Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 April 1941 — Page 13

TUESDAY, APRIL 8, 1941

CONGRESS BETS Proclaims Health Day

STRIKE VIEWS

Mail Reflects Nation's Growing Concern Over | Defense Strikes.

Times Special

a

WASHINGTON, April 8.—A grow- | §

Ing volume is reflecting over fense

of Congressional mail the nation’s concern | strikes which are slowing de- | production. Senators and Representatives say the mail is not of the “inspired” | Ivpe generated by some past issues, | but is apparently spontaneous. The most frequent theme of the | writers is that inasmuch as the | United States has drafted thousands of young men for military service, those remaining behind should not be allowed to block industrial defense. Some letters express indignation because Congress has not assed anti-strike legislation. Congressmen say the greatest volume comes from persons who profess friendship toward labor but | wno are convinced that nothing | should impede defense production. | |

i

Heaviest From East

The mail appears to be heaviest | from the East and the Mississippi | Valley. Some Southern representa- | tives report only a few letters | Letters urging that nothing be | done to abridge strikers’ rights are] reported by some, and others criticize both management and labor, A constituent wrote Senator Lodge (R. Mass.) : “The bulldoggedness of managemenet and labor must be stopped at once or the| Government must take charge by drafting both labor and manage- | ment into the service. My country | "tis of thee is more important than their wishes.” A Methodist minister wrote Rep. Monroney (D, Okla.): “There are those of us in the West who are wondering about this business of strikes and the apparent helplessness of the Govern- | ment to cope with that sort of thing. I bespeak the sentiment of a lot of people when I say that we haven't near the use for men who will hijack the Government that) we have for a fifth columnist. Citizens, at a time of major emergency, should do their proper share to help, and we can't see where they are helping by getting us by the throat in order to get higher wages.” Do Something A single sentence was the letter of another to Rep. Monroney: “Mike, for God's sake do something | gbout this strike situation.” Another wrote: F-- J was in town the other day and we asked him what Administration was going to about these strikes in our narearmament program He said the Administration couldn't do anything until the people's opinion changed against the strikes Now we are wondering who he means by the ‘people Everyone that IT have talked to, and I would venture to say everyone in the United States except the C. I. O. and possibly the Administration, is fed up with this kind of business.” A Svracuse man wrote Senator | Mead (D. N. Y.): “I think it's pertinent to express my conviction that the dragon's teeth of class hatred sown during recent vears have taken root ... A| labor organization which extracts | from labor a tribute of $500,000 on | one Government job for the privilege of working proves convincingly that no one class has a monoply on the economic-rovalist idea.” |

| Protests to Mead

the aon tional

Another protested to Senator | Mead against “attempts to smother | the right of labor to strike for a| tiecent ness for taking increased “without sharing with labor to meet | increased costs of living

From Ann Arbor a man wrote was held yesterday at the Fountain Institute

Rep. Michener (R. Mich.) Does Congress intend to sit idly | hv while union strikes, fomented by | terrorists. not only tie up national-

jcord St.;

Three students of School 60

proclamation making May 1 Child Health Day. right, James Rice, 3167 N. Delaware St.; Julia Brake, 3043 N. Penn-

sylvania St., and Joan Foltz, 3246

According to Health Department officials, Child Health Day is | part of the public education program which has helped drop the Indiana infant death rate per 1000 births from 63.9 in 1929 to 41.9 In the same period, the maternal death rate per 1000 has

in 1940.

PAGE 13

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

PATH IS SOUGHT There'sa Bacon, Ind., But No Eggs--As Yet

DAYLIGHT TIME

“FOR 300 PUPILS

|

Drexel Garden Civic Group Asks Protection Along Lyndhurst Drive.

By TIM TIPPETT An “indignation” meeting was held last night by the Drexel Gardens Civic League, a four-months-old group which plans to incorporate within the next month. The meeting was called at Public | School 13 after it was discovered | that a petition asking for a cinder path along Lyndhurst Drive had been “lost or forgotten” by the County Commissioners. | The path, according to ‘the | League, is essential to the safety of {the 300 school children who must {walk along Lyndhurst Drive for al- | most a mile to reach School 13.

