Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 August 1940 — Page 17
THURSDAY, AUGUST 1, 1940
The Indianapolis Times
SECOND SECTION
By Ernie Pyle
—"“heefing them up” with stronger parts and better bearings. And when the Liberties were all gone, Allison kept going through thick and thin by making these superior bearings ior other airplane engines. kven today it supplies the vital crankshaft bearings for nearly all our airplane engines. And then when this country was having its fling with dirigibles, back in the early Thirties, Allison was commissioned by the Navy to build a dirigible engine, one that vou could run either forward or backward, like a boat engine. The death of American dirigibles left Allison stuck with its dirigible engine—yet that very engine was the father of today's magnificent Allison motor. We come on up through the Thirties. Jim Allison was dead. General Motors had bought out the company, and 1t had become the Allison Division ot G. M. In the mid-Thirties it was Still largely an experimental shop, but one now with plenty or capital, = un ”n
Further Expansion Likely
Although the Army had no liquid-cooled airplane engines in regular use, it still kept experimenting. It gave occasional small orders to Allison, and kept trying them out. Each change in design brought a bigger and bigger engine—and one closer to perfection. And then, just a little more than a year ago, the lid was off. An Army contract was awarded that justified Allison in opening the throttle and going straight to town. The Army wants engines, and more engines, and more and more engines. A vear ago Allison began building what is probably the most modern engine plant in the world. The foundation wasn't in until a bigger one was demanded. The first tool-machine wasn't set in until it had | to be moved to make room for others. Engine build- | ers mingle side by side with workmen setting up | new machines that have just arrived. A whole new | wing is ready for tooling. And orders tor more] widening may come tomorrow. Everything is in a| liquid state of expanding. Here within the walls of the Allison plant you| have our present national-defense picture all under one roof—its impetus, its urgency, its industrial genius, its terrific difficulties, and at last its accomplishments. Allison today is by far the biggest thing in Indianapolis. And in a sense, one of the really big things in America.
TOMORROW-—Who Makes the Engines.
Hoosier Vagabond
THERE ARE DAYS when the privileges of a newspaper reporter so fabulously surpass those of all other people that he feels inclined (within limits, of course) to send back his pay envelope for that day. Today has been one of those for me. For today I've been wandering deep within the almost sacred walls of the Allison airplane-engine plant. It was an experience nearly fantastic, and indeed exclusive. Allison makes engines only for the Government. Consequently, you don’t get inside unless the Government gives its permission. That comes to very few nontechnical men. My permission came from the War Department in Washington, subject to further approval by Wright Field, the Air Corps inspectors at the plant, and the Allison company itself. Somehow I ran the gamut. There came to me, from the Lord knows where, four separate copies of a telegram authorizing the visit. The hour and the day were set. I drove out to the plant. At the outer gate you have to convince a uniformed guard that your business is genuine. Then he shows you where to park. You enter a small lobby. behind which sits a guard. You that lobby unless somebody from inside, who knows all about vou beforehand, comes out and gets you. And even thev vou have to wear a badge. But once legitimately inside—you've somewhere, All this to-do about getting in didn't annoy me a hit. The things that are happening inside the Allison walls these days are vital, and I don't feel short-tempered when someone takes pains to make sure I'm not a Fifth Columnist. In fact I'd appreciate it if somebody could make sure I'm any Kind of columnist,
You sign up at a desk, never get beyond
really got
By Joe Collier HESE are the days of crisis on Indiana farms— crisis about which the farmer can do nothing. Before his eyes his crops are withering. Four or five more days of unrelieved heat not only will drasticallv reduce corn and soybean vields, but will do extensive damage to hay crops sown this year. Most pastures already are gone, Farm animals are suffering with the heat, and with them the farmer suffers economically. It's oven hot these days and nights in the country. It feels hot, looks hot, sounds hot. You see very litle daytime activity in either man or beast on these baked farms.
