Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 August 1940 — Page 7
MONDAY, AUGUST 19, 1940
The Indianapolis Times
SECOND SECTION
Hoosier Vagabond
~ BROWN COUNTY, Ind, Aug. 19.—Brown County Is to Indiana what Santa Fe is to the Southwest, or Carmel to California, or Provincetown to New England. In other words. it is an art colony. But that is only a part of the picture. It became an art colony in the first place, like the others, because the scenery is majestic and the native people are picturesque. And, having become an art colony, it attracted non-artists and ordinary people to its loveiness, and eventually it became a haven, and people came and fell in love with its plain ways, and built beautiful homes and stayed to become part of the spirit of the place. On the whole, I am ill at ease in the company of artists, for so much of the time I don’t know what they are talking about. And yet, invariably, I like the places that they have built into their “colonies.” And So it is with Brown County, Indiana. I have fallen head over heels for the place, and the people, and the hills, and the whole general air of peacefulness. I even like the artists here! There are 92 counties in Indiana. The average Hoosier could not name more than 10. Yet I doubt that there is an adult in Indiana who does not know of Brown County. rown County is not the Midwest at all, as we usually think of the Midwest. There is more variety of personality here, and more old-fashioned vitality of character. The people of Brown County are hill people, not prairie people. There is a difference. = = 5 People Proud, Self-Sufficient All northern and central Indiana is board. Neat farms checker it, and the roads make a chart, lines a mile apart. straight as a ruler. Big barns and regular fences and waving fields of gran splash across the endless landscape. But some 30 miles south of Indianapolis the lana begins to undulate, and the hills are covered thick with forest, and roads wind and fields become patches on slope-sides. You come into the hill countrv—and hill country because here is where the great glacier stopped and melted away its last force and left its giant rubble piled ahead of it. In this hill country of Indiana more
Our Town
ANYWHERE BETWEEN 4 and 6 o'clock in the afternoon, when the bread came hot from the oven, was a mighty good time to drop into Bryce's bakery, the one on E. South St. And I'm not fooling when I say you dropped in. You actually did--for the reason that the door opening into Mr. Bryce's bakery was every bit of five feet below the street level. The steps leading down to the door were always slippery in winter which made it more or less of an adventure to trade with Mr. Bryce. Mr. Bryce
Hat
nat as a
as
1t 1s
than 100
had a little bell attached to his door to announce the customer's arrival. So did a lot of other merchants, but somehow Mr. Bryvce's bell had a more ingratiating sound. I can explain that, too. Mr. Bryce's bell didn't stop ringing the moment the door was closed, the way other bells did. It made you feel sort of welcome after you got into the place But even better than the bell was the heavenly smell that met the nose when the door was opened. Of course, the other bakeries around town had a good smell. too, but Mr. Bryce's smell was better because he knew enough to confine his baking to bread and utter crackers. Mr. Bryce's smell wasn’t contaminated with the sweet smells of cakes and ginger cookies.
