Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 September 1946 — Page 7
28, 1046 Wh
arion Burleson ip to the play d the Rockets,
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titer locked in a twin hazards batting punch
and flawless that were not »
lance
.. 28 (U. P.).~ pennant race at
Games To Pet. Behind Play 625 2 625 2
(night), 29 Chi-
, 29 Boston at
the side down th. ed the Cardinal never was in his equipment
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pt. 28 (U. P).— ned today as sburgh Pirates, was not named, President Frank uld announce manager at a cheduled here
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DIAN ST.
vious Pussle
si st A
S01. ER ESE SIPIREED)
2 Mother of Apollo 3 Solar disk 4 Deadhead 5 Whirlwind 6 Enlarged 7 On the ocear o 8 Encourage 3 Like 1 5 Lone Scout (ab.)
N | ¥ \
" pilots, some of whom top 55 years.
Inside Indianapolis
Meet Mr, and Mrs, Indianapolis. They represent the countless. families now being buffeted about on the stormy domestic front. Mr, and Mrs, Elton Dickinson were chosen at ran~ _dom as Mr, and Mrs. Indianapolis to learn how Indi“anapolis is reacting to meatless meals, shortages of this and that, OPA, politics, the Truman-Wallace flareup and a lot of other things. Mr, and Mrs. Elton Dickinson live in a five-room bungalow at 4715 E. 13th st. Mrs. Dickinson busies
°
@: with domestic duties and the care of her two
ocung daughters. Her husband works at his business, Economy Electric Supply \Co., 130 8. Illinois st., in which he has one-third interest. “The meat famine is a terrible thing,” says Mrs. Dickinson. “Luckily I've a little meat on hand. But I don’t know how it's going to be in thks future. I wish they'd do away with the OPA. “1 imagine our grocery bill is $4 or $5 more a week.”
Deplores Cost of Clothing
“YE GODS!” interjected Mr. Dickinson. “Four or five dollars more. . . , I hope to tell you it's four or five dollars more. “Before the wir we used to get by on right around $10 a week. Now it's $25 a week. “Another thing. I haven't had a new suit for three years. ‘Prices on decent clothes aren't in reach of the common man,” “Yes. - And we aren't going to have anything if these strikes keep up,” said Mrs. Dickinson. “This country Has a lot of political fumblebums, too,” Mr, Dickinson snapped. “Take Wallace for example ..."” . “Why Dick, I thought¥you were an isolationist,” exclaimed. Mrs. Dickinson. “You. mean ‘was an isolationist'—before the war. Now that we're in this political and diplomatic stew we ought to make sure there aren't going to be any more wars. “Wallace had no right to say what he did,” asserted Mr. Dickinson, grinding out his cigaret in the chromium ashtray beside ‘his chair.
Should Have Resigned First
“AS A MEMBER of the President's cabinet he was in an advisory capacity. If he wanted to blow his top, he should have resigned first.” “I wish we could build a new house,” inson said.
