Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 July 1939 — Page 15

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“Rogers Clark s

\. TEEC NOS PAS, Ariz,, July 27—This column is an account of 15 minutes at Teec Nos Pas. It’s an Indian trading post. This country lis full of vast desolation. You drive, "énd you’ look, , 800 you say “Lord, what wastes! This | is utter emptiness. (How . does anybody make a. living?” * The road becomes a mere trail. You jounce over solid sheets of outcropping rock. Thousands of . acres of flat solid rock, like fields of concrete. The end of mnowhere, You come around a ‘rough little hill, and there in the val‘ley is Teec Nos Pas. Just: the store ‘and a’ few + outbuildings, that’s all. Loafing Indians lay on the porch, lounged against store walls. Indian ponies, saddled and blanketed, were, tied here and there. The Indians

_wore red bands around their heads.

We stopped and walked toward the store. One of two white men lounging o on the porch got up and went in ahead of us. All the loafing Indian eyes drilled us coldly. In the West, there lis a friendly greeting between strangers. But not at Teec Nos Pas. : The “unfriendly stare is the greeting at Teec Nos Pas. The store was old and dirty inside. Lying on the

there, doing nothing. Ncbody anywhete doing anything, except staring * We wanted to break the ice.: “I'll have a CoeaCola,” said my friend. /No cold drinks here,” said the white trader. |

floor, flat on wooing. was an old Indian. Just lying

Try, Try

Again : + There was np friendliness in that store. ' Only ‘a belligerent waiting to see who you were and what the hell brought you here. My friend bought a sack of Bull Durham. | : _. “Can you tell me anything about that old building up at Four Corners?” I asked. :

Our Town

" Things everyt dy around here ought to know: -Arthur B. Carr, director of the Children’s Museum tells me that the original model of the George tute—the one I mentioned the other ent part of the collection up at his place. ‘It was a gift of John Mahoney's children. He was the sculptgr—remember? - It ns out, too, that William C. ‘Hoeltke, the strapping young man who posed for the statue back in 1893 or there-

day—is-a perm

omew County. He's 84 years old and sound as they make ’em, says his son.

: rs remembers the bitter presidential campaign of 1884. When the news of Grover

Cleveland’s election’ reached Indianapolis, it moved |

glish to hitch his horse and ride | |. “yah Europe. .into, art galleries, cathedrals,

William - E. Eng through the Pustoffice, says Mr. Gardner. : That was also the year Wilmer Christian, the contractor, built his fine two-story brick residence at the northwest corner of Alabama and Vermont ith the magnificent fountain out in front. That year, too, Mr. Christian and his partner, Mr. Shower, were busy erecting some buildings around Pennsylvania and 14th Sts. The news of Cleveland's - election. inspired Shoyver and Christian to chase all their Buiidings and give. them a

To rtiih to ) . Christian's "tamous fountain. Originally, it was the property of a plumber. Mr. Christian offered to give the plumber a cow for it, but it took two cows to get the plumber to part with it, says Mr. Gardner. Charles Edw ird Thomas, over in the Illinois Build- .. ing, writes more letters to the editor of Time than " ‘anybody else in Indianapolis. Not only that, but

Wr

41 + 4 lL. nington WASHINGTON, July 27.—The embarrassing prospect of two. Republican Presidential candidates springing up in Ohio has been, resolved in faver of Senator: Robert A. Taft, who is expected to announce his can-

didacy next week. » The way was cleared by the

- self-elimination of Governor John W. Bricker, who_announced in Columbus that he was not a candidate for the Presidential nomination, never had been and that Brother Taft would make a good President. Brother Taft thinks so, too, so it apparently is unanimous and the Ohio convention delegation seems to be his. This situation had possibil- - ities of becoming ugly. Governor Bricker, stalwart and handsome, wit. the aggressive flair of Paul McNutt, held a goodly chunk of the state machine, had a healthy ambition to go on up, and showed himself last November to be about as good a vote, 2 sgetter in Ohio as Sena Teht,