Walk on Edge of Road

At present there is no path at {all along the Drive and the children |are forced to walk on the edge of the road. Charging that the road is used by commuters as a ‘“speed- | way,” League members said that

AUN] Ng?

|

watch Governor Schricker sign a

They are, left to

N. Pennsylvania St.

ACO

BACON TAKES TO TH’ HIGHWAYS

ORANGE

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N IN THE ROARIN' THIRTEENS

fm Lh 4

pA 8 = pi |

HERE DOUBTFUL

City Councilmen Hesitate To Advance Clocks Because of Legal Doubts,

Daylight saving time receded from Indianapolis today as a summer time possibilily as City Coun-~ cilmen began to draw back from the proposal and its legal compli- | cations.

/ Paols

3 Q

IN

| Facing what they thought first was a clear issue, Councilmen learned last night that things are somewhat muddled. { Complication number one is the | existence of the 1928 Daylight Sav[ing Time ordinance which revives {when enabling legislation approved by the 1941 General Assembly go2s into effect June 1. | Legality Questioned Number two is a constitutional | inability on the part of the Council to pass the proposed ordinance un[til the 1941 Acts are published in |dJune, thereby creating a mixup in the time when Daylight Saving | Would go into effect. The ordinance {proposes the last Sunday in April, {but that cannot be this year.

at

y FORD

{only recently one driver crashed in front of the school, his car rolling over four times. { League members said they pre-

dropped from 6.8 to 2.5.

COL. HITCHCOCK Te

NOW AT SHELBY

Draft Head Inspects Indiana Cantonment; 20 More Go From County.

Lieut. Col. Robinson Hitchcock, who as State Selective Service director has charge of sending thousands of young men into military service, was in camp himself today. But in his case, it's only for a day or two—not a year.

burg, Miss., Sunday, explaining he wanted to see at first hand the prep-

arations being made to receive In- |

diana selectees.

Most of the 6900 to be inducted | during April will be assigned to the

38th Division at Camp Shelby, Meanwhile, another 500 were to be inducted into the service today, 300 at Ft. Harrison and 200 at Ft Wayne. Marion County Board 5 is providing 20, including: Johnney Robert Hill, 354 Beaufv Ave. Norman Eugene Eldridge, 436 Alton Ave George Steve Kecskes, 734 Ketcham St Anthony Edward Domogalik, 751 N >on Claude James Forev Jr. Arnolda St.. Robert Lee Yates Jr., 576 N Lynn St Lionel Lee Myers, 1122 W. N York St LLeomon Wyatte Jenkins, 1040 N. Warman Ave Robert Arnold Seidel, 1621 W. Market St.: Joseph Willard Sperback 725 N. Sheffield Ave Lawrence Franklin Day. 1421 W. Ohio St, Cecil Lee Ganstine, 3108 W. North St.: Charles Harry Osborn, 1133 Arnolda St. John James Polovich, 1552 W. Washington Ny Kenneth Eugene Hoffman, 1214 N Pershing Ave.; Tyint Dunham, 1317 N Everett St.: Luther Combs, 1409 N. Belle Vieu Place; Lynn Dale Noe, 1419 N. Holmes Ave.: Charles Joseph Ruckersfeldt, 180 N Blackford St, and Frank Duke, 756 Haugh St.

SCHRICKER TO SPEAK

AT MOVIE PROGRAM

Gov. Henry F. Schricker is sched-

uled to speak at 10 a. m. tomorrow |

in the Zaring Theater at the third of a series of four two-hour showings of patriotic motion pictures which some 6000 school children are attending this week. The shows are sponsored by the Y. M. C. A, aided by the managers

wage.” and criticized busi-|0f four local theaters and Vitagraph, | profits (Inc, distributor for Warner Bros. Loring G. Christie, former Canadian

and First National Pictures

The first showing in the series Square Theater, Dewitt S. Morgan, superintendent of schools, spoke. Today's showing was held

at the Belmont Theater, with

Director Hitch- | cock left for Camp Shelby, Hatties- |

GOVER

|

sented the cinder path petition to the County Commissioners some | time ago and when they revisited {the Commission several davs ago they learned that the Commission[ers thought the petition had not |

