Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 July 1940 — Page 7
| WEDNESDAY, JULY 3, 1940 : The Indianapolis Times SECOND SECTION
Hoosier Vagabond By Ernie Pyle
ABOARD TRANSCONTINENTAL BUS (In Iowa), bus scientists. And that is to figure up some conJuly 3—For some strange reason, riding along day traption to keep a fellow’s shirt tail in, and to keep his underwear from working up and cutting him in two. At every stop, you have to redress yourself. Oddly enough, passengers do not worry about the driving, as car drivers often do when riding with someone else. The drivers are so competent and so steady that your feeling of being aboard is much the) same as being on a train. At some terminals, the baggage system isn't all it might be. Chicago was the worst. There were scores of people, and only two boys to handle it. I waited 25 minutes for my bags. . There is ro uniformity about the “comfort stops” and terminals. Some are magnificent, and some are pretty bad. The lunch rooms, apparently, are mostly privately owned. It seems to me Greyhound should operate them. Some of the places seem wholly unaware that the bus intends to leave. / n " ”
after day on a hus does not seem to get montonous Time doesn't drag, neither do the miles that stream astonishingly under vour wheels There 1s nothing specific you can do, so a routine evolves all by itself. and vou sort of fall into it You buv the magazines and papers at the rest stops, and vou read awhile Then the steady droning of the wind and wheels makes you drowsy, and vou sleep awhile. Then vou wake up and smoke awhile. Then vou talk awhile to vour seat partner Then you just sit and gaze at the passing scenery awhile, Then you are at a rest stop. and you get out and stretch for 10 minutes. Then you start it all They Go Pretty Fast over again. . . Most evervhody has the idea that an extremely A bus stops at every railroad crossing—even an old leng bus trip is very wearving, and that is quite true. rusting siding that obviously hasn't been used in 10 This is the second of a series of But here's something that only long-distance bus years. It's both a Government and a company rule.| five articles about one of Indianriders themselves know. And that is—after the first The driver always opens the door as he goes across.| apolis’ important business insti24 or 36 hours. vou get sort of a second wind. That's so if we get hit the door won't be jammed shut.| tutions, its beginnings, its growth The first night and the second day are the hard- And the next time a bus passes you and gives two, and its accomplishments. est You sleen only fitfully Four hours of sleep short toots, dam’ get mad. That is the drivers (Copyright, 1940. by The Indianapolis would cover the first night. Then through the second method of thanking you for pulling over (if you Times) dav vou're in sort of a daze. You feel dirty all over, have). After you hear it often enough, the “toot-} By H . and pinched up, and you have tail-bone trouble. toot” actually gets to sounding like “thank you.” y Harry Morrison Your eyes are squinty, But as the comfort of twilight Busses really go awfully fast, although it never N 1939. a total of 1300 comes. and vou've eaten and feel fat and relaxed, seems like it to the passenger. One of the drivers c : nd settle down for the long night-miles ahead, you told me the busses were held down by a governor to! manuscripts was received quit straining and a composure comes over you 50 miles an hour. Yet several times when sitting up| , > i yuh )» You sleep twice as much, and twice as restfully the’ front I saw the speedometer needle stand at 60 a the Bobbs-Me rrill Pubsecond night. From then on in, your physical tired- Each bus makes about a 12-hour run. and then you| lishing Co. here. Every one
ness re nain bout static IVerv perso ve talked { hange to another bus, baggage and all. They : a B person Ive walked have 16 chank x peas of them was read, although At rest stops after everybody else is in and ready] most of them were unso-
to has had this experienc change drivers about every six hours. Yas § a 33ND to go. the driver usually has to go hunt up one hazy $8 dca : ( ond nee " Dh wers individual who didn’t know we were leaving so soon. licited. In the first 11 day S The air-conditioning on the big busses, when con- He (or she) is the kind who never feels badly about of June, 50 manuscripts trolled right. takes away about 95 per cent of the holding up the other passengers, and who isn't the came in. One was solicited exhaustion that used to come from a hot summer least embarrassed by their stares of reproval. Old Seubert a bus trip Grandpa Pvle is alwavs on the bus at least five min- The truth is that in the
