Indianapolis Times, Volume 35, Number 78, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 August 1922 — Page 4

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# The Indianapolis Times TELEPHONE—MAIN 3500 Published daily except Sunday by The Indiana Dally Times Company, 25-29 8. Meridian St, Indianapolis. Member of the Scripps-Mcßae League of Newspapers. Client of the United Press, United News, United Financial end NKA Service and member of the Scripps Newspaper Alliance. Member of the Audit Bureau of Circulations. Subscription Rates Indianapolis—Ten Cents a Week. Elsewhere —Twelve Cents a Week. If a man say, I love God, and hateth his brother, he is a liar : for he that loveth not his brother whom he hath seen, how can he love God whom he hath not seen? I John 4:20. You Pay YOU will have to stajid the expense of the coal mine war. More than that. Mine owners intend to make a large, juicy profit before the thing is over with and YOU have to pay that profit. The hold-up has already begun. When the shut-down came mine owners had mountains of surplus coal already on top of the ground. After a brief pause, /Get oui \ "Tv 1 \, / f I' ~ j just for the looks of things, the price began to rise and the surplus ••nal began to go at greatly enhanced profits. At the start of the tie-up, coal at the mine was selling, on an average around $2.10 a ton. As soon as Sieretarv of Commerce Hoover named $3.50 a ton as the “maximum price” for coal at the mines, the market shot up to that figure. But the price of coal did not stop at $3.50 a ton. The “average spot price” for the week ending July 24 was $5.57. For the week ending July 31 it was $6. ('3—a jump of $1.16 in one week or $4.63 a ton since the strike started. At $5.57 a ton the public was gouged to the tune of $12,839,000 in one week. At $6.73 a ton the hold-up price netted mine owners $18,057,000. In these two weeks alone the public was trimmed for $30,896, 000, or the difference between what the same amount of coal would have cost them at $2.10 a ton at the mine and the new price. This is just a beginning. Soon the mines will be going full blast. Cost of production will be no greater, but prices will cling to the ceiling until the public’s cellars—and the mine owners’ coffers—are full. Heads, the operators win; tails.you loose. It’s a fine little game. From the beginning the public never had a Hades-bent snowflake's chance. Just Suppose— BROTHER BRYAN lectures pn and on, winning loud and continued applause by “refusing to believe that we descended from monkeys.’ A teacher misleading his audiences. Neither Darwin nor any other competent biologist ever said the human race descended from apes. Darwin theorized, only, that perhaps there was a remote creature who was like enough to both to be the ancestor of both. Let’s do some more “supposing”—this time with the future instead of the past. Let’s suppose two boys born to a human family today, one a robust idiot; the other a robust normal. The idot disappears into a strange land, marries another robust idiot, becoming the founder of anew, retrograding (because brainless) race; the other son’s race progresses' (because of brains) to a higher and higher altitude. One hundred thousand year# from now, would these two races of creatures be anything alike ? Would not the latter rightly describe the former as animals and shudder if anybody said that they came from the same stem as the other? , N<tt At All Unusual 4< I^ OMINATE Dea£l Man ’” was the ca tchy headline in the 1 n newspapers the other day when Tennessee renominated Congressman Lem Padgett twenty-four hours after he passed away. Nothing unusual in that. The Congressional Directory contains the names of quite a number of dead men who were not only nominated, but elected. Most of ’em though, don’t know they’re dead.

WATER By DR. R. B. BISHOP DESPITE anything anti-dry forces may say against It, drinking water Is a mighty necessary adjunct to good health. Few people drink enough of It. There are lots of heavy eaters, but few heavy water drinkers. There is a time for drinking water Just as for everything else. The person who Is fighting fat should avoid j drinking at meals, because the food is j washed down too easily and one over-1 eats almost unconsciously. The sufferer from acid stomach i should not drink immediately after eating or, in fact, until digestion is well started. Although water is an aid to digestion, if taken in excess. It will cause an excessive flow of gastrio acid. To be sure of enough water to keep the body in a normal condition one should drink at certain times during the day. When the business man has finished opening his morning mail, i he would do well to swallow a glass of water. Again, in mid-afternoon, he j should take a tumblerful. If a glass is taken upon rising and another just before retiring, this will meet the day’s requirements, providing. of eourse, that some is drunk at meal time. Fruits contain a good deal of water, j So do sherbets, gelatins, jsoups, potatoes and tomatoes.

