Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 December 1940 — Page 9

MONDAY, DEC. 9,

940

Defense Delays

SOME ‘DAY THERE will be a great explosion of ‘public indignation when the facts about our aircraft . production shortcomings become known. Lack of g single strong executive to head the aircraft. production Job is resulting in unnecessary confusion and delays. It has made impossible such a standardization of contracts and specifications as is absolutely essential before the making of planes can be put on a true mass-production basis. The Army and Navy are calling for different types of planes and parts, thus making it impossible for manufacturers to tool ®heir plants and deliver standard types of planes. And until that is done, the manufacture of airplanes will be on a custom-made, rather than a mass-production, basis. The first thing a regl defense boss would do would be to bring the Army and Navy together, study their needs, and standardize the specifications for similar items and articles.

Differences in Engines You don’t need to know anything about aviation to see what I am driving at. For instance, the Army and Navy both order 1000-horsepower air-cooled engines. It would clearly seem that the same engine could be built and shipped to both outfits. the Navy engine differs radically from the Army engine in accessories, in the types of bolts holding the various parts together, etc. A Navy 1000-horsepower engine will not be accepted by the Army, or vice versa. That’s one nasty, time-wasting snarl due solely to bureaucratic red tape. The Army has one type of oil tank and oil cooler, and thé Navy has another. This means the manu‘facturer of oil tanks and oil radiators cannot turn his entire shop loose on bulls a single type of each (item.

(Ernie Pyle 1 is en

But the fact is that

. By Maj. Al Williams||

The Army requires one type of engine controls; the Navy another type. One service is satisfied with blueprints; the other .service demands transperent drawings, More complications, ‘more man-hours, and more expense. The arrangement of instruments on the instrument board—the instruments themselves being identical— differ for the Navy and the Army. The Army and Navy are not agreed .on engine starters. More contracts, variations, and more hours wasted. The' fuel systems of the Army and Navy are of different design. . More contracts, more Siope required to produce the different articles.

Do-Man Boss Needed

The Army demands one type of landing gear; the Navy another. More wrangling about specifications, more contracts, more and different factory machinery, and more skilled man-hours, These are only some of the dozens of production snarls that could be solved by a good, old-fashioned DO-MAN BOSS. And when it comes to alterations of plane structure while a certain type of plane is supposed to be on the production line, well, a thousand pages of print would not hold the story. If any one thing ever be singled out as the rock that ran our nation’s air-defense program off the track it will be found to be “alterations.” Alterations and inability to “freeze” a given plane or engine type, in order to get some actually built for the. men who fight in the air—those things came close to sinking England. We are now up against iden-|-tically the same problem of ‘constantly changing designs and refusal to settle upon certain standardized types of planes and parts.. In my opinion, only a strong boss, who is supreme and who knows that standardization is the foundation of mass production, can solve it.

route to London)

Inside Indianapolis (And “Our Town”)

NO WONDER THEY CALLED IT “the good old days.” Just examine this| 1886 menu, brought to our attention by Mrs. Margaret Glover, 1238 Eugene St. . She attended the Christmas day dinner at the Hotel English, of which her uncle, Rosseter Morgan, was proprietor, and in her memory, she says, she still can see the apparently endless line of white-coated waiters carrying huge trays laden with steaming foods. Here's the. way it went:

: Chicken Mulligatawny Broiled Spanish Mackerel—Drawn Butter Sauce Palms Julienne Cole Slaw | Buffalo Tongue— | Sauce Piquant Lobster Salad

. Olives Boiled Leg of Mutton— Caper Sauce Shrimp Salad Celery Roast Turkey—Cranberry Jelly Stuffed Pig—with chestnuts - Beef—drip gravy Mallard Duck—Game Sauce Potted Pigeon—with small pastry Oysters Roasted on the Half Shell Escalloped Sweet Breads Saddle of Fowl—with Mushrooms Small Tarts of Jelly Cucumber Pickles Mashed Polatoes Browned Jersey Swe. .s Asparagus on Toast Stewed Corn French Peas

Kentucky Hoe Cakes and Buttermilk English Plum Pudding—Brandy Sauce Lemon Pie Mince Pie

