Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 August 1940 — Page 11

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TUESDAY, AUGUST 27, 1940

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BROWN COUNTY, Ind, Aug. 27.—Onya La Tour is doing a remArkable thing. A remarkably unselfish thing. It is so unusual it is.hard to believe—until you know her. She is trying—apparently without thought or means of recompense—to present to the

people of Indiana an understanding of modern art. It is really almost a missionary work, from the heart. 1 must admit that I don’t understand such motives. But she 1s doing it, and she is sincere, and that's enough. Onya La Tour came originally from Salem, Ind, a little way south of here. Her ancestors were New Orleans French who somehow had drifted northward. Her life has been unusuai. She has been away from Indiana a long time. She has home-steaded in the far Northwest. She has designed dresses in Chicago. She went on to New York. She has lived in France and In Russia. She loves Russia, actually looks Russian in a placidly beautiful way. Around her waist she wears a heavy silver-clasp belt that is the most striking piece of jewelry I ever saw. Art has been her love and her lite tor many vears. She herself has painted, but gave it up because of a frank realization that she nad no talent. Her talent lies in appreciating art, not in creating it. For many years every cent she could lay her hands on has been spent for pictures. She now owns some 500 of the finest pictures produced by Americans whose work comes under the classification of “modern art.” o = =

Art Gallery on a Farm

Last spring, Onya La Tour closed her gallery in New York, came back to Indiana, looked around tor a place, and finally bought a 118-acre farm way off over the hills, 11 miles from Nashville. And in the farmhouse she opened a gallery! The pictures aren't especially for sale. She has almost no money. She hoped to support herself by operating the farm, doing most of the work herself. She has courage. But it seems doubtful that she

Inside Indianapolis (And “Our Town’)

ANTON SCHERRER has ruled in this spot for several years. Today he retired from active writing and we at The Times can be forgiven for feeling lost. Indeed, the brash spirit of “Inside Indianapolis” is tempered by moving into this place “Tony” Scherrer has been ill for some months. He has continued his writing under considerable hardship. His doctor has been urging him for some time tp take a long rest and “Tony” finally has consented. We hope that from time to time, we may be honored in being able to present to you guest columns by the most able interpreter of Indianapolis life Anton Scherrer has long been one of this city's most distinguished citizens. His father before him was recognized as one of the State's leading architects and was one of the leading figures in the construction of the State House. “Tony” followed his father's footsteps into architecture and served in that field for many years. A lover of art and of music, he gave freely of his time. He started several years ago writing a weekly column of art news. The art coiumn quickly grew into “Our Town,” the title itself “Tony's” own choosing. It was what he had always wanted to do—to write of the town he lived in and of the people he

knew. = » =

‘One of the Gang!

“Tony” loves Indianapolis. The things he has written about he has for the most part remembered without aid of reference books. All that ever happened to “Tony” Scherrer left an impression upon him as a part of Indianapolis to remember and to love. Those of us who have been privileged to work with him have come to regard him not as a “trained seal”—the newspaperman’s term for the columnist—

Washington

WASHINGTON, Aug. 27.—There is a suspicious amount of haggling going on by industry over defense contracts with the danger that it will provoke the Administration into a drive for greater control over industry in the interest of national defense. Those interested in preserving our system of free enterprise should not overlook the significance of the various proposals that are popping up in Congress for conscription of wealth or of industry. There is meaning behind the move which the Administration has just made in going to the Supreme Court with the old Bethlehem shipbuilding case to determine the right of the Federal Government to compel industry to fill defense contracts on reasonable terms, Francis Biddle, Solicitor General, sought this Supreme Court review as a matter of immediate national concern. In his petition, he said: “In times of national emergency men charged with preparing the nation’s defenses have no time for haggling with a contractor who refuses to perform his indispensable function unless he be assured an exorbitant profit. . . . It is of immediate national concern that there should be an authoritative determination of the extent to which the country’s need should place the Government at the mercy of its contractors.”

