Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 September 1940 — Page 7
MONDAY, SEPT. 2, 1940
The Indianapolis Times
SECOND SECTION
Hoosier Vagabond
ALTHOUGH YOU know that this column is not given to politics—indeed, quite the opposite—stiil there is something hanging on the wall of that cabin I occupied down in Brown County that has just got to be repeated. It is the entire front page of the Brown County Democrat for Friday. Nov. 7, 1884. It is framed, and yellowed, and in the middle there is a hole from much folding. The whole page is in headlines, mest of it in very large type. It records the victory of Cleveland over Blaine for the Presidency, although you have to read quite a while to find it out. They must have had to send out somewhere that day for more exclamation points. It is an example of the journalism of that day. Also in it are many other things that might be beneficial, maybe through the medium of irony, for present-day writers, politicians, statesmen, and especially voters.
Saving the Republic
Here it is, a front page of 1884 GLORY TO GOD!! DEMOCRACY TRIUMPHANT! ‘TRUTH Crushed to Earth Will Rise Again!’ On the Fourth of November, 1884, she got up and shook herself and the Earth TREMBLED! Monopoly is overthrown! The days of Andrew Jackson have come again! Thomas Jefferson's Theory of Rule bv the People is Revived Again! CLEVELAND. WITH A MAMMOTH BROOM IN HIS HAND AND AN enormous bunch of keys at his side. is on his way to the White House!! The Augean Stable, where the Stuffed Republican Oxen have deposited fertilizing material for 24 years, will he ‘CLEANED OUT’ and new, clean cattle, frugally fed on legal rations, will take the place of those fattened by pillage and plunder by the taxpaving citizens!! For 24 vears our harps have hung upon the willows. We've got 'em off the willows Now, and every note
r
Inside Indianapolis (And “Our Town’)
SEPTEMBER'S COME and with it the town's football troubles. The Indiana University delegation has started the ball rolling, shouting that this year it’s “championship or bust.” If youre looking for trouble, just try whispering “It'll probably be bust” to an I. U. Alumnus. Oooh! Being as masterfully objective as we are, it's always struck us how different schools take their football in Indiana. The Notre Dame folk are always excited, but sort of superior. Kind of like saying: “Sure, we're all Hoosiers and all that, but after all we're Notre Dame. You boys go on out and get, yourseives a reputation. Now run along.” The Purdue alumni just wander around in a near-daze. They act as if theyre never sure whether it's going to be Heaven or some other place. They get into arguments and then lapse into silence, saying “Just wait and see.” It's always amazed us how that waiting and seeing works out for Purdue The old Butler bovs are always torn between emotions. Take Judge Goett and Judge Karabell. Half the time they want to talk about the days ‘when” and the other half of those that are to come. (Confidentially, they say that happy days are here for Butler.) The I. U. gang. though, takes the cake. They'll fight for old I. U. at the shghtest provocation. Just vou dare suggest that “Bo” isn't the world's greatest coach or that the Hoosiers might lose one and youre in for it. They bet, too!
Washington
WASHINGTON, Sept. 2—What makes our defense task difficult is that to many people the purpose for which we propose to arm seems vague, possibly academic and remote. We do not lack materials, men and knowledge. It is lack of a clear and compelling incentive. Among many persons the sense of danger and urgency is not acute. The argument that if Hitler licks the British he will be at us next strikes many even here in Congress as absurd. They react with the same skepticism that many in England showed toward Winston Churchill when he was warning of the danger of German airpower several years ago. Britain felt that the channel which had protected her through the centuries was still a sufficient barrier to keep war from British shores. France felt that after she had constructed the Maginot line she could sit in safety behind it. Their lethargy about intensive rearming finds its echo now in this
By Ernie Pyle
is True, and such music as we'll make ain't been heard on Earth since the “Morning Stars Sang Together.” Indiana is Democratic by a good majority . . . in the grand column of Democratic states which stand forth presenting 219 ELECTORAL VOTES FOR CLEVELAND AND HENDRICKS!!! THE COUNTRY IS REDEEMED!! THE REPUBLIC IS SAVED!! BLAINEISM ANNIHILATED!! It gets awful dark sometimes just before daylight, but when day comes then comes a most grand and glorious sunrise! We've had a dark night for 24 years, and it’s been so dark that we could only feel our way. But Glory Hallelujah! Daylight has come—the grandest and most glorious sunrise in politics that has been witnessed since the days of Andrew Jackson!! WHOOP-EE! HUZZAH FOR CLEVELAND! HENDRICKS! REFORM AND ECONOMY OLD BROWN COUNTY NEVER FALTERS. SHE'S TRUE TO ETERNAL TRUTH IN POLITICS! In confirmation whereof she gives for Cleveland and Hendricks 914 majority! AMEN!
