Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 September 1940 — Page 21

FRIDAY, SEPT. 13, 1940

The Indianapolis Times

SECOND SECTION

Hoosier Vagabond

ABOARD S. S. WASHINGTON, OFF CENTRAL AMERICA, Sept. 13.—Boy, is it getting hot; In fact, it’s too hot. It's even hard to sleep. And when old Iceberg Pyle admits that, there's really something wrong with the weather But vou can expect it this time of vear on the Pacific side. Very likely, as soon as we pass through the Canal and get out into the Caribbean, it will be cooler—and rougher.

Flying fish are skimming the ocean, and many passengers are seeing them for the first time. Some people say they've seen dolphins, but I haven't. Now and then we see a ship on the horizon. One looked vaguely like a warship, but I guess it wasn’t. Maybe it was just a painted ship upon a painted sea. I knew I'd get that worked in somewhere before this trip was over. People certainly prepared for this trip. Their wardrobes. I mean. You never saw such a variety of sports clothes. Some of the handsomest shorts and slacks and things. And some pecple change two or three times a day. As for me, if I ever appeared in shorts they'd think I was a skeleton and bury me at sea. And I don’t own a pair of slacks. So I just go around all the time in that old pair of duck pants that hasn't been washed all summer.

Woes of a Radio Boy

The other day we got a radio message. (I had it sent to myself, because anybody on a luxury liner who doesn’t get a radio is pretty poor cheese, indeed). As I say, we got a radio, and when the boy took it to the cabin That Girl told him I was sitting up on deck She described me, and told him I was wearing brown duck pants. And do you know, when that boy came by he took one straight look at me and kept right on going, and never did come back with the radio. I guess he was ashamed of me One day I got to talking with one of the radio bovs. He was fairly disconsolate. He says the radio

THERE IS. unfortunately, a good deal of misapprehension about WPA workers in this area. Too many people are inclined to shrug them off as *“shiftless gimmes.” Politicians stick their feet on their desks and tell vou glibly that vou know just how the WPA vote will go this fall so you can cross that off the list. Well, nobody really knows how the WPA vote will go this fall. The truth is that the man on WPA doesn’t like it any more than you do. What he wants is a job that is a job. Where he isn't labeled bv some jester as a ‘“shovel-lean-er’ or “grass-raker.” It is quite possible that those on WPA have been giving more thought to the November election than hundreds of persons who think they know all about it As early polls have shown an almost 50-50 split among the WPA workers and it is quite obvious that thev are studving the campaign developments with extreme care

ALid Yes, gimmes, a living

a matter of fact

There are the world owes them Tere are phonies, who don’t have to be on WPA. But the great majority of WPA workers are decent, honest people who have been running in hard luck ever since the depression started through no fault of their own. They're going to vote they think the best real job The Mayor and Accidents HIZZONER THE MAYOR pooh-poohs the auto accident he was In other day He wasn't hurt very much, he said, he felt reaction what-

on WPA,

dead-heats who think

there are

people

the one them a

in November-—for

has chance of getting

the

and no

Washington

WASHINGTON, Sept. 13.—~We hear much how is and what it should be, but the spirit of it rarely has been illustrated better than the attitude of Senator Henry Fountain AsShurst Arizona, speaking in the Senate on the day after he was defeated for re-election He had served as Senator since Arizona became a state After 28 years in office a man might well come to think himself indispensable Some reach that e of mind in much less time Instead of resenting the decision of his state to dispense with him, Senator Ashurst thanked his people for having allowed him to serve so long. If we are to remain a free people, Senator Ashurst told the Senate, it is the duty of public servants to accept defeat cheerfully, which he proceeded to do in one of the most remarkable speeches heard in a long time, Ability to change our officials, and prompt acceptance of change, with a willingness on all sides to make the best of the new situation, are necessary to effective democracy Had the verdicts of the country in 1932 and 1936 been received with more of that spirit among powerful figures in our business life and among the Republican opposition, much of our trouble would have been avoided It was the continuing resistance to those verdicts that sometimes drove ‘he Administration to apposite extremes and kept us a nation deeply divided within itself.

