Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 February 1942 — Page 21
SECOND SECTION
GRIEF AHEAD I LAUNCHING OF MERIT SYSTEM
Many State Institution Workers Too Old for
Written Exams.
By EARL RICHERT
/ W. Leonard Johnson, State Pere 4 sonnel Board director, could use a Ae - Solomon right now. MARIANAS IS. The new State merit system law . says that examinations must be ©cuam 18, given to all employees m the State CAROLINE ISLANDS a4 1 institutions and there are 148 eme . “ 5 ployees in the institutions over the age of 65, most of whom are physie cally unable to take written exame inations. Mr. Johnson is approaching the problem cautiously. He knows that |if he would announce examinations lin which these persons would have lto compete with younger folks, some [very unpleasant reactions would i likely occur.
FRIDAY, FEB. 6, 1942
Hoosier Vagabond
TIMBERLINE LODGE. Ore. Feb. 6 —Human Timberline Lodge is the result of the imagination
® Fv By Ernie Pyle AXIS BUILDING INT Ee FA LRA IY RESOURCES GAINED BY JAPS § 5 0 tron [@ Rice : memories are short. And also—although I am, of of E. J. Griffith, director of WPA for Oregon. The &] Hemp 8 Sugar course. loath to admit it—not evervbody in America Lodge is his idea; the spot is his idea; the design Ji @ oil MEY Rubber
reads this column. is his idea; the, good taste in it is his. If ever a man anganese
So perhaps it would be wise to tell you just what had a right to be proud of something he has wrought, / ’ 7 Timberline Lodge really is, and E. J. Griffith is entitled to his pride. = Se why I am here instead of some- He is a tall, slender, handsome man of early 5 : /
where else. middle age. There is calmness and culture in his ' Timberline Lodge is a fabu- voice. He knows the skiing slopes and the universities lously beautiful mountain hotel of Europe, and he knows also the red-taped corridors; Aim Is to Stir Revolts From
built by the U. S. Government of Washington. four years ago. It was built by But he knows best, and loves best, these mountains Middle East t 0 Burma.
Oregon's people on WPA. It cost of Oregon He skiled these mountain sides long beBy WILLIAM PHILIP SIMMS
¢ Formosa == PHILIPPINE
Jopanes ee. 1. 050% aentS Sdn laa e = ou
The plan, according to reports, is! to foment disturbances if not a whole series of revolts synchronized [5 TwO MONTHS OF with axis offensives eastward toward |wAR, JAPS HAVE: the middle east and westward from © Borbed Hawaii. Burma and Malaysia. © Conquered Thoilond. The Nazis and Fascists have been Seized Guam, Wake. laboring at this scheme for years. Sn Hong Kong Monila
IN TWO MONTHS OF WAR, ALLIES HAVE:
Sank 100, damaged He remembers in Kansas City oi where he installed the merit syse
turned over to the U. S. Forest A Word About the Ski-Lift = formed by Portland businessmen. : i night to keep from freezing. They say now that he|Italian and Japanese agents are Hood. Below the Lodge, all is thick, green timber. ols : ’ Mr. Griffith these days is so busy he doesn’t come| ,.\ ould cause grave trouble for from Portland. i When we were here, two and a half years ago, It’s Pretty Popular, Too tone mile.) and Italians similarly are active Right now, through the week, there is only a handful makes skiing telerable. If you walked up it would p up from Portland. Magic Mile.” —I wouldn't know. But there are few places with start youre whisked clear above the tops of the Remember Past Services
a million dollars. fore this Lodge was ever built Sertice Shek HRI A. TEN YEARS ago he was lost all night in dead of Scripps-Howard Foreign Editor Timberfine Lodge is so named Became Ii status is the only man, traveling alone, who ever survived|working on fifth-column organizaAbove i, sli is mpi, Vast swe) of Wmeadty snd up very often. But he is coming up on my last day the united nations. I SLi Syn 1 me Wvelest ging BI. 1s the ski-lift was just being built.- Now it is finished|ing up subversive movements in You start near the Lodge, and ride the mile up- throughout Iran, Iraq, Egvpt and ) 5 3 ORNE 0 - _, ve SoLowon of guests. But every week-end the population sky- take you hours, and vou'd be too exhausted to ski a N 6 ~@. The place somehow has mesmerized me. There Is Today L rode up and back on the ski-lift. It is an finer views, greater wealth of taste, more comfort, fir trees. Farther up, where there is nothing but new