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Subcontractors Blamed

This move has followed several significant complaints. Rear Admiral Furlong, Chief of Naval Ordnance, a few days ago told a Senate sub-commit-tee of the refusal of subcontractors to accept anti-

My Day

WASHINGTON, Monday.—We flew to Washington last night in the rain, but the trip was smooth. I found that the weather plus an important conference had brought my husband back early in the afternoon from his trip on the Potomac, so Governor and Mrs. Maybank of South Carolina, who were with him, stayed with us for dinner and the night. After dinner we were shown some delightful movies taken of the President’s trip last February. Every time I see pictures of the canal, I promise myself that before another year goes by to see that engineering marvel for myself. The little Girl Scout from Panama, who was so pretty in Jer exquisitely hand-embroidered native costume, told me at the camp the other day, a good deal about her country and I was impressed by her excellent English. No one would have thought that it was not her native tongue. I wonder how soon our young people will be surprising natives of South American countries by speaking Spanish as well as the South Americans do English, I hear most encouraging reports of the National Youth Orchestra's trip in South America under Mr. Stowkowski, and am looking forward to i them

By Ernie Pyle

can make it. She may have to store the pictures this fall ana go back to New York to make a living. This summer she has been having around “OU visitors a month, which seems to me high considering the isolation of her place. They are mostly art students and art lovers from indianapolis and Bloomington. The local people—her hill neighbors——come on week-ends. And she says they appreciate the exhibit most of all. pathetic. Onyva La Tour is a lovely woman, doing a noble deed that maybe doesn’t need doing at all. | In the souvenir shops of Nashville and Indianapolis | you will see a dog carvéd out of wood—an ornery old hound dog, gaunt and sad looking, with his nose clear down (o the ground and his tail up. It is a great caricature. I asked who did them, and they said Buddie Thompson, the midget. So one day on the street 1 happened to run onto Buddie Thompson and we got to talking. I imagine one of Buddie's greatest satisfactions in life must be watching people's eyes bug out when he first starts talking to them.

A Great Conversationalist | For out of Thompson's mouth come tumbling such words ac ‘precisionist” and “irreconcilable” and discussions of liberal arts.colleges and outmoded methods of teaching.

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The local art colony is not at all sym-

In iact, I followed Buddie over to his shop and ;

sat with him a couple of hours and if there was any subject under the sun that he dida’t discourse | upon, 1 can't remember it. He is onginally from Madison, Ind, went to | Hanover College and Indiana University, lived in New York, was on the stage against his will for] several vears in a midget act, never did any whittling | as a Kid, but finally gol onto this business of carica- | turing animals in wood, and loves it. Buddie is unhappier than most midgets, I belteve, | because he has the power to think from a height of six feet. He has written 2 book on midgets and now they feel, and has given me a covoy, which I suspect may turn out to be one of the most interesting books I've read. He says there are other carvers in America who can do it better. But I'll bet there are no othar carvers who can talk better while they're doing it.

but rather as one of us, one of the “gang.” i He would come in to lock over his mail, lighting | his pipe with countless matches and nodding smilingly over some new office development. Somebody | would rezall to his mind an incident of yesterday and he would talk rapidly, using his pipe to gesture with. | The war in Europe saddei®d him. He decided | last summer to go to Europe. “I'm afraid it will be] too late if I don't do it now.” he said. “I want to see | Holland again and Switzerland and France.” The war broke out while Mr. and Mrs. Scherrer were over there. Stranded in ‘Holland, they came back on one of the big Dutch liners, through the] endless mine fields that the British Navy had laid down in the English Channel area.

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Saddvned "by the War

Slowly the news trickled in of Germany's march | across Europe. Holland feil and then Belgium. The news of Nazi troops pouring into the very villages! where he had visited was a crushing blow to “Tony.” | He remembered in every vivid detail the strings of | neat little houses, the well-tended gardens, the art] treasures in the museums. It always seemed to us that Europe's war took | something out of this friendly man who loves people. He brooded over the senseless shooting and the terrible destruction. Several months ago he fell ill, | so ill that he could not write his column for a few | weeks. He resumed writing in his own typical manner, poking fun at his illness, at the doctor's cures, at the old wives’ tales of what to do. He has continued |

Mr. and Mrs. Ernest H. Kitch, 1415 Jefferson Ave. aren't taking a chance on losing their vote because | of improper registration. “Sign right there,” Clerk Carl Viebahn tells them as they fill out change of address | cards in the vote registration office.

