Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 June 1946 — Page 9
LA ——
st
‘became very ‘une
nset June 17, due ntrast in temperacold Canadian air 10ist. tropical “air, nt condition dew y darkened from 1 soon an elephant as seen. A tornado itial rains occurred ng nearly 100 miles whipped the area. nt continued its ment but atmos 3_were not favore lopment of tornae Stapowich exe
day afternoon the Baltimore, Md., he a violent thunder« accompanied by a gale, and blinding
is also short lived \ half an hour it 1t the atmosphere bulent and as the ed southward no veloped. ehill, - Chief «of the and Forecast Divie . Weather Bureau, disclosed that the f tornadoes reportStates for any given nately 75, and he the death tool from >omparison to autos fatalities, ———————————
BNA ay -y 4 * t AR : a ,
EVERY ONCE in awhile the state police get a request to locate persons. because of an emergency. If the message is urgent, the troopers get busy and find the person. Friday they got a 1 from a woman who asked them. to locate her husband and three sons, en route to Wisconsin for a fishing trip. Asked if her message was urgent she replied it certainly was. The police had to have further information, however, before they could o. k. the request, so they asked the nature of the “emergency.” She finally explained that she had learned bread and nieat” were unobtainable in Wisconsin, something she didn't realize when her family left on the trip. She wanted the troopers’ to find her husband and sons to advise them to take some food to the fishing camp with them; so they wouldn't starve , , . Twelve-year-old Robert Miles, 1002 Prospect st, deserves an orchid for a good deed. In Murphy’s Fountain Square store Friday, he found a wallet, containing about $125. The youth took it right up to the store's office and turned it in. His honesty made the owner, who came hurrying back a few minutes later, a happy man. The claimant,
Inside Indianapolis ~~ Patriotic Citizen]
who was too excited to give his address, signed.’
his name as Ross O'Neal.
Unique Birthday Presents SEVEN-YEAR-OLD Sandra Osborne, daughter of Mr, and Mrs. Kenneth Osborne, 1227 Windemere st, can't remember what it is like to receive presents at a birthday party. However, she's probably had happier parties than if she'd received stacks of presents. Five years ago Sandra's parents had a birthday party for her. Instead of presents, though, they requested the children to bring scrap rubber. The proceeds were given to the USO. The next four years they continued this, asking guests to bring cookies and magazines for servicemen or salvage items rather than gifts. Even though the war is over, Sandra continued her unique plan this year. Saturday she had a party with the guests bring ing magazines and games for wounded men in veterans’ hospitals, rather than gifts for her. Her family feels that through learning unselfishness and patriotism Sandra has gained more from her annual party than if she received the presents that ordinarilly would have come to her , . . William R. King, of 2227 N. Meridian st. has an interesting item clipped from a recent edition of the London Daily Express. The story, neadlined by “Wheat for Sale; No Buyers,” says the grain storage quarters are overflowing because no one ‘is buying.
Cool Weather for Sevitzky WHILE INDIANAPOLIS was sweltering in a heat-humidity wave last week, Fabien Sevitzky was
Starving Hungary
BUDAPEST, Hungary, June 24.—Do you Americans want to hear, briefly, why a war-torn country doesn't bounce back fast; want to see how lucky you are? , Let's glance at Hungary, a pre-war nation of 9,000,000, half of whom were farmers and produced 25 per cent more food than they needed from the great Hungarian plains. For three long years Hitler left Hungarians less to eat than they needed. He took their huge food stocks, machinery and farm implements to Austria. The Hungarians struggled along, getting inevitably harsh treatment because their armies were sick of Nazis. They tried, with some success, to rebel. In October, 1944, the Russians struck at the heart of the nation—Budapest. They met desperate, determined Nazi armies and not until January did Pest, the east side of the Danube, fall. The Nazis dug into the hills of Buda on the west bank and two mighty armies slugged it out until February when the last Nazi was driven out. Then (there is no point in glossing over facts of war) a huge Russian army went berserk in the city. They had fought long and endured incredible hardships and losses. The spoils lay before them. They did as they pleased and they pleased to do everything imaginable.
