Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 June 1941 — Page 19

FRIDAY, JUNE 27, 1941

Washington

WASHINGTON, June 27.—Beware of those who try to argue in terms of ideologies. Don’t be bogged

down in a sham debate as hetween the evils of Com- .

munism and Naziism. 2 It does not matter to us that Hitler is a Nazi and that Stalin is .a Communist. If would make no difference if Germany were Communist and Russia were Nazi. These labels cover much the same thing. : Hitler copied many ideas from Communism. The Nazis and the ‘Communists have used the same techniques. When I was in Europe several years ago, there was a current saying that the only difference between Moscow and Berlin was that it was colder in Moscow. Both regimes used éspionage, terrorism and force. Both purged dissenters, suppressed personal and religious freedom and free speech. Communism and Naziism are two trade names for the same package of human poison. One uses more soap, but cleanliness doesn’t bring it anywhere near godliness.

For us the point is that one of these dictatorships.

menaces us far more than the other one. In this world we seldom have an opportunity to ¢hoose between good and evil. We must choose between evils. Life is a constant choice of the lesser evil, a constant struggle against the greater evil. So it is now.

Germany the Nearest Menace

If the time should come when Russia was the direct threat to us that Germany is, we would be throwing our weight against Russia as hard as we now throw it against Germany. Owing to geography and efficiency, Germany is the menace nearest at hand. Germany is the menace that threatens to destroy British sea power and to gain control on the . high seas. If, as every qualified judge here expects, Germany soon crushes Russia, the menace of Hitler will be greater because he will be infinitely stronger. Russia as a national entity probably will crack up. Germany is out to smash the Russian Army. Autonomous states, under German control, are likely to be set up. Hitler will then be in a position to resume his campaign in the West with greater resources behind him.

By Raymond Clapper

We are concerned with the preservation of the Western Hemisphere and with keeping the seas open. We have shared control with Great Britain. The Nazi regime is out to smash Britain and to take over that share of world power which Britain has hitherto exercised. We have an interest in two oceans and have exercised control in them jointly with the British for many years. The arrangement has worked, on the whole, satisfactorily. It has given us a world, not perfect God knows, but certainly one that has been more free and more to our liking than could be expected if Germany replaced Britain as the other major power in the world, Why the United States should throw away this situation, and invite Germany to take over, as Col. Lindbergh seems to hope, is beyond understanding. Anyone who can invite the Nazis {o take over and ride high wide and handsome out on the oceans as they have in Europe is confessing an inability to profit by the events which have been thrust in our faces month after month for nearly a decade.

An Old Story

Can anyone believe, deep down inside—forgetting the line he has taken publicly and feels obliged to cling to—that we could have any peace of mind, any sense of security, any freedom from apprehension, if Hitler had the British fleet, the British shipbuilding facilities, and the far-flung bases of the British Empire as sub-stations for his submarines and planes? For years the British have had bases in our Caribbean area. We never worried about them. Would we have allowed Hitler to hold those bases? Why are we spending billions for defense? Because we fear Hitler. So long as the British were on top, we felt secure *and paid little attention to our defenses compared with what we have paid to them since Hitler smashed France and“became a real threat. This is an old straw. It has been said so many times that one hesitates to say it again. Yet the mail that comes in shows that this can’t be said too often. Hitler would like to see us become confused over this Communist-Nazi ideological debate, so that we would be uncertain where we should throw our weight. The Government stated the issue clearly in the statement this week by Acting Secretary of State Welles. Hitler's armies still constitute the chief danger to the Americas. This Government has seen the menace from the day of Munich, and even before. It is keeping its eye on the ball.

4 Ernie Pyle is on vacation.

He will be gone about one more week.

Inside Indianapolis (4nd “Our Town’)

THERE IS QUITE a difference of opinion building ~ up among those Indianapolis citizens of German descent. A good many of them detest Hitler and everything he stands for, and they are beginning to have mild run-ins with others who are stanchly pro-Nazi. One very mild incident occurred the other evening at a German organization gathering on the South Side. One anti-Nazi, who happens to be a City employee, was approached by a man who has lived in Indianapolis all his life. This man asked for a contribution for the relief of German prisoners of war in Canada. . . “Nuts,” said the City employee, in effect. “If I have any extra dollar bills they go to the USO.” He got to inquiring about the collection and was flashed-a letter from Washington (maybe even from the German embassy) authorizing the Indianapolis gentleman to do the collecting. . Don’t kid yourself that the FBI doesn’t know all about this kind of stuff. In advance, too.

