Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 December 1939 — Page 21
FRIDAY, DECEMBER 8, 1939
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The Indianapolis Times
Hoosier Vagabond
" ~ RV LORENZO, N. M, Dee, 8.—Father Roger Aull MN ‘ atholic priest who came into the isolated New exico mountains for solitude and a chance to prebare himself for the hereafter, But he is such a wise and pleasant fellow that the world in four short years has beaten a path to his door and he has about as much solitude as a canary. And he loves it. Father Aull lives so far off the road that originally vou had to stop and open nine gates to get to his place. But the traffic ®Ot sO heavy the Forest Service took out the gates and put in cattle guards. Father Aull is originally from Cincinnati. He has served in Midwestern parishes, has taught philosophy in Chicago, has traveled throughout the United States as a missionary lecturer. And then, for 15 years, he was the priest at Raton, N. M, Then his health broke down. And after a spell at the Holy Cross Sanitarium in Deming, he came out here into the far mountains, to the cattle ranch of & friend. . ' Father Aull started building right away. In four years he has built a big stone house for himself, and a lovely little chapel, and several outbuildings, and lots of porches and walks and bridges and fancy arches, and has made all his own furniture. In all this he has had only the help of a Mexican. He travels the country for miles around, cutting yucca sticks, gathering cactus, picking up rocks. He says he works fast. He also reads fast, and never forgets anything. In his house he has 3000 books. They go clear to the ceiling of every room, and he has read every one of them. He has 2000 more in Chicago, and has given away 2000. > » »
Seeret Recipe for Hash
When we drove up, Father Aull was up on top of R New addition to his house, laving big stones In cement mortar. He had on bibhed blue overalls. a brown shirt open at the neck, a little linen motorist’s cap, and cattleman's shoes.
Our Town
IN CASE THE QUESTION ever comes up—and Rooner or later ft will—you ought to be prepared to know that Ben Webb and Phil Reichwein were the only Indianapolis men who ever nicked the Louisiana Lottery for substantial amounts, Mr. Webb was the Iuckier of the two. He won $75,000, The Louisiana Lottery used to d0 a right nice business around here, I have no way of knowing for sure, but I'll bet that when it was going good it took something like $6000 out of Indianapolis every month. In ‘Chicago, the sale of lottery tickets amounted to $85,000 a month; in Boston, $50,000. Drawings wera held daily, gemi-monthly and semi-annually with a grand prize of $600,000 awarded every six months on a $40 ticket. There were also prizes of $15.000 on a $1 ticket: £30.00 on A £2 ticket; 75000 on a $5 ticket (the kind Mr. Webb bought): $150,000 on # 210 ticket and £300.000 on A $20 ticket, There is no record of anybody ever winning the grand prize, but a New Orleans barber once won $300,000 on a $20 ticket,
» » It Began tn the Sixties
The Louisiana Lottery was started sometime in the Sixties to help out the Charity Hospital ih New Orleans. In return for an annual contribution of $40,000 for the support of the hospital, the company was granted & monopoly of the lottery for 25 years. Subsequent charters extended this period. In the beginning, Gen. P. G. T. Beauregard and Gen, Jubal Farly, both outstanding military leaders of the Confederacy, supervised the drawings, For two days work & year they got $30,000 apiece, Sometime around the turn of the century—at any rate, after the Naughty Nineties had their fling—the Louisiana Lottery had to move to Honduras, The last man to sell Honduras Lottery tickets in Indianapolis was Royal B. Hammer Who was sui generis not only because of his geniality, but because of his peculiar gait. I'll bet that Mr, Hammer took 4000 steps to walk
Washington
WASHINGTON, Dee. 8--Thomat Dewey can do ® better job than he dig at Minneapolis and he has done it, ‘in several off -the-record talks Th his later Presidential speechas, no doubt, Mr, Dewey will 186 us in on some of his thoughts about national guastions. Masmuch as
By Ernie Pyle
He climbed down and shook hands. He said he was sure glad we came, for his lumbago was hurting him, and now he'd have an excuse to stop work, It was 10 a. m. We didn't leave till 4:30. Around 11:30 Father Aull wanted to know if we wouldn't stay for lunch. I said, “Certainly, I was wondering if you weren't going to ask us at all.” can talk to him like that. So Father Aull got out pots and pans and cooked enough spaghetti for an army, along with some kind of hash that is his own secret. Throwing together a meal is nothing for him. at a time, When hunch is ready, he calls the Mexican workman in to eat with the guests, He says he has been criticized for this, but he says if his guests don't like