Tremble When Russ Appear hed
THE PEOPLE of Budapest, who had lived four months on a battlefield, were so terrorized by the Russkys that even today, though the Red army regulations now are strict, every person trembles when a Red soldier appears. Gradually things quieted down and the Hungarians found they had no tractors or other farm machinery, few horses or oxen, no locomotives, railway cars, or railways undamaged. Came reparations and Americans working here say Potsdam forced Hungary to agree
Aviation
I'VE WAITED PATIENTLY for someone to launch a blast against trigger-happy Russian airmen shooting up our planes. Recently they fired on and forced down a clearly marked, unarmed American transport. The following American transport, which was carrying a group of American editors, escaped attack, apparently for no other reason than that it happened to be No. 2 plane instead of No. 1. In due course, Gen. Mark W. Clark, commanding in that area, “protested” to the Russian commander. And, according to air corps (personal) gossip, the Russian commander in due course denied any knowledge of the shooting. Lately, two groups of Russian fighter pilots (flying lend-lease American planes) staged aerial gunnery practices over the American occupied flying fleld of Tulin, on the outskirts of Vienna: One Russian fighter plane towed a target sleeve over the American field and a bunch of other Red fighters made repeated gunnery runs on it, treely spewing machine-gun fire. Another Russian fighter conceived the. idea of a new Asiatic sport in diving and. firing on the red flag located on the American field radio tower. Gen. Clark protested each gunfire incident to the Russian commander, who, in turn, offered the stock reply that while he knew nothing of said incidents, he would investigate.
Air Corps Men Resentful
NEEDLESS TO SAY, nothing will come of the investigation, and nothing will be done by our side about these incidents—or presumably about any others the Reds care to perpetrate. I'm not speaking for the air corps by any means, but I am recounting the personal resentment—in fact, the fury—of individual air corps pilots at such abject submission to Russian imprudence. woh The total of what our flying combat people are saying and thinking is that this nonsense and humiliation must stop. The American pilot is not widely known for his patience with unprovoked insult—to
My Day
HYDE PARK, Sunday.—Friday was an unusually busy day with outside things. So much of my time up here is spent going through old papers and letters —trying to divide and distribute equitably the numerous things that I stored over here when I cleared the big house of my mother-in-law’s and my husband’s personal belongings—that it is rather rare to spend a whole day jaunting. I began by going over at 11 in the morning to meet Mr. Booth, who is ‘writing a book on the farm interests and the farm backgrounds of various Presidents of the United States, We had a little chat in the library room where all new gifts and acquisitions are being sorted, listed and distributed. The library is rather swamped at present because they have so many papers and various kinds of mementos which I have sent them, as well as material they have received from Washington.
Hard to Find Document
WHEN A REQUEST came in for a particular speech made at the time of my husband's death, they had to acknowledge that they had not yet been able: to get things sorted so that they could put their hands on the requested document at the moment it was wanted, All librarians will be sympathetic be= . cause, from the library of congress down, I think,
PRY
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SECOND - SECTION MONDAY, JUNE 24, 1946
INDIANAPOLIS ARTIST BECOMES CATHOLIC PRIEST
By EMMA RIVERS MILNER Times Church Editor + NOTRE DAME, Ind, June 24.— The Rev. Fr. Anthony J. Lauck, C. 8. C,, Indianapolis sculptor, and the Rev. Fr. Paul E, Waldschmidt - of Evansville. were ordained to the Catholic priesthood today in the campus church of Notre Dame university. : Father Lauck is the son of Mr. and Mrs. A. P, Lauck, 1458 8. Meridian st. Edward B. Waldschmidt of Evansville.is the father of Father Waldschmidt. The new priests received holy orders along with 19 fellow seminarians in the historic Sacred Heart church. The Most Rev. John -F. Noll, D. D., bishop of Ft. Wayne officiated with the assistance of other members of the clergy. n » »
RELATIVES of the seminarians, guests, townsfolk and alumni enter ing the extensive grounds of the university saw the early summer greenness of trees and grass. They drove along the shore of St. Mary's lake, paused at the little log chapel, the grotto and passed through the
. + But Sandra Osborne holds a pair of skates her parents gave her for her seventh birthday. .
