Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 October 1946 — Page 19

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Inside Indianapolis

~ IT'S AMAZING what Indianapolis folks have in ,

their homes. Take, for example, the organ at the

~ Walter Schulzes’ at 920 N. Parker ave. The full his-

tory of that organ probably couldn't be told in less than a book. It's about 65 years old. With Mr. Schulz's parents, the Rev. Max F. Schulz it travelled through Nebraska, Missouri, Kentucky, Michigan, Ohio, and Indiana. Countless numbers of worshipers raised their voices when Rev. Schulz played in the various parishes in those states. After Rev. Schulz passed away, Mrs. Schulz came to live with. her son nd brought the organ with, her, Her son, a transission engineer for the Public Service Co., wanted the organ's usefulness to continue. It was totally dismantled and remodeled. He installed an electric blower and refinished the walnut cabinet. Three years ago, in memory of his parents, a dedication ceremony was held for the renovated organ. Yesterday, we heard the dedication speech and service, preserved on a record. The choir of the Zion Evangelical church sang in the recorded services. Mrs. Schulz said the organ used to be played daily when her daughter, Marjorie, was home. She is a sophomore at thesUniversity of Minnesota, majoring in art. Dave, MarJorie’s 15-year-old brother, would accompany his sister

on the piano for an evening of music and song. Dave . !

and Mr. and Mrs, Schulz miss those evenings now, Looking about the Schulz home one could see what a talented girl Marjorie is. Four oil paintings hang in the front room as well as examples of her ceramic art. her “Seated One Day at the Organ.”

Miniature Cowboy “HI YA, PODNER.” " Following in the footsteps of Roy Rogers, Hollywood “good guy” of Western movies, 5-year-old Bill Meek was playing cowboys and Indians in front of his home, 950 N. Parker. In two shakes of Bill's six-shooters we found out that Roy Rogers was his favorite—and how. Roy Rogers’ comic books could be seen in profusion on the Meek front porch. “I like Tom Mix and Gene Autry, too—but Roy Rogers is my favorite,” Bill told us. Mrs. Robert Meek said that Bill has been playing cowboy since he was 2 years old. Every day he wears his ‘shootin’ frons,” hat and boots. When he goes to Sunday school he'd like to wear his western regalia, Mrs. Meek At the question whether he ould like to have a horse of his own there was a oud whoop from Bill and a wince from Mrs. Meek. Yes, Bill has thought about a horse of his own. “I would like to have Trigger (Roy Rogers’ superhorse) because he goes faster than anyone,” Bill said, “When I get a horse someday, I'll keep him in the garage.” We exchanged glances with Mrs. Meek. Bill went on about horses—he’s only 5, you know, 3ill'’s grandmother, Mrs. Clara Meek, reads him all his omic books and explains the pictures. When he can't be playing at “cowboys and: Indians,” listening to his grandmother read the comic-book adventures is Bill's favorite pastime. His “pardner” Dickie Dean, 927 N. Parker, Bill said, was downtown with his mother buying shoes—that’s why he was playing alone. Cowboy shoes? No just shoes. Cowboy shoes in the sizes that Dickie and Bill wear are not available. They haven't been since the war started. Mrs. Meek said that she has hunted all over town and hasn’t been

Miss Donna Mikels, who usually

R-e-d T-ap-e

WASHINGTON, Oct, 24.—Our government wraps stuff up in red tape. It uses 115,000 spools of red tape a year. Each spool holds 72 yards. That is considerable red tape. It is more than 24 million feet. It is nearly 5000 miles. This red tape is made of cotton with a linen finish and is five-sixteenths of an inch wide. If the width varies more than one thirty-second of an inch, the government rejects it. The official red tape specifications are rigid. The weave must be straight, the number of warp ds must be at least 19. Until Feb. 17, 1941,

@ color had to be guaranteed not to run, crack, or

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fade. Upon that date the scientists in charge of red tape decided that there was none on earth which, under certain conditions, would not fade. They amended the red tape regulations to say that it should not fade whem washed in water heated to 70 degrees Fahrenheit. The government's red tape must have a tensile strength of 25 pounds per square inch when tested upon a machine with jaws one inch wide and one inch apart. No red tape may be tested except under normal atmospheric conditions,

Price of Tape Goes Up _ THIS RED tape of standard quality cost the government before the war 21 cents per spool. There has been inflation since then in the red tape marts. Last red tape the government bought cost 31 cents & spool. That brings the total red tape bill for this year to $45,650.

