Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 June 1950 — Page 33
Lu ed ang oF A alm : ILL Dan's gait quickened when I repeated, “Nothing Lis Touch Turns fo Gold . . . No. § the gallery of the House of Rep : ir , resentatives. The place was empty, A guard in-
‘formed us they had adjourned for the day a few > Fu A aa y “How about a nice sight-seeing bus ride?” Dan’ : ; hear of it : : Bip ®) Lit h
er a De
STOP was the Senate. The clerk roll. On the floof I counted a total tors. Homer Capehart wasn't there to roll. Neither was William Jenner,
| : | Beef Prices Take Big Jump Over the Moon = Alumni Association: Other |
ania Angers, vaulted. over high. walls, 1 e dashed across immaculate lawns, By a devious p is right at the top in ability to ,. ute we made cur way to the marshal's office.| floor when he rises to speak. I mp, corridors, elegantly simple and white, remind-
say that I resented the conversapress boys were having but Dan row hurried words between Dan and a comely bequiet. "©, © secretary took place. We were escorted to Justice : The gallery was far from being packed. School Sherman Minton’s office. By the time we arrived, Truman Cabinet children « Same me one ssetion hi Groves, Theyd a3 matter of a minute LOE two, a guide was Waiting sit a minu wk af e empty oo es were a nod from e. : " ' shuffle the reams of ba they were carrying and —- ates we Spe a hd and Justice pias. (Last of a Series of Articles) was reading his opinion on a case. }
Jetty ston on Shey Wold $0. AnoBer #roup took | By EDWIN C. HEINKE
Robert Taft (R. 0) walked in, plopped in his Language Bovis: Around an smal THE political life of
. I was figuring out a way to , with bowed head. The lawyer language Justice! one of the strangest paraMinton was using went in one ear, bounced around d in U8 litical a bit and edcaped out the other. oxes In + BPO ; Most of the spectators looked at one another history. : at intervals. I noticed several shrug their shoul- : ders. At least I was not the only one having For great political power ; trouble understanding the opinion being read. The| came to a man who never individual words were all right. They were clear wanted anything to do with enough. When you got them all together; that's politics, who ' shunned it all where I became lost. a | his life, who deep in his heart The square courtroom with four king-sized disliked it. And still does. pillars to a side and red drapes was most impres-| Politics has spun Mr. MeKinsive. The nine justices, all in a row wearing black: ney into a web from which he robes, made you feel good inside with all the pre- has never been able to extricate vailing serenity and dignity. himself since that day in 1934 I thought of the words over the entrance:| when he walked into Bill “Equal justice under Jaw.” That meant me. That | Clauer’s living room with Ownie meant Dan. That means your rights and freedoms Bush and left with the county's are as important as mine. We're all equal and | treasurer job in his pocket. they're charged with the responsibility of keeping| Here is a man, at the rela tively young age of 46, who finds himself Indiana's most power
it that way. { My Uncle Sam is the best there is and I'll tell the ecackeyed world that. | ful Democratic politician, one en , ic pL who stands upon the threshold Out of acti if f becoming a nationally known ; of active po itis . of hevaming y wife, Margaret and children,
‘Summer ‘Fun’ By Robert C. Ruark political figure.
TOP RUNGS of the ladder are within his grasp. With a nod of his head, he could be seated in President Truman's Cabinet. But he never will. He could become a back-of-the-scenes President- - maker of the future. But he will not. For Frank McKinney Is through.
Rejects Seat in
States Marine Corps Band on the steps of the Capitol ready to play. “Had them come out especially for you,” he
“You shouldn't have gone to all that trouble,” 1 began and he shushed me. 7 “Nothing but the best for a taxpayer,” quipped Dan. . ty Cw The Marine band formed a huge V on the steps. It was a magnificent sight. Their bright red tunics and white trousers and shiny instruments made one shield his eyes. The director must have had 50 ~~ pounds of gold braid on his uniform. He had gold braid on top of gold braid. His chest was covered with medals, We waited for the music. Photographers, both Army and Marine Corps, snap pictures, Tour- - ists flocked to the base of stairs. I poked a handkerchief wrapped finger into each ear, Still .no music. Dan finally went over and asked the director what was holding up the show.