A Little Local Excitement

THE NEAR WEST SIDE was all agog the other night over a series of explosions which seemed to be coming from the neighborhood of the Marmon-Her-rington plant.

Yankee Trading

WASHINGTON, June 27.—A good many unorthodox things may have to be done before this war is over in welding the Americas, North, Central and South, into an economic unit. But one of the more orthodox steps taken in furthering commercial relations between the United States and the 21 Southern republics is the formation of a chain of InterAmerican Development commissions, one for each country, to study foreign trade needs and the _ problems of internal economy so that all the countries can help themselves and help each other overcome the handicaps of having the pre-war trade channels broken by the messing up of Europe. Ten of these Inter-American c: Development commissions have : already been set up and are functioning, and the other 11 will get geing just as fast as they can be organized. Impetus for their creation comes through the Rockefeller Office for Coordination ‘of Commercial and Cultura! Relations Between the American Republics, and young Nelson A. Rockefeller igaf-ordinaton of the whole movement, with Staté Department blessing. : A hypothetical case will show how these development commissions will work. Brazil has been exporting: increasingly large amounts of raw cotton to Europe. That trade cut off, Brazil decides she needs mills of her own to manufacture cotton goods for local consumption. :

South America Discovers Itself

The Brazilian Development Commission, made up of Brazilian businessmen and government officials, looks over the project. They determine how much Brazilian capital they can get together, what capacity the mills must have, how much machinery they'll need and where théy can get it. If they can’t swing: the whole proposition themselves, they determine how much foreign capital they'll need. If it can't be , obtained privately, maybe some Santa Claus money would help, so the proposition is put up to the U. S. Export-Import Bank, which was organized with a 5-million-dollar capital for just such foreign trade developers as this. 1 EASTPORT, Me, Thursday.—Yesterday might have been an autumn day, cold and clear, with the wind blowing from the West. We thought we might go across to Grand Manan, but there were white . caps on the bay, so we decided that it would be too ; cold and rough for pleasure outside the bay. We put it off and, alas, today is gray and cloudy and again we must defer it. I had a call yesterday afternoon from Officer Sennett of the Canadian Mounted Police. He offered his gervices in case any of our young people are lost in the woods, or anything else occurs where he can be helpful. Since he is stationed on the island for the summer, I certainly hope that ' © no one will be lost inthe woods. However, such things have happened, and itis good to know there is some‘one who can be ealled upon in case of emergencies. Officer hi t boards with the gentleman who looks after OR Dupin Sugine, Murray Johnson, so: he will not

unched with my cousin, Mrs. Fred Adams, and us for a walk through some of her paths in I Woods. I.am afraid that, to those who are not Atliar with: them, it 1s a bewildering walk and

the other da,

. Our own private little investigation disclosed all. It seems that M-H has built a testing ground for armor plate for some of the material it is supplyihg the British Navy. They have a 37-mm. cannon which blasts away during the daytime, but which is drowned out by the high level of traffic noise. At night it’s quieter. And that’s all that happened the other night. The cannon started to go off. Shucks, it’s about time the town got used to a little excitement.

Around the Town

IF YOU SHOULD happen to run into a William O. Harris of Los Angeles anywhere in town. please notify the Real Estate Board pronto. Mr. Harris ‘was scheduled to make a speech to the board yesterday but didn’t show. Some of the boys think our time change threw him off, . . . Albert Beveridge Jr. is going around nursing a cold and running down airconditioning systems. . . . Bet you didn’t know that Western Union keeps a record of all birthday greetings and a year later calls up a few days in advance to remind the sender of the coming birthday. It works, too. . . . You've heard about the movie star fan clubs, of course, but we don’t .know if you ever heard about the John Peterson Fan Club. . John was manager of the Uptown here and the kids. just were all that way about him. When John went into the Army, the youngsters all promised to write. Yesterday, one of them called his mother and asked for his address. She said she’d baked a cake for him. The lucky guy. 2

