Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 April 1950 — Page 11

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~ Inside Indianapolis

THERE'S a right and’ wrong’ way; easy and’

bard way, of doing things. Learned that trying into a bank.

caught my attention, . ~ Citizens were observed to drive up to the windows, throw a wad of dough out and drive away. Bookie joint? A toll gate of some kind? Drive-in bank? Why, of course. (I must confess and say I wasn't as perplexed as it may sound. After all, ‘T've been in alleys before). i

Inside Story : : THREE persons were inside working at the windows. One man was able to get into one corner of the building, As far as the eye could see, this man used the only door. He never went in where the other three were. His main concern was traffic and parking. } It occurred to me that a man around town ought to know the inside story on how the three who were confined got into the place, how they got out, whether they were getting enough to eat, was there any danger of beriberi? . Sneaking to the window and peering over the “ledge revealed little. The two men and a woman shook their heads and shrugged their shoulders violently when I asked them a simple question: “How much dough you taking in?” Obviously they

Long way": .. not a hall at Michigan City * Prison, It's an entrance to a bank. >

The Real Danger

‘lem. A matter of convenience ‘to our customers.

R* 5 s, ; 7 2 - By Ed Sovola

EY RR

hear me,

“TUESDAY, APRIL 25, 1050

The attendant wouldn't answer similar simple questions. About the time I was going to call the cops, or he ‘was, I don’t remember, somebody su seeing Felix T. McWhirter, assistant vice president of Peoples. Now we were in business. 1 After Mr. McWhirter playfully frisked me, we got down to brass tacks. There was no danger of beriberi breaking out in the drive-in bank. The’ tellers worked the same number of hours as those in the bank. Really, they were a happy lot. l “A fellow couldn't meet these people, could he?” ! I id I asked. “Let's go,” said Mr. McWhirter. winde nih Revea Insi e We looked first at the drive-in ' w whic! had served depositors for 19 years. Mr. McWhirter, Story of Reds hinted the bank had outgrown the hole in the By RALPH de TOLEDANO and wall. ’ > . VICTORY LASKY “Louie Schneider, winner of the 1931 ‘500° was EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the the first customer when we opened on June 1.” “Who was your second customer?” He didn't know, We proceeded to the basement by a devious route. I was surprised no blindfold was required. Past furnaces, steam tanks, Hope, cats, empty soda bottles we trudged. Finally we ’ approached a long tunnel. It was well lighted and ac is the Just. orderly, : Tactuat a_heavy iron door prevented any popular use. On i SN le the other end was another door. © {brought Whittaker Chambers

“Shall we walk the last mile together?” I joked. and Alger Hiss face to face in “Yes, after you." ... one. of the most sensational Some people sure have a peculiar sense of hu-| trials of our time. mor. ‘Anyway, we walked through about 70 feet - Digging deep into the records of tunnel, went through another iron door and and interviewing many prinwalked up a winding steel stairway. We emerged cipals, the authors have tracked Into a small room humming with activity. The down much hitherto unpublished humming of the two-way electric speaker in- material. Their story is also a creased the hive-like atmosphere. | remarkable case history of brilMrs. Mary Freeman, Jack Mansfield and Jim| lant young men going ComRice. tellers. nodded and smiled broadly when Mr.| munist.’ McWhirter introduced us. Howard Stuart, atten-| dant, gave a casual wave of the hand when I yelled to him over the speaker system. Pneumatic tubes took deposits into the

condensation of the book, SEEDS OF TREASON, just published by Funk & Wagnalls, New York. 8

CHAPTER THREE IN A MIDTOWN

bank. York—a cold, dirty hall in Hell's

The tellers were never exposed to anyone out- Kitchen, its walls draped with | side. A rotary door opens either to the customer faded red crepe-paper streamers— ' or the teller but never to both. Bullet proof glass whittaker Chambers got his first is used for the windows, naturally. An escape|view of the Communist revolu- |

hatch, steel and with the lock on the inside, is|tion in action. the only opening directly to the outside. Working The room is not exactly spacious but it is adequate. | Business is carried on just exactly like in the| ‘he Doe, part, with a scattering main bank. For the most part. Mrs. Freeman re- Of Other nationalities. Most of the members one time when an elephant came to pe|ienIbERS spoke only their native window. The beast was in an act at Keith's The.{ ‘OREN; yet this was called the ater. Didn't make ‘a deposit. Just frightened the nglish Speaking Branch. daylights out of Mrs. Freeman. Among the few English speak-