a meeting with Mayor Al Feeney. He wanted to meet with me and Paul McDuff (county Democratic chairman). “The Mayor wanted to purge certain two-year office holders. “And I said, ‘Why Al, you can’t do that to these- fellows. It would hurt the party. If these fellows have done a creditable job in their first term, why don’t you let them have a second term? It's just an age-old
and raw—with ginger in the champagne and mint | in the tomatoes, and washing my mother’s friends in an air bath and pouring tea over my pearls, with the same dull music going round and round and milk-and-orange juice coming out here. The book says 1 am supposed to fill a green glass bowl With pink shells and put it on the terrace table, ahd then tersely commands me to “try a canto of Don Juan.” I guess they meal they are putting the stuff up in cantos now, in- WY. i stead of fifths. That does not help me out much| ot Su resign. Irom al de with a direct order to “rotate your ankles 25 times job, either . appointive or elec: Waverley novels again, But even if you have no each morning,” or to “make yourself some batiste| tye jug. maddy ons pos miid regime, here are some small things you might “fightgowns.” I look sufficiently silly in pajamas, It isn’t that Frank McKinney like todo..." and my ankles are strong enough already. , is ungrateful for. the honors :] Nor do I see why I have to have luncheon on that local, state and national Pretty Rakish a tray, under a tree, as advised, or to read Jane| Democratic chieftains seek to MAKING French irregular verbs mine forever Austen in a hammock. There are lots of worth-| bestow upon him. He is humble seems rather rakish for a married man, and I while things to be done in a hammock but reading| in expressing his thanks. He never was much of a hand with a knitting needle, Jane Austen is not one of them. She is strictly| just wants to be left alone with even if I had children to make cardigans for, and
a straight-chair author, | his banking and his basgball, I died with that Trollope the first time around,
i This thing about “get up at 5 a. m. occasionally | but “Vogue” has plenty of alternate arrows in t the quiver. So I thought you would like to know-
and see the secret part of the day” is sheer non- _* 8 sense, too, I see the “secret part of the day” every “I HAVE NEVER liked polihow I will spend my summer, strictly on the ad‘vice of Mrs. Chase.
day, just before hitting the sack, and there isn’t] tics..I do not like politics now,” anybody around but Billy Rose, stickup men and| he said. . “Make a gallon of. cold soup, and put it in the people who bang ashcaps on the sidewalk, And “For 10 years I have been refrigerator, with unexpected guests expected.” There is a slight switch here. I will make a gallon
birds, all shouting at the top of their lungs, i trying to get out, I have tried . everything to get out. I have of warm gin, and keep. it in the bathtub and that Sounds Subversive ~will teach my unexpected guests not to show up
mt -tried to DE AWAY from IndlanCOULD BE 1 will read “Puck of Pook's Hil | apolis at crucial times. Then I without calling first. | to somebody else's children—sitting in a meadow,| find myself in the midst of it “Soak your hair in olive oil, turban your head on midsummer eve, but only after I have sub- again. all day. Have a milk-and-orange juice day. jected it to a loyaltm check: Sounds a-littie-sub-| Diriog he ast PH AEE ie Change the part in your hair. Rub your heels in Vversive, from here. And the next time you sce ton, Spent the majo y ny the sand—hard—to make them smooth. Put up me I will be up to the elbows in a mixing bowl, | A few da x before ane on some tomatoes, with ginger. Pour. American for Vogue wants me “to make a jelly with real y q champagne over ice, add mint, Take an air bath every morning. Go to tea with friends of your
‘NEW YORK, June 8—I had been mildly baffled, __.recently, about how to spend my summer-—torn between Switzerland, and an air-conditioned bar on Third Ave. If there be such a thing. Then my grimy little fingers got hold of that magazine :mama keeps locked in the wall safe. And “Vogue” solved it for me again, with beguiling admonitions. . “You might take an all-summer plan,” says Mrs. Edna Woollman Chase's oracle, “To lose $0 many pounds, to make French irregular verbs yours forever, to knit three cardigans and jumpers’ for the children, to read all of Trollope or the “Have followed. You cannot indict your own party.’ “I told him I was not interested in any individual, that I felt the party should build its ticket around good judicial candidates, make it well-balanced and strong. “The ft. the things that he loves most. Then 1 lent . » : “AND THE NEXT THING 1 knew was that I had been needled into a fight with the Mayor, I had been drawn into it again, that T was for this candidate or that.
