Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 August 1940 — Page 11
mC AR rang
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 7, 1940
The Indianapolis Times
SECOND SECTION
Hoosier Vagabond
(Last of a Series)
A TALL, DARK-HAIRED man with a forceful face is Olto Kreusser, His nickname is “Pop,” al though he is just entering early middle age, He swears, and has an odd accent that affects oniy part of his speech. For instance he says “doyed” for died, and “toime” for time, and he draws them way out like a note on a fiddle. He also has a vocabulary that would make a college professor sit up and take notice. He is, to steal and slightly twist a famous newspaper motto, “Easy to see and worth seeing.” In fact, he is one of the most im=pressive men I've ever met. He is one of the bosses of the Allison Division of General Motors. That is the plant that makes the engines that are about to be heard around the world. Mr. Kreusser is one of those industrial geniuses who are practically anonymous to the public-at-large, General Motors apparently is full of them. They are men so immensely capable in their jobs that they seem almost to attain a spiritual force from the bulk of their knowledge Mr, Kreusser won't even allow his picture to be taken, yet you can walk in and see him and he'll talk till the cows come home. And talk honestly and frankly and on your own level. He 15 a native New Yorker, and got his engineering at Pratt Institute. He has been with General Motors more than 20 vears, at Davton and in Michigan. He came here four vears ago on n »
Sunday His ‘Day of Rest’
He has a daughter ready to enter Stephens College, and a son of 12 who plays the accordion with adult perfection. The Kreussers bought an old house just north of Indianapolis and remodeled it into what must be one of the loveliest estates in the Midwest, Mr. Kreusser is seldom home in the evening before 9 o'clock. But Sunday # his day of rest. He takes it easy on Sunday. He doesn’t get down to the plant on Sundays till 9:30 a. m It was my good fortune articles at the Allison plant get a Jot of attention.
that visitors are rare Since they are rare, they I sat and talked with Otto
Our Town
AT A TIME and statesmen
LIKE THIS when scared prophets and economists go whistling through the wild forest bv dav and baving the moon at night without getting anywhere as far as I can see—I like to think of George Smythe Jones who lived in Indianapolis sometime around the turn of the century. As far back as 50 vears ago, Mr. Jones knew exactly what was ailing the world and. without making any fuss about it whatever, diagnosed the case and prescribed the cure It turned out that what the world needed to make it run smoothly was a new English alphabet Mr. Jones was sure of it because he had spent most of his life teaching school. As near as I recall, he was a Virginian who up until the time of the Civil War had taught the kids of Kentucky. After serving as a soldier (7th Indiana Cavalry) he again took up his profession and, this time, wrestled with the kind of kids bred in Shelby, Rush and Henry Counties which brought him pretty close to Indianapolis. n »
Devised New Alphabet
T can't remember, however, that Mr. Jones ever taught in Indianapolis. While here, he was a clerk in the Bureau of Animal Indusiry, U. S. Department of Agriculture, a job which brought him in touch with the Stockyards. As a matter of fact. I believe Mr. Jones invented his new alphabet while on duty at the Stockyards. Mr. Jones said there wasn't any hope for the English speaking people as long as the alphabet had only letters to represent something like a hundred different sounds. He went even further, I recall, and predicted the end of England in less than 50 years if something wasn't done about it right away. With England, America would go down, too, said Mr. Jones. I'o illustrate the plight of the English speaking Mr. Jones cited the seven sounds attributed heard. for example, in fate, fat, far. air, ask, l'o say nothing of “¢,” “ea,” “ai,” “ay,”
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people to A as and what
‘Making Hay’
COLORADO SPRINGS. Colo 7.—Wendell L. Willkie in the farm country bv accepting the Roosevelt-Wallace farm program—until and unless a better one 15 gradually worked out-—and by his pledge to preserve the benefits gained by agriculture
Aug made ha
By Ernie Pyle
Kreusser half the forenoon, and that night went to §
his country home for dinner, and didn't leave till 1 o'clock in the morning. I've got half a mind to be-| come an industrial giant myself. For hours and hours we talked engines and production and defense and industrial plants and metal stresses. I heard a great many very important technical things that I remember not at all.