. (ers in the branch, however, were Not a Loose Dime | Benjamin Gitlow (later to be-

EVERYTHING seemed to be in fine shape. No|. me { one was unhappy or showed signs of beriberi. I| and a2 Rn in fhe Pany ) mentioned to Mr. McWhirter that Americans sure y oree“seemed to be getting lazy. -He disagreed. i | “This is to help the traffic and parking prob- 3 Daughis: of the American RevOh. There was no chance to ride a pneumatic In the late Thirties, Juliet tube back to the bank. The tunnel gives me the Poyntz was liquidated by the creeps. And not a loose dime along the route. |Party when. shé broke with the ' -’__| Soviet ‘military intelligence -ap-! . !paratus in this country. | » = - { : By Robert C. Ruark CHAMBERS HAD expected to {find tough-minded and dedicated

comrades were Greeks for

WASHINGTON, Apr. 25—A point nobody seems to have reached for in this frésh spate of accusations in the McCarthy hearings on Commies and semi-Commies and semisemi-Commies is that a government official scarcely needs to be a card-carrier to be as dangerous as if he had a tattooed heart-and-arrow on his chest that was personally etched by Joe Stalin. 'S matter of fact, I think I would rather have a paid spy of the Kremlin working for my State Department than one of these mushy-headed buckos who love to hang around and talk ideology with the Communists and their friends. You ued to see them in Georgetown all the time —not a card-carrier among them, but sitting all night on the floor to gravely discuss the social significance of the comic-strip to our time.

Card Not Important ; IN THE CASE of Owen Lattimore, the Far Eastern expert, it seems not too important to prove that he was an actual member of the Communist Party, if it can be proved he was the playfellow of Philip Jaffe, Jake Stachel and Frederick Field, as Louis Budenz charges. You could not operate long in that league without getting some of it on you, We have got a long, whiny thing going now about “guilt by association” which the apologists are using, freehandedly as a civil-liberties weapon to wiggle off the hook. In at least some busi-, nesses, association is all-important. Mine is one of the few dodges in the world where you are allowed to know a lot of bums and creeps and crooks without actually being called one yourself. On the thing of guilt by association, I would “say that a preacher who hung out in fancy houses and got drunk at the livery stable would not last lorig in the preaching trade. I don’t think Sen. Capehart, the one-man scourge of the gaming racket, would be wise to appear publicly at a horse park or a dice parlor. It develops that you would wish no policymolder for your country to be an intimate of Communists, any more than you want some paid hire-

ling of the Germans playing gin rummy with your] Lninists Seventy working for chief of staff in the last war, and if this be a thing| the downfall of the capitalist] called guilt by association, I am willing to hold SYStem and for the creation of | still for it in regard to public servants. |the proletarian dictatorship. I quit on Secretary of State Acheson when he| What he did find, for the most came out for Alger Hiss, a liar who is saved only Part, was a squawling group of technically from being a traitor by definition, and People, the dregs of discontent, became less admiring of the President when he/who were primarily concerned refused to fire Harry Vaughan in the 5-per-cent | with the Party’s intramural polit-| scandals. High public officials are paid for.keep-| ical jockeying. i ing clean noses, as Navy captains are paid to| “I guess the social revolution! refrain from running battleships on sandbars and has to make use of all social mudbanks. elements,” Chambers mused as! Sen, Joe McCarthy has made a bumbling mess he looked about him. of most of his revelations in the long-winded | Factionalism, not revolution, State Department Communist-homosexual hear-|seemed to be the order of the day.! ings. He literally, according to the experts, has On the one hand, a group headed set the cause of Commie-coursing back a erable space, unless he can get well on Owen Lat-| tain its leadership. On the other, timore. {the Browder-Foster clique