You %
He has fed as many as 25 =
it they can leave, | &
Father Aull is bluff but not gruff. He stammers,| Just a little, and is awfully easy to talk with. He loves to tell stories about the characters who live back in the mountains, * »
He Knows Everybody
He knows all the ranchers and cowhands and cattle] thieves and no-goods for miles around. And often he goes out in his overalls and helps fight forest fires. He is.in semi-retirement. He is doing some writing | for the church, but he has no regular parish assignment, However, he says mass in his little chapel every morning, And this is something TI didn't know—it is against |
Catholic ritual for & priest to say mass without some-| §
one there. So Father Aull has special dispensation to say mass alone, In the evening he reads, and goes to bed about 11. He sleeps like a log, and is usually up around 4 a. m. “The days just aren't long enough,” he says. He says mass at 5 &. m, and by the time most of us are getting up he has laid a couple of vards of rock wall, | The time he likes best is a stormy day, when he can't work, and he's all by himself, sitting deep in his big yucca chair with the 6il stove going. He smokes his pipe and reads all day long. “I came out here really to read and write and think | and get ready for the hersafter,” he told me. “Most ministers spend all their lives helping other peopla gat ne for the hereafter, and forget all about them-| selves,”
A mile.” Most people took Mr. Hammer for a big and bulky man, but in reality he wasn't. He only looked that way because of his bulging pockets which always | appeared to be stuffed with something important. | You couldn't help liking Mr. Hammer and his line. of talk. Once when a preacher took him to task for| the ‘iniquity of his calling, Mr. Hammer came right Back and cited Matthew, the Aposile Who was chosen y lot.
vn | Other Precedents Cited \ | Had Mr. Hammer felt like it he could have, bol-| stered his argument with even more citations: The fact, for instance, that Faneuil Hall, after the fire of 1761, was rebuilt by lottery; that the Continental Congress of 1777 tried to raise money the same way, and that any number of early American churches and colleges profited by the turn ot the wheel. Tt was the easiest and quickest way to raising monsy., Why, even | as late as 1880 or thereabouts, Vineennes University ran off a lottery in broad daylight right here in Mdianapolis—as a matter af fact, at the Market St. corner of the Circle in the very building which once served as Henry Ward Reecher's church. Still more alarming was the wav the Indianapolis Art Society, following the axample set bv other esthetic centers of the Sixties, went in for lotteries The modus operandi was simple enough: They collected a big fund by wav of a large membership and | then turned the jack-pot into a collection of pictures and statues for which they sometimes paid fabulous prices, I don't know how true it is, but I've heard it sald that the fancy prices paid for pictures moved Jacob Cox to lay down his tinner's tools and take up painting as a business, leaving his brother to run the tinshop. | Of course after thev spent the jackpot for pictures, | the Art Society sent agents all over Indiana selling lottery tickets at $3 apiece. Tt was a matter of con= | siderable pride at the time that some of our best families bought as many as a dozen tickets. Which explains why a museum piece like Poussin's painting of “Joseph and Potiphar's Wire” landed in Mrs, W. B. Whiffen's home and why H. A. Fletcher's parlor was decorated with Hiram Power's bronze statue of tho “Shepherd Boy.”
By Raymond Clapper
record as a prosecutor in New York, we 100k to him (o break away from the clinches of the shopworn poli- | tician and strike out with the driving, realistic methods which have brought such saiutary yesults im cleaning | up New York rackets. Tf Mr. Dewey has anvihing to! offer, it is his demonstrated ability ta tackle sacred
Times Photos
WPA crew at work on the Warfleigh sewer at N. Meridian St. and
the canal,
es —————
$1,000,000 a Year By Anton Scherrer Spent Here by WPA ¥
By Dick Lewis
WHEN there's a street to be paved, a sewer to be built, a bridge to be repaired, the word goes down the line
at City Hall: “Let the WPA do it.”
