Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 November 1942 — Page 20
Hoosier Vegobons
(Editor's Note: Ernie Pyle has left England ‘for Afrjea. Meantime, several columns which he i ‘wrote in Britain and which were delayed in trans- : “ahission ‘have just arrived. One of these Taews)
AN AMERIGAN AIRDROME IN ENGLAND, Nov.
Fe 23 (Delayed) —My faverite bomber crew is “The % ° House of Jackson.’ . because I've happered to get better acquainted. with
They're my favorites simply
them than with any of the others. That ‘House of Jackson” business doesn’t mean & thing. Nobody on the crew is named Jackson; none of them even knows anybody named Jackson. It was started by the navigator calling the captain ‘“Jackson” one day for no reason at all. The’ captain pegan calling the ravigator “Jackson” in return, and everybody got to calling everybody else “Jackson,” until now the vinole thing is “The House of Jackson.”
“The House of Jackson” has beer, on six raids over German territory up to the shoment of writing. They've shot down five German planes already, and 2aven’t been scratched yet except for a few pieces of flak. I suppose every captain thinks his crew is the best—but Capt. “Jackson” says flak doesn’t bother him, and with the crew he’s got he isn’t afraid of fighters any more.
The Captain Lives Alone
THE CREW menhers say the captain is all busiRess, and’ plenty, while they're on a mission. But 8s soon as they cross the English coast coming home, he starts singing “Deep in the Heart of Texas” over the inter-comm. The captain has a standing reward of a bottle of Whisky to_ each member of his crew who brings
By Ernie Pyle
4
down a German plane. He is already two bottles behind, as he can't get whisky (it’s hard to buy by the bottle now) as fast as his boys shoot down Germans.
The captain lives alone in a small room in one a of the field's many stuccoed barracks buildings. The|$ light in ‘his room is bad, and the mirror is covered|}
i
with dust. In one corner is an iron contraption hold-|§ 5 a
ing washpan, water pitcher and wastebasket.
If he wants hot water he has to heat it on his : nt
own little stove in the other corner. But fuel economy is so urgent he seldom has a fire in his stove.
Like all the others, clear up to the commanding? ‘ officer, he has to walk about 200 yards to the nearest; toilets and] shower baths are. He solves the shaving dilemma by|#}
“ablution” hut, where the lavatories, dry-shaving in his room with an electric razor.
Something We're Fighting For
ON THE RAFTERS above his bed are a pair of| Ji
varnished snowshoes and a pair of white skis. He]
has never been on skis in his life. It seems the for-
mer occupant of the room had been stationed in|}
Greenland, where he skied. When he moved on from here he just abandoned his snow equipment. On the captain's desk a radio he bought on this side. In the afternoons when there are no missions and the day’s test flights and lectures are over, he lies on his bed and eats canned peanuts and listens to the German radio. He does this because they have so much better music than the BBC. At 5 o'clock the announcer gives the news in German, and then in English. We sat listening to the German announcer; and the captain said: “I suppose if a German pilot were caught listening to the British radio, he'd be shot.” If you're looking for things we're fighting for, there’s one.
Inside Indianapolis By Lowell Nussbaum
rm PHONE RANG on the city desk. It was a woman calling for verification of several rumors she got from a neighbor who heard them at the state house. One was that “six U. S. warships followed Mrs. Roosevelt to England and back and that's the reason we have coffee rationing— she diverted our ships from South America.” Bet those warships had to go some to keep up with the plane on which Mrs. R. made the trip. . . . Pvt. Bill Oatis, the rather frail, scholarly looking former reporier for the Associated Press, is back on furlough from Camp Crowder, Mo., with a story on himself. He told of passing a couple of - soldiers in Huntington, Ind. hearing one of them remark: “Oh, look at the 4-F in uniform!” . . Bob Gibbs, employed in the information service of the U. S. employment service here, reported for service with the U. S. merchant marine at Sheepshead Bay, - Brooklyn, N. Y. He'll probably get a permanent.shipboard assignment as chief lookout, in view of his height—6 feet 4 or 5.
