Indianapolis Times, Volume 47, Number 200, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 October 1935 — Page 13
The Wau l See It (MIiSJOBON i Batting for Hiywood Broun) WASHINGTON, Ort, 30.—The best governmental aid to unemployment in depressed countries was supposed to be public works. Our country was so great, its distress so grievous, and its unemployment so vast that, if we were to attempt any aid at all, it would have to be on the grandest scale ever known in human history. Ail the pyramids of Gizeh, the great Wall of China, half a dozen Panama Canals, all the Roman roads and all other previous engineering wonders of
the world combined would not approach, in cost and expenditure of man-hours of work, what we were destined to spend and so we chose Mr. Ickes. Why Mr. Ickes for Ihe engineering of remaking much of the face of the country? He is honest—but most men are honest. It is like picking a field marshal because he is brave and not because he knows anything about war. The President’s acquaintance with Mr Ickes was not extended. It consisted in a misapprehension that Mr. Ickes’ leadership of Republicans for Roosevelt in the Middle West had helped deliver
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Gen, Johnson
the votes of Republican farmers. That was done— ' but George Peek, and not Mr. Ickes, did it. George didn’t want anything and got a kick in the slats. Mr. Ickes didn’t want much—Commissioner of Indian Affairs—and became Secretary of the Interior, with an engineering job big enough for a regiment of Goethals. tt tt tt Honest Foil lire, He Charges NOTHING in all of Mr. Ickes’ honest lawyer's life remotely suggested that he could do such a job—and he didn't do it. It was folly to expect him to do it. Now this was wholly unnecessary. During all that time there stood unused the best and most complete engineering overhead in the world, the Uiiitecl States Army Corps of Engineers. It was trained and accustomed to just such tasks, equipped to handle them, and it had a century-old reputation for nonpartisanship and honesty which is the full peer of Mr. Ickes’ reputation. It might not have done the job either, but at least it had an engineer’s chance to do it and Mr, Ickes didn’t have a Chinaman’s. Either as an aid lo recovery, a construction program, or a vehicle of employment, PWA is a failure —honest but complete. (Copyright, 1935. bv Untied Feature Syndicate. Inc.)
Your Health BV DR. MORRIS FISIIBEIN
HEART failure continues to load all causes of death. The heart is so intimately related to every function of the human body, however, that a j doctor treats his patient with heart disease rather j than treating the heart alone. It must bo remembered that t,hc heart is closely associated with circulation of the blood, and that circulation is concerned with action of kidneys, brain, and every other important organ. In heart disease the central pump is not able to move the blood around the body and back to the heart, and lungs. When the heart fails, the flow of blood becomes sluggish and this sluggishness is seen first in the liver. tt tt a THE liver is so large that it can hold about twothirds of all the blood in the body. Because the heart has to do more work under these circumstances, it will beat more rapidly and a smaller volume of blood will go with each beat. One of the first signs of failing circulation is breathlessness on exertion. This occurs particularly with failure of the left side of the heart—the kind of failure that comes with high blood pressure. A vicious circle forms because lessening of oxygen in the lungs causes acid to accumulate in the muscles of the heart, and this means more difficult action. If the heart itself is suffering from lack of oxygen, certainly those organs and tissues far removed from the heart also will suffer. This causes all organs and tissues to slow down in their activities. The kidneys can not get rid of their waste matter, the glands can not supply the material necessary to keep the body going, and the intestines can not absorb from foods the proteins | necessary to keep the tissues in health.
Today s Science BY DAVID DIET/
A GIGANTIC cataclysm in which the moon was torn loose from the earth brought the oceans and continents into existence. So thinks Dr. William Bowie, chief of the division of geodesy of the United States Coast and Geodetic Survey. The idea that the moon was formed from material torn from the earth first was advanced many years ago by Sir George Darwin, son of the Charles Darwin of evolutionary fame. Shortly thereafter another British scientist, the Rev. Osmund Fisher, suggested that Darwin's theory was the most logical to explain the division of the earth's surface into continents and oceans. While admitting that the problem still is one of the puzzles of geology, Dr. Bowie says that he regards the Darwin-Fisher theory, as he calls it. as the best so far advanced. Writing in the Scientific Monthly, Dr. Bowie shows that the theory conforms logically with the geological discoveries and theories of the present century. a tt tt RECENT geological studies, Dr. Bowie says, have revealed that the earth's crust is like a huge blanket wrapped around the earth. It floats upon the lower portions of the earth just as a blanket of ice might float upon the Atlantic Ocean. The continents are composed of granites which float high upon the underlying material. The ocean beds are composed of heavier rocks which sink down into the stuff beneath. All modern reasoning, Dr. Bowie says, points to the conclusion that the granites now composing the continents must have originally solidified a.- a shell surrounding the entire earth. How then are we to account for the breaking up of this shell into continents? The tearing loose of the moon from the earth is the only satisfactory solution to date, according to Dr. Bowie.
