Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 September 1946 — Page 7

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ptain of the beat Don same was 't beat him was first or opens, the

rs. Not even n their three 3. A. and the No individual llenges. And 1 back. gin to gather

al champione .

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v he will wim, sudden-death prm book is 8

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» he finals. If resign from

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in Bill

orrow elheads of the league wii be

1 successive vice at Victory field the Cincinnati Airst game of ouble-header tos m. The winner 1a LaPalomas of game,

BALL —

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[. 10-15 ounds

ing y . $2.40 $2.40 sman's Store, Roe Sporting

at. 7 P.M.

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BS

Inside Indianapolis - -

THE @PDS were against a 17-year-old Liberty, Ind, farmer and his thoughts about the 1946 state fair almost a year ago when he stood in a neighbor’s barn. . He was holding, tight to $25 of hard-earned cash in his blue denims. He watched buyers shrug their shoulders and pass up a scrawny three-month-old . Angus heifer, . an” After they all had left, the boy threw away the piece of straw. he had been chewing, pulled ‘his money out and put it"8n the line! " Glenn Carson looked a long time at his wobbly new - coal-black Angus and rolled up his sleeves. This would indeed be working against odds—against the sincere advice of more experienced farmers. At yesterday's auction in the Coliseum, Glenn's judgment paid off to the. tune of $5280 when “Buster,” his - 880-pound gfand champion ‘Angus steer, was sold at an all-time high; bringing $6 a

- pound, :

It was last Monday that Glenn was awarded the grand champion award in all breeds. A slow grin which spread to a full happy smile was all the steam that Glenn let off after he won the award. The quiet, matter-of-fact youth doesn't believe in making a lot of noise about his accomplishment ~because he worked hard to win. ?

“That's All There Is to It’

“I PLANNED to do the best I could with Buster at the fair and I won—that's all there is to it,” Glenn said. ro

‘His championship, plan began the day he brought .

shivering Buster home. Careful feeding, daily walking for showmanship, grooming, washing and training led up to the grand finale. Glenn, a graduate of Short high school in Liberty, has many more plans. He ‘has a plan for a farm of his own. He has an idea of ‘what is wrong with the country and what could be done to improve it. “¥H everyone at one time in their lives would live for a time on a farm the country would be a better place to live in. I think their experience would give them a better idea of what comes from the earth and what must be put into it for all the things we have now,” Glenn suggested.

City Life Is Too Hurried

“THE TROUBLE with city people is that they're always in & hurry. I visited New York and Washington and the way people carried on made my head swim. I'm going to be .a farmer right where I am in Liberty.” : . Glenn, who is president of the ninth district Future Farmers of America club, knows how he can be happy. : About 200 acres of ground would “keep me busy,” he says. Glenn also wants a six-room house, a wife and three boys and two. girls “to help with the chores.” ’ ; He knows he has to have a stock barn, tool shed, silo, corn erib, milk house, sheep barn and a cattle barn. His “ideal” farm would include a combine, bailer, two tractors, a truck and all the trimmin’s in the line of farm equipment accessories. ; Glenn took some ribbing after he outlined the ideal farm. “A wife and five kids, Listen to him, daddy—and right now he doesn't even look at girls,” laughed Martha Ann, Glenn's 12-year-old sister.

<

W n Crin ar on Crime WASHINGTON, Sept. 7 (U. P.).—PFive of the nation's Hawkshaws—armed with microscopes, chemicals and lie-detectors—have banded together for a private war on crime. » They'll engage in battle with murderers, thieves, forgers, industrial saboteurs, or any other kind of scoundrel—but for a price. The public knows them as private detectives, Each is a scientist in specific fields of criminology. Dr. Lemoyne Snyder, lawyer-physician who is medical and legal director for the Michigan state police, today told about the formation of this private per-sleuthy organization. Accompanied by three other members of the anti-crime Big Five, Dr. Snyder tame here to discuss the corporate set-up with former U, 8. Atty. Gen. Homer 8. Cummings, who will act as general counsel.

Testifies in Crown Jewels Case .

