Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 June 1940 — Page 18
. 435 B. Deiaware Sst.
B0 * VARIANCE PLEAS
“ Up for Hearing, Monday
At: Public Meeing. in . City: Hall,
A “total of u “requests: for vart-| ances: will ‘be: heard |*by._ the Indian-|
apolis Board : of Zoning Appeals at
‘a public meeting at 3:30 p. m. Mon- ~ day at City Hall. The requests aie: _'M. N: Thayer, 1847 W. Waushing‘ton? St. lo expand an existing apartment; Weissman Auto: ‘Sales, Ti1 Virginia Ave. to ‘operate a used ‘car sales lot: Firestone Tire & Rubber Co., 1030 E. North St., to install an ‘additional 15,000-galion “Basoiine storage tank; Robert ~Sullivan, southeast corner: of: : Palmer and Leonard
Sts, to erect. a three-way :
double. Bradley Allen, 550 w. 25th: St., erect an ice delivery station; Se Service Oil Co., southwest eorner of 25thr St. and Northwestern Ave., to erect a gasoline filling’ station: William A..Englebright, 18 S. Webster Ave, to erect an addition to a double house: A. M. Phipps, southeast corner of Sutherland ‘Ave. and 38th ‘8t.,” a refreshment business with parking. facilities. : Sinclair Refining Co, southwest corner of Capitol Ave. and 21st St., to: ‘reconstruct. a. filling . station: Harry T. Shaneberger, 3006 N. New : Jersey St., to: cperste: a beauty Santieu Aufo Sales, 1705 Lafayette Road, : to. operate: an openair sales lot. John R. Moynahan, 3445 Central Ave, to erect eight two-family duplex dwellings; Indiana Oxygen Co., to erect building to house three’ Diesel motors, and Erma ‘Teegarden, 1744 N. Pennsylvanis St., to Sperate :& beauty s! op. :
- PUTS PENNY. IN BANK
BOSTON; June 28 (U. P.).—Poliee and doctors praised the thrift of 4-year-old Harold Dorgan but advised him to get another bank.” When harided a penny for good behavior, Harold decided tb save it. He later told his mother that he swallowed it Because it was thé ony safe place
(standing right) gave members of
PLAYS TELL STORY OF TRAFFIC SAFETY
Safety is a game for Indianapolis youngsters on City playgrounds. The children are taught fundamentals of traffic safety in a series of plays now being presented under direction of the Recreation Department. The plays: demonstrate what safety means in a manner children can best understand, according to H. W. Middlesworth, Reereation Director. , The plays this week are being given at Marlowe and New York
he knew
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the expedition final instryetions,
at the Fall Creek playground “at 30th St.
City ‘playgrounds this year ‘attracted 8000 more children during the first week of operation than in the first week last year, Mr. Middlesworth said tpday. . A total of 62,316 attended playgrounds in the opening week this year, compared with 54,328 .in the same ‘period .a yeatr ago. The in-
crease was' attributed to. an ad-| ditional number of playgrounds this:
year and ta a more attractive play program. Meanwhile, Weaver W. Pangborn, field representative of the National Recreation Association, has been inspecting playgrounds this week with J. Patrick Rooney, recreation super-, visor.
fl Benjamin Harrison;
Times Phot
The annual Children's Museum Prairie Trek Ex position turned eyes to the West yesterday, departipg for Missouri, Oklahoma, New Mexico and Texas. Before. the start of the trip, Hillis Howie, ‘the, director
a PROGRAM SET
Chaillaux to Address Veterans at Reunion Banquet Tomorrow Night.
