Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 August 1940 — Page 10
SATURDAY, AUGUST 17, 1
940
Hoosier Vagabond
DANA, Ind, Aug. 17.—When I was home the time before, I forgot to tell you about how my family has gone literary. As far back as I can remember, my folks read a book about as often as I find a $200 gold piece. Most farmers simply don’t have time to read books. But now they've taken up reading in a tremendous way, My father started his cultural career last winter with “Grapes of Wrath.” He thought it was wonderful, but my Aunt Mary didn't like it so much. Then they got “Gone With the Wind.” It sounds incredible, but my Aunt Mary read that entire book aloud to my mother, who doesnt see as well as she did ' Then my father got three books out of the town library. I can remember only one of them. It was called “The Rim of the Prairie About Indians or something. It was great. And then they got Webb Miller's “I Found No Peace,” and my father read that book out loud to my mother, They felt awfully bad when Webb Miller was killed in London. By what method they select the bocks they read. I haven't the remotest idea. It's enough for me that they haven't turned sour agai the printed word through all these dutiful years of reading their son's half-caste brand of literature
nst
» ”
More About Solitaire
You may remember a couple of mo a column about playing 350 games of solitaire while oh vacation. Well, that brought scads of letters from solitaire plavers, and I been reading them ove: Here's one from Washington ‘Eleven vears ago a friend a new solitaire game, You lay the cards and take them off by adding faces make 13 (Rditor's Note You what?) “The friend told my husband it could actually be plaved out. So for 11 Years, off a on. he has tried and failed “Then he had We went nowhere and did
Our Town
EVERY TIME I MENTION the precocious babies of 50 or 60 years ago some misanthrope, with two is pocket to buy a postage them
»
Y
1ths ago 1 had
Ye
mv husband in & pyramid,
numbers to
showed
ol
na na
this Xi
\ et 1
18 dayy' Va
nothing, as
in
a i1on
ca
mmer 18
my sbhand
in hh in 0
(or mavbe three) cents stamp, writes in to ask what in heck became of that the purpose of the letter is to corner me and make me admit that precocious babies never amount anyvthing-—a proposition so preposterous that
I am smart enough te know
atl {to
I am prepared to contradict it Consider the case of Lulu Burt, I mentioned her a ago as having
{f Yum Yum in
for instance weeks played the par an amateur product The Mikado” given by the Indianapolis Lyra Society in 1885 under the direction of Alexander Ernestine
at
couple ol oO
ion of
wasn't & dav older than 16 the time Pwo vears later she appeared as Ermmie \ opera of same name, It Was amatew broduction. That was back in the davs when people didn’t know anything about streamlined which left a girl nothing elise ta do but A
\ . tars Byte h Yay ISH it through from sta o finish. Lalu aa nt
off. Lulu the
nat hey notnel
the a ne «
opera ANR her s0 well
business
pat
her ends persuaded her to go into the fo Evertbody said she had the voice
good
to do it.
