Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 September 1940 — Page 9
2 | TUESDAY, SEPT. 10, 1940
The Indianapolis Times
SECOND SECTION
Hoosier Vagabond
si BOARD S. S. WASHINGTON, Sept. 10.—Our firs: a only _stop between Los Angeles and Panama was at Acapulco, Mexico. We got there at midafternoon, anda stayed only three hours. Acapulco is lovely from the harbor. The ship sails in between high hills, and somehow, even if you've never been there before, you'd know from the hillside vegetation that vou were somewhere in Mexico. The ship drops anchor out the harbor, and passengers are taken ashore in funny old launches, Brown-skinned diving boys in dugout canoes row madly out to meet the ship, and dive for coins that passengers throw over. I was standing at the rail as we came in. A girl standing beside me wanted to throw a coin, but couldn't get one of the boys to look up. So I, being an old Latin from way back, leaned way over and yelled, “Oyga,” which means “Look” or “Hey” in Spanish. : Whereupon the man on my other side leaned over and yelled, “Oyga,” except he put about a yard of honest-to-goodness Spanish on the end of it. And did I feel cheap, for all the Spanish I know outside of “Oyga”—and I'm not sure of that—is how to count up to 10. Anyhow, That Girl and I didn’t go ashore, because we had been there before, and I wanted to impress all the other passengers with what a sophisticated and travel-weary man I am. But everybody else went ashore, so there was nobody left to impress. I think this is as good a point as any to reveal that at long last, I've had a chance to wear my new ao.
mn
A Romantic Looking Group
All the passengers dressed for dinner the night before we got to Acapulco, and they certainly made a roman looking spectacle there in the dining room, and certainly not the least impressive of them was well, I kinda hate to say it right out in print like this, but certain people were heard to remark I never looked better. Such a remark has its limitations of course, but still . . As a matter of fact, this business of “dressing” isn't half bad. I've always been a sort of belligerent con-
hat
Inside Indianapolis (And “Our Town”)
BET YOU DIDN'T Know that DePauw University i a little more than 100 years ago because It did, though. The college scene in century ago was hardly as bright and as it 1s today. Not by a long shot They say that DePauw 1s acually the result of first-class case of pique and we can well understand it. Indiana University was already in operation and the Methodists asked if they couldn't have a little representation on the board of trustees and the faculty. Governor Sam Bigger blew up at this and raised all sorts of com-=-motion with the Methodists. It was sort of bad politics and the ministers retorted that they didn't like his tone and what's more they'd build a college that would make the State University look like a peanut and would. to boot. heat him if he ran for Governor again. Sam Bigger did run again and, sure enough, trourniced by James Whitcomb, a leading Methodist. Then the ministers went ahead with plans for their college and entertained bids various towns. They finally accepted Greenand then asked the Legislature for a charter. That's when the fun started. The State Senate split wide open on the issue and day after day wrangling went on. The No. 1 opponent of the rter, though, happened to like his little nip and his seat pretty frequently to bolster up the inner 21 the debates to follow The backers of the college just kept their eye on centleman and bided their time. One day he g particularly low about affairs and needed siderable spirituous aid. The Methodists called matter up for vote while he was ensconced at and scored their big victory As a result, College opened its doors In 1840.
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Washington
WASHINGTON, Sept. 10.—In another week Wendell Willkie will be out on the road making his real campaien. It will be his test, because unless he makes st recovery the election is likely to freeze against him without delay. : No Presidential candidate ever had a more difficult task. This simply is not a situation that can easily be turned to the advantage of any out party. International events play directly into Roosevelt’s hands. He stands for action, and the Republicans essentially stand for inaction.
By Ernie Fyle .
. | scientous objector to evening clothes, But on this trip, | dressing for dinner gets to be sort of exciting. Everybody else does it, so you don’t feel self-conscious. And the women all look so swildly hued and tropical in their evening gowns, and somehow it produces about the same feeling that you get standing on the sidewalk in wartime and listening to the band play “Stars and Stripes Forever.” In other words, a fellow kind of overshoots himself. I think I'll take to wearing my tux all day long, even after we're back on shore. Another thing that has surprised me about traveling on this luxury trip—all the people aren't rich at all. I've found Government workers, and ordinary clerks, and people retired on small incomes. The ship is about half filled—between 200 and 300 first-class. There isn’t a single one you'd pick as filthy rich. Most of them are fairly quiet people and nobody puts on any extra dog.
