Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 31 March 1943 — Page 13
ASKS MORE PAY
Federation - Requests $300
Average Raises in - Proposed Scale.
The Indianapolis school board | today considered a proposal by thel
Federation of Indianapolis Public School Teachers which would give
- the city’s 2000 teachers annual sal-|
: increases averaging around $300 apiece, ‘New rates proposed by. the fed-
eration before the board yesterday]:
would. set the minimum salary for teachers with bachelors’ or masters’ degrées at $1500 a year.. The pres ent schedule calls for a minimum - Of $1250 regardless of degrees. The federation schedule, designed
to replace the schedule adopted inf
1938 and adjusted occasionally since, ‘was presented to the board by Raphael W. Wolfe, chairman of the federation’s salary committee. Conforms, to Law ‘Mr. Wolfe told the board the plan should go into effect next September, conforming with effective dates of new teacher salary laws passed by the 1943 general assembly. Minimum salaries of $125 a month for 10 months for teachers without degrees - and $150 a month for teachers with ¢legrees also would be in conformation with new state laws.
~ Estimated gross cost of the pro-|
posed saalry .increases, according to ‘federation figures, would be $663,585, Fut additional revenues resulting from increased tax‘ valuations and an increase in amount of ‘tuition support from the state were ex-
pected to reduce the net increased|
cost to around $350,000. “Even so, Mr, Wolfe told the board, «the school tax rate would be lower _ J¢than that for 1942. - In urging the .adoption of the new salary schedule, the federation’s salary committee pointed out that the starting. pay for a teacher
with “a master’s degree still would,
‘be $900 a year less than the starting pay of a city policeman or fireman who will receive $2400 annual1y for 1944 and 45. The law requires that if a new salary schedule is to’ be adopted’ it must be adopted on or before May 1.
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i-Kapers' Preview Tonigh
There are soldiets, too, in the soldier comedy production, “Khaki-Kapers.” These four girls, all from . Indianapolis, will do a specialty military dance and will form one-half of the chorus line in several other dance numbers. They are (left to right) Rosalyn Ludwig, 615 Madison ave.; Joan Degischer, 843 Bosart ave,; Marsha Ettinger, 5790 E.. Michigan st., and Gloria Morris, 5345 E. Washington st. :
8 #
# 2 #
Public to See Ft. Harrison
“Khaki-Kapers,” - Ft. Harrison’s first attempt at a musical comedy, will be presented tonight at a preview for a limited -audience at the English ‘theater. 4 The production, typical of a soldier’s dream of what army life should be, will be given again Thursday, Friday and Saturday evenings. A cas of 60 persons, includes young women from ‘Indianapolis. Curtain time for each performance will be 8:30 p. m. ; Sergt. Carl Baker, producer and co-director with: Pvt. Jack Good, have ‘met all incoming trains for soldier talent and have formed a
show of comedy, dancing ‘and music.
Soldiers Baker and Good along with Corp. Albert = Hodges, = Sergt. Jack Gotlieb, Sergt. Vincent; Daniels, Pvts. Joe Vira, Billy Tryall,: Francis Carpenter and Bob Martinez have leading male roles. Miss Lynne Shore of Indianapolis, of the Civic
Musical Comedy Tomorrow
theater, has been cast in several scenes. 3 . Miss Shirley Stonebraker, 16-year-old Ben Davis high school student, will do a ballet dance. Two other representatives of the:'same high: school are the Misses Bernadine Cook and Delores Blacker, who will do a specialty dance number. They are known 'profession-
ally as “Bernadine and Bernad-
ette.” Corp. Don Ewell has written original orchestrations for the finance replacement orchestra - which ‘will play in the pit. Master Sergt. Earl Wellhaven will direct. Pvt. Jack Porter, former -‘continuity writer for a local radio station, has written the narration for “Khaki-Kapers” and has dialogued one scene, “Guadalcanal.” The entire proceeds will go to the athletic and recreation «fund at Ft. Harrison.
. ® Appraisers Plan I oJ : Quiz’ Program IT WILL BE “razzberries” instead of roast, because of rationing, at-the dinner meeting of the Society of Residential Appraisers at the Columbia club at 6 o'clock tonight. The “Nail Counters” will battle it out with the “Form Fillerouters” in an “Information Please” quiz session which will take the place of after dinner speaking. Wendell M. Hicks, vice president, said these designations for members of the competing teams were chosen because they constitute the greatest insults which can be hurled at any appraiser. “Professor Askem” will preside
over the quiz.
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removes Tintex Re edye a matching SOIOC WIR SiC ec ines.)
