Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 November 1940 — Page 2
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YOUTHS AIDED IN 0B SEARCH
Local | Business, Industrial Leaders on Two Y. M. Committees.
Two gomumittees of Indianapolis business | and industrial| leaders = meet at the Y. M. C. A. this wee
to consider the problem of how youth can best get a job. One committee, which deals with
youths seeking immediate work, will |}
meet at 7:30 p. m. today. The other, which will advise young men who believe they are better [suited for a different| job, will meet| Wednesday. Thé committees comprise a vocational guidance aid inaugurated by the Y. M. C. A. and will interview each youth individually, listening to
their problems, questioning and ad- |§
vising them. : 4 at Each Meeting
No more than four youths will be advised at any one meeting, according to Warren Fisher, ¥. M. C. A. head, to whom applications for interviews must be made. There is no charge for the interview and membership to the Y. M. C. A. is not
necessary. The pik was put inte effect, according {to A. HL. Thompson, Y. M. C| A. membership secretary and chairman of one of the committees, because of the restless feeling among youths in their present work. “There are countless vocations very Salles to those in which many young men now are working and in which they would be happy, but I have found that less than 1 per
cent of them were aware of the op- |
portunities,” he said.
Those on Committees
Some the men who will listen to the youths’ problems are C. R. Evans, head of the industrial relations department of the International Harvester Co.; Charles Jones, general superintendent, (William H. Block Co. Evan Walker, public yelations head, Indianapolis Street Railways; William Stout, assistant manager, L. S. Ayres & Co.; George Smith, head of the U. 8. Employment Service; Hardy Adriance, employment | superintendent, Eli Lilly & Co.; Edward Green, McCready Pension American| United Life | Insurance Co.; Doyle Zaring, Indianapolis’ Life Insurance Co.; Berkley Duck Jr., Spann Co.; Walter Jones, Shelby Bales Co.,|and a second representative of the U. 8. Employment Office.
CASTILLO SEEKS PILOTS
BUENOS AIRES, Nov.4 (U. P.).— Acting President Ramon| S. Castillo has broadcast an appeal for 5000 pilots from among the nation’s youth “to serve| the permanent interests of the public and defend the country if necessary.”
GANDHI TO FAST AGAIN
BOMBAY, India, Nov. 4 (U. P.) .— Mohandas K. Gandhi, 70-year-old Indian Nationalist leader, is contemplating another of his famous fasts in protest against British rule, it was reported today in! authoritative quarters.
ngineer; Howard Alltop, |
STEFFEN ADDS VERDI'S WORK
Presents Vocal Scores of ‘Requiem’ in Memory Of Herman Lieber.
Elmer A. Steffen, conductor of | the Indianapolis Symphonic Choir | and choirmaster at SS. Peter and Paul Cathedral, reached into his personal music library and withdrew. 200 complete vocal scores of | the Verdi “Requiem.” These he presented, in memory | of the late Herman P. Lieber, to the Indianapolis Public Library. | Miss Elizabeth Orr, head of the] music department of the library, accepted the gift. “This was a very generous gift,” she said, “and offers renewed proof that Mr. Steffen is not only a loyal friend of the library, but a stauneh supporter of the cultural life of the | city.” She said that the present gift isi
Elmer A. Steffen and Miss Elizabeth Orr . » + a gift for the Public [ Library.
| |
BRITISH NEWSPAPERS HOPE F. D. R. WINS
LONDON, Nov. 4 (U. P.).—British newspapers gave greater prominence to the United States Presidential election today than they had given! to any American news in recent | years. Election news was given equal prominence with war news. The newspapers did not attempt to conceal their preference for Mr. Roose- | velt, and they foresaw his victory by a narrow margin. Sentiment in favor of the President was based on the idea that] Mr. Willkie’s friendliness was still] in the realm of campaign promises. |
one of many made possible by Mr Steffen during the past 10 years. In 1933, when the Mendelssohn Choir
disbanded, Mr. Steffen, the director, turned over 15,000 copies of choral music to the library. This, she said, formed the nucleus of the music department's present collection, which now numbers more than 35,000 copies, one of the largest in the country.
| asked the farmers to support “their
WALLACE ASKS FARMERS VOTE
Declares U. S. Agriculture Income Has Mounted Under F. D. R.
