Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 21 March 1941 — Page 20
FRIDAY, MARCH 2I,
1941
The Indianapolis Times;
"HIRD SECTION
INDIANA
Hoosier Vagabond
LONDON (by wireless).—I suppose every person in England who has had a bomb within a block of him has his own freak bomb story to tell. Bombs seem to do the damnedest things. Every raid brings a flock of incidents as miraculous as the old one about the tornado blowing a straw through a tree, Most of the unusual bomb stories have to do with escapes. Air Raid Precautions men say there are more freakish escapes than freakish deaths, For example, one bomb on a recent night came right through the roof of a building and smack into a pub full of men sitting there drinking beer. It klew the place to pieces, killed some people in a house across the street—and hurt no one in the pub. In another ease, a bomb glanced off a roof and landed in the open. It apparently had a delayed fuse. Two policemen went up to inspect it, and it went off. Not the slightest trace ever was found of one policeman, but the other one—well, the blast blew his tin hat onto the roof of a five-story building nearby, and blew all the buttons off his coat, but he wasn’t hurt. In Stepney a policeman was doing roof-spotting duty on top of a seven-story building. A bomb hit the building and blew the policeman off the roof, He fell seven stories, and landed on concrete. He went to work as usual the next day.
Some Frealish Blasts
In my room I have a circular lead nosepiece from a German bomb. it is about half as big as a saucer, and must weigh two pounds. It came screaming into the apariment of a friend of mine one night, and this friend gave it to me. It arrived in his place through a window, flying horizontally and spinning furiously. It hit a wall, and it was spinning so fast it circled three walls of the room, just like a hippodrome motorcycle racer who rides against the vertical wall of a bowl.
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By Ernie Pyle’
But the astounding thing is that in its mad rush Hus heavy disk racea right across the glass doors] of a built-in china closet in one corner and never even cracked the glass. One surprising thing about bomb explosions is tnat the suction toward the explosion is almost as| great as the blast away from it. That's because the explosioh creates a vacuum, and then as air rushes | back into the vacuum it does so with just about the] same hideous force with which it rushed away. { Because of that you'll see wreckage from the same bomb hurled in opposite directions. Say a bomb lands | in a street. On one side it may blow a house in-| ward, but on the other side the whole front of a house may be sucked out. I know one case where the suction of a bomb) blast pulied a rug off the floor right from under-| neath two tables and a piano, and left them stand-| ing just as they were.
And More of the Same |
And then there is the story—my man says he actu- | ally saw it—of a skilletful of frying fish being blown, off a stove in one house and landing upright on a stove in & house four doors away. My man does go so far as to admit that the skillet Inst its contents on the way. I believe all those stories, tell me a bomb story I wouldn't believe. one even I must take with a grain of salt: A gentle lady of culture and means was sitting in| front of a fireplace on the ground floor of her home | one evening. Her housemaid, having finished her work, wes sitting in her little attic bedroom on he fourth floor. A bomb came through the roof, plunged shrongh, four successive stories, and exploded in the basement. When it was all over the gentle lady was sitting in| her maid's attic rocking-chair and the maid was! sitting downstairs in front of the fireplace. Both were unhurt, of course. And both quite un-| ruffled, you may be sure.
It would be hard to| But here's
Inside Indianapolis (4nd “Our Town”)
A GREAT MANY alumni of Indiana University are planning to be in Bloomington some time during the five-day celebration, starting tomorrow, marking the dedication of the school’s giant new auditorium. The official dedication is tomorrow, open house on Sunday, the Lunt and Fontanne production Monday, the Melchior and Lehmann concert Tuesday and the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra appearance on Wednesday, The new building is 332 feet long, 160 feet wide. It has more than 3,000,000 cubic feet. Dividing curtains make it possible to have both small and large events. Altogether, some 5500 persons can be seated in the building. As far as acoustics are concerned, Fabien Sevitzky has already given the building a pretty thorough test and Riven his enthusiastic approval,
Around the Town
TODAY'S DISTINGUISHED VISITOR: Elsie the Cow. Due in at Union Station at 5 Pp. m. in her special car. She'll be here half an hour, but probably will remain within her boudoir all that time, John Longsdorf, advertis sing manager of the Power & L ght Co, burning the midnight oil these davs oducing a report on the utility's activities for submission In a national utility contest. . . . The mumps seem to be prevalent on the North Side at the moment and some businessmen are taking inoculations in an effort to provide immunization. . The latest thing in education: Theyre holding classes for the voungsters at the Children’s Museum from 9:30 to 11:30 on how to color Easter eggs. No, thev don't teach one set way. They show all the ways there are, including the foreign.