THE FIFTH member of the firm, Leonarde Keeler, the lie detector expert from Chicago, is in Germany to testify in the crown jewel robbery case, which he helped to break. ° The other three members are Clark Sellers of Los Angeles, who can smell a forgery a mile away: William W. Harper, Pasadena physicist who developed a formula for figuring the speed of an automobile from its tire skid marks, and Raymond C. Schindler, New York ‘private investigator who is a ballistics and fingerprint expert. “No,” said Dr. Snyder, “we don’t plan to go into competition with Scotland Yard, the FBI or local

A * 2 t1 MANY PEOPLE seem to insist that the atom bomb means the end of the world unless we all agree to

scrap all our fundamentals for a super-world state.

A-bomb or no A-bomb, the historical trend of weapon-and-defense development won't be scrapped. Every super-weapon has resulted in its defensive counterpart. The essential principle of every offensive weapon . suggests the essential form that must be assumed by the defensive counterpart. - For instance, the German- V-1—a jet-propelled, winged contraption, guided by automatic flight— regulating ~instruments—naturally prompts men to think in terms of a similar, jet-propelled torpedo. It doesn't make any difference whether the most “destructive explosive force. is atomic energy or electrified green cheese. It. nfust be transported * from where it is, to where it will find its target.

Target-Seeking Defense WE CAN CARRY it in bombers, but we all agree that means fewer missions ‘because of the time and money required to build bombers and train bomber | Crews. E - We can load any explosive into a modified German V-1 and bomb enemy targets or build a suitably modified V-1 and equip it with target-seeking elements which will guide it toward solid objects above the horizon. And solid objects above the horizon in wartime means enemy planes or robombs,

My Day

HYDE PARK, Friday —Yesterday noon 1 went across the river to West park to lunch with Mrs. Richard Gordon and the judges of the West park flower show. From her house we went to the Episcopal church; a very chatming little church which was a tie with our old Episcopal church in Hyde park, since originally the West park people came across the river to worship heré on a Sunday. The tale goes that one of the bosts was swamped and ‘after that they built their own, church. My mother-in-law used to open this West park flower show occasionally, so this year they invited me to do so. It was held in the parish house; and the booths for the little fair were out on the lawn, It is a real community undertaking, though the proceeds go to the support of the Episcopal church. Everyone who has anything to exhibit does so. I presented the cup to the person winning the most points, Samuel Tinney, who won 156 points,

Gladiolus Named ‘Atom’

THERE WERE beautiful gladioli and dahlias and a new variety of gladiola called the “atom,” grown in Poughkeepsie by Humphrey Hedgecock of the conservation department. It is a very beautiful flower, I was given a large bunch and am enjoying them. 2 oa ! I have been hoping that, since we had such cold

: eather in August, we would have warm weather that he cari be a ‘friend to all the world. Thus he ‘© gain in September, but I am- afraid that cold. becomes “Squeegy the firefly; lamplighter of the sky.

. i Lime

iii ih J

‘more satisfaction out of encouraging younger mem-

craft and far faster than any -robomb—and it climbs

i .

ow J

foi piel The Indianapolis Times

SECOND SECTION

Down to t ne

"Let's. go down to Friendship, Down to the Town of Smiles! * SOME YEARS ago, while touring through New York | state, I drove, one evening, into the little town of Friendship. Down a kingly hill, into a smiling valley, and there ! |was stopping ip a village with the same name I had:long given to a town of my imagination. For years I had been, and still am, a city planner and construction engineer, building into a ‘mythical city all (the friends that helpfulness, cheer and good-will may gather ‘around my needy and desirous heart. . - Tal, : ; I need friends . .. I want friends . . . and making Grand champion both . . . Glenn Carson and Angus. friends, and keeping them, is my life work . . . so grows my “Glenn, when ‘did you get this idea?” asked his{imaginary town of Friendship, the Town of Smiles.

father, “ 2 = : FN Re Plainly uncomfortable, Glenn gave a big tug HAVING discovered Friendship, N. XY, and writing on the straw he was chewing. about my mythical town of the same name, helped me to Glenn said he doesn't intend to go beyond high|g4igeoyer Friendship, Ind., a squint of a village on the Dearschool with his education. He likes to read in the id {f Rivlev tv : evenings and believes that practical experience and |born side of Ripley county, : self-education will suffice to make him a successful A town of 151, Friendship has a little red brick BapTarmet. ; 'tist church, a bank where Wilkie Lenion is cashier, a trading Another reason he doesn’t want to leave home| . yo: : lie . SIRet he Bic iv Aneit CRIvGL WIitiT Ie te Froom post run by Pop Neighbert, a water lily flour mill run ing fogpthe 1947 state fair. by the Rinkmeyer brothers, Friendship, though small in population, is nationally

“You know I hated like the dickens to sell Buster | : but I'm kinda glad the fair is over and I can get| known, for near the town are the firing ranges of the Na-

back to work.” A 4-H club member since he was 10, Glenn gets

&

bers than anything else—except grooming a’ grand champion. . . “I learned a good lesson from our 4-H leader, Trebor Young, and I'm going to try to pass on+all I learned to the boys and girls ‘who join the club every year.”

