Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 March 1939 — Page 22
SPRING MEANS NEW HOPE FOR STATE JOBLESS
Studies Show Employment Pickup Likely; Graduates Add to Problem.
The Indiana State Employment
Carnival Queen
Service "has a big job—trying to help find jobs for 36,000 Indiana youths who will graduate from high | schools and colleges in June. The Service's first step to meet the problem is a survey of job, prospects. | George J. Smith, manager of the | Indianapolis office, said information is being collected from local employers, union officials and civic leaders: Meanwhile, J. Bradley Haight, acting director of the Indiana State Employment Service, announced that normal spring employment increases are expected to absorb several thousand unemployed workers in Indiana next month.
Most Industries Hire More
Mr. Smith said that the survey would include a study of the job orders received during March. “Our activities as far as placements for this month are concerned will exceed any other month in the his-| tory of the employment service and we see no reason why this present | trend of placements should not continue through the next few months,” | he commented. Mr. Haight said that among the industries included in the employ-| ment study the greatest amount of | employment activity was expected | from the retail and wholesale groups, hotels and sewer construction, building construction and canning, beverages, ice and ice cream factories. Studies of seasonal variations in employment in 137 industries found in Indiana showed that 40 lines] normally increase employment. | 2 per cent or more from March to April; 16 industries usually reduce employment, while the remaining 81 industries experience no appreciable fluctuations, Mr. Haight explained, The arrival of spring also brings a heavy demand for men and women from householders with houses, lawns, basements, and garages to be cleaned, he said. Report Expected by May The job prospect survey is the third to be conducted by the Service. Data collected locally will be consolidated with reports from the other 39 employment offices in the state. Mr. Smith said the statewide report probably would be completed about May 1. “Our past surveys have <shown that the average high school graduate was lucky to land a job paying a beginning wage of $15 a week, although many students hoped to start at $25, Mr. Smith said. “The average graduate also was much more. likely to obtain first employment in a grocery or drug store, as a messenger or waitress, at a filling station or in a private home, than in such cherished jobs as that of office manager, bookkeeper, aviator or newspaper reporter.”
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Times-Acme Photo. Miss Frances Jane Mott, 17, daughter of Rep. and Mrs. James M. Mott of Oregon, has been named queen of the Astoria water carnival.
1940 Hand Also Given To Eleanor
$B Times Special : BLOOMINGTON, March 30.—A newly-formed McNutt-For-President Club had a rival on the Indiana University campus today. As the organization supporting the former Indiana Governor for the presidency was still in the recruiting stage, an Eleanor-For-Presi-dent Club appeared. Membership in the latter totals 125 and “the movement is gaining impetus right along,” according to the organizer, David B. Richardson of Maplewood, N. J. . He is night editor of the Daily Student and a member of the Union Board, student governing body. . The chairman of the Alma Mater Chapter of the McNutt boosters is Walter Smith of Versailles. He said that the membership drive would con= tinue until May 1 and that attempts will be made to organize chapters at other schools in Indiana and other states.
Hot water thet Eliminate bot water on tap 24 ho an auto you become
Ask us to send a repre
HONOR ROLL AT S, HS LISTS 76
Betty Hosmer Leads Seniors
With 99 Points and Next Is Miss Studebaker.
Miss Betty Hosmer, Shortridge
pupil, tops the list of 76 seniors.
