Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 March 1941 — Page 8

PAGE 8

READY TO PULL BELT TIGHTER

‘Average Americans’ Move To Smaller Home and Cancel Vacation.

NOTE—To measure the impact of the national defense program on the average citizen, a reporter tmierviewed Mr. and Mrs. Glen Craig of Muncie, Ind. This couple with their two small children were selected as America’s average family two years ago after Muncie had been found to constitute “Middle-Town, U. S. A.” The Craigs’ response follows:

By CORRINNE HARDESTY United Press Staff Correspondent MUNCIE, Ind., March 24. — Mr. Average American is ready to tighten his belt to meet the cost of national defense. Here in Middle-Town, U. S. A., the United Press asked Mr. and Mrs. Glen Craig and their two children, 1938's average American family, how the defense effort has affected them. “We've had to meet rising prices

TONIGHT 7:00—Those We Love, WFBM. 7:00—Telephone Hour, WIRE. 7:30—~Gay Nineties, WFBM. 7:30—Voice of Firestone, WIRE. 8:00—Radio Theater, WFBM. 8:00—Dr. I. Q., WIRE. 8:30—Showboat, WIRE. 9:00—Guy Lombardo, WFBM. 9:30—Blondie, WFBM. 9:30—Burns and Allen, WIRE.

Robert Tayler and Ruth Hussey, who played leading roles In the movie, are to be starred in tonight's radio version of “Flight Command” on the Radio Theater, 8 o'clock, WFBM. rh ” 8 Helen Mack, star of the stage and screen, has forsaken both to accept the role of Marge in the Myrt and Marge serial heard Mondays through Fridays on the Columbia network at 9:15 a. m. Helen, who has already stepped into the role and was heard for the first time Friday, was selected in a competitive audi-

for food. fuel and clothing,” Mrs. Craig said. She handles most of] her husband's $1500 annual income. Meat and lard prices have] Jumped, she said, but milk and bread costs have not changed, short time ago the family substituted oleomargarine for butter to| halve the cost. They eat meat— usually lamb or liver—one meal a day. Mr. Craig found that coal,| which he bought at $6 a ton last summer now costs $7.75 a ton.

Ready to Sacrifice

“If we have to do without a few] things at home in order to send] cther things where they will do the | country more good, we're ready.” Mrs. Craig said. Her husband nodded assent, Conscription, the first impact of national defense, missed Mr. Craig| because of age. He is 36. But he already has felt the pinch of de-| fense economy ! “Right off, we gave up plans for | our vacation,” he said. "That costs $50—we save for it all vear long.” | Other economies attributed to ris- | ing costs of essential commodities included: | 1. No new car. Mr. Craig drives a 1836 model bought in 1938. |

No New Winter Coats

2. No new winter coats for Mrs. Craig and Emma Lou, 10. Billy, 6, got a new coat last year, but others in the family have worn theirs sev-| eral seasons 3. Reduced rental. The family moved from a six-room house into four rooms of a two-family dwelling, | with a common bath. 4. Fewer amusements. The family previously had attended one motion picture every two weeks. Illness of the children, and operations for both parents have caused some dislocation of the budget. But Mr. Craig is setting aside a small portion of his weekly paycheck to cover medical expense | Mr. and Mrs. Craig said they had! given much thought to the national defense program and the sacrifices mentioned by President Roosevelt in his address of March 15.

Trust Roosevelt “We're anxious to do whatever the Government asks of us,” Mr. Craig] declared | In fact,

2

the Craigs think almost anvthing Mr. Roosevelt does is all

| happen in a good many instances

tion against more than 200 radio ac=tresses. The part of Marge had been vacant since the HA death of Mrs. * Mack Donna Fick in an Englewood (N. J.) hospital on Feb. 15. Mrs. Fick created and played the role since the program first went on the air 10 years ago. Miss Mack appeared in such Broadway plays as “Yellow” and “Subway Express.” Her most recent movies were “His Girl Friday” and “Power Dive.” This marks her first appearance in a daytime radio serial but she has made several guest appearances in evening broadcasts from Hollywood. ”

Don’t be surprised come next March 29 if you tune in on Station WBAA (Purdue) and wind up listening to a broadcast from WLS. That will be because Mareh 29 is “moving day” in radio and WLS] will take over the dial spot now assigned to WBAA. That's liable to

Helen

un "

and there will be quite a bit of swapping around when the frequency changes are made. New frequency of WBAA will be 920 kilocyeles as compared with its present frequency of 890. Three points higher on the dial will bring in WBAA. | The 17 other stations in Indiana

with most every station in the coun-|

y 8 " 5 | Arch Oboler’s Everyman's Theater eaves the air this Friday with a re-| peat broadcast of “Baby,” a play he] wrote last season for Joan Crawford.

