Muncie Post-Democrat, Muncie, Delaware County, 28 April 1939 — Page 3

THE POST-DEMOCRAT

FRIDAY, APRIL 28,1939.

British Secret Service Broadens Operations

Farmer Grows 572 Products In So. Africa

London.—More money Is being placed at the disposal of the British Secret Service. During 1939 Britain will spend $2,500,000 on this vital service. Today Britain is spending six times as much on the Secret Service as it did before the .World War. Only two men in all Britain know how the money is spent and the results it brings. However large the amount of money needed by the government for the Secret Service, not a question may be answered in Parliament about the use made of it. The government takes its stand on the principle laid down many years ago: “Questions cannot be answered about the Secret Service because if they were it would no longer be secret.” The only two men who know all about the Secret Service are Sir Robert Vansittart, the cabinet’s chief diplomatic adviser, and Sir Alexander Cadogan, permanent un-der-secretary at the foreign office. Veil Never Lifted Even holders of the highest ministerial office make it a point not to inquire too closely into the service. An M. P., who was an undersecretary at the foreign office, was once unceremoniously hustled out of a room lest he should recognize a prominent member of the Secret Service who was in conference with the permanent under-secre-

tary.

The active head of the Secret i Service is in another government department. He holds a post that does not sound a bit like his real job. Even the clerks in his own office do not know his real respon-

sibilities.

Every activity of an unusual nature is interesting to the Secret Service. Abnormal purchases of certain raw materials by a country might well, for instance, be the indication of a coming international crisis. Road Buildinq Significant The construction of arterial roads of a strategic character is always highly significant. Establishment of an aerodrome camouflaged as a golf course is another matter for attention. Railway sidings out of all proportion to trade requirements in obscure parts of any Continental country immediately excite the curiosity of Britain’s truly “silent” service. Deepening of harbors does the same; and it may now be revealed that the British foreign office knew of Adolf Hitler’s intention to enlarge the Kiel Canal two years ago. although it was only recently disclosed in Germany. It was in consequence of information gleaned in Germany three years ago that the British government decided to provide the British public \yith gas masks. State Leaders Watched Even the personal relations between the heads of states and their ministers, and the health, both political and physical, of leading foreign politicians are a matter of constant report by the service. The majority of men and women working for the Secret Service are only employed occasionally. Otherwise they might arouse suspicion and nullify their usefulnes. All or nearly all of them have some other occupation, and the sums paid to them for their services differ greatly. Few indeed regard the pay as the main inducement to serve. The work of the Secret Service is not confined to foreign countries. Its members are put to work on such problems as the recent bomb outrages in Britain, and generally to watch the activities of those who seek to undermine Britain’s interest. The golden rule of the Secret Service is lo put as little as possible into writing. In a service with little glamor about it there is one melodramatic touch—few of the members know who are their colleagues. They refer to them by number, A99 and so on. RAMS TO PLAY AT HOME. Cleveland, O.—The Cleveland Rams, of the National Professiona! Football league, will play all their home games this fall at the Municipal Stadium on the Lake Erie front under a contract which has been approved by the city board of control.

NOTICE OF IMPROVEMENT RESOLUTIONS

In The Matter of Certain Proposed Public Improvements In The City of Muncie, Indiana. Notice is hereby given by the Board of Public Works and Safety of the City of Muncie, Indiana, that it is desired to make the following described public improvements in the City of Muncie, Indiana, as authorized by the following numbered preliminary improvement resolutions, adopted by said Board on the 20th day of April, 1939, to-

wit:

Improvement Resolution No. 805-1939, for local sewer in the first alley south of Second Street, extending from Brady Street, east to the first alley west of Macedonia Avenue, and thence north to

Second Street.

Improvement' Resolution 8061939, for construction of sidewalks and curbs and gutters on both sides of 15th Street from Hoyt Avenue eastwardly to the east line of the Muncie Land Company’s Subdivision of the Witt Tract. Improvement Resolution 8071939, for construction of sidewalk and curb and gutter on the Avest side of Hackley Street from 21st Street to 24th Street. Improvement Resolution 8081939, for construction of curbs and gutters on both sides of West Ninth Street from Gillman Avenue to Dailey Street. Improvement ixesolution 8001939, for construction of sidewalk on the North sine of East Eighth Street from Brotherton Street to

Oakland Avenue.

