Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 October 1941 — Page 13

NESDAY, OCT. 1,

TEACHING STAFF * CHANGES VOTED

Board Approves Lease of Space for Defense

Training School.

The Indianapolis School Board fast night approved several changes in the teaching staff. It also authorized the lease of the entire third floor of a building at 444 N. Capitol Ave. for an additional defense training school. . The resignations of two teachers were accepted. They are Miss Grace Shoup of Shortridge High School and Miss Catherine Wollam Baum.gart of School 5. Clerical workers who resigned are Annette Kingholz, Technical High School, and DeLoris Rehm and Lilyan Reiser, both of Manual Training. : Student Assistants Quit

The following student assistants ed: Fred Henke, Tech; Jua-

resign : nita Marvel, John Lewis and Wil-

liam Cantwell, all of Shortridge; Rosemary Stewart, Juanita Parrott, Ypuise Beeler, Aaron Scott and Jacqueline Tahl, all of Crispus Attucks, and Richard Reed of Washington.

Mary E. Rudicel was appointed |

to School 80 and Muriel Mannette to School 24. New high school assistants named were: Dorothy Masters, Shortridge; David Springer. Manual, and Jennie ‘Dennis, Washington.

Replacements Made

Assistants to replace those who resigned are: Richard S. Jones, Chares E: hoppenhorst and George E. onnor, Tech; Mildred Davis, Roberta Robinson, Gilbert B. Langford, Arleana Jamerson and Eunice Tompkins, Crispus Attucks, Corinne Longsdorf and James ‘Stone, Shortridge; Rachel Perkins and Betty McElfresh, Manual; William Watson, Richard Arnholter, Robert Mannfeld, Bert Edwards and William McClellan, Thomas Carr Howe, and James Broderick, Washington. . : Carl Dawson, teacher of instrumental music at ‘Manual, was granted a leave of absence for the duration of military service.

Assignments Changed

Several changes in assignments were also approved. They are: Evelyn Fisher, junior to senior clerk at Tech; Glen Grosbach, student assistant in music at Shortride, salary increase; Dorothy Weyreter, commercial assistant to clerk- - stenographer at Manual, and Dorothy Thornberry, from stenographer in social service in the superintendent’s office to a similar position at Manual. i Space at 444 N. Capitol was leased irom the 444 N, Capitol Ave. Co, Inc, from Oct. 1, 1941, to June 30, 1942. The rental is to be $727.60 a month. Installation of equipment and signing of contracts for utilities , also were approved.

NAZIS USE NEW PLANE LONDON, Oct. 1 (U. P.).—The German air force was believed today in air circles to have placed a new fighter in action on the Western Front, an FW-190, a low-wing, radial-engined plane armed with six

1041

had.

destroyed.

their burns.

- How C

ommunity Fund R

——— THE INDIA

evives Hope

The house has been repaired . . . and they have hope.

The day the stove exploded and set fire to the house they lost hope . . . and that was all they

They got the children out of the house, There were eight of them. They saved some of the furniture, too, but most of it was

Then they stood in the street in the fierce heat of the blazing frame shack and watched silently. They wondered as they nursed

It wasn’t enough that the head of the family had lost a good job in industry and then was laid off WPA. His house nearly burned down. The youngsters nothing to eat; clothes and furniture were gone in smoke. That’s where the Volunteers of America, an agency assisted by the Community Fund, stepped in. After the embers and debris had been cleared away there remained enough of the house for a makeshift shelter.

nishings, utensils and clothing which had been lost. It was impossible to find the family of eight children and the parents any other place in which to live at a price they could afford on the scanty pickings the father managed to get doing odd jobs. And his family didn’t want relief. So, thé family went back to live in the house where the sky shone through the broken roof and the odor of smoke was heavy. And now the house has been repaired. And they have hope.

PRESS FREEDOM

ed eR

Sendoff From Mrs. Willkie

LAUDED BY FOR

National Newspaper Week Observance Starts in 5000 Communities.