A=
=
Plenty to See, Too
Mr. Bryce didn't stop with satisfying the nose because, besides the smell, there was always a lot to see. The counters were piled high with loaves ot white bread, all with the same consistency of crust. They were all cut to one pattern. too. Indeed. Mr. Bryvece's products were so uniform that you could have picked vour purchase blindfolded and been none the worse for the experience. The butter crackers were kept in open barrels grouped around the baseburner in the middle of the room. I knew the barrels were open because I often
By Ernie Pyle
years ago came immigrants from the East—English| people from Virginia and Tennessee and Kentucky— | pushing on into their new frontiers, but never out of the hills, for they were hill people. | Because of a certain necessary resourcefulness, which makes hill people proud and somehow selfsufficient, the natives of Brown County for a long} time lived their own lives in the woods and the] tobacco patches and the little settlements, asking! nothing of any man, and eventually they came to! be known to the rest of Indiana as “quaint.” { That is what first attracted the artists 10 Brown| County 40 years ago—the log cabins, ihe lounging | squirrel hunter, the leaning sheds, the flowers and! the autumn leaves and the brooks and hillsides. That, too, is what eventually attracted the sightseers. But many a sightseer comes to Brown County today filled only with wishful thinking for what he wants to see, and not with any understanding of human beings. =
Old-Fashioned Honesty
is not the same as it was when the artists discovered it 40 years ago. The artists no longer consider it picturesque. They say it 1s “spoiled.” They would go away, except they say it's still better than anywhere else. Fine rcads and hotels have impinged themselves upon the hills and villages. The patch farmer who lives up the holler is nearly pushed off the sidewalk by the gawkers from the city. There is little privacy left. And yet the deep fine attributes of the people endure. The native of Brown County is innately courteous. He would do anything for you, and not think of pay. His honestv is almost old-fashioned. Few people In| Brown Countv lock their houses, and when they do thev hang the kev on a nail outsiae the door. The typical Brown County man plays a guitar, | and sings in harmeny. and loves to square dance, and | doesn t lost in the woods. and raises a little! tobacco. and goes to church. and drinks whisky, and is a dead-shot with a squirrel gun. and there are even those who can kill a squirrel with a rock as easily as with a gun. Sometimes he is prosperous and sometimes he isn't—but it doesn't matter whether he lives 20 miles | up the crick in a clapboard cabin, or works In the| garage downtown and wears a derby hat, still his code of gavety and of honesty and his innate sense of dignity remain the same.
= n
Brown County
~ gat
By Anton Scherrer
helped myself to a cracker. Nothing was ever said about it and I rather suspect that Mr. Bryce not only expected us boys to help ourselves, but would have been offended had we not done so. Mr. Bryce was that way. He was a Scotchman with the nicest trimmed white beard I have ever seen. Anyway, his beard was distinguished enough to get him elected to the City Council. More than 50 years aco when I was a kid, Mr. Bryce represented our ward and was so busy with his city job that you never| would have guessed that he also ran a steam bakery with 25 employees and seven wagons. Mr. Bryce had more than 300 customers every day and it was rumored in our neighborhood that he used 200 barrels of tlour a week. Mr. Bryce also owned the prettiest team of horses in town for his private use. Sometimes, if you were lucky. vou could see the horses hitched to a surrey outside the bakery. It was a pretty good sign that Mr. Bryce was inside the bakery. = = =
Joy in a Good Deed
I remember such an occasion. I had dropped into] the bakery and helped myself to a cracker prepara-| tory tec making my purchase when I saw two little kids crving as if their hearts would break. They had lost their money with which to buy their bread. { It was at this point that Mr. Bryce entered the room. He came from somewhere in the rear, and in| no time at all got the children to tell him the whole; storv—of a father out of work, of a mother taking inj washing and a brood of children at home with hardly] enough to eat. | Without saying another word, Mr. Bryce loaded rear seat of his surrey high with bread, after which he got two of his men to roll out a barrel of crackers. The two men, I recall. had an awful time getting the barrel up the slippery steps into the! surrey. Then with the two kids on the front seat | beside him and the rear seat loaded down with good) things to eat, Mr. Bryce drove off triumphantly behind his magnificent team of horses. I went home that evening wondering why poor kids always have all the luck.
th
Arms Output Satis
Many Critical, [ll-Informed, Gallup Finds
By Dr. George Gallup
PRINCETON, N. J., Aug. 19.—A majority of the American people are not yet satisfied that sufficient progress is being made in re-arming the United States. That blunt fact emerges today at the conclusion of a new na-tion-wide survey by the American Institute of Public Opinion. Between now and next November the question of whether adequate progress has been made is likely to become the No. 1 issue of the Presidential campaign. The Institute survey reveals that at the present time the great majority of American voters are still in the dark as to whether the production of tanks—for instance —has been substantially increased or not. Further, the survey shows, even among those with definite impressions about the progress of national defense, the prevailing opinion is that the rate of production for airplanes. tanks, warships and guns has been too slow. “n not be satisfied that America is re-arming in earnest,” comments an Eastern voter, “until I can see our skies full of Army planes, and until I've seen some U. S. tanks rolling through my town.” While many Americans might be satisfied with less-dramatic evidence of U. S. re-armament, the survey found that only one person in three, on the average, thought sufficient progress had been made. No matter how much progress is actually made between now and November, political writers agree, it will be the voters’ impression of that progress which will count at the polls. Men and women in a nationwide cross-section were asked: “Are you satisfied with the present rate of production of airplanes, tanks, warships and guns for our national defense program?” Their answers were: Satisfied with present rate.. Not satisfied ......... Without sufficient information or don’t know........
