Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 August 1940 — Page 14
THURSDAY, AUGUST 22, 1940
The Indianapolis Times
SECOND SECTION
Hoosier Vagabond
BROWN COUNTY, Indiana, Aug. 22.—Just as the pueblo style of building is the architectural motif of New Mexico, and the Spanish house of Southern California, and the stone house of Pennsylvania— So is the log cabin the mark of Brown County, Indiana. I don't mean the log Fo Wi, cabin of the Western mountains, ¥ : where round logs with the bark { } still on are used. § I mean the old-fashioned hewn log, roughly adzed into rectangular shape, and lett unpainted and graying with age. The kind that Abe Lincoln was born in. Such log cabins, modernized, have become a fad in Brown County. People from the city build summer homes here. And, Y almost always, they are log cabins. But don’t let the term “cabin” fool you. I myself am staying in a little six-rocom two-bath and basement log cabin, and there is a new one here in Nashville that they say cost $35,000. But it's still a cabin, and you'd better not call it a house. This cabin-rebuilding business started about 25 years ago. I don’t know whether they are at the base of the cabin fad, but the three men most responsible for developing property in Brown County are the following: Fred Bates Johnson, a wise Indianapolis lawyer, one-time newspaperman, one-time teacher at Indiana University. Jack Rogers, who owns the old remodeled hotel which is the Nashville House, and operates the big Abe Martin Lodge a few miles away in the State Park. Dale Bessire, one of Nashvilie's best artists.
” zn 2
The Log Cabin Boom
They started buying in here 25 vears ago, because they were fascinated by Brown County. They bought in partnership—timber land, orchards, town buildings —they bought a great deal of everything. And then in the early '30s, all amicably, they decided to break up into individual ownership. So Dale Bessire took the big orchards, and Jack Rogers
Our Town
A POINT THAT future historians will ponder is the unique importance of early Indianapolis beer gardens. and the part they played in supplementing the Public School System 50 years ago. For example, my intimate knowledge of the behavior and habits of monkeys can be traced not to School 6, as you'd suppose, but to Kissel's Garden. Kissel's Garden was started in 1885 when I was still in.short pants. It took in the four acres located at the southeast corner of what was then known as the Boulevard and 18th St. Today, the ground embraces the northern part of St. Vincent's Hospitai. Most of Mr. Kissel's customers came on wheels, for the reason that the Boulevard (now Capitol Ave.) was the finest drive and the best bicycle road in Indianapolis at the time. Located as it was. the garden got all the trade going to Crown Hill and to the tow path along the Canal. In the case otf bicyclists, Mr. Kissel got them going and coming—going out and coming back. In the case of funerals, he got them on the way back. When the Illinois St. “electric railroad” got started, with “trains” running every five minutes, Mr. Kissel had the benefit of pedestrian trade, too
A Self-Contained Institution
Kissel's Garden was the most complete establishment of its kind Indianapolis ever had. In reality, it was a little feudal system: at any rate, to the extent that it was a self-contained institution which could keep going without any help from the outside. On the corner stood the big two-story building with the double deck porch such as you still see in Southern cities. It housed the restaurant and the bar, which always had enough business to keep two bartenders going. From the ends of this building along Capitol Ave. and old 18th St. ran a high board fence, back of
of
Washington
WASHINGTON. Aug. 22 —In connection with England's request that we sell her some of our overage destroyers not now in active service, it must pe made plain that no further commitments for naval aid are implied. We may sell England 50 or so U. 8S. destroyers now tied up. They are of no vast importance to us or we would not have them out of commission. They must be of considerable importance to England or Prime Minister Churchill would not be making a public request for them. Or is it, as some here think, that the Prime Minister is playing a wily game? Is he asking for the destroyers as a token gesture in the hope that it would be one more half-step toward full American participation in the war against Germany? If Churchill says these idle destroyers are vital to England now we can well give him the benefit of the doubt and lev them go over. Bul we should have it understood that no implication of active naval aid is involved. If President Roosevelt does not make that point definite in an official public statement, then Congress should:do it by resolution. There seems no reason why England should not have these destroyers. But the record must be made clear that there are no secret understandings, or misunderstandings, tacit or otherwise, that might rise later to embarrass us, or restrict our freedom of de-
cision. ” 5
By Ernie Pyle
took the hotel, and Fred Johnson took the timber land and the log cabins. : Today there probably are 250 or 300 log cabins which people from Indianapolis or Bloomington have had rebuilt, and they live in them either in summer, or sometimes the year round. Some are in town, others a mere walk from town, and others far out in the hills. Some are so hidden by trees that you could live around here for years and not know they existed. And whether they are mere one-room affairs with a kitchen leanto of unpainted boards, or whether they are $25,000 mansions, they are all lovely, Unpainted, stone-chimneyed, set beneath shade trees and amid flowers, they fit the land and the person-
ality of the hill people. Fred Johnson has built many of these log cabins. Walter Snodgrass has built many, too He and Mrs. Snodgrass have a lovely cabin of their own on the hillside, actually in town, yet ‘so isolated and peaceiul you feel miles away. Walter was born in Elwood, Ind.—the same place and the same year as Wendell Willkie.