It's All Set Up Now

Even in Ohio, the Republican voters apparently would rather Keep Bricker in Columbus than send him to Washington, because only a few days ago a Gallup poll of Ohio Republicans gave Taft 62 per cent for President and Bricker 38 per cent. That may have been the straw vote that broke Bricker’s back. > any rate his renunciation followed close upon it So Ohio *t its Republican Presidential hope

| My Day

NEW YORK, Wednesday—At the Fair yesterday I revisited the |General Motors Building, and their Mr. Frank Harting took a most appreciative audience on the ride to see “The World of Tomorrow,” and the rest of the exhibit. I only had | time for a hasty visit to Miss Hickok and Commander Flanagan, and then came back to New York City. The young people joined me for dinner and enJoyed very much meeting Mr. George Carlin and Mr. Webb Miller. The latter willl meet ‘them before very long in Engand, for he is going over on the lipper and they are taking the teamer Manhattan t his ‘morning. ; :

Everyone in the audience last

“~ night was moved by Jascha Heifitz’s wonderful playing in the movie “They Shall Have Music.” It is made an outstandingly artistic perf ce, not only by the playing of the great artist, b ut by the other orchestras which played so beautifully with him. . I eajoyed it very much and 5 hope that many people will see it land be led to hools for poor children of talent, for

+ I was sent a cartoon from Fhe New Yorke! the er day, showing two ladies rocking ona porch hd one asking ithe other whether the Queen Wrote ea “bread akg butter” letter. i : ede to this desire for informatis on on sophistica Ney Yorker

| Hoosier Vagabond

LE

Joe Gardner, “the tinsmith, |

_pitality they had received from us

‘I feel it is| only ‘to undertake the writin on the | irain i

o % By Ernie The trader leaned one elbow agalnet the high ‘candy case. He pulled at his cigaret, held his head back, blew high. And. ‘then he said, with utter finality. “Dont know anything about it.” : I knew better. So I waited-awhile, and then said, “Never even heard of it, huh?” The trader waited awhile aad then said, again closing the subject, “Yes, I've heard of it.” Then I waited awhile and said, “You been: ‘out | here long?” ' Ana -after’ awhile the trader said, “Yes, quite awhile.” ‘I tried again.’ “I hear aa edly. tried to start a hotel. That old | building up there.” The trader said, “No, it wasn’t a hotel. E war a trading post.” “I'd heard it was a hotel,” I said. “That's the Indian agent out there on the. porch. He can tell you what you. want to know.”

The Old Waiting Game

After a’bit the agent drifted in. He did not speak. He set on’ the high counter across the store,. ‘and studied the old Army shoes my friend wore. "Waiting us out. Our move. + = ° “How long has it been since you: sold a rug to'a tourist?” I asked the trader. ‘He blew a disdainful answer of sioke through ‘his nose. The Indian agent continued his study. The Indians watched to see if my: friend could actually roll a cigaret. He could. Their expression did not change. The old Indian on the floor never moved. . The heat was oppressive, and the needles.in the air grew sharper. My friend and I sensed each other’s wishes without looking. “Well, I reckon we better shove along,” I said. “I reckon we better,” my friend replied. Stares propelled us out the, dcor. The rocky road away from Teec Nos Pas felt like a ribbon of velvet. The desert felt clean and safe and pure. dks el

-

v

By Anton Scherrer|

most of them are - -published. Last month, for 'instance, Time printed two * letters ' written by Mr. Thomas. Both had a Southern flavor. Seems

t something Time said reminded Mr. Thomas or

ancestral plantation, Magnolia, near Ridgeway, 8. C. Letter 1: “Aunt Bino,” who died 20 years, ago.at the age of about 90 years, bore a dozen sons, each dying in infancy. Negroes told her that their” names

killed them, so she didn’t: name her 13th .son. He|

grew up to be known as “Nuttin” (Gullah for “Nothing”). When “Nuttin” reached 16, he disliked not

! having a name; so took one, and forthwith died. abouts, is vacationing in Barthol- | é 2

| The. Duke of. Durham

- ® » # '