UNUSUAL FOLK By .V PA Service LAFAYETTE, Ind., Aug. 10.— Charles F. Bane is getting well into I * l s sixth decade in the service of the Monon Railroad. He never has had but the one employer. It was Eago he Rtepped' upward to the ed the same train ! In all his life as an engineer he j never hiis had a j serious acc.dent. BANE. What’s more, he is not retiring. ' His physical tests he pases as well as ever and he feSls confident, he says, that he st-.1l has many more years of railroad work ahead of him. Turbans Black velvet turbans are now replacing those of taffeta and silk. Some ( have a velvet bow or a feather, but most of them are severely plain.

CANDIDATE A. . \ \ ' \ Y •• • ’ saris' a MRS. MOSS By WE A Service COLUMBIA, Mo. —It's practically certain that Mrs. Luella W. St. Clair Moss, president of Christian College here, will soon be sitting in Congress. She was nominated on the Democratic ticket in the Eighth Missouri district —and that’s about the same as being elected, jEXCLUSIVE Golf Player Praises Fee Actlou For South Grove. To the Editor of The Times In behalf of a personal Interest in golf and the progress of the game I think it is a fine position which has been taken with reference to the twenty-five-cent nominal fee which becomes effective on the South Grove course the fifteenth of this mopth. Nothing is more bothersome than a group of half-interested players, mostly boys, who drive here and there about the course, forgetful of the real interest in the pastime and of those who take a pride in the game. There is an exclusiveness added which will mean much to the dignity of South Grove, by the action of the board of park commissioners—-not to speak of the added revenue for the city'. Golf is a gentleman’s game and must remain as such. It cannot tolerate any of the riff-raff which erst* while has infested various city courses. I admire the stand which has been taken. BRA SSI E. To the Editor of The Times Twenty miles east of Indianapolis i almost 1.000 tens of coal, are being consumed —destroyed—by a fire that j has been burning for more than a | week. This roal belongs to an inteur- j urban line whose cars enter this city. The only effort that is being made i to save this coal consists of a tiny) stream of water cast in the general ; direction of the flames. It is plain wastfulness and much of this coal could be saved by being moved. Coal is too valuable to waste. If this were the property of an individual. steps would be taken to sav6 it. The utilities are sure of their coal supply—the State promises that, and probably this enormous pile is insured. But it is lost. Insurance ’- 111 not compensate a material loss, nd matter how small. CONSUMER.

Movies Have Laugh at Public Which Swallows Bunk Fed It BY JAMES W. DEAN. NEW YORK, Aug. 10.—And now the movie turns to laugh at the pub lie which has swallowed, hook, line and sinker, the bunk the movie has fed it. This is the manner of satire contained in “The Son of a Sheik,” which will be released In September. It proceeds directly to the point in the first scene by showing movie fans crowding into a theater to see "The Sheik.” It shows how that film completely captivated the women and girls and gave the men a pain in the reg on of the big toe.

Specifically it deals with a girl and her fiance. Having seen the film once, she Insists on seeing it the second time. He goes to sleep. Then she turns her home into an Arabian nightmare and longs for hot, passionate love, even as many a little girl longed after she had seen the handsome Valentino in the film. The fiance and the girl’s father put her to sleep- and carry her out to the burning sands that lie just beyond Hollywood. There they find the remnants of desert properties left by thirteen companies* that have produced desert pictures. The fiance, disguised as a sheik, throws her upon a sway-back horse. She is thrilled by this adventure and when he takes her to his tent she assumes the aggressive in the lovemaking. Her ardor cools when ha taints his breath with onions. Having been repulsed by the girl, he traded her to another sheik. The latter is her father, also in disguise. Then the jealous queen of the harem pursues her with a long knife. The sheik rescues her and pitches a tent in the desert to shelter her. A movie wind machine is brought into play. It blows the tent down and fills the girl’s eyes with sand. She faints. Carried back to her home and revived. she loses her predilection for a life of burning sands and hot love. The satire In “The Son of a Sheik” is not so subtle as that contained in “Cold Feet," another Christie comedy that lampooned the movie. .Probably for that reason it will have wider appeal. Since it strikes directly at the public whiqh will see It, its humor will probably be more appreciated. This comedy reaches a ( high level of production. Its scenes are just as beautiful as those of the various feature pictures dealing with desert themes. Its story is more interesting than most of them and its burlesque portrayal of desert life just as true to life as that of films which sought seriously to reproduce that life. Hymns of hate have been sung in many homes in bass and tenor ence Rodolph Valentino appeared as “The Sheik." These spring from jealous hearts that despise him because he slicks his hair, because he is too rough in love, because he is too smooth in love, because he has ugly ears, because he is so handsome, because he is immature, because he is sophisticated. The truth is that man can be as guilty of petty Jealousies as a woman. And no man in this generation has