Pickled Beets

French Custard Orange Cake Nut ‘Cake { Marble Cake -

Fancy Cakes

Fruit Cake ‘Black Cake

Lemon Cake Citron Cake

Lemon Ice Cream i Bananas

Oranges Assorted Nuts

Layer Raisins Apples Confections Cream Cheese Crackers

Coffee

Washington

WASHINGTON, Dec. 9.—Fear that we will be led unawares into the war lies behind much of the controversy over aid to Britain. Public sentiment is held back by that fear. When |specific measures of aid have been proposed in the past, the opposition to them has sprung from fear that we would be led into active fightmg. | Yet a most drastic change in public sentiment and in official direction! would be necessary to take this country into war. Probably only some sensational development in the war itself could bring about ay such sharp change. | Until | now, ah ahy rate, the policy within the Government has been to draw the line against anything that would be likely to bring us ‘into physical encounter with the Axis, but to favor measures which do not involve that risk. One is given to understand that Secretary Hull, who is a powerful influence in| basic matters of policy, makes that the test and that thus far there hag been full White House support for it. For instance, despite whet has been printed, there is no serious official inclination to undertake naval convoy service for shipments to England, because that would involve probable physical encounter. To transfer our destroyers to the British involved no such danger” We will deliver planes for Britain at the dock but will not send them across in our ships-be-cause that might involve physical encounter.

Provocativer Incidents Lacking

That up to now, has been the dividing line. If that policy is adhered to, we cannot become involved

in the war by anything we might.do. The Axis is not.

looking for new enemies to take on now, and what the Axis does if it wins the war will be dictated by what it believes to be its interests—not by whether we now give much aid to Britgin or only some aid.

The only real matter of doubt is whether President Roosevelt intends to adhere to that policy. Any

My Day

WASHINGTON, Sunday—San Antonio is a city which I think has real charm. There were two things I wanted to do there on Friday, which I did not suc‘ceed in doing, so I shall have to go back there before long. Mayor Maury Maverick has been rebuilding an old section of the city which I wanted very much to see and, in addition, I wanted to visit the housing project which is nearly completed. c I had time, however, to see two ‘or three friends at the hotel. After i lunch; the Mayor’s car took us’ to i the airport where a number of Democratic ladies were kind enough to come and see us off on our plane, which was half an hour late. : In Dallas we had time to go to the hotel and have a comfortable ‘inner before we went to the airport to take the deeper plane for Washington. We ran into a windy, fainy stretch and tossed about quite a bit before we ieached Nashville, Tenn. | Then calm settled on us igain and we arrived ahead of time, about 5:15a.m., it the Washington airport. 1 went to the White House, to be greeted by a umber of the staff, who should never have been up that early ho Though I tried to go to sleep

Ul,

And then on the bottom of the menu, in big fancy letters, it Foye “Merry Christmas”—even after

all that!

Our City Officials on Rations

SOME OF OUR CITY OFFICIALS feel like they're being blockaded. Ever since Controller James E. Deery issued his order prohibiting purchases after Dec. 1 to conserve the City’s waning funds, they’ve been on “rations.” Supplies are dwindling. Already some officials are using stubby pencils from which the erasers long since have vanished. So secretaries, clerks and others are developing ingenious methods, of dealing with the situation. The other day, one secretary needed a filing card. There wasn’t an extra one to be begged, borrowed or stolen. But she fixed that. She found some cardboard and made her own filing cards.

They Will Be A Little Late

FOR YEARS, THE CHARLES MAYER CO. has been importing plum puddings by the thousands from England. They take orders far in advance— with some families, it had become a Yule. custom. Today, it was learned that 5000 plum puddings and fruit cakes bound hére from Great Britain were lost at sea. The ship was torpedoed. The order will be filled, we're told, but delivery can’t be made before early spring, and it will be a trifle late then.

She Didn't Stay Converted

A MEMBER OF A PROMINENT Republican family was in desperate straits financially and needed a job badly two years ago. So, swallowing her pride, she went to a high Democratic official and asked for a job. After hearing her story, the Democrat extracted a promise that she would not embarass him politically in the future and landed her a job at the State House. Tears of gratitude rolled down her cheeks. When the smoke of battle cleared away after the Nov. 5 election, the Democrat found that the Republican he thought he had converted to the cause had donated substantially to the G. O. P. campaign fund and had worked hard for the Republican ticket. He’s pretty upsef; about it.