OAKLAND, Cal, April 8 (U. | been presented yet. =

Is of 10-Year ‘Imprisonment’

|

ton Blvd. by Atkinson & Co.;

| | | |

He was a member of the St. Paul|age and one in Woolfington Addi-

Masonic Lodge, the Scottish Rite, |at 54th St. and Carrollton Ave. and

| charged today that her foster |been presented “but we will be glad Of Same "40 Period. bon Habsburg, and his sons— sioner Harry Holt, who could not be eV 18500.000 ahead of the same date in Antoinette of France were his |have been checked at a special “That's about the truth. I |of civic clubs to the city and the in-| Houses sold were: 332 N. Temand starved, she weighs nearly |A representative body of club mem- Peckham: 2215 Garfield Drive by Governor Henry F. Schricker cited| john E. Clinton. 3634 Birchwood 21d 3416 Carrollton Ave. by Ford High School last night. Mr. Clinton was a retired postal | Peckham sold four on Ralston; dianapolis and Purdue University A [and the Shrine at Reno. He also contracted to build a home in Meri“This is perhaps the most critical

| P).—Alwine Hindenburger, 32, | Commissioner William T. Ayres 1941 Sales Are Reported father and his two sons had held |t4 give it consideration at any time.” her prisoner in their home for Slaim Petition Given Holt the last 10 years. : Spokesmen for the club said that With sales of $272.250 reported f (this week, North Side Realtors this Otto, 41, and ‘George, 39—were | . . evicted vesterday. Their land- | reached for comment today. {year have recorded total transaclord said the elder Habsburg, who | The League plans to file incorpor- | 1940. great - great - grandparents, owed |meeting. i he Rd . ne Ya : him a $5000 rent bill. | Paul Wetter, Indianapolis Federa- | Members sold 16 houses, 22 lots About the foster daughter's tion of Community Civic Clubs pres- and two suburban tracts, and conhadn't any clothes for her, so I |fluence they may have in the the Pl€ Ave. 3165 Renwaog ave 303 felt she shouldn't go out.” | administration of public affairs N. Keystone Ave, 2613 N DSR Although Miss Hindenburger | Albert Bell, Drexel club president, St. and 6101 Ewing St. by Jack C. | 200 pounds. bers will visit the commissioners | Lhomas F. Carson; 6270 Washingagain this week (ton Blvd. and 5850 Sunset Lane by | bn To {Atkinson & Co. and Fieber & Reilly; NOR STRESSES J £ clinton Dead: . » n on eq 1+ Carrollton Ave. by Atkinson & Co iand B. L. Edwards; 5543 Carrollton Ave. and 614-16 E. 4tTh St. by the importance of industrial safety | Ave died vesterday at Sunnvside | Woods Co precautions in the defense program | 4 She Bb : | Lorin Driscoll sold a lot on MornFh sanitorium, where he had been a| : at the opening of a city-wide indus- patient for the past three years. |ingside Drive; Mr. Carr sold seven The course, consisting of nine clerk . He entered the service. in|Harry Robbins and Mr. Carr sold classes each Monday night, is spon- | 1890 and retired in 1934. From 1008 one at 81st and Pennsylvania Sts. sored by the U. S. Department of until 1928 he served as superintend- one in Forest Manor was sold by safety engineers. Foremen, employ- | ers and workmen are attending the course to study the prevention of ‘time in the nation's history,” the Governor said. “We may be drawn into this war and industry and man-

i [said today that the petition had not | | Nearly $500,000 Ahead She, 65-year-old Otto de Bour- SI ] the petition was given to Commis[tions of $1,619,401 which is nearly claimed Louis XVI and Marie [ation papers just as soon as they charge, the elder Habsburg said: |ident, last night outlined the duties | tracted to build two homes, claimed that she had been beaten |presided over last night's meeting. Carr; 851 W. 44th St. by R. E INDUSTRIAL SAFETY Rites Tomorrow | | American Estates; 319 Auburn St trial safety course at Washington He was 71. on Keystone north of 30th St.; Mr Education in co-operation with In-| ent of mail at Reno, Nev. At the| William A. Hackemeyer; industrial accidents. | power are extremely important.”

