Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 November 1946 — Page 7

V. 2, 1946 ight

© #4 DAVENPORT, ~Iowd, Sufgeon 17 years ago moved his practice, wife and 6-year-dld ‘daughter: to Indian=. apolis.; ‘The surgeon's wife, a’ native of -Marion, Ind, looked forward to the change, In the state 3 ita] she planned to take a rest from charitable an activities—at least for awhile. Today, still Ate forward to that rest, winding up last-minute details before the Community Fund drive opens Monday, is Mrs. Daniel J. McCarthy, one of the three associate chairmen of the residential division of the Yund. The : division, comprising 2000 workers, has a quota of $79,000, Mrs. McCarthy. is sure her workers will giye ‘every citizen in the division a chance to wear the red feather, Working on- the organization of the drive since last August, her busiest two weeks begin Monday with the “kickoff” luncheon at the Clay~pool hotel. But when the whistle blows ending the drive with its never-ending telephone calls, early and late meetings, Mrs. McCarthy is going to finish com-

ago. Some of her prize recipes date back to 1911, the year she was married. “I've neglected the cookbook: something terrible,” Mrs. McCarthy said. The book will include a recipe for fried chicken from George Ade, An oyster recipe from Cole Porter is her favorite. A graduate of St. Mary's of Notre Dame, Mrs, McCarthy's secret ambition was to be-

couragement from her father in that field. Instead, she majored in French. Her teacher, Sister Eugenie, a daughter of a French count, made a terrific im‘pression on Mrs. McCarthy. So much so that she named her only:daughter, Eugenie, after the teacher.

She Likes Chic Hats

HER EARLY schooling in the arts and French tradition becomes apparent in talking with Mrs. McCarthy. Wearing a cross between a Princess Eu‘genie and a “Robin Hood” type hat she commented

Manford Kistler er. . The Indiana stadium tonight | regular starter, he ? Jame;

when - you're 50 years-plus you have to get a hat that does something.” When worldwwar I‘began the McCarthy's were living in Davenport. It wasn’t long before Dr. McCarthy left with a Réd Cross medical unit overseas. With this unit” the surgeon went through Romania and Serbia. Active at the time in the Davenport symphony ¢rganization—after her husband was gone—Mrs. McCarthy returned to Marion where she conducted surgical dressing classes. Besides that she wds one of the “Four Minute Women” urging Americans to buy Liberty bonds. “I'll never forget how scared I was the first time I spoke,” she said. - After the war and her husband's return she

«Lu A, sown]

p football pic again resumed her busy life in Davenport. Then proper -recogniti came the hope of a rest in Indianapolis. “It wasn’t ry’'s .as proof, long before she was busy in the activities of the St.

yer and his mal It was the

Joan of Arc church here. When the family moved to their present location at 3055 N. Mcridian st., Mrs. McCarthy plunged into the activities of SS. Peter and Paul cathedral. The charitable programs of St.

Greasy Spoons WASHINGTON, Nov. 2—The time has come to remind the keepers of this nation’s restaurants that the war is over. .The day of the skimpy serving for patriotism’s sake is no more.

You hear that, gents? There is plenty of everything to eat, with the possible exception of rice. I seldom go for chop suey anyway. What I mean, keepers of the greasy spoons, is that the’ biggest wheat crop on record is being turned into flour now. ~_ From now on the waiter will bring me rolls, plural, If he brings me a roll, singular, I'l ‘throw (it at him, | : Upon these rolls I shall spread butter thickly. You restaurateurs may discard your undersized molds. Those of you who. have cut the resultant small squares of butter in half to make triangles, doubtless have become experts at the carving of miniatures. Use your new-found skill carving prayers on the heads of pins. Do not try to continue carving my butter in Lilliput pellets unless you want a small poke in the eye.