Political Independence Rare

Senator Ashurst also paid his people a high compliment when he said that during his entire service they had allowed him to do as he pleased and to say what he pleased. In that he was paying himself an unconscious compliment, because the privilege of political independence is a rare one, bestowed only upon those who show the capacity to deserve it Lesser men must the line and that is not always good for either the constituents, the public official or the country, In a time of such confusion as this. ficulty of understanding today that of seeing into tomorrow,

My Day

HYDE PARK, Thursday.—It seems that I have to read the papers in order to find out about my shortmust say, many are, novel ones creep up on me all the time, Yesterday 1 found a

about what democracy

ever

atet

toe

when the dif1s exceeded only by public officials must be

comings! I as they

By Ernie Pyle

business isn’t so good on this trip. He says that on the regular North Atlantic run the radio delivery job is the best job on the ship for tips. You see, most people making the Atlantic crossing are businessmen, and they get lots of radio messages about business. But on this trip, filled mostly with vacationists, there aren't so many, and the tips are poor. The thing I like most about this ship is that you aren't badgered to death by an official arranger always pestering you to join the crowd and play some kind .of game. There isn’t a hostess or a cruise director or a master of ceremonies on the whole ship. I think it's quite a compliment to the passengers’ intelligence.

Lecturing the Captain True, they do have things doing. But they print

the daily schedule on a card and hand it to you at dinner the night before, and at lunch the assistant | purser announces things over the loud-speaker. |

This ship has a print shop, with three printers in it. They turn out an awful lot of stuff. Special | menus for passengers’ birthdays, daily programs, | souvenir menus, souvenir logs of our progress, and | a daily newspaper. | The paper carries no ship news, just radio news | from over the world. They haven't room for all of it. | So the captain has an extra carbon of the full radio | report made for us, and it is stuck under our door |

every morning. |

The other night I got to talking to the captain | fi

about the newspaper, and pointed out what I thought was an error in news judgment. They had used up space telling about a little boy getting caught in a | revolving door, but had not even mentioned the death | of a man whose name is known to everybody in| America. | “That Capt.

s poor newspapering,” I said to the captain. Manning gave me one of his sardonic grins and said, “I'm the one who picks out the news.” Which gave me sort of a start, but I'm not one to crawl to any man so I said, “Well, you may be a | fine sea captain, but you're still a lousy newspaper man.” And there the matter stands. If we don’t strike a whale, this afternoon.

we'll be in Panama

ever until the day after it happened. Then, he says, he got sleepy. The Mayor

Inside Indianapolis (And “Our Town")

is an old hand at accidents and he| says that after so many of them you don’t bother | anymore, He's been in a train wreck, an airplane crash and a serious auto crash. He's tough, points out Hizzoner, He claims it's] the mauling he took on the football field in his| college days that toughened him up. Plus, we might | add, shouldering his way through the politicians,

The Newest in Fishworms

ON MASSACHUSETTS are several signs proclaiming: What, no 1941 models, yet? night club on the outskirts of the city noticed re-| cently that the young fellow in charge of parking | had taken on a worried look and an avid interest | in conscription. The other evening the young] man asked to be paid off He said he was going| into the hills of Tennessee, added mavbe he'd be back when the war blew over Workmen were haul- | ing underground light cables up on Washington St, vesterday and splitting them into small sections with axes so that they could be loaded on trucks. | . They had a good audience because they were | betting nickels on how many strokes it took to cut] through a cable The Civic Theater's first production of the year (Oct, 18-23) is going to be the celebrated “Of Thee I Sing.” What could be nicer in an election vear? The Police Depart-| ment’s pettiest pet peeve is calling a traffic drive a| traflic drive . They always refer to it as “continuing enforcement.” And talking of the police, we might mention that Chief Morrissey is in Milwaukee | at the convention of the International Police Chief's Association, . The bovs on the force had better | hold their hats because he's sure to be full of new ideas when he gets back.