£3 iii Hour agure
ana
y ” x
Joins Abbott Company
Lulu made her professional debut 1800 when she changed her name to Helen Bertram and appeared as Josephine in “Pinafore It was good for a pretty long run at the Madison Square long enough, anvway, for Emma Abbott to become oi Lulu. Miss Abbott died the followi dut her company kept right AS ® of fact, for four more Years during which time Bertram played all the prima donna roles While with Abbott Company, Miss Tor the director of Miss Abbott's Later the two were married Somehow they d hit off. It ended a divorce. I wouldnt have mentioned it except for the that Miss Bertram
Navy Airpower
1"
Xiit
sometime around
Garden
Ng Veart, ma He
nware ttex
len
on going
Bertram orchestia
the met ant 34 in { in
“A aC
the world eventually r shut up speak now, without that we
age-
A POLICY OF POLICING bring & zero hour of “put up United States, It is necessal) to regard for personalities or feelings are hot dumpad into a major conflict lacking uate airpower Raquipment organization, were Engiand and France
0 for the
{0 Insure and
as
Navy handling of airpower is open to indictment on deplorably short mitting Se Of
charges of
vision In come-
¥ sO ave Iss t the exclusive y» cooled
gevelon
itxelf big
es. while
on -
~CO0IQ
“he planes t ritish “Spitfires n “Messerschmitts
andl the German liquid-cooled, sii
all powered by Our Navy lacks comparable plane with a big ad. al in the air than one with = liquid-cooled engine ol radial engine of 1000 horsepowe: sets up far more resistance in ] cooled {ype
Resista
The air-cooled radial is gbout Yel shout 14 square feet of blunt plate into the wind. The liquid-cooled engine square feet frontal area, excellently Since air resistance piles up as speed, each additional square means increased resistance wasted power This is why no radial air-cooled engined plane has held the world's top speed record in the last 17 years Now let's look at the two types from the viewpoint
My Day
HYDE PARK, Friday. —I more about the onion festival Orange County, N. Y,, with 10,000 t geres of cleared land whose soil is as ich as can be found anywhere in this country. It is the second largest onion growing section in the United States, and in good vears an annual income of one million dollars But, there is a gamble in it] for while some drainage work has been done hasn't been sufficient to insure against flooding A few times in the past several vears, the people who depend for the most part on this one crop had ho crop. There are man other hazards In onion growing: f them, the Polish and Gorman people who settled in this area have ueceaded in making good homes for themselves and have raised large families. All in the family work and work hard—but they seem te be a healthy, happy group of people. Religion is a very real part of their lives. so this onion festival is arranged largely by the priests in the different parishes,
canes” Reis sines A slower
engines noun cooled
sleek, streamline The
a the same hoarsepowel o!
than the ligt
a ir-cooled more 1)
1a -
the alr
1
nee Increased
501) 0% In a Area
has about
amete 1a jammed 10 streamlined to the square of the inch of area
decreased ana
Ol
frontal speed
Ss
tell ection 12.000
ana black
promised to vou _
Chere is a
Ol
ome 0
it i
about
nets
it i
but in spite of
-
played that game endlessly, and said he wouldn't quit till he won a game “On the very last day of his vacation he played them all out. Success after 11 years! Such & whooping and hollering, jumping and shouting. I started to call the wagon, but he calmed down and hasn't plaveli it since. So we both figure his vacation was well spent.” And here is one from D. J. Farr of Miami, Fla. He says
“After try my
spare time to play 350 games, But I was quite a bit luckier than you were. I guess I was just born lucky. | “In the 350 hands I had a total loss of $5707 and a total gain of $4851, or a net loss of $856." (In my own solitaire spree, I lost almost exactly twice as much as I gained. . i n A Gift of Cards Mr. Farr plaved all the cards out 15 times in his 350 games, never won twice in a row, and never once went through a game without getting out at least one ace. He concludes: . { “That's enough solitaire to do me for a while. At] times 1 wonder why I had ever started such a fool! thing. but now that it’s over I enjoved it, and I'm glad to know that the darn thing can't be beat.” And from Cleveland comes a deck of cards, the Rift M. F. Trostler. They are not like ordinary plaving cards. This is a special solitaire game called | “Jacob's Ladder.” Nr. Trostler cavs that winning in this game depends almost entirely on skill, whereas the ordinarn) solitaire game is mostly luck He an expert player can win on “Jagob's Ladder” from 80 to 85 per cent of the time, whereas unskilled playver—-depending largely on luek—wins' only about 10 to 15 games out of 100 He saves the game was invented In Netw Orleans in 1860 by “Honest Jack” Rodgers, a religious-minded | Mississippi River gambler, while convalescing in a hospital I've tried quite got the hang pretty interesting
» n
ol
avs
all
{he thing a couple of times, still haven't of it. but I think it’s going to be Maybe T'll have to take another give her a good playing over.
vacation pretty soon and
By Anton Scheyrer
interesting as her professional! Mr. Tomasi was her first husband.