By Lowell B. Nussbaum T looks like there's going to be a pretty heavy vote next Nov. 5, heavy even for a Presidential year, if activities at the voter registration office in the Court

House are a criterion. With Roosevelt and Willkie partisans working themselves into a lather even before the campaign gets in full swing, the registtation office is feeling the results in the form of a lively business. The voters, it seems, taking any chances of missing the train in November. They want to be sure they're registered, ang registered properly. Ordinarily, registration activity is pretty much at a standstill untill early in September. This year, the voters hardly waited until the two national conventions were over before they started streaming into the office at the rate of 150 or 200 a day. They're more outspoken this year than usual, too. Although a voter's party preference has no part in the registration, many walk up, thump on the counter, and shout:. “I want to register Republican,” or “Register me Democratic.” The biggest problem the office force has now is looking up the records for hundreds who aren't sure if they are properly registered

aren't

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HERE are two principal qualifications for voting. One is six months residence in the state, 60 days in the township and 30 days in the precinct. The other is being registered properly. Under the permanent registration law, once you regis-

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A voter wanted to know if he was properly registered, so Mrs. Margaret Bright looks up the records. In these and companion files are the registration records of more than 200,000 voters.

ter, you're registered for the rest of vour life, with a couple of important exceptions. One of these exceptions is that if you move, you must transfer your registration to your new address. The other is that if you fail to vote in two successive general elections, vour name is taken off the list of eligibles and

The City Hall—

you must register again before voting. If you move after the registration deadline, midnight Oct. 7, it's just too bad, unless.your new address is in the same precinct in . Which you were registered. In that case, you still are entitled to vote. The registration office, which is

under the direction of William P. Flanary, is making plans now for opening branch registration offices throughout the county on Sept. 12 for 21 days.

” ” ” HERE will be six branches in

operation each day. The first three days, they will be in various

Each pin in this map being inspected by Registration Clerk Marvin | Jackson represents the site of one of the registration branch offices to { be in operation next month throughout the county and city.

communities outside the city. Then, on Sept. 15, they will move into the city The branches will be open from 10a. m to9p. m The main office, in the Court House, now is open from 8 a. m. until 4 p. m,, but after Sept. 12 will be open until 10 p. m. daily. “We're looking for a heavier reg= istration this year than the former peak in 1936,” said Harry Gasper, assistant supervisor. “We had 275,000 registered for the last Primary, and by the time the deadline rolls around, the number will be nearer 300,000, “Besides 15,000 or 20,000 new registrations, we probably will have 10,000 transfers, judging from the last few weeks’ activity.” Records show, Mr. Gasper said, that almost a third of those who go to the trouble of registering don't bother to vote in the general election. ¥ & # A" even smaller percentage vote in the Primary, Of the 275,000 registered last May, only 120,000 voted in the Primary. In the 1938 general election, less than 200,000 of the 285,000 rege istered actually went to the polls, Mr. Gasper said “campaign talk” causes some Republicans to fear the Democratic registration staff will misfile or throw away their registration records to keep them from voting. “Some of them,” he said, “act hardboiled and threaten: ‘You'd better get that right. If I don't get to vote, there's going to be trouble.’ “Actually, there are very few mistakes made, although each of the nearly 300,000 registrations has to go through 10 steps. Less than 100 voters came down to the office in the last election to get registration errors corrected.”

Bridal Gown Is

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to write daily in spite of the fact that he has ive f|J S MUST ARM § under the prodding of his doctor to stop writing and rest ® i § wouldn't write a farewell column. We CUDAHY WARNS

“Tony” wouldn't ask him to. Because we know that he'll alEnvoy to Belgium Addresses V. F. W.; Defends King

wavs have his readers waiting. And on any day that “Our Town” walks into the office with columns to write, “Inside Indianapolis” is going to hunt himself a new spot By Raymond Clapper Leopold Again. ; LOS ANGELES, Aug. 27 (U. P)). aircraft orders resulting in cancellation of contract|—A Veteran of Foreign Wars connegotiations. A Philadelphia manufacturer an- vention, “thankful that America has

