Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 August 1941 — Page 9
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MONDAY, AUGUST 18, 194i
Hoosier Vagabond
MINNEAPOLIS, Aug. 18.—When I came to Minneapolis I told my friends I wanted to write something about the flour mills, since Minneapolis was America’s No. 1 flour-milling city. So the boys said that was mighty nice of me, and they appreciated it and they hoped the fact that Minneapolis was not America’s No. 1 flour city would not deter me from writing about it anyhow. So you see how I keep up with - < 4 the times. Minneapolis hasn't s %® i been No. 1 in flour for more than NG #20 years. Ca en In actual mills, Minnéapolis SRS now ranks third. Buffalo and * Kansas City are ahead of it. But RE Minneapolis is still the milling pK “headquarters” of the country. oe There are only seven big mills here—yet Minneapolis is general headquarters - for about 25 milling companies. I spent the day with the people of General Mills, which is the successor to the old Washburn-Crosby company. General Mills is the biggest flour-milling company in America. It has mills all over the country—about 25 altogether. You can get an idea of the company’s size by this little item—in its 25 mills enough flour is produced every day to make 24,000,000 loaves df bread!
We Eat Less Bread
The company makes 76 different products, ranging from a turkey fcod called “Suregobble” up through “Heliotrope Flour” and on to something known as “Vibic Concentrate” and ending in the brilliantly climatic item of “Mixed Tcopherols.” Despite these exotic names, the milling business is a pretty sound thing to be in. It doesn’t go up and down. People keep on eating bread, regardless. Yet people in general eat less bread than they used to. Back in the 1890s the average yearly consumption of flour per person in America was 220 pounds. Today it is only 150 pounds. That is simply because, about 40 years ago, we began eating a bigger variety of things—through refrigeration we added all kinds of vegetables and fruits to our year-round diet. ’ Flour, like everything else, is full of new processes. The auto industry has its fluid drive this year; the milling industry has its new “enriched” flour. That means flour that has had vitamins mixed into it.
Inside Indianapolis (And “Our Town’)
MAYBE YOU'VE been confused by the politicians’ tug of war going on at the Court House over how many new voting machines to buy. Bob Smith, the Republican election commissioner, insists we need 226 new machines, at a cost of
$300,000. County Clerk Charley Ettinger and Chalmers Schlosser —the Democratic election commissioners—say that’s silly; that $50,000 worth would be enough. It all boils down to politics. The facts are that we have one voting machine for each of the 341 precincts, and 25 additional machines which are placed in precincts with a heavy vote. When the Democrats are in control, as at present, the extra machines go to heavily Democratic precincts. When the G. O. P. controls the election board. heavily Republican
precincts get the extra machines. If they see a long lineup of people waiting to enter the polls, lots of voters get discouraged and pass up their right to vote. Since the Democrats now hog the extra machines
in their own strongholds, the Republicans would like to buy enough machines so they'd be sure to get extra machines in their heavy precincts. The Democrats would rather buy only enough machines to replace some of the oldest ones and to care for a few precincts to be created next year. That's how simple it is, and we'll bet you thought all along both sides were worrying about your right to vote.
Metal Shortage
WASHINGTON, Aug. 18—Half of what Washington is worrying about these days, or worrying the country about, can be traced in whole or in part to growing tightness in the supplies of metals. To the scarcities that many people here anticipated a year ago have been added some that few imagined. These and others, plus the effects of Britain's astronomical requests, will cause many strange things shortly to appear on the American scene. As did the Europeans, we Americans will soon be taking away iron fences, ripping up street-car rails, pulling down statutes (doubtless to the benefit of many cities), going in for bureaucratic paper work on a German scale, and doing without half our new refrigerators lk as well as automobiles, Designed to discourage the civilian purchase of metals in finished form as much as to prevent inflation, the new regulations on installment buying will raise the down payments to 15 and 20 per cent and shorten the payment period to 18 months. : Alarms over the shortages and their resulting dis-
- locations explain the way the priorities offices here
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and in the districts are filling up with callers. They account for much of the mail coming to national offices of labor unions.
Labor Unions Worried
Both the A. F. of L. and the C. I. O. are concerned over the industria) layoffs resulting from these metal shortages. The A. F. of L. Monthly Survey calls them «a new crisis” which will affect thousands of members in the next two months. “Defense unemployment,” it says, “will offset job gains by the end of 1941.” There are pecple who think union protests will keep civilian production from being choked off rapidly, but they do not go so far as to say the Army and Navy will have to get along with less armament than
they expected.
