Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 August 1946 — Page 13
i
UG. 7, 1046
enway” ANKETS
19
Pr.
jared
ORTS
overed with sateen inx84. Rose,
Inside. Indianapolis
. TROWBRIDGE ST. & narrow, unpaved lane which ‘ angles along one: block east of Keystone ‘ave. out on Indianapolis’ Southeast side, is a distinct contrast. to the ‘bustling thoroughfares which border and inter-
-, sect it, For instance, the 500 block on Trowbridge is
bordered by such husv.atreets as Keystone, English, and Prospect. ‘I'he block itself, however, is so different from neighboring streets that it might well be a lane lifted out of some small Indiana village and set down in the middle of the city. . . . One of the white bungalows on the quiet side street is the residence of Mr, and Mrs. Alpha Huffman, of 526. When we dropped in Mrs. Huffman was in the middle of her ironing. There'd been a tragedy in the household the day before: One of Mr. Huffman's nine pet rabbits died, and the family buried it, with a small tombstone and flowers. Even though he had eight left, Mr. Huffman felt pretty bad about his loss. . It was hawrwashing time at the Edgar Heckman residence, at 529. Mrs, Heckman was washing her hair«and watching for the mailman. She's waiting for some pictures of her son, Richard, in Florida in the coast guard. His pictures appeared in some Florida papers, in connection ‘with coast guard day celebrations, and his family can't wait to see them. Mr. Heckman is a yard clerk and master for the Big Four railroad.
Holders of the longevity records on Trowbridge « « » Frank Cooper and Alfred McGuire.
st.
Cattle Rustling
DURANGO, Colo; Aug. 7.—Cattle rustling has been on a steady decline around here for years, There is still ‘some, however, and it is a tougher problem, for law-enforcement officers, accoffifmg to District Attorney James M. Noland. The rustlers of a few years ago, Mr. Noland said, drove cattle off into gulches and other secluded spots, changed or disfigured brands, and hid out till they could drive on farther and dispose of them. They had to move slowly on horseback and rarely were far away when their thefts were discovered. But the modern rustler moves swiftly. He loads cattle into a truck and in a few hours he may be several hundred miles away. Catching him is a tough job. Another thing: The modern rustler is more of an artist at changing brands. But the FBI is a great help. Send them a hide, and they will make laboratory tests that will determine whether a brand has been changed. Durango, with a population of 5887 and an altitude of 6517, is the capital of the San Juan basin. It is a progressive, friendly little city, Besides mining and cattle tourists are an important source of revenue. This summer five new dude ranches have been started north of the city. "As my wife was entering a grocery store here, she saw a little sandy-faced boy under a big cowboy hat, eating, a candy bar. We are all chocolate-bar addicts, and hadn't seen one in weeks, So she asked the boy where he got his candy.
The Wife Puts On An Act
“IT'S A secret,” he replied. “I certainly should like to have one,” she said. “I haven't had one in so long.” And then she looked as If she were about to ery. “Well, if you'll promise not to tell who told you,” the boy said, “I'll tell you where you can get 'em.” “1 promise,” my wife said. “You know where the (censored) shop is?” whispered.
Science
WHILE THE atomic bomb tests were proceeding at Bikini Atoll in the Pacific, mysterious rockets were streaking through the stratosphere over Norway toward the Baltic. The Norwegian government refused to discuss these rockets, but it seemed probable that they-eame from territory held by either the British
he
_-or Soviet Russia.
That these events should have taken place at the
"same time is symbolic of the future for atomic
bombs and rockets are inextricably bound together
. in the future of warfare.
At Bikini, I was amazed at the way many navy officers with whom I talked shrugged their shoulders over the possibility of long-range rockets. 1 returned home from Bikini to find on my desk a communication from the army ordnance department saying that a search was now being made for a ‘suitable region in which tests could be made of rockets with a 2000-mile range.