By Peter Edson

Another way the development commissions have been working is in promoting more trade between the South American republics themselves. Surprisingly enough, these countries ‘are just finding out they can trade with each other. Chilean nitrate can be swapped for Argentine meat. Brazilian coffee and fruits can be bartered for Argentine grains. Venezuelan oil, its European market cut off, is finding an increasing place in the markets of Brazil and Uruguay, which have no oil, and in Argentina, which produces. only 40 per cent of her consumption. That inter-American

.trade was up 9 per cent last year over the year before,

and it will be up still higher in 1941. This trade development work is aimed at the United States, too. Some of the war’s most horrible effects have been felt by ye olde gifte shoppes, which used to import whole shiploads of Czechoslovakian - glass, carved wood, Bavarian cuckoo clocks, Austrian cracked crockery and Polish peasant prints. Some of the Rockefeller boys got the idea that South America might have a lot of native arts and crafts which would fit the vacant shelves on American what-nots. They collected samples and brought them up for U. S. wholesalers to look over.

Plenty of Unorthodox Deals

When the Yankish buyers found some numbers they liked, Ecuadorean beads for instance, they said fine, they'd take 500,000 dozen. This word was relayed back to a trader in Guayaquil, who promptly fainted. When he recovered, he said that in a year he might be able to get 1000 dozen, and the American jobber said nuts. It wasn’t enough to make it worth while. All this comes under the head of orthodox trade development. Some of the Rockefeller-engineered deals have been more unorthodox, like the Argentine tinned beef purchase, which, while perfectly justified because the United States can’t produce quality canned meats at a price that competes with the South American product, still had. all kinds of opposition. One of the most striking examples of how international trade has to be rejiggered to meet war conditions comes in considering another phase of the cotton problem. Because of the shipping shortage, Canada has been having difficulty in getting the cotton she formerly bought from Brazil. If the worst comes to the worst, the United States may have to give Canada U. 8. surplus cotton, taking in exchange for it cotton stored in Brazil.

By Eleanor Roosevelt

There was a most beautiful sunset last night which left a deep red glow in ofie spot and one felt one might be looking at flames from an active volcano. It gradually faded to pink and the water took on the soft mauve shade that comes just before dark. We turned away from the window and sat around the fire and read aloud. : At 10 p. m. we get news over the radio from the United States, and so listened to Raymond Gram Swing. I must say nobody seems very positive in analyzing and forecasting the future. It is too much to ask, I imagine, for I doubt if there ever was a world situation quite like the present one. There is an old saying that politics makes strange bedfellows. War seems to do much the same thing.

‘Gradually, however, the pieces of the puzzle seem

to be slipping into place. Smaller nations have no choice, they must either toe the mark in one way or another, or be swallowed up. The great nations will soon all have declared their position in the immediate situation. What, is to come later is still a mystery, but I am not sure that the shaping of the future is not going to require greater skill and courage even than fighting the war to. a finish. ‘We are off to Eastport now to get a few of the things which were forgotten on our shopping trip en I think an open fire and a book

NAZI TRUNPH IN MONTH SEEN BY DR. DURANT

Expects Hitler ‘to’ Offer ‘Generous’ Peace After Seizing Ukraine.

Dr. Will Durant, who insists his opinion isn’t worth much, wouldn't be surprised to see the Nazis controlling the Ukraine within a month and preparing a generous peace offer for Britain.

The noted author, philosopher and columnist; who came’ here from

Executives Club dinner last night at the Claypool, opened an inferview with the opinion that “this business of newspapers sending reporters to interview every visiting fireman is the bunk.” - “I don’t know ahy more about the war and such subjects,” he remarked with a smile, “than your readers. In fact, we both get our information from the same source— the newspapers.”

Forecasts Generous Peace

Dr. Durant said he’d like to see the two dictators “eat each other up, but I don’t expect that to happen.” “Within a month,” he predicted,

“Germany will control the Ukraine. Then she probably will offer peace to England on generous terms—

Germany Bppear victorious. “Hitler probably would keep for himself the Ukraine, Alsace-Lor-raine and northeastern France.

