Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 January 1942 — Page 18

PAGE 18

Knox Golfs With Wheeler; Their Relations Above Par

WASHINGTON, Jan. 27 (U. P.) —|tionist battle against Col. Knox’ The Battle of Burning Tree—where confirmation to the Cabinet post, ® stout isolationist and a stout in-!told the United Press he was ‘more terventionist joined hands for 18 surprised than I thought I could be” holes of golf against the common when he walked out to the first tee enemy—became part of Washington to greet his partners. history today. | He explained he had taken adA non-politically minded golf vantage of a system at the course steward was primarily responsible whereby on Sunday golfers enter a for what came near to being the tgyrnament for a prize and are not greatest social error in capital his- | given the names of their fellow tory. play ers in advance. g He matched Secretary of the, «1 walked out to the tee to join| Navy Frank Knox and Senator Bur-| what I thought was my foursome ton K. Wheeler (D. Mont.) for 18! y hen somebody called my name,’ holes at the Burning Tree course on he said. Sunday | The name caller, he explained, Mr. Wheeler, who led the isola-| was the redoubtable Senator Mile— tard E. Tydings (D. Md.), who supported the Administration on most of its foreign policy issues but who voted against repeal of the Neutrality Act. | “Come here and meet your partners, Burton,” Senator Tydings said. “Youre playing with us| { today.” Senator Wheeler turned around] to shake hands with Col. Knox and

WHY INVITE

RHEUMATISM

And Other Painful Conditions

181 ~-

Rijfumal ism ules 5 a 4 Assistant Secretary of the Treasury John L. Sullivan. eh described the scene] “distinctly cool.” | ort five months ago, Mr. Wheel- |

ler toured the country ning

Left to right are:

bad teeth nf re amined thoroughly sure. vou are not deliberately ing furture pain EASY EXTRACTION

| the Journalists’ corner at the Butler Miss Mary Bostwick of The Indianapolis Star; Eugene J. Cadou, manager of the | Indianapolis bureau of the International News Service; Justice Swaim; Miles Tiernan, assistant managmanaging editor of The Indianapolis Guthrie, city editor of the Indianapolis News, also will participate. The Quiz Kids will be featured on the President's Birthday Party program for the benefit of infantile paralysis victims.

ing editor of The Star, and Nor

Field House.

man E. Isaacs,

THE INDIANAPOLIS MES

They'll Match Wits With Quiz Kids.

As if it would do any good, these journalists—reputedly well-informed—don caps and gowns to brush up on their larnin’ for their mental tussle with the Quiz Kids Friday night. of Justice H. Nathan Swaim of the Indiana Supreme Court who, unfortunately, will not be permitted in

They are under the tutelage

Times. Wayne

Office Hours 8 A. M. to 5 P. M.

THE PEOPLES DENTISTS

3613 W. Washington St. First Stairwav East of Ilinois—Above Baker's. We Go the Limit to Please

EE A BA A

LIAN

MADE WITH. ASBESTOS

| Col. Knox and his associates “war mongers.” Evidently, the participants on sidered the great American gam {i} golf an activity

. BLOCK MURALS |

Store Tomorrow: Exhibit | To Be Permanent.

Ask to see Sant sik De Luxe numbers photographic Made to Fit Any Shape Table

Four murals ov

up § the defense bond campaign. The slogan murals is:

Phone MA-3331

BUY WITH CONFIDENCE | 328 Baltkers Trust 2

INDIANAPOLIS TABLE PAD C0.

fense — Buy defense Phone or write. Our representative will call, day or night, for measurement. ’ No obligation. See Full Line of Floral and Wood Grain Patterns stamps now! to match the top of vour table. |

—— | Show Public's War Task 0 I , | Meier S. Block,

Protect Your EYES [ino

contained

! To provide for bonds

company

war effort.

be Governor Schricker; Will H. Smith, collector of internal revenus: W. Wray Fleming, state administrator of defense bond sales, Mayor Reginald H. Sullivan.

Marines to Take Part

FIRST

"Procrastination is the Thief of Time," said a great philosopher. He might also have said that it is the Thief of Sight. The longer you put off getting needed glasses the more you handicap yourself.

The doors of the store will open at 9a. m. at 9:15 with a processional by the Tech High School brass choir followed by the Marine Corps Color Guard. The store also is using its Market | and Illinois Sts. windows to display | photographic murals prepared wiih the assistance of the Government entitled, “We The People at War’ Each window will deal with some] separate aspect of the war. The murals will remain permanently in the store. The window displays will remain through Feb, 2.

Established 15 Years

- CREDIT!

Ris me

Dr. Paul Ww. Schmidt

11 E. OHIO ST. Across From the Postoffice R|-]1633

‘CRANK ABOUT BEER FLAVOR? Make this All-Grain Beer Test...