Literary Notes
Ernest Hemingway reports that Sidney Franklin, the Brooklyn matador who translated "Shadows in the Sun," is in a New York Hospital recovering from his seventh operation. They've all been as a result of wounds received in the bull ring. As soon as he is well enough he will leave for his large ranch in New Mexico, rest there for a while and then back to Spain and bull-fighting. The first issue of Consumers Defender, a national magazine devoted to the protection of consumers, is now on the newsstands. Its leading article is "What s Wrong with Consumers’ Research," by James Rorty, author of "Our Master’s Voice." The magazine is edited by E. J Lever, president and director of Co-operative Distributors, James Rorty, Harry A. Howe and Milton Wend. Granville Toogood. copy supervisor in the Philadelphia office of N, \\ . Ayer, is looking for a pseudonym under which to publish his second novel, which is now finished. He thinks his own name sounds too satiric for the kind of book he has written. Eve Walters, whose novelette "Covenant,” appeared in the June, 1935. Manuscript, has had two novels accepted by Doubleday Doran. The first, railed "Honor Them. Then," will be published early next spring.
Full Wire Service of the United Press Associattou
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Boake Carter
“JX war," continues Fortune, “these nations are dependent upon nine ‘great essentials/ to wit: Chemicals, coal, food, iron, iron ore, machinery, petroleum power, and manufacturing skill. “In every one of these essentials the United States leads and, moreover, is the only nation which includes all of them within its borders. We are not, however, absolutely self-contained. Consider the following list of com-
modities, which are most important to modern warfare : Aulminurn Nitrate Antimony Phosphates Chromium Potash Copper Rubber Cotton Sulphur Lead Tin Manganese Tungsten. Mercury Wool Mica Zinc Nickel a a a THESE 19 commodities,” says Fortune, “constitute the skeleton of modern war, and the war plans of any nation must include definite means for their procurement against any supposed major power or coalition of powers. No nation in the world except the United States and Russia has anything like a complete supply of these materials within its own borders. “The United States has eight and Russia about the same. The remaining 11 are listed by the United States War Department as ‘strategical materials’ .. . These are: Antimony Chromium Nickel Nitrates Manganese Rubber Mercury Tin Mica Tungsten Wool “But due to the fact that we annually consume more of most of these materials than the rest of the world combined, there are always cosiderable supplies on hand. So the above list really boils down to: Chromium (obtainable from Africa, Russia. Just discovered in the Philippines.) Manganese (Russia, Africa, Brazil.) Nickel (Canada, Africa, Brazil.) Rubber (Malaya, Ford plantation in Brazil.) Tin (least important.) “Besides the above, the War Department lists 15 less important ‘strategical materials,’ to wit: Camphor Nux Vomica Coconut shells Opium Coffee Platinum Hides Quinine lodine Shellac Jute Silk Manila fiber Sisal Sugar “. . . . But even these tables do not show our war-making power in full. If you take resources alone, Russia is almost as richly endowed as we are, and has, besides, two great key materials that we lack (manganese and chromium). “But Russia is not yet equipped to exploit her resources and the military significance of this fact is merely that the United States can turn out more guns, more tanks, more automobiles, more ammunition, more of everything required for war out of available resources than Russia and hence aw other nation in the world.” tt tt AGAIN, however,” continues Fortune, “a peer rises—this time the United Kingdom. Britain’s resources are chiefly her colonial empire, and hence are not so strategically placed as those of Russia, or the United States. Her industrial power on the other hand, is concentrated at home. “So long as she can keep her empire together (including Can-
ITI |f*f| M 918
New type sound locator, the army’s "ears” for detecting hostile planes.