2 = =
Logs Getting Scarcer Walter was telling me about log cabins. A genuine cabin can't be built out of new logs. No, it must have antiquity So you scout around the country and spot an old log house, or maybe a barn. This is called a “set of logs.” Then you dicker with the owner, and buy it. Then you number the end of each log, take the whole place apart, haul it to wherever vou want to build, and put it together again, with whatever improvements you want.
An ordinary small cabin, with no modern improvements, can be built for between $1000 and $1500. A | comfortable log cabin, with lights and water, can | be put up for $2500. And a mansion can be built! of old logs for just as much as you want to pay. | “Sets of logs” are getting scarcer and scarcer | Walter Snodgrass has driven thousands of miles over the back hilly roads of southern Indiana, and even | into Kentucky, looking for “sets.” He says he believes he knows every available log within two days’ drive. | So there are some left, but not many. You must] hurry, hurry, hurry—even to remain antique.
By Anton Scherrer
which was a magnificent grove of forest trees, Icvely as any you could find around here. | Sprinkled among the trees were a half dozen more buildings—an enormous water tower, for one, a band stand, the hitching stands and bicycle stables, the! ivy-covered ice house, the grape arbors and the mon- | key house. That's about the way things looked in| 1895, 10 years after the garden got going. The vines) which covered the ice house were brought from the Chicago World's Fair.
A Liberal Education
The water tower was unlike anything around here. | Its name didn’t begin to do it justice for besides being a reservolr, it was also a summer bar. a lunch counter and a pumping room equipped with an engine and a| dynamo. The steam pump lifted the water from a) driven well into the high tower andi the dynamo accounted for the electric lights. At night, Kissel's Garden was as light as day—light enough. anyway, for everybody to see the American flag. Mr. Kissel, I remember, always had two flags flying—one on top of his restaurant and the other on top of the high| water tower. | As for the monkey house, it was a little square] building, about 15 by 15 feet, the sides of which were screened with heavy wire netting. Above the screens were awnings, the like of which I had never seen. They could be let down all the way, protecting the monkeys not only from the sun, but also from the weather. Fifty years ago we never haq4 a summer but what we had a rain every week. As a rule, it] alwavs came on Saturday, the only day we kids had | to ourselves. Largely because of Mr. Kissel’s success with his zoo] many of the other beer gardens copied his idea, with] the result that a kid lucky enough to get around picked up more first-hand knowledge of zoology than the schools were prepared to give. In support of which I cite O. R. Wilson, a barber in the Merchants Rank Building. In discussing the subject the other day, Mr. Wilson agreed that a visit to Kissel's Garden | was nothing short of a liberal education. |
as| |
By Joe Collier
LOSE to 62,500 children will take up a year of academic
work in the system starting Sept. 9.
230,000,000 Indianapolis public school
They will be enrvlled at 81 schools—more than 40,000 of them in the 75 grade schools and the remaining 18,000 or 19,000 in the seven high schools. They will be taught by about 2000 teachers (1928 to
be precise), who, in turn, will be supervised by more than 100 superiors. These superiors include 106 principals and vice principals, 23 supervisors and directors, three assistant superintendents and, of course, the superintendent. The cost of educating Indianapolis’ children is a little lower than the average for cities this size. This year it is expected to
cost just about $108 for each child. School days are cheaper on the
| parents than they used to be. The
old method of having to buy books
| is no longer in vogue, except in
the high schools. The rental method is now used throughout the grades and junior high and school officials say that 99 per cent of the children rent rather than buy. ”
it
UT lets step:
THE PUPILS
School officials say that it is probable (but not certain) that there will be more youngsters in the high schools and fewer in the grade schools this year than last. On this point (a debatable issue) they believe that the birth rate during the depths of the depression was low and that the children now entering grade school were born at the low depression period. Following this reasoning, the conclusion is that there are fewer children of grade school age than normally. On the high school enrollment
”
take step by
Hoosier Goings On
forecast, the school officials contend that family incomes generally are higher and that more young people will be able to enter high school. This view is borne out by the enrollment records which list the 1932-33 term at the bottom of 10-year comparative tables. No matter where it falls in the semester, beginning grade school pupils will be admitted to the first grade anytime within the six weeks before their sixth birthday.