Homer I. Chaillaux, American Legion Americanism director, will speak ‘at the banquet tomorrow that will highlight the first day of the 42d or Rainbow Division Veterans “Association reunion here. The banquet will be held at the Washington Hotel. Harry McClain, former insurance commissioner, will be' toastmaster. . Following the dinner the Rainbow men and their wives will be guests of Stuart H. Tomlinson, general chairman, at the Variety Club, Maj. Gen. Robert H. Tyndall, war-time commander of the 150th Field Artillery of the 42d Division, will speak at the memorial services Sunday at the World War Memorial. Sidney S. Miller, chinirian of the memorial exercises, will give a history of the Rainbow Division's activities during the war. Also on the program will be presentation of colors by a color guard from F<. invocation by the Rev. Walter Nugent; benedic-
ition by Dr. L. T. Freeland; and
| Atlantic Monthly novel
17 Jewels in AIT
gold filled watch
\home.
roll call by C. K. Gregg. There will be a business meeting
i tomorrow afternoon at which offi-
cers for the .coming year will be elected. A meeting will be held at :6:15 o'clock - tonight at the Hoosier Athletic Club at which committees will make final arrangements for the event.
RECORD UNIFORMS CONTRACT AWARDED
WASHINGTON, June 28 (U* P.). —Acting Secretary of War Louis Johnson yesterday awarded contracts for enough khaki cloth’ to
largest uniform cloth contract ever
ilet by this nation during peace
time. The total value of the contracts. including those for cloth and ordnance was $41,564,986. Most of the awards went to 47 companies who were given contracts totaling $27.234,460 for uniform cloth of which there is a shortage.
WHITE RUSSIAN WINS $10,000 NOVEL PRIZE
BOSTON, June 28 (U. P.).—Mrs. Antonina Riasanovsky, 45, of Eugene, Ore., today had won the 1940 prize of $10,000 with her first novel, “The Family.” The story of an exiled White Russian family living in Tientsin, China, the manscript was one of the last received by contest judges. Mrs. Raisanovsky herself is a White Russian and lived in Tientsin after she was forced to leave .her She came to the United States in 1938 after living in Poland, Finland, Manchuria, China, Japan and Mongolia.
PURDUE TEST CAR TO BE SIDETRACKED
tues Special LAFAYETTE, Ind. June 28.—The historic interurban test car, for many.years an imposing and important feature in the laboratories of electrical engineering at Purdue]
University railway museum soon. Removal of tracks and trolleys by
AAR PAYMENTS | FOR 1939 Z0OM|
| Indiana Farmers Get More
.|year in which 1938 payments were
[that more farmers were participat-
EDUCATOR OBJECTS
make 1,500,000 uniforms. It was‘the}
"walls and cars leaping over each
University, is to be assigned ilo the!
the local traction company makes
the installation of a self-contained’ power unit is not feasible, school cfficials said.
it impossible to operate the car and,
- Than Double Amount . ‘Paid in 11938,
’ In nine months of Permits on the 1939 Agricultural Adjustment Administration - program, Indiana farmers have. received more. than twice as much as during the whole
made, AAA officials said today. . Payments on the 1939 crop began Oct. 1. At the close of business June 22, Indiana farmers had been paid a total of $20.466,986.32 for participation in the 1938 AAA program, compared to $9,468,486.06 for the 1938 crop. L. M. Vogler, chairman of the Indiana Agricultural Conservation Committee in the Big Four Building, explained that a great deal of the difference lay in the fact that this is the first year for which parity :. paynfents "have been made on the crop. ; i . Payments Top $13,000,000
Mr, Vogler said also that pay-ments-in the Agricultural Conservation Program alone have been $13,776,861.15, nine and a half millions last year.
Payments in this program for the |!
1937 crop were $5,147514.81 and:
$9.555,288.76 for the 1936 crop.
Mr. Vogler said that the gain was | iil
explained ' principally by the fact
ing in the program and that farmers who had formerly participated by accepting acreage allotments were now performing soil-building practices as well. Last year there were "105,683 farmers participating in the program while this year 134,960 farmers are participating. 94,444 Farmers Paid
Parity paynients are made to. give farmers prices for their products that will make it possible for them to buy an industrial product with the same number of bushels of corn or wheat as were. required in the .1910-1914 period. -Corn price parity payments totaling $4,885,805.79 were paid to 94,444 farmers in 82 Indiana 'counties. Wheat price parity payments totaling $1,804,319.38 were paid to 76,711 farmers in all 92. Indiana counties. : Only farmers who seeded within their acreage allotments in 1939 were eligible.