Letter 2 concerns “Buck” Duke who grew ‘rich making Duke’s Mixture and Bull Durham. There is one story, says Mr. Thomas, that Buck Duke used ‘to tell on himself, of’ the time Mrs. ‘Duke was dragging

etc, and while visiting Canterbury Cathedral, Buck felt, tired. He seated himself in the nearest pew which happened to be the choir stalls. came up and asked if he would move for.he was in a stall reserved: for nobility. Buck Duke is reported to have asked the sexton, “Who in the hell do you think I am?” The sexton politely backed off and .asked

“Who, sir?” and Buck answered “Duke of Durham.”|

George Stout, who:used to run a wholesale grocery on S. Meridian St. when I was a kid, always: wore a straw hat in his office. Even .in winter time. Said it kept his head cool. One Christmas, his friends gave him a straw hat trimmed. with fur. When the grocery burned down in 1895, about the only thing Mr. Stout saved was his fur-trimmed straw hat. It wasn’t until 1898 that the police of Indianapolis were ordered to press their pants. Historically, . it was the same year Doss Shaffer officiated as the cop in the dark Illinois St. tunnel. When Mr. ‘Shaffer complained that nobody could get the benefit of his nicely creased pants, the Mayor saw the point aud ordered more ghia Lisi a the tunnel.

By Raymond Clapper

all set up now in the tall, ramrod-backed, baldish; bespectacled elder son of the Taft dynasty. ‘To the

Taft family’s wealth ahd prestige, son Robert brings,

if not his father’s full-bellied humor, at least an engaging eagerness to please and be liked, a willing ness to talk about almost anything almost anywhere, and an ability—for all you may have heard about his shortcomings as an after-dinner wit—to express his convictions with forcé and clarity. In.fact: some of his Republican associates tried to tell him he was talking too much, but De Wor on talking.

Don’t Forget Matha Taft

- Don’t forget Martha ‘Taff, either,: as. smart and neat a little woman. as ever went to bat for a husband. She’s a political trouper: who’s not above appearing on-the hustings with a run in her stocking. She’ll be worth about as many votes for: the ticket if Taft heads it next year as his running-mate will. As the Republican Presidential picture shakes down today, the first-string-. entries include Taft; Vandenberg and Dewey, was leading at the moment, because he has that certain something that the regular political boys- go’ for.

Dewey has the glamor rating with the public, but|

suffers momentarily from stayihg under wraps. .In the fall he will begin speaking on national. questions. When we know. what Herbert Hoover intends to do with the influence ‘he has built up; and it is nothing to be sneezed at, and when we know where million-

aire angel Joe Pew is going with his army of delegates

when he drops the impossible Governor James of Pennsylvania who is his present stalking horse, tHen we'll begin to get a line on the Republican candidate, Thal Sak be: some little time vet—quite a little. Hime, act. -

By Eleanor: Roosevelt]

Of course, in the accepted sense, neither the King nor the Queen write “bread and butter” “letters, but they are much more careful to. observe; ithe amenities than: you and I might possibly be.. Strictly, speaking, they were the guests not of any individuals, but of the people ‘of the United States, so you will remember that ‘before they sailed for home, they broadcast. a

“bread and butter” letter to- both Canada and the

United States and thanked the people of both countries for their welcome. In addition, as a’ gesture

of personal appreciation, they “sent the President and me a telegram of personal thanks for our hospraliey as hosts, both jin our public and. private Every member of ‘the party who stayed ‘with “us, and even some of ‘those .who: were only our guests for meals. wrote .us most _appreciatively of the: hoe. lly, -an from all individuals: with whom they came ‘in contact in this cquntry. . Only: yesterday 1 was sent’ a photestatic’ copy of a letter written by oné of the ladies-in-waiting to the Queen to Mrs. Maul of the Mountaineer Craftsman’s. Co-operative of ‘West Virginia. Mrs. Maul had sent a small pair of hand-carved colts for the little Princesses. In view of the fact that no gifts, unless they came through friends, were accepted, 'it was possible to keep the number within reason. But even at that, to give personal thanks for every gift must have béen an almost impossible task. It seems extraordinary that these’ ladies-in-waiting should have been ‘able g of so many le while. still

“God, I don’t know. - Nobody ever comes. here.’|.