Immunity Rother Rare schemed to topple the Lovestone- } in . Wis

TESTIMONY to date indicates that Mr. Latti- Abou! People— more at least knew a flock of the gay world-mold-ers rather well. If that is provable, Mr, Lattimore | should be speedily removed from proximity to plans, papers and plots. If not true, Mr. McCar-| thy should shut up, apologize to all hands, and

The tough thing about exposes, which the, eager, rough-handed Senator from Wisconsin evi-, dently has not appreciated, is that when you start to point the finger and hurl the charge, you are supposed to be able to prove what you say—if nec-

legal action is a gift shared by a rather small per- bobby soxers today. centage, But I think Sen. McCarthy has won his case if It’s OK with the expert for a Mr. Lattimore can be identified as a crony of some | though, if she’s sure she knows of the bigger Communist. guns. At least, for the “an expression of affection” and purpose of working in the State Department, he a kiss “as a form of sexual stimuwould be regarded as an undesirable alien in his/lation.” own land. ra Mr. Eckert debunked a lot of ideas which he said were inherited

from mom and pop in a pamphlet | entitled “So You Think It’s Love” lissued today in New York by the | Public Affairs Committee.

Spuds in the Pink By Frederick C. Othman

WASHINGTON, Apr. 25—From a lady constituent, who has read some of my pieces about the government's blue potatoes, I have a query regarding red ones. Which turn pink when mashed. Pink potatoes and gravy, says she in tones verging on the frantic, are as bad as bacon and green eggs, or bread and lavender milk. A psychological thing, maybe, but this color scheme causes her to lose her appetite and her husband to wonder, darkly, what she has put in his food.

Potatoes Look Like Peppermint THESE MYSTERIOUS potatoes are bought by her at the grocer’s are red and shiny in the bin. They are the prettiest potatoes she ever saw. But when she boils 'em with ‘the skins on, the water turns: red. When she peels ‘em, they are pink inside. When she serves them mashed they look like a dish of peppermint ice cream. ~~ "os Her problem I have taken to Whitney Tharin, the boss man of the Nhtional Potato Council, who knows more about potatoes dyed, dumped, and subsidized, probably, than anybody else. Within the last few weeks, he says, some potato dealers have taken to waxing their spuds. This not - only makes them shiny like automobiles, but preserves the .contents. Keeps out the air and

thereby causes the potatoes to stay fresh weeks

longer than nature intended.. This process has not yet been standardized. It may be that some potato men have been gilding the tuber with red wax. After all, says Mr. Tharin, some orange growers spray orange-col-ored wax on. their fruit and nobody kicks about that. He is not in favor of pink potatoes, you

| Mr. Eckert maintains that peostop blushing. As soon, that is, as the artists of ple GROW in love, rather than

the vegetable shoppes learn better how to handle|fall into it.

their waxes. “We can’t really LOVE anyone

That is not all. The boys are waxing canta-| loupes, holding in the aroma and keeping it out| Mr: Eckert fal . of the butter. They are spraying wax on ba-| The public is invited to visit of the icebox, without developing black spots. County Tuberculosis Hospital, They are even waxing pickles, which, thus treated, May 12 in obserneed not be kept in the jar. ’ | vance ‘of NationThey are experimenting with the waxing of 51 Hospital Day, tomatoes and eggs. If this thing progresses any pn. gy. IL. ‘Jen- _ further, you, probably can birn your refrigerator nee. super because you won't need it. lintendent- and This wax business—and I doff my hat to the edical director pink potato lady for tipping me off to another, . announced ' great industrial development—seems to have put 0 ’ the kibosh on the metallic overcoat for grapefruit) _

and avocados. . Post-War Metal Trade Wonders 8 bm, Récorted WELL DO I remember when the moguls of the =~ ©. =~. 4 metals trade appeared before various senatorial th h the hoscommittees shortly after the war with samples roug 8) Bos of the wonders they were about to produce. They Pital to acquaint brought magnesium beer barrels, stepladders, and| visitors with care given patients collar buttons. I hefted one of their magnesium 2nd to show the facilities for the wheelbarrows with one finger. } |services offered. They also brought along an assortment of “© 8 = fruit and vegetables, which looked like jungle! Mark Ogden, president of Marbells off of Christmas trees. Each carrot, lemon jon County Chapter of the Inand rutabaga was wrapped in aluminum foil col- diana Mental ored red, green, blue and yellow. You never did Hygiene Society see such handsome vegetables. and board memBut I have not yet seen egg plants, caulifiow-| ber of the state

be held from 3.10 5 and 6 to

i:

