Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 May 1941 — Page 2

PAGE 2

WARNS GROCERS Look Over Prize Exhibits OF SALES LEVY

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

WARNS AGAINST Hoosier Goings On DEFENSE WASTE ©RASH—

Indiana Farm Bureau Head | Mrs. Charles W. Weis Jr. Cites Bankruptcies in | LE a RN Urges G. 0. P. Women to States Using Tax. I . 1 Sh . Watch Spending.

ding states which The duty of the Republican party les tax experienced three to a \ (these days is to keep a strict watch nkruptcies \ eT ; J to see that defense billions are Schenck |spent economically on defense and

GET FACTS, DR. HU PLEADS AT PURDUE;

LAFAYETTE, Tnd., May 5 (U.P). -Dr. Hu Shih, Chinese Ambassador to the United States, said in a baccalaureate address to Purdue University seniors that the present | world situation calls more than ever | [for “responsible thinking.” Dr. Hu's address climaxed a gala week program which brought more [than 1000 graduates and former students back to the campus.

Valparaiso Curbing IsShattered;

R 3 Bumpus Meets Bumpus After 25 Years) FURNITU

Sof 0 R= 414 E. Wash.

By TIM TIPPETT IT'S GETTING so that Valparaiso residents are afraid to touch anything that looks solid for fear that it will fall, The other day a motorist attempting to park his car John G. Marks’ barbershop scraped a fender on the curbing. than six feet of the curb was torn out, The incident brings to mind the time when Ben Fleming's dray horse rubbed its nose on one of the -

in front of More

SUTTON

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as Indiana

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ident

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told

Indiana

ition today Association annual thr y conver Claypool] Uhrough Registration. inspection

ee

5 hold

ee-d tion at Hotel of the board

of di-

held at vesterday’s sese principal speakers g's meeting, Mr PORTS

fir

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Increase in Stores Cited

Sc hence K| les | running |

il Grocers

ding its 11th the tomorrow. exhibits

mem-| i 3

| for

i

{That we must do when the emer-

[hot wasted, Mrs. Charles W, Weis {Jr., Rochester, N. Y., told the Stale |Federation of Women's Republican

Clubs here Saturday. She spoke in the Claypool Hotel and also told the women that the

| Republicans must be ready to de{mand return to the people of Amer-

ica those extraordinary powers which “we have given the President the period of the emergency.

gency is over,” “No one in the minority party will ever quarrel with legitimate expenses for legitimate purposes spent wisely

city’s ornamental lighting posts on the west side of the Court House. The cast iron went down under the gentle rubbing, breaking into many pieces. » ” »

EVANSVILLE'S eight-year-old Don Canter guesses he's pretty lucky because at least some of the invited guests went to his birthday party. The reason Don helieves he's lueky is that Mama Canter forgot one thing when she sent out the invitations—to sign them. Some of the guests-to-be had heard Don talking about his approaching birthday, however, so

Both men started forward. They stopped. They looked at each other. No gleam of recognition in either’s eyes. “You Bumpus?” the other. “I'm Bumpus.” “I'm Bumpus, 100.” One thing led to another, and it developed that the two were cousins who hadn't seen each other for 25 years. Meanwhile, the interviewer was becoming a bit weary of the delay and called again: ‘Mr, Bumpus.” Both men started forward,

asked one to

[ness to work out as thoroughly as

“Responsible thinking has at least three elemental requirements,” Mr. Hu sald. ‘First, the duty to! verify our facts and check our evidence; second, the humility to admit. | the possibility of error of our judg- | ment and to guard against bias and | dogmatism, and thirdly, a willing-

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we can all possible consequences | that may follow the acceptance of | our view or the theory and to hold ourselves morally responsible for those consequences.” Dr. Hu asked seniors to use the | intellectual discipline learned in| college to give fair appraisal to con- |

fifcting philosophies and confused | thinking now prevalent in the world,

they put two and two together and decided to go to his house at the appointed time. There was some last-minute telephoning, but two of those invited couldn't be located, They had gone to a movie, un un »

Life is just a bowl of queries for William H. Hanley, age 24, of Hammond, between drills at Ft. Bliss, Tex. At mess the other day, he was informed that he has been Tremoved from the pay roll because he is an alien and has no standing in the Army. “No pay, no play,” Hanley said. “YI think T'll go back home,” His top sergeant took it fipon himself to change the young soldier’s mind. “You signed for a year and I have no orders to let you go,” he said. Mr. Hanley was born in Canada and came here when he was 9. Tt may take an act of Congress to straighten the whole thing out.

*henck pointed out rate for | per last of that there was time for a

that the and carefully,” she said. “But’everyretailers | j one in the minority party should to 1% | i 3 [question reckless, heedless, spendsession ‘of ling along lines heretofore used in {the New Deal Government finance, “The minority also has a respon- | sibility to question the New Deal's |tendency to promote mnon-defense | projects and incur gigantic financial | obligations, all in the guise of na[ro defense,” she SRifl,

Indiana Art Show Winners u S, MAY INITIATE Are on Display af Herron CONTROL OF PRICES

WASHINGTON, May 5 (U. P).— Government price control officials | studied food prices today and pre- | pared to act at once to control them | should new increases become evident. The cost of food has been rising slowly for several months and has reached the stage where ceilings on

IMPROVEMENTS FOR | retail prices are being seriously | considered, according to informed officials. hereafter to elect a five-man com- 3 STREETS APPROVED mittee to help Wilbur D. Peat, |