The Help Is First Class
You never know who your fellow-passenger may turn out to be. Already I've discovered three of us, all traveling first class, who once worked on ships ourselves, as everything from oilers to wine stewards.
And speaking of people who work on ships, the United States lines, it seems to me, has achieved the ultimate in honestly high-class service on this boat. It's a kind of service that too many snooty hotels don’t know enough to strive for. What I mean is this—the help from bellboy to purser’s clerk are not only amazingly quick and efficient and thoughtful, but they are also human and pleasant and delightful personally, There is no | fawning over you, as if vou were so much better than | they are. And there is no lording it over you, as the] help does in some fancy hotels. And there is no air of hating you because theyre serving you, as there is in too many restaurants, Jimmy Hanlon is our dining-room steward, and) he's the kind of fellow I can whisper to and ask what | I should wear tonight—and he tells me. And Charles Crantz, the captain's steward, who serves us too sometimes, is one of our good friends. Practically mv favorite people on this boat are the four smoking-room stewards. They are men you would like to have as friends. They are four perfect gentlemen. and their names are William Inselmann, Bernhard Wilmes, Jo Jared and Sammy Boyd.
| |
truck slows traffic. synchronization of traffic lights.
By Richard Lewis N Eighteenth Century French engineer who laid out Washington, D. C., can be held more or less responsible for today’s 5 p. m. traffic jam in down-
town Indianapolis.
Maj. Pierre L’Enfant, the engineer, was no crystal gazer. He could not envision the gasoline engine, the traffic light. He was a practical man who had seen the French Revolution. Major L’Enfant’s idea was to lay out a City where revolutionary mobs could not seize Key buildings. So he devised the spider web city, its streets angling out in eight compass directions from its heart. Such a city could be defended. Such a city is Indianapolis, which is copied from the Nation's capital. Both have their traffic problems as a result of the engineer's plan, particularly Indianapolis.
” n ~ HE key to modern traffic movement is synchronization. This is readily possible where streets follow the checkerboard pattern. When diagonal avenues enter the picture, the problem of trafic light synchronization and movement becomes complex. It's a problem Indianapolis has not yet solved satisfactorily, according to John J. McNellis, City Signal Superintendent. The problem is created, he said, by the addition of a third time factor Where two streets come together, traffic moves in four ways and this movement can be regulated by two time factors: an alternating red and green light. Where three streets come together, trafic moves six ways. The time factors are green, red and red. On each of the streets forming the triple intersection, synchronous movement of traffic 1s thrown off. That's. because of two red lights and only one green. It's all quite complicated, like one of those Rube Goldberg “inventions” where man A pulls cord B lighting match C which lights stove D -which boils water E, ete. In Indianapolis’ case, the interruption of traffic flow at threeway intersections disturbs the
History doesn’t say, but we'll bet a nickel that the State Senator had to take another drink right after he heard the news.
Movie Folks and Politics
ALFRED F. KAUFMAN (4623 N. Arsenal), secretary of the Indianapolis Amateur Movie Club, has been named one of the advisory editors of one of | the big magazines put out for the 8 mm. and 16 mm. | fans. : The TWA office staff was looking very | pleased with themselves yesterday while their new, | neon sign was being hoisted up over the front door. | .. . They were humming, too. on the Circle yesterday | where two men were stamping out “Roosevelt” and | “Willkie” pennies. . The Roosevelt people told us | F. D. R. was 5-to-1 ahead and Willkie folks said Wendell was easily out in front, 10 to 1 . That! reminds us to remind you that if you aren't registered | as a voter, you haven't got a whole lot of time left. | The deadline is Oct. 2d.
The CAA Program
OFFICIALS OF THE local CAA program are 8 little disappointed by the way things have been] working out latelv. Not in the program, mind you, but in the attitude of a lot of youngsters who want to learn to fly, but without doing anything about it Strangely a lot of voung folks have the idea that all one ought to do is to sign on the dotted line and climb | into the cockpit for the first lesson. At the end of | lesson two, they want to take over themselves, fin-| ished pilots. If vou dare to suggest ground school, | they look in wide-eyed amazement. Our guess is | that if vou happen to be one of those young men | eligible and not afraid to put in a little study on airplane mechanics and a few other technical as-| pects pertinent to flying a plane, the CAA people | would fall all over you. Us? We're just one day too old, Shucks!