THE TEACHERS
The average salary for Indianapolis teachers is below the average paid in most cities this size and almost entirely to this fact is attributed the low per capita cost of education here,
” " ”
N a 12-city comparative table, A the median salary paid grade school teachers here was seventh while the median salary of local high school teachers was last (12th). This term teachers will receive a total of $4,350,000 in salaries. About 800 teachers who received less than $2000 each for the calendar year of 1940 will receive raises in 1941 averaging about $75 a year. The median teacher load here is 37 (pupils) in the grades and 35 (pupils) in junior high, roughly one each above the national average. THE BUILDINGS
The 75 grade school buildings are valued at about $14,500,000 and
BAR TO FREEDOM
By Raymond Clapper
. | Hemisphere for defense bases. The empire, which | once kept a roving fleet on this side of the Atlanti~. | is now relinquishing still further, and almost to the| vanishing point, its military position in the Western | Hemisphere and is making us its trustee. Canada remains a dominion of the British Empire in form. But in fact she is under the protectorate of the United | States. For many years there has been a close identity of | British and American interests. We profited by Brit-| ish control of the Eastern Atlantic and by British in- | terest in supporting the Monroe Doctrine. Now that association of interest becomes closer as Britain re-| mains the only challenge, aside from ourselves, to Hitler's domination of the world.
Peoples Should Not Be Misled
In her hour of desperation, Britain is reaching out! for our support. Churchill says the leasing of bases to us means that England and the United States will ‘have to be somewhat mixed up together in some of their affairs.” Viscount Halifax, Foreign Secretary. spoke of the “inexo.cable” fusion of interest. HoreBelisha, former War Secretary, spoke of a possible common citizenship between people of Britain and the United States. | Unless the situation is clearly stated, these ex-| pressions from British statesmen are apt to mislead the British people into assuming that an alliance has| been concluded with the United States.
A strong community of interests exists. We are entering into arrangements that are made only between nations having intimate mutual interests. The full] circumstances of these arrangements and the limits agreed upon should be clearly and publicly recorded.
2
Cut for Fires, Say Prisoners; Osceola Pitcher Loses No-Hitter
By EARL HOFF
| that
| the chief discovered
| cause
FROM SCATTERED REPORTS, we gather that plant and animal life in Indiana has isolated cases of success, but that some people
are having very dopey luck, indeed.
The first case in point is a recent occurence in the City Jail in|
Vincennes,
It seems the Police Chief, through the ordinary exercise of vigilance,
discovered two prisoners had cut their prison bars with band saws. They had soaped the slits so they couldn't be detected.
| { |
hings were in that status when |
mess and he was angry. He accused the
tion for an attempt to escape jail He demanded they be punished for il.
the whole |
prisoners of having cut the bars in prepara- | | most other Hoosier cucumbers. With great earnestness and in-| [throughout the remainder jday, the reverse of the early route
But they claimed they had no |
intention of escaping. They said that they cut the bars only beit would be convenient In case of fire. dread of fires, they said. The matter reached an impasse
| and the bars were replaced with
no further action against the
prisoners,
o o
Then there is the
” “luck” of
They had a special |
concerned. We haven't even run across a tongue tree lately.
” » ”
IN CONTRAST to such wocebegone news an Elliston, Ind, farmer comes forward with a story of a one-cucumber rebeilion against the heat and drought which has pretty well defeated
dustry, and in heroic defiance of the heat which has blistered and otherwise taken its fellow cucumbers out of the play, this particular fellow grew to a length of 24 inches and a weight of three and a half pounds. This is equal to the combined length and weight of several normal cvcumbers—is, in fact, all that could reasonably be expected of a normal vine In a normal season. The proud possessor of the cu-
{way | wi
the seven high schools at about $9,000,000. The libraries are valued at more than $2,000,000 and shops and administration equipment at nearly $500,000. Ready for service for the first time this year will be the newly constructed School 86 at Boulevard Place and 49th St., the Milo H. Stuart Hall at Technical High School, the addition to the Thomas Carr Howe High School in Irvington, and the new Washington High School cafeteria.