The harder you are to please with beer, the surer you are to be delighted with Sterling. It's brewed the slower, costlier way that gets everything good from natural grains and grains only. That's why it has such zesty true-beer flavor . . . no sugar, no glucose, no fattening syrups ever added. Fd Want proof Just try three bottles. It’s ten to one yoi'll be a Sterling fan a “for life . : . Now In New Handy-Pack 12 Non-Returnable Bottles— Starling No Deposit. Merling

STERLING

Srezmvve Brewers, Inc, Brarsrik. Nelorans - P.

yv which u -anscends | | the -differences of political ZL

Ceremonies wv Scheduled at

the main entrances to the Wm. % 29 Block Co. will be dedicated at 9: 15 a. m. tomorrow in the interests £}

“To promote a more perfect rin the common de- |

and Qverall wa for 3600

vice supervised the preparation of the murals which portray ‘the part the people must play in the |

and |

The ceremony will start!

DIRECTOR OF RADIO ‘WHAT TO PREACH

AT I. U. RESIGNS

Times Special

pO Ind. Jan.

. Robert E. Barton Allen, poo,

IS PASTOR'S TOPIC

“Shall all the suffering now going

| radio programs at Indiana Uni-| on in the world be wasted?”

versity, has resighed and at the

of English at Carleton

Northfield, Minn.

REVISE PAY FOR

In Institutions Is About 1 Per Cent.

A pay

Taking part in the ceremony will [one per cent for the 3600 employees :- of the state institutions was adopt. | | the State Personnel :

| ‘ed today Board. The schedule, with but a few ex- | ceptions, has been approved by the | State Budget Committee and it be{comes effective Feb. 1. W. Leonard Johnson, Personnel Board director, estimated that the schedule, which provides uniform salaries for ployees in all state institutions, ; would increase the personal services costs at all 20 institutions by about | $18. 000 a year. The schedule also covers the salaries of 3000 Health Board and, | Welfare Department employees but | {must be approved by Washington | before becoming effective.

by

Some Salaries Trimmed

In fixing the schedule, the Board

the final step preparatory to giving examinations to institution em-

stitutions as provided by a passed by the ’41 Legislature. | Mr. Johnson said that examina-|

few days for chief clerks, guards, atendants, farmers, typists and stenographers.

Merit System by July

He said he expected to have all institution employees under merit system by July 1. The salary schedule fixes the | minimum and maximum salaries

| which an institution superintendent =

‘may pay an employee. For exam-, ‘ple, the salary range fixed for a | switchboard operator is from $60 to [$100 a month, {poultry farmer is from $90 to $155

|a month. :

| To go along with the salary | | schedule, the Budget Committee has adopted a maintenance sched-| ule which provides the amounts ‘that shall be deducted from the em-| | ployee’s salary for maintenance received at the institution at which | he works.

Schedule Covers All

For example, an employee who! eats three meals a day at the insti[tution at which he works shall have 1$15 a month deducted from his pay | check. And a man who lives with! his wife in a house or apartment lon the institution grounds and! | whose utility bills are paid by the! institution shall have $45 a month deducted from his pay. All State

{

the exception of the superintendents and their private secretaries. The superintendents may not pay an employee more than the maximum provided in the schedule nor less than the minimum and they must deduct maintenance from salaries. Among the higher salary brackets fixed by the Board are these: Con-| troller, $350-$435 a month; person-! nel director, $420-$500; maternal and child health physician II, $325$400; Attorney III, $300-$360; child welfare director, $325-$400.

Adver tisement

WAKE UP YOUR LIVER BILE —

Without Calomel—And You'll Jump Out of Bed in the Morning Rarin’ te Go

The liver should pour 2 pints of bile juiee into your bowels every day. If this bile is not flowing freely, Jou: food may not digest. It may just decay in the bowels. Then Sd ts up your ® You get cone ed, ao feel sour, sunk and the world

a old Carter's Little t 2 Ring of bil¢ flow“up and up.” directed.

Dr. to Preach

0 hy tect his country and his beliefs in | God.”

That was the question put before ‘beginning of the second semester the Indiana Sate Pastors’ Conferwill take up his new duties as vice | ence today |president and associate professor | welder,

by

Today”

country? Emphat-

a citizen his duty «is to defend A Christian must pro-

. Oscar F. Blackpastor 03 the Church of the| College, Reformation, Washington, D. C. Blackwelder discussed “What before several hundred pastors in the First Baptist Church for last day sessions of baie two-day meeting. “Defend our ically ves. [Pom ” he said.

But let's also defend our

Dies in Traffic

AARON ROYSTER DIES NEARING 98

‘Served Union Army During Civil War; Once Bailiff In Criminal Court.