»d Bout v. 2 (U. P).—Ra n, pointing for th ight throne, rar inderdog in Cecil ht, but rallied tc rstal knockout ovey attler in the sixth a stadium. rlem’s “uncrowned terweights,” floored nine-count in the ad him hanging on ther count. ger, Jack Bouman | ending the sixth count of 10 by 2 Johnny Weber sai¢ preceded the bel inson a knockout |

1e would file a for- |

he decision.’ x ate Silent, Attentive Operation on (U.P) YOU CAN BUY all'the butter you need. I know Nov. 2 she it is expensive, but so aie your meals. Wheén I have

llone of New York -round decision last ny Greco of Mont. welterweight chamestimated crowd of ymed bexing back tc » Garden after an

to pay $2 for dinner in.a second-class joint, I want at least three full-sized pats of butter. I do not intend to remind the waiter of this. As I consume my butter, he will replace it with new, silently. and attentively. And another thing, mine hosts. - You may begin now to discard your old razor blades.-toss ‘em in the

1 weeks. trash. Do anything you want with ‘em, except :anged . football program rrow at Municipa Science

THE SWEETEST thing In the world, according to the chemists, is a newly discovered benzene derivative whose = scientific name is 1-n-propoxy-2-amonio-4-nitrobenzene.

played at Belmont

fs

a 21.

0: Tenn State ’A. & 1. 6, | State 47, Ouchita 1, | Alva Teachers 9, Citadel 7 St. Louis (postponed, te

Please note that I said “according to the chemists.”"

There is no intention to start a discussion with any returned veteran who claims that title. for his sweetheart. The new synthetic chemical was described in Chicago before the American Chemical Society by Prof. Peter Eduard Verkade of the Delft Technical university, Holland. Prof. Verkade developed the new sweetening agent during world war II and told his

2, Western - Kentucky & Mary's

Chana ech lt Virgins

Hetta 6 i (the). audience that it is now being used successfully in the AT Netherlands and a humber of ouligr European coun-

tries. 1-n-propoxy-etc.—a shorter name will certainly have to be found for it—is 4000 times as sweet as

piling a cookbook. She started the book .five years .

that “I like chic hats but not freak hats—because

JSSMAN, INC. SHINGTON ST. d 45

i 'AL ADVERTISEMENT)

FLECT LUDLOW

member of pow: 3¢ committee or} - Referrec irman Cannon o' mittee as “the resentative ir " Vote for him or is 12-B on the

tions.

sugar cane, according to Prof. Verkade, ~Saccharine, the well-known coal-tar derivative, is only 200 to 700 ] times as sweet as sugar cane, whilé dulcine, another | sweetening agent in general use, is only 70 to 250 times as sweet. Until the new agent-was developed, the record was held by a compound known as peryllartine, a perfume with a tasfe 2000 times as sweet as sugar. Prof. Verkade told his audience that the Nazis had known of bis researches and expressed great interest in them but that he managed to conceal his discovery until after V-E day, .

Potentialities Enormous ENORMOUS INDUSTRIAL potentialities are seen for the new substance. It is believed that it will bring about far-reaching economies in the food, candy, and

"NEW. YORK, Priday.—I have written many times ‘n this column of the need for research in the field oi cerebral palsy, and the need for further study of Jxe Heart diseases from ‘which 50 many children suffer after attacks of rheumatic fever. One of the great difficulties encountered by children “who suffer from cerebral palsy is the lack of public care available on a low-cost basis, In addition, there: has heen very little assistance available at high or low cost, for continuing education for young people who may be able to learn to. do some kind of work—and even hold an outside job if they have the proper facilities and can return to congenial environment. Just the other day I received a story about a new undertaking in this field which interested me greatly. ’ A group of businessmen -has just been granted a charter by the New York state division of corporations to run on a non-profit basis a club for spastic young men. iy ;

Need Government Aid

PEMBERTON HOUSE will be its name, and it is not a charity. Each member will pay his share of the cost.” These costs, because of privacy and homelike atmosphere and because of the special care required, will not. be low, but it is possible they may be conderably lower than adult. spastics now. pay in private institutions . -and for’ special care and: attendance at home.’

OF course, fo_sablsh i Howe Wi regi

Inside Indianapolis

come a journalist. She didn’t receive too much en<

| Honsder Profile

he Indianapolis Ti

&.

