Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 November 1943 — Page 15
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autiful colors “of
ors with V ngck.
3 pilot plant at Marquette, satisfactory, and the forest products division is now finishing up plans for operations on a full industrial scale. All that is needed js allocation of construction
" material from the war production board. .
"WPB Favors Grain . RECOMMENDATION FOR this allocation normally would come through the chiemical branch of WPB. But the chemical branch is committed to and sold on alcohol from grain. The forest products division has - heaten the drum for the néw method, but the chemicals branch has remained unimpressed by talk of food shortages, or the need to help feed a hungry Burope as our armies advance, or*the fact that our 1944 wheat surplus may be only about half of this year's, The chemical branch's estimate of the problem, as summed up by one of its members, is this: Critical “construction materials are more important than dollars saved through cheaper alcohol, and more important than wheat saved by using other materials.
Proposals to make alcohol from waste have beenthroughout 1944,
Inside Indianapolis By Lowell Nussbaum
REMEMBER THOSE old-fashioned chocolate drops with the cream centers you used to buy for about 15 cents a pound, or so? Well, they're back again—in a glorified form. Agent Eagle Eye tells us that some of the drug stores now are selling them done up in paper v Santa's boots—2': pounds to the RH boot. And the price for 2% pounds is $1.25. ,.. The Washington high school art department and printing ‘classes have just “finished printing 5000 menu covers for use Christinas day on naval ships and in navy hospitals. The - task was sponsored by the Junior Red Cross. . . . Because of the help shortage, the girls of the advanced food classes at Washington have taken over the job of serving buffet lunches ' to the
- teachers.’ . + » The courthouse clock was stopped again
yesterday. It stopped at 5:40.
t's Maj. Fieber, Now
THE BROOKSIDE trackless. trolley was crowded the other day and the operator tried his best to get folks to move back to the rear of the car, but without
ec ite a ta ee Ah Sf Rae he a a a a rn aa fd aim a 1 2 a ad eb dr er ad ih sai nnd ict acs beat a a RRA ¥
1 (cellulose) to .sugar- gos), " qonfused with wood alcohol.
Bhi oningrlebmsogl gov grisly aig ney shortly before the war, tossed him into a concentra- | ton camp and grabbed the other half.
Lignin Proves Versatile
USING Schaefer's Scholler process, the Forest Products. pilot plant is consistently getting 50 gallons of alcohol from each ton of wood waste, plus 600 pounds of a valuable by-product called lignin. All of lignin’s possibilities have not been explored, but it is known to be an ash free fuel, a producer of rubber-like plastic
and, with the proper chemicals added, usable in|
making such things as cosmetics, fertilizer, vanilla flavoring, dyes, road binders and insulating material. * Pulp manufacturers have offered to market sulfite-
liquor alcohol at 18 to 20 cents a gallon, instead of |
the 50 cents and more the government now pays. Wood-waste alcohol would be even cheaper, depending on the market price of lignin.” If lignin sold for 1 cent a pound, the alcohol could be sold for a dime a gallon. If lignin brought 2 cents (it now sells for 6 cents), forest products says the alcohol could be given away. Under the present program, at least 400 million gallons of alcohol must be made from grain next year. That will require 160 million bushels of wheat. According" to agriculture department figures, that much wheat, fed to stock, would produce 1,160,000 tons of pork or 1,720,000 tons of beef. Or, by this country’s average human consumption of four bushels a year, that is enough wheat to feed bread to 40,000,000 people
his absence, his wife, Mary Lee Fieber, has been taking his place in the operation of the Fieber & Reilly realty office and doing a darned good job of it, too... . Also promoted is Urban Wilde, who was secretary of the Indianapolis Rea] Estate board when he entered the navy a year ago. He's now a full naval lieutenant. Urban was in the Sicilian campaign and now is back
ANYONE WITH an ear
audience with a Brahms symphony. Instead, the program will include what everyone likes to hear— “Rhapsody in Blue,” “Tales From Vienna Woods,” “William Tell Overture” and others. The price—40 cents per person —as well as the :nusic is designed for wide appeal. This is inade possible by a new state law where-
by $25,000 from bota the school and city budgets will enable the orchestra to present popular pro- . grams at popular prices.
