Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 October 1939 — Page 15

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& No Trouble at All

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2

SALEM, Ore., Oct. 5.—The other day some anonymous reader wrote: in and said, “Are any hops raised in the United States?” 20 3 x "Are any ‘hops raised ‘in the U: S:? Why bless you, little ‘Virginia, we raise so many hops we don't know : rr what to do with them. : : three Pacific states of Oregon, California and’ Washington raise 99 per cent of the hops in America. And the center of the whole business is right here around Salem. Wasn't I lucky to be here when your postcard came? Hops They give it its aroma. A hop ranch) or farm is known as a “yard.” We went out to visit the biggest hop yard in the world. It belongs to the Horst

Brothers, and has 486 acres in hops. Oregon has,

altogether, ‘19,400 acres planted in ‘hops. California ! ‘Aas 6800. ° Washington

! hk has 4900. Idaho provides the comic relief with 60 acres, and New York State tries to get in an oar with 250 acres. That's dll. No other state raises hops. = | £150 oF : - There are about 1100 separate hop yards in America. These yards employ, including temporary pickers, - some 200,000 people.; Many of the Oregon hop farmers are Chinese. ' :

3 » - How They Grow Hops right at the moment bring the grower 30 cents a pound. In| the last decade the price has run from a low of 7 cents. to a high of 80. Since it costs about 20 cents a pound to raise hops, you can see that one gets rich very slowly selling them at 7 cents. The peak of 80 cents was reached in 1933, right after repeal. But then, as usual in this land of too much abundance; everybody and his brother - set out hops to get in on the good thing. And two years later there "was sich an excess of hops that the price did a wonderful swan dive,

NEW YORK, Oct. 5.—One of the intangibles in a long war is the national sense of humor. I don’t mean in any sense that I think war is funny, and yet it is true that armies endure longer if they can escape from time to time through songs and pictures and anecdotes. And in this respect, it seems to me, the British do the best of all. Most ofi the army songs which have survived from 1914 are out of the English army. And today it is London rather than Berlin, Moscow or Paris which passes ‘round the gags. In all countries there has-been satire upon the leaflet raids, and yet I think that Great Britain ° has protected itself by framing the best yarns about its own air service. Perhaps you have heard * the one concerning the pilot who got back to his base-three hours ahead of schedule. += “Lieut. Chumley,” said his: commander, “how have you managed to execute your mission in such brief time?” : ‘

1

“It was. very. easy, sir,” replied the flier. “I had no difficulty in getting over the German lines, and as soon as I was in enemy territory I let the bundles .go and flew home again.” ~~ : “But, man,” exclaimed the excited commanding officer, “didn’t you untie the packages and permit our - messages to drop .one by one?” «Come to think of it,” admitted the young member of the Royal Flying Corps, “I forgot all about it. I just let the bundles drop, ropes and all.” «Well, never let anything of that kind occur again,” responded -his . superior. “Heavens, man, don’t you

Washington * WASHINGTON, Oct. 5.—For reasons of state an official pretense is maintained as to the purpose of the arms embargo repeal. But it does not seem in the public interest that private citizens should avoid looking the facts straight in the eye. # : The real purpose of repealing the arms embargo is to supply finished war materials—particularly airplanes—tc the British and French. That is the end which motivates the White House and the State Department and it is the unspoken objective of which every Senator is conscious. Nothing is to be gained by .. deceiving American public opinion concerning this point. To say that real neutrality requires repeal of the arms embargo is pretense, for our purpose actually is to give a break to the Allied side. To contend that “international Jaw” requires repeal of the embargo is again playing

" with words. We can properly excuse officials and Sen-

ators for insisting upon these polite fictions. Governments cannot always be frank. But the people are entitled to know wirat the real situation is. ;

! ss = =

A Dangerous Folly

Because if we understand the real reason for repealing thé arms embargo, we shall be less likely to be negligent in taking the protective action which must. accompany it. To repeal the arms embargo and then go cruising about the world insisting upon exer= cise of our “neutral rights” would be dangerous folly. In 1915, we were permitting American citizens to travel to England on British munition carriers. Mare than that. When several hundred American tourists

My Day

SAN FRANCISCO, Wednesday.—It was with real sorrow yesterday that I read of the death of Cardinal