The Labor Department's Bureau of Labor Statistics has reveales museum director, select the out- | that the living costs of moderate-of-state jurors. Previously, this | income families in March were 2.6 responsibility has been Mr. Peat’s [proved by the Works Board today | Per cent higher than in August, alone upon the recommendations of City | 1939, when the war started. Anton Engineer M. G. Johnson. : | A joint statement by Edward R. man of the meeting and Mrs. The downtown improvements are |Stettinius Jr, director of priorities Flovd Hopper was secretary. There (the resurfacing of Maryland St.|for the Office of Production Manwas some discussion but no ac- | from Virginia Ave. to Delaware St.| agement, and Leon Henderson, chief | - tion relative to the $2 entry fee |at a cost of $30.500, and the resur-|of the Office of Price Administrasystem y ‘ | facing of Market St. from Senate tion and Civilian Supply, said they Out-of-state judges this year | Ave to West St, #t & cost of |were seeking to “co-ordinate close-| awarded first prize, $150, to Ed- |$17.000. ly” the agencies. | mund Brucker, Herron Art School | ‘On the third improvement, the| You can bet that Leon Henderson instructor, for his portrait of & [Works Board did not decide whether lwill not let food prices get out of Negro student. Charles M. West, |to resurface or reconstruct Michi- hand,” said one OPM official. “Tf painting instructor at the school, |ggn St. from the east end of the|fnod prices come up much more, was awarded the J. 1, Holcomb white River bridge to the 'C. C. C.| he's all sev to push them back down

[TRY A WANT AD IN THE TIMES.

DEPAUW HEAD URGES 10-YEAR ARMISTICE

Times Special | GREENCASTLE, nd. May 5. A [10-year armistice after the war before peace terms are agreed upon was suggested by Dr. Clyde E, wild- | | man, DePauw University president, | {at Mother's Day ‘church services on | ithe campus yesterday. “The nations need a cooling oft | period,” he said. “Peace treaties dictated at the point of a sword will not result in lasting peace. | “If someone says that love is not praticable, are hatred, suspicion, the | race for armaments, war, high taxes, the breakup of moral and religious principles practicable? In the long | run, it will be love, in the sense of | intelligent good will based upon jus-| tice, that will create & new inter- | national order.” |

SPECIAL

Any Domestic Window Size

cent

Two officers of the Indiana Retail Grocers and Meat Dealers Association took time out from their convention business sessions today | to some prize Indiana strawberries on exhibit. Frank Schymik of Evansville, Association director, is at the left, and B. L. ‘Tharp of Indianapolis, secretary, is at the right.

that tax wdopted

numbel

& gross 1nof new| while Illinois, | tax states ding to Mr volume in30 per cent avercent, |

look over 17 per rease sales

cent the Michigar was Schenck

1n

cent He

accor sald the WAS nree states only 21 per

crease in this state

wh the of aged increases of

le her §" yr : 1s t It's ‘Carnival Night’ diana now eral busit systems,

is a leader highv

Mi

in gen-! and school ick, “Why ites which already |

The annual Indiana art show | honorable mention with an at the Herron Art Muséum now belongs to the public, after a preview Saturday and a more or less stormy session of the exhibiting artists, The meeting of artists, was featured by a discussion of the jury system of choosing the winning exhibits, left things pretty much in status quo, The artists did vote, however,

| oil painting, “View of Brookville” and | Frank V. Hoffman, Chicago, won

ana

1€SS sala

Schetl an honorable mention with a still life in oil. The show will be open public

CLEANED

49:

PER PAIR

Lined or Unlined Any Material

ANY PLAIN

= 49

today’s meet-|

Fishback, ex- | 1 |

LEI LIE

to the

i Which | _throughout the month, the National] ition: He rbert| d C. D. Lever, |

of Gen-

Gregg of district representativ eral Foods Corp Tonight will be ‘car with several radio The election of officers will tomorrow and close with a

Lebanon, n n IT HAPPENED in the Hammond Security office the otheryday. An interviewer strode up to the counter to claim an applicant. He glanced at a card in his hand. “Mr. Bumpus,” he called out. Two gentlemen in the waiting room stood up. The interviewer, perturbed, peated: “Mr. Bumpus?”

Y0O0 HOO, MRS. NEIGHBOR!

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| TRAIN PLUNGES INTO HOME NEW YORK, May 5 (U. P).—| A 27-car freight train of the Long Island Railroad jumped the track in Queens borough today and plunged into the two-story frame home of Teofil Dziewionikowsky and | his family. Three members of the! | family and & policeman who helped injured.

the

bee = (RRR

ndis

tars

1 Night featured be held convention will | nquet at which GovSchricker and SecJames Tucker will

Three new street improvements,

the two of them downtown, were apba ernor Henry I retam State

gnesak

His Stay Brief At Boys Town

A 17 voutt unity to Flanagan's

TLL

of Scherrer acted as chair-

Tré-

|rescue them were

Cleaned and VEAR-OLD Pressed who

ndianapolis an opporat Father Town Ne-

was o make Bovs

en

00d

11

braska was Court

held on a vehicle but

at he pccused of stealing a car in Omaha end breaking into a store,

the Indiana Stn

inal

back here toda weeks

in Criminal Six ago the vouth ‘was aking charge on probation in an offer of care Two weeks after there, the youth was

was bhlaced accept Boys Town arrived

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He was sentenced to te Farm

today.

a year on

in Crim-

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prize of $100 with & landscape. He won first prize last year. Frederick Rash, art school student, won the Art Association prize of $25 with a flower study, “Spring Work,” and Lawrence Trissel, Anderson, won the water color prize of $50 with his “Dwellings, Afternoen.” The. winnér of the scupture prize was Robert Lohman, also an art student, with a terra cotta head, “Billy Thompson.” Edwin Pulwider, Brookville, won

| & St,

| cost

L. railroad. Engineer

of reconstruction at $35,700.

MANSION OF 1791 LEV FLED JOHNSTOWN, N. Y. (U. P).-

Johnson estimated the of resurfacing at $18700 and |

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