Miss Bertram's hext engagement Was with the; Conried Opera Company in a magnificent presentation “The King's Fool.” Afterward she appeared with the McCaul Company and still later she was, for a time. with the Duff Opera Co It was while she way with t her next engagement, that she married second husband, a Mr. Henley He died. After enth of her second husband, Miss Bertram joined » Savage Opera company and created! the part ol in “The Prince of Pilsen Gosh, how youngsters for having been bora late Lator Miss Bertram appeared with the troupe that resented George Ades triumph, “Shogun.” At the conclusion of her engagement with “Shogun” she be-. gan career ih vaudeville. While on the big c¢ircuit she appeored at the Grand Opera House In the fall of 1004. Most of her old pals hadn't seen her 1: Except le embonpoint, she was
We
ilje ANVwWay,
was 8s
of
he Bostonians he: the «
widow you <0
ap he)
itt iit
io for a
the old Lalu
» Recalling a [.cge na
By this time He was
Da 1
¥
{ rd husband actor who created the vne's dramatized version believe he was the original
had a John Storm Christian O0 1905. le
vangeville
O
The
«x than a Helen Bertram in Indianapolis, Edward Morgan appeared at English’s in the premiere performance of Booth Tarkin ,
was he who
vear after
plaved The Gentleman Fram indiana. created the part of John Harkless that Miss Bertram ran «at in the audience that night wi knowing it. After the performance he was. Next day, so runs husband to see her old Inndtv whether vou can beIt's possible though, for the the time. For that s the double frame Ww
gion Tt \ {1 hare ) na rere Is egena
14s il
from Chicago and husband how took her
her
3 told him good the legend, she fanapolis home, 1 don’t
Qls lieve the legend or not 1
xe was still gtanding at
you ¢ t today It ith the porch on the east
t and 15th Sts
an see 1
\
By Maj. Al Williams
h pilot. With ® big, round, air-cooled radial engine out in front of him, the pilot's range of | vision is Qeplorably reduced. This is the most vital Because he can't shoot what he can't see ob side of the Navy command in charge never could really fly—and can't today. | when a fighting air arm of this Gov-| the hands of men, qualified for having qualified to sit in the|
SEAMS
~ » +1 5 4 Bu
oie of aviation What happens is left
but
arnyment ernme {
flight
in pay nevel in peacetime? Read the following and draw vour own conclusions as to how far the present chief | the Navy's Bureau of Aeronautics missed the boat, | and bus ih discussing the relative merits of air- | liquid-cooled fighting engines before a
July 3
evel
Ol tram cooiea
versus
committee of Congress ast
Yasha Re Cora Page Wheommitte House of R on
tal Nat
80 of the published heatings the Committee on Approon
om e of gpresentatives ai M1 REP. TABER: “Admiral (J. H have vou
"ny progress since vou were here before in con-
Towers) made velopments? ADMIRAL TOWERS: "We are of some experimental liquid-cooled engines nd we have one that looks quite Be The has carried on the development of the Allison. is built around
velopment
not
RED "Noi other liquid-cooled engl ADMIRAL TOWERS: “No, sir; bacause the liquidcoolad engines are such big, heavy engines that they in the smaller planes for carrier aperations.” The fact is that the weight difference between aircooled and liquid-cooled engines is negligible when you get above 1000 horsepower. Likewise, the Admiral fails even to mention the all-vital visability advantage of liquid-cooled over air-cooled engines
TABER
an)
se 9 t
ao not fit
By Eleanor Roosevelt
reading your column about playing 350 games of solitaire in three weeks, I thought I would | luek. | “Like vou, it took me exactly three weeks in my|
side of Delaware between 14th 000000 limit set by the law,
By Ernie Pyle
The Indianapoli
ehin a
By Noble Reed
Times Staff Writer
LWOOD, Ind., Aug. 17.—
If you'd never seen the man before and walked into a crowded room you'd pick him out on sight as “The Boss.” : That's Homer Capehart— the man who built Willkieville, Ind., the one-day city of 300,000 people.