Tests All Summer Long
ALL SUMMER long tests have been going forward at the White Sands Proving Grounds in New Mexico
‘of captured V-2 rockets. These tests show the
capability of these rockets to fly at supersonic speeds and to reach heights of 85 miles above the surface of the earth, In this connection, TY am reminded of a conversation with Dr. J. D. Cockcroft, one of the British wioneers in atom-smashing experiments, who headed a scientific mission to this country during world war IT. Dr. Cockcroft told me that he was in London when the V-2 rockets began dropping on the city and that
My Day
HYDE PARK; Tuesday.--On the 7th of August four years ago, our marines landed on Guadalcanal. Some of the boys who made that historic landing have told me what those first few weeks were like. t was hard fighting, not only against the Japs but against disease and against propaganda from Japan which made them sometimes feel that they were an isolated dot in the Pacific, We should never forget this first step in our march to vietory. If we had not succeeded there, the whole history of the Pacific war might have been different. Resourcefulness and courage marked the conduct of the first men to land on Guadalcanal. We in this country must never forget that Americans took Guadalcanal, Americans held it and went from there step by step to final victory over Japan. But when I visited the cemetery on Guadlacanal inh
1943, I was reminded of the fact that the Americans.
who lay in that cemetery stemmed from many different races. And they worshipped God in many different ways. But it was the idea and the ideal of America which they all fought to preserve. We must never forget that our greatness depends upon our unity.
Visits Convalescent ; SUNDAY AFTERNOON, I. drove Into New York to see Miss Thompson. She is convalescing in her apartments and, sinos she has to be there another
tam
By Donna Mikels!
THE HOLDERS of the block's Jongevity record are next door. neighbors, Frank Cooper, of 532, and Alfred McGuire, of 520. Mr. McGuire outshines Mr. Cooper by just eight months—he's 82 and Mr. Cooper's 81. For an 8l-year-old man, though, Mr. Cooper has a full schedule. He works 13 hours a night, six nights a week as elevator man at the Peoples bank. Betore his retirement, he worked at the Indianapolis Gas & Coke utility for 38 years. ... Mr. McGuire, who's been retired 12 years, has a record of 40 years with the Penrisylvania railroad as a construction foreman, He also worked five years for the’ Monon, one year for the Big Four and six months for the B. & O. before becoming a Pennsylvania man. . “I looked around until I found what I liked,” he explained, “and then I stuck.” Mr. McGuire lays the credit for his record of never being without a job or without an offer of a job to the fact that he’s never tasted a drop of liquor. He and his wife also have another record in their families. He had one grandson and four great-grand-sons (all brothers) in service; she had a son-in-law and two grandsons in the armed forces, and they all returned home safely.
Family Filling, Raising Yard THERE WAS a riotous game of hide-and-seek going on at 561, the residence of Mr. and Mrs, Bernard Coleman, The only Colemans at home were Sandra, 7, and Sharon, 6, and Barbara Henderson,
who was taking care of them. We were 4nvited td join the fun but we went on with our visiting, dropping in on Mrs. Myrle Spurgeon, of 530. The big activity at the Spurgeon household is filling in the front yard and putting in a new sidewalk. The ground in that vicinity is low and the Spurgeons are trying to raise their yard to a slightly higher altitude. Mrs. Spurgeon, her next door neighbor, Mrs, William Teaney, 534, and a neighbor across the street, Mrs. Elza Brown, are. all one-time grandmothers and the big subject of conversations between them each morning is the latest saying or doing of their grandchildren, Mrs, Teaney told us. Mrs. Teaney and her daughter, Mrs. Wayne Turpin, were war widows together, They lived together and worked together at International Harvester while Mr. Teaney, a veteran of the world war I, served in the navy again and Mr. Turpin served in the army. . . . The block's veteran residents are Mr. and Mrs. Grover Hayes, of 540, who built their house almost 30 years ago. The Hayeses have a beautiful front and side lawn, full of shrubs and flowers, and colorful flower boxes. It's easy to
see both are gardening enthusiasts. There's also: - -
| another veteran in this house, Kenneth Hayes, re- |
cently discharged after serving in the seabees. i
SECOND SECTION
e Indianapolis Times
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 7, 1946
\
By HARVEY HARRIS SO YOU'RE HOT , ., and tired and bothered. You're mad at the world ‘cause it's so doggone stuffy. And why
lin the world is it so sultry?
By Eldon Roark)
{of Heat Treat, the temperature will drop .to :
“No,” my wife replied. “I don’t know a thing about | this town.’ “Well, you go up the hill one block, then turn south and go till you see it. Right on the other side of it is a little house, but it doesn’t look like a store. It is, though, so you go in, and there's an old lady who lives there who saves candy bars for me. But don’t tell her I told you.” We drove past the (censored) shop and. almost passed the designated cottage. There was nothing to indicate it was a grocery.