NEW YORK, Oct. 1 (U. P.)— President Roosevelt said today that

“should awaken in the hearts and souls of all Americans a renewed determination to defend and main-

-|tain and perpetuate the priceless

heritage of a free press.” “The maintenance of an unfettered press, informed by truth and guided by a courage and conscience

public welfare,” the President said,

patriotism. “I trust as a result of the forthcoming observance that Americans everywhere will have a renewed sense of the incalculable blessing

- {which a free press confers. It must

be maintained against all assaults.” The President’s statement was released by the National Newspaper Week Committee of the Newspaper Association Managers, which is sponsoring educational programs in 5000 communities of the nation, starting today, on the theme “the newspaper lights the way of freeom.” Observance of the week will include visits to newspaper plants, civic club meetings on the subject of the press, newspaper exhibits, essay contests, and advertisements, speeches, editorials and news stories on the part played by newspapers in the country’s life and national defense. : o Many prominent persons led by Secretary of State Cordell Hull paid tribute to the press in statements. “A free and informed press is es-

DEFENSE AREAS

U. S. to Finance Additions At Walkertown, Jeffersonville, New Albany.

Approval of three Federal school expansion projects near the Kingsbury Ordnance Plant at LaPorte and the Charlestown powder plant was announced in Washington to-

day. Additions to present school buildings to cost a total of $722,344 will be constructed by the Federal Government at Walkerton, near the Kingsbury plant, and at Jefiersonville and New Albany, to serve the Charlestown area. The projects are a part of the defense public works projects of the Federal Works Administration. Dr. C. T. Malan, State Superintendent of Public Instruction, said that the new additions were the first step toward relieving the overcrowded school conditions in the State’s defense areas. At Walkerton, $283,000 will be expended; at Jeffersonville, $131,700

or eight machine-guns,

7

Gong ——

and at New Albany, $307,644. ro

Large Figure With Larger Hips

Faces Fit and Al

The woman who is size 36-44 and has a hipline larger in proportion to the rest of her figure has two problems to fight. One ‘plain bad corseting. The other is

a semblance of good corseting|

achieved through expensive altera-

tion. Let’s take the bad corseting| |

first. The easiest way to control

this particular figure problem is| 2 with a girdle. But the girdle must|

be very firm to hold in the hipline.

A firm girdle, however, does not § it merely| §

melt the flesh away, shifts it to another section of the silhouette. In this instance, because the thighs are generally large in

proportion to the hipline, the flesh| |

is generally pushed up—to a roll of fat above the waistline of the girdle,

where there should be no excess;

flesh at all. The result of this bad corseting is an extremely bad silhouette, because while the figure looks smaller at the hipline, it looks Jarger at the waist and the entire

_ effect of corseting to control the:

hipline is lost. :

The other method—of fitting figure of this type with an all-in-one—is the method that involves extensive alterations. This type of ‘full-hipped figure is usually smaller above the waistline than it is below it. Therefore, the all-in-one that fits and controls the hipline is too big for the bustline. The brassiere and waistline sections must be reshaped and cut down to fit the figure. The result of these altérations is that frequently the entire line of the foundation is completely lost—because. the foundation was never designed to be altered so drastically in the first place. The foundation seems to fit much better, but the line is neither comfortable nor smooth! : Our suggestion for this type of figure is the Artist Model Corsette sketched here. This all-in-one foundation is one-piece in effect, but two-piece in reality. It is outstandingly successful because the foundation is de- . signed with the out-of-proportion measurements of this figure type in

2 ine

We Are Ple

speciel Rep Foundations. will be Second Floor: throug

you abo

you select your fall

Ayres’ Co

is Just] §

ased to Anno

resentative

hout this week fo

ut your figure PF

teration Problem

mind. And if it has to be adjusted, the alterations are so slight, nothing of the original line is lost. The result is that the girdle section fits perfectly; the brassiere section fits perfectly; and the midriff is smooth! The Artist Model sketched here is 12.50. We have many others at a wide range of prices. If a large hipline is your problem, won’t you come in and let us help you solve it?

