Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 December 1939 — Page 1

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VOLUME 51—-NUMBER 232

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FORECAST—Fair and colder tonight and tomorrow; lowest temperature tonight about 35.

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FINAL

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es Home for Christmas’

I'imes Photo

There's no war in this country, but even war games are hard on a little fellow whose daddy is a

fightin’ man. Welborn.

Four-year-old Carl Welborn, for instance, has only a picture of his dad. Lieut. John C. The lieutenant moved south with Ft. Harrison troops, leaving his family here.

Troops will be

training in the south until March. However, at Chris tmas time many officers will get a week's furlough and return to visit their families here.

TURN TABLES ON Lum ’n’ Abner Obtain 201

CITY PARK BODY More for Clothe-A-Child

——————

Custodians Return Criticism; |

Board Revises Plans For Boulevard.

The Park Board in swift action | today revised its plans for a pro- |

posed North Side super-boulevard

and launched an attack on com- |!

munity house custodians which brought an immediate counter attack.

The Board signed a plat for the! proposed Meridian-Kessler develop- | ment which provides no right-of-!

way for the proposed boulevard from 30th St. and White River to Broad Ripple, implving a radical revision in the plan for the superboulevard. ? A few minutes later the Board. which had called the custodians to City Hall to criticize alleged laxaties. heard itself criticized by the custodians for providing improper equipment and inadequate help. The approval of the MeridianKessler plat came suddenly, after Board members previously had been unwilling to accept any plat which did not provide right-of-way for the super-boulevard. Alfred H. Gisler, Board vice president, said that members had changed their minds but plans for the boulevard would not be abandoned entirely. He said it would be rerouted to follow the course of White River north of the addition. Both Mr. Gisler and Mrs. Louis W. Markun said the original plan to build the boulevard through the addition was impractical because

{Doners’ List on Page Four) Three hundred forty-five Indianapolis school children will wear warm winter clothing this year because of the Lum ’'n’ Abner, | stage team, on Clothe-A-Child campaign. In addition, 286 pledges have been made directly to Clothe-A-Child for a total of 631 chiidren. And now the campaign swings back into its normal stride. The | short days ahead will be busy ones for the Clothe-A-Child staff, and for the people of Indianapolis who annually make this campaign a success. THE TIMES HAS SET up headquarters at 206° W. Marviand

famous air and, behalf of the

City Basking in Indian Summer

LOCAL TEMPERATURES

Sam ...98 10a mm: ... 54 Tam ...0 Nam. ...0 5 Sam ... 48 12 (noon) .. 57 Sam ... 89 1pm... 56

engagement in Indianapolis today, with temperatures about 16 degrees above normal. A brilliant lany smoke, for (several days, glistened over the |City and served up a problem, topcoats or no topcoats. The all-time record high for Dec.

| |

radio appeal of"

St, with a staff on duty from 9 a.m to 5 pp m. Here are the ways you can participate:

meet a child a headquarters.

2—Or if vou want The Times to act for you, mail a check to “Clothe-A-Child, The Indianapolis Times.” Experienced shoppers will do the rest.

Or you can in your office, club, church, sports team, fraternity, sorority or lodge. Select a treasurer and shopping committee. Then let us know how many chil(Continued on Page Three)

IGKES NOT TOLD OF FOR'S NUTT STAND

|

1

Dewey Speech Could Expect,’ He Adds.

Indian summer played a return | (Additional Political News, Page 4) P

WASHINGTON, Dec. 7 (U. P). — | Secretary of Interior Harold

L. sun, unhampered by Ickes said today that President HOO the first time in Roosevelt had given him no indica-|

tion that he was supporting Federal | Security Administrator Paul V. Mc-

Nutt for the Democratic Presiden- |

the Park Board would have to pur- 7 is 63, set in 1892. The Weather tial nomination jin 1940,

chase right-of-way through {Continued on Page Four)

STATE WILL STUDY MILK RISE MONDAY

An executive session of the State Milk Control Board has been called

the

for next Monday to review evidence

given during recent hearings on the 1-cent increase in the Indianapolis retail milk price, from 11 to 12 cents, C. W. Humrickhouse, Board secyvetary, said he was not certain whether the Board will reach a decision on a permanent milk price

Bureau said temperatures today probably would not go that high, but might. At noon the temperature stood at 57. Colder weather | was predicted for tonight and tomorrow.

