficiently to arrest more shortly their upward movement and to cause them to descend more rapidly with the settling air to the levels of the street. The weather continues quite clear overhead, the observer on exceptionally tall buildings or towers often seeing the sun rise entirely unobscured but at the same time being unable to discern objects on the streets below him. Those who live in the affected areas arise to a dark, gloomy, dampfeeling, chilly, depressive morning, sometimes disagreeably smelly of exploded gunpowder: while those living in the suburbs at the same moment are invigorated by a clear. snappy, zestful and bracing atmosphere, Passage from the one area into the other is as marked, and often nearly as sudden, as passing into or emerging from a long tunnel.
Smoke Hangs on
As this smog is brought about by the over chilling of smoke particles in an air already chilled to near saturation, it might naturally be expected that amelioration would set in immediately following the time of minimum air temperature shortly after sunrise. Ordinarily, however, this is not the case on the street and the office levels, and the condition continues usually for two or three more hours with practically undiminished intensity, The fog, indeed, may, and probably does, begin dissipation at its up-
soot particles as their temperature tober. Dr. Verno K. Harvey, State |COUNtY on a change of venue ios) PLANNED AT CULVER
At the first sign of a COLD
"HILL'S
COLD TABLETS
| rounding region has proceeded to a
| Valley, was central directly over the city on the night in question, with
| 30.6 inches.
| the isobars, th
Indiana Di N
| concern over the outbreak of di
|cials had high hopes that 1937 would
| year
the |
. w SRR : Times Photo. Mr. Armington consults the weather map, which shows conditions favorable to smog in Indianapolis.
per surface shortly after the tem- | center (Indianapolis) was more or perature there begins its rise for the (less variable in direction, and day. but the pall is so dense at its | dropped almost to a calm. beiay lower levels that the sun's rays co | less than two miles an hour in velocnot penetrate, and there is no con- | ity during practically the entire sequent rapid warming. The tem- | time from 3 a.m. to 10 a. m. It will perature shows only a slight rate of | be noted, however, that the wind ris: from the low point of the morn- | directions at the surrounding ing as compared with that of the | weather bureau stations along the outside area. There is for a short | enclosing line of 306 inches tend time, usually, a gradual increase in| toward the proper relation to that the relative humidity, which, with |isobar, and the movement at these the continued addition of smoke |Places was recorded generally as from chimneys, causes even an ag-| {rom five to nine miles an hour. At gravation of the smog for some time | None of these surrounding stations after the minimum temperature is WAS Smog noticeable, although at reached. most Shem i vais kde { amount of “city smoke,” but at only PRI ARS Qui Rly | one—Columbus, O.—was this reIt is usual, therefore, for the dense | ported as of more than the “usual combination to continue in the af- | amount.” fected area until the warming up of Suburban Sky Clear
the general air mass of the surAt Indianapolis, however, smog lof the most aggravated type oc- | curred, beginning in the latter part (of the night as smoke which later
degree sufficient to give rise to convection currents that increase the lateral wind movement, and these often within a period of ten of fif- |
teen minutes corry the pall away | 4 : anc restore normal conditions. The | NOW'S as to necessitate the full temperature, which had risen slowly | Sonipimen or Hecht lights in the under the blanket, in a very short | downtown SE buildings. ‘ Wy time assumes that of the general air | x hp ou 1 is of Pe vay the mass, while the relative humidity 5 y WES at al . times Sa less and falls as rapidly and in corresponding | 1'¢ Was no trace of smoke or fog; measure. [and while in the city the sky was On the night and morning of Oct. | clear and visible from the weather 24, 1924, the distribution of the PUreau tower on the roof of a i5weather elements over the eastern | S'OrY building, on the street it was half of the country was almost | Impossible to see any object more
ideal for the formation of intense smog in Indianapolis. An exceptionally large field of high barometer, drifting slowly southeastward over the Great Lakes and the Ohio
[10 a. m. the rise in temperature | was sufficient to promote convec- | tion. The wind increased to more than five miles an hour, and thereafter conditions became rapidly better, and the strong odor of the | smog disappeared. a sea-level barometer at Yam. of | In common with Indianapolis, This occasioned an exX- | most other large cities, having contensive area of clear skies over the | gested business districts in which eastern parts of the country, the | soft or only pronounced cloudiness within a extensively without sufficient care great distance from Indianapolis be- [in firing or the use of smoke coning at Buffalo, where the expanse | sumers, suffer from such visitations nf Lake Erie to the westward toward | under the conditions described: the high accounts for the formation | and, it may reasonably be expected, of clouds at that place. | will continue to suffer until effecOwing to the very faint gradient | tive action has been taken to do throughout the region, as shown hy | away with the great volumes of soot © wind in the exact poured into the atmosphere.