AVE. along fishworm row, “Best 1940 worms.” . .| . The proprietor of a|

By Raymond Clapper

allowed much latitude hy the country. It is not so much a question of which has the better judgment, the official or the public, as it is one of which has the better information. That was possibly the advantage that President Roosevelt had over those Senators who in the summer last year ridiculed his idea that there might be a war in Europe. In a third respect, too, Senator Ashurst tells us something about what democracy should be. He does not say it in so many words, but it is implicit in the | whole tenor of his half-humorous, mildly self-depreca-tory remarks, in his philosophical acceptance of wi, shift from important office to private life Senutor Ashurst bears gracefully the or having his power shucked off. For most oa Mi that is an excruciating operation, accompanied by | loud cries of pain and by scers that leave them forever unhappy, damaged souls,

A Noble Example

Unwillingness to surrender power civilization, the root of ages of trouble. Some men find the appetite irresistible. They will sacrifice everything eise to hold their power. This is seen in its rawest form in dictatorships, and in more subtle form in democracy. Wars have heen precipitated, crises manufactured, enemies murdered, and countries have been sacrificed by men desperate | to hold their power. Senator Ashurst seems able to | take it or leave it with equal grace. He said: “When my present colleagues here are | worrying about patronage, worrying about committee assignments, and about the scorching demands of constituents, I shall possibly be enjoying the ecstasy of the stillness of an Arizona desert night, or viewing the scarlet glory of her blossoming cactus, and pos- | sibly IT may be wandering through the petrified forest, | a forest which put on immortality 7,000,000 years ago. | Enjoyment and ecstasy arise in human life from the contemplation and appreciation of such things.” But this noble example will be wasted on a world now cursed with the evil and brutal fruits of powercrazed leaders. Senator Ashurst would be the last to write himself down as a great and eventful statesman, vet within the range of his capacity he breathes, as the foregoing points suggest, the spirit of ideal democracy, which if it were more common now would make this world more tolerable. But that is only a day-dream of what might have been.

is a curse of

|

By Eleanor Roosevelt

to say in two papers, but I am also rather interested for, of course, while no paper can add to what I have

21-31

INOW that the House and Senate conferees in Washington have reached an agreement on the draft bill, The Indianapolis Times presents the first of a series of question-and-answer articles telegraphed from its Washington Bureau: Q—When must register? A—=The first registration will take place 15 after Congress passes appropriation bill providing money for the new training program. This should put it between Oct. 10 and 15 Men of 21 to 30 inclusive probably will register first, with men 31 to 35 inclusive registering at a later date, though the War Department may decide to register all at once @Q-—How to register? A-—The President proclamation, Q—-—Who must A-—Every male citizen and male alien residing inh the United States or its possessions who has

passed his 21st birthday and not his 36th.

men

days

an

will men know when

will issue a

register?

Q-—-What exceptions are made? A—The {following are not required to register: Officers and men of the Regular Army, Navy, Marine Corps, Coast Guard, the I'ederally recognized active National Guard, Officers’ Reserve Corps, Naval Reserve, Marine Corps Reserve, students in West Point, Annapolis and the Coast Guard Academy, men serving with the Coast and Geodetic Survey and Public Health Service and foreign diplomatic representatives, (In addition, excepted from _beace- time military

the following are registration and service, _ but

The authors of the conscription bill, Edward R. S. Avmy Chief of Stafy,

N. XJ) with Gen, George (

left, and Senator , Marshall,

are subject to registration and

service Veterans of in

Con ps

in wartime

three vears’ the Army, Navy, Marine Guard; National Guardsmen who

service or Coast have completed one year of serv= this with Army

ice and who will follow two vears of National have completed six years’ men on the Officers Corps eligible list for at years)

