Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 June 1940 — Page 7
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* SIGNIFICANCE OF FLAG DAY CITED
Legion Head Urges Observance Tomorrow With Deep Appreciation.
Americans should celebrate the birtjaday of our flag tomorrow with deeper appreciation of the human and spirtual values which our starspangled banner represents, Raymond Grider, 12th District Commander of the American Legion, said today. “Our flag tdday radiates=like a beacon of hope and refuge from the last stronghold of liberty and peace in a world gone mad with hatreds and intolerance,” he said. “Our flag stands for everything at is precious in the life of an American today—his right to live his life freely, to worship his God, to speak his’ mind, to read and write as he pleases, to work where he wants, to decide for or against a given thing and tp stand by that decision. and to ‘enjoy all these privileges without compulsion.”
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Probably Won’t Hear Them Because She Dislikes ° Summer Heat.
BY JOE COLLIER Mrs. Anna S. Elliott admits to this very day that her parents frequently took her to symphony con-
certs when she would rather have been climbing a cherry tree. From the time she was 8 years old, she has attended the available good music programs regularly, first in Louisville where she was born, and for the last 40 years in Indianapolis, where she has lived.
Thank You to The World
That’s probably why she gave, for the second time this year, the $125 necessary for open air park concerts this summer. But Mrs. Elliott, who lives in a charming apartment in the Spink Arms hotel, says not. She says: “My mother taught me that if anything very nice happens to you in life, you must go and do something for some one else. That’s your thank you to the world.” Mrs. Elliott then laughed and said: “My life has been on the happy side.” It’s impossible to talk with Mrs. Elliott for more than a minute and not realize that her life still is on the happy, and busy, side.
Has Three Children
For years she has been interested in all of the musical organizations in the community and for 32 years has beén on the Board of Directors of the Althenheir Home for the Aged at 20th St. and Capitol Ave. She helped found it. She is a member ef an organization which provides some funds for free lunches for school children.
occupied with the achievements of her children and grandchildren, Robert C. Elliott, president of the Standard Dry Kiln Co., and Edward J. Elliott, secretary-treasurer, are her sons, and Mrs. Victor Jose, 410 N. Audubon Road, is her daughter. Mrs. Elliott probably will not be
foc and 25¢. Stubbornly refuse anything else,
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|Open Air Band Concerts Are Mrs. Elliott's : 'Thank You' for Happiness Life Has Brought IN SELECTION OF
PARK WORKERS
DENIES POLITICS.
|Middlesworth Says Eleven
Times Photo.
Mrs. Anna S. Elliott, muse patron , . «holding a first edition of David Copperfield, which is a prized possession,
financed because she doesn’t like mid-summer heat in Indianapolis. But she has a tremendous urge to help select the programs, because she has some tried and true favorites. Actually, Mrs. Elliott’s love of music probably came from little twilight summef music sessions with her father, a professional violinist, back in her Louisville childhood. “When it came twilight,” she re“and we were all tired from play, father would gather the three of us children around him. I was the youngest and I would sit on his lap. The others would sit at his feet. “Then he would play for us and
: teach us little songs.”
PHONE RATE GUT SCHEDULE FILED
New Long Distance Charges Expected to Save Users $300,000 a Year.
A petition seeking approval of a revised schedule of intra-state long distance telephone rates, which would effect an estimated saving of $300,000 a year to Indiana telephone users, was filed today with the Public Service Commission by the Indiana Bell Telephone Co. The revised schedule, if approved by the Commission, would go into effect July 1. The filing of the petition providing for reduced long distance rates followed several weeks of negotiations between the Public Service Commission and the telephone company. Reductions Outlined
The proposed rates for day-time service would bring reductions ranging trom five cents to 40 cents on the three-minute “initial periods” of person-to-person tell calls involving distances from 49 fo 338 miles. Reductions of from five cents to 25 cents would be made on “sta-tion-to-station” calls for distances ranging from 91 to 338 miles. Reductions for night and Sunday service on “station-to-station” calls would range from five to 10 cents on distances over 100 miles, while for person-to-person calls the night and Sunday rates would be reduced
: [ftom five to 30 cents on distances i | more than 64 miles.