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

WHEELER CLAIMS MISSOURI VOTES siw Bran Anti-Saloon League Head Views State Primary With Pleasure. FIGHT AGAINST JIM REED Organization Will Line Up to Support Republican Selection. By C. C. LYOW Times Staff Correspondent WASHINGTON, Aug. 10.—When wet Missouri voteth dry, tnen do the leaders of the Anti-Saloon League of America here rejoice with exceeding joy and sa.y, one to the other, that the fight of the wets for the return of light wines and beer is as sounding brass and tinkling cymbal—it riseth up in the morning and in the evening it is cut down arid is no more. *‘ln other words,” says Wayne B. Wheeler, who is chief counsel for the league, and so dry that even his voice creaks, ‘‘wasn’t that a goahawful walloping we gave sem in Missouri? / “In Missouri the issue was clears cut; for light wines and beer or against them. Our side was hapdicapped by the fact tliat ’William Sacks, the wet candidate for the Republican nomination for United States Senator, didn't divide the wet strength with any one? else, while three dry candidates were against him. Points to Female Vote “We consider the victory of R. R. Brewster, one of the drys, over Sacks to #;how conclusively that the people of this country won’t stand for the return of liquor in any form. If the wets couldn't win in Missouri, in what other State can they hope to win? They seem to forget that the women now vote and that the women are overwhelmingly for a dry nation.” From the dry standpoint here it is considered highly-significant that the Democrats of the Eighth (Missouri) district should nominate Mrs. St. Clair Moss, president-emeritus of Christian College, Columbia, for Congreas. Mrs. Moss is characterised as an “ardent | Prohibitionist.” The district. In the ; Republican landslide of 1920, sent Sid j C. Roach, a Republican, to Congress, i but it is normally Democratic by 4,500. Dryer Congress The next Congress will be even dryer than the present one, Wheeler predicts. “In the 178 congressional primaries that have already been held we have won three additional drys and in only one Instance—the Peer.a (III.) district—has a dry been defeated by a wet. “Pennsylvania will send to the Senate two men who will stand for strict law enforcement, even though they may not be for the rest of our program. “We hope to lick Jim Reed in Missouri with Brewster, the dry P.epub Lean.” he said.

PLAYS LEAD j " Irene Rich, who is the heroine in “The Trap,” to bo at the Ohio next week. It is a story of FrenchCanadian life. captivated so many women’s hearts as Valentino. Neal Burns, who burlesques Valentino in "The Son of a Sheik,” can equal Valentino neither in acting nor personality. However, Viora Daniels in the burlesque film makes a more attractive captive than Agnes Ayres did in "The Sheik.’’ -I- -I* -IOn View Today The following attractions are on view today in Indianapolis: “The Faith Healer” at the Murat, vaudeville and modes at the Lyric, musical farce and movies at the Rialto, “Nanook of the North’’ at the Circle, “Where Is My Wandering Boy Tonight?" at the Apollo. “The Barnstormer” at Mister Smith's, “The Delicious Little Devil” at the Ohio, “A Stage Romance” at the Colonial. “Lights of the Desert” at the Isis, and "Belle of Alaska” at the Regent.

Good Luck Joss Fails —Thousands Perish SCENE IN THE CITY OF SWATOW, CHINA,'RECENTLY VISITED BY A TYPHOON WHICH KILLED THOUSANDS. IN THE FOREGROUND IS THE CITY’S OPEN AIR THEATER, WITH SPECTATORS WATCHING A PERFORMANCE. UPPER, LEB'T, THE “GOOD LUCK” JOSS OF THE CITY, AND LOWER RIGHT, A SCENE IN SWATOW BAY.