MOTHER, 20, GETS 30 DAYS FOR NEGLECT

‘Dates’ More Important, She Indicates.

to M

Mr. Ickes reiterated his support

of Mr. Roosevelt for a third term. He told his press conference that the Minneapolis speech of New York District Attorney Thomas E. Dewev opening his campaign for the Re{publican Presidential nomination last night was “about as good as

vou could expect from one of his]

age.’ “As a political Ickes said. “he (Dewey) apparently has one qualification—if it is a qual-

ification. He can speak for 25 min- |

utes without saying anything.” Mr. Ickes said he had not listened r. Dewey's speech, but had read newspaper accounts of it.

1—-If you wish to shop with a | . child personally, call Riley 5551 | tions included Leo X. Smith as legal successful candidate in the fiveand make an appointment to adviser of the trustees’ association |cornered race for the Republican { Clothe-A-Child |on poor relief; Otto K. Jensen, State | nomination for U. S. Senator.

join with others |

THURSDAY, DECEMBER 7, 1939

ALL TRUSTEES

Prevent ‘Chiseling,” Group Is | Told; WPA Never to End, Jennings Says.

By LEO DAUGHERTY

{stration in some counties, trustees lof more than 1000 Indiana townships this afternoon sought solu'tions to their vexing problems. | The warning that “you are on trial” was sounded by Harry W. | Miesse, executive secretary of the [Indiana Taxpayers’ Association, (who cautioned the %trustees that [their future legislative lobbies must |stand for constructive changes in |laws governing their office. | At the same time, State WPA {Administrator John K. Jennihgs {told the trustees’ association that | WPA never will be completely liqui{dated because it is too thoroughly {grounded in the current social phil- | osophy. Other Groups Meet The forum on relief and welfare

|began as 11 other groups affiliated {with the Indiana County and Town-

{ship Officials’ Association held sep- |

{arate meetings to tackle their own | problems and elect officers. Mr. Miesse recommended that the | trustees appoint a committee which, {between now and 1941, will draft helpful legislative proposals rather than “go over there and fight everything." He cautioned the officials to prevent relief chiseling. Mr. Miesse deplored increasing {transportation costs and, without {being specific, said that school bus purchases in some townships “was good, but bad in others.”

Resolutions Expected

This afternoon's forum on relief and welfare was expected to result in the drafting of resolutions for submission to tomorrow's meeting. Some resolutions are expected to {condemn certain practices of welfare |departments. The trustees’ opposiition to many of these departments {already has been voiced from the (floor and in conferences. | Long a problem of the trustees, {the definition of “indigent sick” was {expected to be given during a dis|cussion led by State Senator {Thomas A. Hendricks, secretary of

the Indiana State Medical Associa-

| tion. | With Mr. Hendricks were to be | committees from the state medical and hospital associations.

Ready to Answer Questions Others who were to answer ques-

| Board of Accounts chief deputy; Bert Yeager, State Aid Department, and David Hogg. Ft. Wayne attorney, on | teacher tenure. Mr. Smith also attended the meeting of the association's resolu[tion commiitee. In his address, Mr. Jennings charged that remarks he previously made had been misinterpreted to mean that he advocated complete liquidaticn of WPA.

Warns of Wishful Thinking

“I should Mke to make it clear {that I have never believed, nor do {1 believe now, that any work-relief | program in this country can ever be completely liquidated,” he declared. “The principle has become too |thoroughly grounded in our social | philosophy to ever return to the

‘Good as You °d wey of solving mass unemploy- |

|ment by direct relief.” | Mr. Jennings said he believed that | war in Europe will result in par[tial liquidation of the work-relief rogram. “But to say that all the people (Continued on Page Four)

|

SIER, 75, SLAYS BRIDE AND HIMSELF

| | WARSAW, Ind, Dec. 7 (U. P).— After writing a note in which he {said life had not been worth living since his marriage, 75-year-old | H. Nidelinger early - today calmly put four bullets into his bride's body and then committed suicide by shooting himself in the head and heart with a .22 caliber revolver. Police reconstructed the double shooting and said that apparently Mrs. Nidelinger picked up the revolver after her husband shot her.

candidate,” Mr. put it on a dresser and then walked treason.