One Thing Is Puzzling
Every evening as I come into the cabin, I stop and read this over. Somehow I can't help but feel that what the voters did in 1884 the voters could do again in 1940. We are faced with a crisis. Yet our country can be redeemed, our Republic can be saved, if we will be| true to eternal truth in politics and vote for the right man And who is that? Why, I don’t know. Whoop-ee! Huzzah! Maybe it's Mr. Roosevelt. Or maybe it’s Mr.| Willkie. Glory to God! Maybe I'm the right man myself. Reform and Economy! Why don't we all get together and vote for Cleveland again? Or perhaps a couple of good resounding votes for the Augean Stables wouldn't hurt anything. But no matter who saves the country in this ouy season of despair, there is one awful single issue in politics and statecraft and the future and the past of our great nation that is just worrying me sick. And that is—what ever became of Mr. Hendricks?
Why We Get Conventions . . . YOU'LL: PROBABLY SEE quite a few convention notes during this month. But you'll really get an eveful in October. There will be 12 conventions here in September (total attendance about 3500). In October there will be all of 33 conventions. Total attendance (don't swoon) upwards of 32,000. It's a mistake to think that conventions just come to Indianapolis “by accident.” There are three gentlemen, Henry Davis, J. J. Cripe and H. H. Schmidt, who spend all their time seeing that those conventions do come here. That's why we do pretty good.
About Public Morals . . .
HE WAS ARGUING POLITICS and he got off on the subject of closed banks. Boy, did he give ‘em the dickens! He said he had more respect for a fellow who would stick a gun in his ribs than for the bank where he kept his money. It was not only illegal, he roared, it was a violation of public morals. P. S—He lost $7000 in a closed bank, all he'd saved up from bootlegging.
It Would Scare Us, Too
A CHAP WE KNOW had an alarm clock that went on the blink. The other day he took it and one he had borrowed and wrapped them both in a pair ot pajamas and put them in his tvpewriter case. As he was getting on the streetcar, he could hear the good clock ticking. He reflected a moment and | then decided he'd better tell the motorman. “This,” he said to the gentleman, “is full of alarm clocks, not bombs, if anybody wants to know.” The motorman looked unhappy all the way downtown.
By Raymond Clapper
1 less, unlimited urge, while the defensive peoples keep | asking themselves whether the danger is not overestimated. Churchill, many in England thought, was seeing things under the bed. Here many now think | Roosevelt is seeing things under the bed, and they are | content with a little pistol instead of a big gun.
| —President Lazaro Cardenas
62%
Fear Indirect
Aid to Nazis,
Gallup Finds
By Dr. George Gallup RINCETON, N. J., Sept. 2.—Should the United States send food to France, Holland, Belgium and other victims of the war if available European supplies give out this fall and winter?
If this issue had to be decided by the voters of the United States at the present time, the country’s attitude would be strongly opposed to such a move, a nation-wide survey by the American Institute of Public Opinion indicates. Despite strong natural sympathies for the innocent victims of the European war, the American public's first reactions are that feeding nations now under Adolf Hitler's control would be only an indirect method of feeding Hitler's Germany. Moreover, they believe that the dangers involved in sending American ships to Europe at the present time are too great to be risked.