7 His idea about Re anything if it is worth to is to do it right d forget entirely dog-eaf{dog competition. “We have a lot of competition in 4-H work,” Glenn said, “but it's the kind of a competition that keeps a man on his toes not only to help himself but ‘to help the other guy. A lot of our so-called

These national matches, held this year from Aug. 29 to Sept. 2, are colorful and, - ND rigiti . . (grounds, are two of Indiana's most X om worth visiting, for he € come | eautitul valley scenes, one called old-timers and new-timers|ine sugar Bowl by the Shawnee

bp many. states.of the union [Indiags. (Did Indians have sugar?

Es

“a a 4 | { ’ ' to fire and display the rifles | Not if there was an OPA!) | “The valley is small, as sugar

that were used in the found- bowls sould be. (I am. tod the

ing of our democracy. 1946 models of this type .tableware Not far from the ranges, lying will be smaller, not outwardly, with northwest and northeast of ‘the pushed-up bottoms, allowing only

tional Muzzle Loading Rifle association, whose: president is °

SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1946 > A NEW WEEKLY COLUMN... By Barton Rees Pogue = *

own of Smiles

T

Barton Rees poet and philosopher.

Boss Johnston of Aurora and WLW broadcasting fame. gouen space to hold your allot-|10t build a house (no shortages of

Pogue .. . . Hoosier

{ment.) If you ever go to the rifle matches or chance upon Friendship in your travels do ask for directions to the Sugar Bowl and the foothills of Scotland valley. You will ind them good for the soul. n | FOR TWQ very good reasons, a desire to travel and an“urge to be something of a philanthropist, 1 have always wished for the power

RDENING: Silvery Daisy Plant Adaptable to

political: leaders and union leaders c-uld learn a lot . from us 4-H'ers.” ; {GA To the point-blank question of how he felt when| he won the grand champion prize in all breeds, the | calm Union county youth thought for some time | before he answered with, “I felt all right.” (By Ed Sovola.) | WHEN THE Brookside Garden

{club opens its flower show at 5 p. m.

‘By Sandor Klein | today at the Brookside community

{house, there will be on exhibition

police agencies. As a matter of fact, we'll co-operate an odd shrubby herb ‘called santo- = with them. But there are lots of cases which aren’t!]ina., Mrs. Harold Hayes, 5906 N. in the field of official work generally carried on by | oxford st. is showing it. Mrs. police and enforcement agencies.” Hayes is club president. He explained that the idea of combining the gi. ces a pair of the silvery various talents in crime detection “possessed by each! low growing and beautifully

|gray, of the five came to them many months ago as the | ound plants on either side of her

result of a casual conversation. lfront sidewalk. Santolina (laven- ’ ) der cotton, ground cypress) has Arrange to Have Associates oehy leavers Tike. thee of the “IT IS our plan fo set ug” what we think will be {smallest sedums, but it is really a the only national crime laboratory in existence,” | member of ‘the daisy .family. The Snyder sald. foliage, in addition - to «its silver “We've already arranged with leading experts color, is pleasantly aromatic. throughout the United States to act as associates in| It’s adaptable to dry poor soil every field of inquiry. { (like its many herb cousins) and “These men include professors in many of our|jts beauty may be used either as a leading universities, outstanding questioned-document | specimen plant for low trimmed experts, fingerprint and. ballistic experts, analysts, hedges along driveway or flower micro-chemists, physicists, aeronautical engineers, peds in a sunny spot. medico-legal experts.” } a = Mr. Schindler worked on the Oakes murder case THE FLOWER show will continue in the Bahamas and succeeded at least in eon- | through tomorrow from 1 to 8 p.m. vincing a jury who was not the slayer. He says the ppe public is invited and there is organization is ready to assist any law enforcement | admission charge. In addition agency not equipped to handje a given problem. | flower and vegetable exhibits Mr. Snyder made a reputation by the scientific| iy aie also will be a display of ‘quilts solution of several baffling murder cases in Michigan. and antiques. [ Mr. Sellers served as a handwriting expert in the| ps... ‘Hayes has a word of enLindbergh kidnaping case. | couragement for new home: owners The name for the new organization.won't be an-|