There is one thing, however, I could suggest to the utes before it ever thinks of leaving. last three vears only six unsolicited m anus cripts
Our Town By Anion Scherrer) t=: re» suo ad On uly 48h Vieksturg surrendered
published. Somewhere in : bi : sa oo 3 BILIA he book. The big his sh & Montian St shows where tne] tDESE WMANUSCEIDIS was a os x MORE MEMORABILIA for the DbOOK. he big his shop on S. Meridian SU ) Pe en idea back of today's piece is to show how and when Merchants Bank people now do business. That was touch of fire. And so Bobbs- Lett went into town on his muls by a street filled with debris. On either side ue em 1° The 1 life came Ag ag here Dack in 1840. Before that, Mr. Hodgkins owned (or| Merrill introduced a new tem he first angel cake made around her : followed a recipe published by Catherine Beecher, leased) a quarter block (one acre) where St. John's| author. les the oldest of the eleven Beecher Church now stands. It was an orchard which had That is why Bobbs-Merrill tlooks were gutted and black, Ee had emi Piskl. his wy in-ondew to get to the children to grow up. Originally formerly belonged to George Stun, we Te keeps going through the manu- ’ ) ~ ; the first newspaper in Indianapolis r. Hodgkins (en Plante there were thir therin rip ch Fe & Merchants Ee saw deri W be ib] of Eo ene equipped the orchard with seats and arbors, and SCripts . « . hunting that touch Banke the tall, John Hardwiok standing with was I or th othea & Ade 3 "decorated it with graveled walks and flower beds.| of fire. wit, her th an subsequently othe to dicated } Fo and When he got it fixed up to suit him. he ealier it The solicitation method is a —- viewing the wrecked bank, Everywhere wepe-obiver men taking stosk of the ae nel 11 ) AN al , wi his Cay t senerall “pleasure garden It was here he sold a home- hw s dot ts iplift her sex. It is DE . made quality of ice cream, the first anybody made complex one. Ii Soh In an) damage. Thelr faces were mostly impassive, Fow that it was over, rolisf wrestled with 1. James Whitcomb Riley, pici oe iv in Indianapolis number of ways. Besides “friends Noon Tis f¥ent Town Cnn i the »wrid than a lot of marrie ve $ Jil : . te women. pn 2 = 8 of the firm,” there are the regular rising bitterncss and sense of losses The Yankee soldiers had not yet been tured loose birthday party in his honor. Left The Beecher recipe called for Th first Qusters : literary agents, professors, book to right, the men are Strickland the whites of 15 eggs which was The Fi Oy sellers, magazine writers, review- on the town; the flow of normy he suietprted had not yo! started, lett cast a Gillilan, Mr. Riley, Meredith hy angel cake was baked only Item 5: The first oysters were brought to In-j ers, all of whom carry on a con- pare PEL had Nicholson, D. L. Chambers, now for very s occasions. The fact. too. that the dianapolis by James Blake. They were the “pickled” | tinual correspondence with of- aritical eye around for A poeribie £1ahestand, phos Ahat-woutd-be-well-Tooxted president of Bobbs-Merrill, and cake would | fall if anvbody walked across the kitchen kind. They had to be in order to be transported in| ficials of the company Hewitt H. Howland, then Bobbsconstituted such a risk that most women were scared summer. Two young women wield a Guards were coming in and taking their places Merrill editor. to try it, Around 1829. Mr. Blake did a right nice business| Keen-edged sword on the stacks P . : It wasn't until the Nineties when the New York running a fleet of six-horse Conestoga wagons be-| of unsolicited manuscripts. One 1; 2. John W. Curtis, the pioneer Store advertised a new kind of cake pan, guaranteed tween here and Philadelphia. Leaving Indianapolis, of them sits at the desk which book salesman, He made his books and all conditions, the wagons were loaded with ginseng, an ornery weed | Earl Derr Biggers used when he : — attractive. had the courage to trv it. (genus Panax, family Araliacoe) which grew around] was assistant manuscript editor Thus came “The Phantom and sold books like you'd sell R. CHAMBERS says there v was the New York Store's here like wild. It was considered good for nothing| years ago. You ought to remem- Crown” and the resultant motion anything else—with a splurge. was never any foundation 3. A sample piece of copy. It soos were necessary to make until Mr. Blake discovered that he could sell all] ber Mr. Biggers. He wrote the picture, “Juarez.” It started Ber- 3 # 8 for the persistent rumor that Mr. appeared in a Bobbs-Merrill Today voure lucky to bite he got to Philadelphia. In Philadelphia, the Indian-} Charlie Chan stories. tita Harding off on a brilliant ca- OBBS-MERRILL vublished all