Dr. Jennings

third of 14 installments of a i

loft in New ¢

ful, brilliant, and unscrupulous— Picayune Communists. But he had

|Scott Nearing.

consid-| by Jay Lovestone intrigued to re-|

Falling in Love Held investigate some other business outside the expose’ Hooey by Edu cator

‘No ‘Such Thing’ as Love at First Sight, Either, Expert Tells Bobby Soxers

: 1 There is no such thing as falling in love, Ralph G. Eckert, con- ducted into the Shortridge High would be more feasible and eco. Jou : “essary, in court.” Congressional” fmmunity “from sultant to the California Department of Education, told the nation’s School chapter of the National nomical, Spokesman Sidney R., president's” a =

There is no such thing as love at first sight, either, he said.

. " “ . Mrs. Blanche | until we... . know him very well, |an acre. of mountain land near | Rawlings, Miss Dorothy Dipple, Miss Jane | 35th St.

{ {ham nanas which then will keep for weeks, in or out sunnyside Sanatorium, Marion ping the Barter ii

for -Her-performs-

pen house@® =| |

-.choose-a young -actor-and.actress Others are Lora Mariette, Karen Martin: recent: weeks.

Sa aL La kW ; AEE 3 ; Juliet Stuart Poyntz, a functionary of the Communist Party during Whittaker Chambers’ early days as a practicing Communist, mysteriously disappeared in 1937.

0

Benjamin Gitlow, also an active Communist during Chambers’ early Red days, became secretary of the Communist Party. He is shown here testifying before the Dies Committee in 1939.

/ites by winning the favor of the the man who would like to but/most responsible for turning me turned up at the New York office

doesn’t take power; the liberal is!into a real bolshevik.” the man who does nothing. This] But he never learned the man’s was a basic and sustaining dogma name. One night, as Chambers in the years of.heavy underground was leaving, the little man asked|Louis Katterfield, looked at the work. x : (him: = - : | young bourgeois - turned - revolus One ‘night, at- his post in the] “You are a Communist, of tionary and patronizingly gave libarary, his nose buried in a book gourse?" ... him the most routine assignment on the Hungarian soviet “repub-| “Yes” answered Chambers. “I ne could think up. lic,” Chambers realized .that a/am a member of the Party. |; He sent him out to pick up une dark little man was watching him~ “I am the West European gq copies of the Daily Worker intently. He had seen the man | Tepresentative of the Communist | ¢rnom the newsstands which care before and remembered him as International, the man a him | rieq jt. Lugging a-small suitcase, oo someone who came in frequently casually. “You are not to tell any- chambers would cover the Bronx, time the American party would ©..." 0 Hungarian papers. | One of these visits, not even ¥YOUr | Brooklyn, and parts of Queens

develop its own American bol- | » rover So he plunged into what| The two struck up a conversa- fellow Fany members. roND he) every day, doing the kind of Party activity he could find; he tion about Hungary and then| ret u penance the Communists seem to { , {expect of their novices.

joined a study group headed by shifted to the subject of commun-| {ism. When the library closed that| : Sleti Le When the Worker's main office As his assignment, Chambers night, Chambers accompanied the| WHITTAKER CHAMBE R S was moved from Chicago to: E. was directed to write a paper on!little man to his flat, a small,| might have remained an intellec- | gtp St. in New York, Chambers the Hungarian revolution of Bela bare room containing only a chair, tual” Communist, working at the peoan getting writing = assignKun, a fruitful subject for in- table, and bed. There they got library by night and reading ments, The. first story thrown at vestigation since the bolshevik down to the core of things—the|P00ks at Columbia by day. {him was about Sandino, the Nicacoup had failed. [theory ‘of revolution. { But this life was interrupted raguan rebel and the would-be _ With his customary thorough-! Chambers had never met a man! a singularly -unpleasant man-|newspaperman was lost; he didn’t ness, Chambers plunged into the so schooled In the Marxist dia-| "cr, Onc day. some Communist|eyen know how to write a news subject. He was still a clerk in jectic, so single of purpose, so| PAMPhlets were found in his lock- ; the New York Public Library, and direct of intellect. jer at the Public Library, aetec-| In fairly short order, however,