Aviati PILOTS WHO “buzz” over dwellings in airplanes betray a sure sign of mental vacuity. Nature, abhorring a vacuum, usually finds her own way to eliminate it. The sad feature is that the elimination usually inflicts damage upon.innocent parties. This menace of buzzing dwellings soon will be eradicated. The CAA has launched a national crusade against it and has enlisted the aid of the local police authorities all over the country. Any sensible pilot who flies over inhabited areas always will have selected an available open space, river or lake in which to ditch his ship in case of motor failure.” Usually the “buzz-bound” pilot does not get into trouble through misjudging the margin by which he intends to clear the buildings. It's generaly his inability to handle his ship at the top of the zoom (climb) which follows the diving “buzz.” At the top of the zoom, his ship, naturally, is traveling more slowly, most times too slow for him to retain control

Slow Speed Area

IT IS IN the slow-speed area of flight that an airman demonstrates his real proficiency in airmanship. Some men never understand this vital angle, irrespective of how long they are lucky enough to get by. All too often the accident report reads, “. .. and he spun into the ground . .."” How any pilot with 50 to 100 hours flight time can spin is beyond me. You cannot spin the modern private airplane unless you

—have slowed the plane down to a point where the

wings dre traveling too slowly to develop the required “lift.” . Trying to maintain altitude with the plane flying

My Day

NEW YORK,“ Wednesday.—As we go out today to the world’s faif grounds for the opening meeting of the United Nations assembly, those of us who remember the world’s fair will be thinking of that gigantic effort. It brought together the art and the culture; the industrial and political exhibits, of so many countries in an effort to acquaint us with each other. : o ‘ : The world’s fair was to me a most useful and interesting. drawing together of people from many lands.- There still are.remnants of that ‘exhibit which might be used to.increase our understanding now. : : . For instance, I have a letter telling. me of two famous Polish statues sent to the world’s fair which are still in the United ‘States. It has been suggested that these statues might be bought in this country, for they have been given by the sculptors to two

~; scientific institutions in Poland, “They were given in

the hope that these institutions may be able to sell them' and purchase. some of the instruments which

they need to build up the destroyed laboratories. :

Life-Size Figure i : ONE OF the statues is a life-size bronze figure of °

© Marie Skdodowska Curie, by Ludwika Nitsch, There a people, have an oppor

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Judging from her picture, we would like to see _o

“Reach for the sky” ... David Meek; roughrider of N. Parker ave., keeps the neighborhood free of “badmen.”

able to find Bill a pair of “real cowboy boots.” Bill has a pair of boots—but he is waiting—waiting patiently for the day the shortage in “little cowboy boots” is over. Looks as if there's a shortage in everything.

Good Natured Neighbor

UP THE STREET we found Joseph E. Lucas simonizing his ‘car. There were big swaths of soap markings on the windows. Halloween pranksters at work. Mr. Lucas, who lives at 650 with his parents, Mr. and Mrs:-Charles Leimgruber, is going to give the kids in the neighborhood something better to mess up. That's what he said and he seemed like a very good natured neighbor—so we believe him. This is the second time his windows have been soaped up. He is simonizing the entire car practically on the eve of Halloween. What. else could he be doing but giving the Halloween revelers a nice target. “I made two mistakes when I started this job,” Mr. Lucas said. “First, I should have used a cleaner—didn’t think it needed it, but now I do, and second, I didn't have someone else do this job.”

writes Inside Indianapolis, is ill.

By Frederick C. Othman

Any federal bureau in need of red tape goes through a minimum of red tape to get it. It simply sends a requisition with one carbon copy to. the nearest of 11 storehouses operated by the procurement division of the treasury department. It gets more red tape immediately, ’

Adequate Supply Stored

THE SAMPLE room of the division is in Washington. It holds 40,000 samples of practically everything the government buys, including brake linings, footballs, razor strops, paper clips and adhesive tape in red, blue, yellow, orange, green, purple and white. The custodian of the sample room said he would look for his cotton red tape sample. his ledgers and inspected his bins, but he could not find it. . He seemed embarrassed. Temporarily the sample room was out of red tape. He said he believed, however, there was plenty of red tape in the warehouse. | This warehouse is four floors high, fire proof, and | jammed with writing paper, waste baskets, and, among other things, water coolers. It also contains an adequate supply of red tape. The foreman said the demand for it is steady. | The gentlemen in charge of red tape procurement | are not amused by wise cracks. This is because! they have heard them all before. As one of them asked, what other material could do the job better? Red tape is used for holding official documents. String would cut them. Red tape doesn’t. Red tape, furthermore, and no matter how great the tension, can hold a bow knot without slipping. If you have any further questions, see me. I know about red tape. I am a red tape specialist.