" Mundelein; He was not only a great man in, the-

«church, he was‘a great man in our country. He used his’ influence to increase the good will and under- ; = standing among people of differ“ent faiths and races. He had a real concern for those who suffered. and a love for young people. When he came to see the President, if it was possible, I alweys made it a point to go in and see hin, if only for a few minutes, because contact with that kind of personality always gives one a sense of encouragement about human beings. He radiated - goodness and you could not deSE ¢ -spair of humanity in his pres- . Many of us who are not of his ehurch will long him with gratitude. ; aL) he would have approved a publication which has just come to -my attention called “The or Human Rights,” published by the CommitCatholics: for Human Rights. A strong stand is or tolerance. Ins

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= | THURSDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1939 Hoosier Vagabond By Ernie Pyle

are used in making beer..

of hating

half the hop growers went under ‘and the other half ‘are still just splashing around. $l | The war has already had its effect on hop prices. In just the first week of ‘the war hops shot from 123 to 30 cents a pound. a That's because brewers flavor their beer with a small percentige of hops from" Czechoslovakia and countries through there, and they're afraid the war will cut off the supply. Y A hop plant bears the second year after it is set out. But once going, it will keep on producing for 25, 40, maybe 50 years. ; ] A hop field is covered with rows of poles, like telephone poles, only about 10 feet high. Then wire is strung across the field, on those poles. : Workers run string from each hop plant up to the wire above it. The tendril then grows up this string, and runs out along the wires. By the time a field of hops is mature in the fall it resembles a grape arbor, withthe hop pods hanging down in great bunches. '

The Hop Harvest

Each hop is just a tight collection of leaves. Some

‘hops are small, about the size of half your thumb,

‘while others grow long, as big as a man’s biggest finger. From about the middle of August to mid-October, the hop pickers move in. A crew goes ahead and

takes the wires down from the poles, ‘and secures

them about shoulder-high within easy reach.

After picking, the hops are put in big: sacks, loaded

‘onto wagons, and hauled in to the hop driers. The!

hops are spread 18 inches deep in big bins, and hot air is blowed up through them from beneath, the floor being perforated. : This drying goes on for 18 hours. If they weren't dried, they’d mould before the brewers got ready for them. Eight hundred pounds of hops dry down to 200. After they're dried. the hops are trundled into a chute, and baled in 200-pound bales, ready for shipping. From now until they're used in beer they must be kept in a cool place. Otherwise, the oil in them evaporates. It's the oil that makes the aroma.

. By Heywood Broun

s realize that with those heavy packages you might have hurt some German?” Naturally, there is no nation which does not possess a native sense of whimsy and laugh lines. Even Hitler pauses in radio orations to wait for the loud “Ha! Ha!” from his supporters. It is rather grim and bitter fun as far as I'm concerned, and yet I must admit that I have heard him make the Nazis cackle. Much that occurred in Poland was extremely humorous to Germans. And yet I take to English jokes more readily. There are pictures in Punch which

- puzzle me, but the same thing goes for the Ncw

Yorker. ' 2 8.8

He'll Take the British

The notion that the United States is the United States and -the Empire a sun-kissed shore and that

never the twain shall meet is based upon the notion

that the British do not recognize their own stuffed shirts and brass hats as being precisely. that. Everybody admits that in the field of classics England is not poverty stricken in humorous conceits, but there is a prevalent notion that since Dean Swift and Thackeray and Dickens, England has tailed off into the doldrums. And that is stuff and nonsense. What living author writes light stuff which is easier. to read than the works of P. G. Wodehouse? ’ And, come to think. of it, the short stories of Damon Runyon, extremely native, are just now the rage in London. : Once on a boat I did a stock monologue for the British crew and got by pretty well. I tried the same jokes on the American passengers and laid a dozen eggs. And so, as far as I am concerned, I will insist that England’s ear is as sensitive as that of any nation to detect the kidding note. If laughter is to come again to all the world I think it will be vital to include the British among the tellers and the audience. :

By Raymond Clapper

were caught aboard the Lusitania on her fatal crossing, Woodrow Wilson insisted to the German Government upon the “indisputable right” of American citizens to travel where théy would upon the high seas. Fortunately we have stopped that sort of business and the Neutrality Law now on the books has enabled this Government to restrain American citizens from thus exposing themselves and their nation to the disasters which helped carry us into the previous war,