Riley didn't like chiidren, book, “The Keepers of the House,” > made of nine (9) eggs apolis weeds were loaded onto ships bound for China If the two consider a manu- Teerasa biographer. of James Ein De - “Some of the funniest memories by Harry Harrison Kroll. The editime around 1845. Henry Ward The Orientals used the stuff for every conceivable script worth taking a second look # _ # 9 books esce t the first o ¢ d ° I have of the old gentleman, tor's markings show clearly. ine’s brother. raised the first cauli- domestic and medicinal purpose. Returning from| at, it goes to other Indianapolis LL this had its beginnings few < HY editio 9 h he a - however.” savs Bobbs-Merrill ~ 1 i h r ie’ 1S wer ith | reader > viv rit . +t “k arlv dave 8 i S C y . . lis. Chances are that Mrs. Beecher Philadelphia, Mr. Blake's wagons were loaded with{ readers who give written reports back in the early days of BO A A Haig : hid president, “are connected with the pened to hear a portion of a lechite sauce to go with it tobacco, flour, whisky. spun yarn, gunpowder and| of their opinion. If the reports Bobbs-Merrill when John Curtis De 5 WAH > BLE viodic visits of d mothers us a ; picked oysters are favorable and agree With the Was its vice president. “If we taken over by the local house periodic visits of proud mothers. tyre Halliburton gave at PrinceA had ¢ agre 1 tne as W < = > : “« y Ww : 54 i - ’i +r Vorlk n 2B a1 Item 6: The vear after Mr. Blake brought tors esti the work it ic could BRA a script with During all those vears until Mr. They would come in with their ton. He wired his New York office os & : editor's estimate of the work, it i 1 nanuscript { g . r tailed or r and ask Mr instruct “Get Hall the Civil [| ar Did ovsters to Indianapolis, he surprised the natives with then referred to D. Laurance enough appeal,” he said, “and Riley's death in 1916, there was pig- ails progeny S : Mr. curt Ins ructions to et alli=- : a consignment of celery. He said everybody in Phila-| chambers. president of the firm Advertise it from one end of the never a contract, written or oral. Riley to listen to them Tecite burton. Tomatoes weren't considered fit to eat delphia ate celery with his oysters. and head of the company's trade nation to the other, we would He would simply stroll into the Litfle OTphen Arnie’ Heals pJaliouron caine to 1nd/ansjio. until after the Civil War, despite the historical fact Item 7: And I'don’t know how true it is. but division. . have something that would make Bobbs-Merrill office and sit down half a dozen children recite that lis. When he left he had a conthat Alexander Ralston raised them in his garden on somebody once told me that the first bunch of wo us a real publishing house.” across from the editor. one poem was a strain on any- tract for his first book. It was Ww, Mas Yond St. as early as 1824. bananas seen in Indianapolis was brought by one of OMETIMES Lk = He and his colleagues set Out to “I've got another book” he body and while Mr. Riley detested called “The Royal Road to RoItem 4: The first to make and sell candies around the Van Camps. It was hung from the chandelier in in A as ? ye ene find the manuscript. But, oddly ° would say. it, he did it with outward aplomb. mance.” Seven other Halliburton here was John Hodgkins, an Englishman who had the front parlor the night his daughter was married. fhe) will submit a manu- enough, it came to them. The And they would go to work on He would never let a child know hooks followed it. seript c ~ panv doesn’ me opi : . y o ’” va . So. re he Sempany. Soe author was Charles Major, a it. There was never a disagree- he was displeased. Bobbs-Merrill was planning an Pree ’ ArCOl= voung Shelbyville lawver. He ment. Mr. Riley wrote. The Then there was Dick Halli- eighth when the S. S. President
. i s11thmitt : : ' 3 . B Ra mond ( lapper bald Rutledge He 5 mitted 2 Wrote: “When Knighthood Was company published burton. Young Halliburton was at Coolidge in mid-Pacific got that as 1n on y y '| manuscript and one chapter men- Flower.” It sold a million Mr. Chambers is recognized as Princeton when a doctor told him fateful message from Halliburton:
were blackened relice of houses, The cathedral was almost in ruin, The business
bake “angel f {" under any
p m ti s father, a colonel : : ; rverthvrot “ a , oned his father, a colonel. The copies and Bobbs-Merrill was one of the warmest of Riley's he was a hyperthyroid case. But Decks awash, Wish you were