SECOND SECTION BARTON REES POGUE.

et

IT HAPPENED at Greensburg, the. only city in i e world ‘that -has a lumber-bearing courthouse tower. Greensburg might .asily boast of having the most outstanding re-

forestration project in either © thrown together as in the good old | hemisphere. " |days—where she might lounge in But other things than trees | yyurious langor, it any human | growing out of courthouse towers ever lounged luxuriously and lan-! happen in Greensburg, where friend guorously strung up between the | Bob Doles sells poles of two coach seats. coal, and friend Well, the concept languor didn't] Ed Hancock pub- SF iinger long . , , there were no doushes the daily § bles, as today there are no white’

pape Shirts or silk stockings. | g This “it” of . 5.8. Mrs. Daniel J. McCarthy . . . after 17 years there's which I speak RETRACING her steps — full a vacation around the corner—-maybe. happened on a length of the coach-—against the

Vincent's hospital appealed to her and she found time for thém.

Found Plenty to Do

DURING WORLD WAR II the energetic Mrs. McCarthy found plenty to do with the Red Cross. This list included chairman of the “Downtown Sewing Center,” vice chairman e “Mile Square” of the

Red Cross and many hours at the Red Cross.Can- 8¢rS Of the world war II period

teen. Last August Mrs. Charles Efroymson, chairman of the. residential division, called her to help in| the 27th annual Community Fund drive. “You know, I Had never worked for the Community Fund and it didn’t take me long to decide my answer.” The other two associate chairmen are Mrs, Royer K. Brown and Mrs, William Wemmer. All her life a foe of prejudice and narrow-mindedness, Mrs. "McCarthy' féels strongly for the fund and what it d through the agencies it supports. “You know hind 4 benefits from the fund—there are no prejudices, no lines of demarcation for aid when the. need arises. have to mention this, but when Mrs. Efroymson called I was tickled because I felt it was about time I pitched in and helped as best I could.” Mrs. McCarthy, still | holding to her idea of immediately returning to her cookbook in two weeks, commented that Christmas is just around the corner. “I like Christmas because there are so many things a person can do.” Well, the cookbook will still be there—after Christmas. (Ed. Sovola.)

By Frederick C. Oslin,

carve my meat. beef is gone. There is more meat in the markets and the store- | rooms now than in six long years. I, for one, shall be delighted to help eat it up. You carvers will cooperate. When I order my next slice of prime ribs, well done, you will see that it is thicker, by considerable, than a lettuce leaf.

The day of the translucent slice of

Refill My Coffee Cup Often

I MUST INJECT also a warning to the hamburgeroos. ‘Hamburger sandwiches now cost 25 cents and up. This is too much, eveh when they contain meat. If I must pay the price, then I shall expect the goods, consisting of meat in a slab ‘at least a quarter of an inch thick and two inches in diameter. | Surely that is not too much to ask for my quarter. | Coffee, my dear friends, no longer is rationed. Mostly you get 10 cents a cup for this, unléss you run a fancy place and charge even more. Just refill my cup as often as necessary and for free, unless you are prepared to have it poured down your shirt front.

In coffee goes cream. This cream comes in jug-~|

lets which are smal] enough at best. are filled hereafter to their tops. to my favorite dessert: Ice cream. I do not like this in a ball the size of a small marble. Let us have no argument. Get yourself some new and bigger scoops, or I'll quick-freeze you. Seriously I am serious. If there is in .the land!

See that they That brings us

a restaurant serving pre-war size portions today a

any price, I apologize to the proprietor thereof. I'd also like his address. I want to eat with him.

beverage Industries and may help end the world-wide sugar shortage. It is important, however, to remember that such sweetening agents merely impart a sweet taste and do not have-the nutritive or caloric value of sugar,

Produced in Powder Form

THE NEW SUBSTANCE is produced: in the form of a powder composed of orange crystals. In its pure, form, it is so sweet that the tiniest pinch placed on the tongue can still be tasted a half hour later. The stuff’ is not very soluble in water, but this is not as great a drawback as it would seem at first because only a very little need be used to obtain the desired sweetness in & solution. It" is one of seven new substances discovered by Dr. Verkade. All of them belong to the same chemical family which he designates as the 1-alkoxy-2-amino~4-nitrobenzenes. None of the others, how-! ever, have the extreme sweetening power of the one already described. They range from 120 to 2000 times the sweetness of cane sugar. + Perhaps a word should be said about the long chemical names of these compounds. While such names are pretty unintelligible to the layman and ceftainly impossible for him to remember, they cduThey are, i in fact, precise descriptions of the: “chemical structure of the compounds in question. The layman should not quarrel with the chemist. for using. these types of names because the. chemist, today has to dea: with tens of thousands of organic compounds and if ‘each one was given a ‘single name,’

. the business of connecting these names with the

~burden onthe World are as im

chemical formulas would be an impossible task‘ for the chemist.

