Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 August 1939 — Page 1
-.
ag
SER TT
a
n
j
I
ll
e Indianapc
FORECAST: Partly cloudy; probable showers Sonight; tomorrow partly cloudy, slightly warmer.
= HOWARD §
COERING PAPER HINTS SILESIAN INTERVENTION
‘Poland Incapable of Keeping
Order in Border . Zone, He Declares.
BULLETIN PARIS, Aug. 18 (U. P.)— The French Foreign Office received information tonight of further German military preparations, including the landing of troops in East ‘Prussia. Troop movements on the Silesian frontier of Poland also were reported.
FOREIGN SITUATION
BERLIN—Danzig crisis a matter of days now, say Nazis.
WARSAW—Poland will fight, newspapers repeat.
LONDON—New military alli- | ance with Poland drafted.
ROME—Papers| advise Poland to remember Italy is with Nazis,
MUNICH—Hungarian Foreign | Minister sees Hitler after border incidents with Rumania, | then flies to Rome. >
» ” o
AT soldiers told to Yespect Al Americans.
By UNITED I PRESS
torint 2 quarrel with Poland reached the stage today of a violent press campaign against Polish “atrocities” on Germans and Nazi warnings. that settlement of the Danzig problem is now possibly a matter of days. The most significant attack was contained in the Essen National Zeitung, personal organ of Field Marshal Hermann Wilhelm Goering, Nazi No. 2, which stated that “the Polish Government is no longer in a position to control the situation in Upper Silesia.” The implication was that the Reich will have to protect the German minority in the Polish province. The inspired press, under screami headlines, described also the “terrorism” against the German Danzig majority and indicated that it might be neeessary for Germany to intervene. No hint was given as to the nature of the “infervention.” Poland professed to be undaunted by the German attacks. The Polish press and political quarters declared Poland will fight if attacked, or if there is violence in Danzig.
Decision Up to Nazis
There was every indication that Britain and France are determined to fight with Poland if Danzig is seized by force. The danger of a general war thus depended on whether Germany maintains her adamant demand for the return .of Danzig and the Polish Corridor without compromise, and Poland holds to her steadfast refusal to surrender either. Point was given to Britain's attitude when she started the final drafting of a binding military alliance with Poland, replacing the temporary guarantee given after the dismemberment of Czechoslovakia. Then (last March 31) Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain announced: “In the event of any action which clearly threatened Polish independence, and which - the Polish Government accordingly considered it vital to resist with their national forces, His Majesty's Government
would feel themselves bound at once
to lend the Polish Government all support in their power.”
Economic Pledge Considered
The proposed new pact is much more specific and binding. As reported in London, it would be effective for five years. It would concern not only direct but indirect aggression against Foland, that is, an attack on neighboring states which Poland would consider a menace to her security. | Also, it was stated, Britain would give an unprecedented guarantee to assist Poland if a foreign power— obviously Germany—attempted to dominate her economic life. The Rome press was far milder in tone than the German, but intimated that Italy would be on Germany’s side in any general conflict over Danzig. The papers expressed the pelief that the situation is reaching its climax. | Paris had the interesting theory that perhaps Italy might remain neutral in a war. Danzig meanwhile sentenced four (Continued on Page Three)
LANDSLIDES PERIL FLOOD-BOUND TOWN
PRATTVILLE, Ala. Aug. 18 (U. P.).—Two landslides today threatened to isolate this water-bound central Alabama town where swollen Autauga Creek made 100 families homeless and ruined crops ver a
wide area. Fred Price, head of the Prattville
.Red Cross Unit, said a landslide on the outskirts of town closed the road to Booth, main outlet toward Tuscaloosa. |
TIMES FEATURES ON INSIDE PAGES
kS ....... 16] Johnson
un seep ar 15 on vieess 15] Mrs. Ferguson 16
mics ..... 23|Obituaries .. 13 rossword .. 22 16 jous World 23| Pyle ........ 15 sditorials ... 16] Radio “17 ) Mrs. Roosevelt 15 Serial Story. 23 Society 12 Sports 18, 19, 20 12 | State Deaths. 13
~ VOLUME 51—NUMBER 137
Any Day Now?
Danzig . . . a trouble zone the size of Marion County.
BUND IMMORAL, GIRL TESTIFIES
Follows Kuhn on Stand, Says She Quit After Trip to Camp.