By Raymond Clapper,
campaign against spending now than it was in 1936, because spending now is for defense. Willkie will promise full recovery. But the biggest | recovery measure ever undertaken in this country is the defense program. It is a life-saver for Rooseveit | that the international situation compels such enormous expenditures at this time, because it covers up | neatly under the American flag the whole ghastly | failure of previous spending, which left us with 19 |
million men and much factory capacity still idle. | The third-term argument appeals to many people because the re-election of Roosevelt tends to entrench personal power in a period when for defense reasons | COUNTY NOW !
{ i | i
we are obliged to move further into the field of government control and state socialism. Yet the difficulties of |
Just north of the “Cross Roads of America.”
Old Bill Dock, Wh
A double-parked
The City Signal system, which includes the fire alarm boxes, gets from storage batteries in the battery room. Superintendent John J. McNellis makes a test.
the “juice
whole system of movement downtown. ” ” ” DS XCEPT at tersections,
the three-way indowntown traffic signals are synchronized. It seems to be a myth to most motorists who don’t believe it. Actually, traffic lights from Maryland to New York Sts. and from Delaware St. to Indiana Ave. are set for 16 miles per hour Try to average 16 miles an hour any Indianapolis downtown street without bowling over jay walkers or banging left turners or double-parked cars. It's like an obstacle race The main thoroughfares ing out of downtown aren't chronized at all. This is for future. The nerve center of Indianapolis’ signal svstem—which includes police and fire call boxes in addition to traffic lights—is a dilapidated looking chamber in the attic of City Hall.
on into lead-
synthe
Indianapolis was laid out from a plan almost 300 years old.
The Monument Circle ahead complicates the | where traffic lights have to run in three cycles instead of two. Massachusetts Ave, College Ave, Noble and St, Clair Sts,
would be thrown off on
City Signal
Here amid litters and scrap metal three made beds is housed the electrical equipment which forms the automatic brain of the system.
of shavings
and n=
” ” ”
HE most elaborate piece of equipment is the Gamewell apparatus which sprawls over the floor and walls. It is compounded of old-fashioned shiny brass and multi-colored light bulbs which continually flash on and off I'his machinery is more than 40 vears old and for nearly half a century it been transmitting fire department signals to fire houses. All fire alarm boxes in the Citv are hooked into the Gamewell “brain.” When an alarm is pulled anywhere in the City, the brass parts of the “brain” begin chattering Lights on the wallboards flash on and off. This automatic signal system, long outmoded, is supple-
has
nerve center department built parts machined and tooled by the factory.
wheeled tion
Traffic alarm switch fails to make contact with the brass brain at City Hall,
The result Synchronized traffic movement, if any,
is this six-way intersection
The City Signal Department builds its own traffic signal heads
from materials prepared by the factory. on a head is Otho Enyert, signal foreman,
mented by the telephone by which a majority of fires are reported and transmitted
orders to engine houses wing of the attic is the traffic signal Traffic lights are
technicians from
The south
by
city
rom here. the assembled signal
heads, painted a bright yellow, are
elevator and installa-
down the into trucks for street corners traffic signals,
taken
at
Linking fire
alarm boxes and police call boxes together electrical impulses are 794 miles of overhead cable, stalled years ago with the Gamewell signal system.
into a vast network of wire and underground
Most of the wiring was in-
down fire
breaks or a
It frequently lights go out
Making a final adjustment
—- EE ———— —— -
O keep network in stant repair, an emergency squad is on call 24 hours a day, Members of the squad are the ocs cupants of the unmade beds when off duty. But theyre on duty most of the time, Since 1925 when the first autos matic traffic signals made their appearance on downtown streets, the number of signals has grown from 30 to 609. There are more to come Traffic signals of the rotary type —a circle of green lights inclosing a cluster of red lights—are to be installed on Meridian St. from Ohio to 16th St. These lights, ine vented by an Indianapolis dentist, warn motorists of the number of seconds left to pass on the green, Most of the downtown intersecs tions not now lighted will be in a few months, City technicians are building the signal heads for these intersections now and assembling the control boxes.
this Colne
0 Went fo Fight Martians,
Proves Value of Free Life, Says Carl Carmer
(CANADA TO LAUNCH
4 FLYING SCHOOLS
1 | OTTAWA, Ontaria, Sept. 10 (UU,
) «=C., D, Howe, minister of mue
the period are so great that there will be hesitation about turning over the control to inexperienced hands, |
and particularly into the hands of a party which has c 77-Year-0ld Woman Hit as
shown so little understanding of the needs of the present and the immediate past as the Republican Party. . She Was Boarding Trolley Saturday.
