Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 January 1945 — Page 2
cert by Technical,
: Servicemen Included Among
PENS TONIGHT
* Special Guests for Gala Program.
The city référeation department's “Ice-O-Rama” will get under way at 9 p. m. today at-the Coliseum, local talent in winter sports activities. : Wounded servicemen from Billings hospital, pupils of the Indiana school for the deaf and Mayor Tyndall will sts. A 80-minute con-
e, Cathedral]:
and Crispus ‘Attucks high school
E V. Gaulden Ray Gaulden
0
»*
pands and the Boy Scout band will |}
open the program. | Mayor Tyndall will preside dur-| ing the coronation ceremonies for | the king and queen, Philip Jolly and Jodie McWhorter, Military drills, figure skating ex-| hibitions, a Mardi Gras parade, | ballet and novelty mcts and speed skating will round out the program. A hockey clinic, conducted by Coach Johnny Sorrell of the local American league hockey team, will conclude the show. ’
DORIS DUKE IN ITALY
ROME, Jan, 30 (U.P.).— Doris] Duke Cromwell, tobacco heiress, is| in ‘Italy with the air service command of the Mediterranean theater, it was revealed today. It was understood she will work at an air force rest camp.
Municipal
in Cadle T
Baritone
Soprano
-
Ellabelle Davis
Hillus Gaulden Hollis Tracy
THREE SONS of Mr. and Mrs, Maxie Gaulden, 917 8. Elm st, are in the army, CPL. E V, GAULDEN is-stationed in Eng-
land with the 8th air force, SGT. | HILLUS GAULDEN is a mechanic | with the field artillery at Camp |
Cooke, Cul, and PVT, RAY E,
GAULDEN has begun training |
with the medics at Camp Barkley, Tex.
A friend of the Gauldens, PFC. |
HOLLIS D. TRACY, son of Mr.
and Mrs. John Tracy, 559 Drover |
st, is serving in France with the
| heavy artillery.
Attend the Third
Concert,
Wednesday, Jan. 31, 8 P. M.
abernacle
Todd Dunean
Presented by the City of Indianapolis, Fabien Sevitzky, Conductor
Tickets Now on Sale — MURAT (RI-9596)
L. S. AYRES & CO.
ROYAL AIR FORCE "BAND TO PLAY HERE
The 110-piece Royal Air Force orchestra and military band will give
Feb. 19 in the Cadle tabernacle in one of 27 concerts in this country as an official guest of the U. 8S. government, The orchestra is .in this country
Jjunder- an "exchange agreement be-
tween Gen. H. H. Arnold and Air
Science asserts:
faces may be
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g
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{Marshal Sir Charles Portal to play for ‘army air forces personnel.
Wing Commander R. P. O'Don-
| nell directs the band and is assisted
by Pilot: Officer John Hollingsworth, the youngest British conductor to have directed the London
| Symphony, London. Philharmonic
and National Symphony orchestras. Soloist is Leading * Aircraftman Denis Matthews, regarded as one of Britain's best pianists. Tickets are available wherever war bonds are sold and at the place of employment for those buying bonds through .the payroll savings plan,
a free concert for war bond buyers]
YOUR 6G. |. RIGHTS—
By DOUGLAS LARSEN NEA Staff Writer WASHINGTON, Jan, 30—Loans guaranteed by the government under the G. I. bill of rights continue to be the subject in which most veterans fire interested. These are typical questions: Q—To get a loan guaranteed by the government de I have to tell what I'm going to do with the money? A—Yes. Funds secured from a loan guaranteed by the veterans’ administration may be used only to purchase, build, repair, alter or improve a home to be occupied by the veteran, a farm or farm equipment to be operated by the veteran, or to purchase a business, property or equipment to be used by the veteran for the purpose of earning a liveli- { hood. aw Q—How much interest do I have
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Rules to Guide Veterans On Loans Are Set Forth
i
to pay on guaranteed loans and how long do I get to pay? '~ 'A—The interest charged on these loans may not be at a rate higher than 4 per cent a year, and the money must be repaid in a maximum of 20 years. Most of the loans, however, particularly those for business purposés, will be for a much shorter time than the maxi= mum. This is because a guaranty will not be given to extend the useful life of the security. Q—How much can I borrow?
| A~-The. government may guaran-
tee any part of an approved loan up to 50 per cent of the amount borrowed, but the total guaranty may net be for more than $2000. This guaranty may be given of §éveral loans made to the same veteran so long as the guarantee of all amounts guaranteed does not excee the $2000 limit. Yi
A
“THIGH SCHOOLS HOLD
bs
WAR BRIDES’ CLASSES
Registration will be held tonight at Mahual and Crispus Attucks high schools for special tuition - free classes for war brides. . The classes which will meet twice weekly, from 6 to 7:45 p. m. include cooking, home nursing, home making and interior decoration, Classes are being organized in any subject for which there is sufficient
demand at Technical, Manual and
Crispus Attucks high schools, Registration may be made any night this week. for. these classes, Thirty-five women have registered in a free sewing class meeting from 1:25 to 3:15 p. m. every Tuesday at school 76, 703 E. 30th st.
CARD PARTIES SET
The St. Philip Neri altar society will sponsor pillow-slip card parties at 2 and 8 p. m. tomorrow in the parish hall. Mrs. Justin Walsh, Mrs. Henry Kern, Mrs. Edward Lucid and Mrs. Willlam Rickey are chairmen for the parties.
| asia
—_ TUESDAY, JAN. 30, 1045
Don't Blame Poor Groundhog If His Weather Guess Is Sour
WASHINGTON, Jan. 30.4-If your local groundhog fails to see his shadow on Feb. 2, and winter nevertheless lasts until about May Day, don't blame the poor groundhog. He never asked for that job, anyway; he was forced to go to bat for the hedgehog, the animal usually entrusted with folklore weather forecasts in Europe, when early colonists brought their traditions with them to this country but found no hedgehogs, si The groundhog doesn't look much like a hedgehog, and isn't at all closely related to him, but he was the best the settlers could do, so
Awilly-nilly he was stuck with the
job. The joke is on us humans rather than on the groundhog, if the Feb. 2 weather-guess turns -out wrong, for whether the sun shines or not, the groundhog normally never sees his shadow that early in the year. Over most of his range, except possibly in the extreme southern
part of it, the groundhog continues his winter sleep unbroken until the very end of the period for which he is supposed to be prophesying. He comes out of his burrow St, Patrick's day in the middle part of the country, and even later than that farther north. In this he is quite unlike the European hedge= hog, .which {is nowhere near as sound. a sleeper, and is quite likely to come out of hibernation for short breathers any sunny day in winter, Zoologically, the groundhog is the same animal as the woodchuck, or more elegantly, the marmot. The latter is the name adopted by scien« tists and latinized ihto his. former
title, Marmota monax,
BLAST JAP LOCOMOTIVES
CHUNGKING, Jan, 30 (U, P).~ American fighter pilots of the 14th alr forge destroyed 12 locomotives and five grounded Japanese planes yesterday over China, a communique reported today.
Come Spring comes a yearning for ruffles
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