is a man of tremendous stature,
I think I've meandered through about every type|,
of manufacturing plant that exists, from a platinum dredge to a shrimp cannery. But this was my first voyage into this new world of mass production of things that are by all tradition the slow handicraft of artisans. And I think I have probably not been able to conceal the fact that I was tremendously impressed. n » ”
Expleining the Delay
And vet it isn't nice and easy as the public may think. The one thing I would like to do in this series, if you will let me, is to disarrange the placid American belief that because we have appropriated five billion] dollars for defense, this defense exists today or will next month or next Christmas or next spring. You'd simply have to go through what is probably | the finest plant of its kind in America, and see the slow and meticulous processes of the whole thing, to realize what's ahead, | For instance, this Allison plant took more than a] year to get going. When you go through, you can't believe it could have been built in a year, or even] three years. And these huge expensive machines, in ordinary times, are delivered six months behind the order given. Now they are running eight months behind. As one executive described it: You have to have a machine to make a certain part. Such a machine doesn’t exist, They have to design a pattern for it. It takes so many thousand hours of work to complete that pattern. A pattern is a small thing. You can appropriate 20 million dollars for it, but you can’t put 20 million men around it and finish it in half an hour. It's so small only five men can get around it. So it takes months to build, Nature won't let them go any faster. And during those months our defense mass production on that certain product must wait. Tt's nobody's fault at all. It's the way things are. But the point is, we all ought to realize it. .
By Anton Scherrer
“eigh,” “ae,” and “ei,” all of which have the sound of A. in case you never gave the subject any thought. The letter O is in the same fix, Mr. Jones pointed out, It has six sounds as heard in note, not. do, dove, moon, book, while its first sound turns up again in “o.” “oh,” “ow,” “ou,” ‘owe.’ "ough. “eau,” “0a,” ‘oe,” “aught” and, goodness knows, how many more. As for C. it is a useless letter altogether since it always | has the sound of S or K. | When Mr. Jones got all this straightened out, he had an alphabet consisting of 37 characters, every | letter of which represented a distinct sound. single letter, for instance, represented the sound | “tious”; another “ing”. another “tion,” and so on. Catch on? Each letter had one sound only and no word had any silent letters, Nor could any word | be spelled in more than one way or have more than | one pronunciation. If anything was ever fool-proof, | it was Mr. Jones’ alphabet.
| Nd un » | |
One-Letter Words
Indeed, it was the slickest thing you ever saw. | With Mr. Jones’ alphabet it was possible to spell al lot. of vmrds with only one letter. The one-letter | group included, I remember, the words you, he, me, | see, the, tea, key, pea and bee. Even more remark- | able was the fact that he spelled the word “cheese” | with only two letters. For some reason, however, | three letters were necessary to spell “breeze.” But to | make up for it, Mr. Jones spelled the word “occasion,” and correctly too, with only four letters. And five letters were all that were needed to spell a complicated ten-letter word like “outrageous.” | On ihe whole Mr. Jones cut the consumption of ink and paper in just about half, to say nothing of the wear and tear on our emotions. As for the saving in time, Mr. Jones said the English speaking people could use it to put their house in order. Nothing ever came of Mr. Jones’ alphabet, probably for the reason that few people knew about it. The few who did pronounced him an old fool worrying about the end of English speaking people in 1940, a good 50 vears off. Thus proving again, if further proof 1s necessary. that a fool is a man who is right at the wrong time, “4 x Y » By Thomas L. Stokes
gram in essence. used words which might almost have | been lifted from numerous addresses of President | Roosevelt in the 1936 campaign and since I recognize.” Mr. Willkie said. “as farm leaders have recognized, that the welfare of agriculture re-| quires industrial recovery too
But I car-|; ried away with me the impression that Otto Kreusser
| ing offered this year.
“Last year there were 412,305 paid admissions to the Fair.”
By Earl Richert ALENT scouts are poking around busily in nearly every farmyard in the state searching for participants in this year’s Hoosier Barnyard Olympics —the Indiana State Fair, Aug. 30 to Sept. 6. The talent scouts are Hoosier farmers and their children, usually 4-H club
members. They have a pretty good idea of the quality of the material at
their disposal. But it takes more than snap judgment to send in an entry to the Indiana State Fair, one of the three best in the United States. If a farmer decides, for example, that he has a good Black Angus bull, he must, for his own protection, measure, weigh and judge the bull to decide whether, in view of past performances at the fair, his amimal stands a chance. It would be a waste of money to do otherwise, since the farmer must pay stall rent, an exhibitor’s fee and for the feed the animal consumes at the fair as well as what it costs to get him here.
u » n
F the farmer decides his Black Angus is in shape to warrant sending to the Fair, he will spend much of his time from now until Aug. 30, combing the animal and feeding it scientifically measured quantities of food. A few days before the Fair, the farmer will even get out his curling irons and put some more waves in the bull's naturally curly hair to smooth over some rough spots. Now the bull is ready to become one of the participants in Indiana's biggest show. He has a chance to win a part of the premiums and purses of $160,000 be-
Munitions Plants Ready in
Case of War or Peace, Organizer Says.