Concerts, Kraut, Coffee
TONIGHT WILL OPEN the Indianapolis symphony’s series of young people’s concerts, one of the finest features of our symphony. The orchestra is running into stiff competition, what with Sonja Henie's ice revue opening at the same time, out at the Coliseum. The ticket sale for the concert isn’t as good as it should be. The concert is for people young in years—and also for those young in spirit. And if, perhaps, you've already planned to take in Sonja same other night, we'd like to call your attention to
go? It's worth while. ...Heinie Mueller, Center township trustee, reports he’s eating “sauer kraut, spare ribs and stewed tomatoes” today, and wouldn't trade it for six turkeys. ... Dr.John M. Young, surgeon at eity hospital, leaves tonight for Miami to report as a captain in the army air corps. , . . Capt. G. E. (Gabe) ¥rand (insurance) is home on leave from Aberdeen,
Washington
WASHINGTON, Nov. 26.—This year the Thanks‘giving table may not be so bountifully laden as it was last year. At least there hangs over it the grasping hand of the ration book. Some chairs may be vacant if only because of transportation difficulties. : Se A year ago we were still revelling in unlimited supplies of food. We were driving about the country with unlimited gasoline and tires. But in some ways we were a much more worried nation then than we are now. A year ago we saw the axis gradually pushing its: conquest. The Germans were smashing into Russia and it looked as though Moscow would fall. Japan was pushing south into Indo-China. Although Pearl Harbor was still a couple of weeks in the future, Washington knew on Thanksgiving day that there was little hope of peace. Secretary of State Hull was advising the army and navy that he had obtained all of the time that he could and that they must expect Japan to strike somewhere before long. In other words, a year ago we were scarcely touched by the war. Yet we saw the hand closing in and there. was real doubt among the best informed People ? 2s. to. whether the axis march could be.stopped. "Now, a year later, we are far more affected by the war. We have had our casualties in men and ships. We know ‘that. more are to come.: -Yet the victory which seeméd somewhat doubtful a year ago is now a certainty. - 7 '
And Another Source for Hope
THE POTENTIAL strength of the united nations has been converted to active war strength and the weight is "beginning to tell. * We kndw now that Russia cannot bz smashed and that on the contrary .ghe will be able to counter-attack. We are plant 4 in North Africa opposite the south-
My Day
WASHINGTON.—I have a letter from. someone asking why the president could not have cut out ving this year, adding that there certainly is ‘nothing for which to be thankful 7 IT grant you that there ‘are some persons whom I ¥ can fobgive for feeling that there is ‘nothing this year for which they ¢an give thanks. Even those, : ~ however, who are walking through _ the Valley'of the Shadow, because “who! ey love have left them here on earth, should stop and ! think ‘before they do away with ‘Thanksgiving festival. ‘That first festival, the first publie rejoicing held in New England, . was not without those who walked in the Valley of the Shadow too.
: "One look mt the old cemeteries wil ar you that, But those pioneers gave thanks and we likewise may look about us and try to find the things for which we can 1 give thanks today.
ihe things quite obviously is that we can
Md. . .. A spy reports that you can get buly one pat of butter at an Ohio st. steak house. , .. The I. A. C. has cards on its dining room tables explaining the one-cup coffee rule and neatly sidestepping any kicks by heading the cards with: “Blame it on Hitler.” Not a single kick reported thus far.
Election Echoes
SOMEONE OVER at the city hall hasn't heard that; the election is over, doesn’t know how it came out, or maybe they just don’t give a darn. Anyway, in one of the basement windows on the ‘Ohio st. side of the city hall is a campaign placard. It’s printed patriotically in red, white and blue, bears a V for victory with three dots and a dash, and the words, “Myers for Mayor.” Bet it comes off there Jan, 1— if not sooner. . . . George L. Winkler, one of the group mentioned as a possible choice for police chief, says there’s nothing to the rumor that he’s resigned his job with the internal revenue department. , . . Rue Alexander, the new secretary of state, will be sworn into office at 10 a. m. Tuesday. Mark J. O'Malley of Huntington, new supreme court judge-elect, will aominister the oath. . . . State Auditor Richard T. James also will be sworn | in for his second term as apditor Tuesday. »
It’s Nice Work tf—
KIEFER MAYER is authority for the report that Herbert M. Woollen, the insurance executive, has been making boasts around the Columbia club that he (Mr. Woollen) has been promised appointment by Gen. Tyndall as the city hall “dean of women.” Mr. Woollen=could not be reached for confirmation. . . . Frank LaBarbara, who was in charge of Tyndall headquarters in the recent campaign, is ill at Methodist hos-
: . pital with a: kidney ailment.. Mr. LaBarbara, a Rainthe symphony concer: tonight. If you're free, why not -
bow division veteran, iias been mentioned for a city hall post in the new administration—probably purchasing agent or membership on the safety board. Je’s in room 303. . . . Also at Methodist, recuperating from an operation over the week-end, is Don Carlson of the United Press bureau. . .. Bob Bloem, also of the U. P. bureau, is the proud papa of a baby boy, Kenneth Bloem, born at Methodist Tuesday.