: | starting out all too often.with gravel nounced until the formal ingorporation, | top soil and a few sad looking ever-

|greens. + «7.7 | She planned the planting which By Maj. Al Wi lliams makes an attractive sef8ing for the : TEE ~~ ~IHayes home yet, she “says, Ten

Such a défensive gadget against robombs was|Yyears @go 1 knew Pomel am bound to be developed. Within the last few days|ing Shout Sardening, for — ago listed as a cauliflower, tried out by the U. 8. army air forces has released a photo of | 1, the city, ang a in Paul H.' Brown, 5145 N. Michigan its latest GA9PA (ground to air pilotless aircraft) in When we move our po > iid operation. It's faster than the fastest piloted air-| there was nothing here but gravel.” Id. A | One compact head looked like a faster. Apparently it is rocket-propelled. INGENUITY AND work accom- purple velvet caulifiower. Perhaps The British have a half-dozen different types of | plish miracles. “A dilapidated picket half of them, Ms: Brown said, similar defensive weapons against enemy robombs.|fence was repaired and painted. A show thelr relattonship to broccoli And whence came the impetus to build such defense |low section of the yard was raised|by bearing looser heads. gadgets? Obviously from the principles of the Ger- by putting sed on top of the short| After cooking, it turns green, man V-1 and the V-2. Fa .border grass. A brick ter- looks even more like broccoli. Chief

Defense Robomb Faster {was made from old bricks. up to protect. the head from sun THESE NEW ground to air pilotless aircraft are| .Mrs. Hayes is especially proud of as caulifiower does. The Browns not going to be spewed into the air in the vain hope|a pair of red, white and blue al-| ike it so well they plan te raise it of at least one of them colliding with enemy |theas, flowering in each of the three again next year, electronics for guiding missiles in -search of specific |colors at the same time. targets. - The U. S. navy, always first in radio, and later radar, developments, has its own sweet version of the. defense robombs for practically nullifying enemy carriers. Obiviously since these defense robombs will be| smaller than an attack robomb designed to wreck | § cities; the defense robomb always will be faster—as the fighter always, is faster than the bomber plane —and for the same reasons, At the present stage of development, the rocket bomb can be used only for comparatively short-range work; the jet-propelled robomb goes for longer ranges.

= tod raises a new variety of cauliflower.

Mrs. Paul H. Brown . . .

. MR. AND MRS, Don McFarland, DID YOU ever see a purple cauli- 527 Holt rd., have a tall sunflower, flower? No freak, it is a new va- almost 19 feet high at last report. |riety, really a broccoli but usually They've deeided its proximity to

” » u

ILLY NOTIONS

By Dalit)

By Eleanor Roosevelt

nights are with. us “for keeps.” As I walked the woods this morning, I saw things

|

|

Aromatic Shrub Adds Beauty to

race for picnic table and benches advantage is that it needs no tying- |

Poor Soil—

Home

their son's rabbit hutch probably induced its giant size, Mrs. McFarland suggests moré gardeners would save. their own vegetable seed and save money if they placed a starting seed bed near the house foundation for early {spring warmth and then transplanted it to a bed beside the garage.

{

» s IF YOU want to save seed of any kind select your specimen vegetable (or flower) not on its own merit {alone but rather dn the merit of {the plant that bore it. A small tomato from a plant that produced well and was free from leaf diseases is a much better seed specimen than a larger, better looking tomato from a poor plant.

We, The Women

No Fury Like ‘Woman's in

A Food Line

By RUTH MILLETT IN A MAD scramble to buy sugar in Washington, in a

one woman

of red on many of the green leaves and, across my brook, I can see. one tree turning yellow and gold | against the dark green background of the pines. This piné plantation, which we can see from the | cottage, was planted many years ago by my husband. | It has now become a dark and mysterious wood, | with a floor of pine needles thick beneath -the branches, ' ’ It was an atmosphere in which the children can | play Indians or any other mysterious game and really feel that they are miles away from civilization, |