WASHINGTON. Aug. 7 (U. P.) — |
PLAN TO SUPPLY 2,000,000 ARMY
| ocrat who admits that he is one
“It takes more than snap judgment.”
“The paving of roadways around the Coliseum will be completed this week.”
And if he is good enough he may even be purchased by a Chamber of Commerce for some special dinner, much to his owner's profit, » ” » AST vear there were 412.305 paid admissions to the Fair. Approximately 41 per cent of these were from Marion County, a figure which shows the Fair's popularity with the city folk. In addition to the farm exhibits of grain, livestock and machinery there are nightly horseshows and fireworks displays, harness races and all sorts of carnival attractions. Nearly all details for Fair Week
‘Bolter Gives F.D.R.Jr.Job
NEW YORK; Aug. 7 (U Eugene 1. Garey, life-long Dem-
of those “bolting” to the camp of Wendell Willkie, said today that Franklin D. Roosevelt Jr, would
{ go to work “after Labor Day” as
a clerk in the Wall Street law firm of Garey & Garey. to the po-
5
P.).—
have been worked out. Friday and Saturday, Aug. 30 and 31, will be Youth Activities Days, during which the exhibits of the 4-H Club members will be shown and judged. Sunday will be World War Veterans Day. Admission will be free after 6 p. m. on Friday, Saturday and Sunday nights. At 4 p. m. Sunday, the new $1.200,000 Coliseum will be dedicated as the highlight of the week's activities. The governors and other officials of the four adjoining states have been invited to attend. Dedication speakers will be Governor Townsend, Lieut. Gov. Schricker, President Herman
LINKS LIQUOR TO
TRAFFIC DEATHS York Tells W. C. T. U. Fatalities Increase With Rise In Drinking. |
Timea Special |
BLOOMINGTON. Ind. Aug. 7. —|
| | | | |
Wells of Indiana University and Dr. Edward C. Elliott of Purdue University. ” ”n n ONDAY, Labor Day, a crowd of more than 100.000 is expected. Last year there were 102.000. Tuesday will be governor and legislators’ day; Wednesday, educational and children’s day: Thursday, farmers’ and farm organization day, and Friday, Indianapolis and manufacturers’ day. This year, for the third time in the last 17 years, there are no new buildings being rushed to completion before the Fair's opening, according to Manager Harry Templeton,
The only construction work, the paving of roadways around the Coliseum, will be completed this week, Approximately 1200 loads of dirt have been dumped on the floor of the Coliseum arena, the scene of the nightly horse shows, and some horse and cattle judging. A carload of tanbark will ba dumped over the dirt this week, Managers of the general divi=sions of the Fair already have hired nearly all the 3000 employ=ees that will be needed during Fair Week, and arrangements have been made for policing of the grounds with city and state police. » n ” TT Red Cross is ready to set up its hooth which last year administered to some 1100 persons who felt ill while attending the Fair. And the State Police ia ahout to install its loud-speaker system which last vear helped in uniting nearly 400 parents with their lost children.
State officials say only Illinois and Minnesota of all the other 47 states can compare with Indiana's State Fair. And Illinois, they say, charges no admission to the grounds while Minnesota charges only 25 cents as compared to our 50 cents. No other state, they say, can compare buildings with the $3,000,000 worth of modern brick buildings, covering 16 acres of ground, which “decorate” our grounds. Our exhibits also are practically equal with theirs, Fair officials say. This year it is ese timated there will be 3000 cattle, 1100 saddle and draft horses, 800 race horses, 3200 hogs, 1100 sheep and large numbers of poultry, rabbits, etc. on exhibit at the Indiana fair. The fair is a money-making proposition for the state too, not counting, of course, the cost of the buildings. Last year total receipts were $365,791 and total disbursements, $308,701, leaving a net profit of $57,089.78 which was placed in tha building fund. That's fair enough, isn't it?
