Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 November 1939 — Page 2
given some union leaders chills,
°
Snow Use Hunting for 2 Flakes That Look Alike |
a loose AFoL Cl und therhood o
-(1139 Employees Sign Up;
| have set a new record in the Indian‘tapolis Chapter of the American Red
attack blamed leaders of both 3 - factions for weakening the Labor Board and labor legislation, and for ‘preventing the peace desired by the ~ rank-and-file.
.Anti-Labor Move Grows
:The National Conference on Laber - Legislation, representing 39 Governars, last week stated that the Tit 1s lars enactment and enX t of labor laws and injur‘the unions. An even sionge t Mayor lla La Guardia of New York. anti-labor movement is grownot only in Congress, but in the
in Congress? This is r_which may yet force a F. of L. truce, however truce may seem at the
“SYSTEM MODERNIZED
HUNTINGTON, Ind, Nov. 22 (U. ) ; 000 program approved
~The program includes rebuilding tlie pumping plant, new Diesel 1 generators, a water ni on of a 500,000-gallon storage tank, and a second
Among the supervisors of NYA homemaking projests who atte day were (left to right) Mrs. Deborah Hoffman, Sullivan; Miss K
we
|] nstitution Will Be Run by i
| |erati th iE oy oar 2 Med fo dinner last.
Four Agencies; Set Up > : At Coleman.
Skimew diidron’s healih. dle. ts Eo be operated co-operatively by four| ~ f public agencies, was. formally in op- i
Uniowing a
|dedieatory
The clinic for the present will be
located in the William H. Coleman
Hospital. Admissions will be dimtied
to wards of the
|Home children’s bureau
. [Marion County Welfare ‘ment.
ih
Six on Staff
Equipped to serve from 1500 to 2000 youthful patients annually, it wil be équipped by a staff of six, drawn from the Riley. Hospital de-
"| partment of pediatrics.
Purposes of the clinic include careful examination to detect physical defects or -diseases, treatment through use of medical facilities
~ |available at the Medical Center,
+jand immunization of
‘* Times Phato.
od a conteishoe which ended yestereen O'Dowd, Ft. Wayne, and Mrs.
John D. How, South Bend. The homemaking super visors met with the supervisors. of NYA workshops at
== MALLORY LEADS RED CROSS ROLL
Block’s Membership Soars to 967.
Employees of P. R. Mallory & Co.
Cross by increasing their membership to 1139, compared with 416 memberships reported last year. This report followed closely a report that William H. Block Co. employees had increased their membership from 287 to 967.
‘Mrs. Wolf Sussman, ; industrial chairman of the Red Cross drive. arranged the enrollment campaign at the Mallory plant. Leaders of the campaign divisions predicted that “at least 95 per cent of the industries, office buildings, utilities and divisions of government in Marion County will increase their enrollments over last year.” Leaders report that many of the larger institutions are keeping their enrollment records open in hopes of increasing their totals.
ARMY, NAVY SHARE. F. D. R. ALLEGIANCE
WASHINGTON, Nov. 22 (U. P.) — President Roosevelt decided today to divide his. allegiance between the Army and Navy when he witnesses the annual foothall game between the two service schools. at .Philadelphia Dec. 2. ‘Mr. Roosevelt made it clear he is perfectly neutral. The President will witness the first half of the game from the Army side of the stadium. At. the end of the frst half, while the cadets stand at attention Mr. Roosevelt will cross to the Navy's side and witness the last ha of the game with the midshipm The President will alah the game from his car .parked near the 50yard line,
- BIG PEANUT CROP AHEAD AS ANOER: Tex., Nov. 22 (U.P) — ,000 peanut crop is in prospect this fall in Eastland County, one of several Texas counties that have turned to peanut raising as a soil
BURN COKE.....
And Make Your Firing
builder and cash crop.
Completely Automatic
AUTOMATIC COMFORT CONTROL
By JOE COLLIER The first ‘ considerable snow of the year fell yesterday, too late for the early to bed, and had disap- ” peared too early today for the late risers. It lay for several hours, never-
Some are open work lace « « + «
ly made bed, not reaching to the corners of the grass, but sort of bunched in the middle. For, those who did not see it, the following will constitute a thumbnail sketch. of the private life of the snowflake. This snow was different in design from the snow that fell last year. In fact, the story goes that each flake of snow that fell this year was different from others. They are formed .in the upper
developed individual chgracteristics by the time they get down. No one can change them. ] Each one is a six-sided prism of ol a different pattern. Some are and some are relatively simply. Some are open work lace and some are closed. They ‘all were white yesterday, because they = diffuse the light. Snow has been known to be red, blue, green and black, but that is
PERKINS PREDICTS.