chapter of the Order of Eastern) lots in Brockton, and Fay C. Cash Star and past watchman of Shep- sold two in Meridian-Kessler Ternerds of White Shrine 6. [race | Survivors are his wife, Mrs. Audra| William I. Bridges contracted to

{lined by Prof. C. W. Beese, in charge | Schreyer, of New York City a step-|and Robert I. Mason contracted of engineering training for Purdue |daughter, Miss Virginia Fort and for homes at 6905 Park Ave. and | University, and E. C. Forsythe of the |a stepson, Cephas Fort. 13342 Orchard Ave. Mr. Peckham Indianapolis Accident Prevention| Funeral services will be in charge | gq 80 acres on 106th St. while | Council. |of the North Park Masonic Lodge | a tkinson & Co. sold 10 AOIES on | and the Rev. Charles Lizenbe of the ji cio "1 ope Road y FORMER ENVOY DIES St. Paul church at 2 p. m. tomorrow dita y v in the Flanner & Buchanan mortuNEW YORK, April 8 (U. P).—| ary, Burial will be in Crown Hill | minister to the United States, died | at 12:30 a. m. today at Rockefeller | Hospital Mr. Christie {suffered a relapse from a blood clot, | | which developed about three weeks! eating broken glass and razor blades lagn. He had been stricken with| Mrs Catherine Bescher died to-|The hospital said he had suffered a { thrombosis last November, and for | day mt the home of her daughter, | nervous derangement

TRIES TO KILL SELF

SAN JOSE, Costa Rica, April P.).—The captain of the sabo-

MRS. BESCHER DIES; ised Taian steamer Fella wes pro-

gressing satisfactorily in a hospital

defense orders but abridge the civil Fermor S. Cannon, president of the a time, had shown signs of re- Mrs. Catherine Bever. R. R. 6, Box

rights of the citizens of this na- | tion?” A woman wrote to Rep. Ramspeck | (D. Ga.) that “on every hand it seems that they (unions) are doing | their utmost to retard the nation-al-defense program, and they are as surely committing acts of sabotage as though they set off loads of dynamite in our shipyards and airplane factories.”

|

STATE TAKES OVER | HOME GUARD UNIT

Governor Schricker today issued an executive order transferring units of the Home Guard to the newly | formed Indiana State Guard. | The Home Guard was set up by executive order of former Gov. M. lifford Townsend. The 1941 LegisJature passed a law authorizing | Governor Schricker create a| State Guard | Officers of the Home Guard unifs must take oaths and obtain new commissions. the Governor's order | specified. His action following a| ruling by the Attorney General that * an executive order was necessary to integrate the Home Guard into the rew State Guard The State Guard | have approximately 2300 officers

Lo

will and men

ETHYL DISCOVERER AWARDED MEDAL

ST. LOUTS, April 8 (U. P.).—The American Chemical Society today awarded its highest honor, the Priestley Medal, to Dr. Thomas Midgley Jr. ‘Of Worthington, 0., for “outstanding achievement in chem- | ical science.” : | Dr. Midgley, vice president of the Ethyl Gasoline Corp. of New York and a ‘director of the Chemical Society, discovered tetra- | ethyl lead as an anti-knock agent for gasoline. He is widely known | for his work on refrigerants used in air conditioning. Dr. Midgley is | recovering from an attack of in- | fantile paralysis but participated In|

the meeting. {

FACES PINBALL CHARGE | Casper Bone, 59, proprietor of a | filling station at 702 Southeastern | Ave

arrest hv Patrolmen John Foran! and M. J. Grannan. The policemen charged they saw a 16-year-old boy playing a pinball game in the filling station yesterday and that the boy twice was given money for a winning score,

peace as soon as possible.” ‘conference of provincial governors.