By Eleanor Roosevelt

a fairly good-sized membership. But with a large membership, the cost can be kept reasonably low. It is for that reason that I make special note of it. | The people behind this movemeht are desirous to make it known to the group of young men for whom it will be at great boon. Even this undertaking, however, does not meet the needs of those in the low-income. brackets. That is why it is essential that the government take cognizance of the problem of these youngsters who face, from their earliest days, a crippled existence,

Outnumber Polio Victims :

* THERE ARE woinern, as well as men, to think of, And one of the saddest tHings“to think about is that as spastics grow older they are left with very little companionship and care. This is even more heartbreakingly true where the really poor are concerned. There arg more victims of cerebal palsy and the various forms of heart diseAse than there are those! afflicted with Infantile paralysis. At the present time, all we can do for those who! are badly afflicted with polio is to give them the best! care and best traihing possible. | That holds good of ‘spastic people as. well. Care that improves their general health. and training that makes them able to enjoy many things and to develop certain gifts so they need not Jou a useless t to spastics as to the victims of infantile oo Af

had lightened its

By David Dietz.

New York Central train, which

interference of lunging, loaded, loading passengers, she sought a Utopia less Utopia-isif. If there were no doubles to be gained she would setle for a nice,! wide-open single, of which . there | (were several she had spurned in her first rampage down the aisle.) (By single I mean an unshared were pouring into the coaches, joccupancy.) But the singles at this 88 a [late date, were NOT BARE, so the OUR HEROINE, hereafter re- poor traveler got none. ferred to As “she,” definitely. was| For the third time she pegged unschooled in war-time travel. In- | down the aisle, this trip in search deed this’ must have been her first|of a liberal half of a single seat. orientation day, for ‘any matricu-| But again the poor traveler got lated * “freshman in travel” would | none , , , she stood. In those days have known that the wise passen- | of rabid confusion one might, with ger, like grain going into a bin, | consent of the aisle-seat sitter, sort goured into the first visible crevice | of perch on the arm of a .seat or

load to quite a ‘degree at the local station no tower and no tree. Chicago and ‘Indianapolis passen-

Mr. Pogue

You don’t —even if the prospective seat mate bear down easily on an up-ended |

had pink eye. sait case. But she had the light of a more In either instance much too much fitting future in her orbs, She | of even a small individual remained ‘sought a double seat—two seats | unseated.

. . Times Rityring Reporter

RAVELOGUE-Too =

:

- SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1946

*,

4)

Labo

This lady stood . . . it may be [t's hope that bids our fears she was. the very lady I heard be gone

about. Looking for luggage she| asked the clerk if he could possibly show her SoHag more comfortable. 3 » » » SHE STOOD. And standing there she thought long, long thoughts. I did not inquire into her thinhking, but I believe I knew her mind. She was wishing that at the next stop a vacancy might occur near her, so she might have the rare privilege of diving into that emptiness far in advance of her greedyeyed adversaries. Verily there were many others being supported by their arches. That is hope, isn’t it? And better to hope for half a seat.and get it than have to stand all the way to Chicago.

Happy is the - man within whose breast There springs eternal hope! For him tomorrow always dawns, For him, while others grope

place; It's hope that makes the grave a step To immortality— God has hope, and we may share In His divinity.

Hope thou till death shall come ‘To terminate life-streams, Beyond the failures of today Keep dreaming dreams! The vietor’s crown may come to you, Defeat your way attend, But hope must have no sunset hour, ; It's day must never end!

In bane and. blessing, pain and pleasure,

In dark, there is the vision of| B elisye d! in yourself and a day The h al e have in some When tol shall bear its ‘Me hope w tomorrow

fruit, When things he dreamed will come to him,

Disturbs this finite clod Of ours and bids us stand,

TT

] : : not sit, Hale bor and fis faith to Regardless of our lot, to ; do— It's hope that makes a merry Hope never rests! I-do not eye, want it

That makes a smiling face; Otherwise « «« do you?