By Raymond Clapper

attempt to Las it and to risk physical encounter with the Axis would provoke a deep split within his official family, and within his following in Congress. As events abroad have gone up to now, it would be difficult for Roosevelt to switch the policy—practically a political impossibility.” He could only do it if supported by incidents abroad, such as the mistreatment of American citizens in Germany and Italy, or by some other kind of- provocative event that would inflame American sentiment to war pitch—from which it is far, very far, at this time. Much of our fear now springs from memory of the first World War. But it. should be remembered that from 1914 to 1917, for almost two and a half years, there was vehement public agitation, led by Some of the most influential citizens, for going into e war,

White Group Cautious

We have none of that this time. Or none of it at least bold enough to come out in the open. Even the William Allen White Committee is most guarded when it gets close to the subject of war—it doesn’t feel there is enough public sentiment so that it is .even safe to agitate the question openly. Any group which wants to advocate: going into is encounter not only the initial hostility of an 0 elming public sentiment but it will have the difficulty of showing how our going in would work effectively. We could send the Navy over—and leave the Pacific exposed at the moment when Japan would like to move south. We could send an army and land it in England, if we had an army, equipped and ready to move and with transportation to supply it—but what would it do there? The only practical argument that can be made now for our going into the war is that it would stimulate our own defense work. ‘The way to pull the teeth of that argument is to push defense production with more than the half-hearted effectiveness that now exists. If we don’t, then it will be argued with increasing force and effectiveness that the only way we can build our defense will be to go to war so that the necessary national will can be aroused. At the moment, that is the best opening a war party would have for its case.

By Eleanor Roosevelt

again, I might just as well have stayed up, for I was wide awake and glad to see my breakfast appear at 8:30. It is nice to feel settled again, and I am having no more long trips for some months to come. As I look back on this trip, I feel that I know a little more about that vast state of Texas. I am not quite sure whether I shall not have to ask Miss-Doro-

thy Thompson to join me on my next lecture trip,|

for everyone looks so disappointed when my secretary |. gives her first name and it is not Dorothy! ; Yesterday was spent catching up on mail and beginning to wrap up Christinas presents. I really enjoy going into my closet, where I accumulate things for this particular season, and doing them up with gay paper and ribbons. So many have to go far away this year, that they must be ready well ahead of time. > I lunched with the Secretary of the Treasury and Mrs. Morgenthau and the Secretary’s father, a particular pleasure, for I do not see Mr, Morgenthau Sr. half as much as I would like. At tea time, Miss Grace Frysinger brought Lady Archer-Shee and Mrs. Roop from Virginia, to talk over some of the problems of our rural women in their organizations, particularly in connection with their work in the Association of the Rural Women of the World. This organization is trying even now to keep in touch with some of its

members in occupied areus and countries which are)

a war

Also Held Bulk

Gallup Finds

By Dr. George Gallup

PRIN CETON, N. J., Dec. 9.—Some- of the most significant trends which appeared in the November Presidential election— trends which may be highly important in future American politics—are revealed in special post-election analyses by the American Insti-

tute of Public Opinion. " These trends—relating not to ‘the cold figures of state-by-state voting, but rather to the political: patterns of business men, whitecollar workers, labor, farmers, per= ‘sons on relief and others—go a long way toward answering the questions: Who were the 27,000,‘000 who voted to re-elect Roosevelt for a third term? Who were the 22,000,000 who voted for Willkie?

patterns are these; 1. President Roosevelt’s relative

the lower income group, despite defections in every major social and economic class.

2. The increasing “stratification” of the voting on an income basis.

3. The important role played by “new voters”—including both those who had just come of voting age and those who voted in 1940 . but did not vote four years ago.

Data for these analyses have come from the Institute’s semifinal election surveys, conducted during the week before the election, which came within 1 per cent of the national popular vote. The analyses do not include the Institute’s experimental telegraphic survey on the eve of the election, which i2creased the In-_ stitute’s margin of error to 2% per cent. . . 2 5 = NE fundamental fact revealed by the Institute’s studies is that President Roosevelt lost strength—as compared with 1936 —in every major political end social group. In great measure, of course, this can be explained by the third-term factor and by the basic Republican trend shown in the 1938 Congressional elections. These losses, group by group, range all the way from the loss of ‘a third of Mr. Roosevelt's 1936 support.among upper-income voters (and almost a third of his support with business men) to a loss of only a small fraction of his 1936 strength with labor and relief recipients. Here are. the potenlages of Président Roosevelt's vote in various social and economic groups,

NAVY CHANGING ITS SUB DESIGN

Souls Disaster Leads to Revision, Knox Told in “Annual Report.