book was turned down, but the rie tENA in our Tee . : Nw , oD WASHINGTON. July 3 —White House support for Before long, defense orders as such probably will] author was asked why he didn't Es of the nation’s great ev He yew jun When she 7 Was isk he eoniny Be the company has a book the Stettinius-Knudsen Defense Commission has so come into competition Bt various points wih private) Hy lo Write a book Bloat his “They went to Maurice Thomp- Washington St., where the west He ran away from Princeton entitled “Richard Halliburton, far been all that have been desired commercial Orders. No serious problems of Huis kind father. Perhaps you read the re- son. @ scholar, They urzed him end of AVIes store now stands. and then came back, took a deep His Story of His Life's Adventure,” A real test -ht the President down firmly on have as yet developed, but when they do, it is the plan sult: “My Colonel and His Lady to write fiction. Out came “Alice There was a fireplace in the breath and finished his schooling. made up of letters written to his side of the co on. It concerned central- 10 Set Jp 2 Separate office Not connected In any Soon alter Bertita | Harding of Old Vincennes.” It sold almost store and Mr. Riley used to come Then he went away again. This mother and father from his early ; : procurement a Na re co en A mmieseon, the Government Tame > Lysine mois re gate 8 as well as Mr. Major's book. in and talk with the rest of the time he went all around the world. boyhood to the end of his life. spent Hee oe has x BE or tarp DE rr a Hy m bs Mr. Curtis was a real salesman literati of Indiana and Indianap- He came back to New York and Bobbs-Merrill fear that will States Gox cramint the he shall make this and not that. So long as the con- her husband, “There's an pr 1; was he who ool ihe ides of ols _ ' _— rise tosell he publishing houses De tte lost of Halirton, Sycen: Navy and the Treas- flict is between the Army and Navy, the Government! prospect!” putting a book jacket on a book, : He was the shyest man I ever there a book about what he had the part that will always live in yeurement Office. Jealous- can decide that directly. But asking a manufacturer A talk with Mrs. Harding re- pr inted in gay colors. It was he knew,” says Mi Chambers, ‘At seen and done. his books. : save been intense for to lay aside a commercial order is something else} A thi Kae ChE Rar wih Who first used the jacket for some- the same time, he abhorred being 5 72 They are all convinced at the waordination wae in again vealed that, while she had writ- thing besides protection. He put alone. In later years when he office that Halliburton, “the most i lH a TO © Sine defense © Si co oso | ten a novel, the subject nearest a resume of the story inside the wasn't so active he used to drive E wrote sample chapters and jjkaple man we ever met,” is erative if the ordering of de- wince the gon commission 1s concentrating her heart was the romantic story jacket Indeed. it Was John Cur- up to the door of the shop and peddled them from office to dead > I Re a uy TY ot RG A gr Pa TR in WR he of Carlota and Maximilian. Mr. tis who took the book business out plead with some of us to take a office. Nobody wanted them. Then : ———— re le 3 —~ or point in being careful not wo saddle it with the| Chambers urged her to write it. of the “respectably dead” class ride with him. came Mr. Chambers. He hap- NEXT—The lawbook business. agencies tesk of trying to enforce priorities and thus setting]
Te Stine Kuen come tanfiets Jeon te torn ane see: TRAFFIC TOLL Police Department Constructs Model Scientific Laboratory
and Treasury procurement be combined. Every- LV to the President, is therefore desired to relieve the
EE Per I TIT SET wees ti mi ede IN STATE RISES To Increase 'Fire Power Against Activity of Local Criminals
was brought into Treasury procurement. : of the Treasury Morgenthau was agree- 1he Two Major Tasks th A ; : ’ Ll Td Wi d the post set up under the Similarly the defense commission has at its own Rae and Hunter Will Move % - a : ‘Nothing Forgotten It S a rgentiiau anted thie post set nqaer “hy n , . Iai > pie ; y . . : 3 5 . . . The Stettinius-Knudsen group wanted it desire been relieved of responsibility for issuing export Governor s Aids Report 113 Into Compact Rooms : ge A a : Criminologist’s Dream
the
to the selection of Nelson. But Seclicenses just authorized under new legislation. Under
carried to the President. He de- this b o . : ; i a ui : 8 : i A RRpre : 3 his power, export of materials or equipment deemed : ; ] ; Lo FTE : i belo ties the el ente Commision necessary for national defense may be forbidden by Pedestrians Killed in On Friday. n ii God Come True. agreeing that there she ould be no separation of a KeY (he refusal to grant a license. A separate agency Traffic in 1940 By DAVID MARSHALL ; En Tae bo An ultra-violet lamp under which