Mrs. Dick“This one isn't too bad but it's awfully
a
Torture
b WASHINGTON, Sept. 28 (U. P.).—The ladies who edit the women's pages of this hation's newspapers slowly are doing me in. Yes you are, ladies. The meat shortage, by itself, I can stand. Wan am I from a diet of baked cucumbers and fricasseed eggplant; weak from eating rutabagas a la Rockefeller, compote of boiled celery and similar foods hitherto consumed mostly by rabbits. That is bad, my beautiful editorial friends, but why must you add to my agony? The newspapers arrive by the dozens and the scores. Do I read about the Democrats denouncing the Republicans or the empty butcher shops? Or vice-versa? No, ladies, I'do not. I don't even glance at_the funnies,
Potted Pork Chops °
SOME STRANGE perverse power (some unnatural psychological urge) forces me to thumb rapidly to the women's pages and there torture myself, reading recipes for good things to eat. I have in front of me now, causing me to drool and feel dizzy in the solar plexus a recipe culled from the current issue
of one of America's great newspapers. How to make meat balls. For a family of nine: “Take 10 pounds of pork and veal, mixed and chopped, add parsley, garlic, four eggs, pepper and salt, one cup of cracker meal and. . .” skirts, you are killing me. I do not mean laughter. I have here a recipe for potted pork chops—
with
Aviat THE AGE limit for safe and efficient piloting of aircraft is a topic which deserves some consideration. Flying is a job open to any. man who is able to
do it, and for as long as he is physically and psycho-
logically fit. The public has been sadly misinformed on this age limit business. Long ago some people proclaimed that flying is a young man’s game. That is true only in the sense of its being a business that should be learned early in life. By no means is it a short-time occupation, Who are driving your crack speed trains today? Grizzled engineers, 50 to 60 years of age, veterans who know every trick of handling a high-speed train. Who are commanding your crack speed ocean-going liners? The same kind. of -men of about the same age as your train engineers—men who know their ships, the’ wind, the water and the weather. The core of every airline is composed of veteran Most of the top fighter aces of world war II ranged in ages from 28 to 37. It has long been my belief that a man doesn't cultivate the habit of real thinking until he is over 30. Up to that period he lives largely in the physical sense.
Flying: A Thinking Business ASSUMING a sound psysique, normally alert reflexes and good eyesight, flying is really a thinking business. It is a business of numbers with totals drawn with the cold impartiality of a bank examiner's ‘pencil. It is a business of learning to interpret the weather. It is a business of judging distance, and
and a business of timing—that is, knowing when Jo do what and how,
My Day
HYDE PARK, Friday —The more T read the ‘papers and look at the world situation, the more I realize that both labor and capital in this country have an equally great responsibility for the economic
recovery of the world. If this country does not get on a stable economic footing, no other country is going to be able to recover, The papers today state that our farm income has reached an all-time high. That is good news. But our farmers should not hold back meat or sell animals before they reach maturity in order. to get a higher price, for that is undoubtedly one of the reasons for our present meat shortage. We were warned last summer that we were eating meat which should not have been on the market ‘until autumn, Prices were good, so the meat was sold.
Now we: are short. And we have to keep the
. price ceiling on meat, in spite of all the pleas which
ye
individual interests are making, because only those people who could pay high prices would profit by the removal of the ceiling.
Must Have Full Production
ON THE industrial side, Alfred P. Sloan, nead of General Motors, has made a speech indicting workers for their Indifferent attitude toward their work. I have heard this from several sources and, if it is true, I hope the workers soon will realize that they hhve a stake in the economy of the country and that it can only be saved by full production, ' *
- 5 sad
small and cramped with two small children underfoot
Editors in -
Hoosier Profi i
fo
Mr. and Mrs, Elton Dickinson. . . . In the role of Mr. and Mrs. Indianapolis they make an unsuccessful phone call to their butcher,
all the time. “Guess there is no use wishing, though. The government doesn't seem to be doing too well on veterans’ housing. And I know we could never get material to build unless we went into debt by paying black market prices.” ‘That new Nash we've got is a honey,” Mr. Dickinson looked out of the window at the shiny green car
he Indianapolis
SECOND SECTION |
I GARDEN . .
up in the world.
It would have been great--or so
run a high headline: POET (one of the two million) GROWS BEANS TO BEAT THE BOCHE." "but they never learned how we bent 8 our backs to fight the weed bind, quack grass and Mexican bean beetles. Result, no writeup, not even | without pictures. +PThis summer, the one now order~
|
Mr.