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Washington
WASHINGTON in the Administration are very deeply troubled. They
are troubled, and I think with good reason indeed, over the fact that labor is working itself into a role of irresponsible obstruction to war production.
March 21.—Some friends of labor
Friends of labor within the Administration fear that if labor persists in some of its present attitudes and practices, it will bring down upon its head public condemnation so severe that the real interec* of labor will be set back for Is. The foregoing is directed to labor leaders rather than to the rank and file. Administration officials do not regard workmen, individually, as any different from the remainder of the population, nor any less patriotic. They do see that labor leaders, in some instances, bent upon playing union politics, bent upon gaining power, are using this situation in irresponsible ways that ignore the urgent needs of the nation.
Coal-Steel Tieup Feared
Administration offiicals are certainly not labor baiters and I hope one can write about this situation wtihout being classed as such, Some officials are urged that the Administration cease being so tender with industrialists like Ford and that furthermore industries holding huge defense contracts be called in to lay their profit figures on the table so that there may be some determination of what labor may fairly ask as its share of the gains reaped out of war work. This should be done, some are saving, so that the Administration will be in a better position to demand that labor, too, knuckle down to responsible conduct. The real cause of concern is, frankly, the suspicion that John L., Lewis is preparing to stage a tieup simultaneously of the coal and steel industries. That would cripple and in some places paralyze defense production. It would confront the Government with a crisis as severe as that which the British Govern-
My Day
WASHINGTON, Thursday—VYesterday afternoon I spent an hour going over the home where the Little Sisters of the Poor here in Washington care for more than 200 indigent old people. Fifteen sisters do all the work with the help of some of the old people, but the building is large and many of those who live here are very helpless and require great care. I looked at the little Mother Superior and wondered how. 15 women accomplished this work. She told me they got up at 4:30 every morning and went to bed at 9 o'clock at night, and never sat down to rest or idle away any time. I can well believe it. However, it isn't just the aeccomplishment of the work which is so remarkable, it is the spirit in which it is done. The building is far more bright and cheerful than when I went through it some
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Got Change for a G-Note?
DOWNTOWN GOSSIP has it that big-time gambling is under way again on the outskirts of the county, The way we get it is that a once well-known resort is being used as the casino and that everything! is wide-open and handsome, i Rumor also says one youngish man-about-town | dropped just about $2200 the other night at dice. The other pastimes are roulette, chemin de fer,! blackjack, etec., etc, we hear. Small fry not invited. That lets us out.
A Case of Simple Justice
FIRST AND SECOND lieutenants of the 38th Division, we learn from Camp Shelby, are not being spared the drilling that all the enlisted men must go through. The junior officers have been ordered to doff their coats and Sam Browne belts every Saturday afternoon and older officers march the “looies” around to see that they learn, if they haven't already, how to march in soldierly fashion. The Shelby grapevine reports that the enlisted men are turning oul in droves to watch the 600 “looies” put through it and the razzing is hot and heavy. yy y . v We're Wondering, Too ONE OF OUR reporters was drinking coffee in the little restaurant next to Police Headquarters yesterday when his eyes, for no good reason, wandered high | up on the wall almost to the ceiling. There, a little! penciled sign, said: “What are you looking up here, ! for?” A little sheepish, he gulped his coffee and left. ! ‘ The Rock Island Refining Co of Oklahoma has opened an office in Zionsville and is preparing to be-| RIN construction immediately of a 5000-barrel refinery at 86th St. and the Big Four.
By Raymond Clapper
ment faced some years ago in the general strike, It! would force the test of which was bigger, John L:| Lewis or the Government, There is hope that the coal strike may he averted, | largely because some associated with Mr. Lewis in| U. M. W. are understood to have refused to go to the| extremes he had suggested. They held out for more! moderate demands, according to some information! here. The U. M. W. also has followed its usual practice of permitting miners outside the Appalachian field, who represent perhaps one-third of bituminous! production, to make their usual agreement to con-! tinue work pending an agreement in the Appalachian! field, which would then become the basis for a retro-| active agreement in the outlying fields. That Sos the operators.