WASHINGTON, Aug. 18 (U. P)). —Buxom Helen Vooros, 19, told t Dies Committee today she quit th
German-American Bund youth organization because she was disgusted with immorality of the movement. Miss Vooros, a former Brooklyn leader of the youth organization, told the committee of her experiences with the Bund affiliate. She was born in Germany but is now an American citizen.
Describes Uniform
Questioned by Chairman Martin Dies (D. Tex) to tell of conditions in a New Jersey Bund girls’ camp which was adjacent to a boys’ Bund camp, she said she had| quit the camp and the Bund because of immoral conditions there. i “The immorality of the entire movement appalled you,” suggested Rep. Joe Starnes (D. Ala.) to such an extent that—" ; “It disgusted me,” she said. Miss Vooros testified she joined the South Brooklyn division of the Bund’s youth Iovement in May, 1937. “Friends interested me in joining,” she said. “But they didn’t tell me it was an arm of the Nazi organization. I found that out later.” Miss Vooros said she had to buy a uniform consisting of a blue skirt, white boluse and brown tie, and costing $11.”
U. S. Ideals Criticized
The girls sang the German song, “Forward, Forward,” at their meetings, she said, and gave the Nazi salute. “We had to know the life of Adolf Hitler,” she said. “We were fined 1 (Continued on Page. Three)
Breathes Life Back Into Baby
AYNESBURG, Pa. Aug. 18 (U. PJ.—A 20-year-old mother breathed life into her 4-month-old daughter. When Mrs. Thomas McCullough of near Aleppo late yesterday entered the room where her daughter, Beverly, was sleeping, she found the child apparently dead, smothered by a rubber sheet which had been pulled across the infant’s face. The mother snatched the baby from her crib and breathed into her daughter’s lungs until the child was revived. - “I don’t know how long I breathed into her mouth,” Mrs: McCullough said happily. “I just breathed and breathed and said prayers in between until Beverly began to come to.” . Beverly apparently was back to
girls’| a
FORD REFUSES TO OBEY LABOR BOARD ORDER
‘Propaganda’ Ban Called U. S. Attempt to Curb Free Speech.
CITE ‘ANTI-UNION’ STAND
‘Fordisms’; Told to Reinstate 24.
DETROIT, Aug. 18 (U. P.).—The Ford Motor Co. notified the National Labor Relations Board today that it would not comply with -an order which the Board issued against it a
week ago and charged that the right of free speech was being denied to Henry Ford. In reply to the Labor Board which last week reaffirmed its earlier ruling that the company was guilty of violating the Wagner Act, P. E. Martin, Ford vice president, denied that the company had discharged members of the United Automobile workers Union ‘or otherwise intimidated them. Mr. Martin's statement addressed to Frank Bowen, regional NLRB director, dealt principally with the Board's order directed against “statements or propaganda” issued by Henry Ford.
Order Unjustified, Claim
“It appears to be the purpose of tire Board to prevent Mr. Ford and ihe Ford Motor Co. from expressing y opinion which may ‘disparage’ or ‘criticize’ any labor organization,” Mr. Martin said. “The right of free speech which is accorded to advocates of communism or any other ‘ism’ is denied to Mr. Ford and the Ford Motor Co.” Mr. Martin said the ULRB order was unjustified by facts and was an
of free speech. Objected to ‘Fordisms’
The new Labor Board decision retained the disputed section of the earlier ruling which required the firm to “cease and desist from . .. interfering with . . . its employees in the exercise of rights guaranteed in section 7 of the act by circulating, distributing or otherwise disseminating among its employees statement of propaganda which disparages or criticizes labor organization. .. .” The Board referred mainly to the famous “Fordisms” as written by Henry Ford. The quotations contained anti-union sentiments. Under the new order the company also was ordered to reinstate 24 employees. with back pay. Mr. Martin explained that Mr. Ford is of the opinion that his employees are better off outside a union than in one.
SQUALUS NOW FOUR MILES FROM SHORE
Only One More Tow Before Submarine Raising.