Little Squeegy Bug OUR TWO little boys came down from the top cottage for -supper with me last night and we read a delightful children’s book called ‘Little Squeegy Bug,” story of a firefly by Bill and Berhard Martin. The illustrations are just the kind that appeal to | children. There is a moral to the tale-but it isn't too obvious. . Squeegy is a little “nobody bug” who wants to be like Buzzer, the bumblebee, and carry a gun in his tail, ! Hunchy, the spider, weaves silver wings so that Squeegy can fly like Buzder and live at the turn of

| {

the road just south the moon. But instead of a A 3, A : gun, -Hufichy hangs a lantern in Squeegy's tail so | «AND WHAT'S NG WITH THE WAY : | PLAY THE GAME P” - ag i rs rh pis . Ne 4s

\ ~ . x v .

gn

| line of three hundred was knocked down ‘and for several minutes

{ other shoppers walked over her be-

| fore the stampede was stopped long | enough for the woman to.be picked up and taken to a hospital. It looks as though the war brought | out women’s latent aggressiveness and devglopéd it to a point where it is way out of control. LJ ” ” WHETHER or not they were the actual bread winners during the war, it was the women who brought home the bacon—and every other scarce article as well. They became the standers-in-line and, after a taste of pitting their strength. and endurance against. all comers, many of them got ‘the scarce-article fever. ? Onee~aroused, the aggressive instinet runs away with a woman's | common sense, with her sense of | values, and with her feeling for the { fitness of things. \ | Maybe when ‘the scarcitjes ake

oe the women who jump into

{every line they see will calm” down | and

regain- their poise, +

fury wr

to make money, lots of money. I really never did set any limit on the amount I should like to make. Any figure, upward, will suit! These years, however, have tamed my ambitions to quite a degree, and there has come a rather settled notion that I will never be a person of wealth, But if cannot make money I CAN make friends... after all & rather satisfactory sort of fortune , . , millions in friends. Men who gather gold and. silver lini In their bonds and bank accounts Tes Make me wish for riches In their kind and-like amounts, But if I can’t make a fortune, To be spent in afterwhiles, I can gather golden friendships In my little Town of

Smiles!

- LJ ~

AND the city, prospers. New subdivisions open almost daily, This column is an open invitation for you to become a friend, to buy a

material here) and become a citizen of Friendship. Let's go down to Friendship, Down to the Town of Smiles! The Highway of Laughter

Leads down there .... ” ” ~

1 HAVE so often noted that if people laugh together gnd not at each other how well they survive the chances of irritation, disagreement and quarreling.

« + « and after We're there = Each gmile is a prayer That nothing but love | From God above May enter the hearts of mankind.

Let's go down to Friendship, * Down to the Town of Smiles! The streets of the city Are called “Jolly,” and “Witty,” . And “Grin” ° And “Try It Agin!” » - » THAT'S my street . , , ¥Try Tt | Agin!” Quite often, when streaks of bad luck showed up in life, I've wondered if my number might not be 1313. But Grin street crosses just below my unlucky number, so I perk up and Try It Agin! And we can’t lose our way, For they've signboards that say:

PAGE 7

Dear Miss Tillie mine

| Kindergartens Aid Children ‘In School Work

(Parents, teachers, and ¢hil dren, too, send your school worries to Miss Tillie in care of The Times.) DEAR MISS TILLIE: = Do primary teachers prefer to have children attend kindergarten before entering school? =~Mother of a Five-Year-0ld. DEAR MOTHER OF A FIVE~ YEAR-OLD: : Yes, most. teachers do, assuming the kindergarten is a well-equipped one and the teacher on her job. A child usually makes faster progress

‘|in. school if he's been in kinder-

garten ‘because he adjusts himself more easily to situations already familiar to him. : He's learned, for instance, to get along with groups of children his own age. He knows he must share his pos= sessions and control his temper, He's found that other children

(Won't play with him if he's a bully

or a scrapper or a selfish person. He's met. competition and discove ered that he can't be in the limelight all the time. But he's gained

has learned to do things on his own, He's developed a sense of security. He's not afraid of the teacher and he knows how to defend himself if other children try to mistreat him. He's found he can be contented away frem his ‘mother, He can do other things with sate isfaction, too—use crayons and paint brush, handle tools, tell stories from books and pictures, sing songs and recite poems, sometimes doing solo work for the entertainment of the whole group. It's things like this. formation of good habits and the development of worthwhile interests—not learning his letters or counting to 20 or writing his name—that give a child who has-had kindergarten training an advantage when he starts to school. LJ = DID YOU EVER: : Try to live for three months without any money coming in? Teachers do, but it's a struggle and no fun. In June, on the day school closed, the last pay check until Octobér was handed .out. One-fourth of a year, 82 days, before.well see another one, July, August, and September rent to pay. Bills to meet by the 10th of each month. Dentist and doctor to see for repairs. Summer study courses to take. A vacation to plan for— two weeks at least for a “breather”

year in top condition? ? What to do to supplement the rapidly dwindling bank account? A short time Job? For .two months? Who ‘wants inexperienced help for that time? - Teach in summer-school—and let further study and preparation go hang? Comes Labor Day at last and séon the school bell. New clothes to buy

“Smile and you're always at

home!”