WASHINGTON, Nov. 4 (U. P). —Henry A. Wallace, Democratic Vice Presidential candidate, today
Rites Set Wednesday for Democratic Election Commissioner.
Funeral services for Hendricks Kenworthy, prominent in County Democratic circles for years, who died Saturday, will be held at 1:30
friend,” President Roosevelt” at the |P. m. Wednesday in the Shirley Bros.
polls tomorrow. “The agriculture issue in this campaign is whether we shall turn our program over to the holding company candidate and his Wall Street backers, or whether we shall go forward with President Roosevel,” Mr. Wallace said in a radio address.) > He pointed. out that under the Roosevelt administration farm cash income: Has risen from $4,700,000,000 in 1632%to about $9,000,000,000 in 1940. He said farmers were “still on the way up.” “The foreign markets or American agricultural products have been cut down by the European preparations for war and then by
the war itself. Without crop con- | “1% limits, trol and crop loans to meet this sit-| Survivors are two sons, Glenn and
uation, we should have seen Tp | LEVY KOM ro daugniess. | hovom grop Sg of Lom brews wins Jackson, and four brothers; ruption of werld trade without dis- Hay aid Thomas So ShaianapoLs ’
aster.” * a: He said that the New Deal re-| Worthy, living in South Dakota.
lieved farmers of unreasonable interest rates, thereby giving thousands of tenant farmers a chance to become owners. He cited the Agricultural Adjustment Act, the Soil Conservation Act, parity payments, flood control and the TVA as Democratic accomplishments to] aid farmers,
Memorial Park. Mr. Kenworthy, who was 56, was stricken Saturday in a downtown restaurant and died a short time later. > He was the Marion County Democratic election commissioner the last four years and was secretary of the Board of Works during the administration of Mayor Lew Shank. For many . years he served as Ninth Ward Democratic chairman. In private life, he was associated with the Portland Cement Co. Mr. Kenworthy was born in Peru and has lived here 30 years. He lived on Miller Drive, outside ‘the
Schlosser Named To Kenworthy Post
Appointment of Chalmer Schloser, attorney, as the Democratic election commissioner has been announced by Democratic County Chairman Ira P. Haymaker, Mr. Schlosser, named to succeed Hendricks Kenworthy who died Saturday, has been active in politics 40 years. He was the Democratic nominee for Congress in 1916 and
‘WILLKIE DOLLARS’ REPORTED TO STARK i be 5 mine er
Hendricks Kenwort Schlosser Named to Post
Central Chapel. Burial will be in|.
Hendricks
Chalmer Schlosser . .
hy Dead;
Kenworthy stricken in restaurant.
. active in
Democratic politics 40 years.
MONDAY, NOV. 4, 1040" 'Regains’ Life After Accident
DERBY, Conn., Nov. 4 (U, P.).—~ Caesar Huggins, 35, whom two doctors pronounced dead after an automobile smashup in Seymour, was given a bare chance today of recovering from a skull fracture and two broken legs. Mr. Huggins was pulled from a flaming car after it went over an embankment. The doctors believed him dead and he was removed to an undertaking parlor. Sometime later when one of the physicians went to the mortuary, he heard moans and saw the “dead” man trying to get oup of a zipper sack in which he had been placed. The doctors administered a heart stimulant and took him to a hospital.
GERMAN PAPER RAPS U.S. AIDS
Terms Kennedy, Bullitt and Biddle ‘Evil Spirits’ in Europe’s Affairs.