Chocolate Bars and Chewing Gum
BUT WE stopped and my wife knocked on the front screen door. A voice said, “Come in.” As she opened the door she saw an elderly woman sitting in a room back of the large front room which was bare except for an empty showcase, and several cabinets. “How do you do?” my wife said. “I'm looking for some eggs.” She thought it would be good strategy not to start off with chocolate bars. “I'm sorry,” the woman replied, “but I haven't any, I'm on vacation this week, so I'm not selling anything.” “We've had such ahard time trying to find eggs and candy bars,” my wife said in her best distressed manner,”
Well, that 90 degree weather |seems pretty cool to some people {in Indianapolis. They're employees Inc. On a cool |day, a “frigid” treaters. The gentlemen who work at Heat Treat, Inc, have as their livelihood the making of heat. They harden steel.
120 degrees for heat
» » » THE STEEL is hardened by fire. And the temperatures of the ovens rise to a sweltering 2100 degrees. That makes a fairly consistent temperature of 135-140 degrees in which to work. When the huge gas ovens are opened to withdraw the steel gauges, shafts, dies, tools and jigs, the radiation from the furnaces sends the room temperatures up to a searing 150 degrees. But that’s not bad to the fellows who work at Heat Treat. It's when the weather is muggy on the outside that they really perspire. Heat treaters, you see, must wear a few extra sweat shirts, and an extra pair of pants to keep from being
“W-e-1.,” the woman said, “I might let you have
some, How many did you want?” “Er- - er, how many could you let me have?” my wife countered, hoping to get two.
woman asked. My wife had to lean on the showcase for support. “Oh, yes, that would be fine,” she said weakly. “And are you out of gum, too?” the woman asked. By that time my wife could only nod, and the woman dropped a couple of packages into the sack with the 10 chocolate bars. When my wife came running back to the car, her eyes were aglow, “Did you get a couple?” we asked. “Look!” she said, opening the bag. “Look!”
By David Dietz
these rockets traveled so high in.the stratosphere that they came down vertically, thus giving no indication of the direction from which they had been fired. He said that British scientists realized at that moment that England might be attacked by rockets in another war and not even know, in the event of a surprise attack preceding the declaration of war, whether the rockets were coming from Iceland or Africa, from the east or from the west.
A-Bomb On V-2 MANY AUTHORITIES think that the invasion of Europe would never have been possible in world war II if the Nazis had perfected the V-2 rockets six months earlier. The thought is that they would have destroyed all usefulness of England as a base for our forces. One ceertain: Had Nazi
thing is Germany
achieved an atomic bomb and put it on the V-2]
rocket, there would have beeen no invasion of Europe by our forces. Great Britain would have disappeared as a nation. In a few years we shall face a situation in which long-range rockets, not merely the V-2 with its limited range, will be armed with ataomic bombs. Those navy officers who talk glibly of building battleships which can withstand the impact of an atomic bomb, must answer the question of what the! navy will do when these rockets begin landing on our principal cities.
What will a navy defend when the first attack is]
launched directly upon the home front, when its initial purpose will be to knock out the nation’s industrial potential and destroy its morale?
A
By Eleanor Roosevelt
week, T was glad to find that she could be comfortable and cool in spite of the fact that, outside, it was certainly hot and muggy. It was good to see her and I had a very pleasant visit. After lunch yesterday, I took the train back to Hyde Park, as I have a number of guests, including three children of various ages, staying with me for the next few days.
Talks to Soldiers
.. I SOON FOUND myself talking with a young Poughkeepsie man lately discharged from the army. Soon, others joined in our-conversation and I was much interested in the various opinions expressed. One young air officer told us that, in a few weeks, he would be going batk to Germany to work with our military government and that he was doing this as a measure of defense. He feels strongly that our brand of democracy must become known and understood in the rest of the world to help preserve the peace. I gathered that the other young men felt the same way.
The only young man who had not fought in the,
war remarked that America could never be invaded to the extent that Russia had been, and I was interested to hear the soldiers say,” “Don't say that— you never can tell what may happen.” This struck me as a far healthier attitude than the sense of false security which- takes it for granted that Americans are 50. invincible Ahat no enemy can make any headway
scorched by the open flames. { . 8. = | A HEAT treater starts work at 3:30 a. m. It takes two hours to {get the big ovens roaring.
the heavens, the furnaces are doing, their hottest work. Then they're handling any of
heating the steel to give it a tough surface, yet a soft inside.