Hoosier Goings On
——
AFTER 77 YEARS
Lincoln Helps Man Get Social Security;
Huntington
Roast Potatoes By EARL HOFF
Wasted
ABRAHAM LINCOLN could have had no idea what far-reaching
effects his Emancipation Proclamation would have in 1940,
Take
the case of a 77-year-old Negro in Gary. Confronted with a request to prove he was 77 before he could receive Social Security checks, the elderly man told the Social Se-
I shall, therefore, exert | Assistant Secretary of War Robert | myself to the utmost as President to create new jobs P. Patters said todav that the | in the cities and thereby produce more purchasing BLETSOn 52 . =) power for American farm products.” | projected $700,000.000 chain of 60 He was credited with political astuteness also in| munitions plants will afford an ade- | speaking well of Secretary Wallace, who stands high quate supply of crucial materials “in |
with the farmers of his home state. ; | peace or war’ for a potential army |
of 2,000,000 men, Mr. Patterson, former Federal] | judge of the Circuit Court of | Appeals of New York who took over | | the important industrial planning! post at the War Department last | | week, told newsmen that the object lof the string of new plants is to assure the United States a per-, | manent and adequate source of | munitions until “we know there is a final peace.”
Although opposed litical principles of Franklin D Roosevelt Sr., Mr. Ggrey said that his critical attitude toward the New Deal would have no bearing on the progress of the President's son as a lawyer in his firm. He described young Roosevelt as possessing “a keen, analytical mind unusual in a chap of 26.” It was understood that Franklin Jr., would start work after he returns from duty with the Naval Reserve and completes his bar
curity Board he had no birth certificate but that his middle name was proof enough. | “1 was named Defirst hecaust I | was horn on ‘de first’ day after Abraham Lincoln freed the slaves,” he said. Neighbqrs said that had heen sufficient proof for them as long as they could remember. On their affidavits, the Social Security Board approved the unorthodox “birth certificate.” . 8 = LET THIS BE a warning te Hoosier folk who are planning a trip to Elwood to look over the layout for the Willkie notification celebration Aug. 17. Be sure you
The relation between drinking and | deaths from driving and the in-| trease in both in 1940 was discussed | here today by L. E. York, Indiana |Anti-Saloon League superintendent. | Mr. York spoke at the W. C. T. U. convention in Cascades Park. | He claimed that the more liquor consumed, the greater the number of traffic fatalities and said that the peak of drinking since repeal was reached in 1937, also the peak year |for wraffic deaths. ) : Local option has decreased the examinations. He was Tecom- |... unt of liquor consumed in 1938 mended. Mr. Garey said. by James |,,4 1939 he said, and there has Roosevelt, “who is a close friend yeep a similar reduction in traffic of mine. deaths. “Sentiment and desire for curbing the liquor traffic through local op[tion have increased rapidly,” he said.
Congress already has Sppfopriaced S00 LOCKS CLOSED $200,000,000 for beginning the chain “TY eatest evide that local T0 VISITORS MONDAY opin acs ITP
ot plants. Funds for ihe others ed 1 re EO CHICAGO. Aug. 7 (U. P.).—All is that it is opposed by the alcoholic | tourists and visitors will be barred liquor interests.
| $4.963.000.000 second supplemental defense appropriation bill. from the Soo Canal locks at Saulte SURVEYOR’S DEPUTY |Ste. Marie, Mich., effective next PAYS UP 7 STICKERS
The War Department already has si xa signed a contract with E. I. du Pont | Monday. the U. S. Navy Hydro- | de Nemours & Co. to operate’ the graphic Offices announced today | “Public servants should be ex- | first of the new plants—a $25,000,000, In a movement to reduce possi- amples, not exceptions.” ; smokeless powder establishment at bilities of sabotage in the canal.| So saying, Judge John McNelis Charlestown. Ind through which heavy shipments of yesterday fined Leonard Dorman, Mr. Patterson said that the broad iron ore pass, the Navy also in- chief deputy county surveyor, $2 program is to permit private in- creased the restricted area for vis-leach for seven parking violation {dustry to operate the plants, which |iting boats not transiting the locks stickers in Municipal Court and ; and banned throwing overboard of promised like fines on four more
| will be but with Federal funds, | on an “indefinite hasis until all of any rubbish or other objects. pending against him.
lour needs are met.” He said that|——
in the last few vears I'his was the concensus among those acquainted with the agricultural vote after his one-day airplane invasion of Iowa, home state of Secretary of Agriculture Wallace, the Democratic Vice Presidential candidate. Back at his base in Colorado Springs, Mr. Willkie is planning further phases of his campaign. His attitude on the farm problem was taken as an indication that the Republican nominee intends to adopt basic advances made under the New Deal which he considers sound, with constructive modifications and improvement of administration, and is not to tear down the reform structure which has won so many friends for the New Deal. Mr. Willkie's statment on the New Deal farm progaram was not brand new. It was a reiteration of a view he expressed at Des Moines on May 17, in that whirlwind pre-convention Swing.
trying to convince his friends of this one: Out fishing the other day, he says he saw a bird swoop down to the water for a bug the same time a fish had the same idea. The fish got the bug and the bird, too, Mr. James insists.