Thinking wn Broader Terms The 91st City-County traffic vic-|
A campaign which ‘carries a negative note, a tone | of picking at details, an air of holding back aganst| the rising impulse to play a more aggressive role il tim of the vear died last night in : world affairs. will not The American people gt Vincent's Hospital. The death | over to Orson Welle's program [Jim Anderson ana that hice Wile are Yeady HOW 10 resume the imperialis un b : : A ath} ana heard the ‘bulletins’*on what |of his lived u,» on the Wilson farn ‘ aq § perialism—call 1t bY was the 60th from accidents within| was happening right in their own | So did the Wyatt Fenitys and thea
names if vou like—that Theodore Roosevelt [je City limits. back vard Mr. and Mrs. |two bright kids. Bill went out to Wvatt Feniiv and their two chil= [the woodshed and took down his
personified at the beginning of the century. Their in-! pe Mrs. Ida Mav gr a BEY Gren, who alse live on the farm, |[shotgun, When he came back
: kp . v : victim was terest in aiding Britain's survival is an indication of | : : new thinking in broader terms than existed in the two Sutherland, 3344 W. Michigan St. | gare in bed asleep. William | through the house he opened the Dock. T6-vear-old resident of [pantry cupboard, found a couple of
decades following the World War. Roosevelt sees it, {Who was struck by a car Saturday and American opinion is responding to his leadership.ias she was about to board a track-| Grovers Mill, heard it and got |boxes of shells, and stuffed them in But this new direction of popular desire may lead jess (rollev : her § out his shot=gun.” {his pants pockets. Then he went us into a mistaken venture into the present European | oo 0 cv NEAr her home. (From the New York Herald= [out the back door and started across war. We are in danger of overlooking the difference] Mrs. Sutherland, who was 77, had| Tribune for Oct. 31, 1938.) [the fields toward the Wilson farm between helping Britain and going into the war as an been a resident of Imdianapolis for #% % | A Jot of folk made fun of Bill OLD BILL DOCK had had a the next day. They laughed at him
active belligerent. i nu . : . . more than 50 years. She was born Willkie has a chance to redirect this national im- |, Poi Bi . 3 | pretty hard day for late fall. There's for having peen taken in by a play= in Point Pleasant, W. Va. la lot to do at Grover’s Mill in mid- actor pretending to be a news
pulse. The direction should be toward developing the utmost national power, in both military strength and| She is survived by her husband, gle Jersey between harvest time broadcaster. But Bill Dock has been Bill one of mv heroes ever since that
commercial preparedness. But it must be a bold, (Lillington D. Sutherland: a son, Ray and the beginning of winter. : aggressive and challenging appeal for a hard-hitting | two brothers. Frank ate his supper and rested easy by) October night. I couple his name in y S, at my memory with that of Jonathan
cestors had established a greed) fend for himself. We know from ing Bill had was that the kind of the stove, trading ideas on running by men who, if they could, would | KNOWLEDGE wouldn't let him speak his mind | than did the wisest thing possible | to gather one pound of honey? had no experts to office? 7 Sutherland; America that will reach out and make its way through | , ? the radio. He was listening to some . 1 ) g its wa | an Iv EdWar wo mies | THE . ¢ ! : : 2 ust did the best ‘ the Taihiess scramble for power that is geng on all ters Ti VoL Sta, ot Hi Re | music when he dozed off. When Harrington and for a good reason. Just 4 ve United States? DS Te Won. gina Edwards, all of Indianapolis = youre 76 its; Jonathan was also asleep one Four voung persons were injured | 4 easy Yo Iallinight when he heard an exehed have acted more | & ‘ cob B dav wi t1 iF car lof JUred | EEE asleep. voice on the air. It said a thousand 5~W at important event in English Elea 1 R < It = SY i Car IR Te Yoad | Bill couldn't foreign soldiers were marching y nor 00seve {and crashed into a culvert in the have slept very down the road to town, and Jona= i.e heef or buls {5500 block of E. 38th St. Jong before an| than got up and took his musket the Houses of Parliament in Lone { oy were Charles Rano, 20, of excited voice and walked out to the village green I feel that 420 E. St. Clair St, the driver; Rob- waked him, where he found John Parker, Bob iemcelves. That ¢ | ert Lee Hilton, 18, of 304 N. Fast St.; | One of those Monroe, Sam Hadley, Tke Muzzy Staats Polizei (German Secret Richard ‘Graham, 20, of 1100 E. news fellows and more of his neighbors. A few hours later Jonathan (who Was on things. tive of New York, New Jersey or
Washington St, and Miss Irene was hot about rs Arvin, 21, of 440 N. LaSalle St. | something, At much younger then than Bill Dock |" But Bill Dock told the world on was on the night he set out for tne |