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By Ernie Pyle
As you know, vitamins have swept the country. My new shoes have vitamins in them, Mr. Knudsen has vitamins in him. I made sure to get plenty of vitamins in my picket fence in Albuquerque. Without vitamins we perish. They say that vitamins are really Hitler's famous “secret weapon.” He feeds his soldiers extra vitamins. And in the conquered countries he withholds vitamins from the people, and they eventually wither and droop and whisper “Yes Adolf.”
The Great Vitamin Hunt
So now vitamins in flour are the fashion. General Mills is one of the leaders, and it has a whole great laboratory here devoted to experimenting with vitamins. I went over to see it, under the impression
that I might find out what a vitamin is, what it looks like. where it comes from, and how they inject it into the flour. But I came away no wiser. The ‘laboratory is full of rooms which are full of test tubes and ray machines and Bunsen burners and stuff, like all laboratories everywhere. “How do you make a vitamin?” I asked of Dr. Ferrari at the laboratory. He is a scientist who has a faculty for talking science in layman's language. But the question was too much even for him. He said it was so complicated he couldn’t possibly explain it to me. : “But what do you start with?” I asked. “Do you start with a piece of celery or an old horseshoe or what? You have to start with something, don’t you?” “Yes,” he said, “but we don’t start with anything you could name. We start with a chemical mixture.” So I gave up on vitamins, and went in to pay my respects to James F. Bell, who is chairman of the board of General Mills. He has been in milling all his life, is one of the industry’s greatest figures, and is highly regarded by his employees. Mr. Bell likes ideas. He likes for his employees to zip and snap with ideas. He calls them mental “cocktails.” He says he counts the day lost when he hasn't been on a mental drunk. I asked him if he knew, when in his mental cups, how to make a vitamin. He doesn’t. But he is all for vitamins. He calls them “veetamins.” From now on I'm going to call them veetamins. It sounds more scholarly—people might think I actually know what a veetamin is.
He's Still the Chief
F. O. BELZER, who retired as Boy Scout executive last year, still is “the chief,” as far as the Scouts are concerned. When Delmer Wilson took over the job recently, it was assumed he also would take over the title. But Mr. Wilson is a very understanding man. “Look,” he said. “There can only be one chief— and that’s Chief Belzer.” And so he goes by the title —Skipper Wilson. Meanwhile, Chief Belzer rounds out 30 years of service by presiding at the Boy Scout reservation as a sort of Scout executive emeritus. He lives in a cabin on the reservation where he can be close to his beloved Scouts.
Hit and Run?
AT LEAST one big department store here isn't planning to push the sale of leg makeup during the impending hosiery shortage, we hear. The store's afraid its customers might not go back to wearing hosiery after the shortage ends! . . . Harry Smenner, United Press reporter here until he donned the khaki last week, writes us that the first person he saw as the train pulled into Meridian, Miss, was a soldier boy atop a boxcar snapping pictures of the incoming troops. It was Bill Myers, who used to snap em for The Times. A taxicab heading south on Meridian St. pulled to a stop at the traffic signal shortly after 10 last night. A police cruiser, headed in the same direction, pulled around the taxicab, and made a right turn, clipping the cab's left front fender with a big bang and a cloud of dust. The police car continued on its way without giving the least indication its driver knew there had been an accident, although the crash could be heard more than a block away.
By John W. Love
These worries over plant dislocations account in part for the new pressure being placed on subcontracting of armament. The Army and Navy are again being urged by William S. Knudsen of the OPM to divide up their work into still smaller orders so that plants being stopped out of their normal lines wil] be able to keep going. The Army and Navy have before them a comprehensive plan for shortcutting much of the old procedure in letting contracts. If it is approved new legislation will be called for, and when the bill is iniroduced it is expected to have the support of labor as well as many industries, large and small. The alarms concerning metal supplies forecast nation-wide campaigns for the collection of steel scrap. The problem is vast—enough scrap to run a steel works a few weeks would fill the public square of any city.
