Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 21 January 1946 — Page 11
5 Ago ably. because, 60 onsisted of only » Sunday ceased fashion to wear
lebrate. At any r to visiting or show’ up*> by 3 at and overcoat spend’ what ‘was ms of the Maen« ear plausible, he > sald he wanted .ckner, a musio seller; Dr. Guido ant with a Hans
ver spent in the unday afternoon
2 of his boyhood ] ittle shaver just { lessons, He was |
is of a sudden Now graphically denness of his J just 10 minutes which was that
.
her's death broke sly that he didn't neral or nof. He rned out, it was he preacher had of, Leckner, when 1 teacher started ed his eyes and
r recognized was ld to report for the Leckner boy , he learned that ud, apparently, L. ? indays like thas
broad
inda. ‘This is no , medicine in: the anybody.” ad. Totalitarian ve manufactured pose they ‘had in radio and press ~ South America the people. have
h when it comes
American propa elt, could hardly vever truthful it
one in which the For instance, our ucate Chinese in at one thing did ed States is like, almost everything 1 two world wars,
ids of interested cause they came on they wanted, nmed down their ve rejected most
who knows his \merica and who ntry to which he nany times over, like the library, vn to editors and olitical, economic, get it promptly
yith propaganda,” ime you want to 1 from America,
Jump
on mill ‘operators ey could not pay ss the prices on and unless these ers. Already the t makers, whole about 250 to 300 production costs consumers. They s to freeze cotton to go up. permitted to ade more for the fine means an increase ring still further 1d so starting an t is unending.
question gets into which the cotton ey, though specu= on, with a lot of demand for cote only nine .million } million bales in 1 bid into a boom, ter the last war, k cotton was 43.78 d, production ine n in the 1920-21 id cotton sold for is in an effort to trophe that OPA
b Party
ust Kosutic, vice aped from Zagreb
' Monsignor Rytig, led the Partisans, iched at the Brite ng home, Kosutig g for him. They 1 -again,
in prison, though :
charge, let alone Also are in prison
| in Yugoslavia Is
st. The peasants ’
ce to the market, linars, with which he shops. Conse produce, and the d. Action to cope yr be popular with wunists desire to
eadership of the
asants’ discontent
| MONDAY, IAN. 21, Bs
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
n NAME NEW CHIEF FUNNY BUSINESS
| propelled private planes are a pos- | sibility of the near future as a re- . sult of fundamental research now
| FOR JETP PLANES |
| Private craft Pe Possible in| oS
Near Future.
By Science Service WASHINGTON, Jan: 21. — Jet-
being conducted by the national advisory committee on aeronautics. Several schemes for utilizing ilye Jjet-propulsion principle have been developed, this government agency announces, and their application to light planes may have a revolutionary effect on the future of civil flying. Aviation engineers, in the few years that jet-propulsion of aircraft has been a fact, have thought of it largely as suitable only for
WORK out PLAN | This co World
OF FAMILY SERVICE
{ Henry M. ‘Graham, Wyoming, Pa. | {today was named-to succeed Robert F, Nelson as general secretary of Faniily Service association here. Mr. Nelson will go to Chicago for | an assignment with United Chari-| ties and Mr, Graham will assume | b his new duties Feb. 1. f Released from the navy three weeks ago, Mr. Graham also was connected with welfare work in the | service. Mr, Graham is a graduate of Bucknell university and has an advanced degree in social work from the University of Pennsylvania. Prior to his naval enlistment, he
Barre, Pa. Family Service assocla- |
CONFER DEGREES
heavier commercial planes.
Preliminary study by NACA en-!
gineers indicates the feasibility of Jet propellers for possible replace-
, ment in reciprocating engines in
light planes, making them even lighter, less complicated, and perhaps more economical. New Scheme Possible
One scheme, deemed possible by
NACA engineers, is an arrangement in which the combustion of air|_ would be taken in through the propeller hub and compressed cen-
trifugally during its passage through |
the hollow propeller blades.
Fuel would be injected and the |
combustible mixture burned. in chambers near the propeller tips, and the high-velocity gases dis-
charged from tangentially-directed |
nozzles, This simple power plant, consist ing of but one rotating part with igniter, would need only a fuel pump and starter for auxiliaries. Other schemes are “suggested. Jet-propulsion power plants now in use in planes have a high fuel consumption and a reduced range in comparison to the reciprocating en-gine-propeller combination. Use Kerosene However, they use kerosene or other low-grade cheap fuel. The annual economy in jet-propelled private planes would be the result of using this cheaper fuel, together | with lower first cost, lower lubricating cost, and simplified maintenance. The national advisory committee | for aeronautics is a government re- | beareh organization and does not | or develop aircraft or air-| Sesit aeronautical research, and has for Ine purpose three laboratories. One is at Langley Field, Va., another at Moffet Field, California. and the third in Cleveland, O. are made available to the aviation industry and to the public.
Dr. Smith Reopens Dental Office
CAPT. RICHARD G. SMITH, | Indianapolis dentist and a veteran of 42 months’ service in the army medical corps, has announced the reopening of his office in the Odd Fellow * building. Before entering active service, he had practiced dentistry in Indianapolis for eight years. He spent 29 months overseas, serving with the 90th coast artillery and the 43d and 69th station hospitals. Capt. Smith is married and lives at 8035 Broadway.
Capt. Smith
|
|
he LIVE (TS ENTIRE LIFE AND NEVER GET TEN MILES FROM THE NEST IN WHICH IT WAS HATCHED.
tion. : |
WHEN THERE 1S SOMETHING ON YOUR MIND, YOU GET IT OFF YOUR CHEST, "Gs RUTH N. KAUFMAN, Milwaukee, W sconsrrn
‘Daylight chapter, O. E. 8, will| confer degrees at its meeting at|
Temple, Illinois and North sts. ‘Mrs. Kathryn Rice will be chairman of a tea in the social room following |the meeting.