finance free concerts for school children; the city’s allotment will provide for eight munitipal con-
The school system's $25,000 will ~
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER , 1043
First TR aricinal ia to Be. 1
Program. Designed for Jazz Addicts as Well as Lovers of the Classics
By HELEN RUEGAMER
for music, from jazz addicts
to symphony devotees, is in for an evening's entertainment when the Indianapolis symphony orchestra presents its first municipal concert Thursday at the Murat theater. Don’t- misunderstand-—the orchestra is not going to swing out with “Cow Cow Boogie’ nor will it overpower its
>
certs for all Indianapolis--at no increased tax rate to local citizens. ” » . FABIEN SEVITZKY, genial conductor of the orchestra, is look« ing to the future, when he enthusiastically acclaims the cone certs, “We will try to give the people “what they like to hear. When they develop a taste for symphonic compositions, they will come and ask for Breams; Schubert, Beethoven, Bach. “People have to be educated to. everything—even tn wearing a clean shirt, brushing their teeth. We will give them something that ~ pleases their 2urs and makes them
pT
Fabien Sevitaky wil ralse bis baton Thursday night to signal the opening of a concert of the world's favorite
' melodies.
tolre: .Rossint’s “Willlam Tell Overture”; the second movement of Dvorak's. “New World" sym- < phony, familiarly known as “Goin’ Home"; “Rhapsody in Blue” by George Gershwin featuring a plano solo lo by Bdwin Biltelifte:
feel good if they will open their minds to good music.” LE Aa THURSDAY NIGHT'S program will include the most popular numbers in any sy mphony s reper-
DEPOT CENTERS SALVAGE DRIVE
in Africa, . .. Add signs of the times: A sign on an E, Washington st. grocery Trading: “No soup-<pienty of .oranges.”
Watch Those Doors.
ONE OF OUR agents reports seeing a timid-ap-pearing woman, her arms filled with bundles, vainly trying to negotiate one of the revolving doors at Block's. She would wait until the door slowed down, | then would start for the door.
a i QP SAY EAD
...Downtown...
Has Parking. Space; Staff Named.
General salvage headquarters have
But before she would been opened at 148 E. Market st. to| brothers,
Feminine Sailors Are Getting Tattooed Despite Admonition in Naval Manual GIVEN VARIANCE
t WASHINGTON, Nov. 30 -(U, P)),, Some gal sailors are becoming so
| their brother gobs’ footsteps—right | [into the tattoo parlors, it was learned [today. All this is tn spite of the official | i bluejackets’ manual, which they | share with their seagoing navy] and which admonishes
get to it. someone coming in would start it spinning. /save the gas, tires and time of "8*Inst tattooing.
and she'd back away. Finally, she got up her nerve once more and started. Just then someone gave the
Marion county citizens and the
“Do not get tattooed,” the manual | warns. “Ask any man you see who
door a big push and the poor woman went flying out [Many war relief and public welfare hag been tattooed and he will tell
—and right back in again. This time she stood with | a baffled look, and finally gave up. She started down | to another end of the store, apparently seeking a slower door. It seems to us there's a moral in this|
agencies. - Staffed by volunteer workers, fit, {will be open from 9 a. m. to 4 p. m.| Monday through Saturday and will
| you that he would give anything to {have the tattooing removed. It is| | dangerous, costly, and an awful lot | {of trouble the-rest of your lfte.”
Although the vogue among fem-
‘among the WAVES. but I hear that though there is the occasional iN
[the women are going strong for it in quest such as a customer of the Louis and Chicago : “The girls there like small anchors tattooed on one leg or per- not anymore,” Kilpatrjck said. {haps a heart on one shoulder.| Kilpatrick favors a small Those are-usually two or three color bearing a ribbon inscribed Jobs and run from $150 to $2. 1] [Tor. women customers only charge $1 for a serial number,” as those for the WAVE customers, [he sald, adding that his most he said, take only a few minutes, | elaborate job costs $75. {and if the patron is afraid of pos- |
} | tat tooed
“We used to do a lot of that, bui
bird “mother™| Tattoos such
Mr Strauss’ Woods";
Sevitzky' s To Old Glory"; Tales (rom = Vienna Dubensky's “Stephen Foster”, the world premiere of Pescara's “Tibet”. and the intros duction to- act IV of the opera’ “1A Traviata” by Verdi,
TRAILER HOMES
1 Heauarters briny. that.. they... are.. following Anrthe.: Middle. West, especially St. night before who. wanted_her. Ips Zoning Board. Turis. To
“Appeal of North Side Church.’