ROBBED OF $54 | GARDENING: Plants Feed on Vegetation Turned Under Trenching Improves Subsoft

By MARGUERITE SMITH

DO YOU WANT a better garden

Holdup Follows R Request for next year? Here's what you can do

~ Cigaret. about it in November. Add some form of humus. It I: A ‘woman bandit, armed with. a|your subsoil is poor, trench your revolver, last night robbed an In- eroung i » pve x a. Joule an qianapolis wan of $54. Lo now have lawn or sod, turn The young woman stopped Dean | {pe ground this month, | Mulkins, 2137 N. Talbot st. while | he was walking in the 100 block on St. makes these suggestions. He's E. 224 st. and asked for a cigaret, | had - 30 years experience raising according to police. Mr. Mulkins| everything from cotton ‘and peas obliged. The woman drew a gun 'to banana plants. and demanded his money. | Sod turned under now will be Robert E. Viney, 77, of 2441 N. Well decayed by spring, he's foi Ind. Illinois st., told police he was at- If cut worms infest the soil at least” tacked by two men who robbed him|Part will be killed by winter cold. lot his old age pension of $40 and| Turning sod under is as good as his trousers. | sowing rye to turn under in the Elderly Man Slugged | spring. a practice he thinks is

Paul Carbin, 946 Paca st. re-. gardened year after year, ported to police he was at Camp, Sn a and West sts. when two young' IF YOU don’t add humus in some (thugs strong-armed him and took form “every year, he pointed out,

you find soil {his wallet, containing $30. Police gradually poorer. And vegetation

ater arrested one man who was turned under also provides material | positively identified by Mr. Carbin. for helpful soil bacteria to work on. | Two hoodlums . slugged Isaac mney jn, turn break down complex |Carter, 82, of 714 Fayette st., while go) substances into plant food sim- ¢ (he was on his way from church last ple enough to be absorbed by roots. tl night, police said. Police found Mr.|" pot his fine dahlias, Mr. HempCarter lying on the ground. HIS hi) prepares the holes in the fall, pockets had been turned inside out. +filling them with rich top soil He said-he had no money. Trenching & garden is a method Scream Foils Burglar for giving all your vegetables and Fred White, 50, of 237 Kansas st., flowers good soil to grow in. He

tells the story of a gardener in a! 0} ‘police he fired two shois lrom small Indiana village who trenched a shotgun at a peeping tom.

a large vegetable plot. Police said Miss Susie Oliver, 60 ww of 3725 Graceland ave. frightened] HE DUG a foot-deep trench at |a prowler away early today, Miss | Oliver was awakened by a noise. | She sald she saw a man holding her! purse in her bedroom. - She screamed. The burglar dropped the purse and jumped out of the window.

{top soil from the adjacent ground, | {and proceeded in this fashion across the garden. To fill the last trench 'he carried the soil to it from his first trench, With top soil, where {it could feed roots, he enriched the | sub- soil now on top. Those who watched the process decided he must. be a little daft to do so much hard work. But, Mr. Hemphill concluded, that yas forty

LOCAL ‘MUN SHOW

N. R. Hemphill, 2606 N. Harding

really necessary on ground that is.

consistency grows

one side-of the plot, filled it with

Barbara Winders, 2242 N. Alabama st. compares an average sized tullp bulb with the bulblets of her “bargain sollsction.”

depehdable varieties, ‘Hultiply faster than others. Reputable nurseries make these extras up into collections without labelling each bulb separ-

years ago and that man's garden is still the best in that town. Another practice Mr. Hemphill recommends is the burning of gar-

And faith to take their|"

.As Battle Over | Mine Pay Opens | ‘By FRED W. PERKINS ¥

WASMINGTON, Nov. 2—~In “Ops ° eration Eyebrows” the navy is pros blac

ceeding under a strict news

out until higher authority decides whether to make. a fight or » beachhead. From some secluded command post John L. Lewis is 8 directing the strategy for his side.” It isn’t in. his penthouse office atop the A. F. of L. United Mine Workers’ building; nor in the Mas~ sachusetts ave. apartment that the on maintains for its leader when he wants to get away from it all-e Including newspaper reporters. It might be in Mr. Lewis’ Alexe andria (Va. colonial mansion, but the reporters wouldn't gamble the taxi fare out there. It was evident’ from other happenings that the . celebrated basso was not yet ready

‘Ito thunder.