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How It All Began
The Allison Engineering Co. has a long history— a long, thin history like a stem, which suddenly blossomed out on top into a great flower. It goes back to the early davs of the Indianapolis Speedway. Jim Allison was one of the Speedway founders, and his shops in those days made and remade speed cars for the great 500-mile race. After the war, Allison kept going by rebuilding thousands of old Liberty engines for the Government
Our Town
EXCEPT FOR SOMETHING Wilbur Peat did this week, it wouldn't have occurred to me to tell you about the first ladies’ shoe store in the West, It was
the one David Chase started in Indianapolis in 1861. Mr. Chase, a general store keeper by profession and a fastidious gentleman by nature, came to Indianapolis by way of Williamsburg, Ind., a little town not far from Franklin. It now goes by the name of Ninevah. Soon as he arrived, Mr. Chase opened the biggest shoe store in the city. One part was curtained off and dedicated to the ladies. Not only that, but the floor of the ladies’ department was carpeted with what used to be called Turkey Red. Up until then nobody had ever thought of making such a fuss about women. Four years later, Mr, Chase found a place in the store for his 16-year-old son—in the men's department, of course, Had he been put into the ladies’ department the boy might have turned out better. Which is a polite way of saying that the kid was a flop when it came to selling men's shoes. Fact is, he didn't make any sales at all. He spent all his time drawing pictures on his father’s wrapping paper. x on
A Disappointed Father
Finally Father Chase couldn't stand it anv longer
By Anton Scherrer
He developed this thought at some length. As a matter of fact. it was the sole topic of conversation | all the way to Mr. Hays’ studio which occupied the third floor of a building on Pennsylvania St. It was] the one just south of where the American Bank peo-| ple now do business. | Barton S. Hays, a portrait painter, had come to| Indianapolis in 1858 and formed a partnership with a| photographer by the name of Runion. For his painted | portraits, Mr. Hays got $75, and $25 more if the client insisted on showing his hands. In his spare time, Mr. | Hays occupied himself with giving lessons, The new pupil was put to work copying pictures. A year later, Mr, Hays advised him to go to New York, | to the National Academy. At the Academy the boy| gave a good account of himself. Then he went to| Munich. After six vears in Germany he returned to; New York. Twenty years later he was the most ap-! plauded painter in America.
= » Last Visit in 1908 And that in a few words is the story of William| Merritt Chase, the boy who started his career as al shoe salesman right here in Indianapolis. In 1908 or thereabouts, William M. Chase, then at| the height of his career, visited Indianapolis. It was his last visit, 1 believe. On that occasion, Capt. Wal-| lace Foster came to see him and brought along a| mounted crayon portrait. Mr, Chase recognized it| right away and recalled that back in the old days! Capt. Foster ran a men's furnishings store on the] ground floor of the building in which Mr. Hays had|
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VEN chickens, usually the friskiest of the barnyard population, spend most of their time in shady spots, just sitting. In ordinary weather they peck speculatively at pieces of wood and stone and go into impromptu 100-yard dashes from one place to another. Now they are riot even pretending to eat. Some Marion County farmers report that their flocks have lost weight during the heat wave—lost weight at a time they should be geting fat for market. Hogs, usually almost always oc=cupied in rooting about in pastures, are hidden under buildings from the sun. They can't stand the heat. The hog population on
Heat
“They blink their eyes slowly and just stand.”
“Hogs are hidden under buildings from the sun.”
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BAA AIR
Doss to the Farm
“Farm animals are suffering with the heat and with them the farmer suffers economically.”
the hottest part of the day. They can stand heat beter than most farm animals. And it is only because of the severe heat that they are out of harness. Farmers don't like to work them in the heat. Most farmers have a genuine affection for the farm stock, apart from the economic interest, and they do all they can to relieve the suffering. Some of them close the barn tightly during the day, like the old country parlor used to be until guests arrived. Flies avoid its darkened interior and in a measure it stays cool,
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HEN night comes, the farme er will lead his panting stock to the barn, feed it from the mows and bins and leave it to as comfortable fly-free night as pose sible, They see to it that the stock has’ plenty of water, an essential to animals as well as humans as a hot weather must. But with all the farmer can do, the stock suffers more and more as the heat wave continues. Some farms have shady groves that are reasonably cool, and the stock on those farms is lucky. The water supply on many farms is getting low, with little creeks and sometimes springs dried up. That increases the farmer's work, since he must pump and carry water to his stock. The immediate cash milk, butter,
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ma NR Times Photos.
Bee Tg
income — poultry--and the
Marion County farms has been materially reduced through heat prostrations, says Horace Abbott, county farm agent.