Pogue
parked in front of the house. “Yes, but »you certainly paid for it” Dickinson. “I only paid ceiling price,” was the answer. “And how much did you get for our '41 Studebaker?” asked Mrs. Dickinson. “Certainly not what it was worth.” i Mr, Dickinson tuned in a dance band on the radio and went over to the couch where he sat down beside his wife. “If you need a car in your work, you have a beating now, honey,” he said. “Le’s go to "bed. You've got to get up and get the kids off to school and I've got a lot of work to do tomorrow. (By Jack Thompson.)
sald Mrs. |
By Frederick C. Othman
double thick pork chops—simmered in three cans of | chicken soup. Ladies, have a heart. From New England comes a current formula for corn chowder. “Cut salt pork in tiny dice and try|
until crisp, add corn, cream .
Another Borgia, trying to ’polson me in my own gastric juices, writes: “It won't be long now before the mighty hunters start oiling up their guns. Probably the first things they will bring home will be a bag full of tiny reed birds, so small they are eaten almost bones and all. “Some experts insist that all the cooking these little fellows need is to be wrapped in grape leaves and then in bacon and salt pork and grilled on skewers. under the flame.”
Skewered Editor I AM a mighty hunter, ma'am, but I am not going after reed birds. I shall bag a women’s page editor, wrap her in-a leaf, put her on a skewer, and so hope to regain my sanity. Ladies, you should not irritate a fellow when he’s hungry. It brings out the cannibal in him. : Before I grow too weak to lift my pen I must report | finally and hurriedly that I also have the account of| a cruel editor who went to a cocktail party. { “They had the biggest turkey I ever saw,” she] wrote. “And a huge ham. We made our own sand- |
wiches.” ! That does it. Lady, you better run. I have got| two pieces of bread and a butcher knife. G-r-r-r-r.|
That's the growl of a man who has read the women's |
pages and become a savage beast. AJ
| cessful gardening, whether it is the
By Maj. Al Williams
It is not the pilot's hands or feet wihch get him about it. into trouble, but rather mental errors. That is what' Herewith the experience of one | we meair when we call faulty pilot judgment “cockpit local gardener who -started four!
trouble.”
Any effort to establish cockpit age limits is illogical because it completely ignores the fact-that flying! is an individual job.
Competency Demands Moderation ASSUME TWO young pilots blessed with equally good health-——one abuses his health,.the other pre-! serves it. The first is bound to go broke physically, the second builds a health bank account. Assume both pilots top 50 years, one physically’ bankrupt, | the other physically healthy, keen, fit and alert. ‘Who would dare ot declare both men physically bankrupt and unfit to fly? A man flies as he lives and thinks, live alike, fly alike, or think alike. Cockpit com- | petency demands moderation in eating, drinking, | smoking, and in the general business of living. Some men normally turn toward preserving the blessing of | good haelth, some don't—just as some men SavelP money and some always are broke. The experienced pilot will be the first to know
No two men |
that he is “through” piloting. This knowledge comes}
to him when he shies away from landings instead of | welcoming ‘them enthusiastically as chances to demnostrate his skill’ and judgment. — Some men fly for years, yet nevel really learn| to fly. Others learn quickly, keep on learning, and work at the business of learnifig more, I will fly with the pilot who knows most about his job, and to know most about your job you have got to be at it for a long time.
By Eleanor Roosevelt
On the other hand, management obligation to correct the situations which cause the workers to be indifferent, It is not in human nature to enjoy doing a bad job. If your job is worth doing and if you feel that the conditions surrounding it are fair to you, you will want to work hard,
Need Plan for Parking
WE TALK about the need for co-operation among nations. But ,co-operation has to be begun among the people in each nation. And it seems to me that management in this country would do well to show its superior ability by finding ways and means. to co-operate with labor. The workers can be shown how it pays to do a good job. And they need to be educated to the realization that they have an equal interest in the prosperity of the country, and an equal interest in seeing that the world does not go under because the United States can't learn how to manage its own economy, On A visit to New York City this week, I was conscious of the bad traffic situation. I thought perhaps the order for no parking between 23d st. and 58th st. would mean greater speed in getting about, but the streets seem to have just as much parking as they did before. Someone with imagination must get to “work on planning how motor vehicles can get around our big cities. I think it might be a good combifiation if we could put engineers, architects dnd artists together and tell them, to prodype a plan.