Q-—-Where conducted? A-—=Registrants will fill out cards in their regular voting precincts

Regular gery

10e; Guardsmen who service, Reserve

least six

will registration be

Q—What provision 5 made for men with dependents A-—They must register President is authorized, stich regulations as he may pre geribe, to defer training and service of those with dependents where deferment is advisable. The local draft boards will have broad powers fo decide questions of dependency

but the under

Q-—Will married men be ex empted from service? A--The mere fact is married does not be exempted; if his ing, has accumulated property from which she ma has an income otherwise, or be supported by her parents

husband may be called

that a man mean he will wife is works savings or live, can the

Q-—-Will he exempted? A-In most the local boards, handling cage individually, could find support for children would available without the aid of father

men with children though every that

CASES, Ves:

Q- What

dependents must a

he the

Rep, James Wadsworth

Burke (D. Neh.) right, conferring

man have to be put in a deferred class? A-—The bill Regulations to be drawn later will this In the World War

men were deferred from depencd-

does not specify

cover

children, aged infirm parents, grandparents, brothers under 186, sisters under 18, or a helpless brother or sister of whatever age. Fach case will be decided individually according to the circumstances

ency of wife, or

Q a man the A-—~Exemptions occupational

draft? will not be made groups. In each local draft boards will des whether a man's job “necessary to the maintenance of the national health, safety or interest Broad regulation this subject will guide them. In the World War some workers in al most every industry found to be essential to the national interest

from

by case

termine is

on

were

Q—=How {to register? A--About 12,000,000 30 age group and 31-t0=35 group, a

16. 500.000 men.

many are expected

21-

in of

in the 4.500.000 total

to

the

these evens available for .

many of

he found

@-—=How tually will service? A-- According to es 5.000.000,

timate, about

Q-- How many actually will be inducted into the armed forces? A-The limit is 900,000 at any one time. Army plans contemplate calling up 400,000 this fall and

another 400000 next spring

Q How will local draft be selected? A —They Governor

hoards

be chosen by the officials,

will

O1 other state

(R.

What sorts of job will exempt

EE

Lo

(Pravines) BE ALERT (X08

N, 8, Yorm No. 2

Registrar for... .. ww

(Middie name)

REGISTRATION CERTIFICATE

This {2 to certity that in accordance with the proclamation of the President of the United States

~

GUAR BRERA Ras

(Laat wame)

5.1 SHY, town, county, ot tats)

£ 2 has been duly registered this... . JARY Ol usvs sxx msnommvnsswawuwn

BRERA A. BURR E Enns REE

(Rignature of rogintenr)

Wand)

in touch with Lota) Board immadintely of change of address,

- RULER EE EYE (Oty or sovmty) led

our Loeal Board 144490

18 aro

DESCRIPTION OF REGISTRANT

a

Bono

A AA Ts

Coron oF Ryns

Slender

lends

RL Sr AR AAA 0

Cowon or Hath

Medium

Medium

AA CLR ARN RAH

Pilipino Short

Stout

COMPLEXION

Other obvious pliyaioal sharacteristion that will sid in (dentiBostion .........couuw.

FEN RAR NI EL ALR AAA ALUN NUUN NNSA FA EE AAA RRS RC Ce Lene

FREELANCER L EE ee

10-~14449

Here is a front and back view

BEARER

CARRY THIS CARD WITH YOU AT ALL TIMES

of the registration certificate now

used by the Army for training purposes and which might be placed in

use when the conscription bill becomes law,

Persons who had com

plird with the registration provisions would be required to carry such

a card,

and by the President without pay,

the

will be appointed

though this is Generally,

up te states there be one board to each counts in urban areas, one to each

men. Members of boards will

01

he

and will have broad, alinost

solute, authority

Most of them will serve

will

30.000 ' 1. 1 drawn from the local community, abe

grea

If for 6500 the and

bey No n

“dot

Q-- Can decisions of local boards

be appealed? A--Yes, by either or the Government

the registrant

population. In addition to the appeal boards, advisory hoards peals from decisions