Quickly a. sexton:

‘educational

I should say ‘Vandenberg

“Mary Had a Little Lamb” will do

, | verse .as you said before the: meteor

doubt.

sit down the str

Tempest in

A Teapot—

Flynn

This is the last article in a de-

bate on “Should wives be per-.

mitted to hold jobs outside the home?” - - Florence Birmingham, Boston woman’s leader, declared working - wives are “chiselers.” ‘Edwina Avery, Washington attorney, replied that family life and marriage will be threatened if married women are: barred from “employment. = Today, John T. : Flynn views the problem through the eyes of an economist. ou

By John T. Flynn : ee” Times Special Writer ! “HE movement to re~ “strict by law and by policy the employment of* -married women arises entirely out of the economic situation. The man out of work who sees his neighbor and his wife both employed ‘feels—quite humanly— . that some sort of injustice is being done to him. Since it is in economic

tion originates, the thing to do is to Jook at it on. its economic side. ‘Out of 48 million working. people. in this country, . about one-fourth of them are women— roughly 10,750,000. Of these, 3,000,000 are ‘married women. - This is the army which is now the center of the attack.

congideration this agita-

hse are 40 women at work in this picture.: Of that number, roughly 12 (A. B.C.) are working wives. Of that 12, you can think of six of them (C) as very poor women employed in various menial occupations. Of the remaining six, three of them (A) are the wives of men who are ill, unemployed or otherwise nonproviders. The gther three (B) are almost sure to be wives of men in one of the low income groups (one—at the; most—may be the wife of a man who has an adequate income.) : :

that the great bulk of this employment is found among peo- . ple in the very lowest income brackets. One-third or one million are found in domestic and personal service. One-fifth ‘are found working as operatives ‘in manufacturing establishments for low wages. That is, well over half or 1, 600, - 000. are very poor women emsployed as servants and as workers in factories. They are women whose employment is necessary to ‘Subsistenca, 8 = ie? OW, what of the other half? First of all, it is not to be assumed that because a woman has

a husband, she has a provider.

There are no: figures ohtainable, but we may assume safely that a large number of these: 1,400,000. women fall into one or more of the. following categories: / 1. Women whose husbands have ho employment at all. 2. Women whose husbands are ill.

3. Women whose husbands have deserted them and do not provide for them. : 4. Women whose husbands, as ‘well as themselves, work for -very small wages.

"I have seen some estimates— mere guesses, it is true, yet by competent observers—that at least half the women outside domestic and personal service who.are mar- _ ried and employed will be included in the first three—women with. ili, unemployed or worthless husbands. "No. one: in his senses will, of course, contemplaté preventing such women from working. And if this estimate is true, we may eliminate half of the remaining 1,400,000 married women. This leaves us 700,000 to be considered.

2 # » rOwW this brings us back to the fourth category above. It is equally clear that among women not in personal or domestic service

or whose husbands atre'ill, employ- - ed or worthless, there will be some

whose incomes are very small.

‘As a matter of fact, in looking at the economic aspects of this married-woman-worker problem, we have to keep in mind the various income brackets. In the very lowest income brackets employ- .

' ment of married women is quite

common—Negro and white work‘ers whose wives also work as

laimdresses atid as servants, too, and at-odd jobs. - . x & As we get to the higher income ; brackets. the number of married

women who are employed is quiet, .

small. Among the 700,000 married women ‘not servants and ‘whose husbands work, there are a very ‘large number whose usbands earn very little—small-scale clerks, messengers, men in seasonal occupations,: men in the innumerable low-wage groups.’ The truth is that when we eliminate these the actual number. of married women employed but who are econom-

ically independent without em-

ployment is quite ‘small. The object of all this is to determine just how serious .an economic problem we are facing. : 8 8 8 ; " THINK the facts are such that, -even if a good argument’ can be made against employing the wives of well-paid workers on some other ground, no argument at ‘all can be made on the -economic ‘side, because the, numbers of women involved is too small to make this a major problem. But in no case can it be considered of economic seriousness to society. There is an idea that

© wages.