[to the perch where she died. Her husband was found dead in bed | Mr. Nidelinger reportedly {been despondent over [quarrels since his marriag {months ago. | Decatur, Ind.

had numerous

ARE ‘ONTRIAL MIESSE WARNS

Warned that they are on trial be- | cause of corrupt poor relief admin-

" paign of the young New York Dis- |

| Israel Becker betrayed state secrets Every possible effort toward ne-

e only two { y 4 " . ivitv 3 He was a native of Service and betrayed military se-|today by the foreign ministers of |d&Y, in the first real activity in a | crets, it was announced.

Entered as Second-Class at Postoffice, Indianapo

COUNTY PARTY WORKERS FEAR COUNTING LAW

Precinct Committeemen See Chance for Chairman to Perpetuate Self.

Wills Killed

|

By SAM TYNDALL Precinct cBmmitteemen and other party workers, both Democratic and

Republican, were in a dither today. The reason: They have discovered a large loophole in the new Central Ballot Counting Law which will be Clarence H. (Dick) Wills.. Death |in effect for the first time in the ends promising political career, | primary election next May.

. a 3 This loophole threatens to strip] LOST 938 RACE {the duly elected committeemen of | | ——

| their control over their party organ- | izations and to place the present ‘Dies Soon After Removal From His Wrecked Car On Road Near Muncie.

{

perpetuating themselves indefinitely, | It all boils down to this: All elections, primary and general, |are held on Tuesdays. The election [laws require that precinct commit- | teemen elected in the primary on Tuesday appoint one vice committeeman each and certify the names to their party chairman not later than Thursday noon’ of the same | week,

The 336 committeemen and 336 MUNCIE, Ind, Dec. 7 (U. P.).— | vice committeemen of each party {Clarence H. (Dick) komo, well known political leader jand candidate for the Republican nomination for the United States Senate last year, was killed today when his automobile crashed into a tree on State Road 28 near here. There were no witnesses to the accident, It was believed, however, | [that Mr. Wills struck a sharp rise and successive dip in the road, lost control of the car and crashed into a tree after coursing through a shallow ditch. He was alone. Paul E. Jones of Ft. Wayne, passing the scene, extricated Mr. Wills | from the wreckage. Mr. Wills died a few minutes later. Coroner Earl Parson removed the body to the | Kimmel Mortuary at Gaston,

| |

{county chairmen in the position of |

in party conventions two days later —on Saturday—and elect a county chairman and other officers. Here's the catch:

Change Counting Place |

| If any committeemen fail to certify the names of vice committeemen to the chairman by Thursday noon, the chairman is empowered to name the vice committeemen. It always has worked out all right in the past, with the ballots being counted in the precinct voting places. The committeemen always saw to it that the precinct boards] tabulated the committeeman vote first. But, under the new Central Bal-

Wills of Ko-| then are required by law to meet!

P

Matter lis, Ind,

RICE THREE CENTS

ARMS SPEEDED 10 FINLAND FOR WAR ON RUSSIA

Even U. 8. Listed as Supporter as Common Fear of Red Sweep Unites Big Bloc in Europe.

By JOE ALE

X MORRIS

United Press Foreign News Editor

Europe's big and little powers hinted today that they

were ready to stand united fr

ym Scandinavia to the Darda-

‘nelles against any Bolshevist invasion.

Few any longer believe that the present conflict can

be confined to Germany, Fran

ce and Great Britain. World

War No. 2 may be close at hand.

Material as well as moral

support has begun flowing to

|Finland. Great Britain, France, Italy, Jugoslavia, Hungary,

Sweden and even the United States and Germany reportedly are sending or preparing to send supplies. The Finnish legation in London today announced that Ithe tiny country has been receiving war materials from the

|

REPORT 8 NAZI PLANES ROUTED

British Say One of Enemy! Craft Struck in Raid On Firth of Forth.