Labor May Risk Gains
Appalachian operators, accounting for three-fourths | of the production, are left under pressure to hasten | an agreement lest their markets be lost to the out-| side operators. The fact that Lewis has adopted his customary procedure in this suggests that he is not really working toward a strike in coal. However, steel looks more forbidding. There Mr. Lewis is understood to be thirsting for: a showdown fight that would demonstrate his strength The Roosevelt Administration has fought hard, and risked public disapproval, to win gains for labor. More than any other Administration in history, it has rescued labor from economic slavery and the dictatorship of management, given labor material rewards and a self-respecting place in the scheme of things. Now when the Administration is midstream in 2 tough crossing, labor leaders forget all that, { This is a sure way to invite fascism. Don't think | that thousands of families, into whose homes conscription has reached, will not support the Roosevelt] Administration if it is driven to take the hard-boiled way. Mr. Roosevelt will have public sentiment fully! behind him. Labor will be isolated, branded, and ruined for vears. Those are some of the things being turned over in the minds of some officials here today.
Review of the Week
By VICTOR FREE
Indianapolis Times News Editor ON THE yacht Potomac in semi-tropical waters off the coast of Florida, President Roosevelt relaxed today from the strain of a momentous week—a week in which he rallied the nation for an “all-out effort” to defeat the black-out of barbarism.” The President's keynote—‘“total
victory”—reverberated throughout .§
the world, In the United States, these events set the pace for America’s role as “the arsenal of democracy”. 1. The House passed, 336 to 55, the seven-billion-dollar war-aid appropriation bill, 2. Navy Secretary Knox revealed that mosquito boats, submarine chasers, and fast motor= boats suitable for the English Channel, would be the first naval help for Britain, 3. Production of munitions and mobilization of manpower gained rapid momentum, with 5000 companies, big and little, working on defense contracts totaling more than 12 billion dollars. 4. The President set up an 11man mediation board to settle labor disputes arising in defense production. At the head is liberal, dynamic Clarence A. Dykstra, president of the University of Wisconsin and Director of Selective Service, 5. The Treasury, while taxpayers tasted their first defense levy, considered even lower exemptions on individual incomes as a means of paying the freight. 6. Cordell Hull warned that “no halfway measures can be countenanced at this critical stage.”
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In London, where swift American action served as a welcome tonic, W. A. Harriman, the President's special representative, declared on arrival: “Believe me, that as to the war, the American people certainly mean business.”
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In Berlin, Hitler, in a speech interpreted as an indirect answer to Mr. Roosevelt, said: No power and no aid in the world will alter the outcome of this war.” An “authorized source” amplified: “If some Americans like to think they are at war with us— then we certainly will not hinder them.”
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Winston Churchill claimed that German submarines and battle cruisers have crossed to the “American side of the Atlantic” and sunk independently routed ships not sailing in convoy. Said Senator Wheeler of Montana, leader of the lend-lease bill foes: “Propaganda.” Added Senator Nye of North Dakota: “An alarm story that will have people scared to death of whales when they see them.”
THE WAR FRONTS—
REAT BRITAIN and Germany jockeyed for prestige and position in the Balkans while devastating raids on London and shipping centers exacted a terrific toll. In Berlin the Nazis said: “It is the real beginning of the spring offensive. Our goal is complete starvation of the British Isles.” Developments of the week were: 1. London experienced the worst raid of 1941, the most disastrous since the fire blitz of Dec. 29. During the week Bristol, Plymouth and Hull, important posts, were battered by hundreds of bombers with high explosives and incendiaries. Tragic episodes in which civilians died in public shelters, churches and wreckage of buildings became almost commonplace. 2. An official announcement placed casualties at 1000 dead and 1300 injured in previous raids on Liverpool and Glasgow, ominous forebodings of the promised attacks to come. 3. British, Allied and _heutral
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British bombers on a continental raid arrive over enemy-occupied Dutch coast amid the glare of searchlights.