Sincerely,

L. S. AYRES & CO.

se

unce That

of Artist Model orset Shops advise

help

in our c

oblems and to

rsots—Second Floor.

GET SCHOOL AID

So the volunteers supplied fur-

Boy ‘Marksman’ Stops the Show

ON THE SCREEN at the Mecca Theater, 733 N, Noble St., last night the boys in a “horse opera” were just riding round the hig rock to head ’em off at the gap. At this intensely exciting time something soared from the audience through the screen, making a really for sure gap in it. The missile: was a box of crackerjack, and the marksman was a 15-year-old boy. When Sergt. Albert Magenheimer later questioned him, he said that he just got excited at the picture and threw the box in his excitement. > It was a $300 bullseye, said Charles Crail, theater manager, who counted that as his loss.

TRAILER CAMPS

To Act on Petition for Eagle Creek Site.

Regulation of trailer camps and tourist cabins which have been

local defense industries is rapidly becoming the biggest problem confronting the newly organized County Plan Commission. The ordinance setting up the new

County Plan Commission office in the Court House Sept. 1, makes no specific provision for trailer camps. However, after the first month's

] operation of the ordinance, Fred

Nordseik, executive secretary, has had several complaints about trailer camps. : A special meeting of the County Plan Commission has been called for tonight to act on an application

asked to open a trailer camp along Township.

that the camp would impair the value of their residence properties. The commission also is scheduled to act on the petition of the Indiana Gun Club for the erection of six shooting traps and picnic grounds at 38th and the Post Road. Since the new county zoning ordinance began operation a month

bulk of the permits was for new residences. These total 21 with a valuation of $58,850. Others were for small garages and store rooms.

only to building outside the City limits.

THE PRIZE ‘FUSELAGE’

Vera Zorina, ballerina and film actress, has the “most beautiful fuselage in the world,” Oxnard, Cal, aviation cadets decided today. Members of the aviation cadet battalion of the U. S. Army Air Corps selected Miss Zorina’s figure from photographs of 500 other women as the most beautiful.

‘BECOME ISSUE:

County Plan Commission |3 Fri

mushrooming up overnight near|E.R

33 Eagle Creek near 56th St. in Pike|; Cu

Nearby residents have complained |]

ago, it has granted building permits|n for valuations totalling $62,475. The Vik

The county zone ordinance applies |

HOLLYWOOD, Oct. 1 (U. P.).—|y

101 IN COUNTY REPORT AT FORT

234 Hoosiers Will Be Inducted Into Army Today At ‘Harrison.

today at Ft. Harrison, a part of 234 Hoosiers who will report for induction.

Today’s deliveries are a part of the 15th State selective service call which will close Thursday. Marion County men were:

BOARD NO. 1—George Valentine Green Jr., 133 N. Riley Ave.; Thomas McLean Dunn, 2412 E. 16th St.; Lynn Geralds, 2355 N. Olney 8St.; Wil Sherman Drive; Murl Massingale, ass. Ave.; Vernon Howard Beaver, 2906 E. 22nd St.; Austin Frederick Chapin, 2628 Brookside Ave.;

4716 strong, 2842 Station St.; ale St.

rix,

Lean, 3022 N. Gal

1 os 4104 E. 34th

2314 Roosevelt Ave.;' Wando Cron Schultz( 1204 N. Ril

ey Ave. William Rains, 2230 Carrollton Ave. BOARD NO. 2—Andrew Lewis Dzama,

Johnson, 1514 Carrollton Ave.; Hendrickson, 3608 Orchard. August Miller, 392 N. O I1l.; John Edward Sandstrom, B way Ave.; Otis Wilbert DeHart, 1906 Tallman, Ave.; illiam Edwar 2404 Central Ave. and Arlynn Robert Fessler, 2423 N. Alabama St.