Aaron R. Royster,. who at 20, donned the blue of the Union Army | § in 1864, today answered the last roll | § call. ; He died at Veterans’ Hospital of the infirmities of old age. He would have been 98 next April 13. Thursday he will be buried in Mt. Pleasant Cemetery at Glens Valley beside his only son, Oliver, who died six years ago, and his wife, who died {35 years ago. Mr. Royster —he was called “Rack” by his nephews and nieces and his G. A. R. comrades—was born on a farm where Speedway City now is located. He served in Company A, 132d Regiment of Indiana Volunteers, during the last year of the Civil War. | During the heyday of the horse, Mr. Royster was a buggy salesman, and at one time he panned for gold in the streams of Arkansas. In his later years he served as a bailiff in Criminal Court under the late| william W. Hampton, Judge Franklin McCray. ! / Before going to the Veterans’, |more than 50 years was in the Hospital two weeks ago, the “old| |printing and stationery business soldier” lived with a niece, Mrs. here, died today in his home, 2035] Minnie Watt of Flackville. Charles! N. Meridian St. He was 86. Te Ee Askin] Mr. Hampton operated the old | Services will be at 2 p. m. Thurs- Hampton Printing Co. here {day at the W. Washington Mortuary ago. He was a member of the Tab-

of Royster & Askin. 'ernacle Presbyterian Church and

FRANKLIN “PHYSICIAN Set Landmarks Lodge, F. & HURT IN 431 CRASH Born in Richmond, Ind., Dec. 3,

Dr. Ralph Blackford, 48, of Frank- 1855, he was a’member of a pioneer lin, was reported in serious condi- | Quaker family in Wayne County. tion at Methodist Hospital today | Survivors are his wife, Mrs. Imogen because of injuries received in an| B. Hampton; a son, Wells Hampton auto collision on Indiana Highway of Zionsville; one grandson, Wells 431, near Southport. Hampton Jr.,'and a brother, John He received a crushed chest when !Hampton of Indianapolis. his car collided with that of Harry| Funeral services, conducted by the E. Ash, 22, of Plainfield. Mr. Ash, Rev. Roy Ewing Vale of the Tabslightly injured, and Dr. Blackford | ernacle Church, will , be held at blamed a third car for the acci-|2 p. m. Thursday in the Flanner & dent. The third car reportedly did!Buchanan Mortuary. Burial will be

Mrs. Rozetta Talley Melson, 29, who was killed today in an auto accident .at Kentucky and Oliver Aves. She was the 14th traffic fatality of 1942 in Marion County.

WILLIAM HAMPTON, PRINTER, DIES AT 8

who for

not stop. |ifi Crown Hill.

years |

TUESDAY, JAN. 27, 1942

LEGAL AID UNIT

GETS 660 CASES

‘Society Saves Its Clients $1956 in Last Year, Report Shows.

Attorneys of the Indianapolis Legal Aid Society, Inc., handled 660 cases for persons unable to hire legal counsel, the Society's first annual report showed today. The Society, organized Feb. 10, 1941, to provide legal counsel for citizens without means to pay for lawyers, handled the cases at a cost of $4195. Funds received by the Society from the Community Fund, the Indianapolis Foundation and from dues paid by members totaled $6437, leaving a $2200 halance for 1942 operations.

Saved Clients $1956

The report showed that the Society collected and saved for clients $1956 through court actions and {legal advice on property and financial matters. Of the total cases listed 169 were for advice ‘only and 96 cases involved military matters incident to imen leaving for the armed forces. | Fifty-four cases involved real estate disputes, 34 were given legal aid in | collecting family support money and 130 cases involved collection of back wages. The Society helped 46 clients adjust their debts and 70 persons were helped in domestic disputes includling divorces.

War to Increase Work

George W. Eggleston, secretary and general counsel for the Society, said the war will bring increased legal work for the Society in attempting to protect the legal rights of men called to the service and their dependents. Other officers of the Society are Jeremiah L. Cadick, president, and Robert F. Nelson, treasurer. The Board of Directors, besides Mr. Cadick and Mr. Nelson, are Cari Wilde, Thomas D. Stevenson, Eugene C, Miller, Clarence F. Merrell and Ar-

range schedule providing { an overall wage increase of shout]

various classes of em-| “

raised the salaries of some and]. decreased the salaries of others. |: Adoption of the schedule marks

ployees and job applicants to in-| ° stitute the merit system in the in-| : law; :

tions would be announced within a| prison : clerks, | :

the

The range for al |

institution employees are covered by the new schedule with|

\ Sf

(Right) Sizes: 9-15

(Above, : 9-15

thur C. Shea

2 N Exhilarating in Color — Animated in Line —

Newcomers

Sizes: 9-15, 10-20, 38-44, 46-52, 181/,-241/,

you can affor and surely cut,

Are Our

\ NO errors, see this group of simply nicely detailed spring fashions! No

\, dE . matter whether you spend your days behind a

desk or doing fill your needs sm

we

— RRIF IOI ~

(Right)

(Above) Sizes: 9-15

tense work, here are frocks to

3 t

Yd

(Right)

Sizes y