placed on the honor roll for the four-year period, Miss Margaret Pierson, Shortridge Mathamatics Department member, announced today. This list represents one-tenth of the graduating class of 1939. Those on the list have 53 points or more. Miss Hosmer had 99 points and was trailed by Miss Margaret Studebaker who had 95 points and Jack Siegesmund with 93 points. . Miss Hosmer will be awarded the Mrs. Alpheus Snow prize which is awarded each year. Mrs. Snow, former resident of Indianapolis, bequeathed $8000 in perpetuity to Shortridge, the income to be awarded to the graduating senior with the highest class standing. Those following the three leaders on the list, in the order of their ranking, are: Katy Lou Matlock, Patricia Federmann, Patricia Jackson, Margaret Jameson, Patricia Sylvester, Emily Glossbrenner, SueAnn Knippenberg, Katherine Bertsch, Virginia Ellerbush, Jeanette Elkin, Morris Green. Robert Stump, William E. Lewis, Wilma Rothenburger, Kathleen Shockley, David Smith, Richard Hudelson, Lloyd Hiott, Janice Murray, Barbara Fuller, Evelyn Quinn, Barbara Frederickson. : Mary J. Hill, Richard Stark, Doris Becker, Fred I. Jones, Norma BE. Miller, Stephen - Minton, Robert Bracken, Phyllis Hadden, Jessie Bitner, Mary Dugan, Mable Clift, Robert Evans, Mary J. Steiner, Bruce Cameron, Clarice Townsend, Florence Jaffe, Mary Westfall, Elizabeth Markey, Margaret Fleischer, Adeline Lewis, Carolyn Bock, Diana Cohn, Nancy. Ann Trimble, Jack Brown, Katherine Parrish, Doris Tuttle, Allan Vestal, Charles Wilson, Barbara Johnson, Margaret Brooks, Betty Lou Bowen, Mary Gordon: Robert Merrill, Susanne Clark, Joseph Coleman, Richard Pinkham, Rosanne Smith, Amy Bird, Ruth Cabalzer, Gaar Johnson, Martha Jo Cantwell, James Hall, Dorothy Weber, Doris Wilson.
HIGH COURT CONFIRMS CONVICTION OF SHARP
The conviction in Criminal Court here two years ago of Dr. Joseph E. Sharp on ‘a charge of performing an illegal operation had been affirmed today by the Indiana Supreme Court. Dr. Sharp was sentenced May 19, 1937, to three to 14 years in prison on evidence that a woman patient died after an operation.
LADIES’ HEELS MEN’S HATS
15¢ 35¢
3 too hot mean
h of them urs a day automa
matic gas water dissatisfied withi 1. REMOVE the heater. 3. REFUND your payments.
CLEANED, BLOCKED
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h an automatic 98 tically and econo oday at no risk.
wit heater installed 1
sentative to tell
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s water heater:
mically.
2. RESTORE your old equip
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES _
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
SORIZONTAL Answer to Previous Puzzle
1,7 Discoverer
of X-rays.
12 Pattern block. 13 Pertaining to the sun. . 15 Soft mass. 16 Cash. 18 Stream obstruction, 19 Carries. 21 Deer. 22 To add to. ) 24 Russian _ village. | 26 Cuckoo. 27 Strenuous. 30 Passage. 33 Positive electric : terminal, 34 Auditory. - 37 Writer's mark. 39 To retreat. 41 Constellation. 42 Common verb. 66 43 Neither. gio, moar 46 Be still. 2 Heathen god, 48 New England. 3 Part of a
fi EIS GLE]
49 Italian river, 50 Idant. 52 Anxieties. 55 Happens. 59 Custom. 60 Busy insect, 63 Ot each an equal quantity 64 Cow’s call. 65 He was a === by profession. He was a ——
WER UE
chain. 4 Opposed to weather. S When, 6 New, 7 Butted violently. 8 Either. 9 One plus one. 10 Shark. 11 Paradise. 14 Musical note,
prize winner. 16 X-rays have 61 North
- wide use in
treatment.
‘23 Parrot.
17 Japanese coin. 19 Three. 20 Honest.
25 Repetition. 27 Sooner than. 28 To leave. 29 Folding bed. 31 Edible tuber, 32 Epoch. 35 Metal. 36 To press. 38 Sailor. 40 Native peach, 45 Garden tool. 47 Twitching. 49 Animal victim 51 Speechless. 52 Drinking mug. 53 Timber tree. 54 Monkey. §6 Food container. 57 Eggs of fishes. 58 Liquid colloidal solution.
os Carolina. 62 Palm lily. 63 Preposition.
SPRING RAINS CURB GRASS FIRE DAMAGE
Fire Chief Kennedy said today that that the cold spring rains this week have saved the City hundreds of dollars in grass fire damage and |\\
the cost of putting thém out.
“The Fire Department has spent several hundred dollars in motor fuel alone in putting out grass fires in the past month,” he said. “Every time we make a run, it costs $50 and there have been 100 fires reported so far this month So figure it out.” , The grass fire situation is more costly this year than last, he said.
March Special
HALF SOLES
3 LY Cc Ladies’ 4 H Men's
OHIO SHOE REPAIR
1¢ 8. ILLINOIS SI.