The proposed rates also include reductions in the cost of additional minutes of conversation in excess of the three-minute initial periods. Follows Federal Lead
The schedule Is in line with a Federal Government program for intra-state long distance telephone toll rates, commission officials said. The proposed rates also would affect long distance calls between exchanges of the Indiana Bell System and - connecting independent telephone companies in the state. In addition, it was said that
panies on long distance service in which the Indiana Bell Co. does not participate because many such companies have patterned their rates after the Indiana Eell Co.
JAMES D. ELLSWORTH DIES BOSTON, June 13 (U. P.).— James Drumond Ellsworth, 76, fore mer assistant to the president of the American Telephone & Telegraph Co. and one-time director of the Association of National Advertisers, died at his home today.
CURB PUT ON WAR NEWS VATICAN CITY, June 13 (U. P.). The Osservatore Romano, Vatican newspaper, announced that beginning today it would publish no war communiques of any of the bellig-
‘Were Hired at Last Minute.
H. W. Middlesworth, City Recreation Director, today denied any summer playground worker had been selected on a “political basis.” He said, however, that at least 11 young men who were named playground directors did not attend the four-months’ training course p.ovided by the Park Department. Mr. Middlesworth disclosed that because of a lack of trained personnel he was forced to choose these 11 “at the last minute,” that all of them are college men, and that all
took examinations. Examination of the records disclosed today that several of the 11 made lower than 60 points on the 100-point examination. Mr. Middlesworth said simply that he was forced to accept all of them because
of a lack of candidates.
Of the original 65 taking the Department’s training course, 19 dropped out for various reasons, and Mr. Middlesworth said he found it necessary to appeal! to universities and colleges throughout the state to recommend men. This resulted in the 11 who applied. These persons were not named until after 11 men resigned at the end of the course or shortly after their official appointments. In denying that any political considerations entered into the selection of any playground workers, Mr. Middlesworth said that most of the appointees “probably’ had their applications signed by politicians. “I suppose they thought they had to have recommendations from the
politicians,” he said.
OFFICERS NAMED BY PRESBYTERIAN GROUP
WARSAW, Ind, June 13 (U. P). —The Youth Council of the Presbyterian Church in Indiana, meeting in conjunction with the Indiana Presbyterian Synod, today elected the following officers: : Ramsey Bonewitz, - Huntington, president; Annette Blackburn, Logansport, vice president; Jeanette Vanosdol, Indianapolis, secretary; Harley Gwinne, Hanover, treasurer; Priscilla Miyat, Greenwood, chairman of youth. |
at DEE'S and MILLER'S .
Scarlet Fever - Pills Developed
(Copyright, 1940, by Science Service) NEW YORK, June 13.—A pill or tablet that can be swallowed to give protection against scarlet fever was announced by Dr. George F. Dick and Dr. Gladys Henry Dick, Chicago, at the meeting here of the American Medical Association. The tablet contains purified scarlet fever toxin such as is now used to give immunity by injections under the skin. The tablet was designed for use in patients who cannot be given the injections. Such patients include those suffering from hemophilia, for which a hypodermic needle injection may mean dangerous bleeding; patients with severe heart injury;
| and persons in institutions under quarantine for scarlet fever when |
speed in immunization is a prime consideration.
UNEMPLOYMENT
U. S. Jr. C. of C. Committee To Consider Role of Each Community.
George J. Smith, manager of .the Unemployment Compensation Division field office here and national unemployment committee chairman of the U. S. Junior Chamber of Commerce, has called a special meeting of. his committee for June 19 to 26. The meeting, which was suggested by Perry Pipkin of Memphis, Tenn., national Junior Chamber president, will be held in the Mayflower Hotel at Washington. A proposal by Mr. Smith that each community assume “full responsibility” for its unemployment problem, will be presented to the committee. “It is my belief that the Junior Chamber of Commerce in each community can be helpful by collecting and making public information regarding local unemployment,” Mr. Smith said. “If the public in each .locality is aware of the extent of its unemployment, it seems reasonable to assume that a better solution to the problem will be eventually reached.”
city be chosen to try out his plan before it is undertaken on a nar
tional scale.
SESSION CALLED
Mr. Smith has proposed that a test|
LAFAYETTE MAN SENTENCED LAFAYETTE, Ind, June 13 (U.|pleading guilty to a |e. ).—Harold Nalka, 19, of Lafayette,|burglary before Judge W.
Pv i A state prison and fined
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today had been sentenced to a five-|Parkinson in Tippecanoe Circuit year term at the Michigan City|Court. '
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