All work done in the making of said described public improvements shall be in accordance with the terms and conditions of the improvement resolution, as numbered, adopted by the Board of Public Works on the above named date, and the drawings, plans, profiles and specifications Avhich are on file in the office of said Board of Public W’orks and Safety of the city of Muncie, Indiana. The Board of Public Works and Safety has fixed the 18th day of May, 1939, as a date upon which reihonstrances may be filed or heard by persons interested in, or affected by said described public improvements, and on said date at the hour of 10:00 o’clock A. M., said Board of Public Works and Safety will meet at its office in said City for the purpose of hearing and considering any remonstrances which may have been filed, or Avhich may have been presented; said Board fixes said date as a date for the modification, confirmation, - rescinding, or postponement of action on said remonstrances; and on said date will hear all persons interested or whose property is affected by said proposed improvements, and will decide whether the benefits that will accrue to the property abutting and adjacent to the proposed improvement and to the said City will be equal to or exceed the estimated cost of the proposed improvements, as estimated by the City Civil Engineer. BOARD OF PUBLIC WORKS AND SAFETY OF MUNCIE IND. By Wilbur A. Full, Clerk.

April 21 & 28

c— HOOSIER FISHERMEN Hoosier anglers have only a few days of spring fishing for bass and other game fish in Indiana waters, before the closed season starts on Monday. May 1; Virgil M. Simmons, commissioner of the Department of Conservation, pointed out today. The closed season beginning May 1, will continue until Satur-

day, June 17.

Fish which can not be taken in Indiana durng the closed season include: large and smallmouth black bass, bluegills, red-eared sunfish, crappies, rock- bass, silver or yellow bass, Kentucky bass, I white or striped bass, Avail-eyes, pike or pickerel, and yellow perch. The closed season also protects

frogs.

o Manufacturers report that if the automobile were 100 per cent efficient it would be possible to obtain 200 miles to a gallon of gasoline.

Drive In and Get Acquainted WITH

SIELt,

PRODUCTS

KILGORE and JACKSON STS.

THE SHELL SERVICE STA. GLENN BUTTS, Mgr. Courteous Service

Worcester, South Africa—An exhibit consisting of 572 different varieties of produce from his farm was the contribution of P. J. Van Dyck, of Robertson, South Africa, to the agricultural show here. Even then Van Dyck had no room for a further 40 products from his farm. The varieties ranged from 35 kinds of firewood and beans to the skins of game and snakes, harness, wooden farm implements shaped from special hardwoods, olives, walnuts, wheat, corn, wine, grapes, lucerne, other fruits and preserves. Van Dyck said that his farm, which is regarded as a recordbreaker for varieties of output, is almost entirely self-supporting. “People have doubted my word, and one agricultural society held an official inspection which vindicated my claim that all these things are produced on the farm.” he declared. “For instance, there are valuable herbs or wild roots which, when preserved, have a better flavor than watermelon. “I grow these things simply to prove to the South Africa farmer how self-supporting he can make his farm.” o First Ladies to Wear Wool Clothes News comes from London of the acceptance by her Majesty Queen Elizabeth of England of a dress from the W'ool growers of America. From Washington comes word of a similar acceptance by Mrs. Roosevelt of a dress from the wool growers of the British Dominions. As a result of these gracious gestures the farmers of England and the British Empire will have a personal interest in the forthcoming Royal visit. The fact that these two “first ladies” are to wear the dresses on the occasion of their first meeting is symbolical of the friendship which exists between the peoples of the two nations and of the great part which the woolen industry has played for many years in the prosperity of both England and America. Wool for the fabric from which the Queen’s dress is to be made, came from the finest clips of the thirty-four wool growing states. It represents the hard work and determination of more than a half million American farmers who depend at least partly on their wool for the money which buys them food and clothing. By accepting the two dresses both Her Majesty and Mrs. Roosevelt have shown their interest in the lives and success of the people whom they pepresent. The Queen herself knows Scotland and the wool producing people of that island well. She grew up among them and has taken advantage of every opportunity to safe-guard their interests; to promote their welfare. In accepting the gift of the American wool growers she again shows herself to be a great and considerate woman whose primary interests be not with the social life of the world’s capitals but with the working men and women of the land over which she rules. Like the Queen, Mrs. Roosevelt’s interest in the farmers is well known. If the example of Mrs. Roosevelt and Queen Elizabeth has weight with the women of America, wool will be widely worn this summer. Let us hope that this gesture of two women will do much to bring prosperity to millions of other women throughout this country and the British Empire. NEW LAW ON STARTING AN TURNING AND ARM SIGNALS TO BE GIVEN Very little change was made in the starting, turning and signal laws for motorists when the laws were re-codified at the last session of the General Assembly but many points were made clearer, Todd Stoops, secretary-manager of the Hoosier Motor Club said today. He continued: “Arm signals required must be given from the left side of the vehicle, as follows: Left turn—Left hand and arm extended horizontally. Right turn—Left forearm raised perpendicularly and at right angle to the main arm. Stop, decrease speed, or back— Left hand and arm extended in a horizontal position and moving it up and down in a vertical direc-