By Maj. Al Williams

at lower than the danger mark on the airspeed indicator causes the controls to become “loose” and comparatively ineffective. Under such conditions the plane falls toward the earth and keeps on falling until it has acquired sufficient s to again provide the “lift.”

Feel ‘Fall Of’

BUT UNLESS a pilot deliberately skids a plane in flight, thus killing a plane's speed, the decrease in plane speed is gradual. And all the way down to the unsafe low speed, his controls progressively become sloppier and more ineffective. You “feel” this fall off in control effectiveness— in the rudder, elevators and ailerons. Likewise, a pilot's saddle-sense—called “seat-sense” in aviation parlance—warns him as pointedly as if bells were ringing in his ears aAd red lights were flashing before his eyes. ‘ The business of flying aircraft is simple. There's an airspeed indicator with a big hand on it right before every pilot, and it can be read just as plainly as the speedometer on an auto dashboard. In addition, every airman is taught in his student pilot days to listen for the whistle caused by his wings, struts, etc., as they cleave through the air. Even with the motor “on” you can hear this whistle plainly. (You'd be surprised at the whistle set up through the air by a motorless glider. The ground observer cannot hear it, but the glider pilot can— and plainly.) The real mastery of ‘any type of aircraft comes only to the pilot who learns the art of handling his craft in the slow-speed range,

By Eleanor Roosevelt

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are three of these figures. One was bought by the| )

French government for the city of Paris; another | is at the Marie Curie Radium institute in Warsaw | and is one of the three statues in that city ‘which | escaped destruction; -and the third one, which is here in this country, is the last one available, ; di The second statue is of General Pulaski, done in gray granite by Ksawery Dunikowski. The proceeds’

of the sale of this statue would go to the instifute of |

experimental physics inh Warsaw university,

Famous Research Center " PARTLY DUE to the great help of the Rockefeller | foundation, this institute, before the war, was one of | the best research centers in central Europe, Natural- | ly, the Germans plundered the institute and removed | precious instruments as early as 1939. But thanks to! the. energy of Prof. Pienkowski, the institute started to function again last winter. : " ’ It is hoped ‘that an American committee can be formed to sell these statues and place them in appropriate places in this country. or

"The Polish citizens who migrated here may well

be proud of the contribution they have made to the development of the Uni } ty to show ‘our gratitude. % 3 gar ‘ oh 9 « ir, :

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tates. And now we; as’

SECOND ‘SECTION

ALASKA, HAWAI

WASHINGTON, Oct. 24-—The nation’s flagmakers will be working with 48 stars for quite a while— perhaps years—before they have to worry about a 49th and 50th for Alaska and Hawaii. In a plebiscite last week Alaskans voted nearly two to one in favor of joining the union. But Hawalians did the same thing six years ago and they are still waiting. Between the two willing territories and stars on the American flag stand passage of statehood bills by both houses of congress, at least

plicated and time-consuming political steps.

’ n ~ » MORE PROGRESS has been made in congress toward passing an’ admittance bill for Hawaii than toward passage of similar legislation foi Alaska. Members of the house territories commitiee recommended Hawaiian statehood early this year after a series of hearings. But no action was taken on the statehood.- bill introduced by * Hawail’'s Republican delegate, Joseph R. Farrington, Other committee members studied Alaskan government, but made no definite recommendation. Lately there has been considerable sentiment in the executive department of government for speedy admittance of Alaska to the union. President Truman, former Secretary of Interior Harold L. Ickes and his successor, J. A. Krug, are among those who favor Alaskan statehood. » » M ONE political observer noted that admittance of Hawaii virtually

in the senate and as many Republicans in the house as Hawaii was allotted. - If Alaska is admitted, the political forecasters would bet on an allDemocratic lineup. Congressional inaction on statehood bills is the main log-jam at the present time, but it will not necessarily be the biggest.