By WM. PHILIP SIMMS (Wrltten Especially for NEA Service) WASHINGTON, Aug. 10.—The pottummied “good luck” Joss of Swatow, China, once more has fallen down on his job. Hong-Kong dispatches report 28,000 deaths in a typhoon which swept the Chinese port, damaging or destroying every house in the city. Just a year ago I was in Swatow. The native proprietor of the Swatow Hotel, the only place in the town of 60,000 where a foreigner could find lodging, directed me to a Chinese photographer—a fellow named Tom. “Swatow,” he told me, “have much bad luck. Just before you come we have big explosion. Powder blow up. Kill hundreds. I show you my pictures.” Tom showed me. It seemed almost

Insurance Leaders Prorogue Question of Effect Prohibition Has on Mortality

By E. U. THIERRY. NEW YORK, Aug. 10.—Is prohibition lengthening human life? To get an unbiased view, the question was put to officials Os flve big life insurance companies whose business it is to know why people die and how many are go ng to die. t “Woat do your statistics, your charts and your mortality research < show about the effects of prohibition?” they were asked. All said there were no statistics. Some thought it doubtful whether the question ever would bo answered. And some intimated strongly an opinion that prohibition has had no effect whatever on mortality. Statements follow: James M. Craig, actuary, Metropoli- j tan Life Insurance Company: “It is difficult to tell what influence prohibition has had. Last year saw the lowest mortality on record in the United States. But the same phenomenon occurred in England, which has no prohibition. Mortality, on the other hand, was just as high in Amerlea during the past five years as in the previous five.” Dr. T. H. Rockwell, medical director, Equitable Life Assurance Society: “It seems to us in our review of applications that prohibition has made no difference. Without analyzing causes, we see no difference In mortality because of prohibition.” John K. Gore, vice president and actuary, Prudential Life Insurance ! Company: “We can’t tell because we can’t get the facts: people do not remember or they do not tell us what drinking they do. Applications show as much drinking as ever, but we oan’t tell what the effect is on mortality. Although mortality decreased in America last year, it also decreased in England.” William Young, actuary. New York Life Insurance Company: “It is Impossible to arrive at any statistics showing prohibition’s influence on mortality, or even to hazard an opinion.” William A. Hutcheson, second vice j president alid actuary Mutual Life Insurance Company of New York: “Misuse of statistics of life insurance companies has been made by both prohibitionists and anti-prohibi-tionists in an attempt to prove that prohibition does and does not lengthen human life. “The misuse of statistics of all kinds is very common, and where such misuse is made honestly, it la

MODERN WIFE SBu BERTOX BRALEV. ' HE doesn’t darn her husband’s sox or mend her husband’s clothes, The thought of washing dishes is a thought she deeply loathes. She loves t > dance and frivol and her gowns are very smart, She’s an excellent example of the modiste's cunning art. She wants the best of everything and nearly always gets it; It makes her husband hustle, but it’s seldom he regrets it. For she pushes him and drives him through the struggle and the stress. Till his feet are firmly planted on the highway of success. SHE keeps her youthful figure and retains her youthful pep, And her husband has to hurry if he wants to keep in step; She isn't any household drudge, she doesn’t do the wash And when- folks talk of "settling down” she gaily answers, “Bosh!’ But —she knows her husband’s business and the ins and outs thereof, She's a helpmate and a. partner who can THINK as well as love. And she lifts him and she spurs him and she fills him full of verve, And she keeps him young as she is—young in body, brain and nerve. SHE’S no slave to home or children, but the "good old-fashioned wife” Never raised up better offspring in her dull and humdrum life. Look ’em over, doubting critics, at their study or their play. They can knock the spots off youngsters raised the “good old-fashioned way.” And the Modern Wife adores them, but she doesn’t prove the fact By forever interfering with the way they think and act. She is more a pal than parent, she's her husband’s buddy, too, She's a first-class wife and mother and a Sportsman, through and through. Copyright. 1922. by NEA Service.

every house in town had been hit, and everywhere among the debris were the ghastly, distorted forms of the mangled dead. “Before that, Swatow had big fire. Before that. Swatow had bad earthj quake. Before that, big tidal wave. I Before that, bad famine. Before that, terrible typhoon. Swatow have got bad Joss.” Swatow seems to be cursed, indeed, despite the fat and.smiling god in her principal joss-house. This is the typhoon season and Swatow is directly in the path they ; usually take. They rise down around the Philippines, swing northwest, then ! north up the China coast, carrying death and destruction in their wake. | Circling toward the northeast they pass out into the Pacific again, and woe unto the ships that get in their way!