LIEUT. GASTINEAU DIES OF GUN WOUND
The body of Lieut.- James Gasti-
neau, 23, was found today in an excavation in the basement of the home of his stepfather and his mother, Mr. and Mrs. Albert E. Williams, 3837 Central ave. There were shotgun wounds in his breast and his face. When his mother awakened this morning she noticed blood in the hallway. She followed the trail down the stairs, through the kitchen, into the basement and to the excavation for cellar expansion.’ There she found the body of her son, clad in pajamas and the weapon at his feet. A note was found in the lieuparents. Lieut. Gastineau, who has been in the army 15 months, suffered a breakdown four months ago and had been home on sick leave for a month from Ft. Leonard Wood, Mo., where he is in a tank division. He graduated from Tech High school, took an ‘Indiana university extension course and engaged in the insurance business before entering the army. Besides his mother and stepfather,
‘Ihe is survived by a sister, Thelma
Louise; a half-brother, Roland Williams, and grandparents, Mr, and Mrs. William H. Magiuder.
STATE AGENTS FOR RATIONING NAMED
Three officials of .the state board of accounts have been designated by Governor Schricker in an executive order as agents for the state to open and operate ration accounts for all state institutions. The are Otto K. Jensen, chief examiner, and Ross P. Freeman and Edward A. Cooper, deputy examiners. The governor also designated the Indiana’ National bank .as the
PRT STR ALE TABLE
TT
PERKS | be
IY ol T3001 N En
OEE IR ET
tenant’s bedroom, addressed to his| -
Pets Can Live Without Liver, Head of Humane Group Says
THE BIG SHOW STARTS NORTH
You'll Be Seeing the Circus On the Same Old Lot; It's Morale Builder.
year thrill to the spectacle of the universe.” And the 1943 edition of the Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey circus will be back at the same cold lot in your home town with full consent of the office of defense transportation. Government officials decided that the big show was too important as morale builder to keep out of circulation for the duration. The big top this year has gone old-fashioned. Nostalgic touches
placed the modernistic trimmings. The original six-pole type tent has been resurrected and subdued pastel colors have given way to the brilliant red and gold displayed so profusely in the old days.
Elephants as Usual
But the elephants, the clowns and all the freaks will be back as usual. Rationing is expected to cause little difficulty. Meat-eating animals will be fed horsemeat. The circus opens at New York's Madison Square Garden April 9 with the" opening under canvas scheduled at Philadelphia on May 31. Longer stops will be made in principal cities this year because of transportation difficulties. This year the route will be cut to 8000 miles and will include about 80 cities,
SARASOTA, Fla., March 31 (U. P.).—The “greatest show on earth” started north from winter quarters today to keep a date with thousands of kids and grown-ups who each “most gigantic
of the circus of past days have re-|
[chase Yalow Kidnaping 1
of Wealthy Chicago Girl.
CHICAGO, ‘March 31 w. P. —
I 18, Lake Forest |: ‘I neiress, was kidnaped by five ban-|
dits .early today and held captive.
| for an hour ina careening automo- || ‘| vile ‘pursued by 25 police squad cars
{Chicago's north side and
late Ogden Armour, the meat’ pack-. er, and Kent Clow Jr. son of a wealthy plumbing supply manufacturer—were robbed of $30 each and released shortly after the bandits forced Armour’s car to the curb on ‘the outskirts of Chicago. Three of the bandits later were captured. The three Lake Forest youths were returning from a party in the loop district when the holdup occurred. Young Armour said he noticed that their car was being followed, but he did not become alarmed until he
Lake Forest. He tried to speed up, but the other machine forced him to the curb. gna “pull over. This is a stickup,” Armour quoted one of the men as saying. - " Inherited Large Estate After robbing Armour and Clow, the bandits forced Clow into the bandit machine while three of the men remained with him. Armour was forced from the wheel of his car by one man while the other sat | behind with Miss Priebe, the daughter of a wholesale poultry dealer and heiress to the bulk of an $800,000 estate left by her grandmother, Mrs. Emily Rice. Armour and Clow were released at Sheridan road and Pratt where Armour pleaded for the release of the girl. Gs “We’ll take care of her,” one bandit said. A citywides alarm was broadcast. The two cars remained together until police intercepted them. in the loop: The car with Miss Priebe sped up and the other machine and its three bandit occupants was captured. - Detective squads caught up with the girl and her two captives at an intersection south of the loop. The detectives gpened fire on the bandet machine. After about a two-mile chase, the bandits slowed up and released the girl. Then they sped on.
