Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 April 1941 — Page 19
EL I ar ape
FRIDAY, APRIL 11, 1941
Show Contest Entries
Miss Fern Stover (left), director of homemaking at Mooseheart, and Mrs. Cora Zell Ackerman of the Butler University Homemaking Department show a prize winning entry in the homemaking contest sponsored by the Indianapolis Chapter of the Women of the Moose, held yesterday at the Moose Temple, 135 N. Delaware St. Murs, Ackerman spoke to chapter members last night following a party in Observance of the chapter's 24th anniversary.
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| rests
[the laws on drunken driving
{themselves
GOOD FELLOWS CLUB
2-DRINK DRIVER CALLED MENACE
Heavy Fewer on Highways, Police Chief Says.
HARRISBURG, April 11 (U, P).|
| who is “as good as new after one or | [two drinks,” is the major factor to] ‘be eliminated on motor highways | if a large number of accidents, in-| juries and deaths are to be pre(vented, believes Lynn G. Adams, | Pennsylvania motor police com-| missioner, Mr. Adams says “false con-| fidence,” instilled in most persons {by alcoholic brews or a sense of increased ability makes the “drink{ing driver’ more dangerous than [the “staggering drunk driver,” who is more easily apprehended and convicted. Actually, Mr. Adams points out that "liquor tears down the ability to think quickly, act |quickly, and react quickly.” In Pennsylvania motor police arin 1940 for drunken driving totalled 1079 and 86 per cent ol that number were convicted. Mr. Adams attributes the high percentage of convictions to motor police practice of obtaining an almost airtight case before taking the offender into court,
Border Line Indistinct |
|
| However, he scores the difficulty in getting an air-tight case. He lists | five obstacles to sweeping the; “drinking driver” off the highway | in the order of their importance as|
follows: 1. Lack of differentiation between | and “drinking
“drunken drivers” drivers.” 2. A misconception by jurors of instill | in
to!
liquor to confidence ability
3. The drivers
power of a false regarding handle an automobile. 4. Lack of definite knowledge by police of what is necessary to prove | a drunken driving charge. No definite formula has ever been estab- | lished. 5. Lack of uniformity in penalties and in court handling ofl drunken driving charges In explaining additional dangers of the “drinking driver,” Capt. T.N. Boate, of the motor police, said: “The drunken driver generally is In too bad’ condition to travel far, almost always coming to grief before he has a chance to imperil other persons. He drives his car into a post or a tree, or off the road, and soon we come along and pick him up.
Menace to All
“But the drinking driver, who is not in such bad shape, drives off down the road for an mmdeterminate distance, i1mperiling everyone who chances to be on the road with him.” Mr
m
Adams explained the Pennsylvania law forbids operation of a motor vehicle by any person under the influence of liquor, but he said most jurers commonly try persons on drunken driving charges and aismiss them unless it 1s proved they were staggering drunk. He believes ensuing legislation should be pointed at the “drinking driver.”
ACTIVE FOR 100 YEARS
NEW ORLEANS (U. P.).—A large white building, situated in one of the busiest blocks on broad Canal St., soon will ring to the toasts of frock-coated merrymakers and the boys in ordinary business suits. It's the home of the Boston Club —a men’s group organized 100 years ago and dedicated to good fellowship. It was founded in 1841 and reputedly is the third oldest club of its type in the United States. The club is noted for many things
| —not lof garden and lawn in the heart of | . : . {the city's business district.
the least of which is its bit
Women probably won't be allowed {o attend the celebration—the members’ wives get in only once a vear, at Mardi Gras. They have to come through the club to reach the special stand where celebrities witness the parades,
COME EARLY Saturday or Monday
PERMANENTS
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Regular $3.45 HOLLYWOOD PERMANENT...