” # 2

The Lesson of 1917

Bnt we have at this moment no statute that keeps American ships out of the danger zone. Every day newspaper dispatches report the sinking of neutral ships in European waters, some of them carring only such apparently peaceful commodities as lumber. Our American ships are still free to carry everything except finished munitions to any belligerent port. ‘This is the most dangerous sort of traffic, protected only by legalistic contentions which don’t save sunken ships or lost citizens. Arguments will be all the more difficult to sustain after the arms embargo is repealed. Therefore, the most important action; insofar as keepii § us out of war is concerned, is not the arms embargo but the so-called cash-and-carry provision of the pending bill. Every day’s delay in enacting this provision to compel all shipments to belligerents to go in foreign bottoms is an invitation to involvement. So far as we are concerned, the arms embargo is a sec< ondary matter. It is important in that its repeal will help the British and ¥rench. But that objective is less important to us than that we keep out of the danger zone. ; : The big lesson‘we learn from 1917 is that we cannot expect to be a supply base for one side in a war and still insist upon roaming around in the thick of the fighting zone’ with all of the immunity of a Red Cross relief unit.

By Eleanor Roosevelt

our neighbors, it urges us to try to understand them. It raises its voice against anti-Semitism and urges tolerance for different races and creeds. ; As the ‘war drags on and the debate in Congre opens to decide what our attitude in this country on the Neutrality Bill shall be, I cannot help hoping that

we will remember that there is work at home which |

has a bearing on the ultimate peace of ‘the world. We have set ourselves a difficult task here. We are trying to find the answers to the economic problems of today. We have the responsibility of proving that a great democratic nation can do this. We must show that we can find a way of expanding industry, of sharing the benefits of invention, of distributing production, so that even the lowliest may have at least the

necessities of life in this land which has before solved |

problems of production, but not of distribution. This does not mean curtailment of private initiative or of ultimate rewards to those of special abilities or those who wish to strive for material returns. ; “None in our midst need be homeless or hungry or lack the necessities for a comfortable and satisfactory existence. It is true that it is said: “For ye have the poor .always with you.” That should not apply to people who are willing and able to work, but to those who, through illness or misfortune are unable to look after themselves. To think of future peace is our first responsibility ina war-torn world.

| steering - commi

“{Woollen Sr.,

~|TIN. WORKERS’ UNION

so EMBARGO PLAN

Local Non-Partisan Group

Ban Repeal.

port behind the move for repeal of

the Hotel Washington. . The meeting was arranged by.

formed:

bargo. . ; + ‘Office in Circle Tower

B. ‘Ralston and Kenneth L. Ogle. The organization. has taken an office at 625 Circle Tower. It has invited anyone interested in working. for repeal of the arms embargo to attend the meeting. In a signed statement sent to newspapers: and Congressmen last week, the group, composed of both Republicans and Democrats, de-

clared that the risks of war involved | -

in repealing the arms embargo “are slight indeed compared to the risks in not doing so.”

Supporters Listed Listed as supporters of the move-

Seeks Support for Arms |

A meeting fo enlist active sup-|

i 1 : 3 { : y . i

the Federal arms embargo has been | called for 7:30 p.-m. tomorrow at} - the| - ttee of a newly-}) : organization tentatively}: . named the Non-Partisan Commit-| « ~ tee on. Repeal of the Arms Em-|

The steering committee is com-| posed of Dr. John Coulter, Glenn}

MARK RILEY'S

ment are Joseph J. Daniels, Clarence E. Merrell, Hugh McK. Landon,! Herbert E. Wilson, Clarence Keehn, Flank C. Daily, George S. Dailey, D. J. McVey, Alex Clark, Warrack Wallage, Garrett Olds, ° Donald Jameson, Ralph Henderson, Robert P. Scott, Dr. Louis Belden, Stanley Coulter, Jonn Coulter, Dr, Thomas L. Sullivan, John K. Ruckelshaus; Julius Birge. Edward H. Knight, Mark Helm, William E. Gavin, Prof. John D. Tomlinson, Ralph. F. Thompson. Dr. W. L. Wright, Mr. Ralston, Allen Boyd, Thaddeus Baker, Dr. Jean Milner, W. Rowland Allen, D. L. Chambers Jr., James B:. Minor, Clarence Efroymson, Earl E. Moomaw, Fred C. Gardner, Edgar H. Evans, J. S. Holliday, Prof. E." N. Linton, Joseph E. Cain, Evans

Culloch, Charles L. Reid, Dr. E. E. Cahal, Dr. Lehman Dunning, Dr. Vernon E. Hahn, James L. Gavin, Prof. J: L. Osborne and Mr. Ogle, :

JOBLESS ‘AGENCIES

The International Conference..of Unemployment Compensation Agencies "at the Indianapolis Ath= letic Club will close today with election of six regional vice presidents. John 8. Stump Jr., director of the West Virginia Unemployment Compensation Division,* late yesterday was elected president to succeed Ray R. Adams, Salt Lake City. '

Vermont Unemployment Compensation Division was elected. treasurer, an office created at .the.convention.. - - ; In line with the new Federal sefup, the delegates voted to change the name of the organization to the National Conference of Employment Security Agencies.