LONDON, Dec. T (U. P.) —British fighting planes drove eight German craft from the Firth of Forth today,

Mr. Wills was born on a farm near Young America, Cass County, He was graduated from the Young America High School, taught rural | schools in Cass County three years, County Election Board. meanwhile attending summer ses-| This board is composed of the {sions at Indiana University. {County Clerk, together with one | He taught a year in the Young | Democratic and one Republican [America High School, and was|/member nominated by the respective |principal of the Burrows High party chairmen. { School, Carrol County, before on If it should happen that this jceiving his law degree at I. U. in|board should decide to tabulate the [1914 precinct committeeman vote last— after all the votes for County, City

lot Counting Law, ballot boxes will

be counted under direction of the

| He began the practice of law in | Kokomo that year, served as judge |and Township officers had been lof the Kokomo City Court from counted—the committeeman race re[1918 to 1922, and was Kokomo City |sults probably would not be known |attorney from 1930 to 1935. [by Thursday noon. { Last year, Mr. Wills was an un Chairman Has Opportunity And then each party chairman could name 336 vice committeemen of his own choice. | That would give the County chairman a solid bloc of 336 votes

DEWEY OPENS DRIVE, = the party convention. With fac-

|

| {

the Air Ministry announced. One|

An Air said: “The Air Ministry announces that eight enemy aircraft approached the coast in the Firth of Forth area shortly after midday today. Royal Air Force fighter aircraft were sent up to intercept them and contact was made, “The enemy were driven off and

one of their aircraft was seen to have been hit. No bombs were dropped. The ’raid passed signal’ was sounded after about half an hour.” Previously, it had been disclosed that R. A. F. patron planes, far out over the North Sea, had fought off German craft which attempted to intercept them Wednesday. One British pilot was

Ministry communique |

|

|

| tional disputes splitting the ranks of SEEKS MIDWEST AlD ine 336 duly elected committeemen, (the 336 hand-picked vice committee- | {men easily could re-elect the exist-| ling County chairman, or a successor

New Deal Is Charged With of his choice.

!

thing depends on County Clerk

| Helgoland when he sighted a Dor-

north of

nier plane. He reported he drove]

|it back to its base.

A second Britizh pilot said that a Dornier was pursued through the clouds for half an hour and that he

Charles R. Ettinger. His is the con- | trolling vote on the Election Board. | Mr. Ettinger declined today to] relieve the workers’ fears.

: . As the party workers see it, every‘Defeatism’ Complex.

MINNEAPOLIS, Dec. 7 (U. FP). — Thomas E. Dewey confers today with business men, farmers and politicians for advice and aid in a campaign to lead the nation away from what he termed the New Deal philosophy of “Defeatism and |despair” to a Republican victory in 1940. The youthful racket-busting District Attorney from New York City {declared last night in the . first speech of his campaign for the Re- | publican Presidential nomination that “defeatism” was the cause of the breakdown in the country’s eco-

Inomic machine. |

He | wouldn't say whether he would ask | (the other two Board members, when they are named, to agree to count |committeeman votes first,

Faction Leaders Busy

His only comment was that he | doesn’t “anticipate any trouble over | the operation of the new law at | the next primary.” Leaders of minority factions in each of the two major political | parties are busy searching for “loop- | {holes in the loop-holes.” The most likely-appearing at the ‘ present is the possibility of filing a | He called on Minnesota Repub- | cit to obtain a legal declaration of | licans and a nation-wide radio]

A : the committeemen’s rights. i laudience to join him in smother- |

; id The suit would be based on the | [ing the “economic quackery” of the eo New Deal. He predicted that

ontention that the law. ciearly in- | : t the tends committeemen should ame | frontiers of social and economic ex-|iheir own vice committeemen. and | pansion of America have not yet | they should not be deprived of this been discovered. [right through political maneuver- | The opening speech in the cam-!

ing. | Hendricks Kenworthy, contractor, | was nominated as the Democratic | a Bets | member of the Election Board by |

THREE EXECUTED FOR | County Chairman Ira Haymaker toTREASON IN GERMANY [Savin esenworthy and Robert 8.

jon the retiring board. |

BERLIN, Dec. 7 (U. P.).—Three| | PEACE EFFORT PUSHED!

men were executed today for high!

| (Continued on Page Four)

Heinrich Peters dist ributed| pamphlets critical of Nazi leaders, |

OSLO, Norway, Dec. 7 (U. P) —

to England, and Hermann Stetefeld gotiation of peace between Finland worked for the British Intelligence |and Soviet Russia was agreed on!

Norway, Denmark and Sweden,

|

made six attacks on it.

Nazi Pilot Rammed

Briton, Reich Says BERLIN, Dec. 7 (U. P.J~-A German pilot rammed a British plane deliberately in a fierce dog fight off the Netherlands Island of Texel, the German High Command | said in a communique today. Both planes crashed into the sea. The communique reported that German planes had reconnoitered over England and Scotland, and as- | serted that they had reached the Shetland Islands. Five British |

wig Holstein area last night were | forced back by anti-aircraft gun| fire, it was said, without dropping | bombs.