How American opinion may shift in the months ahead, especially if advance estimates of the European food-shortage are confirmed by events, is impossible to predict. New studies of U. S. sentiment will be made from time to time. In the current survey voters in every state were asked:
“If there is starvation in France, Holland and Belgium this winter, should the United States try to send food to those countries in our ships?” The actual vote is: SHOULD SEND FOOD.. SHOULD NOT SEND FOOD 62
Approximately one voter in 10 (109,) said he was undecided or without an opinion on the question, n ” HE importance of the food issue was underlined last month when prominent American citizens called for a food-relief mission and thereby raised a storm of protets. John Cudahy. United States Ambassador to Belgium, reported that eight million Belgians faced starvation unless aid came from outside sources. Former President Herbert Hoover asserted that 27 million persons needed to be fed in Norway, Holland, Belgium and Poland.
=
Washington observers have expected substantial public demand for such a relief mission, but have frankly admitted they have been unable to estimate how strong it might become. The Institute survey shows that majorities in both
STANDS PAT ON
OIL INDEMNITY
Accept Terms: Revolt Rumblings Renewed.
MEXICO CITY, Sept. 2 (U
told
P.).|
+ 38% ...
pose Food for War Victims
GALLUP POLL thee is strvaio in Fre, Hall
United States try to send food to these countries in our ships? NO--62%
YES -- 38%
One of the most controversial questions which may face the American people this fall and winter is whether the’ United States should attempt to send food supplies to Belgium, Holland, the France of Marshal Petain and other coun-
tries which have been victims of the war. policy at this time because *‘it would be feeding Hitler's Germany directly or indirectly.” dent Hoover, who has urged the step, and right, Marshal Petain.
political parties and in all sections of the country are opposed to sending food, in U. S. ships, at the present time.
Sixty per cent of the Democrats with definite opinions in the present survey say “No,” as do 64 per cent of the Republicans. Section by section the vote is:
Should Should Send Not Send Food New England, Mid-Atlantic .. East Central .... West Central .. South West
. “ee
AMERICAN facing new pluses this fall, many observers have guessed that a strong demand for sending food supplies to Europe's needv would come from this quarter. Interestingly enough,
FARM-
Crop sur-
ITH ERS
however, the Institute survey shows farm voters even less tavorable to such a policy than other groups in the population:
Should Should Send Not Send Food Food FARM VOTERS 35% 65% Analysis of the comments expressed by persons interviewed indicates that the two great obJections in the minds of American voters are (1) the belief that Germeny would be helped. directly or indirectly and (2) that American ships carrying such cargoes would be imperiled in entering the European war zone. The British Gov=ernment has taken the position that any attempt to send American food to the continent would weaken Britain's blockade; hence American food ships would possibly run the risk of seizure and confiscation by the British fleet. unless the strength of American
An Institute survey shows a majority of Americans opposed to such a
Above (left) former Presi-
shouldn't be allowed to starve”
... “sending food is the charitable and humane thing to do”... “the people of these countries are the innocent victims of the war” . ,
these are the typical comments of voters who favor sending food supplies, the survey found. Only one voter in 10 who fa vored sending food mentioned as his reason the fact that American markets for foodstuffs would thereby be expanded On the other hand, those who oppose sending food to the coun= tries with shortages comment that: “It's a tragedy if there's stare vation in Europe, but the fault will rest with Hitler, and sending food from the United States would be simply playing into Hitler's hands.”