”
32% 40
Ceca
28 =
HE actual facts about American defense preparations are known, of course, to only a few government and civilian authorities. An attempt was made last week to give the public a general resume of progress to date. when members of the President's Defense Council appeared on a hation-wide radio hookup to answer prepared questions. Presi-
=
U.S. IS TESTING
STRATO BOMBER
‘Designed to Fly So High
That Effect of Ground
in 3
YES— 32%
RA CTS
PET SR
rT
fies Only 1
GALLUP POLL ON DEFENSE: Are you satshed with the present rat of production of airplanes, tanks, warships and guns for our national defense program ? NO—40% - DON’T KNOW— 28%
TAR BAR TE
o
President Roosevelt inspects a new anti-aircraft gun designed for
the U. S. Army, on his recent visit to New Eng
land defense points. A new nation-wide survey by the American Institute of Public Opinion reveals that a majority
of voters are not yet satisfied with the rate of progress in U. S. rearmament.
A month ago, as defense preparations
dent Roosevelt has also made a tour of New England defense points and announced that are getting into our stride” national defense But a specific test of the pub-
lic's information on the subject of tank production, for instance, still shows three voters in every four without definite knowledge. Voters were asked: “Do you happen to know whether or not the production of tanks has already been substantially increased?” Their replies were: Bont KNOW .c.vcivsrnceises 75% Believe Yes Believe No
The public's impressions of defense progress have undergone a marked change in a month's time, for in mid-July, when the program had just been launched, an Institute study found a sizable majority “satisfied” with efforts to that date.
‘we on
sesasseniinasees 19
b
Ceres esr ranean
By JOHN T. MOUTOUX
Times Special Writer
WASHINGTON, Aug. 19.—This is
the way
“Are you satisfied with the progress that the present Administration making in rearming our country?” voters were asked. Sixty-one per cent said they were satisfied, 23 per cent were dissatisfied, and the remaining 16 per cent said they lacked information or had no impression. Today's survey probably raises a danger signal for Mr. Roosevelt's Administration and for the Democratic majority in Congress. Further Institute tests will measure the public reactions as the campaign proceeds—including the effect of Mr, Willkie's speech at Elwood, and as long as national rearmament remains an issue, 8 of today, however, the
A striking fact is that a substantial number of Democrats as well as Republicans interviewed in the Institute survey sav they
is
® » ”
Local Election Machinery To Be Used in Case of Draft
The boards will shuffle the cards
| |
the selective service will]
|
a number, Since 21-31-age bracket represents 10 per cent of the country’s
and give each the about
are not satisfied with defense pre-
parations. Yes No «30%
29
Democrats
Republicans 42
37%
The vote by parties is:
Don’t Know
28%
29
Southerners tend to he less satisfied with progress to date than persons living in the Middle West:
Yes No nant ues a1 East Central West Central South ...... West ..
42 33 42 39
2 a 0
27
Don't Know
25%
31 30 al 28
What lies back of these impressions, in the minds of the voters, is shown by the voters’ own comments to field investigators. Those who say they are “satisfied” chieflv comment that “everything pos-
sible is being done to
speed up
production, and that the results
WARNS AGAINST ‘CITIZEN FRAUD
Townsend Reminds Hoosier
will become more apparent later on.” Others simply say that, all things considered, “the present rate of national defense is satise factory.” To these voters must be added another group, however— representing about one voter in every five who says he is satisfied because “the national defense situation is not very alarming at present,” “we have ample time to prepare,” or that “defense has been over-stressed.” The most frequent comment of those dissatisfied with the speed of defense measures is simply that “too little has been accome plished,” or that “production kinks and bottle-necks have not been eliminated.” Other comments complain of “governmental rede tape,” of “lack of co-ordination between government and industry,” or point to the great distance U. S. defense preparations may have to cover in a very short time.