After it was finished it was is ased to a ivate company : B® ess pr D winter on this very slope; had to keep moving alli WASHINGTON, Feb. 6.—German, exactly at T mberline, half-way up 11.000-foot Mt. : : Sa. i : : a night on the mountain in wintertime. tions in the middle east and India rock. clear to the jagged top. The Lodge is 65 miles TR here, to ski with me. Japanese and Germans are buildkind in America. ” : s 35Fs SI and running. It is the longest ski-lift in the world| Burma and India, while Germans UNBELIEVABLY immense crowds come here. wards in 11 minutes. That simple, easy ride is what | ; P 3 Libya. | 2 3 - = we BRITAI rockets to the fantastic figure of 2300 or 3000 skiers, back down. The downhill ski-trail is called “The | possibly better skiing in America than at Timberline odd sgnsation. The towers are high, and just as you more winter-woodsy atmosphere. snow beneath, the sensation is almost one of flying.
Now the Japanese are co-operating. The plan is to proclaim the “independence” of the Arab world and
Invaded Borneo, Celebes, © poten base at Amboina.
© seized British islands. e@ Driven into Burma.
Taken big toll of Japs in Philippines, 2 Malaya, at sea. Ges against Japs / on Chinese fronts.
tem after the ouster of the Pen= dergast machine that one well-liked veteran bookkeeper suffered a heart attack a week after he had failed
*. ® ® Inside Indianapolis By Lowell Nussbaum|s iz wom fie ei] [Qo wume” Haj Amin El Husseini, the Brit-| [@ i gates of Singapore.
IT LOOKS LIKE the Light Company might not American soldier killed in World War I. He was a ish-hating grand Sart Of Serusae 3 lem, is somewhere in axis-controlled| Japan continues to pay a stiff price for her victories in the Far East as the war goes inte its third month
b } -= on sier— yr n WV vy es eg yo na srl re Edlitier--TIITAte James Ghighem Of Euhefic: territory plotting a revolt in Islam. with action along the 5000-mile front from Burma to the mid-Pacific. boiler for the Harding St. plant. he equipment was 4 irik So is Rashid Ali El Gailani, who scheduled for delivery in 1943, but the priorities Hard on Teeth, Too staged the revolt last May against ”.”® = bugaboo may interfere. You see, the companies that MRS. GUY L. BOYD, who lives at 4647 Sunset Ave.,| the British in Iraq and escaped to make the generators and boilers would like to know what to do with her recently | Berlin. Also a galaxy of other high- | also make similar equipment for acquired collection of auto hub caps. The hub caps|ly dangerous Arab leaders. U. S. battleships, cruisers, destroy- rolled into her yard after being jolted off cars that D to Alli ers and badly needed merchant hit a terrific chuckhole in front of her home. The sad ships, and you probably can guess chuck hole has been fixed by the City, but the] In Berlin likewise at this time
l p : who comes first. souvenirs linger on. Attaches in the Navy|are scores of Hindu nationalists.| | Ww
The new turbo-generator on Recruiting office in the Federal Building all crowded|Only last week, under axis auspices, 6 Chapter V—On the Alert
order is a duplicate of the one in- around when Coach Tony Hinkle walked in yesterday|these gathered at the Kaiserhof, The American people, and the British and Australian submarines, destroyers and small, | payrolls.
stelled last year, and it would and asked for information on how to obtain a naval] Hitler's favorite hotel, and “officialcomplete the Harding St. plant reserve commission. The excitement quieted down|ly” proclaimed “the independence of people, too, became impatient during the early stages of swift torpedo craft to harass What this is, in effect,” Mr, seriously any naval attacking force Johnson said, “is retirement on full
when it was learned Tony was asking for a friend.|India.” Under favorable circumstances or fleet of transports. All harbors |pay.” are well mined.