shipping losses for the war crossed the five-million-ton mark as Uboats sniped at convoys along the Atlantic supply line. 4, Britain, frankly fearful that the Axis moves in the Balkans might be a ruse, inflicted consistently heavy damage to Nazi bases along the invasion coast. Chief targets: Kiel, Bremen, Wilhelmshaven and Berlin, For the first time, Germany showed some degree of frankness in acknowledging casualties and damage, admitting deaths-of 57 and revealing a destructive fire aboard the liner Bremen. 5. Jugoslavia, despite dissension, moved closer into the German orbit under a compromise agree=ment that would bar German troops but would allow supplies and hospital trains to pass through the mountain passes. 6. Germany continued consolidation of troops (some sources set the figure as high as 500,000) in Bulgaria at the door of Greece and Turkey. 7. Britain, while moving troops into Greece, won smashing victories in East Africa, virtually sealing the fate of Mussolini's em= pire of 1,725,300 square miles; re= captured Berbera, British Somaliland capital, siezed Jigjiga, key Ethiopian town, and besieged Keren, gateway to Asmara. 8. Greece claimed that the big Italian offensive started in Albania under the personal direction of Premier Mussolini had been smashed. 9. British Middle Eastern headquarters at Cairo exulted; “England now is ready to meet Hitler's army on whatever field of battle the Fuehrer chooses.” 10. Turkev guessed Britain may be contemplating a “preventive” offensive to stall the Nazis in Bulgaria.
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STRATO-gy—
Return of 13 planes from a reconnaissance flight when only 12 had departed threw Greek ground forces into consternation for a few minutes until it was discovered that the 13th was an Italian aircraft—the first captured in mid-air since the war began,
DEFENSE ITEMS—
Another new plant to manufacture parts for Allison engines was announced for Anderson, Ind. . . . The American Legion called for “delivery” of all practicable aid to Great Britain and her allies but avoided mention of the word “convoys.” OPM’'s Knudsen said there soon would be more than a 60 per
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MANILA FEELS HOLD EVERYTHING
WAR IS REMOTE
Wprensied for or A Raids; Island Thinks Defense Is Up to U. S.
By WALTER ROBB
Copyright, and The Chicago Daily News,
MANILA, Philippine March 21 (By Clipper)—The Philip-
Ine.
pines and this vulnerable city of | Manila are not yet ready to believe | that war between Japan and the!
By Eleanor Roosevelt
make a contribution is one of the satisfactions of! life, At tea time I talked with Dr. Martha M. Eliot, of the Children’s bureau. She is back from England and very much interested in what she learned over there and how we can make it useful in the im-
provement of our own conditions,
I saw the President off and am glad that he and all those with him are going to have this rest and holiday. Miss Thompson and I dined with a friend and spent a most enjoyable evening, in payment for which I sat up until all hours of the night to finish! the mail. Today I lunch with the Ladies Club of the 75th Congress and then fly over to New York City to! spend the night. I was much interested the other day in talking]. with John Anson Ford of Los Angeles, and Mrs. | Gertrude Knott of the American Folk Festival, They are eager to have a Pan-American folk festival in Los Angeles, this year. The idea seems to me to have
United States is close, or even very
probable, and that the islands are|
therefore facing danger of invasion.
Members of the National Legislature take the cue from President | Manuel Quezon that defense of the Philippines, while the American flag | remains over them, is a primary | ‘responsibility of the United States. | Not an artificial
Manila is heard of. Even the spa-
air shelter in!
1941, by The Indianapolis Times |
Islands,
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cious archways and storage rooms | under the city’s old walls that might |
| provide safety for perhaps 30,000)
| persons, except from direct hits by | [heavy bombs, are not cleaned out | land made available. There are no cellars, the city is (too close to sea level for that. So
the city is an ideal one for bemb- | sort, heyond such plans as the Army | under Gen, George Grunert may!
ing, with many thatch districts and | ‘neighborhoods where fires would start readily and spread rapidly. The city’s population is about 700,-
cent increase in the number of man-hours of labor devoted to defense. . .. The Governmnet started a “roll call of labor” seeking skilled labor to man defense plants. . . . The April draft call in Indiana will take 6900 Hoosier youths into the Army. . , . Contract for engineering and architecture work on the new brass shell case plant here was awarded to a Boston concern. . .. The contract for building the Naval Ordnance plant to a Cleveland firm. The U. S. Marine Corps revealed it had adopted the Garand rifle because it was the most dependable under all conditions. . . . Virgil Martin, Indianapolis Community Fund manager, loaned to Paul McNutt's Federal Security Agency to co-ordinate community services in southern Indiana defense plants area. . Hoosier Wayne Coy was recommended by President Roosevelt to study the entire transportation problem of the United States.
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White House correspondents, meeting in their usual lampooning program just prior to President Roesevelt's report to the nation, presented a trick movie showing President Roosevelt and Wendell L. Willkie in bed together. Title: “Bundling for Britain.”