Plans are drawn, resolutions adopted and
form is filled out. The WPA does 1t. The blue project form is the City's open-sesame to a stores house of free manpower which is doing a million dollars worth of work a Year for the City. City officials don't like to think what the tax rate would be if the WPA suddenly quit being the day las borer for the Warks, Park, Health and Safety Boards. In return for the million dollars a vear in res labor and materials
| the WPA furnishex the City pavs
amazingly little. Tts sponsors cone tribution by law ix 20 per cent, After Jan, 1, it will be 25 per cent, Only & fraction of that obligas tion, however, is met by cash pave ments, The City makes most of its required contribution through the loans of equipment and office space to the WPA and the provision of materials, The biggest expense to the City on a street improvement project is the cost of management by a prive contractor. On most projects, that is the only cash outlay the City makes.
BUSINESS URGED
In Social Life,” Mooney Tells Junior C. of C.
Tt {trell
QUIT DOG HOUSE, |
“Must Take Dominant Role
| warded $7.50 to the U. 8. Treasury
| |
a project
TINDER {its present budget structure, the City could not finance the minimum number of strect improvements and res surfacing jobs required each year. It could not build “levees and boulevards and it could not main= tain its parks or run a full-time recreation program. 86 deeply has the WPA become embedded in Indianapolis municipal aperation that a cessa= tion of tie WPA would result in an automatic eancellation of most street improvement and xewer rePair and construction. plans for 1040, The proposed 1040 City budget is predicated on the eons tinued existence of the WPA as the muscle which is going to wield the pick and shovel, drive the tractor and wield the paint brush for the City next vear Since 1936, the WPA hag spent $003.375 to improve streets and alleys, It has spent 3879818 on Park Department projects, exclusive of WPA-built levees and boulevards along Fall Creek which cost $1,189.122, More than $100,000
Club Sends U. S. $7.50 for Finns
in WPA
REPORT LACK OF SALESMEN
|
TOWNSEND, Mont, Dee. 8 (U, |
PO) ~The Townzend Rotary Club with a membership of 24, for-
yesterday to help war-torn Finland pay her war debt payment due Dee, 15,
A street vexmnfacing project At Emerson Ave. and FE. 10th St
funds have heen curbz and xidewalks: street resurfacing: 2360.000 for Municipal Airport improvements and $134453 for sewer repairs It wa: not City warkmen who cleaned up and painted the City Hall this spring. The WPA spent $14,183 to do that while the City provided the brushes, the mops and the paint, > 4 9
PA workers dug out tha channel of White River, built flood walls and levees, WPA works
men cleaned up City dumps, Fire Engine House No. 2 was a
expended on $481 067 for
YULE
Merchants Formerly Available Now Have Jobs.
A rhortage of experienced
Say Applicants
retail
»
WPA
over
project. So were bridges the Canal at oth and 10th Ets: the Northwestern Ave, bridea over Fall Creek. the Tllinoeiz 8, bridge over Fall Creek; the Shelby St. brides over Pleasant Run, tha Raymond ©t, bridge over White River, and the Ww, New York St. bridge over White River, Bre it not for a $12,000 WPA project, Mayor Reginald H. Sullivan's campaign to reduce smoke and soot thiz winter would be con= ducted by two men who would be expected to patrol the entire City, The WPA is furnishing three men to assist in this task with the pos= sibility that more will be added,
State's 123d Birthday To Pass Quietly Monday
There will be no official commotion about it, but Monday will be the 123d anniversary of the statehood of indiana, On Dee. 11, 1816, Indiana was “hereby declared to he one of tha United States of America, and admitted inte the Union on an equal footing with the original states in all respects whatever,” The fire mavement for statehood of Tndiana was taken in Novem
POSTOFFICE CLERKS
her, 1811, when a petition was pre sented ta Congress asking admission
The City next vear plans ta clean, renovate and repair ita sbwers and to build new sewers, This will be done through the courtesy of the WPA which iz now work« ing out the details of a $300,000 sewer project with City engineers, WPA workmen thiz year tuns= neled the $150000 38th Bt. wewer, Park Board members agree phat more recreation grounds will ba needed next summer, City ems ployees will staff the park play= grounds. But there will be 10 or 12 wmchool playgrounds to be staffed. If the Board's plans ma= terialize, the WPA will do that, 100,
, APRS
8 14 bBurines: ta pel he 1s preparing A series of ad- is up GE K to the Union.