dure for admittance of a territory to the union as prescribed in statehood bills introduced at the last session of congress: ONE: Congress passes statehood bill and the President signs it. TWO: Territorial governor orders election 30 days after bill signed. THREE: Two to eight months later delegates are elected to a constitutional convention. FOUR: Three week to three months after election, constitutional convention is held. FIVE: At least 75 or 90 days after convention adjourns, a ratification election is held. SIX: If the constitution is ratified the territorial governor certifies the election results to the President. If not, the convention is reassembled. SEVEN: A third election is held: to choose state and national representatives. ’ EIGHT: These results are certified to the President. NINE: If he approves, he declares the territory “in.” " 8 8 IN THE pending bill for Hawaii, the time-table for these actions is quicker than in the Alaskan bill. If Hawail were admitted within the next two years, she would beat the record of Arizona, the last state admitted to the union. Alaska has 13 years in which to beat that record and, incidentally, become the biggest state in the union. It took Arizona 49 years from the time she was organized as a territory to get’into the union. Hawaii is in her.’46th year as a territory. Alaska ‘entered her 34th ' this summer.

FIREARMS SCHOOL WILL CLOSE TODAY

State police were to attend closing ceremonies of a six-weeks’ firearms training school at Camp Atterbury at 2 p. m. today, with Col. Austin Killian, state police superintendent, in charge. The school, conducted by the federal bureau of investigation, emphasized practical use of guns in line of duty. Harvey G. Foster, assistant agent in charge of the

three elections, and five other com- ¥

would insure two more Republicans |

Here is the step-by-step proce-.

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49th

By ROSEMARIE MULLANY United Press Staff Correspondent

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e Indianapolis Tim THURSDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1946 FACE TEDIOUS TRAIL TO STATEHOOD—

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PAGE 19 Labor - Civil Rights Are Ignored in | Southern Drive

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Many ‘decried “Arctic wasteland,” calling it of State Seward, who negotiated

the purchase. But Alaska hos paid off handsomely in gold, sal- |

* | resources still scarcely touched. | © |

buying of this s folly,” after Secretary

on, furs ond minerals, with its

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By FRED W, PERKINS ATLANTA, Oct. 24.—~The C. I. O. and A. F. of L. drive to unionize wage earners of the south is pro. ducing numerous violations of the citizens’ ordinary rights known as civil liberties. on So much so that the C. L O. is, planning to fight back with an ap= peal to federal authority, ‘It has given up hope of protection from city police forces and county sheriffs, The C. I. O. plans to file a charge of conspiracy agaihst officers of some of the largest southern textile

ALASKA Area 586,400 sq. mi. Population 85,2 TEXAS Area 265,896 sq. mi. Population 6,073,000

guided missles, Alaska assumes a new,

After World War 11, ond the emergence of the Arctic region as a potentiol path of future ottack by air or

tant role in America’s hemisphere defense.

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companies. They would be accused of a concerted effort to violate the Wagner act. ® x» | JEROME COOPER, Birmingham lawyer and formerly law clerk for Supreme Court Justice Hugo Black,

|1s working up the case, He is gath-

ering evidence of acts still winked at here, that were commonplace once in Pennsylvania and Illinois, but which have . been practically stopped in northern industrial Areas, In the early days of labor organzation in the south there wag con‘siderable rough-housing, some shooting, and many cases involving threat and coercion; According to . A spokesman for, Van Bittner, who head the C.'I. 0.'s southern effort, those events “do not hold a candle to what is going on now, particu= larly in the textile industry.” » » » “EIGHTEEN of our C. I. O. ors ganizers and local union leaders been pushed around or beaten,” he said, “Workers have been threatened with ‘expulsion from company-dom-

The Territory of Alaska, one-fifth the size of the whole Uui.ed States, may become the 49th state. The

map above gives pertinent facts about this huge area.

Far North Territory Has Acquired 3 Value Far Beyond Wildest Dreams of Early Days

i By Science Service : WASHINGTON, Oct. 24. — The Alaska that has voted twd to one its desire to be the 40th state in the American Union is the same {land area purchased from Russia |just 79 years ago for about two |oents an acre. Today Alaska, because of loca-

tion and natural resources, has ac- |

{quired value far beyond the wildest {dreams of those early days. Alaska then was thought of in terms of fur and fish. Now it is known to be a reservoir of mineral wealth, timber, - agricultural products, and probably of oil. It occu|pies a strategic position in world |affairs. It is the crossroads of-in-tercontinental air traffic by way of the Pacific and the Arctic. Population 75,000 The price paid for this territory, one-fifth the size of the present {continental United States, was $7, {200,000. The stars and stripes re-

By JANE STAFFORD,

of the National Sciences. Only if a new kind of flu germ/ suddenly develops from one of the|

Academy of]

two known influenza viruses and a! large proportion of the world’s | population is susceptible to the new! virus is there any likelihood in Dr. | Rivers’ opinion of a repetition of | the 1918 influenza experience.