BY STANLEY A. TI'LLSEN NEA Service Staff Writer T IKE a toy as compared with the modern sound locator appears the app ratus used in the World War to detect the approach of enemy airplanes. The late type
The Indianapolis Times
BLACK SHIRT - BLACK SKIN + Bj) BOAKE CARTER 4 -
Despite moves to bring peace to beseijed Ethiopia. Benito Mussolini's Fascist legions move onward toward Makale. next objective in the drive into the African kingdom. The reason for the war is told by Boake Carter in his enthralling ‘ Black Shirt Black Skin.” The Times todav presents the eighteenth installment of Mr. Carter’s book.
ada, which is the world’s only j first-class source of nickel) she can rival us as a war maker. “Britain and the United States i combined account for more than 60 per cent of the world’s indusj trial output and exercise financial or covering control over 75 per cent of the world’s minerals. . . . ; The English-speaking peoples, therefore, could easily police the world, should they so desire, or block practically any other coali- | tion of powers.” And in this masterly exposition, Fortune winds up with this observation: “It will be especially difficult for us to eschew war in the future for the reason of our industrial and raw material supremacy. A war in almost any quarter of the world may affect our industrial mechanism, and our natural supplies are bound to affect the destinies of the belligerent elsewhere.” • autt PELDOM has the United States k -* raw material picture been painted so clearly in so few words. America, since the passage of the World War, has become more closely linked with the world than ever. We could be isolated —if we chose to live unto ourselves. But we are not isolated because we have built up an industrial and social economy which is more intense than even that of the rest of the world. And we play a role, a distinct and very emphatic role, in the whole industrial and social economy of the world itself, as distinct from our own domestic set-up. The pressure of the “interests” forced Wilson to let down the barriers. We became the supply house for the world at war for four years. Our machinery was stepped up to take care of this tremendous flood of orders. Factories expanded. New machinery was devised to speed the pace. The loans j and credits became larger and j larger. And accordingly, the social life expanded at the same rate. tt tt tt WHEN the war was over, the American industrial and social economy was faced with either continuing the same pace, or slowing down to normal again. The political powers were afraid to take the latter and only sane course. The industrial powers didn’t want to, because for four years profits had rolled in like a golden stream, and being human, they couldn’t stand to see it all suddenly come to an end. So America took the insane course and kept up the pace. But it found it could only do it by extending the loans and credits to a bankrupt and war-weary world. So the loans and credits were made. And for a time things were lovely. Production kept merrily on its way. Prices went up, profits rolled in and everybody had a glorious time playing the market. Nobody stopped to consider that what we were doing was really selling what we produced, to ourselves. 1 The few who uttered words of
Ini lSl| I N lbs I * |> E 1' H Weapons of the World War and Weapons of the Next War Pictured in Contrast
INDIANAPOLIS, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1035
The Story Behind the Ethiopian War
IT nTo Port / I ■—— - ■■■ ■ - , T nfr 1 Ri ' 'Abba- j J FIRST ITALIAN ARMY of 180.000 men. Gen. 4 „ , x e Emelio de Bono commanding, advancing ! SAUDI R ) steadily beyond Adigrat-Aksum line, antici- p ;: . A iU*y* ■ i pating major battle near Makale. 50 miles .AbuAr:sh_}~ —*— southward. Dessye would be next goal. s/'7 I y ■ . .1 150.000 ETHIOPIAN'S, Ras Seyoum comMANY ETHIOPIANS KILLED, mandmg. in this sector. Expected to fall Dedjasmatch Ayaleu, their ff a \ ~a c, ' w '‘ armies ,e ’* and r,ght. south o‘ leader wounded, in impatient * 5 aUemptin S ma l or resistance. | and rash attack on Italian jT' -fjord* 1 AsmarggW / , j-. A 30,000 ETHIOPIANS p,.