dresses, he might better have selected one of hix more meaty manuscripts for the campaign ° Kickoff at Minneapolis. The one which he used as an opener cons tained laudable sentiments, but it could more appropriately have been held for delivery to ‘the Pawling, N. YY, Boy Scouts, America, Mr, Dewey said, is suffering from defeatism. We picked up a couple of old quotations from the December issue of Reader's Digest to show that pessimism was nothing new in the world and explained that optimism always had prevailed in the end, “Tonight,” Mr, Dewey said, “I propose that we Americans, of whatever party, make up our minds that we do believe in the continued growth of this country , . . the one thing that I want to do in whatever way I can is to help make the courage of eternal youth run once more in the veins of my party and of my country.” The late Arthur Brisbane said it better: “Don't sell America short.”
rackets, National polities (x ax ripe for the man who can do this as New Vork City when he moved in. We already have heen given the Coue treatment hy Mr. Hoover and by Mr. Roosevelt, We have been dosed tions and personnel, said last night with confidence for years, He addressed the umter Chamber If the problem were as simple As having eanfidencs, | Of Commerce Executive Leadership | it would have been solved long ago. Roosevelt spend. Forum at the Indianapolis Athletic | ing was primarily an attempt to back up confidence Club. He said business has an inWith cash. That didn't work, For unemployment re- feriority complex and said it should Mains an acute problem, “appreciate the tremendous respon- > » W sibilities which must accompany the
out af the New Deal dog housge, Paul [ Maoney, Kroger Grocery and Baking Co. general manager of public rela-
salesperson: for holiday work WAR| whe petition, however, dragged reported today by ‘the local office of along until 1815, when an oficial the Indiana State Employment census was taken to settle the un
Service, SITATY 5s ¥ PUpnvon. |afioe Olerks’ annual convention will A zurvey among Mdianapolis mers Petition Dragged Along LY held at Kokomo May 17 and 18, chants revealed these reasons for| This census determined that the| More than 100 members of Indians Mrs, Lillian T. Mowrer, authoress, the growing shortage: population of Indiana Stan by Ho 130 are expected i» a [wi ‘ass the napolis Open | —_ all. four thousand the number required tend, Newly elected officers of tha I dren, i the Lio Na by the ordinance of 1787 for ad- local are Lewis E. Decker, president; dominant role it takes in social life.” | Kirsh Community Center, 2314 Ment. The U. 8. Bureau of Labor Mission 10 the Rin, dhe Se —. » ead, ed vine Donn Getth Dow Git fra] I I © | Kirshbaum Community © » “01% Statistics reports factory employ the way for further action, |dent; Ben Haris, ® vice pres retting Down to Cases Business Will remain in the Qog/N, Meridian St. Iment higher than at any time in| CONEYess again was asked for ad- dent; Glenn L. Moreillon, recording Industrial activity is up around 1929 levels. Busi A, i tin a Mrs. Mowrer, wife of Xdgar Ansel recent Vears exc pt during a few Nish A a rem) DE a Randi) Ness activity is practically i a boom. Yet many mil- lie relations problem and a respon. Mowrer, foreign correspondent, is | months during 1937, od ho = peimanent sont of state [urer: Johh H. Fleischmann, guard, BO ah ea BE Wh 'OHIS TIVES the Yao: sibility to evolve workable programs. substituting for Michael Williams, | Retailers, planning on Increased |, o.anment, land Reuben B, Barnes, Luther A, A aE ov ant ’ sap Mr, Mooney, formerly sssociated author, who is ill. Her topie will be WJ, RD bg Bo MOTE! ~ An enabling act had passed by Higbie, Walter A. Smith, Bdward Cs ave plenty of courage and plenty of with Marshall Field & Co. and {he a Yournalist’s Wife Yiooks at Hit salespersons than in previous years. | i 10, 1816, providing for the Grimes hnd Bert Persell, trustees, confidence in the possibilities of thiz country. If you University of Chicago, gave six fun- os War» sUs Wife Looks at Hit=| General business improvement, | Jel ion of delegates to frame | ta A
Want to see courage look at the dust-bowl farmers] qamental steps in evolving a public | (giving steady employment to heads state constitution, These delegates T E ST YO U R )