Y. M. ‘C. A, ‘as ‘speaker. Children within walking distance of the theaters were invited to the programs, for which 8700 were distributed. Dr. William F. Burdette of Butler University will speak at the final showing of the series Thursday in the Rivoli Theater.

SUES GRIDDER WHO'S STILL A FRESHMAN’

SALEM, Mass, April 8 (U. P).— Mrs. Bdward Toczylowski charged in a divorce suit today that her husband not only was a freshman in fact, but still acted like one after five years of playing college football. She charged Mr. Toczylowski with non-support of their two children, and cruel and abusive treatment.

the case under advisement. Mrs. Toczylowski said her husband now was a freshman at Louis-

prospects of making the varsity team next fall as a quarterback.

tickets |

| cuperation. 596. Mrs. Bescher would have been Th a Cae ari 84 in June. She had lived here for| NEW YORK, April 8 (U. P). — NAMED AIR ‘CORPS SITE | the past two years, : Pennsylvania anthracite operators WASHINGTON, April 8 (U. P.).—| Besides her daughter, she is sur-|and miners today formally opened The War Department announced to-| vived by a son, George Bescher of negotiations for a new {day that Oklahoma City, Okla., has New Haven, Conn. Funeral services | wage-hour contract replacing [been selected as the site for a new will be in St, Boniface Church, New 1039-41 agreement, which expires at {air corps supply and repair depot. Haven. midnight April 30.

|

School News—

Schoolboys Get First-Hand Information On Careers From Men Who Know Answers

| By EARL HOFF

| Indianapolis schoolboys, armed

| with the inquisitiveness of youth,

|

| are prying every afternoon into the

| Probate Judge John V. Phelan took | affairs of men who run the City's

| business, professions and industries. | ‘The boys, high school seniors, are | wanting to know the hows and the

‘jana State University and had good |Whys, and the men are answering

| freely. | Back of it all is the Rotary Club’s

When not playing football during | counseling service for youth, Tt was

[the last five vears. she said, he|Put into operation last year.

worked on a WPA project in Lynn, Mass.

DECLARES CONGRESS ENVISIONS AN A. E. F. WOODWARD. Okla., April 8. (U. P.) —Rep. Ross Rizley (R. Okla.) said today it was the “consensus of Congressional leaders” that America will send an expeditionary force to Europe “if Britain cannot handle

Germany.” In a speech before the Woodward

[Chamber of Commerce, Mr. Rizley

also predicted that the United States will send convoys to Europe “if that

|is what it takes to get materials |

over to the Allies.” “We all hope that we will not have to send our boys to fight on foreign soil,” Mr. Rizley said, adding that he believed an expeditionary force would be sent to prevent Britain from losing the war. “This is not my opinion, but it is the consensus of Congressional leaders,” Mr. Rizley said.

REAFFIRMS AXIS STAND TOKYO, April 8 (U. P.).—Premier

faced gaming charges in Mu- Prince Fumimaro Konoye reiterated | these interviews. There is no school nicipal Court today following his today that Japan's diplomatic policy | teacher along to introduce them and

is based upon her tripartite Axis pact with Germany and Italy. “Japan desires to solidify more and more its co-operation with friendly nations in order to restore world he told

»

Under the plan, high school seniors get |the opportunity of sitting down and [talking “man to man” with an adult {who has succeeded in the field the boys would like to enter. | The adult doesn’t lecture. He tries [to answer the boys’ questions. The |arrangement is on a gentleman's |agreement that the boys on this trip [are seeking only information and |not jobs. This doesn't mean that | they might not get jobs later on with the man they interview. Under direction of John A. Mueller, special youth services director {for the public schools, each high {school has prepared a list of boys |who want to learn first-hand about the careers they'd like to follow. The Rotary Club, in turn, under the direction of Fermor S. Cannon, {of the club’s youth service commit[tee, furnished the schools with a list |of more than 125 men who are willling to grant three or four half-hour |interviews to schoolboys. | Around 400 high school seniors will take advantage of the Rotari|ans’ offer. The interviews are ex{pected to last until the middle of May, { The bovs are on their own in

| |

v

Norval Biggs, Tech High School senior, gets a first-hand impression of home construction and financing from Fermor (Cannon, president of the Railroadmen’s Federal Savings & Loan Association.