Truce Declared

Something like a truce has been declared between the known influenza viruses and human beings. This is because rapid transportation of all kinds has made the world one community so far as influenza is concerned. All populations of the world are probably

FBI here, organized the program.

thoroughly “seeded” with the two

SILLY NOTIONS

By Palumbo |

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OUR NEW TRICK

PLAY /

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crime of violence is at large, never

several times in juvenile court.’

[Ohio st. He was one of three boys

| division at police headquarters. ’ 4 wi ly | ser the counter and struck | dash around and have things humJuly 23, 1943—~Held for disorderly jumped over the co A er Ritwatict Tots

placed the imperial flag of Russia at Sitka on Oct. 18, 1867. Alaska’s present permanent population is about 75,000, about 45 per cent Indian, Eskimo or other nonwhites. The real value of Alaska, onefourth of which lies north ¢f the Arctic Circle, is as yet unknown. Geologists believe that under its surface there are vast deposits of essential minerals, including oil.

derway and every modern device for locating hidden ores is being employed. Even magnetic surveys | nave recently been made, using {Planes and the trailing “doodlebug” that successfully located submerged enemy U-boats during the war. Mines Platinum Alaska now produces, in addition {to coal and gold, some copper and {lead, both particularly

deposits facing depletion.

mines mercury and platinum. Alas-

~ Sees No Flu Epidemic Li

Science Service Writer PHILADELPHIA, Oct. 24.—We shall never have another world-wide influenza epidemic like the disastrous one of 1918, Dr. Thomas M. Rivers of the hospital of the Rocke-| feller Institute for Medical | F Research ~ declared at the!

: . . can live in a kind of ilibrium. meeting here this morning | Ly

viruses and people and flu viruses |

We shall probably continue to have mild and moderate flu epi-

the world. The flu viruses may | gain the upper hand as new sus-|

|ceptible persons are added to the

population with the birth of new | babies. This may upset the equi-| librium or truce between man and! influenza temporarily here and | there but a new truce will then be established. . Other highlights in Dr. talk on epidemic diseases: We do not need to worry about cholera and epidemic typhus getting started in this country because the germs ‘would find conditions here unfavorable for their establishment and spread. Better way

Rivers’ |

than quarantine to|

keep diseases from spreading across |, .

international boundaries is to have | a civilization and a standard of liv- | ing for humans that provide poor | living ‘and traveling conditions for | germs and the insects and animals | that harbor and spread them, The island of Sardinia and some | island in the South or Central Paci-

Extensive explorations are now un-

ka mercury supplemented home production during the war tw a rela‘tively small degree, but its platinum production was important, far exceeding domestic production “within the 48 states. Oil, perhaps, is Alaska's greatest hope. Navy drills have already gone {deep into the earth within the In-|diana-sized naval petroleum reserve {north of the Arctic Circle in the Point Barrow region. If pay-oil is found, it will be delivered by pipeline to Fairbanks, Alaska’s capital

south coast. will add much to its value in intercontinental aviation. Alaskan timber is largely along coastal regions, making easy the rafting of logs to Washington state. {Alaska seals yield oil and meal as {well as fur. Alaska waters provide

{ordinary New England crops.

ke ‘18

fic might be dedicated to scientific

{ping diseases spread by mosquitoes by mosquito eradication. In Sardinia it might be determined just how difficult it is to wipe out the anopheline mosqui-

Joes that spread malaria from a

| long-established stronghold. | In a small, unimportant Pacific

{demics here and there throughout |151and, efforts could bé made to see

whether anopheline mosquitoes can be established in regions where they normally do not exist.

AVC SEEKS SUPPORT | OF GI'S HOUSING BILL

The American Veterans Committee today sent a letter requesting support of ‘the Wagner-Ellender-Taft housing bill to every Indiana candidate for congress. William E. Jenner and. M. Clifford Townsend, Republican and Democratic senatorial candidates, also received a copy which asked “that you go on record as pledging yourself to support the enactment , if you are elected.” The letter further read: “This | vital measure, which. was permitted | to die in the house of representatives last July after it had been passed by the senate with overwhelming bi-partisan support, must be enacted now if veterans are to get housing they can afford.”