fighting through year after year. But confidence alone : ORY As her husband's assistant, Mrs, [of families, has removed the neces- ’ N ha \ : : relations program, 3 1 8 as ) , OB] 3 counties then in doesn’t solve the problem of these farmers, of the They Do : Find out what the Mowrer has met most of Europe's sity of many housewives seeking Fe 3 omits rt ———— Th which river are the famons
( 0, 18186, al sharecroppers, of the self-reliant families turned into public thinks of you. 2. Decide 'eading figures during the past 25 temporary holiday employment, for um Bc: HONE} Wee 10, the wandering tramps of the “Grapes of Wrath,” Con- whether You can and Will correct years, She first met Benito Musso- the first time since 1020, Sl tay Drafted fidence isn't enough to solve the problem of those in any faults, 3. Prepare convincing an-| lini when he was a provincial editor, | yy A Constitution Drafte Cleveland who can't get work though the town is swers for criticisms arisin h [She left Germany with her husband hey framed titution and ‘ 3 ; ! ' ; ! g from © They frame A cons 1 { throbbing with industrial activity, faults you cannot correct. 4, Make| When he was the first to be expelled SPONSOR FILM SHOWING presented it to Congress, State 1 We want to hear Mr, Dewey get down to cases. The 'an honest appraisal of your faults| under the threat of death. She was : ———" [hood was accomplished in 1818, Whirlpool Rapids? American people know that this fx a 1and of almost and virtues, 5. Consider any new | hostess to King Zog while he was] The Young People's Society of The building in which the delegates 2-—-How ix 1030 written In Roman infinite possibilities, They are conscious of ftx great | virtues you can afford to acquire [still on the Albanian throne, She the Union Oongregational and |.anvenesd had been erected by HAT=| numerals? natural wealth, What they want ix somebody who 6. Get in touch with your public and has written a book, “Journalist's Ohrigtian Chureh will zponser WO | vivon County for A Court Houxe, and | 3--Tn singing, what is falsstta? can show how thix waalth may be ned to make life tell them vour story. Wife” (showings of the movie, "King of ina judges of Harrison County 4—Which state 18 repressnted In reasonably comfortable for the whole population, As one example of hix company’s] Mra, Mawrar's talk fx the third in Kings,” Monday at the church, 17th | anderad it ax a State House #0 ong Congress by Senator Hibert D, public relation: work, Mr. Mooney the current xeazon’s program. Mre and Rembrandt ts, The first show |. Garvan remained the seat of Thomas? satd that a short time age he dig-|J, A, Goodman is chairman of the will begin at 3:30 p. m, and the Y0C= | wavernment. 5--Where are tha Orkney Tslands? covered there was considerable an. Open Forum Managing committee ond at 7:30 p.m. ™ 1820, the esnsus of Corydon 8-—What 1x the name for a nines » 8 8 _— . - rided polvgon? In which state was President Andrew Johnson born? 8=-What 13 the correct pronuncias tion of the word kayak? ® ® @ Answers
MRS. LILIAN MOWRER T0 SPEAK AT FORUM,
i -
TO MEET AT KOKOMO
The Tndiana Federation of Poat-
» » ~ Confidence in Abundance
This was the typical speech of a caution: candidate, putting himself squarely on record against sin, If Mr, Dewey has anvthing to offer thiz country as a Presidential figure, it 1& youthful drive. clear-headed. courageous attack on very real difficulties. By his
My Day
NEW YORK CITY, Thursday.-—-Tt was a great pleasure yesterday to have an opportunity to talk during luncheon with Mrs. Hughes and Mrs. Brandeis, who were my neighbors at table. Mrs, Brandeis spoke of how hard it is these days to preserve a calm spirit and confidence in the future. This serenity of spirit and ase surance, that in one way or an= other, the pattern of life will work out eventually for the good of mankind, is easier, I think, to acquire with age, I can look back and see, in spite of all the faltering and even backsliding, that the world as a whole has made progress even In the years I have been able to watch, If you haven't a perspective, each event as it hits you seems the final stroke of fate. Occasionally you are over-elated at a step forward, but frequently you sink mte black despair at what seems to be the endless stupidity of the human race One of my guests at luncheon was Miss Dorothea campbell of Charleston, W. Va, whe, with the Busi. ness and Professional Women's Club there, has been helping to develop some handcraft work at the gove
\ i% Tawi a A | By Eleanor Roosevelt mri, moyen vi com. 0. | The OAPI Teen Ihre nb Woman, 84, Spurns Relief
ping guides and free-distribution 1824, and in the meantime Indians » _® To Earn Her Own Living