By Raymond Clapper
ern shore of the axis, ready, to strike from that side. On the north, England is anchored as a gigantic aircraft carrier from which allied airplanes will batter Germany in the months to come. In the Pacific we have checked the Japanese advance for the time being. If we continue to hold, the time -will come when a real Offensive can move forward against Japan. That is the situation which gives us hope on the ‘military side. I think there is also another source from which new hope for our way of life is springing. While the axis ‘was winning, there was the question whether the democratic form of government, the free way of life, was competent to defend itself in the modern world. There was some question as to whether the democracies were not huge dinosaurs destined to be destroyed by the sharp teeth of the smaller, but more fiercely weaponed, totalitarians.
We're Coming Through!
BUT ALL SUCH doubts are now resolved in our favor. We have seen that the free people of England can fight and hold. We are seeing in America the miracle of production and an enormous army rapidly on the way to bringing overwhelming strength against the axis. ; "The last year, or rather the last few months of ‘it, are showing that democracy is competent to look out for itself even against such dangerously efficient nations as. Germany and Japan. We see now that military victory is certain and that. 1t will bring a new opportunity for the principles of free self-government to be restored and perhaps to grow in lands that have not known them before. We ‘now know that the world will not be swallowed up by the totalitarians and their. brutal conceptions of government and denial of individuals rights. We know that our way of life is going to win and re-establish itself more firmly than ever before because in this year just closing it has met its supreme test and is coming through it.
By Eleanor Roosevelt
say we are free men. We choose our form of government and through our franchise we have preserved it. Under it we have done many things which make our present crisis easier to face. If the government had not trained our young people, we would lack many thousands of men to handle mechanical tools. If we had not given our Young people a chance for better health and education, the caliber of our fighting forces would be far lower today. If we had not faced the social questions in the bad days through which we have passed and established old-age pensions, help for the blind and the crippled, there would be many more men today with a heavier burden to carry and a less free mind with which to face a war. I am grateful for the fact that my country is made up of many peoples; that I have an opportunity to show «that I really believe that all men are created equal and that the “Last” Commandment: “Love thy neighbor as thyself,” really means what it says; for the fact that my boys are still alive; that other boys whom I love have not yet fallen on any field of battle; or my husband’s strength and for his ‘belief in God,
MISSIONS SCAN ALL LANGUAGE
Linguistic Science Extends To Every Land Where Workers Serve.
By Science Service PHILADELPHIA, Nov. 26. — A major source of materials for use in the study of North American Indian languages, until now unavailable to scientists, exists in scattered publications and manuscripts used by missionaries in their work through the immense territory stretching all the way from Labrador to the Pacific coast and north to the last inhabited islands of the Arctic. At the meeting of the American Philosophical society here, Pere Artheme Dutilly, missionary-scient-ist of the Oblate Missions and the Catholic University of America, described this hitherto neglected scientific resource and told what he is doing to round up the scattered material.
Seek New Languages
Missionaries of all creeds make more of an effort to learn the language of the tribes they work
‘with than do traders, ‘explorers and officials, the speaker declared. They|
stay longer with the people, and have more difficult subjects j to discuss. ¥ From the very beginning of the Northern missions, Pere Dutilly continued, priests: and ministers have made a practice of reducing the languages of the various tribes to writing. There are several special systems for expressing the Indian languages, one or two of them very successful. In these written forms, the missionaries have produced translations of the Bible, prayer and hymn books, catechisms and other things they needed for their own work. Most of them are not generally known; some have never even been printed, but exist only in mimeographed form, perhaps with the amendments and marginal notes of several different workers on them.
Assembles Dialects
Pere Dutilly, who has just returned from his 10th summer in the Far North, has undertaken to get all such materials together, making possible their reproduction in forms useful to students of languages. So far, he has assembled 145 published works and reproductions of 52 unpublished manuscripts, representing 21 distinct Northern Indian languages and dialects, plus Eskimo. This work has been sponsored by the Ameriran Philosophical society. The past summer's trip was a “short” one for Pere Dutilly, taking him only as-far as James bay, where he worked in the Cree and Montagnais Indian areas. His principal interest is in botany, and he brought back a collection of something over 1200 sheets of pressed plants, as well as a considerable number of mineral samples.