ing physicians

Q-—1Is the hoard final? A-—It is, in the vast majority of cases, The law provides that a final appeal may be carried to the President, but the possibility of this is extremely remote,

to consider

of

ap examili=

ruling of the appeal

@ How are men actually to be selected for service? A-=After registration, to plans developed by the joint Army=Navy commitiee, the local board will shuffle registration cards, and these cards will be given serial numbers according to their accidental sequence in this shuffle. Then, there will be a lottery numbers drawn will selection,

according

in which

Numbers to be drawn from will 4000, slightly above the

range from 1 to perhaps

or some number :

HOOSIER DRAFT Mary Roberts Rinehart Sees 2 Americas,

CHOOSES 1IN21

‘That's Unofficial Guess a

State Aids, Based on Present Bill.

By EARL RICHERT If the conscription bill passes as it is now written, hetween the ages of only one chance in drafted, This was the unofficial tion made today hy State House oflicials after

the Hoosier male

21 and 35 has

a1 “of

caleulasome interested

| | | In

|

being

{he Con-|

gressional change in the age limits]

for conscription had forced them to revise their earlier Under the previous limit they figured that only one in 15 of that age group would be called Based on Draft of 900,000

These figures are based, of course,

odds,

age

on the bill's provision that only 900, 000 men will be drafted at one time in the entire United States, If the Indiana conseription quota | is based on the state's population ratio to that of the entire U, they think it will be, 22,500 Hoosiers will be drafted.

S. as

And the National Guard has eal-

written, any paper, because of limitation of space, can culated there will be 490,000 Hoo-

take out sentences, meaning somewhat,

This does inevitably change the |sier men between the ages of 21 and (85,

So the draft boards will have |

of |

| |

One Worth Dying for in Dignity and Splendor

r MARY ROBERTS Author of The Door,” “The Circular Staircase,” “The Doctor,” ete There are two Americas today. One is powerful, dignified, long-suffering and slow to anger, It has none of the despairs which threatened Europe with revolution and thus brought the dictators to power, It has more food than it can use, incalculable natural resources, une limited land, and mane power in millions for war and peace, It is more than that, It is still the last stand of the humanities on earth, still sanctuary toward which the of a tortured world turn eves

RINEHART

vast,

24 of America's Greatest Authors Tell What

AMERICA Means to Them

the refugees longing Our weaknesses are largely those of our forebearance. It is not reactionary to believe in frecdom under law, rather than in the type of freedom which becomes license, or which permits the free

Formaldehyde Covers Planet |

By Science Service PRINCETON, N. J, Sept

Life on the planet Venus, the clouds that perpetually

13. under veil

This the fifth of 24 articles on "Our Country,” written by the nation's most famous authors.

is

expression of seditious or treason= able ideas. And although we have allowed far too much of this, we still do have freedom We can still say what we will. worship as we please, live our free lives as free men and women, even close

[ our doors and be safe against in-

trusion, There are no storm walking into our houses, in hand, to drive us prison, or death But the second America is dif« ferent, It is small but dangerous. It plays up a national weakness which does not exist, incites fear, tells youth that to love a country enough to fight fdr it it is ridiculous, that wars are made by old men for monetary gain, and sows assiduously the seed for a national chaos and despair as unJustified as it is Wicked.

troopers revolvers to exile,

{

It mast he destroyed, and can do this. For America is worth fighting for. It 1s more than that, It is worth dying for, As 1 write this an island across the sea is pre=paring Jor death, rather than surrender what we have too long taken for granted, If England dies it will die in dignity and splendor, This 18 our heritage. Not hysteria. Not politfeal demagoguery or passive ace ceptance, A freedom Is to be preserved to the death, with dignity and splendor