Elwood started its task of creating a city with only a couple of comfields and vague warnings that it would have to accommodate safely a quarter of a million pedple. A lot of folks here shook their heads sadly But they didn't know Homer Capehart, Committees of business men and civic leaders had been appointed to work out details, They were struggling with the first drafts of plans when Homer breezed into town, opened office quarters and promptly hired staffs of civil engineers, transportation experts, surveyors, sanitation engineers and architects »
ITHIN a week enough precision blueprints were flow= fhg into the Capehart office to build a large automobile factory “Well, that's just the way we've got to operate,” said Mr. Capehart, “as if we were planning a million-dollar factory building with a whole system of highways thrown in.” The water and food problem started to bother everybody Homer Capehart started pushing buttons. Half a dozen secretaries ana assistants went into action on long-distance phones He contacted all the big food packing companies within a radius of 300 miles. Within 24 hours, he completed arrangements for half a dozen feets of refrigerator trucks te Keep continuous frains of supplies running into Elwood all day today with special highway facilities for them ” » HAT'S the way Homer Capehart does things. In a big He's big himself, like those
» y
2
way
6. 0. P. FIGHTS
Makes National Office Cautious. CHARLES T. LUCEY
Times Special Writer WASHINGTON, Aue. 17 by the Hatch Law from
By
the
down Spending of past years, the Republican National Committee is reform-
ing its lines for a Presidential ¢am paigh dripping none of the fat political hangers-on rolled in some past campaigns Wendell Willkie put
the
nat ou
the commit
mat- tee on notice that the entire national the %3.-
campaigh must keep within ana 1! will not try to follow certain alleged ly legal means of spending which were pointed out by P. Pletcher, its counsel The committee is finding out the $5000 limit on likely to be much ! than the $3000,000 limit, In the 1936 campaign licans received more than tributions of more du Pont family alone more than $500,000 had only 120 $5000
contributions
poured
contributions
ducted along the ordered by Mr be needed
Every fou
economical
years swarms of for JoBs given
to
mittees, looking usually have been speakers, authorized set up organizations of
jobs RO one
Onl
the national campaign machinery Thix year the G. O. P
Mr. Willkie particularly been hired in past campaighs sent over the country, In G. 'O. P. Speakers Bureau
it will function chiefly bare traveling expenses will be met locally in most eases
Printed literature which has been Of other be dealt out sparingly in this new era There will be less
stacked campaign vears, much of
in piles ih hundreds headquarters in it unused, will
of elactioneering.
—Barred
hig
¥ {ol
that is ess burdensome expenditures
the Repub200 ¢onthan $5000—the out The Democrats over This vear there will be none A a1 Sh Ata le cockbits of fichting planes and lead their formations us, Re RE NO0.000 mit. wil with the whole campaign being conlines Willkie, they won't
per {sons descend on the national comThey ns and Kind or the Second another, or put to work at some of Defense Appropriation Bill for the thousands of jobs that make up
is pointing to the limitations of the Hatch law nection with the liquid-cooled engines of plane de- and turning most of them away cracked financing the de- down oh paid speakers who have and 1936 the alone the Allison Spent more than $250,000. this year to provide Even these
|
CAMPAIGN ‘FAT
Three Million Dollar Limit
more | Henny
for sound trucks and all the other
campaign paraphernalia
The Republicans are weighing a several hundred thousand small contributions, of perhaps $1 each, to spread the party's roots as Some offi.
plan to get
widely as possible
lefals say that even with the $5000 contribution limit, it probably would be possible to raise the $6.000.000 to
we lunched with Mrs. Florence Ketchum ih Warwick. and then formed a large procession of floats and trucks with bands to parade through several vilJages and some 12 miles of the countryside, At the end of the motor trip, we returned to the field where the pageant held. This is colorful, featuring ¢ostumes from different parts of dances and some beautiful singing. The ends with the crowning of the queen, who is escorted by voung ladies who are chosen as princesses because they have also found a place in the competition.