s -
~ wi
,
‘started out by using lots of peat
has an equal |
ing its shroud of autumn leaves, goldenrod and wild asters, I was al “famine gardener,” ambition took the -characteristic|
sort of beating my ambitions usu- | simple and colonial. | Sterling, wooden,
ally take,
I SO wanted to send at least a rotate the ear while consumption ;, o
BARTON REES POGUE
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1946
. at least I contribute te the subsistence of. the, seed company officials, and provide a nice open place for weeds to get oleo salted and peppered (not per-
it seemed toe me—for them to have | drought though, HOOSIER | nebulose in its fruition. ‘the moderns would say,
and was nothing I think I was “super.” » AS REGARDS corn I have no
UNRRA ambitions,
Oh, of the yleld- is extra good a
few of the neighbors—like Ed Gard, Professor Bothwell and Bill Groves —will have some.of my ears on
their tables.
But in- the main my
cars are for me.
t
And I had eleven rows of them |
his summer, stretching latitudinally
| for 130 feet from pole to pole of [ my patch of ‘garden sass.”
.I LIKE corn. And I want to tell
and another! you how I prepare for eating ft,
First of all I keep my methods I refuse to use
However that may be, butter or
{mitted in the best social circles of
During the war I was a victory gardener, living in hopes the ‘Marion | course) or ear just salted, this eater Chronicle or Leader-Tribune would héar that 12 town lots had Charlie is now ready to start the buzz Scott and me in chains, and give us narrative and pictorial recognition, ! | saw,
IN ONE Some I visited 1 watched the boy start his mill. Andgto my amazement I discoveréd another technique for getting corn separated from its ear. This boy gnawed around the cob, then he'd shift and gnaw his way around again. My method had always been (this is my thirdly of all) six rows straight through, and the same number back. I find now, however, that I combine the "better points of the two [techniques into a sort of homeopathic synthesis. I chew latitudinally and longitudinally at will— find a great thrill in the variety experienced, N
All summer long I've had a desire To burn my name in a big bonfire, {And then adopt a nom. de plume
other sort of spindles on which to |gy's when I write I may end my say
Lundred heads of cabbage (Danish is in progress
Baldhead) to starving children,
There may come a time when |
through UNRRA, even though Her- convention will force me to capitu- |
(needy, That arriving ing, is it? as UNRRA must expect a little greed
and graft between here and there.!
low percentage of |
If I might but get 20 of my cab-| per into my butter. {bage heads through I would be most | was years ago I used aly those 20 heads would | memdry lingers on,
{bappy . . . make a lot of little Hindoos burp!
to take ert Hoover says that 80 per cent of late. {such food does not reach the really | | myself those things are out.
But whilst I am a law unto |
I am content only when holding |
foods is not toe discourag- | the ‘ear helpless in both hands. Any organization as hig Sort of a double Nelson.
Ld
» » td
rather unique and unsual way; Instead of saying, in the staid old brogue, “Yours most sincerely, Pogue,” Td end up my lines to Lester or Bob, Yours very truly, ~¢ *“Corn On the Cob.”
Barton. Rees
| All summer long the succulent dears
Times Roving-Rhyming Reporter
THE LAST ROWS of Indiana Summer
* Barton Rees Pogue, The Times roving-rhyming reporter, has two speaking engagements in central Indiana during October, |. Sunday, Oct. 13, he will ‘be in | Mulberry, near Frankfort, to speak to the Mulberry Commercial club at the Methodist church.
Wednesday, Oct. 23, he will address a dinner meeting of the northern Indiana Dental society at the Spencer hotel In Marion.