“They just drag around for a while in this sort of heat, and then they die,” one farmer said. Three of his died this week
prospective cash income—hogs, corn, soybeans—dwindle, Even next year’s income is affected as the young grasses that would have become hay crops next year, burn. These heat wave days are days of crisis—days that drone on to the rasping dirge of the locust, the harbinger of heat.
the best shade available which sometimes is only a scraggly tree, Under it they stand, stamping and swishing at flies which add greatly to their discomfort. They blink their eyes slowly and just stand. Sometimes vou see horses gleaning the burned pastures even in
ILK production is down, as much as half in some herds. Cattle are being fed from the mow, of course, since there is not nearly enough pasture for them. But even then they don't eat full
rations, from their own choice, They seek only to find and keep
estett
and said: “Son, you have spoiled enough wrapping _ paper around here. Put on your hat. I'm going to take you up to Hays.” On the way over, the father with tears in his eves explained how disappointed he was not to make a businessman of his son; that he didn't have much hope of doing the right thing now, but he was willing to give the kid another chance. What griped him most, however, was the waste of wrapping paper.
Rubber and Tin
his studio. He remembered, too, that one day he
1 begged Capt. Foster for a sitting in order that he might make a portrait of him. The Captain had ‘W magnificent beard, possibly the most paintable pair of Burnsides anywhere around here. WEALTHY CLAN
When Capt. Foster died. the picture became the
property of the Herron Art Museum, the place Wilbur Rothschild Banking House
Peat runs. This week Mr. Peat brought out the old portrait and hung it up for everybody to see. Decentralized Before Nazi Invasion.
By Ludwell Denny
(Fourth of a Series) Whatever may have been the American public reWASHINGTON, Aug. 1.—The United has action to British policy toward Japan in the past, challenged Japan's threat {o the Dutch East Indies, there is general sympathy here today with British | upon which our country now depends for essential 4 y y | war materials including tin and rubber Whether the U. S. fleet, sent back to Hawaii to watch Japan, would fight presumably would be determined by: (1) shifting British policy;
States YICHY, Aug. 1 A.
of Rothschild which for
while she is fighting for life at home.
East
Asia and the South Seas. We would lose!
Spain is the land of refuge of
(2) Hitler's pressure in Latin America, (3) public opinion here. Meanwhile Secretary of State Hull has warned Japan that intervention in the domestic affairs of the Netherlands Indies would violate Japan's treaties with the United States and other powers,
P.). — The French branch of the great house a . f two cen-| reluctance to take on another war in the Pacific | turies has financed war and peace { for France, has been scattered by| Britain, of course, has much more to lose than the | the German invasion and occupaUnited States by Japanese totalitarian control of tion of three-fifths of the country.)
much of our Japanese trace, and our trade and in-!most of the members of the French |
vestments in China and elsewhere. Loss of our rub- wing of the family and their des-ber-tin sources in the East Indies would force us!cendants from marriages into back on Latin American sources and domestic sub-| French aristocracy and nobility. stitutes The Philippines—due for independence in 1946—probably would come under the Japanese heel. behind an unimposing and unBut tor Britain it would be worse. It would be the | marked exterior, was once the leadend of the Empire, which is and always has been ine money market of western based so largely on the East. Not only the Dutch | gyrope, is closed and the bank gold
The Paris banking house which, !
Kindness Pays Auto Parts Co.
CHICAGO, Aug. 1 (UU. P).— The favors the Martin Auto Parts Co. has given employees paid a cash dividend today. Almost three months ago the company paid $13.141 in overtime allowances to 93 employees on an order from the Federal Wages and Hours Administration. Ten of the employees appealed from that order. After 10 weeks’ deliberation, Alex Elson, Wages and Hours Division attorney, ruled that those 10 legally may return to the company $2686 awarded them. Charles G. Thomas, shipping clerk and spokesman for the group, explained: “The company has done us favors and we wanted to do one in return.”
NAZIS BURIED IN
CERMANS FEED
"Poor Concrete’ Is Inside the psychology of defense, the ikon
FRENCH NEEDY Story on Maginot's Fall | f defense was the bunker.