ON THE RADIO

THIS EVENING

Indianapoll {s not responsible for In a by Timon Changes after press. time

IN IANABOLIS IRE A300

(The nouncement caused by INDIANAPOLI M To 8

(CBS Net.) (NBC-

accuracies in program ane

CREW 00 (NBC-MBS)

HIOAGO

00 Bov and Band 15 Youth in Defense 30 Your Information 146 Scattergood

:00 Convocation :15 Hedda Hopper 130 Syncobators 145 Gilbert Forbes

: mos & Andy nny Ross 0 Short Storv 145 Sportsmen's Show hose We Love hose We Love 130 Gav Nineties 145 Gay Nineties

Radio Theater Radio ne ter

Girl Alone Lone Journey

ick Reed Beautiful Life Dessa Byrd Orphan Annie News Highlights Easy Aces Pleasure Time Music Makers ic ee Inside Sports

[elephone Hour lelephone Hour Pirestone "restone

Dr. lL Dr. Showboa Showboat Contente our our

Burns and Allen Burns and Allen

Dick Reed

“ .

a heater heater

ry Lombardo Lombardo

:00 Gilbert Forbes 115 {Portscop 130 World Today 45 George Hall

Kerns Kerns :30 Tommy Reynolds :45 Tommy Reynolds

Lou Breeze

Music You

Music You Want Music You Want ic Y Want Carmen Cavallero

TUESDAY PROGRAMS

Small Town ne Journey Jack Armstrong News

Norman Ross Norman Ross Joseph Higgins

Midstream

Whizzer The Bartons News Drama Tom

Superman Paul Jones

Organ Lowell Thomas

Fred Waring Bud, ‘ner rns en Burns & Allen

[elephone Hour [elephone Hour Mrestone Mrestone

Dr. 3 Dr. Renfro al ey Renfro ‘Vallev

Content Hour Content Hour Squeakin’ Deacon Squeakin' Deacon

Peter Grant W H Hessler Del Casino Wally Johnson Don Caballero Don Caballero

Moon River Moon River

Organ Better Business ews Frazier Hunt

ve a Mystery ve a_Mvstery ue or 50 e or 80

In the Army

Radio rum

10 O'Clock Final i gas Be 10 O'Clock Globe Trotter

Joe Sanders

INDIAN WIRE 1 (NBC-MBES)

Dawn Patrol Markets

INDIANAPOLIS WFBM 1230 (CBS Net.)

:30 Early Birds 140 Early Birds

LIS 00

CIN CNATE (NBC-MBS)

Nowe ed nannoune el

INDIANAPOL.. WIBG ‘Hos

Devotional Organlogue

:00 Early Birds European News Musical Clark Musical Clock

Musical Clock

as fas Aas as

Time to Shine News - Boone Oounty Consumers

K

0 Mark Time Musical Clock

5 Mrs. Farrell ra un

[30M :45 Unannounced Edward McHugh

Aunt Jenny Goldbergs Kitty Keene Linda's Love

Lester Huff n gon Devotiona

0 Kathleen Norris Myrt & Marge Stepmother 45 Song 8hop

Mary Lee Taylor Martha Webster Big Sister Aunt Jenny

: Ellen Randolph Guiding Light

Man I Married

Road of Life David Harum Singin’ Sam Girl Marries Unannounced Helen Trent Gal Sunday

Melodic Strings Gilbert Fo Farm

rbes rele Farm Circle one

Markets. Farm Han Reporter Dick Reed

Tomorrow's Hits Lt ‘'s Love

o - 3 «2100 -~ a »

3 o - a -4 a - =z —- a -

Home of the Brave

Marv McBride Song Treasury School of Air School of Air

Portia Blake

Tez me Hilitop House Masterworks

Betty

Mary Marlin Maw Pelking Pepper Young Vic & Bade Backstage Wife Stella Dallas Lorenzo Jones Widder Brown