And end, when making report on the job, Yours very truly, “Corn On the Cob”
All summer long I've not talked much-= Talked like you walk, when you walk on a crutch— For it's six rows down and the same back, Then stop, like a freight on a long
“To ae Man or where And not find food like roasting ears!” I'll wager on corn without any fears, ; : And always remain, through smile and sob, Yours very truly, = “Corn On the Cob.”
fn NOW that fall has come, with all her gold and glow, the last rows of summnier—the long corne rows tallest of all—stand helpless-like and lonely. They.droop toward the earth from which they came, These last rows of summer ree mind me of the work I did to make them possible. This has been my summer gymnasium. When I pushed a hand plough the length of-a 130-foot row I had the equivalent of 50 push-ups, Setting 300 cabbage, tomato, mango, cauliflower and broccoli plants is the same as that number
side-track,
plastic or any- out of the fields of corn in bloom, To masticate—some call it chew— |class.
There's nothing else a fellow can
do. I mght say “umph-humph” or shake my head |In reply to something some one has ! said, | Or write, “No time to hob and nob,”
Yours very truly, “Corn On the Cob”
of full-squats in a calisthenics
Ploughing and hoeing, for getting
‘moisture out and pounds off my
frame. 1s as good as road work. If I could only keep from eating the things I grow, I take pounds off in the garden and put them ‘on at the ple.
. DOWN to the lt rows of summes it g good to tend the soil, I enjoy so much seeing the seeds
SECONDLY 1 stir jt and pep- | Have poked their noses into my ears, | All summer long when I've finished break through the ground, to watch .
no, that | How
Last summer I" was driven to |
but the drought came and my |oleo.
| cabbage is not going to head for! anyplace,
| salt.
And this summer I used just |
My early planting of corn beat the the more primitive I. become,
‘GARDENING: Gravelly Ground Is Greatly Improved With Peat Moss—
Trying to ask if ever I heard lot a single or double English word
{That could near describe the deli- |
cious food |So rapidly changing my latitude: There's no way to answer the same,
| my name,
a meal, And there's nothing on the table but a hard old heel, And the empty cobs lie in piles, |And faces carry those twelve-inch smiles,
|
| my chair:
Now Is the Time to Check Soil Carefully
By MARGUERITE SMITH
ymanaged to utilize all quick decay-| put around under her plants and
THE GARDENING season begins ing garbage though her space is so covered with a sprinkling of soil.
in October. Yes,
you plant your seeds in| the growing season,
{small she couldn't bury it during
But such ma-|
Last year she used perennial rye {as a green manure crop to prepare
spring, (though some are better | terials as lettuce and cabbage trim-|a space for grass in the backyard. mings, carrot and radish tops she’ She is Tepeuiing this year in a
planted in the fall), but that is only| the beginning of the growing season: What you do in the next two months will largely determine whether your ‘lawn dries out to a sickly brown, whether your tomato vines turn yellow and die, in next summer's drouth, For an August drouth is normal weather for our part of the country. This year we had three bad dry periods. Only in two of the last 16 years have we had summers that did not produce one or more dry periods, some of them disastreus. 5 o ” A WATER retentive soil can minimize the effect of dry weather —better than the hose can. All suc-|
raising of shrubs, grass, perennials, or just a pot of ivy in the kitchen window begins (and all too often ends) with the kind of soil you have. This is the time to do something
years ago with “hideous stony soil | that raised a few ratty petunias, now produces some 200 varieties of| fine flowers and an excellent lawn. | Mrs. Dawn Snyder, 1235 N. Ala<| bama st., says “at first the ground was 50 gravelly that every time we watered anything the water just went glug and disappeared. So I
moss. It’s wonderful ‘because it {will lighten heavy soil or improve la light soil. I still use--peat ‘moss but now chiefly around plants when I set” them out. ito wet it thoroughly first or it wilt] | just absorb Water rom the ground.
SHE ADDED other. ater holding materials such as-miushroom compost, manure, edf mold and even
Then you have| .
Mrs, Dawn Snyder, 1235 N. rye for a soll improver.
. Alabama st. .