--150.000 ETHIOPIANS, Ras A.X ! "n p, 't ad " , S from , Kassa commanding, in this ' northea I. sector. Sporadic attacks J-itXV '****'*s "V %b*S MB2g||| against Italians* right wing ' <496?+ X!vQC —~ 1 ,-~z repulsed in rugged country. jiEjSia SECOND ITALIAN ARMY. I ( w, ; e *®cute two-pronged moveL \ tr //A ' / r „ \ .firnAW, ment: one force t 0 strike . ETHIOPIAN RESERVE FORCE \ LsJjjLfjZ- -j ; lor / lward . t° Protect Italian ; moving ud here for mainr ~ D,brt * 1 first army s left wing; another tie. War Minister Ras MSlu * • ' . p sw ; n S ward toward t Getta rnmmanHihfr •Maoaaii i ® railway and Ras Nassibu s i a.ynTdrfffMpfy.”.I pTHinpiAMPHMPcIiTP t LARGE ETHIOPIAN ARMY 1 _ ETHIOPIAN CONCENTRATION ♦ J~ j massing here for defense of here, in strong position, in. . V . * , U c *r*, u Harar and all-important Dii- " spected by Emperor Haile / bouti-Addis Ababa railway. Selassie who will take person- Cho-men M Ankcbe A Ras Nassibu commanding, j I al command soon. Eight thou- S wa7n pMen§‘r§<& I / f— r—sand trained troops en route ( Hiri,u I imo.iol Addis , jimbf tint. . ’ to Dessye from capital. Ital- S iH lans hope to reach Dessye as l SU\ x U U southern army reaches Harar, V' ) \ fS then make advance on Addis i h Sirr. | ZZZti \t{ F ‘( S0 • ‘Dtror . o ZIwZZZSZZ Ababa Ui' U’ r C * THIRD ITALIAN ARMY, Gen. Rodolfo Crazi- ./ H*mrih. \*f^f Italian troops wa* anl ' ,tal y' s g rea test colonial fighter, com- wirandetL manding. Capture of Dagnerrei marks ad- ?■) J , fceriogubi ? * Ethiopian troops vance of 25 miles in two weeks, 60 miles '/ Bodiwtin\‘ in A // further than the original line. Determined as- Um/ ’) ] 0 + A C Direction of Italian A sault on Gorahai expected soon. 1 - ? offensives to date and zITo ,-v j ■ - u - : ”7" Z I those expected. , J \ 1 X jt ' * DAGNERREI FORTRESS falls to Itali ans, na- I V Simdogo* 'Styftt tiv e Dubats leading attack with aid of forces — VCZZ * - - m 0 y ® u^an 0101-Dinle, formerly Ethiopian de- \ * pendent. Italian planes from Mustahil base \ D \ MilsUhil UaMS \ Jlpnp'' aid advance, i Bekt V 1 rfu; £#,>', m T St ' 'f oddur \ BurU- ~ Adii Mi /%', . iugh-FerrtndZ ) 1 w" f i iy™, vi.a.
(By NEA Service, Inc., adapted from map, copyright, 1935. National Geographic Society) I his map. picturing latest progress of Italy's invasion of Ethiopia, gives you a comprehensive picture of the scene as Mussolini’s Blackshirts and their black-skinned native allies were reported about to launrh a big-scalc offensive on four fronts. The dotted arrows indicate how the Italians hope to penetrate Ethiopia's machine-gun-studded mountains from north and south and its burning Danakil desert and plateaus from the east, the invaders then to be in position to strike toward Addis Ababa, the capital, from Dessye, in the northeast, and Harar, in the east.
warning were drowned by the shouts of the profit-drunk populace. Actually, the products we made went into other nations and they enjoyed the fruits they provided, but we were paying the bill at the time. In 1929, this huge bubble suddenly burst and down came the whole house of cards. a o o A ND from 1929 on we have been trying to repair the damage, by trying to make the same machine work, with the same tools, the same oil and the same gasoline! And it has, indeed, begun to show signs of life again. And we are exporting. But we have also tried other experiments. We have instituted a cotton control program and a wheat control scheme. Take cotton, for instance. The cotton producers of the South provided the world with most of its cotton at one time. But due to the intensity of the white man’s civilization, with his present industrial and economic set-up, cotton prices fell plumb to the bottom. So cotton producers of America were told that they must produce only so much, and be paid for what they didn’t produce. The government now has a surplus of six million bales on its hands and is trying to guarantee a set price to the producers. In the meantime, the Southern cotton producers have lost many of their foreign markets with little prospect of ever getting them back again. The Egyptians and the Indians have stepped in, where the Southerners stepped out.