an examination. And merit system officials were blamed. Practically all of the elderly eme ployees have had long periods of service at the institutions and are being kept on the payrolls because the State has no retirement system and the superintendents feel that their past services merit their re tention in some job they can handle. For example, one person who is 93 is on the payroll of the Central State Hospital and the State Reshort of adequate naval forces, |formatory and State Farm each but have enough light cruisers, [have a 79-year-old person on their
By HALLETT ABEND
ingly the islands are admittedly
plans for four generator units. The company is getting along - - - Pink elephants, according to the Claypool lobby okay now, without requiring any definition, are “beasts of bourbon.” curtailment of electricity con- . . sumption. But with the city rising in importance as Sugar Blitzkrieg a munitions manufacturing center. the company is
these and kindred activities could| the Pacific War at the seeming lack of effective counterhave extremely serious repercussions : ad / v old : saint for the allies this spring and sum- attacks against Japanese naval concentrations and agains AN IDEA y mer all the way from Suez to Singa-| the stream of troop transports heading almost unendingly anxious to be prepared for any contingency. Already, 1. pec. 7 th De. ph Baris pore. _ for the Philippines, Malaya and Borneo. 36 per cent of the electricity i Ss goes indus- i 5 y vorite{ Particularly would this be the : a6 Ay l ia users. :. bint brim pd 2 es pr grocery when the grocer opens his safe and brings out|case if the Japanese took Singapore If Gen. Douglas MacArthur, the Amer can comcent industrial. jE PET a supply of sugar. In a North Side chain grocery the|and the Nazis advanced to the Cau-| mander at Manila was correct in the estimate he gave other day, the manager appeared with a bushelicasus through or around Turkey. A| me last October, then the Japanese could move only
Up to Personnel Board
5 = He said that the problem would Base Is Bomb-proof be placed before the State Person THE MAIN naval base of the |nel Board for consideration. East Indies is at Sourabaya. Here “We don't want to be harde there are great underground work- (hearted about it,” he said. shops in shelters believed to be One proposal under consideration
Curfews and Camps
BOB LORING, assistant Secretary of State, comes from the Ninth District, which also is the home of Rep. Farl (Curfew) Wilson. Bob found on his desk the other day the following anonymous rhyme: “Dickery, dickery dock, my congressman runs up the clock. The clock strikes nin€, it's campaign time. in district nine; dickery, trickery—FLOP.” . . . Why. wonders Jack Cejnar, all this fuss about what to name the new Army camp going up near Columbus.
basketful of two-pound sacks of sugar. Before he pro-axis revolt of the peoples in becould get the basket down, a swarm of women shop-|tween would materially damage the pers descended on him and cleaned the basket out|chances of the united nations. It took less than a minute. All the bewildered grocer could think of to say was, {tremely difficult to combat. It is “Whew!” , .. A feminine newsie stopped in a restaur-|easy for the Germans, Italians and a cup of coffee—without sugar.|Japanese to promise complete and “They tell me” she explained, “that every 1000 pounds| immediate freedom to the indeof sugar you save is the same as a bomb for the|pPendence-hungry Arabs and Hindus. Japs” . .. A. B. Good, the schools’ business director, and Mrs. Good, will leave Monday for a two-week| British, who are chiefly concerned,
as slick as a whistle.
ant and ordered
Yet these axis maneuvers are ex-
It is not so easy, however, for the
about 125,000 men southward at one “lift.” This estimate was based on known shipping tonnage for transport use. and upon the known tons of shipping required for each
man and necessary equipment.