tion.

“Signals may be given by a signal lamp or signal device but when a vehicle is so constructed or loaded that arm and hand signal cannot be seen from front and rear the signals must be given by a lamp or device. “Drivers desiring to make a right turn at an intersection shall make it as close as practical to the right hand curb. Left turns shall be made at a -point nearest to the center of the road and so as to leave the intersection to the right of the center line of the road being entered. “No person shall make a U-turn on a curve or n^ar the crest of a grade where another approaching vehicle, from either direction cannot be seen within 750 feet. “No person shall start a vehicle which is stopped, standing, or parked until the movement can be made with reasonable safety. “No person shall stop or turn a vehicle until it can be done in safety and then only after giving an audible signal if a pedestrian be affected or after givipg^ the proper arm or device signal. ’

AMERICAN HOMEMAKERS HELP DESIGN LOW-RENT DWELLINGS The American housewife has at

last been called in as a Government consultant. Representatives of the country’s greatest industry, housekeeping, have just met in a conference at Washington to advise with the United States Housing Authority in its work of creating 160,000 new homes for lowincome families. Eight homemakers from low-rent housing projects brought their experience to help decide such matters as the : h;; . and size of rooms, the place to put shelves, where the family should eat—matters that do so much to determine the ease of daily living. With their help the USHA Is seeking to give homemaking the benefits of the efficiency studies which have long served American industry, farming and business. Early in its program the USHA set up in Washington a laboratory for the study of problems in the design and equipment of low-cost dwelling units. Results of these studies are made regularly available to the architects and engineers of local housing authorities all over the country who are now planning and building low-rent housing projects with the aid of USHA 90 per cent loans. More than half a million former slumdwellers will be rehoused in such projects during the next two years, and all of them will live in homes reflecting the common-sense ideas of the housewife as well as the most recent achievement of technical experts. These USHA homes will be efficient modern workshops for the housewife, as well as agreeable family environments. Laboratory experiment, conducted in the hons'ewives’ interests and frequently by the housewives themselves, guarantees the practical nature of every Unit-plan. The laboratory, called “study house”, is really not a house, but rather an ingenious arrangement of movable walls which permits duplication of conditions in dwelling units of different sizes and varying floorplans. Here the installation of kitchen and bathroom equipment, the provision of closet space, the arrangement of furniture—all the thousand-and-one details necessary to Convenient operation of the home—are practiced and perfected. Here the advocates of eating in the kitchen battle with the defenders of combination living-and-dining rooms. each faction supporting its belief by concrete demonstration. Here the doublebed and the twin-bed continue their generation-long feud, as bedroom walls are extended and contracted to provide suitable space. Here cross-ventilation can be studied in operation rather than in blue-prints. Here the woman of the house can realize her dream of standing by the sink and ordering the architect to “put more shelves here—wide ones!” Local communities, financed and counselled by USHA, are building a great variety of low-rent housing projects in every part of the Nation. The projects will range in size from 40 dwelling units to several thousand. The appearance and the method of construction will naturally vary *o ■conform with local living conditions. But interimplans, dwelling-unit designs, will b'-' far more constant, for they will all meet certain standards of convenience, comfort, and efficiency. And these standards are evolved from “study house’ experimentation. The Ambricah Standard of Living is becoming a fact rather then a. slogan, insofar as it pertains to housing. The USHA laboratory is utilized by several groups. First, the Technical Division of USHA itself carries on constant experiments, revising room-sizes, checking all manner of specifications, testing new ideas developed in the field by local housing authorities. Second, outside experts are called in for conference—home economists and specialists in allied subjects. Thus the arrangement of kitchen equipment and the depth of linenclosets are examined critically in the light of the best available knowledge. Third, housewives are invited to inspect the laboratory arrangements, and tear them to pieces if they wish. Women who are actually keeping house in homes similar to those being planned for tutUrC projects have a realistic appreciation of what is needed, of what must be included, of what can be discarded. Their point of view is, in the long run, the test that ill houseshave to meet. American women will ultimately decide the success or failure of present housing plans, and, therefore, every effort is being made to profit by their suggestions in the beginning. o OLD FIRE WHISTLE SILENCED