By DANA SCHMIDT | ‘| Saw Refugees Receiving STRASBOURG, Aug. 1. —How| The French stayed in their binke
United Press Staff Correspondent . France's Maginot Line, once be-|.,. ’ ‘ ; ; ters. Th 5 we ated Rations of Meat, Bread, [lieved to be the mightiest fortifica-| S EE Wire rin movement and attack and conside Reporter Says.
tion in the world, collapsed in a few | weeks is one of the stories that re-|eted their forts only temporary ace Be WEEXANDER DRER mains to be told about this strangest |cessories to be resorted to only when y XANDE ars. i 3 United Press Staff Correspondent jg of four viewspapernien | Thder Ires Vins Jk nde in aw BERLIN, Aug. 1—The German from Berlin were the first civilians | 8'Ve tirels own STUlrY Unie fo wok | welfare organization, National So-| [0 Visit it since the end of the war up an i RRL l.iadhs spe 4 : lin France. Here is what I saw and |which they could go over to attack, | cialistische Volkswohlfahrt, has fed, what I was told by our German mil-| 1; was a contest between old tested |cared for and clothed more than itary guides. Tn a 53 i five million destitute French civil-| The concrete with which {gl ITHS Billy OW WHI fe Velunone bunkers were constmucted was ex- ary warfare. The Maginot Line was
jans since June 14, German officials
told foreign correspondents. [resisting a blitzkrieg. Standing on Traveling in France as a guest|a pontoon bridge in the middle of of the German Propaganda Minis-|the Rhine I saw French bunkers try, IT had the opportunity to ob- that had been reduced to heaps of serve the organization in action [gray gravel by enemy artillery, while It has established 85 welfare sta- on the other side, almost intact, the tions throughout occupied France, German forts showed hardly more
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[cellent for sidewalks, but not fora symbol of the one which lost.
RADIO TELEPHONE
JUNE RECORD SET
NEW YORK, Aug. 1 (U. P).—The
with &n administrative personnel of than blotched and scratched Sur- american Telephone & Telegroph
576, including political leaders, doc- faces. 'Go. reported today that June traifie o § 'S tae] B s Ni Secr | : hs ; tors, nurses and members of the Concrete Is Nazi Secret lover ‘the ‘Bell System's ‘radio telew
German Brown Sister organization, | . A German engineer told me that [phone circuits to South America
East Indies, but the British East Indies, and Burma | i ipped abroad for and India itself would go eventually. What would | tne 1S Fetords Snip; a
become of Australi N eal $ | me ustralia and New Zealand is one of the Paid Huge Indemnity | =
fears haunting London and Washington. At the end of the Franco-Prus-
Russia an Obstacle |sian war, in 1871, the Rothschilds
So this is a fight for oil, tin, rubber and the re-| Ose to great renown by paying off | sources which make empires power ul in peacetime With a single check the whole of and mighty in war. It is more than that, however. |the indemnity which Germany deThe stakes are the balance of power in almost half manded of France — 5,000,000,000 the world. gold francs. This sum Was paid] Though the Japanese militarists dream big, many Off well in advance of the date factors might prevent their successful subjugation of | fixed to obtain the premature dethe entire eastern Pacific even if Britain fell to Hitler | parture of the German armies and the Uniled States were unable and unwilling to from Paris. Later the national fight there alone. | government of MM. Thiers — the Even if Japan were not opposed externally, it is|third French republic — borrowed doubtful that her powers of digestion are great|ithe money from its citizens and enough tc gobble up so many lands and seas and so repaid the Rothschilds. many millions of rebellious peoples. At best the| At the start of this war, the Job would require many years, and it might kill Rothschilds began decentralizing Japan in the process. | their French banking business, hav-| Moreover, one mighty Eastern nation would be ing the example of what happened | left to challenge Japan. That is her traditional to the Austrian branch where Bar-
0 3 : enemy and present nightmare—Russia. i schild | the Burma Road dispute and the China war itself X e pp Rosle Oe Or
But Japan has already violated the treaties by conquest of Manchuria and China. At the time of the Manchurian conquest, Secretar’ of State Stimson warned Britain and France that if Japan was permitted to violate the Far Eastern treaties, Italy and Germany would soon follow with conquest of Africa and Europe. They did. British policy in the Far East always has wavered between a Japanese alliance and co-operation with us. Thovgh the United States after the World War broke the Anglo-Japanese alliance, a strong British Tory group continued to play with Tokvo and against Washington.