1itheria Outbreaks
Bring Warning From Doctors
An Indiana Medical Association bulletin issued today expressed “deep
phtheria within the last few weeks in
ETTA JO
several Indiana communities.” “Doctors and public health offi-
' TRIAL be a banner diphtheria prevention NES until the recent outbreak | threatened to undo the record.’ the
bulletin said. “By the end of Aug- | ust, only 30 deaths from diphtheria |
had occurred since the first of the ——e vear. This number was by far the Beech Grove Slaying Case Set by Hendricks Court.
lowest figure in the state's history | (for the first eight months, which, {means that much ground had been | | gained. Figures Are Cited | Trial of Mrs. Etta Jones, charged | “However, the danger of viewing | With the murder of 12-year-old the situation with complacency is | Helen Schuler in Beech Grove last shown by the outbreak within the July, has been last few weeks which is reflected by | H od ick Sek Jor. J8n. 5 in | the following figures from the State | endricks County Circuit Court at |Health Board: In September of | Danville, Prosecutor Herbert M. [this year, only two deaths occurred Spencer announced today. from diphtheria, while 10 children in Th y . , jo different counties died in Oc- 2 CASE Was taken to Ferries
: tion two weeks ago. Board secretary, points out that we | 8 | Jy \ : : jare just entering the time of {he | MIS. Jones also will be (ried on
\year when diphtheria cases usually | *Cther indictment, charging her P | ely with assault and battary with intent
| increase, | . | to kill Mrs, Lottie Schuler, | “If the diphtheria prevention | lig tie RH" Sie slain {mark is to be lowered this year, | 1 | every parent in Indiana must see | have charge of the State's case that his child is properly immunized, Assisting him will be Henry O. | The method Is so simple and the | Goett, deputy prosecutor in charge | results So sure under the guidance | of the grand jury, and John | and direction of a well-trained, | Kendall, Hendricks County Prose- | qualified physician, that it is almost | cutor. (an inexcusable crime for a child | —————— to have diphtheria these days, The |jredienl profession and health of- BANK DEPOSIT SALES ficers of the state never will be | satisfied until the slate is clear as LEGAL, STATE TOLD | far as diphtheria deaths are con- | cerned. | Local governmental units legally “To stamp out diphtheria in our | may sell their deposits in banks [ERE children must be immunized Kueh clip duidatod, Aiorney la € age of nine months and General Omer eS Jackson adthose who have not been rendered | Vised William P. Cosgrove, State | immune earlier should receive Board of Accounts chief examiner, (diphtheria toxoid before entering | today. | school. The greatest number of Mr. Jackson also said that live- | deaths from diphtheria occur be- stock and hs crops, grown or tween two and five years of age. Te subject to an inheriSo you are urged to have your : ; children immunized before that pe- | This opinion was ven ut the re- : . tance Tax Administrator, “Diptheria toxoid is entirely | Rms harass at the age of nine months OLDER SCOUTS URGED as Well as at nine years or any “Too man y boys leave their troops Otter vied 3 Shino, Any | soon after they become 15 because 8 ot Ad his dose is | we have not had activities suitable susceptible to the disease. Any par- " for their age,” Frank W. Braden, ent who neglects this well established New York, senior scouting assistant netiod yy anton Is to be| national director, told Boy Scout Shed, child dies of diph- | Indiana leaders in the Hotel Lincoln eria. yesterday.
BN (JIN.
va TL
SLATED FOR JAN. 5
| Deputy Prosecutor John Kelly will
Immediate repeal of that should be followed by amendment of the capital gains levy to free capital and put money into circulation, the Third District Representative said. “Steel has fallen from 83 to 35 in two months,” Mr. Pettengill declared. “It took two years for this basic commodity to fall that many points beginning with the stock market crash back in 1929.