2 » »
Plans Talk With Hoover
Political analysts in Jowa regard the Wallace nomination as a smart stroke by the Democrats. They think his presence on ths ticket will help materially in Towa. The trend in the state today, and in adjacent farm states as shown by the Gallup Poll, is against the Democrats. If this trend is checked it will be due largely to confidence in Mr. Wallace among the farmers, according to their analysis. Mr. Willkie is moving to implement his campaign in this farm section, and elsewhere, by appeasement gestures toward two party leaders who opposed his nomination at Philadelphia—AIlf M. Landon and Herbert Hoover, the party's two previous nominees, The candidate has seen neither of them since the convention. Tentative arrangements had been made for a luncheon with Mr. Landon here Friday, but that | has been postponed. However, it was announced to- | dav that Mr. Wilikie would see both men before his| acceptance address Aug. 17 at Elwood. Ind. He likely will visit Mr. Hoover in the next few days in Montana. where the ex-President is on a fishing trip. Mr. Willkie. it 15 believed here. will treat the farm problem broadly in his acceptance speech, reserving until later a specific statement of his views. |
» » #
EVEN THOUGH Assistant Police Chief Don Whitmer of Goshen may have lost whatever status have a muffler on your auto or
he had as a trackman in the motorcycie, Police Chief Michael eves of fellow townsmen, their | j Fogerty has started an antirespect for his versatility has | noise campaign and threatens to bounded. | impound all offending vehicles In pursuit of a suspected thief | until after ihe Biz Dav. he was running a poor second. A | - — shot, from his gun only lent wings to the transient’'s feet. Then the officer spied a bicycle parked at the curb. Mounting the bile he circled the block the reverse wav and came upon his quarry hiding in a weed clump.
TEST YOUR KNOWLEDGE
1—Maggots are baby magpies, lar« vae of insects, or disease germs infecting cattle? 2—Who wrote, “Oh, East is East and West is-West, and never the twain shall meet”? 3—Which U. 8. President died one month after his inauguration? 4—Where is the range of mountains known as the Hindu Kush? 5—Who is David O. Selznick? 6—Why can’t a man marry his widow's sister? T—For what industries are the fol lowing cities noted: Detroit, Akron, Minneapolis?
Answers
1—Larvae of insects. 2—Rudyard Kipling. 3—William Henry Harrison. 4—Central Asia. 5—Movie executive,
n n Ny Wallace Program Popular
He found then. as he found thiz week. that farmin Towa are wedded to the Wallace program. and that thev deo not intend te have it pulled out from under them unless something equally good is put in its place. And Iowa reflects sentiment in the Western agricultural region general Mr. Willkie, in indorsing the New Deal farm pre-
My Day
HYDE PARK. Tuesday —I1 got up early this morning and rode before breakfast, thinking in this way 1 would avoid the flies, but they apparently work early and late. 1 spent most of the time swishing around the horses’ heads trying to help them keep the flies away. x We are expecting quite a d delegation of important people from the Pan-American Conference at Havana, Cuba, for lunch today. The President spent until 5 o'clock yesterday afternoon in the complete seclusion for which he had planned. From then on, however, affairs have become somewhat more busy and official. We were so happy to have a nice long visit from Governor Lehman and a number of other friends vesterday. I do not find the papers very happy reading these davs because so many of the things one dislikes to spe done seem to have become necessities in the different parts of the worid. For instance, even though I believe in the selective draft. it seems to me that anyone who does not believe in it has a right to say so. Of course, if it becomes the law of our land, we must coniorm to its regulations. But that does not mean we have to say that something in which we do not believe is right.