from this vantage point he tives were called in to Investigate | a mpers picked up that simple systematically plowed through |the dangerous radical, and Cham-| P Pp P

bosses .in Moscow. 1of the Daily Worker, the Come

= = ” FROM THE very start, Chambers had little respect fo- these

joined the Party without any, reservations and he was ready to accept them as the feeble instruments which in time could be tempered to the kind of steel which had bored through the corrupt Russian state. He was ready to believe that in

" ” ”

Delay. in Building | AUR Vian ot Sou ANNOUNCE. Winners

| A delegation of North Side | parents tonight will ask the Indi-| y |anapolis Board of School Com-| missioners to delay building a . : $385,000 addition to School 69, Richmond Man Gets 3421 N. Keystone Ave, | President's Award The parents believe-erection of, | Roy Hirschburg, of Richmond, a new school north of 38th St.) was announced. winner. of the

» - = STR > S f . {skill and was turning out “eyeeverything he could find on Kun's PROFOUNDLY INTERESTED, bers was fired. To further damn oo oc” accounts of ‘stich distant ‘borti ttempt to set Chambers returned to the mon-/ him, the detectives went to his] abortive attempt to up stic littl i {events as the riotous American soviet Hungary. astic little room many times, and home in Lynbrook and there | ion convention in Paris A _— = & Shnika ihe JRrlucnce on him of the talks found some books he had bor-| . LL ™M ambers Te was great. rowed from Columbia without! Tomorrow: The “Comrades” was digesting Lenin's sardonic “He was the most thoroughly taking the librarian into his con-! gang up on Santas. dicta: The Bolshevik is the man integrated human being I had ever fidence. | (Copyright, 1950, by Fink & Wagnalls Co. who takes power; the socialist is met” Chambers says, “and the one| Shortly after this, Chambers Distributed b¥ U Tequite S78, a——————— - i Sani a to J = f—— — - - Sg —————————— ———————— Honor Society Shortridge High Plans Ceremony | Sixty-three seniors will be in-|

Honor Society at 8 p. m. tomor- | Levi said. I of Photorow in the school library. | A delay will be requested to graphers drew to a close in the Joel W. Hadley, principal, win | 8ive the delegation time to gather I incoln Hotel. officiate. Carl Wilson, societ jaesnite Sgures on the numibe; ofl The award came after Mr, i ’ Y|school and pre-school age children

i Sarenis was used by the ,..cident, will represent the stu- living between Fall Creek Blvd. cies Bbulgs Six suisies J the rig rothers. Dr. Zahm made gent pody, Shortridge alumni and and Meadowbrook Apts. and be-'pr.= m0 (0 oll) ope in the

former members of the chapter|tVeen 38th St. and Millersville ,;oi6ria) and fllustrative division aiding in the program. will be| 4, {of the contest held concurrently Dr. Hubert Egbert. Charles Fei.| MI. Levi said the School Board with the convention. bleman, Miss Alberta Wells, Mrs. COUld save RRMA of Yolizve | Awards were made at a bane Sally Mitchell Metzger and Her- ia tahepor on Sos 7 Dee quet last night follawing judging man B. Lauter. children, now taken daily by busy, Ajen Arnold, of Birming-

~~ |to School 69. He said the parents 3 x 2 = Faculty members who aided in/qjd not want their younger chil- Rash, Meh; Mille Stes); Crecuville,

Shirley Booth today received | Program preparations are: |dren crossing heavily traveled po 1

Gertrude Weathers, Mrs. | . | Local photographers who shared lin the awards were Ray O. Stieber, The Wm. H. Block Co., gold cup for best print in commercial and

girl to be kissed on her first date, the difference between a kiss as

plane tests at Notre Dame as ear-

ly as 1899 and there invented the first wind tunnel. He served 16 years as chief of the Aeronautic Division of the Library of Congress, retiring in 1946.

|

| Messick, Miss Doris Manuel, Miss Mabel | | Washburn, Mrs.

| Hope Nevitt and Miss {Mildred Foster. - | Current chapter officers are Carl Wil.

