Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 15 January 1947 — Page 17
aste of a few will be all the
dance | today.
TS ———_—,—
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|
~ Shoulder
$F Are Round
ALAM iy wIARY
“SECRETARY'S SLUMP" is af common posture fault among girls!
who toll over a typewriter, or massive ledgers. Instead of consciously sitting up straight, they" unconsclously hunch farther and farther over their work until a round shoulderline mars their figures, The tendency to round shoulders
e
may be counteracted with exercises, |]
One of them, to be done a few minutes each day, is to lie flat on the floor, with a folded towel under the shoulder blades. % ET FLATTEN SHOULDERS on the floor by pressing back hard on the towel, After several days, back muscles will begin to contract and
* help hold shoulders back naturally. |
A narrow table or an on two chairs, are the
and
fig i i:
Eivs
Mr. Bennett Guest
W. Miller Bennétt will be the guest speaker at the dinner meeting of the American Society of Women Accountants at 6 p. m. Monday in the Y. M.C. A. -
.Card*Party Booked
The Ladies auxiliary to the Altenheim will sponsor its monthly card party at 1:30 p. m. Friday at the Altenheim, 2007 N. Capitol ave.
WED—Mrs, Jesse A. Evans was Miss Mary Patrick, 55 W. 33d st, before her matriage - Dec. 24 in Nashville. Mr. and Mrs. Loren Patrick of Eminence ‘are the bride's parents, and Mr. Evans is the son of Mrs, lola Evonreh Larios h
Mostly, One-of-a-Kind
|
SPRING THOUGHTS — A gray wool suit with the new cutaway, longet-length jacket looks like a wonderful idea for a spring wardrobe. Marilyn (Mike) Calvert a junior at Tech, wears the suit with silver button trim, Her hat is of navy straw with pique edging and her gloves are navy string. "Mike" is a member of the Kappa Gamma club. (Wasson's.)
Mrs. Nevitt Speaker
Mrs. Hope Bedford Nevitt will speak before the recent graduates
[the 38th st. branch of the Mer-|%
chants National bank. Her sub-
United Nations Meetings.” Mrs. William Ehrich is chairman of the
| meeting.
Club Hears Talk
The Longan Parliamentary club met at the home of Mrs. T. R.
~ {Clarke, 1856 Talbott st. at 7 p. m.
yesterday. “Privileged Motions” was the subject of the study program, which was in charge of Miss Mabel Hall
Dinner at Marott
The Home Economics Women in Business met at 6:45 p. m. yesterday for dinner at the Marott hotel. Mrs. Florence Webster Long spoke on “Behind the Lines.”
Skating Party The Westview Baptist church
group will have a skating pary at 8 p. m! Saturday at Rollerland.
Famous Makes of
~~ ODD BLANKETS
LY to Ly oft Regular Price
All wool and parf wool blankets now reduced to clear! Some slightly mussed from counter display—but all excellent quality! Mostly one of a kind.
—
\
3.98 Unbleached MATTRESS COVERS
Full and, twin size for regular or Beautyrest mattresses! Boxed sides, taped bound seams. Reduced to clear!
: Extra! 81x99-inch Mohawk Sheets 2.49
Famous quality, noted for long wear and service! Each
vik > £ - 3
nf
ah
—. WASSON'S DOMESTICS, FOURTH FLOOR
»
“. PER PRE CIR AR SR a Bat
unit of the American Association}.
Ject will be “My Impressions of the! ;
i 5
EEE
: 5
:
To obtain complete crocheting instructions for the white wool car-
riage robe (pattern 5389) send 16 cents in coin, your name, address and the pattern number to Anne Cabot, The Indianapolis Times, 530 S."Wells st., Chicago T.
oly prices, and then leave unions
998
Each
(Called Vital
Richberg Says Public|
fl| planned use of illegal methods.” ' It
\ with public rights and wholesale =a | denial of civil liberty as approved
{monopoly laws against businessmen
He
Must Be Protected By Seripps-Howard Newspapers WASHINGTON, Jan. 15. ~The right to strike must be preserved, but it is ‘not sbsolute, and in pertain cases where it injures public welfare its use will have to be restricted or forbidden, according to Donald R. Rich- el berg.