locator really is a set of huge stethoscopes that automatically find the position and line of flight of aircraft, by tuning in on their motors. Mounted on a truck or a | trailer, the detector has a high degree of mobility which 1 the old type did not possess and its range is 25 miles or
A MERICAN cotton farmers can not go on forever on this basis. The procedure would simply bankrupt the government, as well as destroy the domestic market by the knowledge of the ever present surplus locked up in government warehouses. Thus America must provide some new means of enabling cotton farmers who have gone out of business to earn anew living —or else when war comes, demand for cotton goes up, the pressure to permit exports and thus return some measure of prosperity, even though it be a false one, will be too great for any President or any political party to withstand. And once the politicians surrender, America sets foot along exactly the same path she did in 1914, when President Wilson was obliged to succumb to the demands of agriculture and industry that they be allowed to export to warring nations. a tt a AN instance of this pressure is already staring us in the face. The cotton bloc in the Senate was driven only by pressure from “back home’’ when it suddenly tried to tack a guaranty of 12-cent cotton loans from the government on to the third deficiency bill, at the adjournment hours of the reform Congress. We can not go on with a national policy which plays both ends against the middle —a policy which is international with its exports one minute, and national, with its regulations and restrictions the next. Henry Wallace has been the only Washington leader with courage
sassy
An old form of sound locator, used on the western front.
more. The sound locator is connected with searchlights by an electrical transmission line so that the light moves with the locator in following a foe plane. NEXT—The infantryman isn't the "beast of burden’ that he was in the World War.
enough to say so, out loud, to date. If that kind of pressure may influence legislators in peacetime, the pressure exerted on them in war-time can be easily imagined. The last war was financed by America. It financed the w r ar by the extension of billions of dollars’ worth of credit to customers so that they could buy and keep American industry operating full steam ahead. a o TS there any reason why America can not finance itself to keep out of another war, in exactly the same manner as it financed itself into the World War? If 40 billions of credit can be extended to foreigners to buy from us to keep American economy operating, can not 40 billions of credit be extended to American consumers instead of foreigners, upon the next occasion? What have Herbert Hoover and Franklin Roosevelt been doing but just that, these last five years of peace ? It may be very’ nice to make profits out of another fellow’’s war. It may be very delightful to pull ourselves out of our own depression that way. But it is the way that leads directly to American participation and what we might make up in profits in the year or two before we went in, we would promptly lose three and four times over in the subsequent years. Tomorrow—lf—(Copyright. 1935. bv the Telegraph Press, Harrisburg. Pa.i
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Second Section
F.ntercrl Matter at_ I’ostoffii e Indianapolis. In'!.
Fair Enough fWUU PARIS. Oct. 30.—This little narrative might b called a tale of two saloons. It was on a nice day in early summer when Georges Carpcntier arrived in New York. A crowd of regular ship news men who went down the bay on the cutter that morning was augmented by sport writers, many of whom had stayed up all night, and a number of lady journalists, who were to write the “womans angle." The “woman's angle" is a sturdy myth of American journalism. The emanci-
pated woman smokes as many cigarets as a man and has learned to carry her own whisky like a gentleman, but there still survives that kind of lady reporter who. no matter how hard-boiled she is or how acute is her hangover in the dawn's early light down by Battery Wall, can not resist writing into her composition soft and lovely words and sentiments of which her brothers in ink-stained wretchedness are incapable The ladies. God bless them, know what is expected of them
and always make good, though sometimes thev swear over their typewriters. On this occasion lady journalists wrote about Mr. Carpcntier's pale eves and taffy-colored straight hair: his straight nose, unmarked by glove or shrapnel, and the straight line of his jaw. tt tt tt ‘That Mug Got Fresh With Me!' SOON M. Carpentier was receiving mail by the bushel and so much of this correspondence came in scented envelopes that the room in which it was dumped reeked like an Italian barber shop. M. Carpentier was called the “Orchid Man,” but rather oddly it was not a lady reporter writing from the woman’s angle who invented this pretty description. but a fight reporter. So there came the great day when Tex Rickard asked Jack Dempsey not to knock him out too soon, because all those nice people had paid $1,500,000 to see the fight. M. Carpentier. honestly misled by his spurious success in the first