wrapped up in a wool blanket, freezing out on Cape Cod. The conductor of the Indianapolis symphony is. in the East to conduct three stadium concerts July 1, 2 and 3 in New York. Incidentally, Mr. Sevitzky's press agent, Miss Dorothy Knisely, denies that the conductor is “sitting in” with the Fred Waring band while he's on vacation. He's a friend of Waring's, a “hot bass slapper,” and he’s been to hear Waring play, but that's all, says Miss Knisely . .. A lot of meat—hungry pedestrians gazed enviously at a man who dropped a big nine-pound ham in front of Ayres the other night. Just at the rush hour, the paper sack the man was carrying split, and the ham | many buildings trod by generations fell to the street. He hurriedly picked it up and |of young men who call the school, rushed away . . . An East Washington st. streetcar «alma mater.” operator moved strap-hangers to the rear with a raucous: “All right, folks, get back in the car or|dome of the administration building else In a considerable lower voice he con-| from which looks down the statue cluded: “Or else don’t,” but by that time the pas- of Our Mother, “Notre Dame.” sengers were moving back. . . . The clock in front | Across the campus, Wightman Meof Rogers Jewelry store, 5 N. Illinois st. is just half|morial Art gallery in the library working. One side is out for repair, but the other | beckoned the visitor to view its is still giving the correct time, The chimes are in I many masterpieces of painting. good working order, though. 5
IN THIS setting and immediately
Bishop Noll imposes hands upon the kneeling candidate for the priesthood.
High overhead shone the golden
«oe
to give amounts impossible for her because of lack |Heart of Jesus. As the congregation of equipment. sat in the pews today, the June Came land reform. The huge estates were ordered |light slanted through 42 mammoth divided among the many who had been farm |Stained-glass windows. Those in laborers. The edict came in the spring and was|!he main ;body of Sacred Heari|gay mass in his home parish. Father vague; the old landowner wasn't sure so wouldn't [church were installed in 1873, [Lauck will offer his first mass Sungo ori with planting. The new owners felt equally| The churcl extends 275 feet inlgay at 7:30 a. m. in the Sacred insecure. and hadn't equipment or much scientific [length and 114 in width and takes|geart church, Indianapolis.
ordained breakfasted with the clergy and afterward joined their relatives and friends. The Sunday after ordination each is expected to
knowledge. {the form of a Latin cross. The] . Eo» {first mas was offered here in| i Resources Are Low | 1875. - i | HIS MOTHER said of him. one of
(Six children, that his talent for isculpturing and wood carving is a | “gift from God.” “He felt that he must, therefore, complete his training in art,” she explained,” for the sake of future usefulness, before studying for the priesthood. That is why he received his degree at the John Herron Art institute and afterward took graduate work at Cranbrook Academy of Art under Carl Milles.”
SO PLANTING was poor. A long dry summer | ci . 2 8 hurt terribiy. (Incidentally it's happening again, now.) | SACRED HEART church includes Some 750,000 troops were here in occupation—and in [22 chapels each with its own altar comparison a plague of locusts is mere batting |? addition ww the -gold, doublepractice. faced main altar, In the sacristry, Hungary hasn't iron, steel, coal or credit with [30 Array of sacred vessels, croziers, which to import. Her old industries—oil, bauxite, |YeStments and other religious treasmachinery, textiles, handcraft work, poultry, cattle |Ures furnish a tangible record of | and hogs, go to Russia in reparations. Experienced |e 8rowth and history of the men were largely Nazi and have been replaced by |Catholic church in America. well-meaning but inefficient men—and no food ration-| Father Lauck and the other ing except bread. seminarians, wearing white robes
i d th So bread today is made of potatoes and corn,|2Pd holding burning candles, were| The mother observed Father
te : : : '|present in the sanctuary when|Lauck’s devotion to the church all with fractions of wheat and rye. There's no oil or 10 chant the through his childhood and youth
fat because livestock is gone. No s se | Bishop Noll began breaking up of the hE nas ai ow mass. For one awe-inspiring and rr Soules oe Vomma one infant mortality is up to | Moment dur the service the en- | ay be a priest. is devotion was 25 per cent. {tire group prostrated themselves | evident during Hie years he sang in Shops have food, at prices few can pay. A kilogram | YPON the ' sanctuary floor. Father| the Sacred Heat t hols; igled in Ine of fat costs $1.50 (U. S.), and skilled workers get $5 Lauck and those belonging to the DIRyS ven y d . dq re a a month. The prime minister gets $10 a month. |Holy Cross order have taken the Drama Ic cb and worke ard at Factories keep labor by giving food. Some manu- required vows of chastity, poverty his art, winning prizes at Indiana
Fr. Edward Sorin, C. S.C,
| Notre Dame, with its background of {achievement in many fields, should be thought of more often in connection with these fields rather than merely with football { ” ~ n | FOR IT WAS at Notre Dame that