NO. 4—Boynton Frank Moore,

. 29th 8t.; Willi W. 35th St.: Cordsville; Sherman Drive; 2119

A total of 101 Marion County men were to be inducted into the Army

sential to a successful program for |national defense,” Mr. Hull said. Saturday, Oct. 4, will be National Newspaper Boy Day, sponsored by the International Circulation Managers Association. ;

JAPANESE CUT DOWN ON NEWS OF SERIES

MANILA, Oct. 1 (U. P.).—Soldiers and sailors were forgetting air raid drills today until the Yankees and the Dodgers settle the World Series. Tokyo reported that Japanese sports writers had polled their readers and found they liked the Yankees, 2 to 1. The Government,

National Newspaper Week, Oct, 1-8,|

and wholehearted devotion to the| “is a fundamental obligation of}:

sworn in yesterday as candidates.

HOOSIERS’ ART ~ EXHIBIT OPENS a

Work of 30 Is Displayed in

|" State Life Building; on “+. “View All Month.

Seventeen years ago a group of

8 | Hoosier women in Chicago discussed

After ceremonies had been finished aboard the U. S. S. Wheeling, where 31 college graduates were sworn. in as candidates for the Reserve Midshipmen’s School, Mrs. Wendell Willkie (second from left) shakes hands with William MacPhail, sore of Larry MacPhail of the Brooklyn Dodgers, while Mrs. Larry MacPhail shakes with Phillip Willkie, son ‘of Wendell Willkie, at left. The boys were among the men who were

"A Fine Bunch,

The Hoosier guardsmen at Camp Shelby, Miss., “are a fine bunch of boys and we are watching out -for their interests,” Alexander Currie, State District Attorney from Hattiesburg, Miss., said here today. * Mr. Currie, who has co-operated with Camp Shelby authorities on matters of the soldiers’ welfare also is president of the Mississippi State Bar Association and is attending the sessions of the American Bar Association. He reported that there is a “good social relationship” between the Camp Shelby troops and the civilians of nearby Hattiesburg. He said that the “housing situation is once again assuming a normal status” following the first terrific influx of soldiers and their families to the Hattiesburg area. Many of the soldiers and officers have brought their families to Hattiesburg, Mr. Currie said, and special efforts were made to provide adequate school facilities for children in the area.

in line with its policy of conditioning the Japanese populace for war, discouraged interest in ‘the series, and newspapers will not print as long accounts as they. had in past Baseball is a favorite game of the Japanese. The Chinese at Chungking asked, “Whatever became of Babe Ruth?”

years.

He expressed hopes that Governor Schricker will visit Camp Shelby at “his first convenience” declaring that those at the camp and in Hattiesburg would “greatly welcome such a visit. He said he was {glad to be in the home town of Maj. Gen. Robert H. Tyndall, who retired in May as

Mississippian.

Says of Hoosiers at Shelby

commander of Camp Shelby and the 38th Division, of which the Indiana Guardsmen are a part. “The people of Mississippi regretted = exceedingly to lose Gen. Tyndall. ‘He was a general greatly loved by. the soldiers and the civilians.” Mr. Currie said “I would like to

down . there from Indiana that we are making a sustained effort to surround Camp Shelby with the best moral influence and. that the people of Hattiesburg are taking care of the Hoosiers just as they would their own sons.” Mr. Currie, who is the father of three boys, is a World War veteran, and a civic and political leader in Mississippi. 4 )

STRIKE CLOSES 8 HOTELS

PITTSBURGH, Oct. 1 (U. P.).— Eight of Pittsburgh’s largest hotels were closed today by strike "of service employes who walked off

increase.

STOLE TO BUY TOMBSTONE

a tombstone for his mother,

tell the parents of those fine boys

their jobs last midnight in demand for a 15 to 20 per cent basic pay

NEW YORK, Oct. 1 (U. P).— Charles Russo, 25, told police today that he had robbed milkmen to buy

the possibility of exhibiting work of

|| Indiana artists.