WITH THE SQUALUS SALVAGE FLEET, OFF PORTSMOUTH, N. H., Aug. 18 (U. P.).—The new location of the sunken. submarine Squalus is “almost ideal” for the continuance of salvage operations, divers reported today after exploring the submersible. The 1500-ton submarine was found to be resting on an almost even keel in six to eight feet of mud 90 feet below the surface. Salvagers began removing the nine huge pontoons used yesterday to lift the Squalus and tow it five miles and these, along with a maze of hoselines and :other paraphernalia will be taken to Portsmouth Navy Yard pending the final lift. | Rear Admiral Cyrus W. Cole said he would inspect the new scene of salvage operations this afternoon. He added, however, that “I don’t anticipate another lift for a couple of weeks.” The Squalus rested four miles off Rye Beach today, six miles in from the 240-foot depth in which she
normal today.
sank three months ago.
Federal Finger Is Pointed at|’
invasion of the constitutional right
FRIDAY, AUGUST
18, 1939
Entered as Second-Class at Postoffice.
~ Charges Involve Ritter Ave. Project
Times Photo.
Under double investigation. . . . Extension of Ritter Ave. from Southeastern Ave. to Minnesota St.
CHECKS SCHOOL BUSSES’ SAFETY
State Questions Status of 1500 Chassis Due for Fall Service.
By NOBLE REED The safety status of some 1500 truck ' chassis sold for school bus operation in all parts of Indiana was questioned today by State officials. Safety Director Donald F. Stiver said a survey disclosed that many new trucks purchased by drivers who were awarded school contracts were. registered as one-ton capacity. State officials said the new steel bodies weigh about 3000 pounds and that a full load. of children would bring the total load on the $ucks to more than two: tons. o£
Larger Capifily Claimed.
intendent of Public: Instruction, said his office has received information that the manufacturers claim the trucks have two-ton capacity: but that they registered them as oneton to ‘save buyers from paying higher license fees required for the heavier trucks. “Of course the only official record on the capacity would be one-ton and in the event of an accident the State might be held responsigle even if the trucks actually were of ade-
At the same time Frank E. Finney, State Motor Vehicle License Bureau director, also began an investigation of truck registrations because of the probable loss to the State of thousands of dollars in license fees as result of the reduced fees for the lighter trucks.
Conference fo Be Called
Mr. McMurary said that at the request of Mr. Stiver he will call a special meeting of the State School Bus Safety Committee probably next week to determine a policy of enforcement on the weight question before the hauling of children starts next month. He said the State’s regulation merely requires the trucks to “be of sufficient capacity to insure safety.” “We have to rely upon the manufacturer for that,” he said.
130 FIREMEN BATTLE FREIGHTER FLAMES
BOSTON, Aug. 18 (U. P.).— Handicapped by intense heat generrated by blazing cotton, an army of firemen today battled flames that broke out in a hold of the Texas freighter Labette soon after it docked from Houston. More than 130 firemen, directed by three district chiefs, battled the
blaze.
By VIRGIL, FULLING Scripps-Howard Staff Correspondent MEMPHIS, Tenn. Aug. 18.—Citizens of Memphis unfolded their
newspapers the other day, read the headlines, amazement, and read again.
the leaders of the Shelby County political machine, one of the few large political machines in America
And the leaders were publicly advocating a little Hatch Bill to curb political activities of city officeholders! In this city where doorbell ringers, pavement pcunders, handbill distributors and “get-the-voter-to-the-polls” car drivers have always stepped out of their official city jobs to work in the elections, it was unbelievable. But there were the statements led off by the boss, himself—E. H. Crump, who has ruled the political destinies of Memphis for 30 years. “Yassuh,” - said Mr. Crump in characteristic fashion, “I'm for it. It won't be long before all states, cities and counties will not oniy have the Hatch Bill but a wide extenfion of civil service. Every
safeguard should be thrown around
blinked ‘their eyes in|
There they were—statements from |-
which is still hitting on all cylinders. | °
Move for Little Hatch Bill for Cities Gets Backing of Memphis’ Political Boss
E. H. Crump . . , "Yassah, I'm ; for it. ”
conscientious, hard-working public servants.” And at the same time a statement from City: Commissioner Cliff Davis, the Crump spokesman on
| brought the organization leaders to “| ciples of the hill.