The Scrap Problem
The problem in the steel industry is to locate 10,000,000 more tons of scrap iron than were turned over last year, and officers here, as in the steel industry, are puzzled to know how to drag it in. The question is whether, under the limitations of price control, enough of 1t will come to the mills, even when the patriotic motive is substituted for the profit motive. Lest this shift of motive be insufficient, the forthcoming priorities order is designed to keep foundries from getting scrap they can’t use in defense business, provided the order can be enforced on the 15,000 or more scrap dealers and auto-wrecking yards. The priorities order is the result of widespread violations of Leon Henderson's price controls on scrap. These have usually taken the form of “upgrading” the scrap, or offering it to the mill as a quality better than it actually is. Just why the country should be getting short of metals and laying off men before our mills are completely busy is not clear even here, but as people in the defense organization explain it the phenomenon runs about like this: Too much of the defense program is new to industry and ties up more plant than was expected. It also ties up more materials than it was expected to in the early stages of the program.
“State Tomato Queen,” guest of honor at last year’s exhibition and banquet, will distribute prizes to the winners. clusion of the ceremonies, Bottema, auctioneer, will dispose of
The Indianapolis
"MEIN KAMPE......
Not a Theory, to the Democracies.
Mein Kampf is the accepted bible of German National Socialism, the frenzied outpouring of wild political philosophy having for its goal the domination of an entire world by the Nazi “race.” The Times today publishes the seventh installment of Francis Hackett’s powerful exposure of Hitler's fanatic purposes.
THERE IS NO escape from it. This is not a quarrel between two outsiders, Britain and Germany, two old offenders. It is a duel between the would-be wrecker of international order as democracy conceives it, and the parties of
the second part.
Obliterate the British Empire. Suppose Australia and New Zealand under Japan, Canada federated with the U. S. A, Malta and Gibraltar under the swastika. Does Germany thereupon become a tolerable power in the world, with its theories as indicated in Mein Kampf? It is a condition, not a theory—to use Grover Clevei 1ang’s 0a 4 phrase —that confronts Britain. But the phrase has to Mr. Hackett be reversed for t States. Many Americans are thoroughly alive to the dangers of theory, when it is a question ofr Marxism and Russia. But they do not give equal weight to Das Kapital and Mein Kampf. Yet what goes for one goes for the other, or more so. There are bigger and better guns behind Mein Kampf. ” 2 2
No Quarrel With Dictators
THIS IS NOT a simple quarrel between a dictator and a democracy. Democracies are not Wateh and Ward organizations to regulate morals. No democracy, in fact, has direct quarrel with dictator nations as such. All nations in the unorganized society of nations are in different stages and under different conditions of moral development. This is so elementary that the conclusion from it—the freedom of a nation to consult its own interests, its own personality, its own vagaries —can never readily be called into question.
he United
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EXHIBIT STATE'S PRIZE TOMATOES
Shricker, Dawson to Speak
At Banquet Set for Tomorrow Night.
Aristocrats of the tomato world
will be honored. and then eaten, at a dinner tomorrow evening at the Claypool Hotel.
Governor Henry F. Schricker and
Lieutenant Governor Charles M. Dawson, who is also State Commissioner of Agriculture, will speak at the dinner which wil] be the main feature of a week-long observance of the fourth annual Indiana Tomato Show, beginning today and lasting until Saturday.
Samuel B. Walker, president of
the Indiana Tomato Tournament, Inc, will open the program and Roscoe Fraser, of the horticultural department of Purdue University, will be toastmaster.
The menu will feature tomatoes
and tomato products. There will be a competition for the best examples of Indiana-grown tomatoes, Nich prizes will be given totalling 210.
for
Stores Display Tomatoes
Miss Leslie Shippey, Greenwood, who was
At the conMark
the prize-winning tomatoes. Commercal growers from all parts
Nazis Pose a Condition,
Raymond Clapper’s first article from London appears on page one.