Halloween Tame
To This Grid Rally
YONKERS, N. Y., Nov. 26 (U. P.).—It was only the eve of the traditional Thanksgiving day football game between Gorton and. Yonkers high schools but police said it was worse than Halloween. A group of about 1000 pupils, including a liberal sprinkling of’ girls, tossed rocks through the windows of both schools, broke street lights, shattered windows on some trolley cars and ripped away metal identification signs from the cars. - It took almost a score of police to disperse the pupils.
INCREASE FUND FOR NEW BOEING PLANT
WASHINGTON, Nov. 26 (U. P.),— Jesse Jones, secretary of commerce, announced that the Defedse Plant Corp. has authorized an increase in excess of $2,300,000 in its coniract with the Boeing Aircraft Co. for additional plant facilities in Kansas. The increase makes a total commitment in excess of $25,000,000. These facilities will be operated by
r all these things, dear God, I am most humbly)
Allied aircraft bombed and strafed Japanese positions at Yochow and along the Hsin-Chiang river front
efforts to drive southward toward| ‘Changsha, Sharp fighting was Fe-
enemy ~ concentrations, munitions dumps and siver barges,. The Jap}
e Indianapolis
In 1913, when the Marion county Tuberculosis association was formed, Mary A. Meyers became its executive secretary and she’s been its guiding light ever since. Eli Lilly has served as chairman of the seal campaign for years. spending of the money in a health building and life saving campaign.
Annual Drives Help ‘Reduce T. B. Deaths; Marion County Quota This Year $60,000
By ROSEMARY REDDING
A 75 per cent reduction in T. B. deaths! Yes, that’s right. It’s happened in a little over a quarter of a century right here in Marion céunty. It’s happening all over the United States. And a great deal of the credit can go to a little decorative stamp that sells for a penny—the Christmas seal. Millions are now sold annually to provide. funds for control and prevention of the dread disease. But back in 1904, the stamp had its beginnings in a much smaller way. It's certain that Einar Holboell, an obscure postal clerk, never expected his idea to grow into campaigns that now help arouse whole nations against the disease.
Conceived Package Seals
Einar Holboell conceived the idea of decorating Christmas packages and letters with a penny seal to help raise funds for a much-needed children’s hospital in Copenhagen. His idea appealed to the Danish royal family. It was carried out and the hospital built. That was away back in 1904. : One of those stamps came across the ocean on a letter to Jacob Riis, a pioneer in this country’s social service. He inquired about it and even went so far as to write an article describing its possibilities. Emily P. Bissell found it as a solution to her problem and used it to raise funds for a tuberculosis pavilion for. children in her native state of Delaware. And then and there our Christmas seal sale was born. Miss Bissell raised $3000. (Marion county’s quota this year alone is $60,000.) Emblem Changed From Miss Bissell’s attempt, the idea grew by leaps and bounds. Af first, the Red Cross aided in the sale. Then in 1920, it was taken over entirely by the Tuberculosis association. Up until that time, the scarlet emblem of the Red Cross had been used as a symbol on the stamps. The double-barred cross, the dinternational emblem of the anti-tuber-culosis campaign was embodied instead. During the crusades, this“doublebarred cross was the familiar symbol throughout Europe as one of the. emblems of armies that battled
Miss Meyers directs
National]. ' | Sketched broadly, the seal is behind
for the Holy Land. Although no
MOSCOW, Nov. 26 (U. P.).—How a hard, puritanical division of specially trained Siberians held “the ravine of death” at Stalingrad against one of the greatest onslaughts in history and broke the German offensive was revealed for the first time yesterday. Vassili Grossman, special correspondent of Red Star, wrote that Col. V. Gourtiev, 50, a thin, wiry world war veteran, organized -and trained the division for the Stalingrad ordeal. The troops came from Omsk, Novosibirsk, Barnaul and Krasnoyarsk. Their leaders left classes at St. Petersburg Technical institute in 1914 to volunteer for the army and to fight at Warsaw and Barenevivi against the Germans. Béfore his division went to Stalingrad, he gave it special training against night attacks. He made the men lie in foxholes and sent tanks
Specially-Trained Siberians Held ‘The Ravine of Death’
tle.
children through milk.
and women who have tuberculosis rehabilitation and re-training.
be cured if the case is discovered
rial for schools, homes,
tuberculous.
and Marion county introducing va habits to children.