BERLIN, Nov. 4 (U. P.).—A front page article in the Boersen Zeitung today assailed three United States
Ambassadors—Joseph P. Kennedy, William C. Bullitt and Anthony J. Drexel Biddle—as “evil spirits” in European affairs. The newspaper's diplomatic expert said that the three American diplomats had sought to disturb the plans of Germany and Italy for “a new order” in Europe. Mr. Kennedy, Ambassador to Great Britain; Mr. Bullitt, Ambassador to France, and Mr, Biddle, Ambassador to the exiled Polish Government, are in the United States at present. The article was written as a commentary on an interview with former French Finance = Minjster | Georges Bonnet published recently {in the Marseilles paper Le Journal. Speaking of the American envoys, the Boersen Zeitung said: | “These men and their names be- { long, then, to_the ‘most authoritative personalities’ who promised Borinet America’s assistance in i order to encourage France to enter { the war. “Bonnet did not believe them, but Daladier, Reynaud and others who then precipitated France into mis-
fortune did believe them. These men are the ‘most important foreign influences’ mentioned by the French press in commenting on the Bonnet interview. “These evil spirits were not taught by events and have not lost their importance meanwhile, They make election speeches. “Admittedly today they swear solemnly with ‘their right hands that they have no warlike intentions. What they do with their left hands, however, is another question. : “Just as Kennedy described Munich as ‘gaining time, so he speaks today of ‘England's courageous struggle which gives us time to prepare.’ “Prepare—for what? For what Bullitt once told the Poles and ithe French?”
IN (HH SA ALJ: atl
JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. Nov. 5
(5. Foti sis soit Tae FALL CONFINES DEAN | vermor stark] OF STAGE PRODUCERS
board, reported to Governor Stark vesterday that he had found a| “promiscuous distribution” of “Will-| Daniel Frohman, ar geen ke dollars” In St, Louis, but no n= under observation at a hospital to- | dication they had been fraudulent- gay ag result of a fall in which he ly used. | suffered a leg injury, possibly a Mr. Stark ordered Maj. Lambert] fracture. to make an investigation of the “fKlllkie dollars"—dollar bills folded | in the shape of a ‘“W”—after Mayor La Guardia of
{another on Veneto St. Milan’s main thoroughfares, today.
STREETCAR CRASH HURTS 35
MILAN, Nov. 4 (U. P.).—Thirtyfive persons were NEW YORK, Nov. 4 (U. P.).— seriously, when a streetcar rammed one of |
injured, none
‘COTTON ED’ TAKES WALK
Y LYNCHBURG, S. C., Nov, 4 (U. Mr. Frohman, who recently was p)—Senator Ellison D. (Cotton Ed) honored by artists of the stage, |Smith (D, S. C.), whom President (radio and the screen for his 60 years Roosevelt failed to “purge” in 1938, lin the theater, fell Friday at the [said today he will not vote tomorNew York! hotel where he lives with his sister. (row. He plans to go fishing instead.
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charged that Republican campaign| The possibility of serious injury was | workers had handed them out in| DO discovered until Mr. Frohman St. Louis and St. Louis County. | Pesan Suffering intense pain some Republican ‘leaders had urged Gov-| time after the fall. ernor Stark to make the investigation, but Democratic State Com-
mittee Chairman C.#M. Hulen re-| @EALEXICO, Cal, Nov. 4 (U. P.).— fused to have a part in it. | Mexican customs officials, scrupu- | “Whatever the purpose or intent ously carrying out “orders from of the folded bill, it is| obviously | Mexico City,” made a painstaking not to exert any influence on be-| search today of all automobiles half of Roosevelt, or is it\neutral) which crossed the border. The ac-| in any sense, and, therefore, adroit-| tion fostered a crop of rumors, most! ly and without danger of commit-|of them concerning fears that fol-| ment creates an inference, whether lowers of Gen. Juan Andreu Alma- | as a novelty, advertisement or for|zan, defeated Mexican Presidential | an ulterior motive,” Maj. Lambert candidate, might attempt an armed |
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