BLOOMINGTON CIT AIRPORT FAVORED

The State: WPA "has approved plans for a $292,000 Municipal Airport at Bloomington, John K. Jennings, State WPA Administrator, announced today. Plans for the airport will be submitted to WPA authorities at Washington for final approval, Mr, Jen-| nings said. .If ‘constructed, the air=

diana University students as ‘reserve military pilots, he said. The City of Bloomington has agreed to pay $89,000 as sponsor's contribution. : CONCLAVE ON NERVE DISEASES SCHEDULED

: The annual two-day convention of the Central Neuropsychiatric Association will open at 9:30 a. m. tomorrow in the medical amphitheater of the Indiana University Medical Center. - » Approximately -150 Midwest doctors who specialize in the treatment of mental and nervous disorders are to attend. Indiana doctors will deJeves all the papers at the convenon. Si . ; Two Indianapolis doctors, E. Rogers Smith and L. D. Carter, are in chérge of arrangements. Convention headquarters will be in the Hotel Severin. !

IS GRANTED, HEARING

A hearing will be held Oct. 19 in Ye Federal Building to determine the bargaining agency for production and maintenance employees of the American Can Co. here, Robert H. Cowdrill, National Labor Relations Board regional director, announced today. Local 1699 of the Amalgamated Association of Iron, Steel and: Tin Workers of America, affiliated with the C. I. O., petiticned the NLRB May 2 that it represents a majority.

16TH ST.-EMERSON BUS IS 'RE-ROUTED

The 16th St.-Emerson. ‘Ave. bus outbound route will be changed at S. Olney and Nowland Sts. beginning tomorrow. It will go on Nowland to E. 10th St., to Sherman Drive, to 16th St., where it will resume the r route. 2 The change was made because of the Belt Railroad work at the 16th

Dr. Carleton B. Mec-|.

itus, will be followed by a playlet,

"70 ELECT LEADERS =:

William McKee, director of .the

port would be utilized to train -In-| WEBM

90TH BIRTHDAY

State to Join in 2-Day Celebration Starting ~- Tomorrow.

~

Indiana tomorrow will begin a two-day celebration of James Whitcomb Riley’s 90th birthday, which occurs on Saturday. oes At the same time, ceremonies will mark the 15th. Anniversary of the memorial to the \eloved children’s poet—the Riley ores for Children. .

Glee Club to Sing . . ‘Among ‘schools preyenting . pro-| grams tomorrow will be the Clemens Vonnegut School, located near Riley's Lockerbie St. home. An address by Dr. Willlam Lowe Bryan, Indiana University president’ emer-

depicting incidents in the poet’s life and presented by school: pupils. Preby ' Miss: ‘Agnes Mahoney, school principal, Mrs. Dorothy Finn and Miss Helen Healy, the play is.in two scenes, one dealing with Riley’s early. years at Greenfield, his birthplace, and the other with his at the Lockerbie-St. residences _ The Technical High Schaol Glee Club also will take part in the program. A ceremony at Crown’ Hill Cemetery will follow, where Dr. Bryan will lay a wreath: on the poet’s tomb. a : Two Absent For the first time in many years, two important figures in the annual birthday. ceremonies will be absent. Miss Katie Kindall, who was the poet’s housekeeper for many years, is confined by’ illness to her resi-

Lockerbie St. home. Hugh McK. Landon, Riley Memorial Association president, is out of the city on busi-

ness. ‘ Riley Hospital patients will gather at 1:30: p. m. Saturday .in the occupational therapy room for . a program arranged by Miss Lucille Dickman, hospital librarian, and the Memorial: Association. fo Terry Walker, a patient, will recite. “The Raggedy Man,” and Jordan Conservatory of. Music students, including Miss Suzon Osler, Mrs. Dorothy Munger, Miss Rosalind Phillips and Thomas Norris, will present a musical ‘program. The ceremonies will be broadcast by Dr. Carleton B. McCulloch, a friend of the poet, was to relate anecdotes of his life in a Public

§ years)

tract for boulevard’ lighting: and

dence across the street from the}

ettiest. Smile May: Win Judge

3

‘Nod BAR SAYS CIVIL

sy

RIGHTS UPHELD IN LOCAL JAILS

Complaints of Martinsville Youth and Local Woman Are Investigated.