All were taken to St. Vincent's| first it was | Ne a that autumn evening that the spirit Hospital where their conditions were to gel the drift of it wilson farm) eravied bao howe of Jonathan Harringion still lives reported as “fair.” | but when he did he jumped up i the DE a In an age of the questioning of | auick enough. Some mean-looking el tet ng Thal op most accepted values Bill Dock |g strangers had landed an airplane on the GOOF . La vee: there are certain values that the flat meadow that's part of the Now the point that il ROS questioned Ps mes of good Wilson farm. The foreigners had g.ake is that none of Jonathan nds ol of ne and got out of their plane and begun Harrington's companions of the jie ship a ree democratic to act nasty, and pretty soon Bill fateful morning on Lexington vil=| could tell that they meant business. jage green ever attested that Jona= The radio man said they had killed {pan had said to the man who had off most of the State Police that wakeq him: “Mr. Revere, this is
nitions and supply, announced toe day that work would begin diately on four new air force in Western Canada. An elementary flying school will be established monton and air observers’ schools at Prince Albert, Saskatchewan, and Portage-La-Prairie, Manitoba \ flying training school will also be established at Swilt Current, Saskatchewan. The will be completed before the of Noe vember
Right now the Administration is trying to get Congress to put up 500 million dollars for export-im-port bank operations in Latin America, to strengthen the economies of those countries. The entire Republican membership of the Senate Banking and Currency Committee signed a minority report opnosing the measure. Roosevelt puts through the deal ta eet the British bases, and the Republicans say they are olad he got the bases but there should have been a lo. of argument about it vears of argument occurred about putting a canal across the isthmus but we never got the canal until Theodore Roosevelt took Panama, without, as the late Philander Knox said, any tamt of constitutionality. Most people are now glad he did it, without caring much how he did it. If the end is justified, it is difficult to get up much of an argument over the means in times like these. That may not be good ethics but
iii
it is the way of politics. . ~~ - “5 “Y te Defense Spending a Life-Save Willkie is therefore up agamst a hard argument when, in the face of a fait accompli, he must base his cage not on the results but on the method used. People just aren't interested now in talk that delays
would sacrifice my life on the altar of self interest.” And as for Bill Dock there is no record of his having said, when he started out to help Jim Anderson on the Wilson farm, that Jim's an-
By CARL CARMER ] Author of “Deep South.” ‘Stars Fell On Alabama,” “The Hudson,” etc. “The Wilson Farm at Mill was mistaken for muth farm’ of the play. Two of the three tenant families on the farm were at home when the false alarm spread. Mr, and Mrs. | James Anderson switched | Bill didn't hesitate after that
mmes
This is the second of 24 articles on "Our Country,” written by the nation's mest
C schools jrover’s the ‘Wil training in Ede famous authors.
service succeed work
sweeter end
things they want done. Neither will attacks on Roosevelt spending arouse much concern except among the minority which has always been against him for it. It is more difficult to
My Day
HYDE PARK, Monday.—The service yesterday was an impressive one. All the hymns stressed the fact that this was a day when we were praying for peace. After his sermon, our minister, the Rev. Frank Wilson, explained that the President had asked us all to join in a prayer for peace. Mr. Wilson told us that prayer does not mean something that vou sav only on one occasion It is a ‘continuing thing, something you ‘carry in vour heart and mind all the time and it moulds much of vour active life. I have seen several articles
lately in which people have seemed to feel that we are drifting into war. One after the other has said that this or that individual action, or Government action, brought us nearer to participation in the European cataclvsm. I look at it entirely differently. Tt seems to me that a firm, strong attitude is more ant to keep us out of war, War is a mass movement, but masses are made up of individuals. An individual is much more apt to be bullied and badgered until he finally turns upon his assailant and finds himself in a fieht, if he is weak and indecisive in character and allows his opponent to take the offensive. An individual, however, who feels strong and full of self- \
24 of America’s Greatest Authors Tell Wheat
AMERICA
Means to Them
confidence does not invite the aggressor. as a nation we should be that kind of individual, no wanting to bully anyone, not wanting to take any- | thing away from anyone, but feeling so self-confident | and strong that no one desires to oppose us. i After lunch yesterday, I went down to Poughkeepsie to say a few words at the unveiling of a| monument to Gen. Pulaski. The General did much to help us gain our freedom and it is only right that —
we should honor him and remember him among our | heroes, particularly at this time when freedom every- DID G. 0. P. SWELL
where is threatened again. Quite a crowd gathered | WALLACE CROWD?