About |
HOT? HOW: WOULD YOU LIKE TO WORK IN 140-DEGREE BLAST?—
90 ‘Cool’ to Heat Treaters
Dixon Eagle, president of Heat Treat, Inc. tests a rocker shaft for Alvin Hibbitt gets smoke in his eyes as he douses a basket of gears in a diesel engine on the Rockwell machine to determine the strength of the metal. John Bills, an employee, watches,
oil, The gears are fresh from the 2100 degree oven,
(—— Dictator Politics ms Tennessee Boy Criticizes ‘Boss’ Crump Politics
By DANIEL M. KIDNEY © WASHINGTON, Aug. 7.-Edward H. (Boss) Crump of Memphis wal held up as an example of dictators type leadership by a Tennessee hoy attending the federal government forum being held here by the Amers ican Legion. » During debates on selection of & president and vice president for the mythical national constitutional party established by the young dele« gates, Bobby B, Lowe, 17, got the floor. “I AM from Tennessee,” he said, “but I don't think we need the type of politics that results in the sort of election battles we had at Athens last week, “That condes from followers of the Boss Crump machine fighting to stay in power and run the state, Politics need not be like that. We in Tennessee are all too familie with. what that kind of politics means. “Politics can be the science of government. And it can and should be clean, even if we do have Crump elections in Tennessee.”
BOBBY, WHOSE * home is in Madison, Tenn, was applauded by the 100 teen-agers from all parts of the country. Under discussion wa® the question of whether sectionals ism, or some other diversive factor, might crop up if any of the boys were chosen for president and vice president by name. Most of the delegates favored the suggestion advanced by Elmer W, Sherwood of Indianapolis, national {| Americanism director of the Legion, {for the use of fictitious names. Se {they prepared -to elect the presidens {and vice president from three cane didates named John Doe, Tim Smith and Bill Jones. ...
» » . THE YOUNG Crump critic was governor -of the Boys’ State spone sored by the Tennessee departmeny of the Legion. A high school seniop
and leader in school activities, Bobby
is director of youth radio forumh for a Nashville station.
We, the Wome
Thousands Ask For a Place
To Call Home
By RUTH MILLETT + “WANTED-—as soon as possiblef A place to call home.” That one sentence, taken from
Like a scene from Shakespeare, this duet of Heat Treat, Inc. employees stirs the bubbling oil as the red hot dies are poured inte the cauldron for a bath. R.T. Robinson heaves while Henry Hampton stirs the
steamy solution,
ture In around 1700 degrees.
gears are carbonized. » » »
ANNEALING involves
The hardening operation takes | aceording to the Heat Treat. This|the temperature up to 1500 degrees can be quenched in water or pref- home from a 140 degree shop to a takes four hours and the tempera-|for a 10 to 40 minute duration. This | erably a special oil solution for six [chilled 80 degree backyard.”
the blast ovens ranges! The piston “Would five with nuts and five without do?” the | noon, when the sun is highest in | pins and transmission in your car's
removing three steel hardening operations.|the strains and hardness from the The processes are known as car- | metal at a temperature of 1400 debonizing, hardening and annealing. | grees. Forgings and castings are The carbonizing operation entails|treated to this heat bath,
is the final heat treat operation and
is used where wear is the chief) Sewing machine parts are
factor. | hardened. Cooling the steel products under such extreme heat is no simple
operation. - Like human beings, in-| animate gears and other steel items |
must be chilled slowly, There are two ways to cool steel, Steel
to eight hours or it can be temporized. That involves blowing hot air to bring the heat down. ” » ” HEAT treaters love their work. “Wouldn't have any other job,” they chorus. And in hot weather? How about it then? “Oh, 1t isn't so bad,” say.the men. “After all, it feels so cool to go
THE STORY: Cecily’s yeiding is over at last. But never will orget the eruel thing I did te her. 1 does ean I plain to Cerinna . Robert that they—my dsughter and my husband— have been cheated all through the years for Cecily’s sake? And that she wasn't worth it! Della? Della hates me for what I've done to Cecily’s life. te go back to the beginning. Della, Ceelly’s mother, is a strange one. She is very wealthy but she squeezes every cent. For instance, I knew she had her own reasons for the party she gave the poor Marlin st. youngsters—the party that was given at my house because she was afraid they would dirty hers. But I wase’'t prepared for her fury when the newspapers credited me with the party and | omly listed Dells as a guest. She said | she had spent all that money just to | impress Myrtle Ralston and now it had been wasted.