First
1S
¥ "yy rol
Poland, various Polish | pageant the people had sent telegrams urg- |
ing his nomination would put the [cost of the telegrams into the cam- { paign, financing would be substan-
$8.000000 of past national paigns without difficulty
After his nomination at Philadel the if all
Willkie, commented
addressing that
phia, Mr, convention,
came
Writes Letter
OKES TO ANSWER
Ickes
wood,
Hi,
Homer Capehart , “The Boss’
y famous
and really smokes he lights up
smokes a cigar When it
right away
SCHRICKER TALK AVOIDS HIMSELF
Candidate Mentions Neither Own Race or State At Bass Lake.
music box made He carries hi He moves it
He never looks tired. He
s size well goes out,
fast
To Call Firemen
HAVERHILL, Ma
UP $
Ave, stat
Aug
Firemen at the 16th
told today of receive
mg a to a fire
A
station
small 1to
with ¢ ote from he
mother th ‘My tom an one to put 1t The fuemen (itehen caught advising th
€ phone nex
atl ead
on fire at the hot
stove 1S \ It has been burning about Will send some-
out?
BASS
Speaking
LAKE, Ind, Aug 17 a homecoming celebra-
hom vou
Bl tion in hiz honor here, Lieut, Gov Bcehricker,
Governor
+ he left | Henry P
e woman to tel
rrived as
fire
They
Democratic
after airtel
made no ref-| In-
nominee fo time his own candidacy ot
ference to diana politics In
rtared
the celebration vesterday Starke Democats. Mr. Schricker dealt only with the national Administration “Safety with Roosevelt,”
hig speech
by County
WILLKIE ON M
i {
first will
NEW YORK, Aug. | U. PD the Interior Harold I Ite sad predicting the re-election of and ah President Roosevelt Enumerating New Deal Lieutenant Governor said they had saved business and industr) and had aided workers and the unemployed He said the Roosevelt Administration has restored the confidence of the people in democracy as a form to- of government
10,000 SEE ANNUAL PAGEANT OF PARKS
10,000 city
Secretary of
a former Republican
measures, will to Kl lican PresidenWillkie
Democratic
machine politics make st New
the acceptance speect
opponent of
the
the fir Deal reply today at of Repub Wendell 1
Democrat the committee announced
Ind tial a former National day Mr. Iekes will speak over the Blue Network of tite National Broadcasting System from 7 p.m (Indianapolis Time), The same eve ning, Edward J. Fiynn chair man the Democratic National Committees, tion <wide over the System The
Biv 1
nominee
30 to 8 New estimated at last
70
A crowd
night
of the playpag
open-air
witnessed
make his first na 0}
appeal in that capacity Columbia Broadcasting
will their annual Park's
grounds present
eant at Garfield
+) oN tnealel selection o Ty n
Mr.» Willkie
hlow ol
wars Seen AX A
New Deal to
thant
) {
A cast of 2000 children, dressed in \
<THor
tunics the Laughing Mountain,” directed Mrs. Norma Koster and sponsored by the cit) recreation departments in co-opera-tion the county WPA recreation department WPA orchestra, Whistler, plaved furnished the entire
and pre
Tale
long dresses
counter
he ortio NO -
the
Republican a The Of machin
Deal camp
enteq,
litica running Wr
New
INJURIES ARE FATAL FLKHART, Ind, Aug. 17 (1 George ©. Scoles, 62 Elkhart died last night in Dowagiac, Mich of mmnmmries n an auntomo-
hile collision
with PY directed hy an overture
Of I'he Reid ana fon
received
show
Tuesday
.