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WRECKS—
Saboteurs were blamed for the wreck of the Buckeye Limited, which left the rails and plunged into the Ohio River near Baden, Pa. Officials said a rail had been loosened “deliberately,” sending the engine and five cars from the tracks. The toll: Five dead, more than 100 hurt. A fast Erie Railroad freight train crashed into a 10-car commuter train carrying 750 workers to the Government's new shell loading plant near Ravenna, O., injuring between 300 and 400 persons, Officials said there was no trace of sabotage.
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POLITICS—
Governor Schricker, outlining the controversy as a question of who is to be the chief executive officer of Indiana, filed his first suit contesting the validity of the Republican “ripper” laws. The initial test attacked specifically the new laws abolishing the Attorney General's office and providing for appvintment of an interim attorney until a new officer is elected in 1942, Attorney General Beamer issued an opinion that the law cre-
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COPE. 1941 BY NEA SIRVICE, WNC. T. M. REG. U. 5. PAT. OFF.
“Gosh, it sure would be tough to have ears as big as those to wash every fay?’
| have,
Water is widely obtainable from & nization to provide entertainment |
| CO-EDS 'GATHER CARDS OBERLIN, O. (U. PJ). (Hllege co-eds have formed an or-
ating a new Slate Board of Education was void “because it ate tempts to amend an act already repealed.” Republicans, proclaiming harmony on the patronage problem, welcomed party heads of Midwestern States. The theme: A stronger national organization for the 1942 Congressional campaigns. On patronage: Six elected G. O. P. officials will dispense it, but all applications must come up to the State committee through district chairmen, " LEGISLATIVE ECHOES: Governor Schricker allowed the Stout liquor act to become law without his signature, objecting to sharing appointive power but lauding several features of the measure. He signed the act ending “fee grabbing” by Marion County officials. Republicans took control of their first State department, the State Printing Board. Cooper Clifton was named director.
BUSINESS—
The British, hunting American cash, sold their $100,000,000 American Viscose Corp. largest rayon manufacturer in the world, to U. S. bankers who plan to resell the stock to the U. S. public. It was the first sale by the British of the companies they own operating in the U. S. For months the British have been selling the American stock they own. The long - disputed St. Lawrence Seaway project, rejected by the Senate seven years ago, was sent to Congress as a defense measure. Cost: $266,170,000. The Indianapolis Water Co. asked Public Service Commission approval to build a $1,600,000 dam and reservoir on Fall Creek near Oaklandon. It would cover 200,000 acres, store 7,000,000,000 gallons of water,
SAFETY—
OR the second consecutive week, six persons were killed in traffic within the boundaries of Marion County. The year's toll jumped to 36, double last year's. The city total now is 17, compared to 1940's 10. Said Sheriff Feeney at the Mayor's Traffic Advisory Committee meeting: “Our greatest difficulty . is that the enforcement officials of this city and county have never been able to get together.”
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REMEMBER?
One of the hottest New Deal fights in 193 8 was the removal of
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Arthur E. Morgan as chairman of the Tennessee Valley Authority, Morgan, fighting for reinstatement and back pay, this week lost his fight in the Supreme Court.
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TIME ON THEIR HANDS—
In 1928 City Council passed a Daylight Saving Time ordinance and never repealed it, In 1929 the Legislature passed a law putting Indianapolis permanently on Cen~ tral Standard Time. This year the Legislature authorized Daylight Saving Time, So the city will go on Daylight Time automatically when the State law becomes operative—probaly in June—or will it? Legally, it's quite complicated, une less Council can untangle it. The point is: Can an ordinance nullified by State law become ef= fective when the State law is re= pealed ? Council plans to call on the pube lic to help, decide the issue,
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ODDS AND ENDS—
A 55-year-old farmer was held in Green County in connection with the dynamiting and injury of 13 during revival services at 8 church. , . . The Marion County Grand Jury will investigate the reported $45,000% shortage in acs counts of Municipal Court deputy clerks at police headquarters. . . , Senator Lister Hill, Alabama Dem= ocrat, will speak at the annual Jackson Day dinner March 29. ... John R. Caldow, assistant head» master at Park School, succeeded E. Francis Bowditch as headmas= ter. Mr. Bowditch will be heads master at Lake Forest Academy.
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SPORTS—
This was the final week of the annual Hoosier hoop festival. To= mororw at Butler Fieldhouse, be= fore 14,883 fortunate ticket-holde ers, Washington, Kokomo, Froe= bel of Gary and Madison will fight it out for the Indiana basketball championship. The week also saw Michigan again win the Butler Relays, the hockey Capitals conclude their season and young Patty Aspinall of Indianapolis set a new U., S, record in the 220 -yard breaste stroke swim.