Mary Roberts Rinehart

Man must regain his feeling for man here in the United States, declared Sherwood Anderson in the next article of this series on “Our Country.’ »

NAZIS LIKE SHARKS, | No Rest for

DUCE A BULFROE

is pri

CLEVELAND, Sept. 13 (U, P)

| The disease of civilization

Police Chief

ILWAUKEE, Wis, Sept, 13 (U, «= Police Chief E. Weatherly,

marily biological rather than politi-| Et O, couldn't forget he

cal or sociological and is seen at

its |

is a policeman, although miles

Appeal boards will be set up for each 600.000 of

there will be medical

in Washington,

determine

only the common sense of our people

Q fied A

to ques

eacl

covered depe

type

these place

regis their These pages tailed

test number of men registers

ing with any local board

No. 824 should be drawn example No. 824 in the 20 local districts would be t man called In his district order number would be No No. 92 were the next num drawn, this number would 2 to be called, and so on ms the draft is based ible shuffle”

each 0! firs his

) Df

On a

How are registrants for deferment? After the the joint tionnaire: strants in the order numbers have questionnaire calling for the information Istrant., Among are physical ndent: education earning: of work done. On the basis of answers it is planned to registrants in of four

lottery, according committee's plan will be sent to in which heen selected cover eight cle ming stibiect

most cConce 1 reg condition

ole

classes

1 diate 3 port ices life 3. 1 in tl 4 indn vio

physical

T1 clas

istrant is deferment is

for tivel

Wo

(St, a

| pulled open

the ¢ hox. As to M “4

and «¢

| | | | |

Frightened Smedley

| miles Lebat conta

Miss

| police

Bhe

3765

sification Is

| | While stopped by a traffic light on W

Available 3] Deferred of ance the nation being rendered in

for service immeime OT

hecause the of

civilian

to

eferred because of dependents 1c meaning of the Deferred by law ction is undesirable 8 reasons, such as unfitness, 1e ruling principle

nw because for ob Insanity, alienage, et in this that every regeClass 1 until established posi-

01

in ealse

Vy

MAN ROBBED BY

~ ARMED HITCHHIKER

Miss Wanda Smedley was 16th t Road 52 vouth the

and took a gun from a cigar

door,

night, a leaped into ar he drew the weapon, he said iss Smedley: Irn irive fast.” and het an hour. At the bandit $20 Smedley

right, drive to Lebanon

Miss 0

nervous, ween 60 the outskirts took

and left

drove anc of 10n, hei

ining

purse the cal notified Lebanon y and the sherifl's office here was en route her home, Lafayette Road When held up

fo

TEST YOUR KNOWLEDGE

“He

MN

many cubic feet are in a

cord of wood?

2==Can

ba

the voltage of a storage ttery he increased by the direct

use of a transformer?

3-~Maine

fs bounded by which

State?

4--Was

ple | Buse W dn

6--What was

Di

T«Who 8--Who

en

CGleorge Sisler a baseball boxer or a wrestler? the Democratic candi Vice President? the original Mason and line? was Neptune? said, “Patriotism ough’?

Aver, a ho is te for

Xon

fs not

ENE RRR

little item announcing that in Cincinnati, at an Interstate Commerce Commission hear- ¥ ing, a porter testified that I had paid him 50 cents for a T0-cent service and that he had not told me of my mistake,

worst in Europe's totalitarianism,| outside his jurisdiction, » | Dr, Ernest Albert Hooton, Harvard | Here for the police chief's con[University anthropologist, told the| gantion, Chief Weatherly inter [centennial convention of the yA ceded when he saw a street vens ican Dental Association here last| dor become abusive with a woman | night, or | Who refused to buy his shoe- | In a discussion of evolution, | strings.