round, popped Dempsey on the chin in round two. ’That mug got fresh with me,” Mr. Dempsey said when he returned to his corner, and Jack Kearns, his manager, said, “Yes, the bum. that’s what you get for doing him a favor. Go on out and knock him over.” tt tt tt A Weary and Worn ‘Orchid Man' MR. DEMPSEY is now a saloon keeper and a colleague in the liquor business of such eminent fellow Americans as John D. Rockefeller Jr. A1 Smith and Vincent Astor. whose St. Regis Hotel recently solemnized the dedication of anew case. Mr. Dempsey is robust, strong and prominent in the community and a loving husband and father, who leaves the saloon at midnight to go home and dine with his wife and spend a half-hour playing with his little daughter. In Paris today in a side street off the Champs Elysee is a small electric sign bearing the signature of Georges Carpentier and a caricature of the “Orchid Man” done in electric lights. At the door stands another caricature of the “Orchid Man.” his face seamed, his droopy eyelids dropping more heavily than in the days when they imparted to his face an expression which in woman's angle stories was described as “romantic.” Now his expression is one of weariness. His cheeks are sunken and his nose is scarred. The place is a small room crowded with tiny tables. The walls are adorned with modernistic scrawls representing athletes. The “Orchid Man” opens the door to let in air and customers and let out smoke. He shakos hands and signs autographs, as Dempsey does at his door of his vast property near Broadway. (CoavriKht, 1935. bv Unite and Feature Syndicate. Inc.i
Two Gentlemen BY ERNIE PYLE
WASHINGTON. Oct. 30.—0 h. thank you so much, Mr. Ickes. And thank you too, Mr. Hopkins, thank you ever so, as the British say. It sure was great to see you two fellows. It sure is a kick to be able to say that I sat right there in the same room with you and listened to you talk. Id never seen either one of you before, you know. I don’t suppose there’s one person out of 200 right here in Washington who has ever seen you, even though you're both famous men, so I assume I am a lucky guy. Maybe you’d be interested in knowing that you look much better in person than in your pictures. Mr. Ickes, in your pictures, you always looked to me like an old grump, but in life there’s something about your face I like. You look all the time as though you had just got the best of something, like a mouse that had just eaten a cat or something. And the way you sit there without any coat or vest on, with your arms folded and that cigaret holder tilting up out of the corner of your mouth, and you swinging your head back and forth to lock at everybody, and smirking through your glasses as though you were about to bust out laughing I guess maybe you’re all right, Mr. Ickes. tt tt tt AND you, Mr. Hopkins, I liked you because vou look like common people. I don’t mean any slur by that either, because they don’t come any commoner than I am. but you sit there so easy swinging back and forth in your swivel chair.'m your blue suit and blue shirt, and your neck is sort of skinny, like poor people's necks, and you act honest too. And you answer the reporters’ questions as though you were talking to them personally instead of being a big official. It tickled me the way you would say, “I can't answer that,” in a tone that almost says out loud, “Now you knew damn well when you asked me that I couldn't answer that." Say, that's a swell office you’ve got, Mr. Ickes. It must be half as long again as a street car. and so wide and so high, and the walls are panelled pretty. And that old office of yours. Mr. Hopkins, good Lord it's terrible. It’s so little in the first place, and the walls are faded and water pipes run up the walls, and your desk doesn't even shine. But I guess you don’t care. Maybe it wouldn't look right for you to have a nice office, anyway, when vou re dealing in misery all the time. And say, you both sure eat up the cigarets, don't you? What's the matter, are you nervous? You both smoke more than is good for you. and you know’ it. But I guess it’s none of my put-in, if you want to do it. And I’ll bet neither one of you can roll ’em out of Bull Durham, quick and neat the way I can, even if you are big men.
Times Books
TTISITING Englishmen have been wandering about ▼ America, collecting impressions and then going home to write books ever since the republic was in swaddling clothes; but it has remained for A. G. MacDoneil to sound anew note. Mr. MacDoneil, whose “A Visit to America" is a witty and good-natured account of his travels and travails in our land during the fall of 1934. declares it is foolish for foreigners to compare America with any one European nation. 'Macmillan; $2.50 t This English visitor seems to have enjoyed himself immensely in America, and his book provoke* a long series of chuckles, since he writes with a deft, unlabored wit—as, for instance, when he says that American football combines the less pleasant features of English Rugby and the World War. He found New York restaurant cooking atrocious and Kentucky cooking divine. Amazingly, he reports that nur auto traffic managers are far better than those of England, (By Bruce Cattonj
Westbrook Peglcr