ere any individual in the primary but suddenly I found myself ‘supporting’ some candidates,
‘being against others. ”
down his first job. After serving as vice chairman of the finance division of the. Democratic National Committee, President Roosevelt sought to
or
“I never was for or against
co di-1940, Mr. MeKinney-turped-—
TT THURSDAY, JUNE 8, 1050
-
reward him by appointing him a member of the Securities and
Exchange Commilssion, He de-
clined the appointment, citing pressure of his business interests. In April, 1949, he turned down the request that he serve as treasurer of the Democratic National Committee, ” ~
” MR... McKINNEY accepted appointment to the Military Ho ‘and never one to accept a job in name only, he went to Washington, conferred with high military figures, He found out that government apartments for U. 8, soldiers in Alaska were costing $40,000 per five-room apart. ment, with one eight-apartment unit already constructed at a cost of $320,000. He put thumbs down, drew the wrath of the military who showed him pictures of the dilapidated houses the soldiers were forced to.live in.
flew to Alaska with the committee, He found out that lumber was being brought in from Seattle when there was plenty of -lumber-avatable-in-Alaska:-He discovered that cement costting $16 a ton at the mill was being shipped in from Loulsiana, costing $76 a ton when delivered. He found that the base-
. I came home. The first thing I orange juice and orange sections,” and to stir up a bowl of “hot, hot chill.” got was an invitation to attend mother's. Wash your pearls in lukewarm water . and soapflakes. Play Prokofieff's symphony over
Vogue also craves me “to figure out Why You eof mofo. admire whom you admire,” and the answer 1s Schools— five times, if you feel like it.” It seems to me I am going to be a hell of a
mess, with ‘my “head oily and the part missing
asy. I admire th le who write th f 4 : is Being They Sa] ted “my tain] ] OC I High School Names mest; Witt Tuy bead ily and the part mising in-elves, and will keep mié out of the saloons ™g g h : h EY : : Re eb pr cholarship Winners ap Uncle Again a,
summer, which looks like {tll be pretty busy. { . | By Frederick C. Othman WASHINGTON, June 8—Akron’s “mightiest rubber moguls agree that the price of shoes for the old heap is on the way up. This is partly because some of the synthetic rubber ingredients they thought they'd get for tires are turning, up as rattles for babies, shower bath curtains, and plastic ukuleles. Who's to blame? The government, - of . course, or so say the men who keep America's wheels rolling on rubber. In ‘the last six months the price of genuine rubber from Asiatic trees has doubled; this is largely because of riots and Communists in Malaya and Indonésia. So the tire makers thought they'd turn increasingly to synthetic rubber, made in. the plants the. government built during the war. They thought. - - x Five of these mighty factories used to turn eoal and oil into a gummy substance called styrene. This, when boiled in one way. becomes rubber. When fried on another kind of fire it turns into plastics.
U.S. Sold Four Plants
SO THE FEDERALS sold four of .their styrene plants to private business: a while back and, according to the unhappy rubber gentlemen, these wonder-working factories now are specializing in plastics instead of rubber. And another thing. To get styrene, you've got to. have benzol. This comes from coal. John I. Lewis messed that up good a while back and now we've got a serious ~benzol Shortage, Tar 80 the boss men of Goodyear, Goodrich and Firestone think the government ought to start its other synthetic factories to booming again and get some tire material in stock, just in case those Orientals become too busy shooting at each other to ship out any more of the genuine stuff. That still isn't all. Harvey Firestone Jr. a ruddy-faced citizen who is’ considerably younger than his white-haired competitors, says the gov-
Botany Class
is Tours Gardens ernment hasn't done so well with its. rubber fac-! Among scholarship winners in tories, {Technical High School graduatIt has owned them for eight years now and jo class of 723 are Betty Jo the synthetic rubber it turns out isn’t much bet-/pinant who received a scholarter than it ever was. Take truck tires. The gov-\ghin to Franklin College; Kenton ernment’s synthetics aren't much good for them,|; . ..or4 Hanover College and hecaube he stuff gets hot under flexing and tends|y . .¢o ‘Carroll, Indiana Central 0 0 pieces. n i y j Firestone told the Senate armed services sub-| College. 