providing special nurse for county
Provide nurses to follow-up boards because of tuberculosis to under - medical supervision and
instructed. —
What Seals Do for Marion County
Provide a teacher at Sunnyside sanatorium to help the men
Provide funds for.an extensive case-finding program by means of tuberculin testing and x-raying in high schools and colleges, also provides for x-rays for the needy. Nine out of ten cases can
Supply literature, posters, books and other educational mate~ industries. literature were distributed this past year. Provide special material to the medical profession. Finance studies to determine better methods of procedure. Made possible Summyside sanatorium; Fresh Air school and established the Julia Jameson Nutrition camp. Helped- give Indianapolis adequate clinical facilities for the
Made possible a child health education program in Indianapolis
Promoted public health nursing in rural Marion county through
Provide carfare for needy children at the Fresh Air school.
to return to useful lives through
early.
More than 368,000 pieces of
the Theodore Potter
rious methods of teaching health
work for 16 years.
the men rejected by the draft see that these men are placed that the families are properly
thought was given to its brilliant| past when it was chosen as the emblem of the fight against tuberculosis, it has become the sign of a modern crusade. This. country, perhaps, leads. it, but it has spread to every civilized nation of the world today.
Crusade Grows.
Once the campaign was begun, it fast became a national institution. State after state was organized and the state groups, in turn, organized local associations like our own. Together, led by the national
body and suppotred by seal sales,|’
they have heen responsible, in a large part, for the present day community machinery ' that combats tuberculosis. And that machinery is extensive.
a four-fold purpose: 1. To find all active cases of tuberculosis - and place them under medical supervision. 2. To seek out all persons exposed to T. B. and build up their resistance. 3. Educate the public ‘in the ways of healthful living. 4. Rehabilitation. Yes, ‘many of the big objectives have been gained.
go on long forced marches at night. When the Siberians were sent to Stalingrad at a critical moment, they could go by rail only to a point 125 miles from the beleaguered city. They marched the distance in two days. At Stalingrad, two’ regiments of the division took over the defense of a ravine ‘traversing the factory settlement. They dubbed it “the ravine of death,” for there they faced and fought back constantly heavy tanks, including some with fiamethrowers, and German machine gunners who used dumdum bullets. The ‘Germans also ‘concentrated against the Siberians in the ravine a heavy artillery barrage, and attacked them with minethrowers and swarms of dive-bombers. ; “These silent, sober, -well-disci-plined Siberians withstood it all, fighting for days without even their
roaring over them. He made them
PLANES RAID JAPS IN HUNAN PROVINGE
CHUNGKING, Nov. 26 (U. P.).—
in northern Hunan province, ‘last night and early today, the central news agency reported. The raids were in support of Chinese troops resisting Japanese
ported in progress for the past six days on the south shore of the Hsin-Chiang. : The agency said the allied "aircraft took advantage of bright moonlight and struck hard at
prized hot meals,” Grossman said.
Yanks Down Under Have 8-Hour Meal SYDNEY, Nov. 26 (U. P). American soldiers, sailors and airmen based in Australia observed Thanksgiving in traditional fashion today with religious services and . feasting. At one recreation center, dinner lasted for eight hours because of dancing between courses. The menu included copious portiorns of turkey, succotash and mince ie. In many cases, army and navy forces combined their religious services, . OPTIMISTS TO SEE FILM - The Optimist club will see a movie, ‘America San Take Bi utp :
4.50/4.75/5.00x20, $11.05;
“But the battle has not been won,” Mary A. Meyers, executive secretary of the local association, is quick to point out. Furthermore, she is anxious that
we do not lose some of our gains,
“Tuberculosis: always increases during wartime,” she points out. “It is already .on the upgrade in the large industrial cities of the country. This disease strikes down the young, cuts short the life of many a child of promise, destroys the earning power of older people and twists the destinies of whole families.” She emphasizes that although the declining death rate offers encouragement, it should not be forgotten that tuberculosis is still one of the major couses of death in the United States and the. leading cause between the ages of 15 and 45. “Not until tuberculosis has become ga relatively minor disease, as a cause of both death and sickness, will our job be accomplished,” says this woman who has already given 29 years to the job. Some experts say that if steady gains are kept up, we can hope to see the end of tuberculosis by the year 2000. What power in a little Christmas seal!