Answers

1«-One hundred and twenty-eight. 2=-No. | 3—New Hampshire, \ Baseball player, S-Henry A: Wallace, 6The surveyed line between Penne svlvania and Marviand

I traveled down to New York City and back on the [490.000 men from which to select the | train vesterday and had an interesting conversation on the way down with one of my Poughkeepsie neighbors who is interested in laboratories and research work for the prevention of contagious diseases. She is convinced that we should force every mother to What grieves me is that he did have her child inoculated against diphtheria before not tell me, for I have always it is a year old, She told me that every death from doubted whether the new rule of diphtheria was equivalent to murder, 10 cents a bag gave the porters I think it is so well known today that it is a prosufficient pay. Therefore, I thought tection for a child to be given diphtheria anti-toxin, that I had always paid not only that there is really comparatively little necessity for my 10 cents a bag, but a tip in a drive to educate people in this particular field. If, addition. To find myself 20 cents however, statistics show that many people, especially shy on the actual amount due is children, are dying from diphtheria, I agree with my really a shock However, if it lady of the train that we should all do what we can helped the porters to change this rule, which I feel to prevent it, quite sure is not giving them enough weekly income, Today has been a glorious day and, after a grand perhaps it will not do me any harm ride and plenty of exercise, I even had a swim, though I had a letter yesterday from a gentleman who says 1 must confess that the water is getting very cold. he reads my column in two different papers, and he Some friend came to lunch to discuss some difficulties found something which he considered vital to the about refugee children in unoccupied France, and now meaning of the column left out from one 0 them. I we are about to start to attend the Democratic womam flattered that anyone bothers to read what I have en's tea given by Mrs. Henry Morgenthau Jr.

its surface, now seems impossible, as a result of studies by Dr, Rupert Wildt of the Princeton University Observatory. Dr. Wildt,

National Guard officers have figured there are 63900 men in Marfon County who will register the terms of the bill. Thus under the population proportion basis, Marion County will provide approximately 3000 for the 22.500 draftees, If many Hoosiers voluntarily enlist in the army during the draft] period and the state is given credit | for them, as it is believed will be | done, the chances of being drafted | will be even smaller than they are| at present, Officials say that the chance of being drafted is so small that there is practically no possibility of any married men or single mgn in key Jobs being called for duty.

that sur

who showed Jupiter and Saturn are rounded by clouds of ammonia, and that the atmosphere of these planets also contains methane, now advances the theory that the clouds of Venus are solidified formaldehyde. This 1s a poisonous and extremely irritating gas otten

under | Hooton used both the Nazi and ind Unimpressed by the officer's

| Fascist as examples civilian clothes, the vendor per 3 ‘animal development, sisted, Mr. Weatherly called a rt nasion] Boul of the sea. | The shark he likened to a Nazi, Milwaukee policeman who arrest- [°c 0 CAVE for neither of which, he said,| ad the vendor. » » »

civilized society has any use “except Ee sua. CUTS TEETH AT 84 ASK THE TIMES

his hide.” The shark is a “totalitarLEWES, Del, Sept. 13 (U, P).=| [Inclose a 3-cent stamp for re-

ian stage of animal development,” | he said, “totally bestinl and total- | gighty-four- a Jacoh Morris ts| Ply when addressing any question of fact or Information to

ly useless.” cutting his third set of teeth. An used as a disinfectant because of The bullfrog—-an amphibian=re- |X. red A ori | The Indinapoils Times Wash its germ-killing powers. minds him of Mussolini, Dr. Hooton | paperhanger, had two new molars ington Service Bureau, 1013 13th His results are announced in a |SAid. “It has a loud voice and is pushing through the gums of his 8t, N. W, Washington, D. OC. ? Inotoriously capable of self-inflation.| lower jaw. He was advised to lay| Legal and medical advice cannot paper to appear in the next issue | when danger threatens, it dives for aside his artificial teeth until the| be given nor can extended reof the Astrophysical Journal, its primordial refuge in the deep,” |process had been completed. § search be undertaken, *

of phases in

| | |

22,500 3000 From Marion County |