WASHINGTON, Dec. 9 (U. P)— The Navy’s new submarines are be-

opéd since the Squalus disaster, Rear Admiral Samuel M. Robinson, chief of the bureau of ships, has

advised Secretary of the Navy Frank Knox in a report for the fiscal year 1939240. “Minor design improvements tending to greater ease and convenience in the use of existing fafacilities have been approved with a view to reducing the possibility of such disasters as that of the Squalus.” The Squalus sank May 23, 1939, off Portsmouth, N. H., during a trial submersion. It later was salvaged and recommissioned as the Sailsh. Admiral Robinson said that, as a result of the Squalus sinking, the Navy has devised rescue chambers which fasten onto a conning tower of a distressed sub to take men to the surface.- The Navy, he said, is seeking to develop a method of lowering the chamber without pre-

down” cable by a diver with “promising results.”

Admiral Robinson reported, still

| form bottlenecks ig navy yards al-

though expenditures for tools and equipment during recent mohths are the largest on record. He said the Navy has a serious shortage of officers for designing and supervision of naval construction.

GRIST MILL ACTIVE IN ITS 270TH YEAR

DENTON; Md., Dec. 9 (U. P.)— A grist mill that turned out flour for Washington's army during the Revolution is in dajly use here in what tradition says: is its 270th year of operation. The water-powered mill, said to be unchanged since Colonial days, is operated by F. S. Langrell. The frame building, large and roomy, is known as James. Murray’s Mill, on the banks of the mill stream, Hunting Creek. When Maj. Nathaniel Potter of Potter’s Landing near here was commissioned to buy flour for General Washington's troops, he went to

Murray, who ground corn meal. for

Some of the more important :

success in holding the greater part of the labor vote and the vote of

ing: built on revised designs devel-| =

liminary attachment of the “haul|

Worn and obsolete machine tools, |

he Inc Ianapo; IS

Of Labor, WPA,

900.000

3,

19,400,000

500,000

:3.000,000

Cn J

300.000

$1,900,000

(Every symbol = 1 million votes)

| 400,000

Some of the most significant patterns in the whole 1940 election won't be apparent when final, official figures for

the 48 states are released in Washington shortly. From special analyses by the American Institute of Public Opinion, however, come the above estimates of just where Roosevelt got his 27,100,000 votes—and where Willkie got his 22,200,000. The results will give political observers and practical politicians new insight into some heretofore wystert-

ous “internal” patterns in U.

according to the 1936 and 1940 preferences .of those interviewed by .the Institute: ie - 9% Roosevelt 1940 1936 Bo

Income ; ~ Upper income "($50 and over per week) Middle income ($20 to $50) sevsisece 93 Lower income (less than $20, including all relief categories) ...........69 Relief, WPA and old-age assistance ...80 Occupations A - Business ....ces000...34% Professional .....0.....38 White collar ..........48 Farmers seseness.54 Skilled labor ..ccc00...59 Semi-skilled ..cec000...67 Unskilled vss s asses seis 09 (All labor) ... .66 ‘It is important to note that the political breach between the upper income group and the lower

ase 38% 42%

60 6

84 41% 9

sdsevese

-Hoosier Goings On

TOO HOT

Burns Up Engine Trying To Thaw lt; Otwell Farmer Picks Corn At | A. M.

By TIM

BUILDING a fire under an; army mule to make it go may be all right for mules but a Bloomington resident knows now that you shouldn’t do it with a truck loaded with 1000 gallons of gasoline, The other day the motor of his truck was too cold to start, so he

built a fire under it.

When firemen arrived the engine and cab were ruinéd but they ex-

SCHOOLMAN NAMED DRAFT BOARD AID

William E. Best, principal of Lincoln High School, Evansville, Ind, has been appointed co-chairman of the 8th district Selective Service Board of Advisors for Registrations. The appointment was announced

by Governor M. Clifford Townsend.