“We'd be asking Britain to lift her blockade, and the blockade is Britain's main hope of winning the war.”
sentiment were to increase to the point where it could not he ignored by the Churchill government,
ou ” ”
N A SUPPLEMENTARY question the Institute asked: “Would you be willing to do this (send food) even if some of this food might go to the Germans?” The replies show that, with this contingency in view, only one voter in five would favor an attempt to relieve possible starvation in Western Europe. The actual vote 1s: (If Some Food Went to Germans) SHOULD SEND FOOD ......22% SHOULD NOT SEND FOOD.78" With the small group who favor sending food, even if some of it falls to the Germans, the guiding principle is the relief of suflfer-
ing and famine, regardless of the political or military consequences “The people of these countries
: bs | Indiana Polities—
Both Parties Throw State Machines Into High Gear
Cardenas Says U. S. Must
|
An American newspaperman, Otto Tolischus, COr'- | Congress in a “farewell message” |
respondent in Berlin for the New York Times during !
the Hitler regime, has written a book, “They Wante
dl vesterday . : | War,” which suggests something of the enormous en- foreign oil companies would have jae for every phase of campaign activities that will reach into all Europe under the complete yoke of
that American
and Organizations
Bobbitt Calls Session on Campaign Policies for Thursday; Democrats Hear Bays Outline Plan for State-Wide Campaign.
By NOBLE REED
Campaign machinery of both
Division headquarters
Republican and Democratic state
will go into high gear tomorrow. have been
set up in the Claypool Hotel
ergy and morale that has made Germany a nation ito accept the indemnity offered by 92 counties of the state during the next two months.
totally armed with the military, economic and moral |;
resources.
No Limited Objective
priated properties there was no serious threat of an
Government for their and said
exprohat
The German nation organized for war—and war internal revolt in the country as a
without any limited objectives. an effort, sav Correspondent Tolischus, can be no limited objective, because that would not justify such a tremendous national effort, and furthermore al
The goal of such {result of the | race.
July 7 presidential
{
But even as the chief executive]
limited objective would leave the way open for later | spoke new outbreaks of violence
retribution. such as Germany is now herself exacting occurred
from her conquerors of 1918. The only goal, he] says, can be Punic annihilation such as Rome visited | upon Carthage.
~ i
between
administration supporters and followers of Gen. {Juan Andreu Almazan, independent
Democratic county chairmen and vice chairmen held an organiza- democracies
KEEL FOR LARGEST FLYING BOAT LAID
By Science Servi BALTIMORE, world’s largest
9
— The now
Sept.
flving boat 1s
|
under construction here at the plant] lof the Glenn L. Martin Co. Destined
tral campaign policies will be formed for| nated in actual invasion and con- | i ® i | all districts in the state.
tion meeting yesterday when State strength and work of one of them.
Chairman Fred F. Bays outlined specific instructions on campaign
strategies.
State Republican Chairman Arch
N. Bobbitt will preside at a special come to disaster in two ways,” King dolph Field, Tex., and session of the State G. O. P. Cen-|said in a radio address.
Committee Thursday when
Hillis Outlines Policies
Glen R. Hillis, Republican Gov-
Jr.C.of C. Aidsin Selling Air Corps
CANADA'S CHIEF WARNS OF PERIL
The Junior Chamber of Commerce | Defense Committee has set a
booth in the Administration Build
Urges United Effort of All ing to tell Indiana young men about : the flving cadet division of the U.S, Democracies to Frus- Army Air Corps. trate Nazis.
The committee, headed hy Charles B. Brownson, a first lieutenant in 5
up
y the infantry reserves. is co-operate —-— Pr : ¥ OTTAWA, Sept (U. P.) —Prime ing in the movement to fill Indie Minister W. L. MacKenzie King said gana’'s quota. [that whether Labor Day a vear| Eligibles are unmarried men bee | 1 « aM hence will see a free Europe or a tween 20 and 27 with at least two | {years of college. Cadets will get six Sot ~~" Imonths schooling and then may be= {the Nazis depends on all surviving|come second lieutenants in the Air rather than on the corps Reserves.
Van Zandt Jr. and Robert G
New Le
Claude L
{ “If we lack the vision to see the Ind.,
peril and the strength to meet it, Castle,
|we, on this North American conti- Compete, Evansville, have completed
‘nent like the nations of Europe may [their three months training at Ranare being [transferred to Kelly Field for final be domi-|training.