5 committee that if the government would lease| Betty Pennington won the Pi these factories to private rubber firms, they'd Omicron senior scholarship and start competing with each other and first thing|Robert Berkshire and Jack Real- “ you knew they'd be making better rubber. |6§ were awarded scholarships to His cohorts, the Messrs, Paul W. Litchfield, Herron Art Institute. chairman of the Goodyear Tire and Ruhber<Co., ———— and John L. Collyer, president of B. F. Goodrich! Climaxing a year of activity Co., didn't go quite this far. They agreed with! which has included landscaping Firestohe that businessmen could make better and care of shrubs and trees on 7} rubber than G-men; but that since the cold war the campus, 21 Tech pupils of seemed on the verge of getting warmer, they’d go, Scott McCoy's Botany IV class & along with the government staying in the rubber toured garden spots of the- city ¥ : business for two more years, That is, if it got this week. busy and started turning out rubber wholesale: i = and Mr. McCoy, they visited gar- °
Must Decide Shortly {dens of Mrs, J. K. Lilly, Mrs. Eli
THE SENATORS have got to decide shortly Lilly, Mrs. Frederic M. Ayres Sr, whether to take Uncle Samuel out of the rubber Mrs. Nicholas H. Noyes and Mrs. | business, or whether to maintain the federallJ. I. Holcomb, li ; monopoly on synthetic tire material. The subject] The advanced course in botany | is of vast importance to us motorists. And that was offered for the first time dur- SEs brings. up. another. thing. : , : wr ing--the—school--year- just -com-13 : My new car is equipped with some super de pleted. luxe tires built by one of these gentlemen, with) ‘Flowers in the “Fléwer Pot, A some of, the fanciest squeegee marks in the tread traditional - get-together-between-any doodler could think up. ,On some kinds of | classes-spot, near Treadwell Hall, roads.these tires hum; on some they roar, and -on!{were planted by class members. some they rumble. It’s not for me to give the The class also planted. 23 shrubs Akron experts advice, but as a customer I'd ap-iand trees on the campus this preciate it if they'd start making tires againispring that don't howl in protest every time I drive] : faster than 20 miles an hour. :
Ww
Accompanied by Miss Lots Sink
Bride Month
Harold Avple has been elected N . ot Universal
ipresident of the Howe High re { By Science Services Q i {new officers who will serve during] NEW YORK, June 8—June is The. corn-fed cow is jumping the same as a year ago, and the; The basic answer to meat prices 0c 1950-51 school year are John the month for brides in some but over the price moon with its tasty industry is moving from the sur-|is that they are what the public | Bruckman, vice president, and not all sections of the country. In sirloins stinging) under the lash:plus period to the deficit period. is willing and able to pay. . - |Miss Billy Rich, secretary. Princi- Mississippi, South Carolina, Ar _. of the inflation whip. "In the supermarkets the re- And the Choice meats, from porter- port was that choice meats are the price on the hoof at the stock. Dent treasurer. Kenneth M. December, Metropolitan Life Inhots to Runie hamburger, have “very scarce.” One big buyer yards. “7 |Bmartz is faculty sponsor. 3 : n on the gallop in the last said he had a hard time fillin ci J gs | It is in the Northeastern an month. They're going into the orders. » 8 o0ay prices Wel 25 cents af shortage SeoL, -l . [* Sirloin steak has ) pay more. e rea- 93 cents a pound a month ago to| | “superior” by the Indianapolisimost popular marriage month. son is quite simple. Wage earn- 99 cents, although a year go. Rote, he dation hogs Wer* | wnsemble Society following inter-| May is the month for brides in ers eat more meat when they can was 95 cents. against 67,188 a week ago ¥ | school -competition at the World Utah, while jn Nevada, there is afford it, and that's right now. | Porterhouse is $1.09, up 10, Butit wasn’t meats alone. Dun| WA* Memorial have been an-no pronounced As the still, hot nights of sum-|cents in a month. And filet mig-|and Bradstreet reported today | nounced. : {Young divorcees, Me come, roasts and pork willinons, which show up on your that its index of food prices had! They were Edward Haase and suggest, probably remarry shortly pind 2 in demand, tt those notel plate ‘wearing a gravied moved up 6 cents in the last'week, Alice Hatcher, violin; Jane Reed, after the dissolution’ of their prea a ke: gToaled| mushroom button, are $1.99 over listing flour, oats,. lard, - cheese, Viola; and Judy Wear, cello. John vious marriage, whatever the soak. not to" mention trillions of | the counter, . _|coffee, tocoa, eggs, potatoes, and Shepard was faculty advisor of mon h may be. hamburgers eaten on picnics will The great American