Funeral Dress

CLEVELAND, Aug. 27 (U. P). —Mary Tokar, wearing her bridal

Those Big Plans of Council Are Forgotten as Years Pass

————— gown and accompanied by her six bridesmaids, went to her fiance's

Johnson on Three California funeral yesterday. ; ) reorge Joe Courney Jr, 23, wh Tickets: South Carolina, i

was to have married Miss Tokar a : last month, became ill shortly be Mississippi Voie. By UNITED PRESS

fore the wedding date. His By RICHARD LEWIS Senator Hiram Johnson, veterdn

friends who were to have been : In City Hall's closet of forgotten things hang the skel-|California isolationist, sought the ? nounced that his firm would accept no more Gov-|thrown off the shackles of Republican, Democratic and Pro-|

ushers, served as pallbearers. ernment contracts because the risk of loss was t00| pacifism,” today studied a plea by etons of great municipal improvements which never Came |, oqiive Senatorial nominations in great under the 8 per cent profit limitation. Senator | Ambassador to to pass. They haver't rustled for ages. Jig stales primulies tay, foalunng WHEN HIT BY AUTOS Four cyclists came to grief yese

‘Wish We Could, hut Lack Money,’ Say Officials: Rents at Airport to Be Raised.

Johnson,

By Eleanor Roosevel

to

Walsh, chairman of the Senate Naval Affairs Com- | John Cuaahy, U. S. i : iat ‘ : ) mittee. quoted an airplane manufacturer as saying Belgium, that this country become | Born, most of them, in municipal election years, they primary elections in three states. Be a a # hikers vitor. 'moulder silently now. relegated to the limbo of fhe “wish we| In Mississippi, the political fume Si S S. aus ts | . h @ oriz ’ : ’ ‘ . (The Man) : for Dlatics. Lev. Are refivie te thar 1d In a speech authorized by tMe could do it. but we don’t have the money.” of Senator eodore |terday but escaped serious injury tt and they will pi Tartire He Lig DE I A ey | Tl t k el ti BABS WAS 31 Stale. He SBI Demi | Wren stuck by autos y Y : 0 enrke 1 y | ‘ee was trac elevation : : : A : a eed at 8 and 10 per cent profit and therefore two networks, Mr. Cudahy last] sre Was NM / iy. cheaply, compared with fees they|Cratic renomination with former) pycille, 10, and Jimmy Powell, 14, American planes are not being contracted for.” |night told the 50,000 former soldiers | for the South Side. The City must pay for the use of other Governor Hugh L. White opposing| were riding a bicycle “double” in i“ prog Propose Aunt the a at the VFW's 4ist annual conclave had the Legislature pass {munitipa) pons Mid proposed in-|him. y en alley in the rear of 320 Trowe give 3 s $ } he United States must pre- ay ald crease in fees is based on a survey i ocrats were prie ; . we have a real emergency. Nothing of the kind will I ihe we orate ree new law to make it possible. ot 49 airfields made by I. J. (Nish) Ho oorale seats | Pricge St. when they were struck, be done at present but the threat is significant. peace. The Works Board adopted a Dienhart, airport superintendent. |in the House and for State legisla- Lucille was cut and was taken to a by a 4 | He was the second American ‘ : ; The survey shows that landing|tive offices. {doctor by the motorist, Lloyd | ial resolut to bring it] Few Jeopardize the Mani diplomat to discuss the issues of {SPECIAL TESOM Ioh me fees ranging from $25 to $200 are; In the three California Senatorial| Duetsch, 1421 Marlowe Ave. . ! = ty {war publicly. On Aug. 11, Ambas- aghout. That was two years charged by some municipal airfields, contests there were eight Boao inion When Robert Fox, 24, of 342 N, If conscription is adopted, don’t think that a Sador to France William C. Bullitt while Indianapolis charges none. all opposing Senator Johnson for Holmes Ave. went bouncing over large number of Senators and Representatives will | told a Philadelphia audience that agO. [La Guardia Field at New York City, one or the other party designation. the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad not then be ready to take some of the curse off of | the United States should sell de-T There won't be any track eleva- for instance, receives $200 apiece for| Governor Culbert Olson was try- tracks on Holmes Ave. last night their conscription votes by cracking down on industry | Stroyers at once to Britain. Under- tion this year or next, according to the first three planes, $100 each for ing to prevent the renomination of jon his bicycle, the headlight went and war profiteers. And why not? If men have to | Secretary of State Sumner Welles City officials. There can't be, they the next three, $50 for the next|77 Democratic members of the State out and he was struck by a car abandon their private ambitions