Mr. Best will serve on the ad-

'visory board with Ralph Irons, sup-

erintendent of Evansville schools, who was appointed in September. District chairmen of advisory

boards help selective service registrants in filling out their question-

naires and explain the operation of the program to them.

Patient Wins Penny Battle

PITTSBURGH, Dec. 9 (U. PJ). —Fifty-year-old David Bloomfield has won the battle of the pennies. Just before he was to be released from Montefiore Hospital here, Bloomfield offered 4980 pennies, the family “nest egg” in payment for his bill. Cashier Leonard Reed of the hospital refused the pennies, demanding payment in what he called “legal tender,” citing a law of the United States declaring pennies legal tender up to 25 cents and silver up to $10. Bloomfield * trumped Reed yesterday. He pointed out the law was repealed in 1933, during the banking crisis, and anything goes now.

TOWN LIBRARY IN BOXCAR

COLMER, N. M,, Dec. 8 (U. P).|

—This little town of 75 persons claims to have the smallest library in the world—the only library in a boxcar—and the only library paid for with - eral women launched a drive for a mile of pennies to build a library. With the they purchased a boxcar,

Thoved 16 to a vacant lof, and nstalled some books,

gasoline exploded.

. stoker,

[ zled workmen were on the job—

S. elections.

income groups has become even more pronounced than it was in 1936. Four years ago the former group averaged 42 per cent for Roosevelt as compared with 84 per cent among persons on relief and WPA —a spread of 42 points. In the recent election this became approximately 52 points—or about as much spread as there was between Republican Kansas and Demogratic Mississippi.. ” 2 2 ONTHS before the November election every political observer recognized that President Roosevelt, running for a third term, could not hope to hold all of the 27,500,000 who voted for him in 1936. But many political observers made the mistake -of assuming they could count Governor Landon’s 16,700,000 votes as a solid “nest-egg” or rock-bottom minimum for the G. O. P. Many of them also overlooked the role which might be played*by “new” voters (first voters plus

TIPPETT

tinguished the blaze before the

2 0B 8

A MAN who gets up at 1 a. m.* and goes into his field to gather corn should be voted the community’s most industrious farmer. But all Ebb Sullivan of near Otwell received was a few chuckles. Maybe he shouldn’t have explained—that his clock wasn’t running and he just supposed it was near daybreak when he began his daily toil.

2 8 =

FROM THE Evansville Public Schools Bulletin: “Pedantic Jar--gon Department: ‘Retroactive Inhibition As Affected by the Temporal: Position - of Interpolated Learning Activities in Elementary School Children’—title of a recent doctor’s dissertation.” ; 2 2 = AND ALSO from the Bulletin, a boy’s essay on school teachers: “School teachers hardly do any work at all besides grade papers and that is their own fault because they gave the test.... Some teachers give tests every day and then when six weeks or finals come up they give these tests on Monday, the first day of the week. That's the reason I dislike school teachers.” 2 2 =»

A FAMILY living west of Muhcie suddenly found its electric power cut off. The water supply, the the cooking ...in fact everything that depended on electricity wouldn’t work. Calls were made and soon puz-

mystified. Seven hours later the trouble was discovered. A squirrel, - tossing caution to the winds, had walked into contact with the “lead-in” wire, had been electrocuted and the line had been shortcircuited.

10TH PLANE VICTIM DEAD

CHICAGO, Dec. 9 (U. P.).—Owen M. Prederick, 52, of North Olmstead, O., died today at Holy Cross Hospital, the 10th victim of the crash of a United Air Lines plane Dec. 4 two blocks from the 6 Clncase is

those who had not voted in 1936, but would vote this year). The Institute’s studies show that while Willkie captured approximately 20 voters. out of every 100 who cast their ballots for Roosevelt in 1936—yet an average of six voters in every hundred Landon voters switched to Presi‘dent Roosevelt this time. Even more important in the final oufcome, apparently, were.

the new voters. Institute fests show that Roosevelt received by far the lion's share of these voters. Indeed, the indications are that the President’s share of these votes accounted for more than half of his 5,000,000 majority - throughout the country on Nov. 5. The Institute estimates that approximately 2%; millions of the Landon voters in 1936—and about 312 millions of the Roosevelt voters—failed to vote in 1940. The chief reasons, of course, were death, failure to register, absence! from the district on election day, and all other causes which contribute to non-voting.