Washington building _ confer- £ ence, was for’
“The right of an Mr. Bichberg individual to quit his employment is a constitutional right in the United States,” he said. “But large numbers of men have no absolute right to do in concert what one can do. One man can walk in public places, but a mob has no right to occupy streets or. pack the corridors of public buildings. And a strike is not simply the quitting of work, but a concerted effort to dorce an employer to yleld to demands. Lists Types of Strikes
Mr. Richberg named five types of strikes he believed congress should forbid: ONE: Strikes against government. “Paralysis of a government organism by private force for private gain will open the door to major insurrections,” he argued. Public employees, he said, must accept an
all the people. TWO: Political strikes, which seek to compel government officers to yield to demands for action or inaction. These, he said, were “simply rebellions against public authority and should be made an offense on a par with bribery.” ' THREE: Any strike, however le-
“carried on by deliberate and
is a matter of national as well as local concern,” he said, “when unions adopt” mass picketing and intimidation, wholesale interference
methods of winning strikes.” FOUR: Strikes that shut down public utilities or deprive communities of necessities of life. Utility rates, he pointed out, were regulated by law, and managements could not stop services without public permission, Arbitration Urged “Neither management nor employees, he contended, should be permitted to shut down a public utility, but should be required by law ‘to submit their controversy to the binding decision of impartial public arbitrators.’” FIVE: “Monopolistic” strikes that deprive commurfities, or even the nation, of vital necessities. Mr. Richberg cited the 1946 coal strikes. Here, he said, “we face a choice between either outlawing strikes and requiring compulsory arbitration of industry-wide controversies, or limiting the bargaining power of unions. so that a failure of local bargaining will not result in an in-dustry-wide strike. : “It is absurd to enforce anti-
to protect the public from monop-
free to use a far more effective and practically unrestrained power to impose fixed labor costs and production controls on an entire in. dustry, with the inevitable result of establishing monopoly prices.”
7
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gitimate in origin and objectives, |.
crackerjack cook.”
SIDNEY SAID he didn't have to tell her, she knew it. - “Mamma taught me, and she's superb.” Basil filled the plates, they ate with appetite and few words. Then Basil got out brown-paper cigarets, and they smoked. “May I lle down with my head in your lap, Sidney?” “I wouldn't squawk.” She was feeling rather drawn to Basil, which may. haye been only the good behavior of the motorcar. She leaned over and kissed him. ~ . “8id, why can’t we be engaged.”
ator to er dons a Set Jing aud. Xa. Satta ERE
the decisions of representatives.off... . .. __ ® ® 8 “BUT I love you—and fox your-
self, your cooking. I never think about your being an heiress.” “Heiress? Oh, you mean Dixon?
Earle, and that it's insufficient to the bare necessities of life—and always due my creditors, anyway. Bo then Papa closed up like @ clam.” € » " # " SIDNEY THREW her cigaret into the brook. “You mean he’s selling stock and tried to sell you some?” “Well, we didn't get that far. But I rather think so. Why?” “Why?” Suddenly her memory was like a rubber ball bouncing back through the summer, the spring, back to the start of Papa's eccentricity; and with every bounce it brought a curve of recollection, some word or action, Papa's frequent mysterious absences from home, his friend Mr. Milgrim, those conferences at the hotel She sat and thought, and then pushed Basil's head ouff of her lap. “Get upt xe.) a Re v CRE “How fast can you drive that auto of your?” “Like the fiends of hell. But I don’t want to.” Basil had struggled
Printed “Sheer Luck, Printed rayon “Weshan,” yd............ Printed “Cobblespun,” Plain color “Nirvana,” 39” wool and rayon, Yass rss sans inns nasi LAN
to his knees. “I'm having fun.”
Saturday . 9:30 A.M. to §
>»
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NC
of sald, (an “I didn't mean that at all, You'll be an heiress in your own as the ship comes in.” “What ship?”
right as soon |
| have Shanse YO 0. Sumatin he’ | wanted t
something
ways w
Would you object?” » » . nothing I want more than f dren Tours, All buy. oh 3.
home? No, don't say anything un~ til you've thought it over. I know how you feel about us, our being a family circle, a ‘group. And you love Jeff so much because he's the oldest—" “I love you all the same!” “But suppose- Jeff had to leave home soon?" . A “Is it another contest?” “No, so far it's just supposing.” “Well,” Mamma sald, “it Jeff wanted to. go, and if it was the right thing, I'd never stand in his way.”
(To Be Continued)
* On Accrediting Board Times State Service i BLOOMINGTON, Ind. Jan. 15. Prof. John E. Stempel, head of the Indiana university journalism de-
{he -accraditing aqmmittes for education for journalism by the American Association of Schools ang De~ partments of Journalism: at its re
0% 's |
“But if this took Jeff away from|
rE Wak elected E THEHBer or}
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