at the monument and one interesting incident occurred A few years ago, the women's division of the Dem-| TECUMSEH, Neb, Sept. 10 (U.| ocratic State Committee held some essay contests P.).—The turnout to hear Demoand we had a boy who represented Dutchess County cratic Vice Presidential Candidate | as one of the winners. He was an interesting young |Henry A. Wallace yesterday was ad= | had showed up, and the Governor obvious propaganda on the part of
Mr. Carmer
of experience
should be. and therefore Jim could to himself. Perhaps the main feel: the sun and talk by night beside | and Wvatt Fenity-—-was endangered ¥ E ST YO U R and what he shouldn't, and who I'm not saving that Bill and Jona- travels 400, 4000 or 40.000 miley cumstances. They impeached was he deprived of his do, and so they the Pacific coast line of the y 1 haps they would p inter, author or musician? considered send= ! : 6-Wt famous bell is located In neighbors defend The popular name for Geheim be left to men in Was Theodore Roosevelt a na-
empire that was no better than it what Bill did that he said nothing life he lived-—work that he liked in ihe government with Jim Anderson tell him what he should work nn any more, 1--It has been estimated that a bee under the cir= 2--When President Johnson was tell them what to 3--Which is longer, the Atlantic or they could. Per= 4—Thomas Gainsborough was #& wisely if they had ” ~ hit wy occurred in 1066 A. D.? lets to help their don? question ought to Police) is? Massachusetts?
’ an p 1 me a Answers 40.000. 2--No; he was acquitted. J=Atlantic, 4—Painter, 5-William the Conqueror invaded England, 6--Big Ben. | TGestapo. 8-=New York,
I'd like to
Fighting among ourselves is one proof that we are not degenerate, writes John Steinbeck in the next article of this series on “Our Country.” 2 a 0
ASK THE TIMES
Inclose a 3-cent stamp for ree ply when addressing any question of fact or information to The Indianapolis Times Washe ington Service Bureau, 1013 13th St, N. W, Washington, D. ©. A Legal and medical advice cannot be given nor can extended research be undertaken, ,
boy who has now grown to be a young man and is vertised as held “in co-operation was calling the militia imperialistic monevgrubbers who PTE bor a en a with the Johnson County Repub- | SE ER : : - 3 ¢ © our Democratic ‘candidate for Con- jie . iat > Es A | y y A BY Caren be my escort at this Polish cele- aR ral. chairman of | . 20 JRER PAROLED . RESERVE BASES OKEYED Wy TO BUILD ROADS : mn. ve is progressing well and I know the Nebiaska State D ; ens | WASHINGTON, Sept. 10 (U. PO). | { SHINGTON, Sept. 10 (U, P). that it gave me great pleasure to see him again, I, . Ska State Democratic Cen=|__pajples granted 20 of the 24] WASHINGTON, Sept. 10 (U. P).|—=Federal Works Administrator am wishing him success in all his undertakings. tral Committee, Said the county Re miners serving prison sentences in| _ poaplishment of naval yeserve John M. Carmody has announced Our Norwegian friends left us today, $ we all had Publican organization aided in ad: the Southern Illinois bombing cases! =~ = : that the Public Roads Administra« a picnic supper last night out by the big fireplace | to the meeting and in bring= will become effective Sept. 15. Ar. aif bases at Portland, Ore, and in js prepared to begin construc on the picnic grounds. The children played all kinds |g out about 1500 farmers, as well [thur Grambih, Farl Evans, Ray- Salt Lake City, Utah, has been ap- tion soon on 3000 miles of roads of games afterwards to keep warm. I fear I must | Ri a luncheon meeting for Wallace. mond Tombazzi and John Edward proved by the Navy and awaits ap- leading to Army reservations at a acknowledge that autumn has come to stay. Republican comment wasgacking. (Tatman, wer not granted paroles, |propriations, : cost of approximately $220,004,060.