8 30 45 :00 :15 :30 45

00 1 3

Houseboat Hannah Bachelor’s Children

Against the Storm

Homemakers Hour Homemakers Hour

eather

nda’'s v Editor's Daughter Bob

Melodic Moments Waltz Time Lester Huff ' Tropical Moods

Friendly House Friendlv House Public School On the Mall

Community Hall Bill Jones Off the Record Bov Greets Girl

Mid Dav News Melody Farm Checkerboard Meet the Bus

Matinee Musical Matinee Musical Wildwood Church A-Z in Novelty

Master Singers Gov't Reports Concert Concert

Varietv Theater Variety Theater Request Time Request Time

Houseboat Hannab New

Ww Ellen Randolph Woman in ite

Man I Married Against Storm Road of Life Right to Happiness Sulldine Light Nelills Farm Hour Farm Hour

Live Stock Dreamers’ Songs Editor's Daughter Tony Wons

8 in Daughter r 's Vallant Lady: Light otf World

Mary Marlin Maw Perkins Pepper Young Vic & Sade Backstage Wife Stella Dallas Lorenzo Jones Beautiful Life

0 5 30 45

Girl Alone Lone Journey Dick Reed

Beautiful Life

Masterworks Christian Science Your Information Scattergooa

0 45 0 1

Small Town Lone Journey Jack Armstrong News

Rhythm Roundup Rhythm Roundup Rhvthm Roundup Odditorium

KEY NETWORK STATIONS (Subject to Change): MUTUAL~ -WOR, 710; WHK, 1390; WHKC, 640; CKLW. 1030; WSM, 850 NBC-BLUE—-WJZ, 760; WOWO, 1160 WLS-WENR, 870; KWK, 1350. NBC-RED—WEAF, 660; WTAM, 1070; WWJ. 920; WMARQ, 670. CBS—-WABC, 860; WJR, 750; WHAS, 820; KMOX, 1090; WBBM, 7170.

| Martha Scott is to play the lead in

the revival.

Everymans’' Theater had a large | also will switch, of course, along|number of listeners as was proved

by the Crossley surveys but in a letter to this department Arch reveals that strangely enough the program was duplicating much of the sponsor's day listening audience. He adds: “From my standpoint I was ready

to call it quits because of the insertion of a middle commercial which I felt destroyed the realism of my sort of plays.” Many a listener will agree with Arch on that. However, he explains that the parting was entirely amicable. Reports are that Mr. Oboler will do a monthly series of plays with! | national defense as the theme.

|

|

ROOSEVELT SETS UP OPM LABOR DIVISION

WASHINGTON, March 24 (U.P). —President Roosevelt, by an executive order, has incorporated the labor division of the National Defense Commission into the Office of Production Management, the OPM announced,

The labor divicion is the fourth

section to be set up in the OPM

Ernie Pyle, Bac

On Way to Mother's Grave

(Continued from Page One)

censorship now he wouldn't write

any of the things the censors blacked out for him. : “I don’t see how any of the things they cut out of my copy could have helped Hitler,” he said. “But that’s their business, and I'm not going to

k From War,

Personally, he said, they were grand to him. And he loves them. But between the lines of what he said you seemed to sense a feeling on his part that the English were

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

informed Criminal Dewey E. Myers that he will be un-

JURY STUDIES CLERKS’ BOOKS

Reported Municipal Court Shortage Probed as Recess Edns.

After recessing for more than a week, the Marion County Grand Jury reconvened today to open its investigation into the reported

Municipal Court deputy clerks. The alleged shortage, reported by the State Board ‘of Accounts, occurred between 1935 and 1938

and was said to have involved the accounts of four deputy clerks, none of whom are on the clerk's staff at the present time. Prosecutor Sherwood Blue said he has recommended that the] Grand Jury investigate “other | phases” of the record procedure at Police Headquarters in connection with Municipal Court cases. The jury returned 12 indictments this morning. Eleven involved cases of persons already arrested on affidavits. Mrs. Dorothy O. Kossman, was indicted on charge of “child stealing,” one of the first indictments of its kinds returned in several years. Mrs. Kossman was accused of illegally taking custody of her two sons from her former husband, Oscar K. Kossmann, who was granted custody of the children in Circuit Court a month ago. The mother is said to have taken the chilrden to Florida to live with relatives and her attorney has filed a petition in Circuit Court to regain | their custody. Lewis Hitsfield, 33 S. Bradley St., was a member of the Grand Jury, Court Judge

able to serve on the jury because of pressing business duties. A new juror wil be drawn, Judge Myers said.

HARDAWAY ARRIVAL IN CITY IS DELAYED

William T. Hardaway, who will assume the duties of manager of the Veterans Hospital here April 1, has been detained in Washington, D. C. and will not arrive in Indianapolis until later this week. John H. Ale, present manager of the hospital who will take a post at the Dayton O. hospital, the second largest in the Veterans Administration, said that Mr. Hardaway probably would arrive here “either Wednesday or Thursday.”