a “married woman at work dis places some other worker. But this is not true, unless she and her husband are earning a very large income. é The person who earns $30 or ‘even $60 spends all of his or her income. And if he or she does, the money, as soon as received, passes out into the channels of trade and makes employment for another person. This is not true only when the following two conditions are observed: (1) That the person ‘who collects income saves a large part of it and (2) does not invest it. This cannot be said of men and women who work for moderate All of the money which flows. into their hands flows out again promptly, or nearly so, and

as promptly provides employment -

for others. In the case of wives and hus-' bands who each earn large sums,

of course an economic injury to

society may : be observed where (1) they save heavily and (2) fail to invest. But such cases are so rare as to be quite unimportant in a nation of 130,000,000 people. My own conclusion on this issue

~i{s-that it' is, from: the point of - view of economics, a tempest in a : teapoy,

- A glance, however, will reveal

. NAMED HEAD OF

UNIT AT BUTLER|

Dr. Charles C. Josey Comes To Direct Psychology Department.

Dr. Charles C. Josey of the University of South Dakota has been

appointed head of the Butler Uni-|’

versity psychology. department. Dr. Josey has been head of

psychology and philosophy at the|

University of South Dakota. The Butler department, which “he will

head, has:been transferred to the|

collége of liberal arts and sciences from the college of education, Dr. S. D. Robinson, Butler president, said. Meanwhile, the creation of a new department of library science at the University’s college -of liberal . arts and sciences has been announced by Glenn R. Maynard, librarian. It was made necessary by state | : system requirements that every high schodl employ a teacher with a license in library science. : Dr. Josey, also, will teach in the evening division. He is a graduate of Wake Forest College, N. C., and received his master of arts and doc-

7 tor of philosophy degrees from Co-

lumbia University. He is a member of the Society of Colonial Wars, the American Psychological Association, Phi Beta Kappa and Pi Gamma Mu.

university |

Youth Takes Gunman for .2-State Ride

Wayne Chaney, 18, reported “at 4 a. m. today at Police Headquarters that his car was ‘boarded by a guhmian near his Thomasboro, Ill., home last night. . The gunman, he said, or . dered him to drive to I ‘dianapolis swiftly and with= out regard for traffic signals. Chaney said he drove consistently at 60 miles an hour and ‘that the man got out of the - car at Harding St. and the ‘Belt Railroad. Chaney said the man made no attempt to rob him of - either money or the car. Police were investigating. .

SAFETY QUIZ BOOKED "FOR TRUCK GROUP

Two teams, one of truck drivers, and the other of truck executives, will match wits in a safety quiz Aug. 4 at the Hotel Antlers under sponsorship of the Indiana Motor Traffic Association. Five men will compose each team to answer “stickler” "questions: on Interstate Commerce Commission safety rules and regulations. The contest is to be conducted by Charles C. Morgan, American Trucking Association safety expert, who will be

honored guest at the local Association’s weekly Juncheon.

If You See a Meteor Fall,

Supine. meteor. What would you do.

Speak a Nursery Rhyme,

rt Ry JAMES THRASHER you were taking a walk tonight’ and suddenly saw 8

“Well, €0 per cent of the population. wouldn’t know what to do either, except Ts look. But W. G. Gingery, Washington High School prin-

cipal, is proper scientific procedure: (1) ‘Upon sighting the celestial fireball, line it up with a landmark, such as a roof, steeple or tree. . (2. Recite a bit of doggerel;

very nicely. (3) Pick another landmark where -{ the meteor disappears from: view. (4) Go home, take out your watch and time as much of the

bowed out. - (5) Next day: ‘take a surveyor's transit (and someone who knows how to use it), line up your two landmarks, tell the transit man how long your verse took, and maybe you will find your meteor.