Sympathy for Britain
Britain on June 18 met most of Japan's terms in the Tientsin dispute—"“blackmail,” the British Labor.tes called it, In at first refusing Japan's demand to close the Burma Road, Britain for the moment bowed to American opinion. But with another typical shift of policy, Britain again is trying to appease Japan, and to settle both
k
. . officials told me. In addition, there |, t : £ | Mothers and Wives Advised approximately 450 members of pore Ea ade of [and across the Pacific broke all . . [the German Motor Corps assisting. | .. a. adequate onlv for non-mili- Previous records, with a total of Against Asking Return Organization headquarters were en German bunkers are nearly 2000 messages. B di first at Brussels, then at Lille and |, we of fine pravel and a mixture| Indications are that July will Of Bodies. pow in Pa a als oh hot Cement ‘Which Nas been ‘a Ge. equal the June record, the report Belgium "Iman military secret since the World Ea, BERLIN, Aug, 1 ‘U. p) ~The of - | istration, War. In addition, the crushed French | ficial German News Agency said) at pe Havre I saw refugees and |pillhoxes reveal reinforcements of today that Germany's war dead! gestitute local civilians receiving | onarjed steel rods only about ~ne TEST YO U R will ‘be buried where they fell and rations of meat, vegetables andinglf jnch in diameter. Ge .nan that German mothers and WIVES preaq from seven supply houses. Iti forts are reinforced with steel KNOWLEDGE who would like to have “their sons wag told that they got them daily.|girders and railway rails. or husbands in death back in their supply houses are administered by ~ pyrther, the front and side walls | native land, ‘have been asked t0/ the French. The supplies are Ob-iqf the French bunkers are appropri- 1—The oldest living things today tet them remain in graves arranged tained from abandoned British | ately 10 feet thick. but the flat rear | are considered to be Sequoias, by military authorities. | supplies, which, according to the wall is only a little more than four| turtles or whales? The cemeteries in foreign lands Germans, were sufficient “to last|feet thick. As a result, as soon as 2—Quicksilver is another name for where German armies have fought! five years.” the Germans broke one link in the| What metal? will become “places of holy pligrim-| Men and women ith raggedly | chain of forts, they were able to 3= What ey pe Great age for relatives in the entire na- clothed, bawling babies In ir take the rest of the line from the] sake: : tic? x J } tion of Hitler vouth and voung!larms, stand for hours to receive weakly defended rear. (4—Who wrote the biography of by a so-called compromise acceptable to Tokyo. NEXT—Japan Fears Russia, and held for ransom. | soldiers,” the Agency said. | their portions. Fast talking French| How the German High Command| Benjamin Franklin that won the (Raymond Clapper Is on vacation) n Sells Stables | “Shoulder to shoulder as they officials handling food distribution determined what was the weakest | Pulitizer prize in 1939? a Cg fought,” the Agency said, “our sol-!do everything possible to accelerate|point in the line was explained to | 9>—To what rou ten department | Of the French branch, Baron diers rest in the soil they consecra- the movement of the thousands in us by our guides. For a week Ger- een Se ‘ a By Eleanor Roosevelt over de Rothschild, head of the ted with their blood. As they the lines, Officials said that ap-'man artillery maintained a mild ° C8 vin En, TT family and head of the bank. as turned out in rank and file they! proximately 13000 are being fed uniform fire along the entire line pie o He wales ipostate | well as outstanding sportsman and now lie side by side, whether off- daily at Le Havre. They say they to determine, by detailed statistics, = des “Bt tu, Brute” mean? 0 , W § mer, sold his stables, jeer ivate. Death no longer have served 25000000 meals since whence came the weakest French | : Coes “Et tu, ; HYDE PARK, Wednesday. —How we rationalize I have never beens 'Verv er i iat | racehorse owner, so =» 1cer or private. 8 J . ; 8—Cockroaches are nocturnal or with omstives! 