England’s Prospects

He might offer England some of France's colonial possessions, agree to withdraw Nazi troops from the channel ports and permit restoration of the governments of such small countries as Holland, Belgium and Poland, provided they join the new order of Hitler. “It wouldn't be prudent for England to accept, although the British aristocracy no doubt would be pleased to accept out of gratitude to

viet.” Whether or not England accepted such a peace offer, Mr. Durant said, would depend on how much help she feels she can rely on from the U. 8. Wants Britain to Win

“I want Britain to win, for the usual reasons,” he said. “If Germany wins, the U. S, will become a

politically. . “That would be bad, but whether I'd be willing to spend a lot of lives to avoid such a situation is another matter, “I'm not certain we ought to worry too much about being a first class power. I think we could be happy even in a small country such as Switzerland.” His subject last night before the Executives Club was on the subject, “A World Revolution.”

Trend to State Capitalism

He declared the industrial world is passing from private capitalism to state capitalism. : State capitalism he defined as an economy (system of production and distribution) “controlled by governmental providers of ‘capital, in a system operated by planned production, controlled prices and state regulated trade.” The needs of defense, he said, are spreading the state control brought on by the depression, and participation in the war will greatly increase it. This revolution might be averted, he suggested, by an early peace and restoration of world trade.

A Policy for 1941

Dr. Durant urged as our policy for 1941: . 1. Support for the President in all legal steps to support England. 2. Preservation of a maximum of freedom in the face of this revolution by: a. Insisting on Constitutional acts and the Bill of Rights at every step, and b. By working for it—and when the time comes organizing a lasting peace based not on the right of the victor but on the brotherhood of man. .

"Talk Over’ the War in Wabash

* WABASH, Ind., June 27 (U.P.). —Because Joseph S. Thrush, Wabash County farmer, wanted to have his say so about the war and the international situation in general and get some other opinions besides, Wabash is giving the old fashioned “town meeting” a oneday revival next Sunday. The idea arose after Mr. Thrush wrote a letter to the Wabash Plain Dealer suggesting that it would be a good idea,for everyone to get together and discuss the war and war policy. Mayor James E. Smallwood seconded him and today arranged for Rep. Karl E. Mundt (R. S. D.) and former Congressman Samuel B. Pettengill of South Bend, to speak at the meeting on the question “Should America’ Enter the European War.” The meeting, termed a grass roots patriotic rally, will be held in the Wabash City Park, and the Mayor expectes several thousand persons to attend.

FORMER VERMILLION RESIDENTS GATHER

Former residents of the town of Clinton and Vermillion County will kold their third annual picnic at the shelter house at the Riverside Park picnic grounds Sunday. A covered dish luncheon will be served at 12:30 p. m. Invitations to attend the picnic have been sent to former Clinton residents at Terre Haute and Anderson and to Clinton County residents. Members of the committee in charge are Mrs. Ralph Minnick, Mrs. Jennie Galloway Clarence Lyster

£3

New York for a talk before the|

which will make both England and|

the Nazis for overthrowing the So-

second rate power, economically and |

By WILLIAM CRABB Times Staff Writer TAILHOLT, Ind. June 26.—This story-hook town eight miles from the ole swimmin’ hole is getting ready for a homecoming of about three times as many natives a ever lived here. : Here’s the reason—

“You kin boast about yer cities and their stiddy growth and size, “And brag about yer county seats, and business enterprise, “And railroads, and factories and all sich foolery— “But the little town of Tailholt. is big enough fer me!” Only James Whitcomb Riley could spin poetry like that and only J. W. R. could think up a moniker like Tailholt to hang on as quiet a community as ever shuddered when a cross-country bus thundered through. ” ” n .THE HOMECOMING will be Sunday with about 500 lovers of

Riley’s poems joining about 100 who live here and about a dozen

brings up another stanza—

“There ain’t no style in our town—hit’s little like and small— “They hain’t mo churches nuther—jes the meetin’ house 1s all.”

And now to go back a piece: Tailholt is on the south edge of Hancock County about 10 miles

most 100 years ago it took the name of Carrollton, but when the

railroad company named it Reedville. And then Riley wrote his poem, “The Little Town of Tailholt.”

: on ” EJ WELL, IN 1914 the town got its post-office back through the efforts of Congressman Finly Gray, but they found that another town had taken a name too similar to “Carrollton” to avoid confusion, so they called it “Finly” for post office purposes. So here's the situation—

who used to live here. And that

from Greenfield, Riley’s home. Al-

railroad came through in 1860 the -

The Indianapolis Times

Tailholt’s Good Enough Fer Me!

The highway traveler is greeted by two of the t own’s four names and (inset) “Uncle Hayd” Noe, ) past 80, who lives in a house once owned by the Hoosier Poet.