‘Look, Honey cre His Fine Was $6
CLARENCE SMITH, 142 Bright st., stepped up before Judge John Niblack in Municipal court today confident that his. story would win acquittal on a charge of driving 39 m. p. h. at 32d and ‘Meridian sts. “I was driving along with my girl friend,” he said. “I saw those policemen with the stop watches on-me. I turned to her and said ‘Honey, look at these policemen,’ and when she turned to look her foot slipped over on mine, pushed down the accelerator and my car .shot forward.. ‘Look, honey,’ I said, ‘you've caused me to be arrested’.”
The judge got a chuckle. Smith’
~ got a $6 fine.
NEW YORK, March 31 (U. P.).— The American Humane association today offered some “how to live without liver” advice for cats and dogs who may be worried about meat rationing and high point values. Sydney H. Coleman, president of the association and executive vice president of the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, has been getting panicky calls for help from pet owners
on good beef” or whose cals are fussy about the brand of salmon they are served. One woman asked if she couldn't get extra ration points for her pet. :
day with association executives from Chicago, Boston, Albany, Hartford, and Milwaukee, drew up
deficiency. Commercial dried dog foods pro-
-|vide a “sustaining diet,” the associa~| § tion found, and can be supple-|
mented by moistennig with pot liquors, or water from cooked vegetables mixed with ‘table scraps| and enriched with dish scrapingsor discolored and unsalvagable fats. Meat trimmings, scraps, Taree fish and fowl, unusable portioris -
i rabbits and poultry and horse meat
Pull the Trigger on Constipation, with
Ease for Stomach, too
When constipation hings on
whose dogs have “always been fed|
Mr. Coleman, who met the other|’
with them a‘ wa ‘non-rationed diet for pets which he believes will| agency ‘in which the ration’ ac-$take care of any d | counts are to be kept. :
or ‘cat without |
are available. Mr. Coleman pointed |
out that, whatever human beings may think, the entrails are the preferred natural food of the dog. “It will take a little ingenuity and patience,” he said. “Dogs accustomed to one diet may turn up their
noses and refuse to eat at first. If}
they have more will power: than
their owners, as some dogs have,|
they may get away with it. They’ll sniff and look disgusted. The trick is to make the change gradually.
: OE LOST OUT IN HIS ROMANCE ‘HIS SOUR STOMACH SOURED HIS CHANCE!”
NOW HELP ACID INDIGESTION
THIS FAST, DOUBLE-ACTION WAY!|
Poor Joe—he should have known about Lambert’s Effervescent Anti-Acid Tab-
lets! For this new improved help for
acid i
{ out causing added gas! Take a Lam- 2
bert’s Tablet and acid stomach, fullness, “upset feeling” and heartburn get
two-way relief! First, it is quick relief.
Lambert’s Tablets ielude a ‘“fast-
Armour, 18, grand nephew of the|
turned into the Old Mill road in|
A veteran of four major Pacific battles, this sailor at Lubbock, Tex., still makes a face af taking medicine. Coxswain Noah Riba
.| says he'd rather fight the Japs.
SOFT COAL WAGE MEET RECESSED
"UMW Proposals; Con- ~ vene Friday.
p. m. Friday, after John L.' Lewis,
the union’s 22 proposals.
wildcat mines. Maj. W. W. Inglis, president of
man of the bargaining sessions. Want $2 Raise
fits. also demanded for the bitumin-
ous region. It was learned that Dr. John R. Steelman, director of “the U. S.
sub-committees.
BURNS FATAL TO BABY
Rockville rd. The parents are Mr. and Mrs. Howard Zarlinglon.
| P) —“Bombii”—demons akin to the
land warnings against their tactics
| cadet bombardiers reporting to the}: San Angelo army air base in Texas.| .
| the booklet ‘states.
Operators Hear Lewis’ 22!
NEW YORK, March 31 (U. P.).— Operators from the anthracite region -of northern Pennsylvania and the = United Mine - Workers representatives’ considering a new. wage contract adjourned today until 1:30
U. M. W. president, had outlined
The conferees adopted a resolution approving a bill now pending in the Pennsylvania legislature which would" provide for state inspection of all “coal holes” where two or more men are working. The act is aimed at control of so-called
"On the Gromlintite Bo
WASHINGTON, March 31 AU.