«|machine—the rift starting nine ,\months ago and growing in in-
; Year terms with its blessing and
the City Commission that, “I am absolutely for a Hatch bill for State, City and County and I will advocate it.” - It may have been the statement of Mayor ‘Watkins Overton the day before advocating a little Hatch Bill for city employees which
a realization of the sterling prinMayor Overton has split with the tensity with each day. He
formerly was part and parcel of the organization, elected for three four-
support. He is still in office—his term does not expire until Jan. 1, 1940—and he is making the most of his posi-
spot at every opportunity. up Nov. 9, with the possibility (al-
Mayor Overton opposing an organization candidate for the office.
introduced one In the
Com(Continued on )
7 &
Floyd I. McMurray, State Super-{.
quate capacity,” Mr. McMurray said. |
Men's Clothing Downright Ef fem—Dash It, Read This
Women’s Interest in Masculine Styles Results in “More Harmony in Ensembling.”
Nev YORK, Aug. 18 (U. P.).—Men’s clothes this fall will be downright: effeminate, the Hat Style Council said today. The Council, which concerns itself chiefly with headgear, made a study of the complete male “ensemble,” because of what it said was “the new interest being shown by U. S. women in their men’s clothes.”
TAX LIABILITY |S WATER ISSUE
Company Head Refuses to Guarantee Its as
By LOWELL B. NUSSBAUM “Mayor Sullivan's “official ‘advisory committee will be asked, probably next week, to decide whether to drop the City’s plans to buy the Indianapolis Water Co. With the negotiations in an apparently hopeless deadlock,
appeared exceedingly slight today. The deadlock arose at a conference between
president and executor of the C. H. Geist Estate, yesterday. Mayor Sullivan, on the advice of attorneys, demanded that Mr. Schutt give the City an air-tight guarantee against the possibility
‘| that it might become liable for Fed-
eral taxes or other obligations in the event the City acquired the utility.
Mr. Schutt assured the City that
no such taxes are possible, but flatly refused a guarantee.
Civic Clubs Approve
The meeting ended with both
sides adamant—the City in its demand for the guarantee and Mr. Schutt in his refusal to give it.: Mayor Sullivan said the meeting of City Hall officials and his citizens advisory committee would not be called uhtil Will H. Thompson, Utility District - Counsel, completed his study of the laws on the taxation subject. Meanwhile, Paul O. Wetter, Indianapolis Federation of Commun- «| ity Civic Clubs president, issued a statement that the Federation is firmly on record as approving the acquisition of the utility” by the City “on the terms and conditions contained in the. pending proposal of sale.” 5, At the same time, Floyd L. Hoffman, a certified public accountant who has been one of the leaders in opposing the utility purchase plan, discussed the proposal at the Optimist. Club luncheon. : The difficulty over the guarantee arises from the roundabout man-
“Iner in which the estate insists
upon selling. Since an outright sale of the utility ‘property itself to the City would subject the estate to heavy eral inheritance and other taxes, he estate’s proposition was based on the City buying the holding company, then dissolving, in turn, the holding company and the Indianapolis Water. Co. The City’s attorneys have advised that such a procedure might not be recognized by the Government as a legitimate avoidance of taxes, and the Government might impose several million dollars taxes on the company.
‘Mayor Explains Situation
The City, as the last cwner of the company before its dissolution, and as the owner of the utility property, might be assessed several million dollars in taxes. It is for this reason that. the guarantee was demanded.
tion to put th aniza ‘ ‘Mr. Schutt, after the meeting, deProne organization on the) |. ed to talk to reporters, advising
A mayoralty election is coming|them to “see the Mayor.”
Sullivan -explained the “We feel that if we buy the util-
Mayor
though as yet unannounced) of Situation.
ity,” he said, “we are spending a lot This week Mayor Overton went a|Of money, and we are insisting that step further with his advocacy of|they give us a guarantee—something a Hatch Bill for city employees. He|like a warranty deed to real estate.
“Mr. Schutt positively said he canContinued, on Page. Thirer)
the City’s prospects of acquiring the utility under satisfactory conditions|:
City officials and Harry S. Schutt, water company
It started with hats and .went “right on down to shoes” arrivat the conclusion that more thought has been “given to harmonious coloring in the ensembling of men’s clothes and accessories than ever before.” . Take hats, for example—“Mr. . America” is going in for bluegray, dark green and even “me-dium-light : tan” hats’ with “two‘tone ribbons.” And he will wear _ lower.ecrowns and wider brims, the Spor, says, “because they are BT a | Silt and topcoats “colorings are generally louder” with young men “wearing herringbones and fancy weaves” of gray-green, blue-green, heather and the like. The feminine motivation will be apparent, the report added, in a demand for lounge or drape clothing “because these streamlined effects are flattering to the figure.” Topcoats will appear in a , variety of colors, not to mention checks and plaids. ! Shirts are likely to be « ‘green and tan in light pastel shades” with “irridescent, ingrained effects.” Moreover, the Hat Council says, “fine regimental or candy stripes, in two-tone effects, are very good,” too. In ties the general trend is “away from dark colors” with “definite increased interest in crochet ties” noticeable among college boys. 1 2 8 8 | EN are going in for “antiquing” their shoes to give them a phony but “rich, uneven custom-made look.” In this category, the report says, “you find red and brown stains on tan leather, gold on tan, as well as green on tan and black. But it’s in the sock department that the men, especially the collegiate type, will really go to town. “Typtical example,” says .the Hat Council: “Wide stripes of navy, orange, yellow and bright blue; or green, orange, yellow and light green.”