» . ” HOWEVER, THERE are low rumblings from West Virginia, Tennessee and Kentucky. Followers of Mr. Lewis are starting scattered strikes in those mining regions. In one instance a union leader said the men wouldn't work because they had no contract, the operators report. ys Mr. Lewis’ record is clear on’ that, because he wrote to “Cap” ii secretary of the interior, that he labor contract with” the gove a would be effective during the 20 days he is-trying to wangle a wage boost on top of what he won after Uncle Sam took over more than 3000 coal mines ‘last May,”

. . 0» THE SCATTERED strieks are fae miliar symptoms of major mine trouble. They serve to impress Washington with what may happen. Mr. Lewis, while disavowing all responsibility, can point to them as proof that his men are “restless.” Sometimes he uses them to prove the existence of “shrunken bellies"

- among the miners.

So observers are watching for the scattered mine strikes to appear in other sections—such as western Pennsylvania, eastern Ohio and Illinois. One factor is that the squirrel-hunting season is on, Another is that coal miners like to. take off on election day, which will be Tuesday,

» . » THEY'VE BEEN putting out a lot of coal. The last few weeks have been 12. million-tonners, which is “just about as fur as you can go.” - Nobody can dispute him when “Big John" says his boys are tired, Also, most of the miners possess folding as well as jingling money. A lot of coal, but not enough to bring stocks piles up to where, in event of a big strike, we wouldn't be caught—as the war production board used to say—with our plants down. Whatever happens, it is certain not to come before election day, The preliminary huddles of U. M, W. shock troops with Navy Capt, |N. H. Collisson, coal mines adminise trator are off until Monday.

We, the Women Appliances Save

den trash in the fall so insects and | disease can't winter over.

ately. They can them sell hem | cheaper than carefully labelled |

8 un ¥ BARBARA WINDERS, 2242 N.

bulbs or those that are less prolific. So watch the fine print and beware!

| Work, So Keep

too good a “bargain” when you buy a collection,

{Alabama st., like many a young gardener, is learning the hard way. She bought a “bargain collection” {of tulip bulbs. They turned out to [be “first year bulbs,” quite as the advertiser, had mentioned—but in very fine print. Though they're only {the size of a hazel nut Barbara will [plant them, about 3 or 4 inches |deep, and after another spring or | maybe two they'll be of blooming size. Bulb collections‘ are often true bargains. Some bulbs, sSpecially old

~ - # THE CHOICEST plant in Barbara's garden this summer was a Scotch thisle. She obtained the thistle in a swap with her pal Nancy Manning who lives at 2223 N, Delaviarest, Items involved were one coleus, one elderberry plant, and the thistle (the price) for which Barbara pald Nancy one balsam, three ladyfinger plants, and a number of poppy plants.

OPENING TOMORROW

1 * ~ » Em in Repair By RUTH MILLETT THE. VACUUM cleaner goes on the blink, or the washing machine draws a shuddering last breath, Just try to get it fixed. ; That has become one of the ° housewife’'s big problems—keeping her lahor-saving devices in repair, First there's the job of finding someone to do the work.

n . » THEN COMES the problem of trying to get an estimate on the job. “I can’t tell until I get it apart,” is the pat answer today.

land blooms

Indianapolis will become the na-. ‘tion's center of chrysanthemum in-

'terest tomorrow with” the opening|

of “the annual chrysanthemum show here sponsored by the department of parks and climaxing next weekend with the National Chrysanthemum show at Murat temple. More than 6000 pérsons are pected to attend the opening of the city show tomorrow in Garfield park greenhouses ind the display will continue to be on exhibit from 10 a. m. to 10 p. m daily through Nov. 10. The National - Chrysanthemum show will be held Nov. 8, 9 and 10 from all over the United States will be sent to the city for the exhibit, Twenty-two garden clubs are participating in the city show and ribbons will be given for the best still life arrangement as well as the best arrangement for dining room use.

exday the

Both shows coincide with national

flower week, Nov, 3-10,

STAY OFF RANGES, ATTERBURY WARNS

Camb Atterbury oficlals today

warned all persons residing in the

| vicinity of the camp of the dangers,

of trespassing on the post ranges. Daily firing with live ammunition is being conducted on the ‘various post ranges by post personnel, and outside agencies such as the FBI, Indiana state police and units from

!Fort Harrison,

Demolition and explosion by ' post ordnance personnel ma|terially increases the danger at this

! time. ~

PRESS RENT RECONTROL PT. WAYNE, Ind, Nov. 2 (U.P). ~-Morgan L. Fitch, vice president of the Great Lakes region of the

National Association of Real Estate -

Boards, told Indiana realtors last night {ba the OPA s be pressured into Feeasitng rent controls,

oa

of “duds” throughout the reservation!