and go into the Army, Said Li spoke with the approval of explain, until the State Highway three and $25 a plane thereafter. |Legislature who had opposed hi |deven bY nroiand M, nobody is going to be very tender about the war |the State Department. _|Commission takes the first step, the| Airlines here pay $1 a year for offering a slate of “77 true Demo- | Connersville, Ind. profiteer. bai Fou annex pave Wig b |elevation of the tracks at Madison each square foot of office space they |crats” against them. | Thirteen-year-old Edward Law It isn’t all industry that is causing the trouble. Biers OE foo y Sal ‘| Ave, a State Highway. The Com- use at the Airport Adniinistration | Senator Johnson nominally is a Son: dvs Carreliton = ANe, wad never 1s. It is that some are jeopardizing all of |, old hr hg and that price | mission hasn't the money, its en- building. At other ports, office Republican, though when he was re- brtlised Witen Siruck by an auto at the others. For instance several leading airplane is AL PR PTICE | gineers claim [space is rented from $2 per square elected the last time, he had, in ad-| St. and College Ave. manufacturers felt it necessary to clear themselves| .bLcP ovate tart : ters? foot up to $2400 a year, flat rate. [dition to the designation of his own of unjust suspicion in a statement the other day.! a le ge perate Tact, but or Retieibe? Parking Meters? + |party, that of the Democrats which T EST YO U R They announced “we are ready to bulid airplanes first | nin . aT Br apy Then there were parking meters. Venerable Notices President Ronsevels Jeiped Him get. and, talk about profits afterward. we like it or nqQt, become a mili- The Safety Board decided to wy th Tes y oe rue eral” and KNOWLEDGE The most dangerous thing for our system of free (o,.v nation. This means sacrifice them downtown. experimentally. | One of the enduring features of| fat ne Was no BC : enterprise now would he for business to allow itself nial on the part of us al." Surveys were made. The exact Gitv Hall is the ¢ [this has been used against him by t : in and denial on the part of us all. ’ groups of publie the three candidates, including to be blamed by this Administration for a breakdown | ar Cudahy echoed the blasts [number of meters needed was de- notices on the Main Fl bulleti Io lis BE Patt = in defense preparations. which National V. F. W. Com- |termined. The Safety Board re- W168 ain» oor bulletin (iéut. GOV. Bis A a Br op 1—What are the first 10 amende mander Otis N. Brown of North |ceived samples of various types of board. Notices posted tnerq rarely posing mn He seerved a of ments to the Constitution called? Carolina had made earlier against meters. That was a year ago. are torn down. New ones are pasted Romina fon if hot two of the three!” -Is there a variety of stoneless pacifists. | The samples still are on display atop the old, and the very old ones Be tae fie has been in the a Foch? “We thank God.” Mr. Brown said in the Board's office. The surveys fall off of their own accord and are gens since 1017 3—Which peninsula do Sweden and 'in his keynote address, “that Ameri- [also are on file. The parking meter swept away. ia 4 Norway igs ca has finally awakened, that proposal, in the terminology of City| The most venerable notice on the Eee e Sul o Slay | America has finally come to its|Hall, is “under advisement.” bulletin board at this date is a NLRB RULING FOUGHT |o—What is & bronchoscope? on their first program their 'n to the Unit a[nses, that AmeNcs Aas conally A Ne Belt Highway Demacratic State Committee leaflet, | |<Roger Nard Babsunds a Yusiness on prog on their return to the Unite thrown off the shackles of nd tie Be ghwa lurging young Democrats to attend] BY NEW YORK TIMES | executive, A sullezs professor or Ve ; ; oy | PACIASM.” isis There was a belt highway to a “Victory Dinner” at the Claypool. concert violinist? ; i ise saw a rmber of the latest news reels last The ambassador ridiculed fears circle the City for overland truck- The dinner was held Oct. 26, 1938. NEW YORK, Aug. 27 (U. P.). —.