‘Question Two Boys son, president; Lucinda Rohm, secretary- | v * tre ; - A ’ 1 | Bik Lugar and Bevahey, Jona rier. About Broken Windows industrial class, and George V, president. | Juvenile authorities today ques- Courtney, owner of the Shen- | The new members include the | tioned two boys, aged 13 and 14, Courtney Studio, silver cup for

| Abington, Va., land a Virginia for win-

Theater award {for the best act-

|ing of the 1949- (following: - . - in connection with recent break-|second place in the pictorial and {50 Broadway | Blaeiey qAsbye im Beacham, Easley age of windows by BB guns onl!illustrative division.

|season. She won Brown, Gloria Bruce, Janet Caulfield, Tao the East Side.

ana Fisbeck. Lucia Funk, Alice Gerlach, | i 7 - eee meee 4 a a y —'Sara Green, Dolores Hampton, Jim ar [Pile Boat Co., 1518 E. Wash-/elevated from vice presidency to

amy, M t Hiatt, Maril Hol s ‘ |Shaion A ee da y Hughes, “ins | ington St., after they were seen | presidency of the IAP. He suce

e ay Ingles, Miriam Ingram, Don Jeffries, | | Dorothy Jeffries, Libby Ann Jones, Kath- shooting through a plate glass leen Jordan, Molly Kuehrmann, Jerry Kur- window. lander, John uter, Margaret Leighty, Dorothy Little, Richard Lugar.

Lance—in—“Come—j Back, Little # Sheba.” | Her victory {means she may

Four other windows in| Wayne,

Miss Booth {the building have been broken in| Other officers are D. Signor

son, ruce Maxwell, Carolyn McClurg, Donald Millholland, Richard Moore, Rich- conipany owner, estimated his (Ar

ET Fae ale a | Tre. ta A oned th Miss Mary Wiggins, Earlham Rosenbers. Herman Schalk, Katherine uLOrities 50 q one . |College sophomore, will represent Robert Vanes ot Walken rath Wer: boys-on $200 datiage to windows {Indiana in the Interstate Oratori-| {tie Ohl Woitsane: Roperta Wood Hen: in -the- 2200 Plock of X.. Wasklcal Association contest Thursday neth Ziebel. Geraldine Zuckerberg. ington St. recently. Young Republicans

2 The Candidates Say— so Sere fem

|won the Indiana State Oratorical |Association contest in February. {Miss Wiggins is the daughter of! Melvin C. Loy, Republican|give the taxpayers their money's’ Delegates from a dozen Young candidate for sheriff: “Why is the worth.” | Republican Clubs on Hoosier colsheriff's office called the top po-' Joseph E. Nowak, Democratic lege ’g

|to train at the Barter Theater.

" ” s

president; Ray Stuart, Connersville, second vice president; Carl Morgan, Argos, secretary; Byron Nash, Franklin, treasurer, and Ray Scribner, Logansport, and Tom Petty, New Castle, directors,

Owen,

Losantville. Ld " = Five teen-age boys in New Mexico and West Virginia had enough

Mr. and Mrs. Fred Wiggins of 3 and university campuses

actly what it is and what it has| vi 4) : -jurda been. With the help of your voles, [OOUIL 3: 1 believe lo io fair ag y-