» ”

And Fons of Riley Who Said That Will Return to It Sunday

If you write a letter to here, you address it “Finly.” If you ship in a carload of coal on the railroad, you bill it to

“Reedville.”

“If you come in on a bus, you get off at “Carrollton.” And if you ask Uncle Hayd Noe, one of the oldest residents hereabouts, what town this is he won't even think twice. He'll just say “Tailholt.”

»

» »

- THE SHADY little town itself is worth describing, but you could hardly beat this—

“Some finds it -discommod-

can’ like, I'm willing to ad-:

mit

“To hev but one post-office, and a woman keepin’ hit, “And the drug store, and shoe shop, and grocery, all three— “But the little town of Tailholt is handy ’nough fer

me!”

Riley is just a little out-of-date on one point—the postmaster used to be a woman, but since 1916 T. E. Arnold has run the post officefilling station-grocery store.

o 2

SUNDAY just before noon the adopted natives of Tailholt will sit down to a basket lunch. Then they’ll have their business meeting under the direction of Ralph Boring, Hancock County School superintendent, who, like the rest of them, never lived in Tailholt. After that William A. Bixler, artist-evangelist, who made “The Ole Swimmin’ Hole” famous with his painting, * will. address the gathering. And the theme of the whole affair will be:

“You kin smile and turn yer nose up, and joke and hev yer fun,

“And

laugh and holler

‘Tailholts is better holts'n

, none!’

“Ef the city suits you better, w'y hit’s where you ort to be— “But the little town of Tailholt’s . good enough fer

me!”

HOLD EVERYTHING

| perts is that Soviet Russia's auton-

[ers 18 and over was co;

QUICK DEFEAT.

Leadership; Only 85 if Pct. Mobilized. :

(Leon Kay, who has just re‘turned from the Balk! 3, explains * the collapse of the Jugoslav army under the German blitzkrieg, which he witnessed.) !

By LEON KAY . (Copyright, 1041, by United Press) a) NEW YORK, June 27.—Jugoslavis had 2,000,000 soldiers—more than the United States hadyfoday—and they were as brave as any fighting men in the world, but they didn’t have the equipment, leadership and organization to endure a week of the German blitzkrieg. v Before 'my assignment in the Balkans I had seen the blitzkrieg-in Holland. I used to ask Jugoslave what they expected to do against &

¥

40-mile-an-hour mechanized at if one came their way. ig The answer, accompanied by .8 sweeping gesture, was always the same, a literal translation beings “Every Serbian has a strong heart and for the Germans he has § knife.” ’ + ad Knew Own Courage

They were convinced that theie cause was just, and they knew their own courage. They found comfort in those ideals, but eventually they had to go into battle, hungry, warn out from marching, and lacking gunpowder. ep To begin with, the Jugoslavs exe pected the German attack to come 10 days later than it did. In conses quence, the Jugoslav army was 0 about 85 per cent mobilized scarcely concentrated at all. The Jugoslavs had about 800 aire

JAPANESE AXIS LINK UNBROKEN

Waits Outcome of Russ War But Fears Proximity Of Nazis.

By A. T. STEELE Copyrisht, 1941, by The Indianapolis Times and The Chicago Daily News, Inc. SHANGHALI, June 27.—The SovietGerman war has eased the bowstring tautness of Japanese-Amer-ican relations but so far has brought no improvement of a basic nature. Nor is there anything in the present situation to bear out wishful American views| that the opportunity is ripe to divorce Japan from the Axis. Though smarting under the second slap on the cheek from Fuehrer Adolf Hitler, the Japanese are yet in no mood to quit the Axis, not will they be, unless and until Hitler’s luck changes for the worse. More than ever the Japanese are convinced that they must play a realistic and opportunistic game, grabbing the breaks as they come along. . But they are equally convinced, for the time being, anyway, that

planes, of miscellaneous types and vintages; about 1000 auto trucks, only half of them in A-1 condition. Their anti-aircraft guns were mostly old models. Anti-tank guns were scarce. The Germans, by contrast, used 1000 tanks and 4000 armored cars in one sector alone--in the drive from Bulgaria which cut off the Jugoslav armies from the south, :