‘WAR TIRE’ CEILING PRICES ARE $3 T0 $18
WASHINGTON, Nov. 26 (U. P.). —The office of price administration today placed a maximum retail ceiling price of $13.25 on popular size 6.00x16 passenger car tires made of reclaimed rubber. / Tires of reclaimed rubber are the only kind now being manufactured for passenger cars and may be sold to persons obtaining certificates from their loeal war price and rationing board. The ceiling for the 6.00x16 tire is about 22 per cent below the ceiling of $17.11 for a first-line tire of the same size. Retail ceilings for other sizes of
casings being manufactured from reclaimed $17.80; 6.25/6.50x16, $16.65; 7.00x16, $18.25;
rubber are: 7.00x15, 5.25/5.50x17, $12.20; 5.25/ 5.50x18, $11.10; 4.75/5.00x19, $9.95; 4.40/4.50x
21, $9.90; 30312, $8.45.
TRUEBLOOD ESTATE "VALUED AT $60,000
The estate of Luther E.'Trueblood, real estate and insurance broker who died last week, was valued at more than $60,000, according to papers on file in Probate court today. -
The. will left $7000 to a sister, Miss Irene B. Trueblood; $1000 each to three brothers, Willard, Oscar and
Emmet Trueblood, and two other) } sisters, Mrs. Mabel Armstrong, In-|E
diana Harbor and Mrs. Alma Orintha Davis of Oregon, Mo. : .The remainder of the estate, amounting to several thousand dollars, was left to the Indiana Yearly Meeting of Religious Society of Friends.
APPEALS MINE STRIKE
+
* MEXICO, Ky., Nov. 26 (U. P.).— §
Two hundred and fifty miners of the U. S. Coal & Coke Co. remained
off work’ today. #5 K. A. Johnston,| “oo 1 [] 1 ed i
Postal Clerk's Idea Leads to Christmas Seal Campaigns
Dale Nichols, outstanding young American artist, designed this year's seal. It features a red barn, symbol of a nation-wide campaign to eontrol tuberculosis in catAt the beginning of the century, T. B. in cattle was common and was carried to
NYA PRODUCES WAR WORKERS
20,000 Complete Training Each Week: Need Women 16-24.
WASHINGTON, Nov. 26 (U. P.)s —About 20,000 NYA-trained stue dents go into war production ine dustry each week, according to Aus brey Williams, NYA administrator
The 18,600 NYA shops in about 900 locations are equipped to hans dle 150,000 people as trainees in & 24-hour period, thereby relieving war production plants from the burden of training new workers.
At the present time 40 per cent of the trainees are women. By the first of the year he expects 60 per cent will be women, and that the percentage will rise to 80 per cent by March of 1943.
Seek Women 16-24
Although male students are not turned down if they request NYA training, women between the ages of 16-24, inclusive, are being ene couraged to take NYA shop traine ing. NYA is training students to do
activities, including machine work, aircraft sheet metal and other sheet metal, gas and arc welding, t welding, foundry, forge, radio, elecs trical, = automotive and aviation mechanics, aireraft. engine mes= chanics, pattern-making, joinery, aircraft and general woodwork, in= dustrial sewing, mechanical drafting. Some clerical instruction also is being given.
Need Woodworkers
“The great need is for woods workers and sheet metal workers, particularly in aircraft industries,” according to Williams, “and women fit into that work with great facility.” NYA shops find that women make first-rate machinists, Williams said. They excel in jobs in which they are not given strenuous work. AS inspectors they are superior to men because their sensitivity of touch is more highly developed than men’s. They have difficulty in applying mathematics in the measurement of tools. Nevertheless, at the Portsmouth navy yard the all-gir NYA shop made fewer defective tools and had a lower percentage of wastage than any other shop im Massachusetts supplying the hav 4 in a three-month period.
COMMUNITY CENTER PLANS FAMILY NIGHT,
The ° Northwestern community center ‘will have its first family night program of the winter at'8. p. m. tomorrow, ; Roscoe, Palin will lead community singing and the quartet of Boy Scout troop 22 will sing. Square dancing will follow a basketball game between junior teams from Northwestern and Townsend center at Richmond. * :
BAR TO PAY TRIBUTE
TO MEYER ON FRIDAY
The Indianapolis Bar association | will hold a memorial meeting in honor of the late Howard M. Meyer: at 11 a. m. tomorrow in the circuit court room at the courthouse. Mr. Meyer died early this week. He was the Republican candidate for cons gress in the recent general election.
HOLD EVERYTHING
20 types of work. There are 19 shop |