; Evidence Necessary Incidentally, enpugh to discover the meteor, then you may call it a meteorite. But you: have to. have the corpus delicti before you can ‘use the word. Three of Mr. Gingery’s students at Witten! College, Springfield, O., -once trieds the landmark-and-nursery-rhyme : stem on a roaring, flaming meteor. But it tripped up through an incursion of feminine

"The students all had dates the night that the meteor hove into sight. ' All three of the young men agreed upon the spot where it was seen. But one gir. ‘moved the tran3: the second girl claimed they ‘were in the wrong block; the Bir snl didn't show Fup af all

oe

They ‘finally found the ‘meteorite

up near Lima,

i you are Tucky |

je ‘of the learned minority. And here is hig outline of the

terial, such as we see during the August “meteor showers.” : ‘Mr. Gingery doesn’t make any positive assertions about the matter, though, because the whole. thing is

€la subject of perennial debate.

“Shooting stars,” a very lowbrow way of referring to :meteors, are more - common than most of us

think. By stationing four observers|

to watch the various points of the compass and then do some multiplying, it has been determined that

between 10 and 20 million meteors}

strike our atmosphere every day. But only about 100.a year actually reach the earth without burning up.

‘Some Are Pure Iron

About three or four of these 100 are pure iron. The rest are

stone, with iron, nickel and.other|

elements. . Examinations have Trevealed 30 chemical elements in meteorites, all found in the earth. There have been:no new ones discovered from “out yonder.” The world’s biggest meteorite hit Arizona a few :thousand years ago,

and it really was a dandy. Despite].

tremendous resistance by the earth’s atmosphere, it plowed a crater 1000 feet deep and 4000 feet in’ diameter. nosiup fragments in the vicinity.

Mr. Gingery advises us not ‘tol

worry, however, about the possi-

bility of being struck by a chunk of |

interstellar matter. So far as ‘he has been able to find out, no one has suffered such a fate.

4A meteor, says Mr. Ging ; stellar material that ar aaa

|

They're still pickihg|

In fact, a person’s chances of ‘ex- Wi pre Sd ihe Inefeorite. route Jen 101

24 ENLIST FOR NAVAL SERVICE

6-Year Hitch; New Law Effective.

Twenty-four Indiana youths enlisted here this’ week for six-year

_;|terms in the U. S. Navy

The enlistments are the first under the new law making enlistment in the Navy for a period of six years rather than four, as provided by the old law. The men were ‘sent to the Great Lakes, 1, Naval Training Station : Those enlisting were Donald Morris Nichter, 19, James Henry Rust, 18, and Glade William Brown, 18, all of Seymour, Ind.; Harry Edward Southwick, - 20, Alexandria, Ind.; Lawrence Frank Teder, 20, Jasper, Ind.; Everett Eugene Cobb, 19, Dugger, Ind.; Robert Leonard Bogeman, 18, ‘Shelbyville, Ind.; Earl Cecil DeBord, 18, Francisco, Ind., and Buron William... Long Jr., is, Muncie, In Leo James Flynn, 18, Kokomo, Ind.; Charles Conrad Beckner, 18, Princeton; Marvin Floyd Goldman, 18, Owensville; Fioyd Raymond Shank, 19, Churubusco, Ind.;' John Preston ' Fisher, 19, Murreie, Ind.; Wilfred George Croxton, 21, Ft. Wayne, Ind.; John DeWitt, 18, Logansport, Ind.; Carroll Dalton Gilliland, 18, Petersburg; Chester Harding Glenn, 18, Patoka, and

Orval Lee Stewart, 23, Farmersburg, Ind.; Frederick R. Koverman, 19, Ft. Wayne, Ind.; Roscoe Marion Mickey, 20, Palestine, Ind.; Martin Dale Johnson, 19, Middletown, Ind., and Harold Charles Barnard, 18, Linton, Ine Ind.

OLD-TIMER CLOSES "ARGUMENT ON FAIR.

MANSFIELD, 0. y Jiily 27 (U. P.). —The: executive committee of Richland county’s fair board know now which. fair this year’s will be. They had made guesses from 65 to 70. W. H. Shyock settled it. It is the Tist. Shyock is 81 years old and a former secretary of the board for 23 years.