Two traller-dwelling families toe i
day had been assured permission to occupy their mobile homes for the next 90 days despite the fact their
Kilpatrick said he had recently sible pain,” I {reeze the skin ‘with aanits are parked in back yards in
tattooed three women employed hy little anesthetic.” the FBI, adorning one with her | rame on her left shoulder, | looked. Kilpatrick says he yéfuses “One had a heart tattooed ovérito tattoo drunken customers or to her left breast and the other had a [tattoo nude women on service men big black star put on the same| “If they're drunk, I {ell them to
“| violation of a new city ordinance, Professional. ethics are hot gver- |
In overriding the provisions of the ordinance by granting an exs tension period, the zoning board took into consideration the essens tiality of - the occupants as war
little incident: Now that the shopping season's here, serve as a clearing house lor all] success, Finally, the operator said: “Won't you folks pe considerate of others. Don't see how hard and salvage material. Parking space is inine sailors is far from widespread, | spot,” he said. sober up and come back,” he said. workers and their inability to obtain PLEASE show a little consideration and move on fast you éan’ spin revolving doors, Elderly and infirm | | provided in front of the building fori Van Kilpatrick, who operates a tat- Lady customers are assured of There's no use ptitting -that nude permanent housing. .
woback?l: Nothing happened. for.a: lew. moments. TRGB, persons may not. beable 40 £400.81. enqUgh Rd «CARS JRGIRE. LROAS ARH, salvage loo Lhooth in. one. of a rn DY, 8. screen which shields stuff on a fellow: His commanding | The jsaller-owners are . Clarence
, blue and navy.
0 TR HE PE AEA
penny arcades, Tevealed today that them: from the ‘ther-penny- -arcade’ afficer Will just-order ft-Covered upp - Htyinbrook’
ei
my 3-year-old Jane Ann Williams, riding with her niother,
HERI———————————
Mrs. Russell Williams (2316 Coyner ave.) piped up in a childish treble: “Well, are you going to show any consideration?” That brought down the house—and a lot of stanidees did move on back. .., Howard W. Fieber, the realtor, has been promoted to major. Hé's in Africa, and has been overseas a year or more. In
+
Washington
WASHINGTON, Nov, 30.—The old-timer In congress will tell the freshman that the way to stay in office is to vote in favor of all appropriation bills and against all tax bills. That is sound advice for one
whose object 1s to be re-elected. -
But shouldn't some chances be taken, considering it is wartime? If you swallow what some are saying around Washington you become convinced that the coun‘try can't stand another penny of taxes. Although the administration asks for 10% billion more in taxes, Republicans and Democrats alike cry that this will break the country. Republican Riess of the house ways and means committee In SE Te is ne their trust were they to “saddle this heavy additional burden on the backs of taxpayers already heavily burdened.” Democrats sided with the Republicans and they appeared on a love feast recommending 2% billions erat of 10%. ‘ Senate Republicans and senate Democrats indicate 4hey will take the same position. = The administration won't stand for a sales tax. That would be unpopular in the lower brackets. » So there you are.