Lawton, Okla. — Lawton’s fire whistle was abolished by the city council after speakers had condemned it as “merely good bait for fire fans. Mferie Warren asserted that fire whistles went out with bucket brigades. They attract so many spectators, he said, that sometimes the fighting of blazes is seriously hampered. r-O London—The British army’s oldest drummer boy is 53. He is A, S. Thompson, who joined the Territorials at 17, attained the rank of company quartermaster-sergeant and then reverted to the ranis when he Vrat. 50.

NOTICE OF SALE OF SCHOOL FUNDING BONDS

Notice is hereby given that at 1 o’clock p. m., on Monday, the 8th day of May, 1939, at the office of the superintendent of City Schools in the Central High School Building in the City of Muncie, Indiana, coaled proposals will be received the board of school trustees of the School City of Muncie, Indiana, for the purchase of negotiable school funding bonds of said school city, in the aggregate principal 'sum of Fifty Thousand Dollars ($50,000.00), the proceeds from the sale thereof to be used for the purpose of refunding and extending the time of payment of certain indebtedness of said school city evidenced by bonds heretofore issued. Said school funding bonds will be issued and sold pursuant to a resolution adopted by said board of school trustees on the 5th day of April, 1939, and will consist of fifty bonds of the denomination of One Thousand Dollars ($1,000.00) each, numbered''from one to fifty, both inclusive. All of said bonds will he dated May 15, 1939, and bonds numbered from one to twen-ty-five, both inclusive, aggregating the principal sum of Twenty-five Thousand Dollars ($25,000.00), will mature and be payable on July 1, 1947, and bonds numbered from twenty-six to fifty, both inclusive, aggregating the principal sum of Twenty-five Thousand Dollars ($25,000.00), will mature and he payable on July 1, 1948, and the interest on all of said bonds will be payable on January 1, 1940, and semi-annually thereafter on July first and January first of each year. Said bonds will bear interest from the date thereof at the best rate obtainable, not exceeding four per cent (4%) per annum, the exact rate of interest to be determined by the accepted bid for said bonds as herein provided and interest to maturity will be evidenced by interest coupons attached to said bonds, 'signed by the lithographed signature of the treasurer of said board. Both the principal and interest of said bonds will be payable at The Merchants National bank of Muncie and said bonds will be delivered at The Merchants National Bank of Muncie upon payment in full of the purchase price on the following respective dates: Bonds 1 to 10, inclusive, on May 15, 1939; Bonds 11 to 25, inclusive, on June 1, 1939; Bonds 26 to 50, inclusive, on September 1, 1939. AJHbidders will be required to state in their proposals the gross [ amount they will pay for said bonds with accrued interest to I date of delivery and will be required to enclose their proposals in sealed envelopes having endorsed thereon the nature of the bid and the name and address of the bidder. Each bidder will be required to state in his proposal the rate of interest which said bonds shall bear, not exceeding four per cent (4%) per annum. Such interest rate must be stated and must be in multiples of one-fourth (14) of one per cent (1%) and not more than one interest rate shall be named by each bidder. Each bid shall be accompanied by a check or draft for two and one-half per cent (2%%) of the amount of bonds bid for, duly certified by a responsible bank of trust company and payable to the older df said school city. Such checks and drafts will be returned to those bidders whose bids are not accepted and in the event a successful bidder fails to comply with the terms of his bid or to take and pay for said bonds, said school city shall retain the proceeds of his check or draft as liquidated damages. Said bonds will be sold to the highest and best qualified and responsible bidder and the best bidder shall be the one who offers the lowest net interest cost, to be determined by computing the total interest on all of the bonds to their date of maturity and deducting therefrom the amount of premium, if any, bid. Accrued interest on the bonds will be computed on the basis of the bid rate accepted. No conditional bids will be considered and the successful bidder will be required to accept delivery and pay for said bonds on or before the respective dates above mentioned and to pay accrued interest, if any, to the date of delivery. Said bonds shall be sold subject to legal approval by attorneys for the purchaser, the cost of such opinion to be paid by the purchaser. All proposals shall be submitted and said bonds will be sold subject to and upon the terms and conditions set forth in this notice and in the resolution of said board authorizing the sale of said bonds. The board of school trustees shall have the right to reject any and all bids. Dated at Muncie, Indiana, this 18th day of April, 1939. School City of Muncie, Indiana. By E. ARTHUR BALL, VERNON G. DAVIS, JOSEPH H. DAVIS, Board of School Trustees Bracken, Gray & DeFur, Attorneys. April 21-28. ; o-— Darwin, Australia—Mrs. J. E. Edwards believes she is the only woman in the world to embark in the heretofore masculine job of pearl fishing. With the aid of hfer son, she operates three pearl fishing boats, each with a crew of four, including two Japanese divers. *