1 De nr a ve, Jationglize ; Nn ey $f! partisan. I believe| .jocad his bank and went to Spain| recognizes rank. They are now only the “3érman invasion. response. This turned out to be diurnal in habits? doing certain things for very high-minded reasons © ATEWNg things out, as clearly and with as little with all his family. He departed comrades.” = across from Kaiserstuhl Mountain and Scan always find a hundred ee arguments to 1cat as possible, and trusting to the fundamental later for America. | The Agency assured arene [BRITISH SUBJECTS EE nage Vl Brot vows meet any doubts that I have, So, why should I be common sense and wisdom of the majority of the| Baron hi hg jreihschild. mothers ahd wives that the Marking Stud Forests With Guns 1—Sequoias. i NE gi Pe 144 De Joy oy Be ong i umes of | ent to England. Baron Robert de | carne Gl ASKED TO VOLUNTEER! Swiftly and secretly the Germans a, y same thing—and yet course, an 1at Is why minorities go on working ; n ilv to Spain. | « a . v Istudded the forests and hills around| 5 Sv Lawrence. I always am! for the things in which they believe. Roussehid I re <i Nation N ot Toner] WASHINGTON, Aug. 1 (U. P.) — Breisach with guns. At 10 o'clock 4—Carl Van Doten, Alfred E. Smith, for instance, It frequently happens that they eventually become d Eugene, also migrated ary a ji th The British Embassy today invited on the morning of June 15, when 5—Department of Justice. in the papers this morning, in- the majorities. If this were not In Rs g worthy of their deeds to 088 Silo iti : | y id rtres 6—Five dollars, g J tL the case, once a [pilots and other British subjects who heavy fogs hid the fortresses of sists that the salvation of the pattern was set, it would alway sacrificed in the war. The stone DP . tev Trem iy Siri 1 7— Thou, alse, Brutus.” p uld always remain, regardless | | : came to this country from the!Chains, Mignty and Oreposing from Democratic Party is in ridd of what changes came about york {OI every ‘grave will conform for, all i ingd ili | $6 ni y ing Wn g ame about In the work from | ¢ ! 2 S | 4 th tf the soldier his| United Kingdom, who are of mili- | one another, German guns suddenly i once and for all, of those who political reasons, or from reasons of mere evolution. | Here S r Oo he tio ont Wy residence [tarv age and who have certain ‘began blasting with concentrated . represent the New Deal and who It is only because the majority of us do change, | v ‘ ' | Bl ata death” | technical qualifications, to volunteer fire. Anti-tank shells ripped holes ASK THE TIMES APparently control 1t for the that there is any chance for progress in the human | Don tf Kill Me | 38®, and date of death. for service with the British Army. [as big as a man's hand in steel turon Se oe us feel Po . Liat 5 i | BOY TUMBLER INJURED The Embassy said there is no lack 'rets from all angles before the Inclose a 3-cent stamp for rat Oo gly 3a ; 3 were L Save Just been over to say goodby to my | BIRMINGHAM, Ala, Aug. 1 | ) . of manpower in Great Britain and [French could recover from their sur-| reply when addressing any i CDTi (ev) 2 an oo Int a a i wu start on her journey to| (U, P.).—Add ways not to get Charles Amos, 14, of 1567 E. 73d no question at present of any gen- prise, Exactly 20 minutes later, the| question of fact or information ee ee Nich popresen 5, Campopefo 15and, New Brunswick, Canada, on| murdered: | St. was injured yesterday as heleral cali of Britons in America for first line French bunkers were silent,| to The Indianapolis Times W : > no Democratic Friday before I return from Washington. | Charles W. Streeter, 20, told po- [and his playmates practiced a!military service. [their guns destroyed, the bunkers| Washington Service Bureau, Party and perhaps no Republican Party left in the I have a leter from Washington this momring,| lice today he paid another man 1013 13th St, N. W., Washingcountry today. ; : : bakh which tells me that the heat there is so terrible| $2 not to kill him. He said they ton, D. C. Legal and medical There you see in a nutshell how perfectly honest advice cannot be g! people can think differently on the same subject and he under: argue themselves mto such reasonabie positions.
| tumbling act they expected to give But air pilots, wireless operators, ‘heaps of loose gray gravel, ; | at the ‘Ravenswood carnival. A pole engineers, skilled tradesmen, elec-| The most important factor of ‘all that all those who are working for patriotic reasons,| had a fight and when he saw he [that was holding a net broke and|tricians and others with have to remind themselves frequently otf their patri-| was losing he handed over the extended research be wundertaken,
special lis the intangible one of the psychostruck Charles’ head. He was treat-|skills ‘will be welcomed now, it|logical training of troops, the Gerotism, or they would run away to a cooler climate. money as a bribe,
ed at City Hospital and sent home. said. mans said, French psychology was
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