Man With Longest Name In u S. Dies

|neral services were held today for— (tian names in the nation. take a breath—Oscar William Free Omlis Fritz Allen John Don Pedro Al Fonlas Mell Tare Gustafson Tittle Step Carl Cary.

LEGION MEETING MONDAY

Audley S. Dunham, local magician, will present a program follow-|

for officers with whom his father ican Legion at” the Central Chrisserved in the Civil war. His was tian- church. ‘

SILLY NOTIONS By Palumbo

eam

Ase

Vik

SEATTLE, Nov. 2 (U, P.).—Fu-|believed the longest series of Chris-!

|ing a dinner Monday night at the Mr. Cary, who-was 82, was named Robinson- Ragsdale Post 133, Amer-

WYATT GAINS EDGE ON BIG HOME. LOANS

WASHINGTON, Nov. 2(U, P).— Housing Expediter Wilson W., Wyatt appeared today to be gaining ground [in his fight for big government loans to finance mass production of | prefabricated houses. It, was the first real test of his

emergency powers.

The Reconstruction Finance | Corp. today. approved loans to two, | house manufacturers—$1,500,000 to | the . General Panel Corp. Los An- | | geles, and $1 million to the Knox| { Corp. Thompson, Ga. | The _ housing expediter had recommended loans to 11 firms. The RFC, earlier refected four of them {on straight business grounds. The | other loans still await RFC action. Even on the cases disapproved, the RFC officials indicated they "would make the loans if Mr, Wyatt insisted. “He is expected to press for reconsideration. The 11 firms | plan to build 106,000 pre-fabricated homes.

1 GRILL NEW SUSPECT | IN NURSE'S MURDER

Detectives today questioned a 31-year-old man in the Alberta Green nurse murder case, admitting the latest of 40-odd suspects was “not promising.” The suspect, Columbus Williams, was arrested with an adding ma{chine he admitted stealing last night. Similar in appearance to the de: scription of the: man who beat to death the Riley hospital nurse last Sept. 11; Willlams also admitted he fortnerly was employed at the 1.U. medical center. He' is held under $2000 pond on | charges of assault and ‘battery and | vagrancy. Police found a warrant | on the assault charge pending after | bringing the muspect to hed quarter,

hE

aE) ayn

Then there's the period of waite ing. “Sorry, I haven't had a chance to get to it yet,” the man who promised to “get at it” on Monday says the following Saturday. r ” ” ‘MANY A HOUSEWIFE wishes tos day that somewhere along the line her education had included a course on how to make small ree pairs in labor-saving devices and | how to tell when a complicated re« {pair job is actually called for. Knowing nothing about the equipe | ment she uses every day, she is (completely at the mercy of repairs | men, Says one housewife who has & college degree: “If I had it to do over again, I'd swap at least two years of college for short courses in plumbing, electrical repair, and carpentry.”

SHAFFER RETURNED ON ROBBERY CHARGE

Harry Allen Shaffer, sought by - {police here on burglary and robe | bery charges, was being returned to Indianapolis today from St, Louis where he was taken by police yesterday. Testimony by Donald J, Greeley, 8 pal of Shaffer, who police are holding here in connection with the robbery of the Kirby restaurant, 2127 N. Illinois st, on Sept. 2, implicated Shaffer, ; Greeley said he and Shaffer broke inthe restaurant where they obtained $101, and that when the proprietor, Robert Kirby, walked in on them Shaffer threatened him with a gun. -Greeley was arrested almost ime : mediately after - the robbery but his agcomplice escaped.

28 KILLED IN GERMAN yy BERLIN, Nov. 2° (U. P.)~Presa : Slspatelies said Sodny that 8 Derk sons were killed and 1 seriously when a li s derailed between .

and Zeits.