Patriotism ‘Not Salable
Co-ed Candidate For Legislature
ALLEN, Neh. Aug. 19 (U. P.) — Ruth Zimmerman, 21, con= vinced that youth has a permae nent place in government. That's why the pretty Wayne Teachers’ College co-ed became a candidate
18
operate if the bill now before the population, there will be an average Senate becomes law. {of 2500 registrants for each board. Local election machinery will be' This means that the numbers as-
: . . ; np si the cards will run from 1 to > weuld like t $ registration. Each man signed one uld like to think that the outlook is not 8S The g 21st birthday 2500, or possibly a little higher, in als a)
for Nebraska's unicameral legisla= ture, Against five other aspirants, she emerged from the non-partisan primaries with 1591 votes. Because Nebraska never has had a woman Senator since the unicameral system was inaugurated in 1937, the eyes of the state will center on the November election outcome in her district. Miss Zimmerman's opponent in the fall runoff vote will be Louis Jeppersen, a farmer,
Guns Is Nullified.
DAYTON, O., Aug
Washington
REHOBOTHBEACH. Del. Aug. 19.—The Willkie acceptance speech was better in the newspapers than it was on the air. It must be read in type to be appreciated. Whereas Roosevelt's remarks gain in effectiveness by delivery over the air, Willkie's lose, The very real merits of the Willkie acceptance speech were muffled by the sloppy delivery, with frequent stumbling and slurring of words. The effect of this upon Republicans and Willkie worshippers here at this smell summer resort was one of pain and disappointment. They had no specific suggestions as to the content of the speech. They said that it somehow just didn't measure up, didn't give them a thrill, didn’t have the lift they had expected. That was about all one could get out of these friendly critics, but inasmuch as they are a'l Roosevelt-haters of long standing and had been intently proud of Willkie, I regard their reaction as a significant index. I found that some changed their opinion about the speech
after reading it in the newspapers the next morning. = ” ”
Radio Delivery Important The fact is that Willkie is being judged as was Landon four years ago, by the Roosevelt standard of radio crooning. Roosevelt probaely could have taken the Willkie script and made it sing. This all seems silly to me, but if people are going to be swayed by the cut of a radio voice, then that fact has to be taken into account Willkie might well hope that Roosevelt ignores his challenge to joint debate. Not many major political utterances in modem times have rung with such courage as this Willkie acceptance speech. The world situation is driving the Roosevelt Administration into steps that are disturbing and not weicome—such as conscription. Every-
My Day
HYDE PARK, Sunday.—I picked up a friend who was spending the day with me in New York City vesterday morning and returned to the country in the afternoon. Then I went to keep two appointments. The first was to talk about a meeting of the United Parents Association in the autumn, and the second was with a committee from the Society of Podiatricians. They have a bill in Congress which will give them recognition in the Army and Navy on the same basis as dentists and other specialized groups who do not have M. D. degrees. It seems to me they will certainly ; be useful in the services. Soldiers { on the march and sailors standing watch on board ship. both need this care for their general health and happiness In the afternoon I went out to the World's Fair, feeling very sorry that the weather had been so bad all morning, for I knew it would spoil the day for the rural young people who had planned a big meeting in the Court of Peace. First. I visited the Brazilian Pavilion and drank some delicious coffee with the commissioner and his wife. We looked at the murals, which are ex-
Commodity.’
A warning to Hoosiers be on the alert” against numerous | schemes which are capitalizing on | the present national emergency was issued today by Governor Town-| send. “Patriotism is not a salable com-
By Raymond Capper,
19 (U. P)—{ysed for “to
Army is reported to be testing! 0 1
flies or
Four Classes Set Up
Proponents of the selective service say it is superior to the volunteer system particularly because of this provision, If recruiting drives were to be put on hundreds of employees of steel, powder, or aluminum plants might enlist, and thus cripple vital defense industries. If selective service prevails this possibility will be avoided, and men who stay behind to work in vital posts will carry no stigma for not being in uniform. On the basis of the questionnaires, registrants will be divided into four
By Eleanor Roosevelt
90 ENTERED IN 4-H AMATEUR CONTEST cise = = oe
Twenty 4-H boys and girls will mediately. compete in the Marion County ama-| 2. Those engaged in important teur contest at 7:30 p. m. tomorrow civilian jobs, including defense inin the Indiana University Building dustry workers, policemen, firemen at the State Fair Grounds. and others. All township winners, they will] 3. Those with dependents.