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UTILITY
There have been Indianapolis so
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KU
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PUSH MENTAL
GLINIC PROGRAM
|State Advisory Council to
Hold Second Meeting Here June 5.
The Indiana State Advisory Council on Mental Hygiene will hold its second meeting June 5 at 141 S. Meridian St., Dr. George C. Stevens, director of the State Public Welfare Division of Medical Care, said today. The Advisory Council was formed early this month and will mee§ quarterly to review the progress of the Division of Medical Care’s program of mental hygiene. The program instituted by Dr. Stevens includes the holding of mental hygiene clinics in a number of Indiana cities, The Advisory Council, at its first meeting early this month, approved of the clinics and recommended that they be continued under competent medical supervision. It was also recommended that services be extended only to indigents. Members of the advisory council
1are: Dr. H. J. Norton, Columbus,
chairman; Dr. Larue Carter, Indianapolis; Dr. Herman Baker Evansville; Dr. L. F. Harshman, Ft. Wayne; Dr. M. DeArmond, Indianapolis; Donald DuShane, Columbus; Miss Emma C. Puschner, Indianapolis; Louis E. Evans, Indianapolis;
|Prof. Frank Flynn, South Bend:
Mrs. Austin Clifford, Indianapolis; and Prof. C. M. Louttit, Blooming-
J ton.
Members of the Welfare Department on the council are: Thurman A. Gottschalk, state administrator; Miss Mildred Arnold, Children’s Division chairman; Donald T. Griffin, classification supervisor and Dr. Stevens. :
. 13 IN FAMILY ILL MIDDLEFIELD, O., March 30 (U. P.).—Thirteen of Mr. and Mrs. Abe Weaver's 18 children have been coiifined to their beds with scarlet fever which has closed schools here.
Double Dipped Chocolate Covered
Peanuts. 1 { c ih
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227 grass fires in far, compared to
G. C. MURPHY
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ul
| o J
ob
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59 al
You must kling beauty a
PURDUE GIMLET CLUB ELECTS 3 FROM HERE
Times Special LAFAYETTE, March 30.—Three Indianapolis students . at Purdue University have been elected to the
for organized upperclassmen, it was announced today. They are R. B. DeMars, 6166 Broadway; Robert E. Insley, 272 S. Ritter, and D. G. Malcolm, 4230 Park Ave. The club, an athletic booster group, is made up of juniors and seniors affiliated with fraternities. It will sponsor an exhibition baseball
Gimlet Club, honorary organization |“!
THURSDAY, MARCH 30, 1939
of the National League and the Pure
due varsity on April 15.
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Took “Too Many Medicines to Mention”—But Says Grand Compound Alone Had Power Enough to Help Her.
“I didn’t know that any one med-, icine was capable of doing all that Natex did for me,” exclaimed Mrs. Emma Shucraft, 519 N. New Jersey St., this city, in a recent statement given to the special Natex representative at Haag’s Claypool Hotel Drug Store, Illinois and Washington Sts.
“The past 14 years of my life were anything but pleasant ones for me, I can tell you. I was constantly constipated and continually worrying about one complaint after another. My digestion was so poor that even a bird-like meal would distress me greatly with painful gas; my nerves were in such a state that I lay, awake for hours every night before even fitful sleep would come; dizzy spells and headaches seemed destined to be my daily companions, and there always seemed to he aching misery in my legs and a stiffness and soreness in my muscles, “I tried too. many medicines to mention but until I luckily started on Natex not a one of them was able to help me in the slightest.
“It took only a dose or two of this amazing medicine to get my bowels moving better than they had in years, and that was only the start.
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Mrs. Emma Shucraft
after-distress; my nerves quieted down nicely and sleep came easily and was deep and refreshing; the dizzy spells and headaches simply seemed to become a thing of the past; ‘and then, almost before I realized it, there wasn't a trace of an ache or stiffness or soreness in my body. So I say to anyone who suffers as I once did, take Natex if you want real relief.” A special Natex representative is at ‘Haag's Claypodl Hotel Drug Store, Illinois and Washington Sts., daily explaining the merits of Natex and how it can help you. See him soon. Natex is also being especially featured by all 26 Haag's Neighborhood Stores. will be paid to
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