“This continent might
quest.
ny Hite Diiey hany. HM Ne Sul 10 MINTON URGES LABOR until tyranny is saser. SUPPORT OF DRAFT
until tyranny is destroyed, disaster will follow no less
. . : | . “The secret, terrifying impetus of the German presidential candidate. surely even |
hit He Na Tousen Sn Ts the cig Meanwhile, Gen. Emilio Madero. ion of the minds and spirit of the German people, |... .... ve hw especially German youth, which was Hitler's first | President Of the Aumazan Dany, concern—a mobilization that has created a fanaticism |announced that a rump congress which as long as it can feed on victories repudiates had met in a secret place yesterIT values and attains the stage of self- ‘day. Gen. Madero promised that We are aiming as a half-way stage between peace the ConpTess oul mee. go on and war, at a kind of armed peace against some | Sept. 2 Db prociaim Ten. dimazan future contigency as yet unclear in its exact outlines. president. ; : aid th It is difficult for the milkman in Omaha to become | In his speech Cardenas said that: aroused over a threat which seems thus vague and | 1. The expropriated oil properties
far away, and which has produced no Lusitania in- Would be paid for in 10 yearly incident to stir his blood. 'stallments and that payment would
for the U. S. Navy, the start of the “flying battleship” was marked with a keel-laving ceremony timehonored custom in the building of | surface vessels, but never before applied to aircraft. No information has been released vet on the new airplane, a bomber However, it is obvious that it will] __ o considerably exceed in size the Hillis said: Navy's present largest. This is the| “It is my firm conviction that type known as the XPB2Y-1. It!jahor should be consulted fully on| He expressed the conviction that | oy s 9 . as ¢ D> SD of | . “ . . wep | i Ye Jas 8 Ning SAN matters that affect it and that its| in then Combing eon Ho forced , : : : i roc 0 eel, J 1eel ¢ " |can greater than the truth in We have vet to find for this fever which has driven be based on the ev Shion Fens of 28 feet. It is powered with four representatives should be appointed labor's heart and the strength of | Germany 1 Sieh lengths a satisfactory morale sub- 3 rade gr 1 Te MB a35 | Wright engines, of about 1000 horse- | on all boards. commissions and labor's arm.” : stitute that will arouse our national will : ourt. "OX ly $390,- oe : . yr : iE tld Nes job——a job which is not to duplicate De 08 029) ower each, committees wherein matters oi gov- Woy Jing Jererted paiticilanis 2 J : $ cate t | 508,05), ook | : 'the join efense rd set up by feat but something quite different, to protect our-| 2. Mexico supported the principle ernment affecting labor are con- hy i) the Oe Ses il selves * OWI Wav anv: | i t- rican solidarity an Siw ‘ ~ = | Ives in our own way against anything that Germany of inter-American solidarity and CHICAGO | cerned. | “The declaration at Ogdensburg .