tists’ st | experiments were conducted with 3 artis SNOWS, | mud > ’ . " n _ facturers actually carry their produce into the | 2Pd obedience. | rT 3 model airplanes which helped lay countryside and exchange it ‘for food. | a fw | {the foundation of aeronautical sci-
“What can we do?” they ask- helplessly. The | AFTER THE imposition of hands] YOU WOULD need to talk with ence. From here was sent the first answer is in the future somewhere. Even the nations by the bishop and the clergy, the|the mother to realize the deep grati- wireless message ever transmitted which won haven't found it—and Hungary came in|Seminarians were vested with the tude with which she gives her son successfully in this country. And to second. ; chasuble to symbolize their calling:|to the life of a priest. {mention only one more such inciTheir hands were anointed with oil| His theological training began at|dent, the Rev. Fr. Julius A. Nieuto signify the giving of the power the Holy Cross seminary at Notre|land, C. S. C., discovered the basic to celebrate the mass. And the 21/Dame continued with a year of clois- | formulae for synthetic rubber in new priests offered candles to the tered study at St. Joseph’s novitiate,| Notre Dame's laboratories. Of the 10,000 Notre Dame men
. . . By Maj. Al Williams fe | aishop, who again imposed hands. |Rolling Prairie, Ind., and at Morean { joined the armed forces in
say nothing of attack. The “boys” are furious. As the time-honored ceremonies | seminary, Notre Dame. The past | who They do not believe their own or any army leaders of the church went forward, one|four years, he has studied theology | world war II, 324 made the supreme | are responsible for this weaseling acceptance of Rus-| could not but recall that it was here|at Holy Cross college, the house of sacrifice. Throughout the war, the
has been the scene of a
sian gunfire. The failure to retaliate or even to pro-!that the present pope, His Holiness, | studies of the Congregation of the university vide fighter escort for American transports on au-|piys XII, knelt to pray while visit- | Holy Cross, Washington. D. C. naval training program now about thorized peace missions is the work of our incom- mg + Notre Dame as Cardinal It was borne upon all “who al- to close, prehensibles in Washington Pacelli , tended today's ceremonies that; All of this is the outgrowth of the
THE DOCTOR SAYS: Carelessness Hurts Many
eieetebEEC Farmers Are Frequent
with Stalin and his gang far in the lead. | By WILLIAM A. O'BRIEN, M. D. | Just as careless hoRsckecping | ito Weir feet, and, as farm We've taken about enough, and some fine sy a Farming i clasied as o danger- BUS most accidents in the bome sol le, contaminated, wih horse hot-headed American fighter pilot is going to be! ion, for many farm ace; Tare ul OUSE IOPINg A uy Bere aloft when the Reds press the trigger, and then|°%® occupation, fo ; yard may result in accidents. | lockjaw a possibility following | there'll be no need for formal protests and do- | cidents results in severe injury or sn such an accident, nothing investigations. A piichlork 5 one of UY nos
Sees No Excuse for Tolerating It THERE IS NO EXCUSE for tolerating such vicious demonstrations of contempt for the U. S. and the U. 8. army. If it hadn't been for American lendlease combat equipment at the time of the Stalingrad crisis, what would have been left of the Russian air
15
5 [death, A SHARP TOOL dropped on the : From what I hear, that day isn't far away. The, Farm leaders and farm families! ground can be obscured by weeds, |dangerous tools used on the farm
Reds don’t understand us and won't. We don’t under-{are aware of the need for accident| and someone may step on a cutting ue b Phoniors ht boy. lenviing stand them and we will never be able to as long as| prevention, and farm visitors should edge without realizing it is there. against a Li ys ek; : nay - oe that iron curtain is held around Russia and her con-|co-operate with them this summer. Barefoot children can run nails serious in ary » someone who
quered territories, |Farm as well as urban accidents
Apparently the only thing they seem to under- |are largely preventable, according to BILL MAULDIN | stand and respect is symbolized by the name their the National Safety Council. present leader, Iosif Vissarionovitch Dzhugashvili, | x =» 0 selected for himself, namely, “Stalin.” Stalin means| (~pUCTION examinations for steel in Russian. | military service revealed serious i hen 3 Fura Sond te
And remember, the name of the party who led the | mutilation cases among young men |
Golden Horde, which rose out of Asia to ravage ones... the farm who survived major half the world up to the gates of Vienna about 600 | {1 juries. g years ago, Genghis Kahn, was also known as “Te- Many of these accidents were due muchin.” In the Gobi tongue of that day this meant , ..eless use of power machi..ery, "ihe fines, steel.” land, although the designers, manu-| Only an awakened American public opinion tan | ra oturers, and safety engineers are stop the appeasement policy of our Washington In-| naking an effort to produce farm comprehensibles and protect American airmen from|,..cninery which is less liable to attack. If it's only “steel” the Reds understand, they |.ause accidents, the operator of the certainly are asking for it. | machine still is the most important | factor in accident prevention.