GERMANS ATTACK ON 100-MILE FRONT

French Say Casualties in Nazi Raids Are Heavy.

PARIS, Dec. 7 (U.P.) —German | troops made 60 raids on the French | advanced lines of the Western] Front during the early hours of

this morning, it was learned to- |

month.

French outposts were raided all|

{bility of Russian aid

United States, Great Rritain and Germany for more than a year. Even Nazi Germany was reported selling arms to Fine land and to Rumania, which had heen warned by the Communist International to ace cept a mutual aid pact with Soviet Russia, but the posie

tion of Adolf Hitler—even now step= ping up the tempo of fighting on the Western Front—remained to be clarified,

Even Germany May

In broad outline, sible that

Join

it appeared posthe European conflict

be sealed the moment the polls close |enmy plane was struck by British | might yet turn into a struggle where and trucked to the Court House to| fe.

the main issue would be shifted from the battle for power between England and Germany to a teche nical crusade for or against bolshe« vism and in which a desperate Germany might be forced to join up with Russia. The real issue in such a struggle might or migh’ not be bolshevism, but in the shifting complexities of European chaos it could be used as a rallying cry by both sides, That is already vaguely fore shadowed. For that reason, Germany's material aid to Finland must remain an obscure factor until Adolf Hitler's fate in warfare against the Allies forces him to a more definite posi tion in relation to the Soviets.

Neighbors Fearful

But for the other powers, the question appears to be more definite, Britain and France are steadily closing the door against the possi= in the war against Germany, possibly because the government of Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain in London cone siders communism a worse enemy than naziism. But a more immediate cause for the Allied attitude can be found in the fact that Russia definitely has demonstrated that she does not ine tend to aid Britain or France and in the fact that Russia's efforts to capitalize on the European war by extending her defensive frontiers has aroused the anger and fears of her small neighbors, which may be persuaded by that fear to cast their lot more definitely with the Allies,

Doubt Stalin to Withdraw The outcome of those maneuvers remain to be seen and depend primarily on lrow far or how fast Josef V. Stalin chooses to advance. A

planes which flew over the Schles- | !hrust into Rumania in an attempt

to seize Bessarabia (taken from Russia after the World War) or a move against Turkey's eastern frone tiers in the Near East would bring the conflict to a head, but for the moment Russia's hands are reasone ably full in the snowy hills of Fine land. Much depends on how realistic a view the Allies, especially Britain, take of the Russian “menace.” They realize that to fulfill their stated war aim—the ending of aggression— they must deal with Russia now or later. At the start the idea was to clean up with Germany first and tackle Russia only if it became necessary, (Continued on Page Four)

HOGS HERE SLUMP TO FIVE-YEAR LOW

By UNITED PRESS

prices at Indianapolis 10 cents today, bringing

-

Hog slumped

|along a 100-mile line between the them to the lowest in five years,

| Moselle and Rhine Rivers as the | salable receipts were estimated af | Germans sought to find weak places | 13 009 and the top price fell to $5.60, \in the French defenses and obtain| “New York stocks retained a pore

order at the Monday session.

; Because a 20-year-old mother PUPILS ROUT THIEF thought more about “running, An unidentified man was routed around and having dates” than car-|

That Voice in the Dark—Was It an English Judas?

from Tech High School today when a group of pupils at the school saw him attempt to steal a bicycle, police said. He dropped the cycle and fled in a truck when the pupils shouted at him.

RST

SHOPPING DAYS LEFT

ete ¢ DON'T XOU.O0

Swan o “set?