The Indianapolis Bar Associa= tion’s civil rights committee held

~|today that civil rights were not de

nied prisoners at the City jail after investigating two complaints that prisoners were held incommunicado

‘last summer.

The complaints were made by a

Martinsville youth arrested on a traffic. violation charge, and a local

{woman held on a charge of child neglect. >

Rd

1 Smiles like - these may make it difficult for the judges to pick the most perfect ‘baby in Marion County. in the Lions Club contest. These contestants are (1) Sandra Kay Hybarger, daughter of Mr. ‘and Mrs. Charles M. Hybarger, 919 Riviera Drive; (2) Tommy. Lewis, son of Mr, and Mrs. John Lewis, 538 N. Tremont Ave.; (3) Sandra Ann Moulton, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. (John E. Moulton, 3107 Boulevard Place; (4) Olga Darlene Burdett, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Hurlie Burdett, R. R. 13, Box 111; .(5) Carol Gene Dawson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Dawson, 3259° Winthrop Ave, and Phyllis Louise Johnson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George Johnson; 1358 Ww. 22d St.

POWER CO. BID

New 10-Year Contract Ts Sought for Boulevard and Park Building Service. .

The Indianapolis Power & Light Co. today submitted to the Park Board a bid on a new 10-year con-

metered service in park buildings.

cial representative, said the rates bid for 27 different types of street lamps are the same as in the present contract. A slight: reduction in

cording to the number of kilowatt hours used, was offered, he said. Park Board members said they had not had an opportunity. to study the bid. The Board plans to confer: further wi the company on the Board’s proposal that the

stalling new. boulevard lights on the one-fifth of the ‘boulevard system now unlighted. : oe

STAMP CLUB WILL MEET

morrow at Hotel Antlers. Club busi-

John -E. King, the company’s spe-|

the metered service rete, scaled ac-'

company pay: part of the cost of in- | : Tr pany Day. . the been’ made agaiiist overlapping. re-|

The Indiana Stamp Club will hold uni its first fall meeting at 8 p. m; to-}

STUDY RELIEF

“FILING SYSTEM

State, Federal Officials’ Are - Developing Plan to ~.-Avoid. Duplication. A master: file system, designed to eliminate overlapping relief service in every township in Indiana, was being developed today by State and Federal officials. wi The project would be sponsored jointly by the State and the Federal Bureau of, Records. Preliminary plans for the systein were discussed by. Governor :M. Clifford Townsend .and Clarence Manion, Indiana director. of the Records BureaMy i, Lie Fi Ts : | Provides District File 3 ‘Governor , Townsend said establishment of the system, to be known as the Social Service EXchdnge File, * will ‘depend. upon whether sufficient State funds are avaliable, fo, pay administrative ‘costs. © 2 i #4

Under the'plah, names and records of every pemsofi’ receiving relief or welfare assistance of any kind jin Indiana would be in files kept by distriets. . - .

Information in the files would be available’ td WPA, township" irustees; State "and: county : welfare units, unemployment compensation offices’ and’ private charity agencies, and Governor Tawnsend. "Propose “Weeding Out” "A.C. Ketchum, State Budget Di‘rector; was' asked -by the Governor to make a survey of the budgets to determine if funds are available. Governor Townsend said the system ‘would simplify the ‘entire relief setup: in ‘Indiana and possibly re-

‘persons actually in need.

For many years complaints have

lief ; in. communities where some ‘families were said to be getting two

+ #

lor three kinds of relief despite sep-

arate: investigations . by: aiding

“il ts. a ¥ 4 a ¢ : $19 “Under - the file system, ‘officials| said ineligible ‘persons could be}

ness will be discussed and new mems-

Schools broadcast at 10:30 a. m. today over WIBC. RAS

First Man to Fly Atlantic With , Passenger Brings Ships to City.