get the most out of the interviews. In direct parallel to the program When they step into the office of | for boys is one for girls being conthe man they are to interview, most | ducted at Tech for the second year of the boys are a little nervous.|by the Altrusa Club, a businessSome of them become almost tongue-| women’s group, under direction of tied. But the businessmen try to| Miss Mabel Guttery. Fifty women put them at ease and soon the ques-| who are in vocations that Tech girls tions are tumbling out. | intend to enter will be interviewed On the basis of the reports boys| by more than 200 seniors, made on their interviews last vear,|. The Rotary Club, Mr. Cannon the program is a success, Mr. Muel- | said, is contemplating expending its {ler said. Frank Murphy, director of | program next year to include jun{the program for Tech High School, |iors, since he said the boys then said that some encouraging reports | might be able to apply in their already have been made concerning | choice of school subjects the inforinterviews this year. mation gained in interviews,

[perhaps to guide their questions. The school furnishes each boy the ‘name of a businessman and the boy |phones for an appointment. | Before the interview the seniors |are coached on conduct and what type of questions to ask so they may

+

3039 |

[4632 Broadway and 5410 Washing- | 6166 |

Atkinson | end of that time he returned here.|& Co. sold two in Sherwood Vill-|

Methodist Church, the North Park |t{ion; American Estates sold a lot|

was a past patron of North Park dian Hills; John Robbins sold two |

Subjects to be taken up were out- | M. Clinton; a sister, Mrs. Emma puild a home at 5818 Oxford St.

NEAR 84TH BIRTHDAY today after attempting suicide by |

two-year | the |

} | opened the valve,

N. SIDE REALTY /n Other Words, This Is an

Answer to

Bacon, Ind, is in Crawford Coun- | ty, a few miles north of English, Ind., or at least it was on March | 25, 1941, but you never can tell. { | Bacon, Ind. is on rollers and subject to geographical change without | [Slee |

No Eggs, Ind, has yet been re-| | ported. | | This information is primarily for | Heath Bowman, author of the re-! | cent Bobbs-Merrill “Hoosier,” which | lis a book that takes Indiana apart. | Mr. Bowman spent two years leriss-crossing the State to get his information and registered a substantial complaint that he had been assured that Bacon, Ind., and Eggs, |Tnd., existed, but that he could not | find either. Since his public lament, both Mrs. Ray Standiford of English, Ind, and Cecil Danner, Indianapolis, [have put in writing the location of | Bacon. Mr. Danner added that he was not surprised that Mr. Bowman could not find Bacon, since he (Mr. Danner), a former resident of] | Bacon, returned two vears ago and | found the town had left.

CENSORSHIP BY NEW YORK PAPER.

| NEW YORK, April 8 (U, P)~—| | The New York Daily News, which |

| vesterday published a detailed story! lof the arrival of a British warship | in the United States, suggested today to the Government “that it put into effect an official censorship; that it issue definite orders, not requests, as to what may be printed and what may not.” The statement preceded a story headlined “Crowds View British Warship” and was described by the |News as the result of a statement in Washington by Secretary of Navy Frank Knox commending the news agencies and newspapers which withheld information on ‘the recent arrival of a British warship in this country.” “The News obviously comes under | | Secretary Knox’ disapproval be- | cause it printed a story and pic[tures,” the statement said. | “The News did this,” the statement said, because the arrival of the warship “was newsworthy and because it was no secret.”

Peanut Vendor's Sales Aid Greece

WASHINGTON, April 8 (U. P.) —Steve Vassilakos, for whom more than one Fresident has intervened to permit him to continue selling peanuts just out-

side the White House grounds, is doing most of his grumbling these days in Greek. That language has better adjectives than English to give vent | to his indignation about the invasion of his homeland, he says. But Steve is a man of action, too. Yesterday he posted a sign on his peanut wagon which read: “For two days all my receipts will be given to Greek relief— Steve Vassilakos.” He reported that unusually high.