Times Special : BLOOMINGTON, Ind., Nov. 22.— Labor Secretary Frances Perkins said last night that she expected the settlement of the Chrysler Corp. strike “at any time.” Miss Perkins made the statement in a press conference following a speech before the American Associa-
quet here. Asked if a woman could ever beEni President, retary Perkins said: « “If Eleanor ran I believe that she would be elected.” Miss Perkins also said when asked about the A. F. of L.-C. I. O. fight: “When they are good and ready to get together they will do so and I i expect it .any sooner than at In her talk before the association Miss Perkins advocated increased earnings for ‘the lower income groups as-a means of building wl our internal market. She predicted that stabilization of employment end éapital will be] brought about in the United States| “through the building up of a wider internal market.” This can be accomplished by increasing wages to provide a market for increased output of factories and other industries, she explained. Secretary Perkins advised university students to. carefully
‘| the field of emplovient. offered by
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or dirt in coke to settle in your home. or Draftender and a load of coke today from your nearest fuel
se there is no soot, smoke -
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ICKMAN-WILLIAMS CO.
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civil service.
MINE BEARS MESSAGE FAR FROM NEUTRAL
mine, found in the North Sea bore this inscription in German:
Churchill
Winston Churchill, is First Lord of the British Admiralty.
Chicken t chen ©
- ROAST
Homemade
MA. 4538 [
theless, like a sheet on a careless- |
air, out of reach, and have well= |
jects.
children against whooping cough, diphtheria and smallpox. Cag - Directors Named
Members . of the committee in charge are Miss Dorothea Robson, of the Welfare Department’s child welfare department: Randel Shake; chief probation officer of Juvenile Court; James W. Carr; Riley Memorial . Association secretary; Miss Cordelia Hoeflin, director of the Indiana University school of Rising.a and J. B: H. MarMedical Center administrator.
'
Mrs. od) San Carlin . will have
“charge of nursing service under the
husual and ought to be dealt : Louise Pickering. is the clinfe sec-
: retary.
with when it happens. Snow is a poor conductor of heat, which is the scientific way of saying it is a poor conductor of cold. Another way of saying both is that cold doesn’t readily get through a blanket of it and things underneath it- stay: pretty warm. In fact, a good blanket of snow will keep things under ‘it at 32 degrees Fahrenheit, it%o matter how cold the air is. This is good for winter wheat, grasses and pastures. ; There is ‘a report that none of the: billions of snowflakes that . have fallen since the beginning of snow is identical with another. They are all six-sided, however,’ ‘because the water crystal is sixsided and any combination of them is six-sided. Alum crystals, for instance, are always threesided, and the salt crystal is always a cube,
+++ « and some are closed.
Somehow we couldn't get in touch,” however, with the fellow who examined each and every snow crystal and reported on: their
infinite variation. He apparently :
was out in a field hunting snowflakes.
T urkey Dinner |
CHRYSLER PACT]
tion of University Women at a ban-|
LONDON, Nov. 22 (U. P)—A|
“When SDI goes’ up, up goes}
Times Special '* HAMMOND, Ind.,, Nov. Jariles Kreuzberger, former deputy sheriff and World War veteran, may be in the mood for just a hot dog for Thanksgiving dinner.
Mr. Kruezberger, who was gassed |
during the war, has just returned to Hammond from the Veterans’ Hospital at Hines, Ill, after a
. month on a “fattening diet.” Doc-
tors had sent him to the hospital after he lost 15 pounds of his nor-.
mal 125. He was: put on. & dist of ried chicken, turkey, cake, ice cream.
and other rich foods. He now :
weighs 137 pounds.
FIRE LEVELS HOME
* OF LEONARD HOHLT |
Mlaanes which firemen fought for mare than two hours last night destroyed. the restaurant and home
The fire of tmdétetmibed orlgin x started about 10 o'clock in a garage
which joined the rear of the two-
before and Mr. Hohlt, who. lives :
alone, was not at home.
A passing motorist discovered the ;
Fru i A Celery ST Ra ishes and TURK
YOUNG Te a Salad 5 die ! RT
“THANKSGIVING DINNER Full Course: Dinner 5¢
Food Dock pL
EY
+
Is ‘01d Stuff’ |
2— |
supervision of Miss Hoeflin. Miss
UNFINISHED NOVEL. BY NAPOLEON PUBLISHED
- PARIS, Nov. 22 (U. P. ~An unfinished novel written by Napoleon Bonaparte when he was 26 was published today by the magazine ‘Revue des Deux Mondes. The manuscript, of only 13 pages, was penned shortly after Napoleon broke his engagement with Desiree Clary, who later married Marshal Bernadotte and became Queen of Sweden. Experts described the style as “promising.” -Napoleoh cherished his first and| only literary effort throughout his life, taking the manuscript with him into exile o at St. Helena.
ealo, (Gute. known ps loping Hy of- the China dock “Here today.”