Regular $5 MACHINELESS PERMANENT...
i” 3 Service Starts 8:30 A. M. \
ROYAL
x BEAUTY ACAD.
w 401 Roosevelt Bldg. 4th Floor
4 3 13
Intoxication Perils | i
—The “drinking driver,” the one | &
Knows Her Men
450,000
Miss Betty Schroeder
Meet knows
Betty mone young men than anvbod) the possible exception Selective Service Boards. Betty, who's 22 and has spar= Kling dark eves and a ready smile, is the office scceretary of the Indianapolis Junior Chamber of Commerce As such. she knows more about the organization and its ac= tivities than 90 per cent of the 250 male members Besides answering the telephone, typing and serving as a general information department, she helps edit the Jaycees’ Weekly Bulletin, and aids the officers and committee chairmen with their correspondence and reports.
Schroeder, who about 21 town. with of the
facts more
between and 35
else In
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Needs 30,000 New Farms
| WASHINGTON, April 11
PAGE 17
FINLAND FACE
| |
For Those Fleeing Areas Ceded to Russia.
By Science Service
— Finland faces a severe problem this spring, in finding beiween 30,000
and 40.000 new farms in her smali [territory, for the resettlement of farmers and herdsmen driven out {of the areas ceded to Soviet Russia under the terms of the Treaty of | Moscow that concluded the IInno- | Russian conflict a little more than a Vvear ago. | Some of the difficulties are de- | scribed in a letter from Dr. Eino | Saari, leading Finnish forester, re[ceived here by Maj. John D. Guthirie of the U. S. Forest Service cdetailed to CCC duty,
Lose Best Farm Lands
By the terms of the treatv, the [U. S. S. R. took over ahout 650,000 acres of land, including some of the pest farm lands in the Finnish Republic. The people, approximately in number, were evacuated inte Finland. Of these evacuees, about 180,000, or 36,000 families, were from the land and had to find new farms, in a country already ap- | parently farmed to the limit of its agricultural capacity, A strenuous effort has been made to get at least two-thirds of of these displaced farm families back on the land by the beginning of !'he new lerop year, The land comes partly from subdivision of large private estates, partly from parceling out public lands Foresters Lost
| | | The amount of unoc upied tillable land in private limited land state-owned
estates lands are largely forests with not much arable land { The program therefore may compel the opening up of submarginal farms, it may mean the conversion lof good forest lands into poor farm land. It is possible that some of the | former farmers .may have to give (up farming and become or forest workers.
SALE of
ADD CLOTHING to YOUR FURNITURE ACCOUNT
MEN'S SHOES
$ 299 Men’s Shirts $1 79 TOPCOATS
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6 ® EASY TERMS
ALL CLOTHING PURCHASED WILL BE DELIVERED BEFORE EASTER
USE YOUR CREDIT
LADIES’ COATS
$095 LADIES SUITS
$8 95
CHILDREN’S DRESSES
69c
SATURDA
BA READ 300 BOOKS
LAND PROBLEM | Dolls and toys are of little interest Mrs. Robert B. Carney of Wheeling, venson
herdsmen
PASSES UP DOLLS lto 33-year-old Michele Rosemary | W. Va, as "a child prodigy,” Michele
(Carney. She would rather read a!has read 300 books, knows the names’ good book or follow developments of | of all the continents, can tell time the war in Europe than play [by the clock and has memorized Described by her parents, Mr, and several poems by Robert Louis Ste
PUNTA GORDA, Fla. (U. P) —|
PORK CHOP
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SUGAR
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Lb. Bag
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MILN UT oo RICH, IT WHIPS TALL cn Be
‘COFFEES | Prune Juice "wis" 17¢ o Apple Juice J cme 29¢
PEAGHES - 12:
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Like This Good Sauce cans
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MAXWELL HOUSE Ib. 2Tc Corn or Tomatoes
LIFEBUOY 3-14:
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mona | Smoked Picnics swe w 163¢ 2c Sliced Bacon win. 12}
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EXTRA! This Ad Worth 5¢ On Any Dollar's Werth of Goods. Clip It.
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
half -pound cellophane pkg.
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INCLUDING
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i 9.35
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3
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