My Day
HYDE PARK, Sunday.—Yesterday morning looked so rainy that we dared not rush having the meeting of the Centra] Good Neighbor Committee on the picnic grounds, as we had hoped to do. Very hurriedly, we made arrangements to hold it in the big house instead. were already arriving and the morning session opened at 11 o’clock. Dr. John L. Elliott described the purpose of the meeting very well. He hopes that “good neighbors” all over the country will use the unit of the community, taking advanage of every organization, philanthropic, political or social, to meet the new needs as they arise. - This does not mean that, of necessity, we must have a new organization everywhere, though there will be many places where people will want to form good neighbor committees. Even though the membership consists largely of ple working in existing ‘organizations, they may hope to use this committee as a clearing house where all constructive forces in the community. may. come together to discuss their programs, in order to meet more effectivey the new demands brought about by the national emergency. $i:
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By 10 o'clock, people
By Elenor
It is perfectly obvious, of course, that any communities situated near camps, or in areas where defense industries have largely augmented the working population, are finding themselves faced with many Inadequate housing, school facilities and recreation are a few of these problems. To meet them will require the co-operation of every citizen. Ten possible areas of work were suggested; among
new difficulties.
them:
. To interpret the national defense effort, ‘not only generaly, but in specific terms, concerning the ways in which it affects your own community. To sponsor local meetings, or forms, to discuss the
meaning of democracy.
To arrange neighborhood and community hospitality for soldiers on furlough, without regard to race
Jr creed.
To co-operate actively in the spread of the nu-
trition program.
There are many other suggestions, but one of them I think of paramount importance. actively to minimize racial and religious antagonisms, not only through the written or spoken word, but also through direct’ and active intervention to prevent discrimination in housing projects, in the operation HES pervs and in other actual relationships should not be countenanced,” bo
of selec in which
vio Ee
of the State wll enter the competition, which is said to be the only State exhibit of its kind in the country. Tomatoes will be the motif of window displays of many downtown stores and groceries of the City throughout the week. The object of the exhibit and competition is to focus the attention ‘of the public upon the tomato as a source of vitamins and income to Indiana consumers and growers.
STOCKINGS RATIONED IN SILK-RICH JAPAN
TOKYO, Aug. 18 (U. P.).—Women of the “leisure class” henceforth may not purchase stockings, the Government decreed today when women’s stockings were placed on a stringent ration list which gives preference to women outdoor workers, especially bus and streetcar conductors and school teachers. Women of no especial occupation have no need for stockings and hence must do without, it was explained. No public opposition was expected sincé most Japanese women rarely wear stockings, depending on cloth high shoes and long petticoats,
a Aus
Roosevelt
“To work
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Times
"SECOND SECTION
BER By FRANCIS HACKETT
Warsaw in flames after the German bombing at the start of World War IL . .. “All extreme nationalism has the same forms of deed and word; and the violation of neutrality, the bombing of noncombatants, the typical release of force and fraud, cannot be modified in any all-out effort at self-preservation
or self-assertion.
The moral of war is that there is no moral.”
Among the many republics in the Western Hem®phere, for example, there have been, and are at present, a number of dictatorships. A dictator, properly speaking, is not simply the president of a republic who has immense powers conferred on him by process of law. He is a ruler whe controls and sometimes employs armed force as a substitute tor government by consent. He tears no opposition as long as he has the use of his gunmen, his secret police and his concentration camps. He does not hesitate to have his abler opponents assassinated. The abuse of naked power within any sovereignty is bound to disquiet decent neighbors. A dictator is a disturbing element in the world about him. His wiil is arbitrary at home and threatens to be arbitrary abroad. But the best of great nations, including the United States, has its own imperialistic difficulties, and empires cannot base their foreign policy on the wickedness of imperialism. ” o ” WHAT, THEN, HAS a power like the U. S. A. to do about dictatorships? On what principle
Food Costs
By UNITED PRESS
The American housewife has increased her food budget to avoid changing the family menu in the face of climbing food prices, a United Press survey showed today.