Decline Called Real
“This business decline is real and the most precipitate in recent history. It provides an extraordinary situation for this extraordinary session of Congress to act upon at once in ways not contemplated when the session was called. “We should adopt that sound rule of the President and putting ‘first things first’ take action to relieve business from taxation handicaps now.” Such action will be the best method of getting men back to work, Mr. Pettengill claimed. He urged that the undistributed profits repeal I'should be made retroactive and (apply to 1937. This would keep | profits going into payrolls and
| capital construction, rather than
| combined with fog and became so | Naving them disbursed in dividends | dense during the early morning |
and going into hiding, he contended. Referring to his speech of last | year, Mr, Pettengill pointed out this | question as significant: “If corporations are not permitted to accumulate reasonably sized | nest eggs for the next rainy day, Tho bad will the next depression | be?” | A poll of his Hoosier colleagues | disclosed that almost without ex-
: > Puy , i. | DOr's past,” said Detective Captain | | than one block distant. Just before | CePtion they favor some tax modi- p Ra
fication to aid business recovery.
DAY'S WRANGLE ENDS IN COURT
‘Two Face Charges After Argument and Fight In Tavern.
inferior coals are burned!
| An argument in the morning, a well-aimed sugar bowl in the afternoon and a reunion in City Hospital at night today set the stage | for the Municipal Court trials of | Willie Sullivan and James Oliver, | both of a downtown hotel, They were charged with assault and battery with intent to kill as the result of a fight in a 8. Illinois St. tavern. Police said events took place in this order: Sullivan and Oliver met in the establishment shortly before noon. | They argued and parted in a huff.
Greeted With Sugar Bowl
Each returned in the afternoon. liver was there first and Sullivan | was greeted with a sugar bowl. Sullivan was sent to Oity Hospital and charged with drunkenness. He said Oliver did the throwing. Officers received a call to a physician’s office where they found Oliver receiving 25 stitches in his face. He, too, was sent to City Hospital and charged with vagrancy. Both were treated, charged with | the more serious offense and re- | turned to jail.
|
| | |
HOLIDAY PROGRAM
‘Military Drills, Grid Game And Dance Scheduled.
Times Special CULVER, Nov. 24—Thanksgiving week activities were to get under way at Culver Military Academy this afternoon with military drills by the R. O. T. C. units and a dramatic skit, written by two cadets, to be presented tonight. Other highlights of the Thanksgiving vacation program are: Thanksgiving Day services at 11 a. m. with Dr. Joseph A. Vance, First Presbyterian Church, Detroit, presiding; football game at 2 p. m. between Culver and Chicago's Lake View High School; Fathers’ Association Smoker following the game with Will Harridge, Chicago, in charge; dance at night.
Henry C. Bush, American Embassy staff member in Berlin, was in the city today visiting his parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. V. Bush, 5831 N. Delaware 8t. A graduate of Shortridge High School and the University of Chicago, Mr. Bush has been in the foreign service 10 years, He will return to Berlin after the Christmas holidays.
DIPLOMAT VISITS CITY.
Rep. Samuel B. Pettengill of South Bend, has been selected by Life magazine as the “typical Congressman.” He is to be featured in that magazine soon.
Carter,
Willis L. Carver, Harold Chamberlain, Howard «Clark, Walter Clark, Ray J. Cogan, Charles P. Commons, Lester Cruse and James L. Davis. Louis Drexler, William H. Drissell, Clifford J. Duffy, Robert E. Dwyer, James Q. Elzey, Edward J. Evans, John E. Feeney and James F. Finley. Robert BE. Gray, Earl K. Handwork, Thomas J. Hannon, Harry C. Kauffman, Dale Kinney, Laffey, Ralph L. Landis, Joseph B. Lawrie and William E. Lich. Paul Lindeman, Albert William J. Lynch, Harry E, McCarter, Warren J. McCune, Dennis OC. Maxey, Edward Mench and Charles J. Murphy, Philip E. Ochs, John O'Leary, James W. patten, John E. Popp, PHILADELPHIA, Nov. 24 (U. p.). Eugene Raftery, Edward A. Schenk
————————
STUDY PAST OF GIRL GYMNAST
Police Seek Motive for Slay- | ing of 5-Year-Old Nancy Glenn.