could conceivably do to us. {openly and consistently proclaimed
inci # + ste yover t rand the policy from which it“ the principle of absolute respect : Our state government must seek | @ nh m . wihien for the sovereignty of other peo-| STUDIES 6-HOUR DAY, improve the condition of all its|SPrang.” he declared, “represents an
§1% | 15s Re a . Biv : increase and not a decrease in Can-! Po TI assination of Leon|, CHICAGO. Sept. 2 (U. p.) — citizens and it must not permit that|ada’s responsibilities. Canada and |r Ee a Sopa wurder and Arthur M. Betts, chairman of the improvement to become a matter The United States have undertaken | a OS should Po. condemned {board of governors of the Chicago of partisan politics.” to share the burdens of maintaining | i ®s He favored compulsory military Stock Exchange, said today that | their joint security; neither has. waiting ; : |sentiment for a longer trading ses- | Club Seeks Charter shifted the burden to the other.| hope that by doing so they would continue to retain | Extensive military precautions| SiO? Was “very strong” and that | Application for a charter has We have recognized that our united | all that thev had without making anv ¢ i bs : X : v plans for a six-hour trading day | : ’ a strength will be something more 7 hi "i ’ > ut making any concessions to;were in effect as the chief execu- : {been made by the 23d Ward Young . 6—With which sport is Ken Overe the workers. live faced Congress | were under consideration by a spe- | oe can Club. listing 32 charter than the strength of both acting |i associated? ove “They never realized that these workers in their! All the armed forces in the Fed- cial study committee. {Eo Officers oi By Dur-| Separately. Reciprocity in defense »_py what authority did country had a right to share some of the things con-|eral District were ready for any Although it was reported recently ham president Prudence Adair | involves reciprocal duties as well as] Government exist before trolled by the little and big employer in shop or fac- emergency. The normal army com-| that the New York Stock Exchange |... resident; John Wilson, record [e/proea) fivaniages. Canada glad-| gqoption of our Constitution? tory, mine or field. Now these employers have plement of the Capital had been | Was considering a Sitn al ation, secretary; Catherine Seddens, fi-! " pis is 8—Who wrote “Pride and Prejue learned to their sorrow that Mr. Hitler has taken ceinforced and unofficial estimates Mr. Betts said that any move in secretary: DeWitt Petue, Hits at Neutrality dice’? “Canada has indeed become, as I
ernor candidate, in a special Labor a n : ! i ’ though not one Nazi soldier were MOUNT CARMEL, Ill. Day message, said “Labor's right 10 to Jand upon our shores. The tri- A plea for Labor to support the procure a higher living standard, umph of the Nazis in Europe would Conscription Bill was voiced here never should be the subject of po- involve for the peoples of this con- today by Senator Sherman Minion : i " tinent the substitution of fear for (D. Ind.), Senate Majority Whip. in | litical interference. ‘ . he 3 a freedom, and of economic domina- addressing the Southern Indiana { Outiining the policies he said he tion for social progress. It would Labor Day :Association. will follow if elected Governor, Mr. spell the doom of democracy in the, The Association is composed of | new world. {union men from both Indiana and Illinois.
TEST YOUR KNOWLEDGE
—Is Valparaiso. Chile, west of New York City? —Did France have the fourth or fifth largest the world? 3—Where is the pituitary gland loe cated in the human body? 4—Can a rocket ship travel vacuum? An equerry is a nobleman, messenger or an officer charge of horses?
country because descriptions of a possible Hider military attack on the continental United States sound fantastic and unreal and explanations of economic and political encroachment through LatinAmerica sound academic and remote. Germany's amazing feat of rearming was carried on under a spur which has been missing among the “defensive” peoples of France, England and the United States.
Nation on the March
From the start Hitler and the German people set out to'win back the war they lost in 1918 and to go as far beyond that as they cculd. That became a fanatical national hunger which caused a nation of 80,000,000 persons to carry out a total mobilization for war—for aggressive war, not for defense. Germany became a nation determined to march. That promotes a different internal psychology than is found in a nation which is merely arming to defend itself from attack. One instills a positive, relent-
My Day