man from that bod) #2 8 will handle that, again excusing the defense agency The Indianapolis Police Depart-| ; ; Si ; ait 3 3 ; i invisible blood or chemical stains
Th e Priority P voblem with manufacturers jumped 34 per cent in the first fve ment's most deadly weapon—science i Foi Be : pry ¢ | stand out like ink blots on a In general the disposition is to keep the defense |’ peel 0 Dep cen : “| —now is more devastating than ever on g— fae EL tablecloth of the troublesome question commission clear for two maior tasks The first months of 1340 over a similar 1939 | before. 3 § ; ARE RS & ) . f = eing. At present the prin- is to insure a supply of needed materials—raw mate- |period, according to the Governor's; A new scientific crime detection | 53 : i 5 i : ning has been forgasen Jute cipal ty problems arise almost entirely from rials such as rubber and tin, and manufactured mate- | Co-ordinating Safety Committee laboratory. said by local officials to| §&& TE ; Ta ! ; | ting from the wall above and on conflic stween the Army and Navy. Co-ordinator rials such as armor plate. That is under Stettinius.| yo . «a. i iS lve second only to the Federal) Bod Soon WEN * : 4 or % | each side of the sink are five water Nelson is in a position to decide these conflicts and The second task is to turn out the finished weapons| I 2 five-month period last year|, =.=" 1 vestigations crack lab- § 5 » ; : nozzles, a compressed-air jet, five to advise manufacturers which orders are to be given —the actual factory production of guns, airplanes and {there were 84 Hoosier pedestrian | oratory at Washington, was com-| } : ; 5 i eS 81s ouliets atid » vacuum pam. preference in cases where production facilities are not tanks. That is under Knudsen. Any additional re-|deaths; this vear there have been | pleted today Running: clear around the wall equal to current deman Anoiner of gis tasks is sponsibilities that interefere with those two activi-{j13 By LOMO TOW the last of some 2 : Shiest high are electric outlets every to standardize specifications. Army and Navy speci- ties w t os Sir av] " 3 ew inches. fo Sant FT eI i Re Pp a wo Sr overburden and to dissipate ener- The Committee also reported that $5000 worth of equipment, Ww hich can : i CW ; ; It's a criminologist’s dream come there were 75 more persons dead|mean life or death to a suspect,|. ; ; ‘8 2 Lira. from traffic Seeidents in the five| Will be in place. Friday, criminolo- , months of this vear than died in gist Roderic Rae and his assistant,
My Day By Eleanor Roosevelt|:m re i» ime Ee a een, compet aun 3 SE EDUCATORS URGE cent. a a | he ADEQUATE DEFENSE
from work that would involve irritations and conflicts Indiana pedestrian fatalities have
HYDE PARK, Tuesday. —It is so rare in this world the rest of the woodwork in the church is oak. As Indiana traffic deaths, however. Back in Ieee, i is A «Eons, that anyone wants to take away from any credit given a rule, I do not care much for oak as a decorative decreased 3 per cent during May, as | What har y pod dark. windowless ¢ MILWAUKEE, July 3 (U, P.).—= 3 3 . > . 3 ( S Dy 2 3 RA them, and gives it to somebody else, that I must tell wood, but Otto Berge has finishgd this so beautifully [compared to the same month in 8 1ory ter by -hole, 52x22 feet : 2 & & | A resolution advocating “such prevou that Mrs. Stephen Wise insists I created a wrong that I was very happy over it. I hope that when it{1939. py oi 5 5 neh § 3 i J . «z : ; ft 1g through houses for ref 5 ts d ic : ; ; : . |A work bench took up so much 3 , paredness as will make the United impression after going through houses for refuge. reaches its destination, it will look well in the little] Rural deaths outnumbered city’ : serson could get in| & N 3 + ver dav. These are run by church. deaths by almost three to one jn|ro0m only one pers > 3 2a | States fully able to defend itself
rican Jewish Congress, I am giving my broadcast today from the big house May, although rural fatalities of Rb 5 sme the Safety Board in-| & HR gL a aR | but without interrupting normal women's 2vision up here for the first time. It has been wired for the|275 to me have increased only 15 oe . Ne Rae had to go into — educational services was submitted and maintained them President, so that makes it possible for me to speak {Per cent, while city deaths, totaling; : : hay Times Photo. ’ r ) hrough voluntary gifts. from there. ¥ P 150, have mounted 35 per cent. ®|the hall so os TSI ere soul Criminologist Roderic Rae, left, and his assistant, Howard Hunter today Jo the National Education I forgot to mention one rather So Rumania has had to join Hitler in order to| Ft. Wayne, Evansville, Indianapo- |} through Ne E d decided he| » + + in their new laberatery. Association's 78th annual convenimportant