favorite! raisins on the high side, {the participants, : 4 OT er brides prefer October to = help keep pric » Grade A hamburger, 90 per cent pe ptnin yr . Ture for. the wedding month. p eep Pp ices up. lean and 10 per cent fat, is 61 Vv aft . P i t Pic R it | SER preemie sets . At Mid-July. Stage ~ icents. It was 59 cents last month. ¥ Of@ Draft Extension Fresent Fiano Recital sponsor ¥isH FRY T. @ “Binclalr, vice president, And round steak is nudging the WASHINGTON, June 8 (UP), Mrs. Albert Reep will present] Fleming Garden Volunteer Fire of Kingan and Co. said meat dollar mark at $9 cents, up from —The Senate Armed - Services!17 plano students” in recital at Department will sponsor a fish came to market earlier this year 93 cents last month. { Committee today unanimously ap-/8 p. m. Sunday in her residence fry at the fire station, 4325 W. 2 | at| Top Foin lamb chops are $1.31, proved a three-year extension of studio, 3110 Broadway. | Washington St., at 6 p. m. today "up 3 cents, and loin pork is 89|the draft law with no strings at:| Assisting will be S8andra Adams and tomorrow and at 12 noon cents, up 12 cents a Mund from | tached. The present law expires and Lannie Christoffel, gnarimb- Saturday, Lenley Phillips amonthage, = 3 iJune 24. ists, % = Ichairman. : :
apr
yo
<q
is/Club at Claypool
Brownson Opens Fire on Jacobs
Starts Campaign With ‘Hypocrite’ Charge
Charles L. -Brownson, GOP nominee for 11th District Congressman, opened his campaign today with a blast at Rep. Andrew Jacobs, Democratic candidate for re-election and also a candidate for the senatorial nomination. v At a Columbia Club luncheon meeting today, Mr. Brownson accused Rep. Jacobs of being a hypocrite in his political aectivities. “His voting record shows he | went'along with the Truman tax and spend program about 92 per cent of the time, yet he has the gall to come back to Indiana and try to hoodwink the public into believing he is an independent,” Mr. Brownson said, “He (Jacobs) - issued a statement calling Alex Campbell to task
senatorial nomination)
Eg [for following to Truman leader-
ship. i Brownson ‘Amazed’ { “The hypocrisy of this. man
| Jacobs amazes me. He. votes like
using. Committan. last. JAS... w hola, the handwriting ap-
_ Mr, McKinney Immediately
1 nh
vo,
.
ments alone in the apartments were costing $18,000 each,
ton, suggested changes that brought the cost of the apart. ments down to $17,000 aplece instead of the planned $40,000 expenditures,
ila. THEN MR. McKINNEY was asked if he would come to Washington and take over the job as of the Army.
pears on the walls,” he said, “I told them I could not divorce myself from my business, uproot my family and move them to Washington, That if war came, I would do anything at all but until that time, I was not interested in an appointment. of any kind or character.” Recent reports have streamed out of Washington that Mr. McKinney - would be named Secretary of the Treasury. But a few weeks ago, he definitely took his name out of consideration for the job. Meeting Under Secretary the Treasury Ed Foley in Chicago, Mr, McKinney said: “Bd, T am not interested in «it. I cannot consider it,
“~ "He came back to Washing-
sakes Political
.. out of business ventures except banking and baseball. So Frank McKinney returns to his family—his Claire, 16; Robert, 14, and Frank Jr, 11. : :
Then I am at your service.”
“the Democratic State 1 tion, he will resign as stats treasurer, He served notice on the party last month the primary.
» FOR A LON! has
ABT WAIT ‘appreciate 1t if SA
you will let it be known when you return to Washington that my name should not be consid ered. If war comes along— that will change everything,
To < ; X¢ # 2 i ' his children, Claire, 16,
14, and Frank Jr. 11, And his bank, And baseball,
Director to Address Luncheon of YMCA
By EMMA RIVERS MILNER
Times Church Editor Indianapolis ministers and laymen will meet today fo lay plans for aiding the new interdenominational newspaper “The Protestant World.” Dr, J. W. Montgomery of New
a-noon luncheon in the YMCA. Dr. Montgomery is serving as director of extension of the new {newspaper which will begin regu{lar publication in September.
York will address the group at:
At today’s meeting arranged
|by Dr. Howard J. Baumgartel, iexecutive . secretary of Indians japolis Church Federation, a committee of promotion is to be organized, Members will present |information regarding “The Protjestant World” to ministers of the community and to church boards.
Dr. J. W. Montgomery
| Each will be asked to make a|“But we shall reserve the right
imately $2 million to finance it {until advertising and circulation {begin to pay in sufficient amount {to defray expenses.