The first exhibition was held in March, 1925, in the Marshall Field Picture Galleries. ' Today, the Hoosier Salon Patrons’

| Association, the result of that meet-: | ing 17 years ago, opens its new office

in Room 609, State Life Building. The association just recently moved its office and gallery here from: Chicago. if

On display for the 300 persons invited to the formal opening are works of some 30 Indiana artists. The purpose of the association is stated objectively in their slogan— “Hoosier- Art and Literature in every American home.” The opening today was not to be formal and all those interested are welcome, according to Mrs. Leone idas F." Smith, executive chairman of the group. The pictures on exhibit will be shown through October at the new offices. The office space is being donated by the Wm. H. Block Co. Among those present tomorrow will be Mrs. J. E. P. Holland of Bloomington, president of the association. Other officers are Mark C. Honeywell, Wabash, vice president; Miss Martha V. Moore, Thorntown, secretary; Irving W. Lemaux, Indianapolis, treasurer. John C. Shaffer of Chicago is president emeritus and Mrs. C. B. King of Burlingame, Cal., counselor.

PLAN HOT LUNCHES IN COUNTY SCHOOLS

FORT WAYNE, Ind. Oct. 1 (U. P.).—Nutrition = specialists from Ohio, Indiana, Michigan and West Virginia close a two-day conference on the REA’S rural nutrition program today with a discussion of technical problems involved in pute ting the program into action. . The program—calling for hot lunch service in country schools and increased food preservation fa cilities in rural areas—was outlined to 300 delegates yesterday. } Paul V. McNutt, Social Security Administrator; John W. Studebak= er, Commissioner of the U, 8. Of« fice of Education, and Harry Slate tery, REA Administrator, spoke to the meeting by transcription.

2

George William Luckey, 2518 Sherman Drive; Richard Leon HendE. 10th St.; Charles Allen ArmJames Jacob Mc-

S8t.; Charles Alfred Golden, row 3042 Graceland Ave.; John Frank and Charles

No. 1, Rock Creek, O.; Robert Louis

d Steepleton, | =

BOARD 3009 Salem St.: James Ernest Farmer, 1029

y Ww. William Briggs, 10 Albert Sipf, 1230 W. Breckinridge, 291412 N, a eorge, 1242 W. : Joseph Farrell, 3133 Kenwood Ave.

BOARD NO.45—Paris D. Hattabaugh Jr., 33 Kessler ory Marlin Paul DeHaven,

of Mrs. Ruth Barnhill, who has|ford

515 N. Cable St.; Robert Albert , 16268 Winfield St.; Eddie Clifford Harrington, 201 Traub Ave.; Marsee Os Puehrer, 833 N. Hawthorne Lane; Wesley Elsworth Dill, 246 N. Richland St.; Jean Heuchans. Townsend, 3506 Clifton 8t.; Robert Ova Pearson, 5260 E. 30th St.; Theodore Nickoloff; 1202 N. Capitol Ave.; Robert Howard Shelt 901 N. Belmont ttman, 3631 . Edwards Jr., 648

h . Luett

BOARD NO. 8—Robert Lewis. Monroe, 1030_Church St.; Arnold William Dove, 713 . Delaware St.; Donald Byron Ayres, Wilkes-Barre, Pa.; Ray Scott White, L ington, 2 Asasen Bugsne Helcon, 2004 , as en Bernice Brown, 33612 Ww South St.; Albert Gray Duncan, Spencer Hotel; Frank Leo Balek, 421 N. Delaware St.; Wallace O. Colvin, 429 E. New York St.; Leo Vernon Talley, 713 N. Delaware; Harold James Rowe, Omaha, eb.; Ve! . E. Vermont St.; Myron Richard Ley, 624 N. Illinois St.; Jack Burdette Poynter, 403'2 Mass. Ave.; John Robert Oliver, 344 N. Davidson St.; Clarence Omer Hill, 125 E. St. Joseph St.; Albert Herndon Ball, 3721 Schofield Ave.; urman e Berry, 227 Hiawatha St.; Harry Edmond Sca £5 525 N. Delaware St.; Gene Leo Ryan, Mass. Ave.; onroe Smith, 1006 Prentice Earl St.; James Edward O’Brien, 843 N. M ridian St.; James Richard Smith ville, Ry: Lloyd Clark, St.; Robert Delaware St.; George A. Powell, 713 N. Delaware St.; Garold Paul Query, 509 N. Davidson St.; Glenn Clarence Edwards, 29 S. Harris 8t.; William Leroy McDowell, 225 E. Michigan St.; Jerome Joseph Sheely, 2257 N. Harding St.: Phil Alton Waln! St. and Mark