Liars’ Prize Won On2-BulIetYarn of Pioneer Times

Names Famous In History Given to Broadway By Kin; Boone, Rutledge, Villa, Patti

Hammond, Ind.—Allen Barnett, 79, of Hammond, won a liars’ contest sponsored by the Veterans of Foreign Wars here. He said that as a youth in the west, he ran out of food. He took a muzzle loader and began to hunt for game. He had only one charge of powder, but two bullets. He spied a turkey on the branch of a tree and a deer beneath the tree. Putting both bullets into the musket, he killed the turkey with the first shot and turned the gun in time to kill the deer with the second bullet. The bullet passed thorugh the turkey and killed a fish hawk carrying a large fish. Barnett began running to get to the spot where the hawk fell. He had to run through a large pond and his boots became filled with frogs. He kept on running and when a rabbit dashed in front of him, he killed it with one kick. His momentum upset him and he fell on a covey of quail killing 10 of them. Then he picked up the fish the hawk had been carrying. With all this game he returned to the spot where he had killed the deer and the turkey. Then he found that the bullet which had passed through the deer had split a large tree, exposing a 250-pound hive of honey. “Believe me,” he concluded, “I had plenty to eat.” o STATE PARKS THRONGED BY WEEKEND VISITORS With special events staged at Brown County and Turkey Run state parks during the week end, inaugurating the spring season, thousands of motorists have begun their annual series of visits to the Indiana parks, Virgil M. Simmons, commissioner of the Department of Conservation, reported today. Archers from all parts of the state gathered at Brown County for the annual Redbud Archery Meet. This is the first of a number of meets to be held in the state parks during the late spring and summer months by Hoosier bow-and-arrow enthusiasts. The Redbud Meet attracts hundreds of spectators and marks the opening of the outdoor season for the growing number of Indiana archers. Turkey Run was the weekend headquarters for a large group of Chicago cyclists who came to Cayuga by train and then rode to the park for a series of events that included rides over the trails. This was one of the biggest events of its kind in the history of the Indiana parks and will be followed by similar Outings by other j^roups. Redbud, dogwood and other flowering trees now blooming in the southern part of the state drew many visitors to Clifty Falls, Spring Mill and other state parks in that part of the state. India contains fifteen British provinces and twelve semi-autono-mous states or agencies. Petroleum leads China’s imports. Japan has taken a gold census.

New York—Lineage may mean all in the social register or the Almanach de Gotha or in the marble mansions of Park Avenue but how little it really means on the stage is attested to by a dozen young men and women descendants of some of the glittering names of history. These bearers of great names. were scooped up by the talent dredge dragging wide over the country for fodder for the Broadway entertainment sector entering its busiest season in years. Most of them landed in the chorus, some as singers with bands, while one got a minor featured role—with the Federal WPA Theater Project. This distinction is fitting, however, for she bears the most illustrious patronymic of them all— Betty Washington, direct descendant of John Augustine Washington, brother of George. She takes part in the vaudeville unit of the Federal Theatre. This same project recently boasted the services of Ann Rutledge, direct descendant of the Ann who was Abraham Lincoln’s love. Gypsy Grant a Yankee Lincoln’s greatest general, Ulysses Simpson Grant, also a representative, so to speak, on the Broadway scene. She is Gypsy Grant who entertains at a night club called The Arabian Nights. Miss Grant takes her ancester so seriously she finds it hard to reconcile herself to performing with anyone from the Soiith. Daniel Boone was a trailblazer of the colonial days always in the forefront of daring and adventure. Donna Boone, who can trace her family back to Dan’l, is also always in front—of a band. She is a singer and Daniel could not have known that some day he would fce claimed by a pretty jitterbug. Adelina Patti was one of the greatest of all operatic and concert singers. Ellen Patti is her grandniece but in her nightly chores at the Diamond Horseshoe Club, Miss 1 Patti does not rely on her voice. She depends, instead, on that assortment of charms traditionally the inspiration of the tired business man. Miss Patti’s admirers call her “Dark Rapture.” Faith Bacon Rehearsing Faith Bacon preceded Sally Rand as the nation’s premiere stripeuse, .ind now she is back at Ben Mar-, den’s Riveria club rehearsing for a show in which she will again display her qualifications. Miss Bacon recently asserted she was a direct descendant of Sir Francis