Grocers have heard verbal protests but have found housewives willing to change their buying habits. Increased employment and wages and rising farm income have enabled families to spend more for food. The survey showed prices last week had jumped to a new high for the past 12 months while the volume of retail sales also reached a new peak. Competition of the Government, buying for military forces and for food shipments to Great Britain, and a tendency of housewives to lay in supplies in anticipation of further price increases has contributed to the increased volume of sales in some areas. Scattered cities reported meat prices had climbed 30 to 64 per cent in the past year and 6 to 10 per cent in the last month. Sharp increases also were reported for fats and sugars. The price of dairy products has risen 1 to 3 per cent, but fruits and vegetables have shown little change. During the last 12 months, the price of pork chops rose in New York from 26 to 32 cents a pound, in Washington from 31 to 36, in
can a free people shake the bloodstained hand? For a fanatic there is no problem here. Take any hand that suits you, and break your faith when it suits you. For the democrat there is a moral problem. He has to, pick and choose, with live-and-let-live as his principle. There are grades in misdemeanor and depths in evil that preclude copartnership. At the same time, if his right to existence is disputed, he must look for help. The French speak of “amis de circonstance”; the democracies also can have those friends. Suppose my wife and I are having a dispute about the amount of coffee I drink. If, at that moment, a burglar breaks into our hotel room, our dispute is finished and the burglar occupies us. But if the door again opens and Miss Toto, the expensive gorilla, enters smiling, I should not be at all dismayed, I'd be relieved, if the burglar and I became amis de circonstance. ” ” ”
Can’t Serve All Principles
BUT JUST AS HE has his revolver ready for Miss Toto, her two gasping attendants arrive and
Housewives Protest Higher
but Finally Pay
Oklahoma City from 19 to 34, in St. Louis from 28 to 36, and in Dallas from 24 to 35. The same cities reported increases in butter prices ranging from 4 to 12 cents. The increase in egg prices ranged from 2 to 15 cents a dozen. The index of food prices, compared with the 1935-39 average level as 100, was 1079 last Friday compared with 98.1 a year ago, and 103.1 a month ago. The current index was 15 per cent higher than that for August, 1939, in the final weeks before the outbreak of the European war. The survey indicated prices of restaurant meals had increased approsimately 8 per cent since August,
Spokesmen for the food industry predicted price increases will continue at 2 or 3 per cent monthly until at least next spring. They said prices had not yet reflected increased costs of production. Consumers groups have organized to support price control and to urge that housewives alter their diets to avoid greater expenditures for food. Government officials said relief families which spent $15 a month for food a year ago have raised the
figure to $17 at a sacrifice in food value.
HOLD EVERYTHING
COPR. 1947 BY NEA SERVICE, INC. 7. M. REG. U. §. PAT. OFF.
a min __ “Héy Don't you kngw when you're licked?”
see him about to destroy their fine piece of property. With which of the parties am I now to line up? In principle I am a lover of animals, an enemy of burglars and a believer in the rights of property. But in an emergency one cannot serve all one’s principles. One has to choose. Now a capitalist democracy finds its choice peculiarly difficult, and Hitler has calculated this with great cleverness. The weakness of a capitalistic society is that it has subordinated the masses for profit, for interest, for rent, rather than for race-preservation, for blind obedience, for world domina-~ tion. Hitler urges this weakness of a capitalistic society on every romantic and disheartened youth. When I asked Mussolini his abuse of force in Italy, he looked at me rather quizically. Then he said slowly, “Have you ever seen a motion picture of a strike in Pennsylvania?” He might forgive the Gestapo but he couldn’t for=give the State Police. Like Mussolini, Hitler has the
LOCAL TRAFFIC MISHAPS GAIN
July Safety Record Worst In Last Four Years, Records Show.
By RICHARD LEWIS After brightening last spring, the Indianapolis traffic picture grew black again last month. Police statistics showed that: 1. There were 900 traffic accidents, a new high for the year. 2. There were 312 traffic injuries, a casualty list second only to the 325 in May.
3. It was the worst July in four years from the standpoint of traffic safety with more accidents and injuries than in any similar period since 1938. This was last month’s traffic record despite an increase in arrests over the two preceding months and more court penalties. Of those tried in court, 66 per cent received penalties, the highest percentage this year. At the same time, the first seven months of this year brought more accidents and injuries to the motoring public than any similar period in the last four years. Here is the picture according to police records. Accidents Injuries Fatalities
UTE COUT
BOAT CAPSIZES, BOY DROWNS IN SHAFER
Times Special MONTICELLO, Aug. 18.—Gerald Dimmitt, 18 son of Mr. and Mrs. John Dimmitt, of near Monticello, drowned in Lake Shafer yesterday after a rowboat, in which he and four companions had gone for a ride, capsized in the wake of a power boat. The companions, Kendall "Piatt, 16; his sister, Isabelle Piatt, 21: Wayne Price, 17, and Helen Dimmitt, sister of the victim, were rescued by Tom Cox, 12-year-old Gary boy who was riding in a motorboat. The body of the drowned youth was recovered last night.