$45,000 shortage inn the accounts of |:

For the past seven years, Mr. Hardaway has been working as a special investigator out of the Wash-| ington offices of the Administration. | !

FAST LIGHT IS USED FOR BABY PICTURES

Science, at long last, has outsmarted the baby who doesn't want his picture taken and would rather hear no more about it,

Until the best laboratory brains of the country got together and thought up a new photographic light that will stop motion at a 1-30,000 of a second, babies moved

|

Rites Tomorrow

Herman Sieloff, Born in

Germany, to Be Buried In Crown Hill,

Funeral services for Herman Sieloff, a resident of Indianapolis more than 50 years, who died Saturday in St. Francis Hospital, will be held at 1:30 p. m. tomorrow in the Shirley Bros. Central Chapel. Burial will be in Crown Hill. The Rev. John S. Albert, pastor of the Gethsemane Lutheran Church, of which Mr. Sieloff was a member, will officiate. Mr. Sieloff, who was 78 and lived at 4726 E. Washington St., was born in Germany and lived in Australia 14 years. He was a retired Pennsylvania Railroad roundhouse foreman. Survivors are four sons, August J., Alroy H., Louis E. and Charles Sieloff, all of Indianapolis; three daughters, Miss Amy Sieloff of Indianapolis, Mrs. Harold Bakeman of Plainfield and Mrs. I. E. Speer of El Paso, Tex., and six grandchildren.

17,000 ATTEND SHOW OPENING

New Record Is Possible at Sport Exhibit; Maggie ‘Adopts’ Onlooker.

than 17.000 persons attended ‘he Sportsman's Show at the State Fairgrounds yesterday, to give the event a head-start toward what officials believe will be an all-time attendance record. The show will be open daily through next Sunday, with water shows at regular intervals and exhibits open at all times. Only two things went wrong yesterday. The 40,000 gallons of water in the aquarium tank set up by the State Conservation Department had not quite cleared, and you could see only about 5 to 6 feet into it. Nevertheless, the exhibit, largest of its kind ever set up in Indiana, was quite popular. The other error was marked against Maggie, the tricycle riding chimp. She suddenly took a liking to a man in the ‘crowd, scooted

More

CANADA AWAITS WILLKIE SPEECH

Toronto Broadcast to Open Campaign for $5,000,000 War Fund.

TORONTO, Ont., March 24 (U. P.).—Wendell L. Willkie arrives to-

day to launch a $5,500,000 war fund drive and to receive the greatest tribute Canada ever accorded a private citizen of the United States. Thousands of Army, Navy and Air Force officers, Government officials and others were out to pay their respects to Mr. Willkie, who was invited to describe his recent experiences in Britain to a crowd of 20,000 at the Maple Leaf Gardens tonight. He will be introduced by Canada's Prime Minister W. L. Mackenzie King and his speech will

National Auxiliary War Services of Canada. There was to be a parade to the City Hall, where Mayor George |

the afternoon Mr. Willkie was to visit the Provincial Legislature and address the House. Mr. Willkie’s speech toni be broadcast.

FABRIC SHOP MOVES |

The Fabric Shop today moved into larger quarters at 36 N. Pennsylvania St. The shop for the past two years has been located at 15 N. Pennsylvania, The new quarters will double the floor space of the shop, according to Al Katz, owner and manager. The building at 15 N. Pennsylvania recently was purchased by the George J. Mayer Co.

TWO ANTHEMS PLANNED

Fred Kern will direct the Confirmation Alumni Choir in two anthems at a Lenten service honoring all confirmation alumni of St. John's Evangelical and Reformed Church, Thursday at 7:45 p. m. in the church.

open the fund campaign for the}

Conboy pays his respects, and in|}

ght will (}’

TO BIGGER QUARTERS |.

MONDAY, MARCH 24, 1941

3 REPRESENT CITY AT DISTRICT SESSION

Maj. Sampel J. Mantel, president of B'nai B'rith’s District 2, and two past presidents, Louis J. Borinstein and Isidore Feibleman, will repre’ sent Indianapolis at the national triennial convention of the organization in Chicago March 29 to April 2. Vice President Henry A. Wallace will address members at the Chicago Civic Opera House March 30. The program will be broadcast at 10:05 p. m. over the Columbia Broadcasting System and rebroadcast over short wave to Latin America. Maj. Mantel also will attend the 97th annual meeting of the B’nai B'rith executive committee in the Drake Hotel in Chicago March 27 and March 28.