compared with the}:
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istrative assistant in the Division,
tions in natural history
number of years.”
by the Department of Labor
tem.
four-year, nation-wide
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T0 PICKED’ BOOKS
Times Special BLOOMINGTON, Ind. June 28.--A plea for teachers to get away from the idea that school children should be introduced to a set list of books was made by Dr. Dora V. Smith, of the University of Minnesota, at a conference on reading problems at Indiana University. She stressed the need for studying boys and girls and their experience in order to discover the kind .of books which can be made a vital
and recognized avenue of experience §
getting and of joy in life for them. Henry B. Littell, Bloomington, and William €. Moore, Winona, Minn, have received awards from the William Lowe Bryan Scholarship and Fellowship Fund. This is the second time two students have won this award.
MOVIE STUNT MEN TO PRESENT SHOW
The Cavalcade of Thrills, featuring Hollywood - stunt men, will be given at the Fair Grounds July 1314 by tke. 12th District American | Legion Drum and Bugle Corps. Stunt men to appear include Fred Schaefer, who doubled for Basil Rathbone in “Tower of London;” Chet Wallen, double for George Raft in “Each Dawn I Die,” and Cary Loften, double for Errol Flynn in “Dawn Patrol.” Whitey Mathews will duplicate his “Dawn Patrol” stunt of crashing in a plane through a two-story house at 150 miles an hour. Other feats will include head-on collisions between automobiles traveling 50 miles an hour; crashes into brick
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‘Dictionary’ Is Text a as 45 Start Employment School N
Today, all day tomorow and Sunday, 45 member's of the field. .opera- | tions staff of the Unemployment Compensation Division are going to ‘| Sihool at the office, 141 8S. Meridian 18t. ‘They .are Studying: a dictjonary— and Miss Aletha: Pettijohn, admin-
says the dictionary represents a step as important as Linnaeus’ classifica-
J. Bradley Haight, oY vi assistant director of the division, says that the “full importance of the dictionary may not be fully known for .&a
The volume is the “Dictionary. of Occupational Titles” just. published I
contains definitions. of ‘mote than 17,000 jobs and about 7000 ~ode numbers by which these jobs can be identified quickly in a filing sys-
The ! jobs were defined after a analysis. About 75,000 job studies were made in iE scattered . establishments:
and then the material’ was edlicd and co-ordinated in ‘Washington. The dictionary is- the resulf. # The dictionary has two big advantages, according to ‘Mr. Haight. “First, it ‘so _defines “job titles that they have a common meaning for all employment interviewers everywhere. * Second, its code structure is such that related ; jobs are filed in close proximity. ” In addition to thre dictionary itself, there is a volume which groups the 17,000 job titles in major groups and subdivisions so that ap{plicants with related skills can be found easily. A third volume provides a table to translate the old code numbers-into the new ones. A fourth ‘volume is published by the state division to explain the use of the dictionary to its employees. Mr, Haight, ‘Miss Pettijohn and the district . supervisors of the division will be instructors in the week-
: Eleven new’ sto ynamed today by th ie WPA recreation department L
L. Dickerson, City Librarian, nounced 19 library sites wh wy librarians would also participate in the recreational activity. for chil dren. : : . The WPA’ story-tellers are the Misses Mary = Bell, “Briggs, Stella Cox, Filomena Chalet, Griselda. Newton, . Dorothy" _Domer, Frances Byerly, Ruth- Browning, Olive Roberts, Callis “Scrivner. and Marie Elliott. : City library sites are the: ‘branches at E. Washington St:, Schaeol ‘Division, Madison, Rauh, Broadway, Brightwood, Broad Ripple, - Spades, Attucks, Irvington, Durbar, Pros= | pect, Shelby, Riverside, Hawthorne, Haughville, School 87, West Indi-
anapolis and Central 7 i
THIEVES TAKE 400 LIPSTICKS j BOSTON, June 28. (U. P.).— nieves stole: 400 lipsticks:from ‘a
parked auto and ‘a briefcase containing photographs of ‘caskets from
‘end. school here for field office
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