ers, or plums wrapped in metal. I guess it's easier) societ will of adventure, they said today. ee | Part of the state GOP understand. but he says, if my lady will quit to spray wax on a potato than to do it up, like a speak YS John Lind Jr. of Tesuque, N. M., well put an end 1s the politicall™ Frank Fairchild, Republican to build young voter oy ig worrying, he is certain that soon her potatoes will bon bon, in golden foil. i mond tonight and Oliver Ricketson of Santa Fe. xo... E Brennan Repub- candidate for prosecutor: “The|campus groups will be organized and in Terre Jace rescued after shivering for jean candidate for judge of Su. JTeTengous 1jerest of the Women into a single campaign unit. Ses« ° | Haute next/hree days in a snow bank in the perior Court 3: “A new disease Ss primary shows tha Ihey sions will be held in the Clay. 299 T $ Y Skill 299! Tuesday night rugged Sangre De Crist Range called “Democratitis” has infected Want decency in government. {pool Hotel and will include elec2 UIZ as er * oo es our I LE Before : where they prospected for gold. the public. The people can cure Charles W. Cook Jr, Republican tion of officers to head the " Y ib MeN Near Kingwood, W. V. three the disease by electing strongest candidate for judge of Superior/campus Republican group. . . - al hygiene 80° hoys spent 27 hours shivering and Republican candidates.” Court 5: “I have not sought in-| State Chairman Cale J. Holder Are lotteries forbidden by law throughout the How did Portland cement receive its name? | cieties. His sub- ovine in a. dark, rat-infested| Edwin Haerle, Republican can- dorsement, nor have I been in-|will speak at a luncheon Sature United States? It is so named because it resembles a build-| ject. will be cave. “It was spooky and we were didate for prosecutor: “Organized dorsed by any faction within the day. About T5 d pid

Lotteries are prohibited by federal law. Some states also have strict laws in regard to lotteries. ee > In what country were dogs first licensed? In England in 1796 in order to help balance the British budget. The idea of such a tax spread through Purope and through the United States. + © oo What ts the origin of the word coquette? Jt describes a woman. who flirts, preens like a rooster, hence “coquette,” the French

diminutive for rooster. °

struts and.

on England's Isle of Portland. | Mr. Ogden. :

“Your Stake in * & @ | Mental Hygiene.” What is soil fumigation? | Mr. Ogden, vice-president of SpenSoil fumigation involves putting special chem-| cer Curtiss Inc., will give a busiicals well into the soil to kill harmful bacterial ness man’s interpretation of the and animal life. : need for action to improve the | nation’s mental health.

ing stone quarried

Sb From what .is lactdse obtained? i Lactose, a sugar f6uRd only in milk, has the The Notre Dame press has pubsame chemical formuld as sucrose but is not lished the Aeronautical Papers of nearly as sweet and it cannot be fermented by Albert F. Zahm, Notre Dame - yeast. : | graduate wh informfftion on

|scared,” Robert Shrout told his crime cannot be effectively com- Republican party.” [father after rescue parties found bated without efficient and fear- Earl J. Cox, Democratic candi- — him, his brother, Eugene, and less law enforcement at the local date for Congress: “United States{their cousin, Alvin J. Shrout. level.” (ism must prevail over laborism, CIVb to Hear Campbell tn | Charles L. Sumner, Democratic managementism and farmerism.” “- Alex Campbell, former ase |{CANCELS LECTURE candidate for sheriff: “I have nev-| Harold W. Geisel, Republican!sistant United States attetney Dr. Elbert Russell of Sj. Peters-|er had any intentions of with- candidate for Auditor: “The audi-' general, will address the Beth El burg, Fla, has canceled his series 9raWing from the sheriff's race.|tor => the watchdog of the Men's Club at 8:15-p. m. tomor. 8 ¢ “ou 'y v ] . | ot lectures. at the. ¥irst Friends Reports of my withdrawing are county's funds. I believe I am row at the Beth El Temple. Mr, Church, 1241 N. Alabama “St.| George L. Winkler, Republican efficient and economical adminisFriday, Saturday and Sunday. candidate for sneris gt pledge toitration.” : \

scheduled to attend.

side Story of the Recent i Trials.” =

| munist newspaper. The manager,

ceeded Walter W. Neuman, Ft,

George F..Pile;| Stouffer; “South Bend, first vice =

itical plum? Because that is ex-\candidate for judge of Superior Will meet here Friday and Sate ,

qualified to give the county an|/Campbell will speak on “The Ins

..Chen, Bobert “Deitch. Ann. DeVaney, Neil! cco ooompsmm Ae RAE HERP EAE : EE Eick Martens Sadie John Finley, The boys were picked up at thei Larry Foster, Indianapo is, was