CHAPTER THREE “WHY DID you mention Robert and me at all?” I said, and my vojce had an edge to it that I knew was dangerous. “1f you didn't want us to have {any credit,” I added recklessly, “why didn't you just say the party | was held at our house?” “I don’t want Myrtle Ralston to think I have those Marlin flats kids running through MY rooms!” Della said. “It would give her an excuse to say that the reason she doesn’t call on me is because she’s afraid of catching something!” There it was—Della’s rankling anger against the town’s most prominent woman who was president of Cecily’'s school's P.-T. A, and who had completely ignored Della’s existence from the first day of their acquaintance. » » » DELLA WAS always rehearsing this grievance to me. “We go to the same church—our kids go to the ‘same school and we live in the
same block. Who does she think she is, anyhow? My house is bigger than hers and my car is a later model. I've got as many diamonds as.she has! One of my ancestors was signing the Declaration of Independence before her family ever saw the inside of a schoolroom!” “What does it matter?” I argued ceaselessly. “You can have, owner friends, can't you?" | The trouble was, of course, that i she. couldn't. She could join clubs —and she did—but although the women were pleasant to her at the organization meetings, they did not call, they did not open their homes
on their soll n , to her,
“1 COULD buy and sell the whole bunch,” Della said, contemptuously to salve her pride. “That's it, Della,” I said once, trying to help her. “Those women have enough money so that it isn't the most important thing in their lives—" “Like fun it isn't!” Della halted me. “They're simply jealous—and I'll give them cause to be!” There was no use trying to reason with Della when she was determined to be unreasonable. ~ n » SHE CALLED the newspaper and accused the editor of favoring the Ralstons with publicity to curry favor because Mr. Ralston was a political figure. The editor, busy with the world’s affairs, thought at first that he was being ribbed. After he decided his caller was in earnest he made an effort to be polite, but after a few more of Della's acrid personal comments he gave up and BSuggested that she cancel her subscription and let him get on with his work. Della took him up on it, adding that his rag wasn't even remotely worth the seventy-five cents a month he had been exacting from her, Also, as a further vengeance on the P.-T, A., she yanked Cecily
BEGINNING A NEW TIMES SERIAL STORY—
Daughter of Mine . « + ByR. Louise Emery
out of public school and entered her in a private one for girls in the city, an hour's drive from home. ” » Ma MY HEART froze, because I feared that meant Della would move to the city to be spared those hours in the car each school day, but nothing could have induced her to leave town while her score was still unsettled with Myrtle Ralston. In the city Cecily took piano lessons, ballet, tap and ballroom dancing, drama, riding, swimming and fencing. It cost Della a fortune but she didn't care, She had her eye on some future goal that even I didn't see, although I did know that Mrs. Ralston's son was only two years older than Cecily, Della tried to put the announcement in the paper that Cecily was launched on this breath-taking and gilded program, but her name was on the editorial boycott list. The paper was not interested. ~ ” ~ WELL, THAT was Della. That was one side of her anyhow. Nursing her through her petty griefs I found it hard to remember that she was capable of truly great love ~—but she was. In her devotion to Thorne, her invalid husband, she was like a creature transformed. Della has a mean tongue, but I
Thorne except in gentleness and affection, and Thorne is often cranky and impatient with her. “He never was until his {lIness,” Della always exouses him. » ¥ . HER LOVE for Cecily is another item I've always remembered in trying to find good in Della to counterbalance the bad things. Of course you could say from another standpoint that it is no credit to her to love Thorne and Cecily; they are hers and for Della whatever is hers shines with a resplendency bright enough to dim every flaw, Della is fond of animals. Before Cecily arrived one of her neighbors, going to South America, asked Della to board his cat until he returned. He paid well for the favor. » » » THE CAT slept very comfortably on an old sofa pillow in a carton from the grocery store for months until a letter came from his owner asking Della to adopt him. The next time I dropped in the cat was curled up, a golden ball, in a wicker basket lined with blue satin, “He's mine now,” Della explained. Now that he was hers “he could have the best,
have never heard her speak to
(To Be Continued)
GI's Rest in English Beauty Spot
By DAVID M. NICHOL Times Foreign Correspondent CAMBRIDGE, England, Aug. 7.~ Atop a hill near the village of Madingley lie 6000 members of the United States armed forces, who died in the war with Germany. The hill is one” of the beauty spots in rural England, The cemetery, one of three in the British Isles, is the Cambridge American military cemetery.