‘Clarence: D. Chamberlin, the first pilot. to'fly the Atlantic with’ a passenger, thinks England ‘and France could defeat Germany if the war were fought in the air alone. - He believes the German air force to be vastly over-rated, and backs up his stand with the explanation that pilots to operats 300 and 400-mile-per-hour ships can’t be trained overnigit, as Germany has: done. "Mr. Chamberlin and his wife, also a pilot, are at Municipal Airport this week with two 27-passenger Curtiss Condor ships.” They are on'a tour of the country, demonstrating night flying, and daily taking up passengers. 2 5 ; i < The years have treated Mr, Champerlin kindly since he gained international fame by crossing the Atlantic with the passenger, Charles Levine, only a few weeks after

making sO He hasn’t gained much of a‘waistline, his hair is still sandy and he is still making a living at his first love, flying. CEE peli Ba Cm nails. th le remember who he “is. ai what - he has done, and he has ae away” a good portion of the flight, he says. His name is even in : . Chamberlin, now ‘has been following the foreign situation

bout

St. crossing and will be in force for|a

We

Charles Lindbergh made his history0“flight in the’ summer|:

,000 made in the hey-day of the’

bers will be installed. Fei

Allies Could Win if War Was Foug Air Alone, Chamberlin Declares

| president; said : next year’s show

He hasn't visited Europe for several years, but has flown ships similar to those now in combat use. . = ° “France. and England have had the experience of continyous flight training for their pilots, While Ger-| many under the Versa Treaty:

SE

“weeded out” of relief. rolls more readily. Ge

1s Fought in

In a preliminary report to the association meeting last night,’ Clyde H. Jones said that in the committe€’s judgment “the constitutional rights of the prisoners were not violated.” - 7 Mr. Jones also reported that constitutional rights were not abridged at the County Jail, which figured in the committee’s investigation.

Police Heads Consutied

The committee, he said, conferred °

with Police Chief Michael F. Morrissey and Sheriff Al Feeney on methods used to contact outside parties for prisoners. “Chief Morrissey told us that in some . instances prisoners com= plained because the police were slow in making outside contacts,” he said. “The Chief said it was his policy not to permit prisoners to make calls, but to have the calls made for them hy police. “One party is usually called until he is contacted. If the party cannot be contacted, the prisoner is asked to designate another person whom the police will also try to contact,” Mr. Jones said. y Mr. Feeney, he said, uses a similar system which, the Sheriff's office - says, “is iron clad.”

‘Outsiders’ Barred

“The Sheriff’s office keeps a card index on which the prisoner writes the name of his attorney or another person he wanfs to contact,” Mr, Jones said. “If deputies fail to reach this party, the prisoner is asked for a second contact. In no case, however, are persons not named by the prisoner allowed to see or talk with him. This prac-

tice prevents soliciting by attore .

neys.” ; Announcement was made at the association’s meeting that the In- - diana Bar Association has joined the fight: of the: Indianapolis Bar Association .to enjoin trust companies from allegedly practicing law in the state. ak : The fight: will coritinue until the Indiana ‘Supreme Court has ruled who can practice law in the’ state on a case now pending, Clarence F. Merrell, association president, said,

BOYSTOWN: TO HOLD

FIELD DAY PROGRAM

More. than 150 members and prospective members of the North East . Community Center Boystown are expected to participate in the Field Day ‘program Saturday. A football game will be held in the morning, between . the junior teams of the Keystone Boystown and the North East ' Community Center Boystown. ‘A free dinner will be followed by another football

SEL Ie-igame between the senior teams of duce the welfare rolis fo only those|the two Boystowns at the Keystone .

Boystown field. The North East Community Center football field is being completed for the everit. The boys built the field, the WPA furnished equipment and a lumber company donated the materials for the goal posts. Howard

Thompson, recreation director, is in: Yr

charge of the activities.

LIONS CONSIDERING LARGER FESTIVAL

“Encouraged: by an attendance of more than 3000 at last night’s opening of the Beech Grove Lidns Club festival, ‘club officials today considered plans for enlarging the festival next year'to its “pre-depres= sion” scale. 1 Joseph C. Greenfield, Lions Club

: would include exhibitions of farm, garden and canned products. The

{festival

Rg 5:

is being held nightly, beat 7 p. m., along two blocks

inning : 16

of Beech Grove's main street.

will close Saturday night.

TEST YOUR - KNOWLEDGE

'1—At the mouth of which

is the city of’ ?

2--Can the President of the

' United States pardon a pris- _ oner "convicted 'in a state

"3—What is an epitaph? -

Mr. and Mrs. Clarence D. Chamberlin in the cockpit of one of their ' 27-passenger ships. ; RE

design. in large quantities but they have. sacrificed maximum perform-

‘lance in order to gei quantity pro-

duction, figuring: that the. greater

49. rr es

~ 4—Name the ‘inventor of the 3 telephone. Std 7 ‘ 5—With what sport is the name "of Charley Yates associated? _ '6—Where is the native habitat of the chimpanzee?

number is more desirable than extra ge

|" “Regardless of what happens over| he declared, “I hope this|