—Police and a psychiatrist searched And Edward W. Springer Jr, the past of athletic Mary Keenan | Jean Stamm, Thomas M. Stapp, determine whether some twisted Ski. Carroll D. Trees, Robert L. Wilstreak in her make-up might have Kins and Martin J. Yohler. | with two blows of her fists and leave | the child's body in a mud puddle. DAPPER GUNMAN known to her classmates at ex- | | elusive TImmaculata College as | | “Tarzan” because of her athletic | | Ability, was held in Moyamensing | | homicide. At a hearing Monday | police will decide whether to charge Police Seek Neatly Dressed | Was recently a patient at the | | Mental Diseases Department of | | East Side.
O'Connor today in an attempt to Ward L. Storm, William B. Szatow driven her to kill Nancy Glenn, 5. | a Miss O'Connor, 19 years old and Prison on a technical charge of | | her with murder. Police said she Bandit for Holdup on | Pennsylvania Hospital. “We are investigating Miss O'Con-
| John Murphy. He declined to am. | A dapper gunman who held up an | plity that statement, but it was|E. Michigan St. drug store and pointed out that Dr. George B. Wil- | escaped with more than $100 in cash | Son, psychiatrist, had a chance yes- | Was sought by police today, | terday to observe Miss O'Connor, | Harold Wilkins, 33. of 127 Lin- | Miss O'Connor, officials said, has Wood Ave, told police the man made two confessions. Detectives | entered his store at 4620 E, Michigan are puzzled by the motive given in | St. and announced a stick up. both. They state that Miss O'Con- | He said the bandit handed him a nor killed Nancy merely because the | sack, and ordered him to fill it with child insisted on being taken for a | the contents of the cash register. ride on a bicycle. Unless the kill-| He said the bandit was neatly | ing was done in a burst of anger, | dressed, wearing a bright-colored | police believe there might be a | tie.
1 “This flight was his first. To his great joy, we reached a station in
| four or five-day trip behind dogs.”
EMPLOYERS’ GROUP EXTENDS ACTIVITIES
The Associated Employers of Indianapolis met last night in special session and changed its name to the Associated Employers of Indiana. Its activities now are state-wide, officers said. Lynn W. Beman, Cincinnati labor relations official, predicted that the A. F. of L. and the C. I. O. eventu[ally will consolidate. He said the nation is through with the “rough stuff” period in labor.
deeper motive, A Negro last night robbed the A pretty blond member of the 1936 [drug store at 330 N. Senate Ave. American Olympic team — Mrs, | of $40, according to police. [athe Phillips, a gymnast—was under arrest as a material witness, | Senate Ave. clerk. told officers the | She told police, they said, that Miss | man ran south on Senate Ave. , O'Connor came to her home and | following the holdup. confessed the crime. Blaine Hoope, 27, of 1035 8, Lynn | nen mn St., a taxicab driver, reported to po- | lice that two passengers early toe AIRPORT PLANNING day forced him to drive three miles [out of the City on Road 67, where | they robbed him of $3. PARLEY IS CALLED The men got out of the cab and | ordered him to drive back to Ine dianapolis, Hoope said. ———— ‘Need for Long Runways to ARCTIC AVIATION IS . Be Discussed. MISSIONARY’S GOAL WASHINGTON, Nov. 24 (U. P.).—| Modernization of transportation | Assistant Secretary of Commerce J. facilities in the Arctic is the goal of Monroe Johnson announced today | the Rev. Pr. Paul Sciwilte, O. M. 1, | : “Ya flying missionary who spoke last (that he had called a conference of | night in Knights of Columbus Hall, [ state, municipal, private and Fed-| “Im not adventuring” said eral agencies for Dec. 6 and 7 10 |pather Schulte, whose parish is the discuss a national program of air- Arctic Circle. “I'm working, and port planning. my work is to motorize the Arctic, The conference will consider the “An example of what motorizaproblem which has arisen from de- | tion will mean to our missions up velopment of giant air transports | there is the recent voyage of the Which will require unusually long | most Rev. Bishop Turketel, O. M. I,, runways. The new type ships will be | with me. He has been traveling by ready for operation in the summer of 1938, According to Commerce Department officials only five or six of the | nation's airports are large enough to | accommodate the big craft. | Among those invited to send rep|resentatives to the conterence were | the Aeronautical Chamber of ComFre Air Transport Association of | America, American Municipal Asso|ciation, U. 8. Conference of Mayors, [National Association of State Aviation Officials, National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics, Navy | Department, Postoffice Department, | | War Department and Works Prog- |
[ress Administration.