Financial Page Nous’ Feteronting
THEY DO PUT up two excuses. One excuse is that government war expenses won't be as heavy as had been estimated some months ago. True. We will spend 92 billion instead of 100 billion. By June the national debt will be $194,000,000,000, instead of 8 or 10 billions more. The second ‘excuse is’ that the country can’t afford more taxes, You can get hard luck stories from every group in the country, And by the time the testimony is assembled it appears that there is not 8 single cent left that internal revenue could take. . Taxes are high and we could well believe that they could not go any higher, and that, as the house ways ‘and means Republicans say, it takes only one straw to
My Day
. NEW YORK CITY, Monday. Nov. 20.—At the pres-
ent time we are ail concerned with the questions of
It is interesting to have a
have inaugurated a new five-point
may. be injured seriously. . . . Miss- Nellie Coats of the trucks will call it the homes if the state library reminds us that the telephone directory {contribution is large, ~~. has a map showing the various delivery:zone num-| Some of the things feeded now is | bers. It's the first of the yellow pages in the directory. /costume jewelry, rags, Use it, Not only will the mailmen love you for it, but your cards and left-over Christmas dec-| mail will go through with less delay. {orations. Directing the new center are Fred | {G. Phillips, director, and Mrs. C. R. Gutermuth, B R co-chairman. ~~ Staff workers -are Yy a) ond Clap p er {houser, Mrs. Homer Wade, Mrs. [George Iskra, Mrs. E. L. Gilgritt,|
spectacle Place the zone numbers on all your mail. frames, used toys and Jpectacle| In e serial number just above a red rose on a lady's hip,” he ex- (women in uniform. He thinks It
county OCD: salvage|~
Mrs. John Carson, Mrs. A. G. Funk- |
he had tatooed four women naval trade. { reservists. } “You see, I sometimes: get a job “In each case 1 tatlooed the like the one the other day—putfing| the right knee,” Kilpatrick said. “Tt plained. However, arms and legs
{apparently isn’t so popular here are the favorite tattoo areas, al-|
Tomorrow's Job
Test Plants to Extract Gas
- fa an
{and Tl have to tatloo a bathing! way, and Dr. D. G., Walesby, Tear o suit or a dress on the girl.” 1322 N. Drexel st, Kilpatrick, for one, approves of | Refuse Variance
In the face of passionate pleas
{M3Y be A spur to a greater po pular) om a church official to “encourage
| acceptance of his art. deadlocked 3-3 vote, temporarily re-
i ALMUS b. RUDDELL {fused a variance to. the Park Heights church of God to permit GUEST OF SCOUT UNIT conversion of a residence at a | E. 34th st. into a church.
North side, the board, through a
_|the appreciation of religion on the
break the camel's back, and that if we put on more taxes now people will slow down in war production and their morale will break. Maybe so. But it is interesting to look in ‘the back of the
Mrs, William P. Meyers, Mrs. J. J.| Kiser, Mrs. Joseph Stickney, Mrs. W. L. Caley, Mrs. Joe Ebbitt, Mrs. Edward F. Clark and Mrs. Joe Darl-
Almus G. Ruddell, a member of |
From Coal, Shale Favored board of directors of the Cen-|
‘By E. A
Seripps-Howard Staff Writer
tral Indiana council of Boy Scouts EVANS
and ideals of scouting at the annual |
of America, will speak” on thé values |
"mained the individual leader, his salary going from
newspaper, at the financial page news. I got so depressed over this cry-baby talk stuff that I turned to the New York Times' financial section to brace up my morale. There I found department store sales, as reported by the federal reserve board, running 20 per cent more than a year ago, and in some cases 40 per cent or 50 per cent higher,
| | Must Be Money to Spend
Some allowances must be made for higher prices this year. Even so, there must be a terrific amount | of money to spend when department store sales are fof additional training—the 366th | up over a year ago by such percentages as these: .niantly regiment coming from Akron, 26; Atlanta, 37; Birmingham, 29: Boston, 20; field training in Virginia and the|
ing. Mrs, Harry G. Daniels is per'sonnel girder,"
UNITS ARRIVE AT CAMP ATTERBURY
Times Special
CAMP ATTERBURY, Nov. 30.— Two more. units have arrived here
Buffalo, 22; Chicago, 17; Cincinnati, 23; Columbus, 40; 30! signal operations battalion ar-|
Dallas, 61; Ft. Worth, 47; Houston, 51; Indianapolis, '1Ving8 from maneuvers,42; Louisville, 31; Oklahoma City, 54; San Antonio, 30; The infantry regiment 1s a reTulsa, 42. J | activated unit of the original 366th Further in the New York Times’ financial section | hich took part in the Lorraine I see the SEC report on salaries, headlined: “Salary and Meuse-Argonne opérations in increases heavy in two years” “Many increases of "ond War I. Before moving to 100 per cent.” These are reports of 131 corporations, Virginia it received commendations mostly doing war work. Probably the men. are worth {Tom the governors of Maine, Verwhat they are paid. As a hired man I always favor mont and Massachusetts for hanhigh salaries. { {dling of assignments in those states. But the figures don't indicate any condition of Te Seman of cer is Col. poverty either on the part of the companies or of the| owa ey Queen. executives, Eugene Grace of Bethlehem Steel re-. The signal unit will undergo intensive physical and classroom | $478,000 in 1940 to $537,000 in 1942. Second place went | Work at Atterbury.” The platoons of to Roland Clinton of Wright Aeronautical, who Ach company are crews.of trained jumped from $168000 in 1941 to $372,000 last year. 'echnicians in the . installation, Some jumps appear to cover increased taxes. {maintenance and" operation ' of
: dios, telephones, teletype ma- | People who make good money should be the last ra to complain of high taxes. If a man is earning Chines and a message center. enough to pay the goverhment money that will keep|™Manding is Lt. Col. Garrison G. the war going 30 seconds or a full minute; or that will7 Farwell.