HYDE PARK, Sunday.—To me and to every citizen of the United States, Labor Day must be one of the most significant days on our calendar. On this day we should think with pride of the growing place which the worker is taking in this country. In every walk of life, the man who actually does the work is gaining in Influence and respect. That is as it should be in a democracy, and it is the surest way of proving that we intend to preserve democracy. I was talking to a Frenchwoman the other day who, though married to a citizen of Venezuela, has lived many years of her mar- : ried life in France and left there ¢ only last June. One thought she Te expressed has heen echoing and re-echoing in my mind. It ran approximately like this: “I wish I could teli the people in America what happened to the spirit of France. There were too many people there who had either a little money or a great deal, who cared more about what they had than about France, and who believed the Hitler propaganda that communism was something imminent and threatening because of demands being made by the workers, They were, therefore, almost willing to invite Mr. Hitler to control their country, in the
Sept. 2
Refers to Joint Defense
east or
third, navy in
in a
By Eleanor Roosevelt
a in
this the
a
3 Answers
meet A
everything.” [placed the number of troops con-| Chicago will be entirely independ- TE Anthony Douglass. serShe told me the story of a woman whose father | centrated here at 10,000. ent. Should the New York board | ...i at.arms, and Lucille Knox, have point d out before, the bridge | l1—East was a self-made man. owner of a fairly big business, initiate 8 oe Haine NY | reporter. OR le re OS ee |2—Fourtn and who slept with her jewels under her pillow every cago would be “quick to follow,” Mr. |“, oanizati Wi th Asap : . |3..Basa of a night because she was afraid that the workers would | 2 HOUSING PROJECT |Beus = but pointed out eat ter aay pet Ave OE Alariesn Sonunens with Hie) 3 Fase of the brain, come and burn the factory when they heard of the] {present discussions were primarily |g or 3 ’ ARG os Cs . : 6 Ye French Army's collapse. The workers did nothing of CONTRACTS AWARDED | the outgrowth of Chicago problems. By I pian So Il ho a ne A Er in. haves Of Bowses, he Mind os yi I beige Times Special | ber up at 7:30 p. m. tomorrow when |tions had fondly hoped to find se-|7—The Articles of Confederation. tioned in the tale. But all that went to make the] WASHINGTON, Sept. 2—con- FIRM HERE T0 MAKE ie & Sn ale Cisbrus Jhon Cun isscruprious heutrailivy: Buk 8 Jane Austen, factory a success is gone, and her country is gone, too. | tracts totaling more than $1,500,000 Ohio St. with Chairman Walter Sun 4 =) neutra ity was oni anf y a8» There is a lesson for us in this tragedy. Our peo- have been awarded for low-rent 13,000 ARMY COTS Brive A “victory minstrel” planned nl Bo ne FaYRSion Diiage ANN ASK THE TIMES ple must be one. On Labor Day we must remember housing projects® in two Hoosier t ] g I will b or ir Pann Go SH fr a that this nation is founded to do away with classes! cities, Ft. Wayne and Hammond. A contract for 13.000 Army cots| °F 'all wii be rehearsed. I or om eeing irom Manvi ppclose a 3-cent stamp for reand special privilege; that employer and worker| Lloyd Builders, Inc., of Chicago costing $51870 was awarded to the ——————— j ands, ae decigred his followed p1y when addressing any question have the same interest, which is to see that everyone was awarded the contract for $1,310,- Ermet Products Co. 2100 N. Caro- FIRE SWEEPS SUPER-MARKET Peace into exile,” he Said. of fact or Information to in this nation has a life worth living. Only thus can!000 to construct the Columbia Cen- line Ave, yesterday by the War De-| IOWA CITY, Towa, Sept. 2 (U.| on . ee The Indianapolis Times Washwe be sure that Labor Day will continue to be cele- ter containing 400 dwelling units at partment. 'P.).—Officials today attempted to| PRESIDENT INAUGURATED | ington Service Bureau, 1013 13th brated. Hammond. The $253,753 contract| L. P. Erpelding, president, said the determine the origin of a fire] QUITO, Sept. 2 (U. P.).—Carlos| St, N. W, Washington, D. C. If Labor Day does not live as one of our significant|for the 121 dwelling units in the order is to be completed in 60 days.|which caused an estimated $35,000 Arroyo del Rio was inaugurated | Legal and medical advice cannot holidays, we may be very sure that many other project at Ft. Wayne went to Max ;The firm recently filled an Army damage to an A. & FP. super- today for a four-year term as con- be given nor can extended resignificant holidays will pass with it, Irmscher & Sons, Inc, of Ft. Wayne. order for 15,000 cots. I market here yesterday, istitutional president of Ecuador. search be undertaken.