Evidently this full number, 125,000, sailed southward The next serious invasion wave occurred Dec. 23, just 15 days later. This gave the fleets of transports time to go back to Formosa,
for the first surprise push, Dec. 8.
proof against even direct hits by heavy high explosive bombs. Everywhere in the East Indies air-raid shelters have been provided. On Java alone, it is estimated, fully 20,000,000 of the population would be in adequate shelters within one hour after the first alarm sounds at the most remote outpost. These alarms are transmitted from district to district by radio, by telephone, by
by Mr. Johnson is to classify these elderly persons as laborers and give them part-time work at the instie tutions. Laborers do not have to take examinations. Oral examinations may be given in a few cases. “This situation definitely shows that a retirement system is needed for institution employees,” the Personnel Board director said. “But legislation is needed for that.”
As far as Jacks concerned, there's only one name to vacation at Ft. Lauderdale, Fla. They'll visit Roy|t0 Offset these promises. the China Coast, or even to Nagasaki, to bring a second
be considered. And that's the name of the first Bair, the former neighborhood movie magnate, Axis Has Advantage “lift.” But because of the number of transports bombed the booming of coastal guns, by
heliograph in daytime and by light signals and even by primitive ~ beacon fires at night.
Average Worker’s Age Is 45 He pointed out that these 148
h . Both in Islam and in India, Brit-| or torpedoed during the first expedition, the second “lift”
By Raymond Clapper “nic mes: Amb clamor tor ince-
ain’s problems are far from simple.
be ruled by any save those of their own brand. In India there is a com-
was probably smaller than the first, unless some of the 200 Allied merchant ships the Japanese grabbed on
Philippine and
terprise.
to sink Japanese ships off the
a tribute to their courage and en-
The air-raid shelters run all the way from elaborate steel and concrete structures to caves in the hills, and on down to mere
Malayan coasts, is
persons earn at least $148,000 a year and that that amount could be much better spent by the State hiring younger persons who could do more work.
WASHINGTON, Feb. 6.—This is another idea that, procedure will be necessary. After visiting some of like the Reuther Plan, comes up from labor-union the automobile plants in Detroit last week, I could people. But maybe it will be given more serious con- see that it is difficult to have any halfway conversion sideration, in spite of its source. in a given plant. For instance in the Plymouth plant The idea is being advanced for the refrigerator the whole place had to be used if the assembly line industry but it might be applicable was going to operate at all, because it winds around to numerous others, and that is over the entire space. the main reason for giving it a There 13 no way to cut it down and make room look. for manufacture of gun mounts in the same factory. The proposition is merely that So they are tearing out the whole assembly line. a limited number of cut-down The plant has to make nothing but automobiles, or standardized, simplified “victory” something else besides automcbiles. It can’t do both.
parable situation. deep trenches in the country dis- i ; ; ; : my on 08S ® 8 a C : Particularly is this true, h Axis propaganda, therefore, has Dec. { and 8 were pressed tricts. These deep trenches are |of institutional attendants § sal, a big advantage. Despite every- into service. Dutch Stress Planes lined with upright bamboo stakes | A survey made by the Persotinel Do By rn do is check ££ & #8 SINCE any invading enemy driven deep into the ground, t0 | Board of the ages of institution eme a a "al Mans Not Clear must approach by sen, tho Dutch PIER, casalios fiom ctv | loses snowed that he use of the Wz = f the Indies put particular stress ° oS gi . |average employee was 45; that 25 area. Many arrests hes e ; ne ° ; arks : ~ made and some Have te COUNTER sirokes io these i= yu, tng value of their air force. — De a fie oy Po per cent of the 2778 employees were 10 death. But scores of others are vasions look simple on the maps, Daily for more than a year, at i large citice hoe spacious less than 32 vears old, and that 25 f sco! at ‘ ; x * [per cent wi er 55, at large doing their best to under-| but the maps give no proper ideas dawn and just before dusk, scores oo; vo tijateq shelters, and be- p Sra ver £5 of distances in that remote part ©f scouting planes have set out The personnel turriover in the Americans are working with the| of the world. It must be remem-
Unrest in India
HOLD EVERYTHING
By Eleanor Roosevelt | camvaien to combat infantile pa-
day. I can still remember Governor Cooper's mother twice as much as in 1941, Evan B. Everyone tried to find chairs| Walker, fund director, predicted tofor her and for me. while the ceremonies went on. ay. The view of the dam was much better today and I was interested to see the little boats which are on 24- here in honor of President Roosehour patrol duty to make sure that no harm comes to|Velt's birthday, including the Butthis particular source of power, When we were not eating, working or writing, I read two issues of the “Saturday Evening Post.” In| Mr. Walker said reports from one of these is a good story by Clarence Buddington|collections in theaters and from Kelland. 1 cannot help wondering why anyone, who Sports events are expected to swell writes such nice fiction, should want to turn his tal-|the total county contributions to ent to facts or near-facts of the political world, but|$20,000. perhaps his talent for fiction is a help. Then I read a very interesting copy of the “Sur- tional Foundation for Infantile Pa-
standing in the sun.