{gift toward the newspaper which|to be just as pro-Protestant as (candidate for the Democratic/anfiounces the need of approxi-|the Catholic press is pro-Catholie,
“If we find ourselves advocats ing different policies we shall, merely be reflecting good old de. moecracy, true Americanism, a
Sounds Out Churches ~~ Wholesome thing." Le Dr: Montgomery has-visited 90] Dr: RovertW. Serie, called
{a Truman Democrat and comes! cities in 40 states in the United one of America’s greatest schol{back to Indiana and tries to talk States and Canada over the past |ars and Christian workers, is the
like a conservative,” Mr. Brown-
EF (son said.
{ The {Committee was reorganized fol-
as follows: Bruce Savage; chairman; Mrs. John A. Alexander, vice chafrman; Alex Clark, secretary; and Kevin+D. ‘Brosnan, treasurer,
Receives Engineering Degree After 15 Years
State Sery
a | : Tim itn. nOMSetTe LroAlly sets P8¥-Charles-M.Sharp-is -perma-icansas and Georgia brides prefer LAWRENCEBURG, June 8 —
Fenmore E, Dunn, Lawrenceburg
|surance Co. statisticians here find. business executive, will receive men. | | “Headquarters a | hundred higher at the stockyards, | Four Howe High School in- North Central sections. of the gree from Cincinnati University Will be in the ‘Religious News jumped from 50 cents in a few instances. {strumentalists who were cited as United States that June is the'at 8:30 p. m. today—the reward Service Bldg. in New York. At {first, we shall let a contract for {the printing. A preview copy will
(his mechanical engineering de-
{for-75,000 miles of travel and 15 years of study. | Chief engineer at A. D. Cook!
seasonal pattern.Co., Inc, Mr. Dunn fihished his| | the statisticians education during the last two|a board of 300, a corporate body
\years by attending classes in Cin- representing many denomina-
cinnati two nights a week. He had made the trip thres times a week for many earlier years. Mr. Dunn will go to Harrison, N. J.. where he will become ap-
= [plication engineer with Worthing- P. W. Thomas, editor of
ton Pump & Machinery Corp. {COOLEY TO ADDRESS CLUB | - Al G, Cooley, state supervisor of { paroles, will speak at the weekly luncheon of Indianapolis Kiwanis noon tomgor ‘in the
two years. In so doing, he sound{ed out churchmen in all the cities
editor of the new newpaper, James Craig, former editor of
Brownson - for - Congress | regarding their desire for thel|thé New York Sun, is managing
orgatiization of a newspaper for editor. ol .
\ “Miss Pennington lowing the luncheon meeting. Alli protestantism. Mr. Berkshire : F Penniagion previous officers were re-elected
“1 found great interest every-|
YMCA to Sponsor
'where,”
“Conservatives,
gether to get
Dr. Montgomery reports. |
land liberals all Jmdamentatists Coa] Golf League
“The Protestant |
A co-ed golf league of 12 teams
|World” started, The first to in- has been added to the summer
{dorse the paper was the conservlative. Missouri Synod Lutheran {Church. We number our friends (among the Nazarenes, among the highest and the most lowly chugch-
of the paper
be delivered in a few days. “Ownership will be vested In
tions, The ‘Indianapolis contingent serving on the board will include Dr. Baumgartel; Dr. Roy
the Episcopalians. and,
sponsored by the seven branches of Indianapolis YMCA this. Learn-to-swim classes for boys under ‘16 will be held next week for Indianapolis youths, following this week's Marion County program. Regular swimming classes for beginners will be held there. after four times daily. 9 Boxing’ and wrestling classes are béing held three times a week. Shuffleboard, rifle and
The lobby and boys' game rooms are open every day, and movies and a story hour are given each
Ewing Vale, pastor of Tabernacle Presbyterian Church; Dr. “Piighirh | {Holiness Advoeate; Dr. H. B. {McCormick, president ‘of the {United Christian Missionary Society, and Dr. Gaines Cook, execu-|
five secretary of the Disciples of |o
Friday. Ah In addition to golf, the YMEA men's program includes softball,
| volleyball, “handball,
basketball; calisthenics, ton, archery, we lifting,
Convention.
And within a few weeks, at Convens
|Churchmen Plan Aid or z New Protestant Newspaper
program of outdoor activities
classes are taught twice weekly,