VOCATIONAL WORK
The school officials anticipate heavy enrollments in all vocational courses, especially those pertaining to aviation and machine tooling industries. Their experience has been that pupils are quick to follow national vocational trends.
n » 2 HERE are 23 vocational courses offered for which two-year certificates are issued. Indianapolis, it might be pointed out, is fortunate because only in big urban centers where the pupil load is heavy can taxpayers afford the necessary equipment, especially in the machine shop fields. So far as school officials can see now, the night classes in emergency industrial training for adults will be maintained through-
SPEEDWAY BUS
ROUTE ALTERED
Allison Employees Are to
Benefit by Double Morning Schedule.
|
out the school term without interference. BOOKS
will be little, if any, change in textbooks, report the authorities. The rental fee in the grades and junior high is 75 cents and the saving to parents is estimated at about $150,000 a year.
SAFETY
The problem of safety continues, as it has in most large cities, to occupy a good deal of attention.
In preparation for the opening of school, 394 school patrol officers go into special training at the Boy Scout Reservation from Aug. 26 to 30. These youngsters will take up the duties of supervising the patrols to make street crossings safe for the pupils throughout the school year.
THE TAX LOAD
The taxpayer in Indianapolis gets off easier than in the average city of 100,000 or more population. The average for cities of this size during the 1937-38 term (last for which figures are now available) was $120.87 per pupil as com= pared to Indianapolis’ $102.81. The difference, as pointed out previously, was mainly in the teachers’ salaries. The budget calls for an outlay of slightly more than $6,750,000. The biggest chunk of this, 66 per
There
SE
cent, is earmarked for teacher salaries. ”
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EBT service will take about $650,000 or almost 10 per cent. Operation of the school plant will take a shade less than this amount or roughly 9 per cent and maintenance another 2 per cent, The Library, etc.) per cent and per cent. Even with the increase in teacher salaries, the budget is less than last year's figure by about $88,000. Part of the saving comes through a $162,000 reduction in debt service The requested tax rate 96 cents and school officials are quick to point out that their proposed rate has dropped 5 cents from 1931, although assessed vale uations have decreased a full fourth . (26.5 per cent).
THE PROGRAM
Superintendent DeWitt S. Mor= gan plans to lay special eme phasis on citizenship and appre ciation of the United States. He intends to point out to the teachers that their job made even more important by world turmoil, He intends to charge them with the responsibility of patiently and steadily developing the minds and+bodies of the young so that they can be of greater service to the country.
agencies (the take nearly 6 2.1
auxiliary will administration
18
18
| Birth Certificates More Important Now Than Ever
| |
Day by day it's getting more important to prove that you were born.
|the border back into the U. S§,
|
will require identification and prodof of
citizenship and a birth certificate
For example, you have to if you|is the most acceptable.
want to work in a plant making munitions or other materials Uncle Sam may need if and when he marches off to war, or which he
The Indianapolis Railways, Inc. |may furnish to warring nations.
will change the route of morning |busses in Speedway Sunday | Until 9 a. m. under the new plan, to applying for an old-age pension. [Speedway City busses {south a
City
will turn
Sunday,
Alter 9 a. m and
of
Will be operated. | Railways officials said the change will give employees of the Allison| Engineering Co. a more direct route or thereafter, your birth's recorded to their plant without the necessity with the City Health Board.
lof riding around the pr
City loop.
Circle here at 4:57 a. m. on [Saturdays and 4:49 a. m. week days. | continuing the |
esent Speed- _ be: They said also it tors and midwives around Indian-
Il provide Speedway City residents apolis were pretty prompt in rea more direct route to Indianapolis| Porting births and during the morning rush hours.
| |
starting | do (rolling in the first grade of school signed by your parents
|
And you have to if you want to most anything else, from en-
In many cities and states, bu-
t 16th and Main Sts. to 10th| peaus of vital statistics were not [St., west to Winton, north to Speed-|in existence when present-day job (way Drive, west to Lyndhurst drive, | seekers |south to 16th and {16th to Main and |the present route. The plan is effective for busses leaving Monument 5:15 a. m.
and pension
and where. Began Here Long Ago
But not so in Indianapolis. Hoosier Legislators of 1907,
The
the people now, passed a law requiring doctors to report birth they attended, within hours or face a felony charge.