generally due either to an absence of ’ analytical power or to a lack of logical reasoning. “This was the theme of my presldential address to the Actuarial So- j ciety of America last May, and in j this address I took occasion to cite ! two recent statements of the general | counsel trf the Anti Saloon League j that life insurance statistics proved j certain benefits directly flowing from [ prohibition. I “One of his statements was this: i “ ‘Thirty-seven leading insurance! I companies, which transact 80 per cent ! of the life insurance business of the I country, show that the death rate ! ian ong policy holders has been re- [ : duipd from 98 per 1,000 In 1920 to ! i 5.20 in 1921.’

Each Automobile Owner Saves $7 a Year on Two Cent Gasoline Cut

By Unit/* Press • WASH/NGTON, Aug. 10—The owner of each individual automobile in the Un.ted States saves $7 a year ar a result of a 2-cent cut in gas prices. * This is th > deduction made by the National Automobile Chamber of Com merce on the basts of figures of consumption supplied by the Bureau of Mines. The average vehicle consumes about 350 gallons on lowest estimates of the \ bureau. Some r\in as high as 450. But the average js around 350 and figured on this b\sis the individual saving on a 2-cenC'cut would run $7 to the individual. Collectively, the American motoring public made a savitg ot $73,500,000 on a 2-cent cut. The - are more than 10,000,000 persons enjoying the pleasLEARN A WORD TODAY Today's word is—DECALOGUE. It’s pronounced—dek-a-log, with accent on the first syllable. It means—the Ten Commandments, given by God to Moses (Exoc us 20:1-18) on Mount Sinai. It comes from—two Greek words, meaning respectively, “tel” and "speech, to speak, to say.” It’s used like this—“ Consider ng how many things there are to do teat the Decalogue doesn't mention, it’s surprising what a preference ioßt people show for the acts this famout- code prohibits.” ,

Swatow is a bustling port nevertheless and notwithstanding. Her junk trade is heavy and most of the small British and Japanese coast steamers call there to take on and discharge cagro. The coast about Swatow is famous for its pirates and all coast steamers carry armed guards who patrol the decks, rifle on shoulder and automatisc strapped to waists, night and day. It is seldom, however, that the pirates attempt to board a foreign steamer so long as it is capable of navigating. But once it is in distress, or goes ashore as the result of some such typhoon as that which has just visited Swatow, they storm it in legions. Plunder is their object, of ! course, and murder merely a side i line.

“The reasons for the decreased rate : are obvious: First, we had an lnflu- | enza epidemic in the early months of 1920 which caused the death rate j jof that year to be high. We had no : such epidemic in 1921. \ “Second. on abnormally large j amount of new business was written in 1920, and the death rate on this j insurance was low in 1921, as we would expect in the first year after : selection. j “There are no prohibition laws In ! Great Britain, and yet there the death rate of the whole population was j lower in 1921 than in 1920, which was ; ; the previous lowest on record. ; • “Excessive drinking leads to high ; 1 mortality, but reformers weaken their j j case when they misuse statistics.” ! * I

| ure of automobiles now, according to the bureau. The farmers feel the greatest benefit of a cut, since they own not only one-third of the motor cars in the Nation, but, also operate 2,000,000 gasoline consuming stationary engines. ANSWERS You can get an answer to any Question of fact or Information by writing to the Indianapolis Times, Washington bureau. 1322 New York Ave., Waahmg- ' ton, D. C.. inclosing 2 cents in stamps. Medical, legal and lore and marriage advice will not be given. Unsigned letters will not be answered, but all letters are confidential and receive personal replies.—Editor. Q. —What is signal oil composed of? A.—From 300 degree mineral seal oil with pure lard oil or .sperm oil, or with a mixture of lard oil and sperm oil. The portion of the fatty oil varies somewhat, but will ordinarily be found to be near 20 to 30 per cent. Q. —What is the total male and female population of the U. S'? A.—According to the census of 1920; Males, 53,900,431' females, 51,810,189. Q. —What kind of acids do lemons contain? A. —Citric acid. Q. —To what official at Washington should one write for information on the property of aliens taken over during the war? A.—To the alien property custodian. IF YOU ARE WELL BRED You remember that after having urged a pianist to play, it is most j discourteous not to pay some atten- 1 tlon. Having a heart-to-heart talk with I the person beside you may be more , pleas'ng to you than his interpretaI tlon of some musical number that does not interest you, but you will forego this, if considerate.