32-POUND FUNGUS FOUND UNDER SNOW
Times Special ROCHESTER, Ind, Nov. 24.-— Walter Bryan is contender for a new
Thomas |
J. Long, |
Alvin Blacketter, 32, of 1230 S.|
spring or| dog team in the North for 37 years. |
three and one-half hours that is a |
About 10 persons will be fed in jail. Jail dieticians explained thal daily menus excelled the greatly joked about “bread and. water” diet. For example, a typical menu consists of beef stew, macaroni and cheese, coffee, bread and butter,
Indigents to Fare Well
Many indigents who are wards of the County, State and other charitable organizations will have special menus tomorrow, too.
At the Salvation Army Shelter, 200 homeless men are expected for Thanksgiving dinner, Capt. Adam Wolf said. Roast pork, dressing, mashed and sweet potatoes, crane berry sauce, celery, creamed peas, slaw, coffee, bread and butter are | to be served. This compares with [an ordinary day menu of roast beef, tatoes, beans, pudding, coffee, | bread and butter, ( Five hundred inmates at the Mar-
| fon County Infirmary tomorrow will
| eat meat loaf, baked sweet potatoes, |
| dressing, | pickles,
cranberry sauce, slaw, drink, bread and butter, | John Arnholter, chief cook, said. At Wheeler Rescue Mission are | rangements have been made to feed | 400, The menu will consist of duck | and chicken, mashed potatoes, creamed peas, cranberry sauce, fruit. | pumpkin pie, coffee and milk. | Harry Barrett, Marion County
| Julietta Hospital for the Insane sie |
| perintendent, said the menu there [would consist of roast perk and gravy, baked sweet potatoes, dress[ing cranberry sauce, slaw, bread and milk or coffee,
Ham at Prison Baked chicken, cranberry
v
sauce,
| mashed potatoes, fruit salad, baked |
(squash, ice cream, milk, bread and
butter will be served 175 orphan chil- |
(dren at Children’s Guardian Home.
OWNERS FACE TRIAL
|
City’s Bills Overlooked,
Popp Reports.
[misplaced or ignored a City “please |remit” notice faced Municipal Court | prosecution today.
| George Popp Jr. Building Comm |davits for all store owners who have [failed to pay the inspection fee on their overhead signs. The signs are inspected once a year, The Building Department staff begins its work in January and continues several months, checking [each of the several thousand signs in [the city, The ordinance requires the sign owner to pay for the inspection
| within 30 days after the check 1s |
made, Mr. Popp said.
HOOT GIBSON IN PERU Times Special PERU, Nov, motion picture cow | paying Peru a visit,
24. Hoot Gibson,
The menus of the Women's Prison
300 DILATORY SIGN
| Approximately 300 merchants who
issioner, said he is preparing affi- |
boy, has een |
[the Colored Orphans Home will be |covered with baked chicken, dress(ing, mashed potatoes, cranberry |sauce, pumpkin pie, milk, bread and butter, Mrs. Elizabeth Bell is chic} | cook,
‘WIFE NAMED EXECUTOR { | Mrs. Madge E. Temperley today [ had been named in Probate Court as | administratrix of the estate of her husband, Edwin E. Temperley, fa[tally injured in an auto accident near Lebanon last week. Mr. Teme [ perley was owner of a floral come pany at 5518 College Ave. and a J Shrine official,
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crown. He found a 32-pound mushroom under five inches of snow here,
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FIRST Soa SECO THIRD CHURCH FOURTH CHURCH FIFTH
SCIENCE
Branches of THE MOTHER CHURCH, THE FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST SCIENTIST, Boston, Mass.
Lesson for Thanksgiving Day
Subject: THANKSGIVING
Psalms 28:7—The Lord is my strength and my shield; my heart » and I am helped; therefore my heart greatly re-
This Service in sach of the five Branch Churches will be at 11:00 A. M.
ALL ARE LOVINGLY INV
CHURCHES
praise him,
Meridian at 20th St, Delaware at 12th St, Washington Blvd, at 34th St. Pleasant Run Parkway (8. Drive) at Butler Ave. e Ave. at 62d St.
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