R. A. P’s gremlins—are now harassing American: bombardiers. ros A complete history of the bombii
are contained in & hand-book given
_ Spawned by Satan, bombii use bomb shackles for teething rings,
“They understand the methanism of the famous secret bombsight, and can ride falling bombs, make them: turn handsprings in the air, or guide them to one side of the target. Can ‘Push’ Target
“Bombil are divided into air crews and ground crews,” the booklet declares. “A prime function of the ground crew,” cadets say, “is to move the
‘plane takes off.
target as soon as the cadet bom-
bardier has released his Groups of the title’ demons push» Miefont target ab june '| 50 yards in a few seconds.” :
‘The ground crews also flich
| mathematical tables. from the]
‘bardier’s ‘‘greenhouse” before i At "15,000 can't find his charts. = ai Pilots Skeptical In the air some bombil carry “widgets.”. A widget isa tool whic is a cross between a Boy Scout ni and ‘a machine shop, eluding pen cil and eraser. « As the bombardier computes his data, the bombii erases his figures and substitutes others, and tke ‘bombs land half a mile from. We
. target.
The booklet explains that aes are unable to perceive bombii and don’t believe in them and, therefore, are unsympathetic when bombar~ diers complain that bombii caused
Bustline Often |
The woman with an average size bustline often, and erroneously, thinks she has: no figure problem at all. It’s true that it takes little to solve that problem, but that little is very important. : It is not so much a question of the right brassiere as it is of the proper fitting. Most women, knowing their bustline proportions are : average, give little thought to the selection of a brassiere. They buy a size 34—if that’s their size—and think that everything is ‘all right, that their figure will be perfectly beautiful and normal-looking. As a matter of fact, the size 34 is only the beginning —. because brassieres also come in depth sizes, A, B, C or D. Now a woman buys just any brassiere size 34, doesn’t bother to try it on, and when. she starts to wear it finds it is- often too big or too little, and that her entire silhouette doesn’t look at all the way it should. If it is too big, she had too. much brassiere for her figure
them to miss the target.
Figure With Average Size
correctly Fitted
the Glen Alden Coal Co., Scranton,|:
. . too much material that she
Pa., was named permanent chair-
Anthracite. miners_ in - northeastern Pennsylvania ‘are asking a $2a~day pay increase and other bene-
conciliation service, who has made himself .available to both negotiatihg groups, returned to Washington last night.” It was said his’ trip was made “to report and be enlightened,” - the latter apparently -referring: to White House reaction to the progress so far made. by the
Lulu Bell Zarlington, 15 months old, died in Riley hospital late yesterday of burns received: Saturday when fire destroyed the family trailer © in a trailer camp at /3826
doesn’t need and that gives the dowdy appearance of badly-placed, unnecessary padding. If the brassiere is too small it binds the figure and the bustline bulges out at the tep (which was considered a ‘good’ line in Napoleonic fashions but certainly isn’t now): and it also bulges out at the bottom of the brassiere, giving her a ‘bad roll just above the waistline. The best way to be. sure you have the proper brassiere for your average size bustline is to try it on before you buy it. Then you can see’ in a minute whether it is right for you. : And these are the things to look for before you: even think of trying it on. It must be a .B cup size which means it has the proper amount of depth for the average bustline. It must be wide enough around tne entire figure so that it fits easily but without any sloppiness;
firm enough to support firm tissues or tissues that may be broken down, in a good uplift line; to mould the bustline .into a young contour.
with the Bali brassiere sketched
. controls without dis-|-comfort. And its material must be|
One of the best ways we have found | to ‘fit the average size bustline is}
here. It is'a B cup size, therefore the right depth. It has an adjustable back so that you can fasten it where it will fit you best (the ad-~ justable back also allows for shrinkage). It is of fine, firm broadcloth that uplifts beautifully. It has ad justable, rolled and padded shoulder straps that will not curl up; will not cut into the shoulders. It is 1.00. Qther Bali brassieres up to 5.00.
If the proper fit for an average. size bustline is'your problem, won't you come in and let us helps you solve it? y
- ment, too.
_ energy. Anybody can make
‘ie a
Coke. Both mean thie same
“QPOTLIGHT Bands”, the \/ radio program broadcast over ‘Blue Network every week night for - Coca-Cola, features the nation’s favorite name ‘bands. ‘Their names mean something ‘because their bands have something extra to offer. Coca-Cola got where it is by offering something that more than quenches: thirst. It. _brings a delightful after-sense of refresh.
In ice-cold Coca-Cola you find quality you count on. You find delicious taste that sets it ‘apart. You find refreshment that goes into
a soft drink, but
‘only The Coca-Cola Company makes Coca-Cola. - The only thing like Coca-Cola is’ Coca-Cola, itself.
It’s natural for popular names to acquire friendly - abbreviations. That's why you hear Coca-Cola called
thing . . . “coming from a
single. source, and” well known to the community”.