So if you were born here in 1907
But even before that the doc-
the Health
baby born here since 1882. 80 a Day
never thinking what a help they'd be to
|
applicants | thence east on were born and theyre having a eastbound over tough time proving they were born
Affidavit Can Be Used
birth is not Board, Mr,
In the event listed at the Health Hoff has an easy way for you to prove it. The Board has a pre=pared affidavit which can. be guardian, the midwife, an older member of better still, the present when
your
your family or, physician who was you were born. If you're more than 58 years old there are numerous ways in which you might prove you were born and when and where, Turn to the family Bible, the church record of your baptism or confirmation. You might produce an insurance policy, the bank ace count taken out in your name when you were an Infant, a newspaper
every clipping, or the congratulatory tele= 36
errams and letters which came to your parents the day you arrived. Look up your lodge records, em= ployment records, the Federal cen sus, civil service records if you've ever held a public job. If you've been in the Army, the Navy or the Marines get your service record.
TEST YOUR
{ Board has a record of almost i |
| Kay Strominski of Osceola, | cumber is John Suthard.
who pitched and lost a no-hit baseball game at Mishawaka the other night. (A no-hit baseball game, all you basketball fans, is something that few pitchers ever | attain.) This is how it happened: A Mishawa batter walked and then stole second. He got to third on a deep fly, running after it was caught. This produced a terrific | rumpus, the Osceola penple claiming he was out at third. But | the umpire ruled against them.
5 Our Relations Intertwined The reason it seems important to have such an understanding on the record is that our relations with England are becoming extremely close and intertwined. Hence opportunity increases for misunderstanding as te the extent of our obligation We are negotiating with Great Britain to take over some of her island territory in the Western
My Day
About 80 people come to the KNOWLEDGE Health Board every day to get a Em birth certificate. An average of 45 |—Is osmium the heaviest or lighte of them are people trying to get est metal? {jobs filling Government orders, and 2—Which country is called Emerald [they pay for their certificates, John Isle? {Roh ie chief clerk, A jo 3 Did George Washington wear a ; : | The others are issued to people] ic? ; sident the Buildin . 1g: [Jule PE ternational | Seeking enrollment in some Gov-/4_with what sport is Lew Jenking | Union, allegedly used union funds | ernment agency or seeking Govern-| associated? to pay for work on his $22,500 home | ent aid in some form or other. /5_1, which state is Muscle Shoals? lin Ridgefield, Conn., was being out- | Lney get the certificates without g_which is correct: “He lives in
lined today by Harry Rose, building charge. | State St.” or “He lives on State
Tah : . Hoff is preparing for the| gi» contractor, at Scalise’s trial on t.”? charges of having stolen $60,000|usual big rush the first of the 7_which member of the U. S. Su
| [from the union. month when schools reopen. preme Court is a Roman Cathe
CLAIMS SCALISE USED UNION CASH ON HOME
NEW YORK, Aug. 22 (U. P).— | A scheme by which George Scalise,
If that is done, then few persons will object to 0 question the supplying of old destroyers. Nobody will be much concerned about the technicalities of inter-, national law which are now little more than academic wreckage anyway, nor will there be much quibbling over the method by which the transfer is made. All that our people want is to be sure that no funny deals are being put over on them.
Nd » u
WE ALSO have to report a happy event on the farm of Thomas Tompkins, in Washington Township, Shelby County. A sow gave birth to 18 pigs in one litter, just about twice as many as normal The pigs themselves celebrated the event by all being healthy and living. At last report they were in a good-natured, but noisy, race to gain weight
By Eleanor Roosevelt
olic?