6 DIE AS HOUSE BURNS vie for $50 in cash prizes. The 4. Those physically unfit. Class 1 registrants will be given
” 5 » ASK THE TIMES
Inclose a 3-cent stamp for re-
lack as sevelt had pictur . All w X { as r 5 ted yeh black as Roosevelt had pictured it. All would like to as reached his leach district. to be just dandy no matter who wins the war in bombers at Wright Field here. > asd iv . oi e : a Europe. There are some Republicans who have been| Although details of the new aati] Will be required lo register, He! 000; yilabe, Ey be tempted t angle that fool's paradis b ‘ : | will do this at his regular precinct *® C ¢ . $ we 0 Sahgle BOIS Dargie Delete the are withheld by the War Depart-| 5 E political day-dreaming. ment, it is known that they are Ag he registers he will be asked if| °° Since Fah container, shuffled > to phi : : ; ses} “ sas 3 and then drawn out, p i Wilikie did not say things that were pleasant to| designed to fly 8 to 10 miles above he wishes to enlist in any of the Sr} ben a re Se Order is modity, and it is not necessary for| hear. He spoke of toil and sweat and sacrifice, He the earth in the stratosphere—|armed services. and if he says yes : > : ; iti are s / 5 -| prove hi jotism,” the Governor TY se tr : . that the loss of the British fleet would greatly weaken .* oc oo 0 so. Ste Selepted by each of the 6500 lo prove his patriot EDITOR IN SHANGHAI SHOT our defense and he spoke for all possible material He oral guns. : Civilian boards, with three mem-|*® at Many reports have been coming SHANGHAI, Aug, 19 (U. P).— aid short of military involvement in present hostili-| Equipped with “pressurized” cab-| bers each, will be set up to pass on| Then Men Are Chosen y y : | editor of Ta Mei Wan Pao, Amers hn : | : : , . Police headquarters of foreign-born e : : stai y ac y weigh, | ‘ is . re W i rd for : : ts . \anN=-0Wr 3 ase 1g ag ape stand face to face in competition with Hitler—a) members to stand the thinner ai tion. There will be a bos d "| first by the local board and then in| Americans being solicited to join| ican-owned Chinese language paper, competition in armaments, in production, in sales-| .., aE vd ._|every 25000 persons in the coun : : : e ‘ported batriotric societies which| Was shot and seriously wounded toe manship. without wearing cumbersome in-|;.. probably about 6500 of them.! Washington, is designed to assure|purported patriotric societies : | Ea issue certificates and badges PI9* one of the Chinese and American : A ab cults a i shi . > n : : i ted t : : > he £ J C8 Dolitics Army officials declare the bomb- appeal agent, to advise registrants er In Which en are selected. Sisining Weir 2 a DD] newspaper men recently “blackliste * ee </@s to their rights, and a doctor to] Aifier he SAVIND wo ot, tie To led” by the Japanese-sponsored y 1 . : an P= S /e service, P S= { A rn ve > it pred |with deadly accuracy, even from, ing of men who can serve without] The Governor said he also had -— eee z ce : y vears. A Rais Advisory lanned dislocati tk life of the heard of an organization which is| Ti Brest irntert ; «.|the higher ranges, because of the] Advisory Boards P islocating the economic life of the heard o g h This gives great importance to his pledge as follows: o country. selling memberships to patriotic T E S T Y 0 U R principles that overcame German autocracy once now held exclusively by the United aid registrants in complying With questionnaire to fill out and return|ing into a pool from which rewards KNOWLEDGE before, both in business and in war, to outdistance States. : | provisions of the act. And finally, to the local board within 10 days, sre offered for arrests and convicHitler in any contest he chooses in 1940 or after] The new craft is expected to bej 0) yoards will be set up to han-| giving information as to his de-| tions of alleged Fifth Columnists. . beat him on our own terms and in the American aircraft defenses. The normal ef-| =~. Spray , of his work. A statement will be re-| : ini ' or izati way” | dea) £ aircraft <| registrant or the Government from od } copictrant’ _ | solicited to join any organization of ture in Paris i6 France's Une oe {lective range of anti-aircrail BUNS... geiicion of a local