Bacon.

“Imagine this Shakespeare,” she said, “grabbing the glory while Sir Francis did all the work. I hope some day the world will give credit where its due—to my ancestor the author of Shakespeare’s works.” Miss Bacon said she was proud to wear the designation of a descendant of the 16th century genius. She wears little else in her

dances.

Royal Link Claimed Another girl in the Riveria show is Marilyn Brandenberg who claims indirect relationship to the royal family of Sweden. The late Pancho'Villa of Mexico has a daughter, Cecilia, who sings

around town and Vice President John N. Garner has a singing niece, Nancy. Of course there is Tallulah Bankhead, whose father is the Speaker of the House of Representatives but she is a real star. One of the chorus boys in the Casa Manana .show is William Van Loon, son of Hendrik Willem Van Loon, the author. There seems to be some friction between the Van Loons for when William was asked in a questionnaire to list whether any member of his family had achieved fame, he wrote; '“Not fame—just notoriety.” o NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS AND TO PUBLIC

Notice is hereby given io the public and to all contractors that the Board of Public Works and Safety of the City of Muncie, Indiana, invites sealed proposals for the furnishing of all material, equipment ahd or supervision as may be required by the plans, profiles, drawings and specifications therefor on file in the office Of said Board, of each of the public improvements below described, to-

wit:

Improvement Resolution No. 8001939, for local sewer in 20th Street from Madison Street and Monroe Street. Improvement Resolution No. 8011939. for local sewer in south side of Willard Street from Mock Avenue to Oakland Avenue. Improvement Resolution No. 8021939, for local sewer in Kinney Street from 8th Street to 6th Street. Improvement Resolution No. 8031939, for paving Kimberly Lane from Petty Road to Euclid Avenue, and constructing curbs and gutters along the line of said improvement. Each bidder is also to file with the Board an affidavit that there has been no collusion in any way affecting said bid, according to the terms of Sec. 95, of the Act of March 6th, 1905, (Acts 1905, p.

219).

AH such proposals should be sealed, and must be deposited with said Board before the hohr of ten ■o’clock in the forenoon Of the 4th day of May, 1939, and each such proposal must ne accompanied by a certified check payable to said City, for the sum equal to two and one-half per cent (2 V 2 %) Of City Civil Engineer’s estimate which shall be forieited to said City as liquidated damages, if the bidder depositing the same shall fail duly and promptly to execute the reqfilred contract and bond, In case a contract shall be awarded him on such accompanying proposal. Sai<^ Board reserves the right to reject any and all bids. BOARD OF PUBLIC WORKS AND SAFETY OF MUNCIE, IND. By Wilbur A. Full, Clerk. April 21 & 28 o Housewives of New Zealand have appealed to the government to step the soaring of potato chip prices.

ISSS®®® 0000 Facts That Concern You

No. 6 of a teriet.

THAIS INCREASED MIGHTILY

£eer helps even those wlio do not drink it* To for us?.Brewers of America realize this depends the tune of a million dollars a day nation-wide, On keeping beer retailing as. wholesome as beer beer tax revenue reaches back into every com- itself. They want to help public officials in eve’ty munity, to help pay for relief, for public works, possible way. They cannot enforce lawfc. 1 Slut for education... and to lift a burden that would they cah-^attcTno/(^cooperate ! otherwise rest directly on the taxpayers. * booMtl W!i1 , rtMr To this, add a million new jobs made by beer,’' unusual self-regulation protram? Address. And a 100 million dollar farm market. tlmtred Brewers Industrial Foundation. 19 Efcftt How can we keep these benefits.., for you and 40th Street. New York, N. Y. • . ,

I M ir *