“PARASHOTS” PRACTICE CONCORD, N. H. (U.P.).—Fearing “Hitler may land in Portsmouth Harbor” or that “parachutists may
drop down in Concord backyards,” Miss Jessie Doe and 10 women friends are learning to shoot Tifles,
* AMERICA |
Abuse of Power by Any Nation Bound to Upset Neighbors.
same patter of moral indignation about pluto-democracy. He himself has the heart of a strike breaker, in spite of it. What he desired as a born organizer was to dispute the factories with a capitalistic society, to keep them running but for another, a more exhilarating purpose, the purpose of Deutschland uber Alles. ” ” 2
Acceptance of ‘War Guilt
THE GERMAN apologists are quick to indicate that in any country preparing for war there has to be a mobilization of the soul as well as the body, of opinion as well as munitions. Those same apologists can parallel much that Hitler has said in the jingoism and chauvinism of other epochs. All extreme nationalism has the same forms of deed and word; and the violation of neutrality,
the bombing of non-combatants, the typical release of force and fraud, cannot be modified in any all-out effort at self-preservation or self-assertion. The moral of war is that there is no moral. Everyone must admit that Britain, as the war progresses, has adopted some of the German methods. The supreme difference, however, is Britain’s intention as against Hitler's intention. There is not a court in the world that does not give weight to the pleas of self-defense. Every court asks. “Who started it?” And the importance of Mein Kampf is its proud acceptance of war guilt. Hitler's intention from the start has been to precipitate a war. Mein Kampf is the best weapon with which his opponents can be supplied. It affords the irrefutable proof that Hitler was the prophet of a “master race.” Every American schoolboy is able to see for himself the foundations on which Nazi Germany is built, the obstacles that Nazi Germany has itself raised to every form of internationalism, and the implacable conflict that now exists between Nazi Germany and the United States, not to speak of Britain, of China, of India or of Russia. Mein Kampf, Nazi meat and the world’s poison, is a declaration of war, and unless we scrutinize it to the last syllable, our own war aims can be neither realized nor realistic.
Next: “Master Race Versus Mongrel Democracy.”
{Copyrigns, 1941, by Francis Hackett: gisitiee by United Feature Syndicate, nc.
England 'Safe’; Recalls Children
NEW YORK, Aug. 16 (U. P.) — Three British children who have spent the last two years as evacuees in Massachusetts returned to England today aboard the Dixie Clipper because their mother considers that conditions there have become “safe.” Frank A. Day Jr. of Newton, Mass., at whose home the children stayed, said he had received several letters from their mother saying things were not safe enough to risk their return to the British Isles. The youngsters, Christine Illingworth, 13, and her brother ang sister, John Sanford, 10, and June, 7, said they “rather liked” the idea of going home. “We want to share the hardships with our parents,” Christine said. “I rather like the idea cf going home, but Sandy (John) seems kind of torn at leaving. He made lots of friends here.”
HOOSIER WORKER KILLED JOLIET, Ill, Aug. 18 (U. P.).— Floyd Falley, 35, of Warsaw, Ind. was electrocuted yesterday when hs fell across a high voltage wire while working over a transformer at the Elwood ordnance plant. A fire inhalator squad failed to revie him.
TEST YOUR KNOWLEDGE
1—The maximum distance across the United States from East to West is greater than it is from: North to South; true or false? 2—A citrus fruit and a chemical compound both have the sam32 four-letter name; spell it. 3—Name the capital of. Vermont. 4—Name the Norseman who is bclieved to have discovered the North American continent neari;’ 500 years before Columbus. 5—Who wrote “The Cotter’s Saturday Night”? 6—In the Navy petty officers rank below commissioned officers. What corresponding name designates such grades in the Army? T7T—The Great Pyramid in Egypt contains about one, two, or three million stone blocks? 8—The Spanish J is pronounced like which English consonant?
Answers
1—True. 2—Lime. 3—Montpelier. 4—Ljef Ericson. 5—Robert Burns. 6—Non-commissioned officers. T—About two million. 8—H.,
” ”» 2 ASK THE TIMES Inclose a 3-cent stamp for ree ply when addressing any question of fact or information to The Indianapolis Times Wash= ington Service Bureau, 1013 13th St., N. W., Washington, D. OC. Legal and medical advice cannot be sven nor can extended ree search be undertaken. § :
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