| |
|
efi | |
| ” ” ” a | ANY RUNNING machine can By Eleanor Roosevelt {cause an accident, and many such 9 result from someone's starting a this is one of the troubles in every library where the Aine while it is being repaired flow of incoming material is constant. or adjusted. Afterward I made visits to three convalescents— Aj} ‘machines should be stopped there seems to have been an epidemic of accidents , .¢. ve repairs are attempted. Ragand illness among the wives of some of our older | eq, loose clothing or long muffiers employees—and it was lunch time before I knew it. |. .,; pe caught in pulleys, cogs and 1 : | belts. Ending ¢ Busy Day ji of fingers, hands and arms AT 3:15 I WENT to Mrs, Saulpaugh’s home on the | may result from tinkering with maAlbany Post road some miles beyond Red Hook. She | chinery while wearing ragged, longhad a joint meeting of a number of the garden clubs, | fingered gloves. Jumping on and and I told them what I could of the United Nations | off the seat of a moving machine is setup and the human rights commission. My young) another acicdent breeder, and flying niece, Amy Roosevelt, was with me ahd we got back’| ropes and cables have injured or just iii time for an early dinner. She then took the killed many a farmer. | train for Detroit, while I went to speak at the Ben-| . #8 nN jamin Franklin school graduation ercises in Pough-! FALLS ARE Jot 2s Somon on keepsie. : | the farm as in the city. 8 . Parents and teachers. all seemed very proud of | ways, rotted rails, missing steps, | the .16 young graduates—eight girls and eight boys.|and climbs on wobbly supports may | Three of the boys were apparently too shy to come |cause accidents. to these formal exercises and receive their diplomas. Low ceilings and low overheads | But I thought it was a very pleasant occasion and|on doors can produce skull fracthat the others all seemed happy and well. started | tures. Children shoud Joi be o toward their high school years. f lowed to climb over buildings or This is the chronicle of a busy day for me in the play oy. hyoken ladders and macountry. By * chinery. ; ! :
BA em 7
\
“Maybe if one of us went down and TALKED to Petrillo..."
wy > ¥ : : as . . . “ | y
An
21 Are Ordained At Notre Dame
Notre Dame's Sacred Heart church
y Accident Victims
[County Appliance Dealers associa=| help him to wait more patiently
Mr. Greene:
~ + hi
Put Reporter 'Wise' About Terrific Blast
BY JACK KOFOED , Times Foreign Correspondent g ABOARD U. 8. 8, APPALA~ CHIAN, Bikini-Bound, June 24.-= The experts are beginning to orient us (which is service talk for “putting us wise”) about what to do when the atomic fission occurs at Bikini, This ship will be approximately 15 miles from the explosion, Even with a blockbuster, 15 miles is a safe margin but compared with the atom bomb the blockbuster is nothing more or less than & penny firecracker, For a fraction of a second the tremendous flame of the burst generates a heat of 100 million degrees, which is 10,000 times that of the sun's surface. On the first . drop at Las Alamos, N. M.,, ob= servers 20 miles away felt a gush of hot air, as though a furnace door had been opened. » » .