weekly newspapers,” a . ernment homestead near Red House, W. Va. A num-| Because of that and, “recognizing tn Tre ot CAD Bre M hor Of Sales have been held lately ih nearby towns, daily newspapers perform a valuable The 1d Corydon Oapitol 1a now and it looks as though a market is opening up for social function,” the Kroger Co. dis- a State property and is - visited Tw eR I KTR NASHVILLE, Tenn, Dee, 8 (U.| General Sessions Judge Brown 2==MOM , P) With a smile of triumph, 84- | Turner, signed the warrant with 3=-The notes above the natural vear-old Mrs. Callie Gambill, rooms= “reluctance.” Another judge, Trigg a of the voles, 4-—Utah, '5-~North of the mainland of Boots land, 8-=Nonagon, T=iNorth Caroll, 8-=Ki'-ak; not kay'sak, "ew
ASK THE TIMES
nelose a
some of the work done by the women, which is very continued advertising in the other ; encouraging. They sent me two charming little hand mediums, except ih isolated oases NEHGS BP Chuuarde of pero, woven towels with my initials woven into them. I he said. —— ss can think of no more personal and attractive gift we m—— pk for anyone who likes hand-woven linen, COLONEL’ SON GETS PETERS IN CAPITAL I had a brief talk in the afternoon with Prot. | \ “ 4 FOR FHA MEETING Julian Huxley, a friend of Mr. and Mrs. Leonard | ing house operator, continued today Moore, sent for her with “great reElmhirst From his conversation it is evident that | WEST POINT ORDERS to “earn my own living,” refusing luctance.” One deputy sheriff said i Wa] people abroad fh all nations are tryin to work on | ————— [to accept relief, he'd rather resign before arresting| WR. Rarl Peters, FHA state adies " , . ; at She was charged by Sam YT. Bol- Mrs, Gambill, The three finally ministrator, was in Washington the question of a future and more permanent peace.| Henry W. Urrutia, son of Col, ¥n. | * ; | today to confer with THA officials They feel as T do that a War every 25 years is more |rique Urrutia Jr, has been ordered ton, inspector for the Hotel and did their duty. | a Pre ident Roosevelt gy than any civilization can stand, : (to report to the U 8 Military | [Restaurant Division of the State| Judge Moore appointed four Soin ha i pa " Ath the Hous! At the ARPOIL, T WAS Surpr b Academy at West Point te join the [Conservation Department, with op= | yers to defend her, A fifth voluns | e W NCUNS Wi e Housing , hy AS 8 prised and very pleased Tans Of 1043 0 JOIN THE rating a rooming house Without teered his services, Spectators took authorities the development in n= to meet again some old friends, Gen, and Mrs. Cro. ¢ O01. Urrutia I the © a paving a $5 license foe, [up a collection to pay her fine, One diana of the new low cost housing her The Wat hat Sriven theth home after Years off Me p he local v. a ing Although eligible for a $15-a- offered to serve her sentence, if any, | program which gives persons earns travel, And they hre again in their Washington house, officer of she ocal U. 8. Army Ye: p.onth pension, Mrs, Gambill sald | Assistant Attorney General Ned ing from $000 to $1500 a year an As We boarded the plane, Mrs, Oroater spoke of some © Moo a on . she would rather make her own live Lentz said the State didn't want to opportunity to build homes costing of the early fying she had done. Planes were very | Ts — a ahd ther daugh- | jo operating her rooming house prosecute Mrs, Gambill but all other not more than $2500. He also will could Wee. under NEM." She MIA" toarv | MnMDs| ATIer WSHAIME & WORK In New worn, [01,0 Met oven though she ‘ix teoming house operators had to pay discuss the poasibility of two ines § ' a ! ve SAPS | : . / K, partially erippled chante of a the fee, scale ! 'ojects whie made her think of the Normandie and the Queen they will Arrive at West Point on eg rn ered two years ame. | Judge Moore said: “T don't want |Oity of Evansville wishes to build Mary transferred to the air, |New Year's Day, when young Urs «7 made 50 conta last week.” xhe to have to go through that again (at once. We arrived here rather late, This morning it Is rutia ix to report, wal, “T don't want to break the Onze dismisted, And Mr Bolton | His visit with the Prasident will cold and clear and I am starting off on & very busy | Cadet Urrutia served abt West jaw, But 1 don't think 1 should have | (the Inspector) will be assessed the Also be to discuss housing in In. day, (Point from 1087 until 1ast June, {to pay that 85. | costs,” | diana,
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