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impatient for our entry. There were (When the camera clicked and

| since it was created Jan. 7. At that

right. We voted for the President every time he ran,” Mr. Craig said. “I think we can trust him to do more, for the country and people's welfare! thar anybody I know.” His wife said she wants the country “to avoid those wheatless, meatless days of 1917.” She blamed mismanagement and profiteering for the high cost of living in the World War. They both think the present) Administration will safeguard | against injustices in ‘carrying the | defense load.” Give Up Necessities Emma Lou, an abbreviation for Emily Louise, has chestnut hair and blue eyes. She smiles constantly. She is in the 5th grade, Billy in the first. Mr. Craig is employed by the American Waterworks & Electric Co. of New York as an engineer at the Muncie water works. He moved from the six-room house in order to be in a company-owned property near his work. “I feel a little more secure- on company property,” he said. The rental saving was ‘“coasiderable.” Two years ago when his family was selected as “American Average” in a national survey, ne worked for a glass-jar company. His income now is $150 greater than it was then. He thought he could save some of it. “Illness set us back a while,” he recalled. “Now we're going to tighten our belts because we expect to do a share for the country’s extra expenses.” Mrs. Craig smiled in agreement.

time President Roosevelt established production, purchasing and priorities divisions. The executive order said the newly created division will be headed by a director appointed by the OPM and approved by the President. The duties of the division will be 1. To ascertain labor requirements for national defense. 2. Develop programs and co-ordi-nate efforts for securing an adequte and trained labor supply for defense purposes. 3. To advise with respect to problems of working standards and employment in defense industries. 4, To assist in the prevention and adjustment of labor controversies which might retard the defense program. 5. To advise and collaborate with the other three OPM divisions on all labor matters.

16 IN STATE GIVEN RANK OF ENSIGN

Ten Indiana men, including six from Indianapolis, have received the rank of ensign following their graduation from the U. S. Naval Reserve School here, They are Ensigns Frederick F. Burgmann, 940 Garfield Drive; Harry L. Champlain, 5119 College Ave.; Thomas E. Mumford, 3¢ W. 42d St.; Evan L. Noyes, 5625 Sunset Lane; John M. Warden, 24 Johnson St.; Reginald W. Bass, 6537 Carroliton Ave.; John L. Mote, Spiceland; Robert L. Stoops, Sharpsville; Herbert W. Hall, Clinton, and Frank Coburn Powell, Westfield. The graduates were a part of the

ed “and if I had to do it again, I'd Still Go to Morris Plan!

Morris Plan loans are easy to repay —first payment need not start for six weeks and I can take 6 to 20 months to repay balance,

Moris Plen will lend me $75 to $1000 or more, on Character or Auto WITHOUT ENDORSERS, quickly and without red tape.”

Many loans are completed by phone or mail — without coming to the

office. Phone for a Loan — MA rket 4455

i110 E. WASHINGTON

{ V=T cruises which trained 5000 men as reserve officers last summer. Each {Indiana man had 30 days of sea [duty and 90 days of schooling at Abott Hall, Northwestern Univer{sity or on the U. S. S. Illinois, | anchored at New York City. |

MRS. BERTHA DAILEY | RITES TOMORROW

Funeral services for Mrs. Bertha | Dailey will be at 10 a. m. tomorrow at the J. C. Wilson Funeral Home with burial at Greenwood. Mrs. Dailey, who was 59, died Saturday at her home, 131 W, Market St. She was born in Pulaski, Tenn., but spent most of her life in Indianapolis. She was a member of (the Baptist Church and the Daughters of America. Surviving are her husband, James Dailey; a son by a previous marriage, Ancil Fee of Indianapolis; her mother, Mrs. Virginia Mulvery of Greenfield, and a sister, Mrs. Stella Hargrove, living in California.