Lacked Food

Jugoslav leaders had left . the supply problem to take care of itself. There were no stores of food hidden away at strategic points, and many of the soldiers, after marching two or three days to reach a concentration point for battle, found nothing to eat when they got there. Another thing that struck me was that despite al] the lessons which might have been learned from the campajgns in France and the Low Countries, Jugoslav troops were commanded by veterans of the World War and even of the Balkan wars before that. These old men, with their outdated notions of military tactics, were competing with the bold and vigorous youths Germany has placed in charge of her troops. : The Jugoslavs had a fierce nae tional spirit — except for some treacherous Croatian elements which contributed to the collapse— and they had a unity of purpose, in which the civil population tried every way possible to aid the fights ing men. They did not have anything, hows ever, to match the equipment and mathematical precision of the Gere

this policy dictates the necessity of playing along with the Axis regardless of the insults they may suffer en route.

Believe Fate With Axis

If a Gallup Poll could be taken today Japanese public opinion would undoubtedly show that the majority believes that the Axis will ultimately win, that Japan's sole hope of fully attaining its objectives depends upon an Axis victory, and that a victory by the democratic powers would inevitably spell the doom of Japan’s visionary program on which it has staked its all. These ars elementary facts but they form the foundation of the. Japanese policy. And they preclude the probability of any early Japanese retreat from the Axis alignment. Paradoxically, a poll would also show that the majority of the Japanese oppose war with the United States and favor averting such a war despite Axis commitments. Japanese-American relationship may become stronger or weaker as the outcome of the Russo-German conflict becomes clearer. Japan apparently intends to refrain from interference in'the dispute until it can act safely.

Japan Waits The opinion of many military ex-

omous Far Eastern Army of 400,000 men is more than a match for the Japanese, whose forces are divided between the northern and southern frontiers. If, however, Russia’s Far Eastern strength is drained by the hositilities in the West, the danger of Japanese attack may become very real. But that moment is some weeks off at best. Meanwhile, Japan waits. And Japan's press already is beginning to worry over the specter of a Ger-man-dictated peace with Russia, involving extension of Nazi influence into the Soviet Far East. The Japanese have no desire to be on such cuddly terms with a partner. as fickle as Hitler.

METAL TRADE MEN ‘POLISH’ UP AT TECH

Registration of metal trades workcted yesterday and today at 4A%ch High School for two courses/ in shop mathematics and blue plot reading in the emergency industrial training program. The courses are especially planned for men who can operate machines but wha, need training in the course subjects to improve their efficiency. The classes will meet Monday, Wednesday and Friday nights. About e registered

mans,

PRESIDENT MAY ASK FAST TIME FOR NATION

WASHINGTON, June ‘27 (U. PJ, —President Roosevelt is considering asking Congress for legislation to place the entire nation on Daylight Saving Time for the duration of the emergency, it was learned today. - . Defense officials said the Presle dent has received reports of the Office of Production Mariaselant ard the Federal Power Co sion concerning ‘he feasibility of the change to conserve electricity, Both agencies have approved the plan. :

said that his Daylight Saving is now before the House Interstate and Foreign Commerce Committeq and that he expected hearings to be held soon. . Passage of the bill, it was said, would conserve 2 per ‘cent of the nation’s total power production, og

kilowatts. :

1—Which State is most densely populated? 2—Mice are larger at birth than kangaroos; true or false? .

OF JUGOSLAVS

Lacked Food, Equipment, ! |

more than 700,000 kilowatts, frome the nation’s top load of 40,000,000

Ad

TEST YOUR: KNOWLEDGE |

|

Rep. Eugene J. Keogh (D. N. Lo y

3—The “Old Lady of Threadneedls Sreet” is a character in a novel,

the Bank of England, or a fae mous spy? } 4—Name the queen who helped Cos

lumbus to finarice his voyage t@ |

America? d 5—A scuttle butt is a drinking foune tain aboard a ship, or a valye scuttling the vessel in an em gency? » 6—<Who was Secretary of State yu der President Hoover? T—Which city ' in Texas has French name which is slate in English “beautiful mount”} Answers 1—Rhode Island. 2=—True. 3—The Bank of England. 4—Isabella of Spain. 5—Drinking fountain.

6—Henry L. Stimson. T—Beaumont.

ASK THE TIMES

Inclose a 3-cent stamp for ply when addressing any quest of fact or information

1650 men already have: in the sessic

ninth al