Permits Private Operation
"re
” ” ” THEN THERE'S always the story of the swimmer who dives into the water and comes up with somebody's false teeth. Billy Shurgert of Loogootee did that at Hindostan Falls near Shoals, but the teeth weren't false. After an examination, authorities decided the 10-inch molars,
By Eleanor Roosevelt
A group of Huntington youngsters planned a picnic the other day and before it was over the city’s entire fire department was d in on it. 6—Because he is dead. To bake potatoes, they built a | T—Automobile, rubber, flour milling, fire between Dr. H. S. Brubaker's ..8 8 garage and a nearby building. The blaze and smoke the fire made ASK THE TIMES when it started in on Dr. Brubaker's garage brought all the Inclose a 3-cent stamp for city’s fire apparatus clanging. reply when addressing any What made" the kids Sore. was question of fact or information that the firemen didn’t put-out the | io The Indianapolis = Fimes blaze until after their potatoes ashine : . 1013 13th St., N. W., Washing- : ton, D. C. Legal and medical
were charred. Hale dm oxen .- advice cannot be glven nor can FRANK JAMES, Muncie sanita- | “extended research be undertion officer, is having a haid time
It seems very similar to the old prohibition days. | Sites are being selected rapidly for live up to it. But I never could see any reason why ged ings cr SR ve . anyone who did not believe in it should n y ’ rE nl ii : : a and try to persuade other people that Lo ay > tials, and that negotiations for their Presented fo Rauh Library which were set in a 21-inch jaw i ctinct specie of dinosaur and i i ; | being pushed. .. an ex 0 Ee Ee ary AR J ip to| iv idwest Areas A “defunct Thomas (cat) prepared) well as provisions was depleted by that Mr. Shurgert’s find was of attack an evil which all of us retried must be! Five Midwestern for the gastronomic delection of the siege. historic importance. i ; : | wi : 5 \ st “wallpaper” four columns concerns the siege or The selective draft probably will nd registra-| Will be located from 200 to 250| That, from the last “wallpa tion will take place. pp oan Jess any A of miles within the borders and be- edition of the Daily Citizen, Vicks-| the war, there was no note of surthe bill which time will prove to be wrong from vari- tween the Rockies and Alleghenies, burg, Miss., printed July 2, 1863, is render—except in a “note”, at the ivi | \ y - ivi “Two days bring about great and want them changed. Personally, I know nothing| ©d seaboard areas that are vulner- the Civil War. ] : about the details of Ape bill. I approve of the principle able to bombing attacks. It also is a story of defiance and changes. The banner of the Union of a selective draft. I think that conscientious ob- Under the plan, the Midwestern 'gaiety displayed by Vicksburg citi-| floats over Vicksburg. Gen. Grant quired to work for the country's good in ways which separate geographic areas, he ex- their city encircled by Gen. U. S. dined in Vicksburg, and he did do not conflict with their religious beliefs. | plained. Each of these will be built Grant's army. ess bring his dinner with him. The CitiBut io put a man in jail, even when at war, if he up separately to assure a continu-| The newspaper, now a journalistic zen lives to see it. For the last time believe in something seems to me one of the regret- more of the others should be de- Branch of the Indianapolis Public more will it eulogize the luxury of able actions we ought to guard against. stroved, he said. The bulk of the Library. It is the recent gift of mule meat and fricasseed kitten— Fear of our safety makes us do things semetimes plants will be located east of the Mrs. Henry E. VonGrimmenstein, urge Southern warriors to such diet to justify when one sits down quietly to reason out! The plants, Mr. Patterson said,| The one-sheet newspaper is print-| paper Citizen, and is, excepting this certain circumstances and when the heat of con- will be constructed on “a perma-'ed on the reverse side of red note, from the types as ‘we found troversy which excites people's emotions has ceased nent basis with an eye ou lasting |flowered wallpaper, 18 by 20 inches, them. It will be \pluable hereafter
As long as we had a prohibition law, I felt we should Ne new industnies, which snclvde Wallpaper Newspaper of 63 view was right. As time went on, a great majority YbkfationS by privale contemns are hoe, Probably nce belonged 2 fought. The plants, generally speaking, numerous friends...” | Although nearly every item in the ae ous aspects, and many people will disapprove of them 2s a measure to decentralize crowd- an indication of the hardships of end of the last column. jectors should be protected, but they should be re- region has been divided into five zens while they faced starvation, has ‘caught the rabbit’; he has has done nothing more than state that he does not ous supply of munitions if one or curio. is in the Rauh Memorial it appears on ‘wallpaper. No in the name of patriotism which are extremely hard Mississippi River, it was said. /2452 N. Pennsylvania St. nevermore. This is the last wallto exist. e many, many years.” sadicating that even newsprint as as a curiosity.” : :
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