. She believes in winter
different area for, she pointed out, you can tell the difference between the lawn that has rye under it and the untreated part.
n » r RYE SOWN in September was about a foot tall when the ground was dry enough to turn it under this spring. (The seed will germinate even after frost but the soon“er it is sowed now the better growth
it will make). She used chemical fertilizer on the rye before it was
which hastens decay.
planks hold the material-“on the other side. The lower plank Is slightly raised from the ground so finished compost can be scooped | under it. _~ gs spririkle Adco, lime or chemical fértilizer, whatever I have on| hand, over the rubble to help it
1 ‘decay, and always keep it moist— dry material won't rot. I don't com- |
post my grass clippings but use| them for mulch. The first couple years I gardened | I tried to keep the yard perfectly clean, but that's a mistake. fall I'm going to let leaves stay as they fall around the perennials and
natural winter mulch.” » ” "
continued, “I'd have the soil analyzed the very first thing. I haven't | been scientific about my soil im-
provement, and an analysis tells you just what to put on your .| ground.”
Idea from the Snyder yard: After frost, scatter seeds of Shirley popples, mixed with sand or fine soil, over tulip beds. Thé poppies, bloom= ing next spring, distract the eye from maturing, and unsightly, tulip foliage while the bulb matures.
(Second of a Series)
By ED SOVOLA “STEAK DINNER tonight? thank you. I'll go out with you i I can have a nice salad.” True such a conversation 1s un-
No bash,
| likely today, but that's what actual- |
|y happened nine years ago. A salad
for a steak and it still goes for Mrs. |
Betty Kraft, secretary to Dr. RobLert E. Jewett, director of division | of maternal and child health at the Indiana university medical center, She told how disturbed _her boyfriend (husband now) used to get nine years ago when she would turn down a steak dinner for a salad or vegetable plate. . Also in the story was his joy while meat was rationed during the war. And now, when even a piece of bologna is an unknown quantity from day to day, Mr. Kraft's satisfaction at the choice he made almost a decade ago is boundless. » » A CONFIRMED vegetarian, Mrs: | Kraft isnt’ one bit worried in the | present meat shortage.
| can be bought, I'll be happy,” | Kraft said. An encouraging note for future involuntary vegetarians was sound= ed by Mrs. Kraft. almost never, has a cold. A doctor's
office is a curio shop as far as she | is concerned because being ill is not |
in her makeup.
-DOES SHE have Per? Besides working every day, Mp. Kraft
hg nd
“Just as long as vegetables al my next favorite, shredded wheat, | Mrs. |
She | seldom, -
|
The 34-year-old native of WaInd., besidés not giving two
whoops for meat, would rather eat
SILLY NOTIONS
a carrot or a tomato instead of ice cream or candy, Her favorite fruit, she eats all kinds, are peaches. She loves coffee and under a rigid cross examination admitted she will eat
By Palumbo
re
‘Meat Shortage Doesnt Worry Vegetarian
bowls, swims, and plays golf when- | ever she has a chance.
Italian spaghetti even though the | sauce has some meat flavor in it. The thing that pleases her palate with spaghetti, hoever, is the sea- | soning in the sauce--not the small | [meat Somtent
EVEN AS child, Mrs Kraft did not eat meat, She said her parents | tried to get her to eat it but finally | gave up when they were convinced that their daughter “just didn't care for meat.” And that was that. The first few years of her married life were spent in convincing her husband William that a bowl of vegetables does more for her than an inch-thick steak. | Mrs. Kraft doesn't object to fry- | ing a juicy steak for her husband— iin fact she said she would like. to | get hold of one for him soon. His | enthustasm for meatless meals is | practically nil.