THE BLAST is enormous at 13 miles distance. The sound of the explosion will take roughly 73 seconds to reach the Appalachian, Then the terrific. wind, even though dissipated by distance, as is the heat, comes with force enough to throw men off their feet, It is intimated that smarg characters among the observers will lie down and not take the chance of being bowled over. To guard the eyes, all will be provided with thick arc-welders’ goggles, but even then it is suge gested - that it would be wise to look at a point toward the side
1 {f the ordination of |adjoining the administration build- « v4 30CNE O and not directly at the burst. By J ack Bell ing, in all its gothic stateliness Fr- Anthony J. Lauck, C.S.C. 21 priests. — stands the Church of the Sacred| pojlowing the services, the newly kab ASA ————— NOT MANY people alive in this
world have seen the awe-inspiring blast of the atomic bomb. There are, it seems, several stages purely from the spectators’ viewpoint. First, there is a small point of light that, after an infinitesimal time, bursts into ‘the most tres . mendous ball of fire ever made by man. It expands and rises, becomes a mushroom of multicolored smoke, rising to more than 40,000 feet, The head of the mushroom breaks off, and another grows out of the decapitation. ~ » . THIS RADIOACTIVE cloud ‘holds together’ for hours, while below is destruction utterly une dreamed of by the average man and woman only a year ago. This is what we will see at Bikini, What we will see later, among the shattered ships of war in the lagoon, is another matter, Just how great the destruction will be is now only a matter of guesswork, though ships of war are tougher than cities, it should be tremendous. ” ~ ” HUMAN BEINGS are strange and unpredictable. When the men loaded the Hiroshima bomb for the first atomic attack on an ene emy city, they scrawled insulting remarks to Emperor Hirohito on the casing. Yios They didn't know any of the common people who lived in the city, or any of the soldiers of the 5th Japanese division, who were quartered there. Hirohito was the symbol of Jap=
Statue of the Sacred Heart carved by Fr. Lauck,
efforts and faith of the Rev. Fr.|
Edward Sorin, C, 8. C, and his seven! anese arrogance, and lust for associate brothers who founded] power. But, more than 100,000 Notre Dame on 10 acres of land, - Hiroshimans ag the explo= with a few hundreds of dollars, in| sion, and Hirohito%till lives come«
1842 { fortably in his Tokyo palace.
If the world desires to live and grow, the big bombs at Bikini will be the last in history.
Copyright, 1946, by The Indianapolis Times and The Chicago Daily News, Ine,
We the Wome
slides down the side of the stack p bli will and 1s caught on the handle. u Ic ” td n THROWING a fork down from Remember the the mow and then jumping on the ' ' hay has caused many a man to be Bored Sellers seriously hurt, When forks are not in use, they shéuld be hung on al By RUTH MILLETT wall to prevent anyone from step-| “I ALREADY have more names ping on their sharp prongs lon my list than I want,” said the This 1s a good time to make re- car dealer to the prospective custo= pairs around the farm and the mer who had asked humbly to be house in order to prevent a fire put on the waiting list for a new next win‘er. Farmers should warn car. their visitors of the possibility of! Of course, car dealers—and other
injury by farm animals and should retailers who can’t get the goods
stress the fire hazard created by|their would-be customers are clams= careless smoking habits, |oring to buy—are discouraged. But : 8 8 1 it isn't good business to take it out QUESTION: 1 have a
positive! on the customers. skin tuberculin test. An X-ray ex- ” ” amination of my chest did. not show! WHO EVER HEARD of a dealer's any signs of tuberculosis. What having too many potential custowould you advise me to do now? | mers? Maybe he has too many to
ANSWER: Health authorities | satisfy this month or this year. But recommend an annual chest X-ray, customers are something to try to for more frequent X-rays if neces-|hang on to—not something to drive sary, in cases like yours, A positive away, tuberculin test means that at some| The other day one of the coun time in your life you have been in- try's top business executives said
tubercule tuberculosis
fected by the bacillus, | salesmen were going to have to which caused It 15 learn to sell all over again, And probably in a dormant stage in your| he's certainly right. chest at the present time, but in| A car dealer, or anyone else
{approximately 15 per cent of cases! trying to fill a waiting list for [in |
which the tuberculin %Yest 18|.ensumer goods, has a wonderful positive and chest X-ray examina-| chance to build up good-will. He tion is negative, the tuberculous in=| pags that is, if he’s a salesman, fection is located elsewhere in the! a 8 8 body, HE OUGHT to be glad to take names, and with the taking to en= | sure each would-be buyer that he can expect to be taken care of in
OFFICERS ELECTED BY APPLIANCE MEN proper sequence.
Times Spegial Furthermore, a telephone call or NEW CASTLE, Ind, June 24— |g penny post-card dispatched once Howard E. Greene of Moorland has |g month to tell the waiting cus been elected president of the Henry tomer just where he stands would
tion. . - |and confidently: Wes Lee Bouslog is new vice pres- " "8 ident: Claude Harry, secretary-! IF HE WOULD pubstitute selling treasurer, and William F. Behers for shrugging, many a man who
hasn't goods to deliver right now could convince -some of his cus tomers that what he is going to have is so much superior the other fellow might have sooner
outgoing president, is chairman o the board of directors. Other directors elected are Harry Joyner, Mark Myers, Urban Horney, Elmer -Livezey, Mr. Bouslog, Mr. Harry and
niin v
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