Russians "Begin
y HENRY SHAPIRO United Press Staff Correspondent MOSCOW, Jan. 21, — A visitor dropping in at public school number 290 in Coscow can witness the following scene twice weekly: When the bell rings 40 pigtailed 7-year-old girls carrying dolls troop into Olga Khanova's schoolroom. When Teacher Olga signals the girls rise and begin reciting in English the nursery rhyme “Hush a {By, Baby.” They not only recite spiritedly in fairly good English but lact out the rhyme.
Changing their dolls the girls | before the war “Three |
break into another verse, Little Kittens Who Lost | Mittens,” | rhymes.
Their
Seek English Books
Olga’s class is the Soviet union’s of the aristocracy while German
most successful experiment in teach|ing English to 7-year-old children {as part of a campaign to teach
wer plants. It conducts basic | every educated Russian at least one
foreign language. Some 15000 students, mostly adults, take English courses through Moscow's state
¢flices offer classroom instruction.| The demand for English textbooks,
classical literature and periodicals 1s|
never satisfied locally. English and American classics
such as the writings of Shake- | Feb A knowledge ‘of at least one
|speare, Dickens, Cooper, London, |
{Longfellow and Hemingway are jto graduate from army. sch schools.
{read as eagerly as the Russian classics of Pushkin and Tolstoi.
Phonetics Taught
Beginning with nursery rhymes | for elementary schools and Shake- |
English in the First Grade
and other Mother Goose
} correspondence Its findings ' school and trade unions and factory
Study of
clude foretgn languages at the beginning of the third year. The campaign to teach every educated Russian at least one foreign language began in 1932 when the central committee issued a decree making the study compulsory. The movement has grown by Jeaps and bounds and, if continued at its present rate, it would not be rash to predict that within another generation every high school graduate will be bilingual. English is by far the most popu|lar language. French, German and | Spanish are next in order. Even English easily shoved other languages into the background, ; French Once Popular
Before the Communist revolution French was the favorite language
was the principal language in commercial circles. Now every ambitious Russian wants to learn English and the authorities give them every encouragement. Out of 2000 students at the Moscow state institute for foreign languages, which trains teachers | and translators, 800 specialize in | English. The same proportion is true at | tec hnical schools, high schools, | universities and Red Army acade-
|
foreign language is a prerequisite
"PROFESSOR TALKS | AT CIVIC MEETING
“How to Build a Community Rec- |
was five years director of Wilkes
speare’ for higher levels, the de- reation Program” will be the sub-
mand for books in English is un-|Jject of Garrett G. Eppley’s speech limited. The Russians are Jearn- | a University Heights Civic league ing to speak English well as they | meeting. read because the schools devote Justin R. Marshall, president, will much time to phonetics. {head the public program at 7:30 Even Olga Khanova's first-grade |p. m. today in the Indiana Central pupils learn elementary phonetics | college association room. As a result there is a need for books! Miss Mary Lou Trotter will play about phonetics and the history the piano and Prof. Eugene Mogle and theory of the language as well Will conduct group singing. as grammar books and the classics.| Mr. Eppley is associate professor In most schools foreign language {of recreational education and coninstruction begins in the fifth year | sultant in recreation for state parks, although the curricula in larger | cities and schools at Indiana unicities was changed recently to in-|versity.
YOU ARE CORDIALLY
INVITED TO SEE THE
22nd Annual
HOOSIER SALON
Which Opens Today
and Continues Through Febiuary 2nd
Paintin
Ww
gs, Prints and Sculpture
By Indiana’s Leading Artists
Will Be On Display Daily During
Store Ho
urs—9:45 A. M. to 5:15 P. M. 4
IN BLOCK'S AUDITORIUM—SIXTH FLOOR
locks
w.
No Admission Charge
\
+
tant Shop evo Paar
1:30 p. m. Priday in the Masonic| |
AND SMART ALL OVER!
Sharply etched black and white makes.
headline news . . . is as fresh under winter coats . .. southern suns . . . as snowflakes against the night sky. These three, styled by Rembrandt, sparkle beautifully on you
now and through spring!
\
-r - EN
“He's daddy's little helper—his father's s chiropodist!”
POD wy.
*
WASHINGTON, Jan, 31.--Here are some gengral questions from G. Ls and their relatives: | Q=My son-in-law has been sta|tioned in France for ‘almost 18
| months. In August he was on a boat : to come home, but he was taken off and gent to Antwerp, Belgium. He has been with .the 617th quartermaster depot but recently our letters to him have been returned. Can you tell me if his unit is on its way home by this time br if the new demobilization will change his return? ~A-Your son-in-law’s outfit has _ been alerted for return but no date has been set. It should be within the next few weeks. The new prodoes not affect those outfits which have been alerted for return. QI have been talking to a local builder who is planning to get priorities under the new government | veterans’ priorities plan. He tells
EF LL Tn RC op ys i 4 Pri
fon by 8 ZEA PRT
b>
ton field offces most be satued that the proposed sale ‘price
3 2 E k : a |
give veterans preference [It was not in the form of
Tt i
Left: Slender dress with curving shoulders, deep divided peplum, long sleeves. , In black rayon crepe with valley lily prints in white. Sizes 12 to 18,
24.95
Center: Two-piece dress of black rayon .crepe with white print, its whisked off sleeves, collariess neckline " banded with black ‘grose grain ribbon. Sizes 12 to 1s. 22.95
Right: Black rayon crepe printed with snowflowers, fashioned with long shirt sleeves, a flaring skirt and a wide girdle of black ribs bon finished off with a bow * set in. Sizes 13 to 20.
1698