HYDE PARK, Wednesday.—I have never known such marvelous weather for this time in August. I went riding again this morning and the breeze was cool. Even the flies are gradually disappearing. Before kong, I think, the woods will be possible for real riding enjoviment. nN Tire purple loose-strife around 3 my pond is at its height in color. At certain times in the day it is reflected in the water and I can see it from the window by my desk. I find myself gazing out in sheer enjoyment of the color, instead of paying attention to my work. I always had great svmpathy with children who played hookey from school in the springtime. Looking out from our porch yesterday, one of our guests remarked: “If you landscaped this view, it could not be lovelier. After all, nature is the best landscape gardener.” I agree, for no planning on our part could excel what weeds and trees and meadows do for us I am going to use my column today in a very peculiar manner, A woman who wanted sofe infor-
mation, and who is evidently a badly frightened human being, wrote me and suggested that I put an ad | in the personal column of a certain newspaper, giving an answer to a question. Unfortunately, this is not possible, for the answer is slightly longer than one could put in a personal item. She wrote anonymously and 1 have no way of reaching her, unless she should happen to read this column. In which case, if she will write me, I can give her the answer to her question, which is entirely reassuring. While we are talking about people who are panicky about things they do not understand, I should like te say a word to those who have been asked to register under the Alien Registration Act. Several people have written me who have been here for a long time, have led good lives and have become respected citizens in their conmmunities. But, when they originally entered this country, they perhaps slipped up on some necessary observances for legal entry. Instead of being terrified now, it is better to go to the officials and tell the whole story. They are sure to have fair and understanding treatment. Their standing in the community will be in their favdr, and they will certainly receive sympathetic assistance in straightening out their difficulties, whatever they
may be, 4
Then the runner scored when Strominski pitched wild. None of Osceela’s three hits produced a run. =» ” » MOREOVER, The Kokomo Tribune reports that Joan Coston made a trip recently to Russiaville and came back with an oddlooking insect which nobody seemed able to identify. The account said that if it had not been scores of times smaller than a crocodile, and an insect instead of a reptile, it could easily have been a crocodile. Failing that, the account read, “as nearly as Miss Coston could find out, the insect’s mission is to manufacture tongue oil from what is known as the tongue tree.” This leaves the matter strictly up in the air so far as: we are
U. S. LOANS TO AID
AIRCRAET INDUSTRY.
! January, 1940, he said, he was stayWASHINGTON, Aug. 22 (U. P).| —The Federal Government believed | today that substantial loans to the aircraft industry for plant expan-|
'day afternoon, [Lg Ok he acted as agent in selling Scalise | Ning like
Beginning his testimony yester-
the home in 1939 and that he contracted to do some work on it.
ing at a hotel in Miami Beach, Fla.,
|
The School Board at the begin- |
both the
ning of every term asks for some- What w - Mr. Rose said that 2400 birth: certifrates. 1 8 1 was Franklin D. Roose
mother and father are| In working or if they believe their
velt's first political office?
Answers
child capable of starting to school ;_ peaviest before the prescribed age of 6 they Be
when Scalise arrived for a three send him.
weeks’ visit. He said he told Scalise that his
sions would start a steady flow of men were asking for their pay for
airplanes off the production floors work on the Scalise home and Sca- | {lise gave him $500 on account. He
into Army and Navy hangars.
Federal Loan Administrator Jesse, : \ : J totaling $78.- | the union and listed it as organiza-
[tion expenses at Miami.
Jones approved loans 500,000 to three facilities, enlarge production build new plants. Concurrently,
important manu-
facturers to improve their existing | and |
the War Depart-| —Fire Chief
said Scalise drew. the money for
SUN BLAMED FOR FIRE
SANDUSKY, O., Aug. 22 (U. P.).lin Wilson McLaughlin chiefly
|
Teachers Check Ages
3—No. 4—Boxing.
Teachers doubting that the child | 3—Alabama. really is old enough for the class- 6—In State St. : room seek .confirmation from the|7—Frank Murphy.
Board.of Health.
Then, too, persons contemplating trips to foreign countries need birth But the | demand for that purpose is not so great today because of the decrease now and
certificates for passports.
limited Canada
foreign travel, to Mexico,
ment announced that it will organ- listed “sun” as the cause of a $1590 South America.
ize 38 school squadrons and six spe- blaze here.
He said the not rays
Canada accepts
cial air base groups within twa!were refracted through a plate glass identification, even a driver's li-
months to training program.
home to ignite. :
implement the pilot window and caused paper in the cense. You'll have no trouble in getting into Mexico, but crossing
8—State Senator of New York. " = -
ASK THE TIMES
Inclose a 3-cent stamp for ree ply when addressing any question of fact or information to The Indianapolis Times Wash-
| ington Service Bureau, 1013 13th
any kind of]
St, N. W, Washington, D. CO. Legal and medical advice cannot be given nor can extended research be undertaken.