_~ y tially provided. He was taken lithe girl chosen as queen was a pretty r-haired | : gin : queen Was a pretty, fair-haired) sony “hy many throughout the
oirl with great poise and a charmi personality. | Te Re charming Personality. | tiv and & Iarge humber of. conAmong her other qualifications, the queen must Rc tributions from 25 cents to $1 hav tually have worked in the onion fields. This one s R 8 1 ave ) : A Ts 8 resulted plaved her part charmingly and State Senator Des- Ohne df the G. O. P. officials’ cur mond crowned her with appropriate ceremony. th siakh ’ a ah A 1 Di ! a rent concerns Is whether $600,000 I did not get home until half past seven, and found naj out early this year to meet a the andience for the plays given by the Valley Vaga- gaficit remaining from 1936 would bonds already gathered on our lawn. The Pough-|same within the $3.000.000 limitation keepsie Refugee Children's Committee, headed by Dr. \rhe jaw says Bo committee shall Heniv MacCracken, and for which Mrs, Lyndon H. jeceive or spend more than $3.Thatcher arranged this benefit, did a really very good ooo ong “during anv calendar year,” piece of work in selling tickets [but friends of the law said they be-| This morning Mrs, Henry Morgenthau Jr. is joining | lieved the courts would not ¢on-| us and we are poing over to Woodstock, N. Y,, to strue such a debt payment as R visit the NYA project there. |eurrent expenditure,
ir i
\
Open Drive
be the theme of voters in November, |
hackground music
SECOND SECTION
ilwood
His voice is low and resonant and carries enough authority to
make a highly paid secretary go
Hoosier Goings On
from Washington, D, C. to Wash« ington, Ind, in one jimp. It was Washington, Ind., by the way, where Homer staged his big show of 1938 -the Grassroots Cone ference. Many persons contend that it was that huge affair that gave the Republican Party the springboard for its revival, But the Grassroots Conference is just small potatoes compared to what he's done to Elwood. His Willkieville=Callaway Park may have its faults, but it stands today as a miracle of efftciency. All done in the space of weeks, ”
VERY day for six weeks,” he said, “there has been a detailed program of things to do and we never went to bed until the day's quota of work was done, “What we did was simply to organize each day's program with written instructions to all divi. sions and then follow NEL) that the instructions care ried out to the letter Weeks ago he had his blues prints showing to the inch where every one of the scores tents, buildings, movie camera stands and rest rooms were to be erected, There was even a set of blues prints drawn by civil engineers for the huge parking lot, marks ing off space for 40000 automobiles and roadways for them to get in and out without congestion
up to were
ol
"ow pS there were 40 miles of
wire stretched
” around more of farm land for of automobile
than 100 acres
the control lines
And Homer Capehart was buss tling around town on a last-mine ute inspection tow snapping orders to his secretaries and tryeing to guess at how many people already were in town He grinned a little when was reminded that next week that will be left of his one-day boom town will be debris and a page in the political history of America He was probably thinking about the feather in his cap
he all
EVIDENCE GONE
Gary Nimrod's Negatives Got Away; Dogs in New Albany Take the Hint
By
AS RAY SBPARKS of Gary wound up a fishing trip home Carefully he photographed the vacation catch, friends and headed home exulting th the admiring looks that,
doubting Thomases back
his success
for the evidence of gave the fish to Then as he unloaded his car would come w one slipped up to the car, grabbed the camera and film and ran You should have seen the neg-
atives that got away,” he wailed
# Nn N DOGS hecame New Albany
possible! rabies
ETRAY 8 80 nu
merous in that to
epta
forestall a
demic, clamped down 120-day
Armed
police quarantine with shotguns and officers
morning
the started out
the
nooses
arlv in after the
strays But the word on the canine grapevine and the officers spotted only one pooch on streets all day Apparently the last one to hear the news, he was on his way out and the officers never got close enough to capture him
had gotten out
» Nn n
Marion has the right idea about all this hot weather. They're installing a new $35,000 refrigerated storage plant. Just talking about it ix helping keep the citizens cool,
v # » Bocatise of the party ol the =e of the
ond part striking the party
matter concerns of the third
Worden
first part over na
me party part, Judge Wirt under advisement Said Fred Smith Fdwin Griffin called him out into a field to give assistance 46 an airplane pilot who had crashed. There was no plane wreck Smith and Griffin beat upon hin. for alleged dam ages to a third part; In court the third party said it wasnt true He and Smith were the best of friends Despite Griffin's admission guilt, Judge Worden have to think the matter over foi a little while There was oven some talk of passing the to the Circuit Court to worry about it
a took case
up at ba
(first
a Porte pariy)
(second party)
san
Ol
sald he'd
ap et
on them
” o ”
.