How to Grow Your

A good prospect for a serious

having been sentenced to a day in jail, although “rehabilitated”

The prospect, an_ 18-year-old juvenile ‘offender, twice has in-

their hospitalization in both cases. In .addition, he. threw a wagoh through ‘a glass window in a fit of rage. His recom: 3 June 5, 1943—-Suspectéd of stealing from the Pants store, 46 w.!

implicated. After questioning, hey was realesed by the juvenile aid

conduct after a crap game was | broken up in a bowling alley. Re-. leased by J. A.D.

bafrce in a-West. side grocery store. The owner askéd him ‘to leave the

| store. When he did, he grabbed a (fined $20, costs suspended. .

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{old man, cutting a gash over one flicted injury to persons, requiring jeye and beating.his face. The vic-

C IT | child's wagon and threw it through a window of the grocery, Ordered

into juvenile court. Fined $5 and costs, ordered to make restitution

and university city, and-also to the Domestic oil in Alaska

{studies of the possibilities of stop- |

(inated shurches in textile towns for {joining the C. 1. O. Many have been discharged because of union activities. garage of one C. I. O. leader in bama was dynamited. D@puties in unincorporated company-owned textile towns have ignored civil rights.” ® x ® THE A. F. OF L. has not had so much trouble. In the A. PF. L's office here is George Googe, a native southerner, who last week told A. F. of L. convention in Chicago that his stepped-up drive had added 180,000 southern members to A. F. of L. unions. The A. F. of L. reports that only two of its organizers have been beaten up recently—in June at Greenville, ‘Ala, Then there is the case of Willie Dudley. Willie, a Negro, works in a gypsum mine near Macon. He joined the A. F. of L. cement lime and gypsum workers’ union, Last July some “hooded men" — not necessarily members of the Ku Klux Klan, called at his home and told him he'd better quit the union. Showing.reluctance to quit, he was Laken out and beaten,

' J ” NOTHING “HAS been done about

essential the United States with 90 per cent| Willie Dudley's case, so far ds of[etals now with continental known |of* the salmon it consumes. South- [ficial records show. One reason for It also ern Alaska climate permits raising | that is the union won the election

{in most of the gypsum mines, and |since then six gypsum eoncerns |have reached labor agreements and | raised wages. | It's noticeable according to a |C. I. O. organizer, that “after .all [the fighting is over the companies | sign up willingly. There's no further trouble, we've got to be friends.”

We, the Women:

Husbands Like To Find Busy Cook aft Home

By RUTH MILLETT A KENTUCKY husband disappeared for five months, then turned up one morning to greet his wife with the familiar words: “Is my breakfast ready?” Though that case is extreme, the reaction is typically masculine. Despite all that women have ace complished outside the home, men still feel that at whatever hour they come home the woman ‘to whom they have given the title of Mrs. should be there waiting, preferably with a meal ready to go on the table, » » ” NO MATTER how much they go in for clubs and outside-the-home activities, modern women still keep an eye on their watches, so that they can beat their men home— even if only by a 15-minute margin. As one wife of many years told a bride who wanted to quit a bridge game so as to be home in plenty of time to have dinner waiting for her husband: “If you just allow yourself 15 minutes, that is all that is necessary. In that time you can have the table set and something boiling on the stove when your husband gets home. “And that’s all a man wants— just to know that you are home and have made some preparation for his home-coming."”

on. .n » THIS MASCULINE insistence is

to owner of store, Jan, 2, 1945—Attacked a 62-year-

tim was sent to City hospital’. The youth was sent to the juvenile de-

probably just a hang-over from the time when men expected their

| wives to stay at home all day every 4 | day.

They know wives don't do that. any rhore.. But fhey like: to kid

tention home, ordered into juvenile court. Later the same day, he was} sent to the county jafl under $500) bonds, _Jan. 10, 1945—Placéd on proba-| tion to a. juvenile court employee. | . Sept. 10, 1945—Started an argu-| ment with a woman employee of a building materials firm. He!

the woman in the face, inflicting a deep head gash. She was sent to the City hospital.

ordered into juvenile court, Oct. 18, 1945 — The youth was

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He was sent| fooled a little and lulled into Dec. 29, 1944—Created a distur- | to the county jail under $1000 bond, | comfortable feeling that, just

wife at home when he arrives gives a man the feeling that she has been there -all the timb, just waiting. » : a NN 3 AS THE experienced wife said: “Fifteen minutes is all-that,is necessary.” © In 15 minutes a

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smart’ woman can

And that is all men ask-—just be

randpa, they have a’woman at He waiting for whenever they chodse fo show wp:

‘themselves a bit. And -having his .