board. quired from the Lop man § oulq | this nature inquire first from the| Lo. 0 To dir buried? That statement. for all practical purposes, freezes is about 15000 feet, according 10| pyc" pachinery will require the| Plover, estimating how long lt WOW giate police or the Federal Bureau 2—Are daddy-long-legs time to come. In that pledge, Willkie has destroyed |must be timed to explode within . tertres-—25.000 to serve another competent worker. ination 3 ized by the Gov-|. utterly the fugitive dreams of appeasement which/a small radius of the target for it partion! igies cH serve on |, under the pending bill there are Sn Santora] by on Gov-|3_What is the name for airplane have been hovering just below the surface of public to be effective. BE CHL. ; to be nq blanket deferments by He added that 1 had received| bombs, designed to break into RD SB ao00 poral agents e a al he ‘| small pieces when they explode? ace oe & war ‘ si ,! strato-bombers will be rapid-climb- | ViSOry boards, 69 a S| will be passed on separately, and in| : fe ae Seen EIR Ty ing pursuit ships. In ho connec- | and 6500 doctors. " | each determination will be made as director, of his complete satisfac-| oi River? hang the tag of caser Willkie trick tion, the air corps has been experi-| All wil! be under a Director of Ce-| tg how necessary the individual is|tion with the manner In which & For whom was the state of Geore g g app on lkie. The ick p planes. Already pursuit planes have| Will appoint. The selective service ing with Federal authorities in com-{e what property must a metal been perfected which can climb officials will be paid by the Federal bating subversive activities Within|~ poccecs to be hammered into thin better than a mile-a-minute. | Government unless they volunteer the state. sheets? strato-bombers give the crew more| After registration, the cards filled die or be incapacitated before latitude of movement and will be|cut by each man will be turned over election day, who would choose tremely interesting and depict different phases ofa great aid in battle maneuvers,ito the local boards, each board the one to run in his place? of course, be viewed from a gn di - ig i S, | y ive i C A ours n a greater distance than | ent-day hight altitude operations,jtrants who live in the county or ORDERED IN FRANCE head of the Polish Government, their present location permit but they are colorful | pilots are required to wear heavy city it represents. | President. Premier or Chancel and bold in execution. cumbersome outfits which make 1 9 ’ VICHY, Aug. 19 (U, P=Frence] ol bly hall at the Fair where Harvey Gibson, Dr. J. A. | task. | has established a totalitarian di-| Answers Linke of the United States office of Education, Dr. Present-day bombers have M. L. Wilson, director of the Extension Service in|reached some high altitudes, but] economic liberalism, Minister of Lr tensbomb i i | 3—Fr n S. On account of the weather, the ceremonies were| for the mission. On a recent photo- gust pial SE a be RE ar on ow brief. and many young people must have been disap- | graphic mission during the *“shoot-| Belin announc vy. : inted. ing” ; | j vs pole ing” of a solar eclipse, one of the| be created for each branch of indus- | 6--Malleability. : s nk . e| 7—The National Committee of hi unveil the poster which the American Committee | 36,000 feet, an official record for oy {ibe snnotin gethent, sad, ales 7 party § Commi : for Aid to Finland is putting out in a campaign four-engined craft. ‘ A to gain members to help in their work. sitting on each committee. tect, a group of students at M. I. T. a in The new totalitarian French econreconstraction work and the building on MIDDLE RIVER, Minn, Aug. 19 contest is sponsored by the Marion] omy will resemble the Italian Fasup of a city in Finland. It is an interesting under-|'U. P.) —Six persons were burned County Farm Bureau and the Mar- physical examinations if their num- : in a blazing, ion County Farm Bureau Co-opera- bers are called. said. ply when addressing any question villages they are planning are certainly an improve- | house on the farm of Albert Knut- ; Simultaneous with Belin’'s an-| of fact or ipformation ta ment over what was destroyed. It must, however, son, 13 miles east of Middle River.