At Brookwood, nearer London,
eled walk and neatly trimmed grass at Madingley is Anthony Lumpp, formerly a landscape gardener, Wilmette, Ill British civilians in astonishing numbers add their contributions to the care and maintenance of this memorial to the young men who came into their midst and were received as allies and friends.
The women’s volunteer service of Cambridge regularly provides fresh
flowers for the small chapel and for special occasions. Fifteen hun-|
3600 more U. 8. war dead lie along- | dred persons came for the Memorial |
side their predecessors from .world | war I and at Lisnabrenny, near Belfast, in Northern Ireland are 150 more, . Each of the three plots has Its caretaker and crews of American reco: and British eivilians, In chavge of the rosebeds, trave
day services in May, although it is | not a holiday here. A group in! Bishop's Stortford has offered $400 | to} be used as jt may be required,
don’s northern outskirts to 10 men of the 577th bombardment squadron who “sacrificed their lives to prevent their aircraft from crashing on our homes,” Until it is decided whether this will be a permanent U, 8. cemetery, the chapel will continue to be a converted Nissen hut. Like the burial ground itself, it is shared by Protestant, Catholic and Jew. A non-commissioned officer stained the glass of the chapel windows. A Negro painted. the altar mural, with its angel in gold rising | from a darkly troubled world, The three cemeteries are ad-
| ministered from the American graves registration command in Versailles, through a headquarters
A Je over the chapel door|in Cambridge, A Lt. Col. Rusin’ simple language the se)] Weilenman, Red Oak, Ia.
tribute of the residents of Oheshunt and Waltham erogs on Lone . / « J @
a y
wi
the want ad of a veteran who cons fided in print that he hadn't lived | with his family in 3% years, might stand as a summation of the coune try's most pressing problem in 1948, All that thousands upon thous sands of families are asking is “8 place to call home.” Like the veteran who used the phrase in his ptfinted plea, most of the families are ho longer pare ticular, “House or apartment, fure nished or unfurnished,” they say, ” tJ ” THEY DON'T ask that the house be a certain size, have this or that convenience, and be in this or thay neighborhood, They just want anything—quone set hut, converted chicken-house remodeled garage—anything with four walls and a roof that they can call home. The need for place to call home makes all other shortages seem minor annoyances, What's the meat shortage to the couple who are being evicted and have no house into which to move? .» What's the scarcity of automo biles to the couple who are anxe fous to stop imposing on relatives, yet. who can find no dwelling of their own?
» » . FOR A HOME of their own, thoue sands of couples are pleading in print, offering rewards, listing such virtues as “no smoking of drinke ing.” For a home of their own, some couples are even promising thas they will themselves do the worl necessary to convert an attic or garage into a livable room or two, All they ask of 1946 is a place to call home. And if 1946 gives them that, no matter what minog headaches it brings it won't seem a bad year to those who know what it is to be homeless.
Dr. Charles L. Ball
Resumes Practice
Dr. Charles L. Ball, 2716 Made ison ave. announced ‘oday that he has resumed the practice of dene tistry In associae tion with Dr. Wils liam PF. Hanning, 204 Kresge builds i
ng. Discharged witly the rank of major, Dr. Ball served almost four years in the army dene tal corps. While overseas Dr. Ball served with the 872d medical hose pital ship platoon in the Southe west Pacific area. He was also & dental officer in the station hospital at Camp Maxey, Tex., and Camp Stoneman, Cal. Dr. Ball is married and has one son, Billy, 8 years old.
RENT HOUSING NG BUILT BY INSURANCE FIRMS
Rental housing for 75,000 persons is under construction by life insure ance companies throughout the country or is scheduled to start’ within the next year, the Institute of Life Insurance has anhounced: Costing $150,000,000, the projects bring to $275,000,000 the amount of rental housing financed by lite
Dr. Ball