Pr TILES ST PEDESTRIAN DIES al wa can re oO! : AFTER CRASH HERE
to serve as a tax collector for Uncle Sam. Big taxEdward, Mills, 78-year-old pedes-
payers always have enough left to live on. trian, was injured fatally last night when he walked in the path of an automobile near Vermont and West sts. Evelyn Porter, 5818 Kingsley dr., told police that she was in the middle lane on West st. when the man walked from the curb into the street in front of her automobile. He died before the ambulance arrived. No arrest was made.
By Eleanor Roosevelt
Lo 3,
Points four and five deal sith increasing. the interest and support the public, so that the above objectives may be eved and that there may be more co-operation with all other agencies working along thé same lines. They stress particularly the home, the church, the school and the other social agencies. This is a program, of course, which aims to prevent delinquency sc that we shall not need to reform young criminals. They are planning to keep their clubs open dur"ing the after-school and evening hours and there are| no membership restrictions of age, race, creed or} - nationality. In industrial areas, club buildings will be opened for young workers coming off the graveActivities for older boys, such as dances
SETS MURDER PLEA DATE _ BLOOMINGTON, Nov. 30 (U. P).
| WASHINGTON, Nov. 30.—Senator O'Mahoney's bill authorizing | $30,000,000 for government demonstration plants to make gasoline from coal and oil shale is moving slowly, but probably surely, toward enactment. It has passed the senate, is before” a house committee, and the reste favors it as a post-war project. Germany produces liquid fuel from coal on a huge scale, England on a smaller one. The U. 8. bureau, . __ . (of mines laboratory at Pittsburgh {uses about 100 pounds of coal daily lto make seven gallons of gasoline, {Senator O'Mahoney contends this | country, drawing heavily on dwin|dling petroleum reserves, must de{velop processes to make it inde{pendent of foreign oil.
would pioneer the processes, the bill limits their commercial use to private industries, with anti-monopoly safeguards. : i. Some authorities predict 100,000 privaté and commercial planes and 60,000,000 automobiles in the United States a few years after the
dinner meeting of the north district |
the | and |
at 6:30 p. m. tomorrow in American Legion post, 64th st College ave, Troop committeemen will hear an address by Glenn F. Finley, scoutmaster of troop 78. A review of past | activties and plans for the coming year will be outlined by Stanley E Norton, assistant Scout executive of | the central Indiana council, District officers will be.elected and committee reports will be read. R.
©. Johnston, district chairman, will |
‘preside.
Com- |
Rusdia, he says, probably has the {world’s greatest undeveloped oil} fields, but we have most of the coal—trillions of tons—while our shales contain three times as much crude-oil as we now h petroleum. H#é predicts research would greatly reduce the cost of making gasoline from coal, presently estimated at two or three times the cost from petroleum. Though government;
|
war. Senator O'Mahoney points out | that ‘a six-hour mission by 1000 | four-engine bombers bugns 180,000 | gallons of gas.
Obviously, he says, we can't have | military security, aviation leader-| EXECUTIVES COUNCIL ship, prosperity through high industrial production and as many| Ward Julian, salesmanager of the jobs as Americans need unless we| A. Burdsal Co. was elected 1944
insure an adequate, continuing president of the Indianapolis Sales
JULIAN HEADS SALES
Remonstrants protested location lof a church at that address would |devaluate nearby property, : “If we're going to arouse the animosity of alr neighbors I'm in {doubt as to whether the move would be advisable,” sald the church | spokesman. We were hoping we could get them to come to church.” Reassign Rooker
George PF. Rooker, zoning board engineer, was reassigned on a half[time basis at a salary of $1600 a {year. Mr. Rooker, who has served three terms on the zoning board {and city plan cofmission, said he would devote the remainder of his time to private business. Other variances approved were: Claude Massey to operate a nurse ing home at 1422 Park ave.; Forest Harrison to convert residence at 2071 Station st, into a four-family apartment house; Douglas C. Jill son to convert residence at 1448 N, Delaware st. into an eight-unit apartment, and Harry G. Barker Jr. to convert residence at 5520 Col= lege ave. into two-fs into two-family gweling
supply of liquid fuel Executives council yesterday. E. M. Huxford, district salesman-
i i
Miss Irma Piel of Wafren township, a freshman at Butler university, will return from the national 4-H “club congress at Chicago tomorrow with a $200 scholarship, a token of her ability as a Seamstress, The scholarship za was in addition to |
Co. “national clothing achievement contest. She is -at Butler on a scholarship won last year in a§ county rural electrification contest. ~~ Irma Piel She has been in 4-H work eight years, winning only blue ribbons.