1 It ended ‘a 25-year career i of serv the|ice in the Far East as it docked or | yesterday during a flurry of snow,
It will be decommissioned, converted into an oil-burner and used
|as a training ship for the Indiana
Naval Reserve, replacing the U. 8. 8. Hawk. The crew.of T7 men and six officers, ‘veterans of the China, service, - will, leave . in io weeks, ‘The’ Sacrariento’ left: 3 ‘Tecord of 17 active’ campaigns and a log of 500,000 miles since. it was la ed in Philadelphia in 1914. paigns in which it participateg included ‘Vera Cruz; ‘the: Mediter-
3 a i Judge; Ha
Wi Freedom for One in Slaying Case.
Five Inmates of the State —
uy including one serving a life term for
when it joined the Asiatic fleet. | The “name “Galloping "Ghost": Hc Jaogued in in 08. Whe the a speed ‘of 14 knots, left Bn with the 30-knot British warboat, Suffolk, both headed for Hongkong. When the Suffolk raced into _port, the “Sacramentq” already “rode at anchor. ually it was a sister ship, the’ U. 8. 8 “Tulsa, but no one corrected the Sen, of the British sailors that it was the Sa¢- [man ramento and the name stuck. . The gunboat has bee
The icam- | de:
| murder, have been granted paroles By Gis Stale Clemency Comsmiston.
NOISY PHONES
HAMPER POLICE]
Officers: Not: Loafing,’ Chief Explains; They’ mw Tryin 0.
Police Chief Michael F. Morrissey told the Safety Board yesterday that police seen in drugstores and filling stations are “not loafing around the premises” but probably are trying to| call headquarters, _ The Chief explained that the city
signal system over which police telephone boxes operate is so .antiquated that iteoften is impossible to distinguish th€ human voice from the roar of traffic and vice versa, sO the police don't use the regulation police ‘boxes anymore.. 3 The Chief said he had received some complaints that police. were loafing in drugstores and conféctionery shops as well as ‘gasoline stations. He said the men explained they were simply waiting to use the telephone. Board members agreed that something should be done to improve the police’ communications system but took no action on the matter,
| Light Pans
Blacked Out
NASHVILLE, Tenn. Nov. 22 (U; P).—Maj. Tom E. Morris, State Safety Director, said today he “hated to deprive the man of the: pleasure he'd get out of that
nied a Tipton County man per-
1929 ‘model ‘automobile, ‘The man wrote Maj.’ Morris
in front, one on each front’ fender, - and three lights on the rear.
KIDNAPER GUILTY; SENTENCED TO DIE ||
CHICAGO, Nov. 22 (U. P)— Oliver Lawrence ‘Dressler, alias Jack Russell, 38, was Tound guilty today and sentenced to die under the Lindbergh Law. by a Federal Court Jury for the: kidnaping’ last
Kansas salesman. Dressler kidnaped Hamilton after escaping from the Oklahoma State penitentiary. at McAlester and shot and killed him July 14 near Ring-
wood, Ill
$50,
A Nations
Iniditution
mission to put 19 lights on his.
seeking permission to put 14 lights .
July of William Scott. Hamilton, |
“gal-| with the expeditionary force, and|®® Coast,” Yarlows' ‘world stations - - stood at the Naval ‘Reserve Arm ry : unl 1
“in Carroll" County more than six years ago; Marshall. Edmunds, sentenced to five years for burglary ‘in Marion County three years ago, and Lewis Treciado, sene tenced to 1-5 years for robbery in® Taks Cottaty five years ago. ' - tition of Clifford Moors a tended in Marion County Criminal Court. to ‘10-25 years for
et DIES AT a
: WARSAW, Ind, “Nov: 22. Miss: Grace Miles, former employee of 1. S. Ayres & ‘Co. Indianapolis, died’ yesterday at the ‘home i her pare’ ents, Dr. and Mrs. O, P. Miles, Wi" nona Lake. She was 51. Miss Miles had been employed as an artist at the Indianapolis store ik a number of ears. Crh : !
‘Christmas tree,” but ‘he still ‘de~ |
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CONGRESS]
CONSTRUCTION 00. 1317 Merchants Bk. Bldg.
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