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SPRING—
It arrived at 6: 21 last night.
eee ee——
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Daylight Time Issue Scares Daylights Out of City Hall
At this stage, it appears evident]
| that the Daylight Saving Time will be the exclusive business of the City | Council and citizens.
Democratic political leaders and |
the City Administration will have no
himself,
part in it. They have decided that
a hands-off policy is safer.
none of it. Councilmen themselves are taciturn. Not a member has committed not even personally and off-the-record. They are anxious to appear as detached as possible, They don’t know how their constituents are going to take it, but they are making valiant efforts to find out.
Follow Mayor's Hint The councilmen are echoing Mayor Sullivan's statement: “Let the people decide.” Right now, Council is prepared to weather the coming storm like the slender, little sapling
which survived by bending gracious- |
ly the way the strongest wind blew. Meanwhile, while maintaining strict neutrality, the Administration is willing to perform yeoman service in determining legal ramifications of the proposal. The chief complication is the 1928 | Daylight Saving Time ordinance which never has been repealed, The ordinance was invalidated in 1929
{when the Legislature passed a law
— Oberlin setting Indianapolis back on Cen-
‘tral Standard Time. Legal Opinion Asked Now that the State law is re-
In the | coming debates on the proposal they. .
foresee plenty of heat and want | ] | confesses his complete personal and
{Garth Webber |sophomore trombonist at Indiana
would Daylight Saving Time go into effect if the proposed ordinance is passed or the old ordinance is ruled valid? The 1941 Statute enabling the City to have Daylight Time was not labeled emergency and hence does not become effective until published . probably about June 1. As for himself, Mayor Sullivan
official detachment to the proposition and lesser officials have taken up this cue. “I went all through this Daylight Saving Time when we had it be= fore,” he said, puffing complacently on his pipe. “It never raised my blood pressure then and won't now.” Then, as an after thought, he asked: “What do you think about it”
CONCERT ARRANGED BY 30-PIECE BAND
An augmented 90-piece band of Indiana Central College band meme bers and high school visitors will give a concert at 7:30 p. m, tomor= row at the college gymnasium. The concert will culminate an all-day band clinic attended by the (college band, alumni who are di= rectors of high school bands, and some of their band members. Featured players will include of Indianapolis, Central, and the Southport High School baton: twirlers — Virginia
Including immediate environs, canals and the River Pasig, aside fr men in military services of the
planned. 1000. There is one road north and|ftom the water system, and Mani- lied States, ‘Informed opinion maintains that it
I have just received a notice of a book about the one south that in panic civilians lans could perhaps be relied upon to’ The organisation is called the [Joes Rok, that Wie ordinate m of Quakers. It is written by ex-President Comfort of fleeing to safety might wish to use boil it for drinking purposes. commities for inigicollegiate aid to] Sov Wa% Iopoaley y Lhe Seale La®, of Southport High, Francis Rat= Haverford, and called “Just Among Friends.” It is|exactly at the time the Army want- Nevertheless, war at Manila might American soldiers and sailors. Its iy Mayo a i on he 00 we) d the liff of LI High School a Cuban song and danced for me, The sisters urged designed to give information about this particular |ed it. |well entail epidemics, since P Sulivan has aske e »
the | urpose is to collect playing cards| City Legal Department t repare Henry Busche of Napannes High her on and applauded her. How well they under- religious group, their activities and philosophy, I| There are no blackouts. There is| hospitals are not sufficient even for and games for young men undets 3 prep School stand that no matter what your age, the ability to think it will be of interest to a great many people, SAE youn {an opinion on this question, | School and Jack Nice of St. Pay}
no community organization of any |peace times. lgoing military training. Another question raised is when'High School. |
merit and tc promise something beautiful and in- 000.
teresting, but as yet it is only in the stage of being|the population is well above 1,000,- Dealed, does the 1928 go into effect?
years ago, and one felt that the service rendered there was done in a spirit of joyousness. In every room we went, they sang “God Bless America” and the old voices mingled with the younger voices of visitors who had come in for the occasion. One eolored woman from Cuba, aged 82, sang
Tanner, June Floyd, Betty Mae Long and Marjorie Dewsnap. Alumni include Robert Durham