ralysis last month are expected to total nearly $20.000, more than
Collections from the dances held
ler Fieldhouse show and from downtown booths totaled $12,555.
The 1941 contributions to the Na-
acting and making war like an independent nation is an event of prime importance in the whole political make-up of the Far East. These islands, hitherto an exploited colonial empire, are being formed by events into an important self-contained unit with political and economic policies of their own. They are not leaning primarily upon strong neighbors but are resolutely fighting for themselves as full partner of the democracies. Their leaders love liberty and are determined to defend this new-found unity and existence at all costs.
NEXT: Weakness in the Phil-
6—An eclipse of the sun can occur only at which phase of the moon! 7—Which of the following spellings is correct: Acommodation, ace comodation, accommodation? 8—Peruke is a shade of yellow, a wig or a pickle dish?
Answers 1—Col. William E. Mitchel (dee ceased), 2—Six. 3—Tree. 4—David Farragut. 5>—Pro tempore (for the time being). 6—New moon. T—Accommodation. 8—Wig.
ippines.
Copyright, 1941. by Hallett Abend: dis- s 8 8
tributed by United Feature Syndicate, Inc. ASK THE TIMES LEBANON: EX-EDITOR: DIES Inclose a 3-cent stamp for re-
LOGANSPORT, Feb. 6 (U. P.).—| ply when addressing any question Adam Felker, 74, publisher of the| of fact or information to The
COPR. 1942 BY NEA SERVICE, INC. T. M. REG. U. S. PAT. OFF.
fientestine. Sepies Secor mine Britain's position. from the different islands and pe SY nimi i. Ba institutions “is terrible” Mr. plants while all other plants in Onl y One M ystery to It British to put a stop to the plotting.| pered that from Manila to Singa- Se ap 1 ni Th to enough to accommodate all ten- oy pn eld. oaen Sy dt the business are converted com- At Baghdad, for example, an Anglo-| pore, by the most direct sea route, b li ved 3 ig . IL WaS ants. Hotels have also construct- the type of work the yon out pletely to war work. THE IDEA OF any special-purpose factory is to|American public relations council] the distance is 1375 miles, from RL pg > —~ oy ed shelters large enough to afford | y arerrequired Use of the “victory” label on Make just one thing and nothing else. Such factories|IS using the most modern American| Hongkong to Singapore 1440 miles, Ton os 1 - pn igh ” _ Tefuge {0 4 masimum number of { “ry, survey showed that the wartime model is to prevent Must either go on making their normal civilian prod- methods for checking up on public| with the Japanese-held Spartley > 7s Ping eo 2s me Ss guests and the entire staffs of |... ¢ tie res I 3 >» per the few firms which would be UCt. change over entirely to war work, or stand idle. opinion, combating Germanophile! gng Hainan Islands lying across ot fu a Se nava servants. oe i 0 oh ave been at licensed 6 make it from having a commercial ade The sensible answer is, instead of keeping two influences here and utilizing pro-| the route. From Shanghai to a a awn on any of the PE ad FH ; s ess asinye year vantage after the war over the remainder of the in- refrigerator factories on half time because of re- ally sentiment there. Singapore the sea lane is 2213 Anas many bombers. scoubin Unity Is Achieved there less re hays worked dustry, stricted materials, to leave one running full time and miles in length, whereas the non- and pursuit planes has Et IF GERMANY has had an “And that’s not due 0 politics, 3 The proposal : that the War Production Board ae Ore one out of refrigerators and put it at If the British could forestall the Sp ty: Suangeal to Ma- Government