Irma. is the daughter of Mr. and
other local girl, Miss Gaylle Rumford, a senior at Warren Central high school, attended the congress
“| with Miss Piel.
Keith McMillin, Lafayette high school boy, also won a $200 scholarship at the four-day meeting. Yesterday's winners in the judg: ing contest included the following | Indiana boys and girls: _ Carload ' swine, 230-270 pounds, | Otto E. Holle, Decatur, first, and W.
Village, third in the 200-230 pound
sevond in the 10200 Nickel,
4-H Club Congress Award
‘Won by Freshman at Butler “aims
ek William Fouts, Galveston, ST. GEORGE’ S SETS’
Clark, Clarks Hill, first.
Mrs. Edward O. Piel, R. R. 11. An-|
ager of the Inland Container Corp. | was elected vice president, and H.| A. Rosener, salesmarmger of the ‘Kahn Tailoring Co., was re- -elected |
lot directors, elected for three-year Fat Shropshire Wether lambs, | terms, are Paul O. Farrel, vice presPurdue university, third, and fat|ident in charge of sales, Thomas ‘Hampshire Wether lambs, , Purdue, | Quilt Factories; J. M. Kline, salesfirst. manager, Gates Manufacturing Co., Fat Oxford Wether lambs, Betty and B. J. Richards, agency manJ, Millett, Portland, second, and pen ager, National Cash Register Co. of three lambs (over 95..pounds),| The council is affiliated with the Miss Millett, third. Indianapolis Chamber of Commerce. | Pen of three lambs
(under 95/
| Fat Berkshire barrows, 200-230)
pounds, Purdue first and third; -{at| -. - DATE FOR BAZAAR Berkshire barrows, 230-270 pounds,| St. George's Episcopal church wil Purdue second and third. | hold its annual bazaar in the parish " Fat Lincoln Wether lambs, Hal B. hall, Morris -and Church sts, at 6 ’ {p. m, Thursday. Supper will be Fat Cotswold Wether lambs, Keith served, followed by a card party. B. Clark, Clarks Hill, first. Mrs. Bessie Trent is bazaar chair- - Fat Cheviot’ Wether lambs, Miss man, to be assisted by Mrs. Glen Millett, third. | Wolfe, Mrs. Edna Eberhardt and Pen of three fat Cheviot lambs, | jee Orin Stottler. Keith Clark, first.
Pep of three fat. Dorset, wether SAFETY BOARD HEAD ILL
lambs, Hal Clark, second. | ‘Safety Board President Will H.
NEW ‘TRAFFIC SURVEY ews lo confined to He hn te WILL BE MADE HERE over the week-end. Presiding in
this place aver the. safety board + Three field representatives of the meeting. today was Paul Robertson, safety division of the International! ‘board vice president.
Association of Chiefs of Police | were to confer with Mayor Tyndall] WOMEN OF MOOSE MEET
and Police Chief Clifford Beeker The 42 club of the Hembership to be conducted here,
is confined to his home with; i
this afternoon on a. traffic survey committee, Women of the Moose, |
IMPLEMENT DEALERS ELECT MARK MYERS
Mark Myers, New Castle, today became the new president of the Indiana Implement Dealers’ associ ation. He was elected by the direc tors at their 27th annual meeting yesterday in the Hotel Severin, Other officers elected are Arthur Coblents, Liberty Mills, vice presi dent; O. L. Barr, Bicknell, treasurer, and R. M. Souder, Indianapqlis,
| secretary.
The convention will close with
the annual banquet tonight. The
speaker will be Edward F. Flynn,
St. Paul, director of public relations of the Great Northern ralle-
Way.
HOLD EVERYTHING
¥