13 E. alnut . Walker, Cloudcroft, N. M.

LOCAL ORGANIZATIONS

Sponsor Bake Sale—Fidelity Rebekah 227 will sponsor a bake sale at Sears Roebuck & Co. tomorrow. Mrs. Maude Wilson is chairman of the committee.

Legion Group to Meeft—The executive committee of the 12th District, Department of Indiana, American Legion, will meet at 8:15 tomorrow at 119 E. Ohio St. Frank L. Mumford is commander and Fred Hasselbring is adjutant.

0. E. S. Session Tonight—The Millersville Chapter 300 of the Eastern Star will meet at the Millersville Masonic Temple, at 8 o'clock tonight. Mrs. Frances Lee is worthy matron and Albert Jeffers, worthy patron.

Noble Grands to Meet—The Olive Branch Post Noble Grand Association will meet tomorrow noon for luncheon at the home of Mrs. Nellie Milhous, Valley Mill. Assisting hostesses will be Mesdames Ray Miller, Vina Hubbard, Nellie Sas-

{ford and Kate Gardner.

' Fetes Committee—Mrs. George E. Herrick will entertain the general house committee of the Women's

1. 0. O. F. Group to Elect—The Marion County I. O. O. F. Homecoming Committee will meet Saturday at 8 p. m. at the I. O. O. F. Hall, to elect officers for the year.

Basket Picnic Sunday—All former Jasonville residents now living in Indianapolis have been invited to a basket picnic Sunday at Riverside Park.

Dempisas to Meet—The Democratic ub of Center Township (outside) will hold a business meeting at 8 p. m. today at the home of Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Degner, 351 N. 18th St., Beech Grove. W. A. Benedict, president of the group, will preside .

Post. to Give Card Party—The Sahara Grotto Post 264, American Legion, will hold the first in a series of card parties at the club house,

13th and Park Ave. Friday at 8p.m.|

E. B. Tillson is chairman and others Roy E. Degischer, Ralph W. Johns, P. Beckham and E. B. Tillson. G. O. P. League to Meet—The

Marion County Republican League will meet at the home of Mrs. Anna

Ce — uta) of Sahara Grotto at 12:30

Washington, 1015 N, Missouri

.; Randell y Bellefontaine St.; Pranklin, 615 N. New Jersey C= , Louis1132 Bellefontaine Sylvester Emmonger, 1010 N.

Luke Wright Talks About

“The Man Who’s HARD ON HIS CLOTHES’

taking part in the arrangements are}-

Mesdames Rocky Holland, Charles| °

Here’s the rub

a

Here’s the rub

We've all suffered with this experience . . . your

suit wearing out at the cuffs and seat, at the elbo

coat sleeves, the trouser ws. (There's the rub, men,

the spots where most of our business suits show signs of wear the soonest) An Ayreshire Sharke skin clear finished Worsted Suit can take it (the rub,. | mean).. . . it's a tough wearing fabric . « « like a coat of mail, it will give you plenty of service «+ « it keeps its shape and retains its press.

® Put yourself and your problems in the hands of an Ayres’ Salesperson. They can help you!

Clothing—Second Floor

- The Store for Men