Herman Seheimann's little gir
spied what she thought was a ball ving on the highway, Bhe coaxed her Dad, who lives in Decatur, into going back after it, He wheeled his ear around, it crashed into one driven by Mrs, Ruth Burdig, causing $100 damage After it was all over, the little pirl started after the ball on foot She found it was a tomato
GOSPORT MAN KILLED
A NA
Democrats who are supporting Wendell 1. Willkie for President met ih New York City this ‘week and formally opened a headquarters for the Democrat-for-Willkie Movement, Mrs. Roberta Campbell Lawson, a Democrat from Tulsa, Okla, is pinning a Democrat-for-Willkie button on the coat of Alan Valentine, president of the University of Rochester, who was bamed executive director of the new organization,
fh
a Ri
A) ME
AS HE TOUCHES WIRE
ANDERSON, Ind 17 Qletis Benxy, '256 ploved the Northern
Power Co,
Aug hy
day neat Mr pole neal School.
the Markleville
PERU, hd, Aug Pp)
IJexse Schlott, 66, of
17 "VU Mexico,
wire, 0
’
U.P). of Gosport, emIndiana was electrocuted yveaters
Ind, [as electrocuted near here yester- | {ny when he touched a high tension
hen he had thote pictures developed and printed
|
Lands in Jail
the held from Sept dent
EARL HOFF ss
he demand
prepared
who would concreta
somes
After 3 Mishaps
DRIVER can last night after smashing three other autos in wild down the Lafavette Road Police =aid he 1--Smashed into a machine waiting for a stop signal, 2) rubbed fenders with a second car, (3) turned southeast in Whita River Blvd then swung into Sheffield Ave. where he c¢hHpped A sedan: (4) came out second best when an irate motorist chased him near 16th 8t. and Pershing Ave
to griet mto dash
A TAXI
A
P. 8. He landed in jail under $1000 bond charged with drunkemns drunken driving, reckless failure to stop after
ness driving and an accident
INDIANA LAW SCHOOL
WILL OPEN SEPT. 16
for fall classe: Law School will 0 to Sept. 14, PresiOgden annotinced
Registration at Indiana he
James M
[today
|
Markleville whan he ¢ame in contact wit a high voltage wire Sensy was working on a utilicy High
| |
gin Sept
fall
woe
eh a
>
Pav and evening classes will hes 16 Many Courses which ma) students
present
this parte aid OR
offered taken by desire to
occupations, Mr
will be be fime who
then
den said
TEST YOUR
{wice monthe two months?
RBi-monthly lv. or once Is Jacqueline Cochran a famous aviatrix, actress or radio enters tainer? In which country River? Do the highest waves accur along a coast or ih the open sea? Which is taller, the Washingtop Monument or the Biffel Tower? When used as a negative answer to a question, what part of speech ix the word no? Owen J. Roberts fs a Justice of the U. 8, Supreme Court, Chairs man of the Wecurities & Ex« change Contmission, or Chairman of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation Is the Bill of Rights a part of the United States Constitution?
Answers
Every two months, Aviatrix Venezuela, Open rea «Eiffel Tower “Particle, U. 8. Suprente Court Justice, Yer
means every
ix
the Orinodeo
» ” » ASK THE TIMES
Inclose a 3-cent stamp for ree ply when addressing any question of fact or information to The Indianapolis Times Washs ington Service Bureau, 1013 13th Bt. N. W., Washington, D. 0, Legal and medical advice eahhot be given nor cah extended Tee search be undertaken,