| Horace Abbott, County Farm proximately 4,500,000 men will be in nouncement the Government as-, The Indianapolis Times Wash= be hard to rehouse so many people who have lost | The dead were Mr. Knutson's el-| Agent, will be master of ceremonies Class 1, and that all those called tional labor and owners’ organiza-| St, N. W., Washington, D. C. My last visit at the Fair was to the model of children, 1, 6 and 8 years of age, |the contest, a talk will be given by class, at least in the immediate fu-|tions by decree, charging that these Legal and medical advice cannot associations were more political than| be given nor can extended re-
hink 1 ~ indber rervt hi i i new giant four-engi str re | | think with Col. Lindbergh that everything is going; g four-engined stratosphere, has not reached his 31st birth-| These numbers. 1 {0 2500 or 1 to voters this vear, Willkie refused to indulge in such] | voting place. Cards containing the numbers will | : h itt o> . ality ; ios . ity be the order in which registrants|anyone to join any organization to spoke for conscription. He faced frankly the reality peyond the normal effective range h° will be given an opportunity to ) Chen Ching-Chong, assistant news y Chabon is ‘ ‘ . to the Governor's office and State ties. recogniz t i S y Ss WwW : requests for deferment, or exemp-| . . ¢ He recognized that if Britain is defeated, we ins, the bombers will enable crew red ele ( I This double shuffling of numbers, a be : ¢ |day by a gunman. Chin-Chong is y & # dividual oxygen masks. | Each will have attached to it an impersonal determination of the or=Rises Above ill be able to destroy target ers wi e able to destroy targe . ihe . shi . : . give physical examinations. | actual ship fee. | Chinese regime at Nanking. I promise. by returning to those same American hew secret gyroscopic bomb sight,| Advisory boards will be set up Each registrant will be given & persons, their membership dues goAnd I promise vou that, when we beat him, we shall almost immune from present anti-| : . ndents. if any, and the character| «yr w h sare I |dle appeals taken by either the PC f an c I would suggest that any person 'y ynger which monumental struce the general direction of our foreign policy for some military experts, because the shell io. "0¢'114500 persons, the War take to replace the registrant With) "ry, octigation whether such or-| spiders? ios Tn the United States Roosevelt, in his| The only real defense against aDPeal boards, 65.000 to serve on ad-| classes of occupations. Each case| f J. Edgar Hoover, FBI | word from J. Edgar Over, 4—In which country is the Macks didn't work. menting with swift intercepter lective Service whom the President | to his industry. state and local police are co-operat-|— oi, 14 med? The pressure cabins on the new their services. | a Presidential nominee should eat TOTALITARIAN PLAN | life in various parts of Brazil. These murals should, predict air corps officials. In pres-|/ handling only the cards of regis- 8—Was Ignace Paderewski’s title ag The rural meeting had been moved to the assem-| moving about the ship a difficult rected economy and has scrapped l1—Arc de Triomphe, the Department of Agriculture, were all assembled [all have been individually equipped Industrial control committees will} S-King George II of England. From there I went to the Finnish Pavillion to|bombers reached an altitude of) ly by a Government commissioner |8—Premier. Under the direction of a well-known Finnish archi(cist system of corporations, it was) taking and the models which they show of the new !o death yesterday : tive Association, Inc. The War Department expects apserted its right to dissolve the na-| ington Service Bureau, 1013 13th their homes. derly mother; his wife; his three| for the free program. Following! for training will come from this professional in their outlook. search be undertaken.
Quoddy Dam built by the NYA. Then we drove home, |and the children’s cousin, Shirley| Larry Williams of the Farm Bu- j ture. Those in Class 3 and Class 4 arriving after 7 o'clock, Knutson, 6. reau, will not be called at any time,
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