6.

ing for her two babies, she began {serving a 30-day jail term today. Juvenile Court Judge Pro Tem. Tom Robley George sentenced the mother to jail and fined her $1 and {costs on a charge of child neglect, STer she admitted having dates and relieved of the burden of her children. “Your two children (ages 2 and 3) | are really in your way, aren't they?" Judge George asked the youthful mother, | She said they were rot in her way, but that she would agree to {send them back io her 25-vear-old! husband, who lives in North Carolina. The children were made wards of the court and ci:dered sent to the Children’s Guardian Home and the mother was taken to jail with an admonition from the judge:

|

|indicated she would just as soon be]

i

By MILTON BRONNER LONDON, Dec. 7 (NEA) —Strange animals prowl in the dark—not only in the jungles, but in the very streets of London. London at night is a wartime! picture of iniense blackness. If someone accosts you, unless you have a flashlight and break the law by turning it in his face, you can never recognize him again. And mavbe that is an opportunity for friends of Germany. For instance: This correspondent the - other night wanted a brea:h of fresh air. So he stood just beside the main entrance to his hotel in the Egvpt-| ian darkness, He did not even realize that anrbody was beside him. |

| we protect them?

drops love and kisses pamphlets over Germany but you don't catch

{the Boche doing that sort of thing. air raid shelters.

Right on our own doorstep, so to speak, they come with their submarines and their bombers. | “Look at Scapa Flow. marine waltzes right in, torpedoes | the battleship ‘Royal Oak’ and | waltzes right out again. If we can't! protect our warships put to bed for the night in that harbor, where can

| |

A sub-/|

“Then to add insult to injury, they flew their bombers over that same harbor and took a crack at some more of our ships. Those| Germans are devilishly clever and efficient. Looks pretty bad.” “Are you English?” I asked in

evening on the radio advised people taken to work for the enemy of his | here to stay indoors, close to their| country for 30 pieces of silver. | They said they | Such an agent does not do | had information that German egnignace work. He is not a spy. | bombers were coming over London gis job is to undermine the morale | tonight.” lof the people. He is to talk in a Now this correspondent happened gespondent patriotic tone in street | to know that the B. B. C. had done cays in busses, in the underground | nothing of the sort. [trains, in pubs, in restaurants, in “Your line of defeatist talk to an any place where he can engage al utter stranger certainly sounds few people in conversation.

queer to me,” I said. “The B. B. C. He is the kind it is almost m=

did not say such a thing.” 3 A Co Then I found I was talking to possible for the police, or the intel

€ : ; ligence service to bag, officials have a void. The man with the voice {414 me. It is hard to pin anyhad vanished. thing on him. In a democratic $$ 2

. MAYBE HE WAS on the level... ‘ob to distinguish between, just a chap from the antipodes get- 'the man who really loves his coun- |

[ernment and its conduct. It is a

sitions. regarding troop dispo-

sitions. . Rifles, machine guns, grenades and mines made a bedlam of the front and finally artillery (Continued on Page Three)

ABC CANCELS PERMIT, IN COUNTY CAMPAIGN

The Alcoholic Beverage Commission today took its first step in a co-operative plan with City and | County authorities to “clean up” liquor and ber taverns here. The Commission revoked the tavern license of Jacob Kagel, at whose

|

was |

country a man can criticize his gov- | E. Washington St. tavern beer law | Editorials ...,

violations allegedly occurred. Alleged sale of beer to two 15- | year-old giris at this tavern was

tion of earlier gains. Business news was favorable. Pressure continued on Scandinavian bonds. Curb stocks were steady. London domestig stocks improved slightly.

TIMES FEATURES ON INSIDE PAGES

vives J3{Johnson .... . 22| Movies ....18, 21 | Mrs. Ferguson . 31| Obituaries . .. 29 Pegler . 31| Pyle 22| Questions uit : 16| Radio ered. 16 | Mrs. Roosevelt 22 Scherrer 31| Serial Story. ..

Books .. Broun ...... Clapper ...... Comics Crossword .. Curious World

ER

Financial .. Flynn Forum

BUY CHRISTMA

some surprise. yt un | "No. I am Australian and I don't! “THIS IS A helluva war.” grum- like the way things are going. . . . listen to him. But, again, he may bled a voice. “Tipe Royal Air Force The British Broadcasting ¥Co, this have been a man who had under.

[ting rid of a grouse against his try and is distressed by some of the |said to have been one of the factors Grin, Bear It. 1 own empire to anybody who would | things that happen in a war and | which aroused County officials to|In Indpls. 3| Society ....24, 33 (the man who has sold his country |start a clean-up campaign seygral Inside Indpls. 22|Sports .... 26, 27 |and is talking to earn Wis pay. weeks ago, Jane Jordan ,. 25 | State Deaths. - §

| "Maybe when vou get out vou'll = realize more fully your responsibil- | ity

§ §