|7—=Do jerusalem artichokes grow night and, among others, part of Ambassador Bullitt’s | that a strong Army and Navy would ing. It was proposed two years ago| e lish (| above or below the ground? speech in Philadelphia. This was interesting to me, produce a “military caste” clamor- |a¢ a solution to the truck traffic. Arthur Hays Sulzberger, publisher of g__ where is Trinidad? because speaking for the news reels is something which ing for conflict. S I ey nil's Cominitiees Code to Be Published the New York Times, said today | DE SO al Pen RI Liat in this Mr, Cudahy also reiterated his 0 fet » and Public Works were to| i , that the National Labor Relations) Answers articular one, the depth of his feel carried his ; L Ids sur- On Safety and Public > W0| Sometime next year, a new Muni- : particu e dep hi elings carried defense of King Leopold's sur OV t of | sas | 1=—The Bill of Rights oS i ‘a Whi ‘ iad ie | ; {make a joint survey. No report of} 1 de will ke it , Board's ruling that The Times was ghts. message in a way which had not been achieved by his|render of Belgium to German ihe survey has been made {cipal Code will make its appearance. “ inna? in | 3=NO. written words I had read it in the newspapers and| forces. It was for a similar state- |", Sy a the old Indiana It'S to be published, tentatively, by|SUllty of “unfair labor practices” in 3 goo, qinavian, had been interested, but had missed the force of con-| ment in London that he was called hi TL el : as «| its dealing with the American News 4 vas ro aa : r . rR a : |Avenue bridge over Fall Creek was the Bobbs Merrill Publishing Co. It ; | S. viction which went with his delivery. home for explanation and, later,| =o... cs'and a new one was pro-|w paper Guild raised the issue of the 5—An instrument used to extracs The President began his day this morning with an |exoneration. 1x Blockade "Ul cost from $4500 to $6000. closed shop in news and editorial| foreign bodies from the bronchial ‘ \ : He likened Leopold Gen, Posed. The old bridge is blockaded, t inted ill be the first cod shop ’ important conference at 9 o'clock and apparently there po |but the pl for the new one are| If printed, it will be the first code qq rtments tubes. is not one minute during the rest of the day which |Robert E. Lee who “had no al- but ne Pons or The new bridge 0 appear since 1925. The’ current | ar syizherger said The Times|6—Business executive, will be 1ree. I realize that, in these summer months, | ternative but to surrender” when | NOt 3 " Fait until Fall Creek Plan is to issue supplements to the would appeal the rulings. 7—Below. when he goes to the country occasionally, there is more | he saw his Army harassed and re- |tannot be bullt ; |code biennially. The NLRB in a 2-to-1 ruling in|8—British West Indies, off the coast OW t rs whi . treating and thousands of his|Flood Control work has been com- g ' crowded into the days which are spent in Washington, #d > i | pleted rding to City Engineer Because no recent codification of | washington yesterday ordered The| ©0f Venezuela. but the days in Hyde Park seem to me as busy as PE ri, Jie, starving, ter- | & ’ ora 8 N municipal law has been issued re-|Times to desist from its “unfair RW & they can ve, Il et The Fall Creek flood work has not | cently, City attorneys spend much jypor practices” and to reinstate with ASK THE TIMES I wonder if, for everyone in Congress and in the vét been started of their time looking up ordinances pack pay two employees who had Administration, the pressure of work is so very heavy STAMP PLAN EXTENDED , : and amendments to ordinances in| peen dismissed, allegedly for union Inclose a 3-cent stamp for ree because so many different activities must be co- Airlines to Pay More the bulky annual Council reports. |activity. ply when addressing any question ordinated and dovetailed. Ordinarily, each person| WASHINGTON, Aug. 27 (U. P)).| y Each year, the Council passes| william M. Leiserson, one of the( of fact or information to could go on with his own job regardless of what others | Secretary of Agriculture Henry A Commercial airlines using the In- from 50 to 100 ordinances, some three Board members, dissented] The Indianapolis Times Wash« do, but at present everything seems to bear on what is| Wallace today announced that the dianapolis Municipal Airport willinew, some amendments to old laws./ from some of the rulings, but con-| ington Service Bureau, 1013 13th being done somewhere else. is is even truer of our | food stamp plan for distributing| pay more fees to the City next Feat, Lass year, Council approved 99 gen- curred in the finding that super-| St, N. W. Washington, D. ©, relations with the rest of the world. I feel that there surplus agricultural commodities to|according to plans. eral ordinances. Since 1925, nearly |visory employees had interfered with| Legal and medical advice cannot must be an increasing sense of burden for the leaders needy families will be extended to| Works Board members are agreed 80 amendments to the Zoning Law the workers’ rights of self-organiza<| be given nor can extended ree of Congress and the heads of the Administration. all of Arizona. that the airlines are getting off too|alone have been passed, tion. search be undertaken, : ; » : ‘ 4