Down to the Town of Smiles! They don’t have a mayor, Or city surveyor, | Or cop, Or these winky-blink signs that say, Stop!” To smile is the law . ...

and that is the only law they have in the town of smiles . . . the tax rate is low, too , , , a good turn pays the November and May in-| stallments . . . income tax . . .| forget it . . . we don't have wars and crime and graft. . . . And you never saw

A statute so gladly obeyed.

Let's go down to Friendship, Down to the Town of Smiles! While our troubles unravel In laughter, we travel Down there Where each smile is a

prayer, : And the people, we'll find, Are never unkind. . . .. [If you smile we'll soon be there! ” ” y THE Chamber of Commerce | wrote this column, I think! But!

it hasn't over-elated. down! The Mayor, ‘the Town "Board, and citizens urge you to move in. Any male with a white shirt will be more than welcome. Ladies with nylons, any size, will be mobbed. :

Come on

Get ‘Reward’ for - Catching Thief

CHICAGO, Sept. 7 (U. P.).—Anthony Churin and John Nolan, riding by in a car, saw their neighbor, Mrs. Bernadette Kruszynski, 21 entering a Streetcar, her ams loaded with bundles. :

»

man is picking her purse.” They parked the car and chased him two blocks through the loop, caught him and turned him’ over to police. He was Albert Jacobsen, 50, who had a record of arrests dating to 1915, i + Their good work done, Mr. Churin and Mr. Nolan returned to their automobile’ to find their reward. They had been parked in a no-

Let's go down to Friendship, |

“Look,” Mr. Churin said, “that

—you can't face classes for another | year in those twice made-over {dresses Sept. 5 and work begins {but not the pay” check. Another month to go. The money lender to the rescue! And then, oh welcome day; Oct. 1. The ghost walks! And we live again.

Today John said: That guy who writes for the paper makes it sound like we hate to go back-to-school-after-the summer. think vacation drags "out too long, Most of us kids feel that way about it even if we don't admit it.

: Labor

A. F.L. Wins Battle Over - I. L. O. Delegate

WASHINGTON, Sept. 7 (U. P.).— The Truman administration found itself in the C. I. O. doghouse today for sélecting the A, F. of L. to represent UJ. 8. labor at the coming international labor organization conference, Informed quarters predicted the politically-potent C. I. O. would reply by rejecting. an invitation to participate in the conference in any

I

“{way. It starts Sept. 19 at Montreal,

President Truman, it. was learned, made the decision in favor of the F.rof L. In so doing, he overs ruled a proposal by Setretiry of Labor Lewis B., Schwellenbach to rotate I. L. O, representation bes tween the C. I. O. and A, F. of L,

: ” ” oo ¥ THE CHOICE pulled the admin istration off a hot spot with the A. F. of L, and was hailed by A. PF, of L. President William Green as “Just.” C. I, O. leaders. were plainly angry but there was no ‘immediate comment from C. I. O, President Philip Murray. C I. O. sources said the presi dential invitation to nominate OC. L Oy advisers to the A. F. ot L, dele= gate would probably be refused by Mr. Murray and that he would ask the national C. I. O. convention in - November for further instructions.

Sheridan Children

To Hear Curfew

Times State Service SHERIDAN, Sept. T.—Curfew will ring ‘again tonight -in- Sheridan, Starting this evening, the town fire siren will sound the signal for all children under, the age of 16 to

accompanied by an adult. . The time for the new curfew signal ill be 10 o'clock on all nights except Saturday, when the siren

parking spot, but there was no| ticket on the car. vo ti

‘will echo through the town at 11 o'clock. a oR tr 4 i) Hy a

= vn

confidence in himself because he as

otherwise, how start the next school’

be off the streets of Sheridan unless

! »

WH

\