AVERTS NEAR FATAL LAUNDRY EXPLOSION

A boiler explosion which might | {| have injured or killed employees of | |the Lux Laundry, 5301 Winthrop | | Ave, was narrowly averted yester- | |day, Tony A. Lux, proprietor, re- { ported to police. | Mr. Lux said a mechanic working | |outside the boiler-room looked in | (the room and saw water running | {out of the boiler. He discovered | someone had opened a valve. Mr. | [Lux said the boiler would have ex{ploded if the discovery had been | delayed another five minutes. About | | 100 employees were in the laundry | at the time, he said. | Police were unable to learn who

|

sales were

{

| | | PURDUE TEACHER DIES

| | | LAFAYETTE, Ind. April 8 (U.| | P.).—John J. Dietrich, for 30 years | |an instructor in the practical | ‘mechanics department at Purdue | | University, died yesterday of injuries | received when he was struck by an automobile Sunday night. He was | 79. He had retired from active |

(teaching two years ago. PHILANTHROPIST DIES | { PHELPS, N. Y, April 8 (U. P)) —| | Funeral services were planned today | for Birton E. Babcock, 69, president | of the Empire State Pickling Co, | largest sauerkraut manufacturing plant in the country. | Mr. Babcock, a widely known | philanthropist, died yesterday. He [recently gave $50.000 to Wooster {College in Ohio, and had financed | college educations for many young men and women,

v

lin Eggs, Ind.

URGED

| —

Number three is a strang legal doubt that the ordinance is cone stitutional at all because it was in{troduced last month, long before | the enabling legislation becomes {the law of the State. Corporation Counsel Heath Bowma Knight, who outlined these problems in an informal letter to the Council, suggested a simple remedy: “Where's Bacon?” he asked some-| throw out the new ordinance and ore. reintroduce it in June and kill the

“Oh, Bacon's moved up the road 1228 ureinance. Cas a spell,” the native replied. “You 1928 Ordinance Nvuillified : know the fellow that owned it died, Council President Joseph GG.

| Wood said he was reluctant to kill and someone else bought it. So he (he new ordinance. Sych action

Sure enon Mr. Danner went |. RR bi AR Novel a down the road a mile and & ha {together and Council has not yet made up its mind, he said. LN eon, Sued | The 1928 ordinance, which has property of the Hew OWL. ; ‘| been nullified all these years by the

: : Y statute that was repealed by the Bacon, Ind, is, in fact, just alygq) Jegisiation, will probably be grocery store. Now it's on wheels. i jcken to leave the way clear to At one time a dwelling and a ,.tjon in June, it was indicated. church clustered about the store, "“Gouncilmen indicated their desire but they were left behind when

to discuss the fate of the new ordiBacon was moved. No one lives), nce at special session, but made there anymore, anyhow, as Mr. no definite plans Danner gets it. a Mr. Danner advises Mr. Bowman | to hide out somewhere near English, CHIL

Ind, and keep his eyes open. DREN T0 GET Chances are, he says, that Bacon | DECORATED EGGS

will eventually heave into sight on | one of its perambulations, | Children of Riley Mr. Danner has no faith at all | St. Elizabeth's Home will have | gaily decorated Easter eggs for | breakfast Sunday as the gift of the | Loyal Order of Moose 17 and the social service committee of the Indianapolis Chinese boys and Women of the Moose, headed by girls soliciting Chinese war relief Mrs. Hazel Novak. funds in the lobby of the Inciana| In addition, Mrs. Novak has arTheater have raised $164.44, it was ranged an Easter egg hunt for the announced today. The children are [children of the Protestant Orphans working for the Chinese Emergency Home, 1404 S. State Ave, at 2 Relief Society of Indianapolis. p. m. Saturday

Edward H.

Hospital and

$164 FOR CHINA AID

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