STOCKS OFF 1 TO 3 AS VOLUME GROWS
NEW YORK, Aug. 18 (U. P.). — The Dow-Jones industrial average sunk below the 138 level; considered the resistance point, as stocks declined 1 to 3 points today. Volume swelled with the decline, but trading was only moderate up to noon.
Light receipts toda today brought the second large gain. in hog prices in two days at Indianapolis, with quotations bounding 25 to 40 cents higher. The top price rose to $6.65.
steady at top prices of $10 and $8.75.
Kansas City
KANSAS CITY, Aug. 18 (U. Py— The Board of Education today ordered copies of John Steinbeck’s best selling novel, “The Grapes of Wrath,” removed from public libraries. : Four members voted the action at a special meeting last night on the grounds the novel portraying the hardships of Oklahoma dust bowl farm folk, their trek to and experiences in California, was obscene. Two voted to continue circulating it through the city’s three main and 17 branch libraries. Those voting to remove it were
| Mrs. Frank E. Dorsey, Miss Annette
Moore, Wallace Sutherland and Ira 8S. Gardner. Those against the ban were Butler Disman and Ludwick Graves. Miss Moore criticized the novel for “its portrayal of women living like cattle in a shed.” She found grounds
for abhorrence parti@larly in that sequence of the not 3} dealing with
Indianapolis. Ind
2 WPA PROJECTS | HERE CITED FOR U.S. PROSECUTIO
| Ritter Ave. Work Is One of Cases, Tnvestigats
ing Chief Says in Capital, Refusing ‘To Reveal Other.
|nouncement;
Vealers and spring. lambs were] -
Matter
‘Personal
Two ated.
tion.
INNER NEW DEAL TALKS 3D TERM
Seeks to Create ‘Demand,’ With Silent = Assent From Roosevelt.
* By THOMAS L. STOKES Times Special Writer WASHINGTON, Aug. 18.—Nothing so high-powered and well-or-ganized in a political way has been
seen here in a long time as the current third-term ballyhoo being put on by the inner New Deal board of strategy. Nearly every day it breaks out on a new front with another proanother ‘demand,” another staged demonstration of
‘lone ‘sort or” another, ranging from
‘the ovation "by Young Democrats gathered in Pittsburgh to the “petition” purporting to be signed by 40,000 Puerto Ricans which was proudly displayed by Interior Secretary Harold @ Ickes—presumably on the theory that “40,000 Puerto Ricans can’t be wrong.” his right shoulder.
Now It's Bob Jackson
President Roosevelt smiles and keeps discreetly mum, but the campaign has gone heyond the stage where anybody can now say that he does not condone it. In fact the inference is that it has his warm blessing, -for it emanates from a point just a little to the right of If this needed proof, the proof is now supplied by the latest ‘“demander” in the person of Solicitor
ber of the New Deal councils and a confidant of the President, who has been one of the most willing and most effective mouthpieces of Mr. Roosevelt for a long time. He revealed the psychology of the third-term campaign in his speech at the Illinois State Fair, in Springfield. There he urged that the Presi(Continued on Page Three)
‘Investigator’ Investigated
SELF - STYLED “investigator” today was being investigated by police. The 20-year-old man reported to Louis Stein, proprie of Stein’s Tavern at 1121 N. Meridian St., at 10 o'clock last night. He mentioned a police sergeant who, he said, had sent him to investigate three recent burglaries there. Mr. Stein became suspicious when the “investigator” said his fee would be $25. He called police. The officers asked the man for his credentials. He had none. They asked the name of the sergeant who sent him. He had forgotten. Police departed with the “spe-
cial investigator” in custody.