TEST YOUR KNOWLEDGE

1—Where is the British Island __of Grenada? : 2—With what sport is the name - of 'Elwood Cooke associated? ; 3—Which" ‘country was formerly . - known as the. Ottoman Empire? 4 Historically, which ‘is the . oldest alcoholic beverage? 5—Do ships have a lighter draft in salt water than in . frésh water? 6—Which independent republic in Africa was one of the allied and associate nations in the World War? 2

rt it

Answers

1—-In the Windward Islands, West Indies. 2—Tennis. 3-—Turkey, states. 4—Wine. : © §==Yes; because salt water has’ ’ greater buoyancy. : S—Liberia. = 8 8

ASK THE TIMES . ‘Inclose & 38-cent stamp for reply when addressing any

; Fassia of fact or information “to. e Indianapolis Times shington.

“and its subject

Harry Wayne Richey, 18, Plymouth. |

‘Service - Bureau, | {4 NW !

The Claypool Goes Native

And Puts Its Porch to Use

The other day. the Claypool Hotel manager suddenly discovered that it had a front porch. And that’s how downtown Indianapolis’ first sidewalk cafe, the Pompeiian- Loggia, was born. It is quite possible that a majority. of Indianapolis residents have passed a busy and happy lifetime without suspecting that the Claypool had a mezzanine porch running the length of its Illinois St. frontage. The porch was used a few times in its 37 years as a reviewing stand

HOSIERY WORKERS PIGNIG IS SATURDAY

Members of Hosiery Workers, Branch 35, will hold their annual picnic at Riverside Park | ‘Saturday from 10 a. m. until midnight. Committee members ect. an. attendance of about 25 A parade from union’ headquarters is to precede the outing. The program will include a beauty contest, games, dancing and a floor show, according to Walter Truman, business agent and president of the union. The committee in charge includes John Carr, chairman, Sarah Olvey, Clarence Mayerhoefer, = Charles Cleveland, Vivian Murrin, John Vail, Lowell Burnett, George. Dris-|. kell, Helen Sullivan, Thelma Pruitt, Jewel White, Laurene Withers, Knox. Martin, Harry Babrick, Nina Kincaid .and Eunice Sink.

TEMPLE SISTERHOOD ~ HONORS 4 HOOSIERS

Four Indianapolis v women have been named members of national committees of the National Federation of Temple Sisterhocds, it was announced at headquarters at Cincinnati today.. . Mrs. Isaac Born, 533 S. Central Court, is a member of the committee in Charge of the sale of uniongrams for the benefit of the scholarship fund. Mrs. 8. E. Kominers, 4111 N. Illinois St., is a member of the committee on peace. Mrs. Harry B. Jacobs, 4955 Washington Blvd, is on the committee for young folks’ temple -leagues. Also working on a national committee is, Mrs. ‘Louis R. Markum, 3645 E. Fall Creek Blvd.

for parades. But for the most part, it has led a quiet existence behind the gilded faun on the north marquee. i

Let's See About This ;

- It was a waste of time and money, the new management decided, to let that porch languish while Midwestern citizens went. to Paris or Rome

atmosphere at sidewalk cafes. Even

sary and dust at sidewalk restaurants on Lower Fifth Avenue was a bit. extravagant, they concluded. Especially ‘since you could have the atmosphere back home in Indiana. Accordingly, the Pompeiian Log-

wonders about a loggia, it is, accorde ing to unimpeachable authority, a

room. There’ll Be a Breeze

the ‘decoration motif, the marble tables and the palms and ferns which serve as a screen while the “| patron looks at the stream of traffic or the passersby.

location premises a. breeze, \whenever a vagrant zephyr sees \fit to stray through the downtown sector. What's more, you needn’t be afraid of bugs. Tests have proved that they stay away. °

BUILDING BLUNDER MEANS PLAYGROUND

NEW ORLEANS, Jul; July 27 (U. P). —A construction blunder will’ be turned into a recreation center for New Orleans’ youth. The city pur= chased - an immense unused street transit garage from the Public Serv-

a huge: skating rink and playground

one’ ofthe largest in ‘the United

States. |

Everyday Movies—By Wortman

or- Budapest ‘to absorb Old . World

to New York to eat crepes

gia was created. For anyone who -. roofed gallery; an open-air in

The Pompeiian part comes from

Besides food and drink, the new.

ice, Inc. The site will be made into

yn