fact—that while the gain protection, and the islands of Guernsey and|lis, South Bend and Gary rank in The Safety Doan ; management has been entirely in Jersey in the English Channel, which are demilitarized {that order in their 1940 death rate , : i wow . the hands of the women’s di- and half evacuated, now have the swastika flying over based on population. Muncie out- small room ih al pig 3 — summer ; i SUIth unseen particles into Images vision of the American Jewish them. This should help Hitler from the point of view [ranks other cities between 25,000 Ruded. of a under a nearby Mr. Rae hasn't forgotten a thing. | of boulder dimensions. line of national defense is to be Congress, they have accepted of dairy products. but then perhaps the children inj{and 70.000. persons, having had no HE Ie relop the photogiran He has: : A drunkometer to test suspected); ...q in the loyalty, intelligence refugees on an entirely non- Germany feel as some of our children did who had|traffic fatalities. Stairway lo gre OD GRt ae ™ Hundreds of chemicals stored in}major criminals so detectives can health. technical skill self-discip= sectarian basis. Not only Jewish, been unable to have butter for a long time. A butter| Headquarters area of the state Sa > Raat] he stooped S| Justproel. glass Jronted ealinels rely on their comprehension. line and character of the citizens but Catholic and liberal Protes- substitute seems to become a habit and children pre-|police. comprising Marion County, OUI Ges Mn tell pr Te 2 ho Ee pe A comparison or ballistics micro- {and not in regimentation of youth tant refugees from Germany, fer it to real butter, holds a 26 per cent reduction |" Then six weeks ago, WPA work- {poison being tested ? scope through which bullets fired !oharacteristic of totalitarian counhave found a haven here The importance of these islands, of course, is fatalities under an average of the, en supervised by Sergt. Frank Gal- A balance. or scales. which is so |from the same gun look like identi- tries.” I did a considerable amount of work vesterday, simply that they become another base from which |previcus five vears lag} Sw the Police Department's sensitive it can measure the weight | cal twins. phi ion even though I felt I had spent a very free day. After Germany can operate more easily against South- — oe Ral nari e man. began ripping out | difference of two hairs i A burnisher for “polishing out” our luncheon guests departed, Miss Thompson and I ampton, which is an important port. SOLDIER KILLED, 13 HURT walls in part of the garage A helixometer which measures |Serial numbers which have been BLOOMINGTON BOY DROWNS sat at our desks until 6 o'clock, when we called on We have heard so little lately of submarine activ-{ HONOLULU, July 3 (U. P).— “The Department furnished part |the rifling of a gun barrel that | “erased” from guns to avoid de- BLOOMINGTON, Ind. July 3 (U, some of the neighbors. Otto Berge. the head man ity that one feels encouraged to believe that the ships| Private Kenneth C. Loimaugh was|of the labor and all of the ma- [leaves such an indelible mark on tection. P.) —Thestle L. Wall, 19, of Bloom= who took over our furniture shop a few years ago and which carry children from Europe will come through killed and 13 other soldiers slightlv| terials. The new 27 by 32-foot lab | its bullets. An X-ray machine to detect|ington, drowned yesterday in an who makes beautiful pieces of furniture in his own safely. The responsibility of the crew and the people!injured yesterday when a cable car sparkles under the six flourescent A camera which, with a micro- | bomb-laden packages. abandoned quarry northwest of here barn with the help of the machinery we gave him, who care for the children on this trip must be heavy at Schofield Barracks rock crushing |tubular lights which augment the scopic lens, can “blow up” in one| A spectograph which tells, with while swimming with friends. His has made a lectern for me to send to an Indian indeed and one hopes that no Submarine will have|plant jumped from its track and |daylight flooding through two large operation anything the size of a|rainbow bands, whether metal par-|body was recovered three hows , church out West. It is made of oak because the heart to attack them. crashed into a guich. i windows. The whole laboratory is|postage stamp to 8 by 10 inches, ticles came from the same solurpe
.
, S : , tion, needed more room so in 1938 aj. .iiated im both winter and| Two 2500-power microscopes which
The Association's resolutions com= mittee declared that the “ultimate
SN TAFEUILE titan taast tris esttrasttss css OU EmUUY JILL AF WD seen ? ; a LVL alan amaver ee ’ v J Bh ARSE we ARR GR AYURIARIATTR