»” » ” | TAKING THIS infoffnation as a |lead, we painted a verbal picture lof a succulent, aromatic, Iscious, [ juicy, tender hunk of steak, surrounded by baked potatoes in a
['deep, rich, brown sauce and then [quickly asked her if she: ever was | tempted by the sight of a meat dish. Thinking very hard, Mrs. Kraft admitted that last April as she | | prepared bacon and eggs for break- | | fast, the smell of frying bacon | | tempted her to eat a slice. Has she ever been tempted since? ENo. Good enough for uUs—Mrs. | Kraft is a vegetarian—the lack of meat in her diet doesn't worry her and it won't us from now: on-for | awhile at least.
—
! | | { |
turned to add the extra nitrogen
Though her space is limited she manages & 3 by 9 foot compost pile |.J in a back corner of the yard. With sheets of metal to protect the fence,
This |
not clean them up. They make a|
“If 1 WERE doing it over,” she |
them flower and bear their fruit. . Each year I say, “I'll never have another garden,” but each year do. I guess I'll always be gardening. From first to lasts $m "rows of
The higher things go in price {Unless it might be I could alter I've said, as I've settled back in| summer are beautiful as any garden |of flowers to me,
| We, the Women————
Wise Women Help Inspire Their Husband's
By RUTH MILLETT ONE OF THE chief complaint: - wives have against husbands is tha! they never do anything around the house.
Maybe the husbands whose wive do the most complaining fbou! this matter have wives-who don’. know -
»
That a wife should not assume, when her Yugtiana surprises fis Ie by taking a household task once, that” rs Should thereafter be hl: responsibility. This scares a man
into a state of mind where he i: afraid to be helpful when he doe: have the urge to be. LJ » ” THAT A HUSBAND needs an audience—one willing to participate by fetching and carrying—when ha [sets out to do a repair job around {the house or to work in the yard. That men, don't like advice when {they are doing a job, Their reaction to feminine advice is: “Well, {if you know how to do it, next timo {you can do it yourself." : That it is better to let the grass: {grow a foot high than to try to na<+
Some day it will get to the poini where he is ashamed of it, too. ! ® nn ta THAT MEN like to lecture whila they work—and that if a woman | wants a job done she had better {be willing to learn while her ma | works,..even if it's a job she neve: | intends to do herself. No matte fwhat the job, he'll tell her: “Yo [never know when you might hav: (to do this yourself. It's really ver; simple. You just... That you can't over-do you praise and your admiration for : job- well done. If you want th: help to continue, forget the shelve that fell down after you had fille: them with your summer's cannin’ {and remember the job that turnec out okay,
ARCHBISHOP TO LEAL 40-HOURS DEVOTION
| The Most Rev. Joseph E. Ritter. {former archbishop of Indianapoli: land archbishop-elect of St. Lous. will make his final public appear: ance here Tuesday night. | Archbishop Ritter will be presen’ at the closing ceremonies of the 40-hours devotion at 8 p. m. n |SS. Peter and Paul's Catholic ca: {thedral. The clergy of the city wil {assist with the services, The Rt Rev. Msgr. Raymond R. Noll, ca thedral pastor, is in charge of the 40 hours which will begin with & solemn high mass Sunday, Priests of the city will honor the departing archbishop with a recep tion . Sunday, Oct, 6, from 4 to 6 p. m, at Marian college, Leaves Here Oct, 7 Accompanied by a group of friends jand priests, Archbishop Ritter will leave here next day in a private railroad car for St. Louis. He will be installed archbishop of « St. Louis by the Most Rev, Amléto G. Cicognani of Washington, D. €,, apostolic . delegate to the United States. The apostolic delegate will return to Indianapolis to install the Most Rev. Paul C. Schulte of Kansas City, Kas, archbishop of Indians apolis, Oct. 10, Many dignitaries ot the church will attend.
LEAVES BANK POST Times State Service 4 WESTFIELD, Ind., Sept. 28. Miss 44 Margaret Hull, assistant. cashier of the Union State bank here top the last six years, has
MONDAY: A heavy laborer and a white collar girl have their say, i
“
cept a position ten Xn the
a husband into mowing the law,