LEGION MOVES T0 AID DEFENSE

Prepares for Service Should * An Emergency Arise In Nation.

The National Defense Committee of the American Legion is interested in whether or not Legionnaires can cook, follow a doctor’s orders in filling a prescription and what their standing is as a homing pigeon fancier. All this is in event they want to volunteer for possible emergency volunteer service. The Committee is taking steps to

implement the Boston convention resolution calling for an index of Legionnaires, and World War veterans who have the capacity and willingness to serve in time of emergency. The move will provide accurate, up-to-date information about each Legionnaire. Questionnaires are being mailed to 400 Legion officials and it is estimated that by Jan. 10 they will provide means for each member to indicate the responsibilties he can accept ih any emergency. Instructions to provide air raid warning service are being prepared. These include the provision of man= power, shelter, evacuation, feeding and aid to police and firemen.

WINDSORS TO ARRIVE IN MIAMI TOMORROW

MIAMI, Fla. Dec. 9 (U, P). — Tomorrow, four years to: the day after he sacrificed the kingship of the British Empire, the Duke of Windsor brings “The Woman I Love” here to have her teeth fixed. The Duke and his Duchess arrive from the Bahamas, where he is Governor, aboard: the yacht Southern Cross, owned by Axel WennerGren, Swedish industrialist. The Duchess is coming to Miami for a major dental ‘operation, and the social program for her and the Duke has been limited for that reason. They will go to St. Francis Hospital at Miami Beach, where the operation will be performed. They ‘will return to Nasau Friday aboard the S. 8. Munargo. They were scheduled to come: here on the Munargq, but Sams. Vyvyan Drury, the Duke's said the liner was Unesheck Jaye wih hat rather

Airport after a flight from New |off York, .

»

aide-de-camp, tedly de

T= following tables give the - Institute’s estimate of where President Roosevelt’s © 27,100,000 votes came from, as indicated by survey data: ri, ROOSEVELT’S 27,100, 000 From 1936 Roosevelt Voters. . 19,400,000

1936 Landon Voters...... 3rd-Party Supporters 1936

36) . . seco evee ,000,000 Didn't Vote in 1936 .... 3,500,000

: 27,100,000 The, comparable estimates for the sources of Wendell Willie's 7 22,200,000 vates are: ; i WILLKIE’S 22,200,000 From

1936 Roosevelt Voters.... 4,700,000 1936 Landon Voters .....13,300,000 3rd-Party Supporters in 1936 .....oeestsenins 400,000 First Voters (Too Young : in 1936) ........c0:00 1,000,000 Didn’t Vote in 1936 ..... 1,900,000

122,200,000

Cats Scare Cast,

Cast Scares Cats

HOLLYWOOD, Dec. 9—(U.. P.) ~= A scene on a Paramount sound stage, where cameras were filming shots of wild beasts through a fine screen ‘which doesn’t show in the picture, became too realistic for Bob Hope, Bing Crosby and Dore othy Lamour, they admitted today. A group of leopards became panicky at the sight of the cameras and the whirring of film. They jumped over the 15-foot screen onto the stage where. Hope, Crosby and Miss Lamour had been acting as if they were not afraid. But when the leopards appeared on their side of the screen, they found exits. Olga Celeste, animal trainer, cornered the leopards, which she said were as frightened as the film players, and herded them into their cages. Paramount officials said they would raise the screen several feet for the rest of the picture.

TEST YOUR KNOWLEDGE

1—How many original Floradora Girls were there? . 2—Does the air at the seashore cone tain more ozone than other Places in the country? 3—Does an airplane take off with or against the wind? 4—-Why type canal was built at Panama? §5--What is the name used In England for elevator? 6—A planetarium is a place where ° plants are kept, plans are drawn, or the movement of planets and stars is simulated? T—Who is chairman of the special . House of Representatives Com"mittee to Investigate Un-Amers ican Activities? 8—What is the slang name in the Post Office for a letter that cane not be delivered or returned to . the sender?

Avels

1—Six. 2—No. Fed 3—Against it. - 4—Lock and lake,

5—Lift. 6—Movement of planets and stars is simulated. 7—Hon, Martin Dies. 8—“Nixi ”

ASK. THE TIMES

- Inclose a 38-cent stamp for Nop when addressing any tion of fact or information. ~The Times

was 13th St, N. w ‘Washing=

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