Libraries
~ Bar ‘Grapes of Wrath’
the birth of a still-born child to one of the principal characters, Rose of Sharon, in a box car. “It portrays life in such a bestial way,” she said. Mrs. Dorsey, a member of the library committee, at first voted only to have the book restricted by librarians at their discretion, but later cast the deciding vote for the ban. She was influenced in the first instance, she said, by a minister's opinion of the work. = “The librarian said a minister came to the library and was asked his opinion of the book,” she said. “He said he believed there was a valuable lesson to be learned from reading it.” Mr. Gardner, who called for the vote on the ban, said: “I would like to take that book eut and read it to that minister’s congregation. I'll bet he would be run out of town the next day. Such an obscene indecent book has no piace in the librazy. , ,
General Robert H. Jackson, a mem-|
ACTION IS UP TO NOLAN AND MURPHY,
Boehne, Whose Letter Inquired Into Stop- 3 page of Job Under Fire, Denies |
Imoves? ’
)
of alloged WPA probert irregularities in Marion Count ‘have been turned over to the Justice Departe ment for prosecution, it was revealed in Washington today, by Roger Bounds, chief of the WPA division of investigas
. This marked: the first definite indication of possible prosecution resulting from the double-barreled WPA probe which has been under way here for several weeks.
Mr. Bounds, according to Washington dispatches, said one of the cases concerned the extension of Ritter Ave, a project which was abans doned several months ago when it was learned it was unauthorized. The nature of the other case was not revealed.
ecution rests entirely with U. 8. District Attorney Val Nolan and Atty. | Gen. Bounds said.
Probe May Expand
At the same time, it was reported that both probes—one by the WPA agents and the other by represerfta« tives of a Congressional WPA subecommittee—would be extended to other cities of the state as a result of their findings here. : It was said the WPA agents" ne vestigation would ‘ embrace “every major city in the state’®: «-: Any action taken by the WPA ine vestigators will not interfere in any way, Mr. Bounds said, with the in< vestigation being conducted by ths Congressional investigators, George J. gone and Matthew J. Connelly.
Question Deputy Surveyor
Mr. Nolan said the WPA agents’ investigation here is completed exe cept for a few minor phases. 3 The Congressional investigators, however, probably will remain here for several weeks yet. Reports in Washington that Jamel O’Connor Roberts, special counsel for the Congressional subcommittee, would come here soon to look over results of the probe thus far, cout not be confirmed locally. : Mr. Shillito and Mr. Connelly spent most of the morning ques-
: A)
$
As soon as the conference was ‘over, the investigators went into the: district attorney's office. They declined to reveal the subject of the conference with the deputy.
John C. Ryszeleski, one -of the WPA agents, conferred during the morning with John K. defining state WPA administrator.
Nolan Gets Reports
Mr. Nolan said he had received complete reports from the WPA agents on the results of their probe here, but declined to say whether the result would be submitted to the Federal Grand Jury when it meets Sept. 6. . Meanwhile, the name of Rep. John W. Boehne Jr. (D. Evansville), entered the probe of the Ritter Ave, extension project. This project was halted recently when the County Commissioners, who were paying 20 per cent of the
legally had -been improperly ale
i Personal interest
Tt was learned that Rep. Boehne, a brother-in-law of Arthur PF, Eickhoff, who owned 95 acres of unimproved land adjoining the improvement, wrote Mr. Jennings, ine quiring why the work had been halted. Mr. Boehne, questioned about the letter, said today that he had received a reply from Mr. Jennings that “practically all projects in the
ing investigation.”
terest in the project and was not connected with Mr. Eickhoff’s realty (Continued on Page Three)
JUST RIGHT TODAY FOR LAWN MOWING
LOCAL TEMPERATURES 6am... 68 10 a.m... 7am... 69 11 a. m.... 8a m 71 12 (noon). 9a m... 4 i
Thousands younger citizens, who have been begging off lawn mowing, car wash ing and other forms of violent exera tion because of this week's find the weatherman against them today. : He predicts the temper “won't go much over 80,” so a of household activity is in order: ' morrow theanercury is to
and the activity to sul
Whether or not there is any prose
Frank Murphy, Mr. 3
tioning a deputy county surveyor.
cost, discovered that the work ale °
county had been abandoned pend= : He said he had no personal ina ]
Sl lm RE
EEE SS aa EEE