“DISASTER SQUAD” ON CYCLES MARION, O. (U. P.).—A “disaster squad” to act in emergencies has been formed here by 15 young men.

yo 1 ARI IT0(7) 03

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talk out of turn just because I'm out of reach.” Ernie is as positive as can be that England cannot be successfully invaded, unless she is first destroyed by bombings and blockade. As to the latter possibility, if it can be called that, he declined the role of strategist. But what he saw along the beaches and far inland from the beaches— some of this stuff the censor (and now his conscience) keeps him from describing—left him utterly convinced that invasion would be madness. The English would like nothing better than to see it tried, he said. They are spoiling for the chance. And yet, he said, there is no fanaticism in England, no bitter personal hatred of Germans, no “killing of dachshunds.” He was a little surprised, and relieved, to find that hysteria of the 1917-18 sort Had not yet gripped America. “What do the English think of the Americans?” Ernie was asked time and again,

little things like the home guardsman who remarked casually that when we went in last time our “coffee had got a bit cold.” Ernie had an incendiary bomb on his person—a gift of the Air Minlstry, on whose roof it landed without exploding. He hurriedly assured the nervous that its thermite contents had been removed. He also had a handful of fragments from anti-air-craft shells, evil-looking scraps of jagged metal that would do no bare head any good after falling 15,000 feet or so. . . He had other souvenirs, and anecdotes, and reminiscences of a land where he far overstayed his intended month or so, and which he left with regret. (He said he felt guilty at walking out on those people, and “kind of ashamed of myself” at reading about the heavy bombings since he left). He seemed genuinely surprised when told how well some people had liked his stories. But then he has always been that way.

An Indian Maid And 2 Yale Men

CLEVELAND, March 24 (U. P.). —Pocahontas, a beautiful wooden Indian maid, was believed alone and friendless in the big city today. Alone, that is, except for a couple of Yale men. The wooden Indian girl, valued at $750, was taken from the automobile of John D. Gilchrist Jr, while it was parked in the city’s mid-town sector. Gilchrist would like her back by Saturday to take her to a dance—the Dartmouth alumni dance. Just what happened to Pocahontas isn’t certain, but Gilchrist suspects Yale men and only shudders at her fate.

GETS 1-TO-10 YEARS IN BASEMENT KILLING

Herbert W. Floyd, 24, Negro, indicted several months ago on a first degree murder charge, was sentenced to one to 10 years in prison on an involuntary manslaughter charge in Criminal Court today. Floyd was accused of fatally shooting Lester Collins during a fight in the basement of a downtown hotel last November. : A jury trial had been set for the case, but deputy prosecutors agreed to wermit Floyd to plead guilty to the manslaughter charge instead of murder b2cause of reported self-de-fense evidence in the case.

UTAH CITIES LEAD SALT LAKE CITY, Utah (U. P.). —Figures for the 1940 census put Utah's total population at 550,310— 305,493 in urban areas, 244817 in

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SUGGESSOR TO LOHSS SOUGHT BY COUNCIL

The Marion County Council will meet tomorrow to elect a new Councilman to succeed John Lohss, who rasigned last week. Mr. Lohss said he could no longer serve on the Council because he plans to move out of the county soon, At the same time, County Auditor Glenn B. Ralston announced that he will call a meeting of all township trustees within the next 10 days to select a successor to J. Malcolm Dunn, County School superintendent who resigned to enter U. S. Army service, effective April 1. County Councilmen said they had not decided who would be named to succeed Mr. Lohss. No successor to Mr. Dunn has been agreed upon.

BRITAIN'S MILLIONS PRAY

LONDON, March 24 (U. P.).—Millions of Britons gathered Sunday at churches and ruins of churches of all denominations, observing a day of national prayer at the King’s request. The keynote of the services was thanksgiving for “the nation’s deliverance from perils greater than ever before known.”

spoiled the picture. They can still move, but they can't spoil the picture. This was one tiding brought today to the Daguerre Club of Indiana as it began its annual spring convention at the Lincoln Hotel. The new light, which is pretty elaborate and costs more than $400, also will “stop” an electric fan in motion, birds in flight and is good for portrait and commercial work. The club, composed of 26 members, will continue sessions today and tomorrow morning. There will be criticism of prints and a business session tomorrow. The banquet will be tonight. C. R. Dollar, Muncie, is president; Clem C. Voorhis, Indianapolis, is vice president, and Charles C. Starks, Bloomington, is secretarytreasurer, ;

SUBSIDY APPROVED FOR EXPORT AIRLINES

WASHINGTON, March 24 (U. P.). —A Senate Appropriations Subcommittee today approved a proposed Federal subsidy of $800,000 to permit American Export Airlines to begin a limited trans-Atlantic service in competition with Pan-American Airways. The subcommittee also authorized Pan-American to operate four instead of three weekly round trips in the trans-Atlantic service.

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off the tricycle, and climbed up and sat on his shoulder. He was dismayed temporarily. The forest fire, set up by the State Forestry Department, is atracting a great deal of attention, and conservation men say they believe it will be of a highly beneficial educational value in helping prevent forest fires this summer and fall.

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