B Prepare Y our tel s To TEACH rrtEACHING is an honorable, fattest ing,dignified profession-Teachen are well paid. Prepare yourwelf now. Courses in Kindergarten, Primary, Graded, Rural, Home Economics, Drawing,Manual Arts, Music —taught by teachers with pra cncal experience. A standard normal college. Writ* for catalog Eliza A. Biker, President _ 23rd and Alabama So. INDIANAPOLIS

TEACHERS COLLEGE • lflfla e> INDIANAPOLIS

AUG. 10, 1922

MINERS' LIVES SAVED BV USE OFNEWDEVIGE Federal Bureau Adopts French Geophone for Detecting Remote Signals. WAS PERFECTED IN WAR Instrument Found Effective Means of Locating Entombed Laborers. By United Press WASHINGTON, Aug. 10.—Announcement of the invention of anew instrument to save the lives of intombed miners has just been made by the Bureau of Mines. The geophone, an instrument used in the World Wax by the French to detect military mine and tunnel construction by the enemy, will enable rescuers to locate the entombed miners by the hammering of picks, or the sound of the human voice, either of which may be heard through walls of earth by means of the new device. Exhaustive tests have been made by the bureau’s experimental mine near Pittsburgh, Penn., demonstrating that human voices may be heard with the j instrument through 150 feet of solid coal: blows with a sledge on the face of the coal at a distance of 650 feet, and the slightest rap of knuckles, on a suspended pipe line, at more than 150 feet. Uses Varied Tests made by the tmreau in Pittsburgh show that another use for the instrument will be the location of leaks in city water mains. The lo- | cation of a leak in one of the Pittsburgh mains at a busy corner proved that the circulation cf water could be heard from 10 to 15 feet below the street. Leaks that baffled the water company for weeks were easily located by the geophone. Beside the use as a means of protection of life in the mines the geophone has proved its usefulness in mine surveying. Two tunnels being I brought together can be observed by \ the instrument and their relative positions determined. Being very often necessary to blast in the mines, the proximity of other miners may be determined and warnings sent to those in the danger zone, the announcement said. Effective In Rescues Location of lost diamond bits, used in drilling, will be another of the valuable assets of the instrument. These bits usually drift from the straight j course and their location by the in- ! strument will prove a great saving as compared with the more costly, j and time-wasting methods used here- | tofore. It was stated by the bureau that the | geophone has proven its advantages I for mine rescue to such an extent | that they have been placed in ail the i mine rescue cars. THE REFEREE By ALBERT APPLE CONTAGIOUS Eskimos in northeasts jflrjL ern Siberia have dlscov--1 Id 61-0(1 the ila Sic Process In* dSSL —h°w to distill alcohoL I ML& They drink it as fast as I \ Caa ■T they can make it, and the country is in | L I drunken chaos, accordAPPLE ing to returned travelers. A newspaper man, crossing to Alaska, reports that Eskimo children are dying from lack of attention, and the older nati\ r es “drinking, fighting and killing each other in their orgies.” Thus the white man's “civilization” continues spreading. DANGER The danger ages for girls axe 16 and 17, says Maude E. Miner, secretary of an association that checks up such things. A good many of our modern problems are due to unfair economic conditions that compel boys and girls to go to work too soon. Every girl should remain at home until she is 18. And no boy should have to quit school until at least 20. The Industrial system, however, tries to get them shortly after they leam to walk. Civilization shortens youth. KEY Galsworthy, International writer, says Maupassant “taught writers what to leave out.” O. Henry was the same. His fame depends as much on what is left out as what he wrote. The principle applies to most lives. The things we don’t do are as Important as the things we do. Success is easy for the person who develops Judgment that enables him to omit futile effort. Some of the greatest buccesses axe chronically lazy. We Will Help You to Save Safely Jf leteber feabttuja anb Crust Cos.

AWNINGS Indianapolis Tent & Awning Cos. 447-449 E. Wash. St.