at its immediate dis- hopes that a yobellion in ny either,” the Personnel ‘Board direc etermine a yearly quota of this model refrigerator, ing else. Axis by solving the problem of nia 1s ee posal? As usual, in these times, Netherlands East Indies might |tOr said, “because the jobs are not it $3 ' : bub 1 + + 3 pr i : : ” based on avaiable materiale and minimum needs, | {A0VE belive (hat in the matter of public 800d Ara and Tudian independence, | ua aan mens perry UIC C5aCt number is an oficial bankrupt Queen Wilhelmina's ro- | Lat good factory capacity on a 24-hour, ven a y iy ¥ reasonable that after the war the public is golng to] most ot as propaganda would| Macassar is about equal to the mitted cot 2400 1 Be schedule ayy penalize a concern which devoted itself to war work Joe yoos: OY Shute air-line flight from New York to inclusive of grim b _— oe go a mA, Te : i ; d nor that there will be any special good-will value to a - fv Rg Seconds Atlanta, Ga., while the distance training. IR spam Mas are 10) Svan Doves nd T E S T Y Oo U R It's Still Under Consideration Ad on hias pol Go Sirk ou te skimpy little} country, sincerely want to co-oper- Tt te (ot betrdtn an Boi Bis oe fs ep tek Sima) a), mucky pers KNOWLEDGE , UNIONS WORKING IN the industry proposed this would license. 5 Lie rio Se on yo Richmond, Va, and Hastings, Neb. persuasion and Ie si i > os DE oa es piv! Rn on TRY eal SO loss : But ‘those are not the main questions. There| This, London insists, must. wait i at he Denpenands Boyt Birds i SoTL ec: DE goth he time being. les Naive ie yy Army officer who chief of the consumers’ durable goods branch secron Tie of mon — Pe 5 gine so poor is Som. In view of divans the fact Dutch East BD the — t in fptor a or that a a an gsi to be favorably impressed at the first discussion. need for all possible factory help in akin mar a et rest i that the Netherlanders have sent invasion of Holland halted the Fully 30,000,000 of a Ai high commands were fo a Be Arig gm done i Tos. weiiae . § sitdution whiED the Avie iv one, PINS desizorers snd sibmariney, realisation of firis Pian, Accord. of the Jslands are devour Mo- A a ragnite the imperianies Ge Of Th ie Wl i one in he only mystery about this proposition is why, ploiting to the full. ; hammedans, and daily in the 2. Th RL Ys : = stries, except that they after two and a half years with all of the industrial thousands of mosques the hadjis e lerm of the President of I Sate gi by having the special brains assembled here at Washington, and after all proach to ihe naives the Warn. 3 Wo i tvs, four or six years? oe i iy urers distribute the trademarks on of the official studies that have been made of what COUNTY POLIO DRIVE ing that if Japan ever becomes I. aulownia is the name of a fish, he standa: product in the ratio of normal sales. the British are doing in that line, it remained for Maier Ot We Arcmpélage the J Or Saran flower, As civilian production becomes tighter this kind of some union people to bring up the idea. M AY RE ACH $20 000 Mrsiaye vi all be reduced to the feriio Was roe Ar admiral of evel of coolies working long hours - SO. Navy J for harsh and arrogant masters. |°>—For what does the abbreviation Funds raised in Marion County's The fact that the Netherlands pro tem stand and what does it y ay East Indies is now thinking and mean? CHICAGO, Il, Thursday.—I did a little work yesterday on the train and wrote a few letters which I hope may be readable. I rather doubt that they will be, because, at best, my handwriting is none too legible, and when I add the movement of a train it becomes very like the scrawl of a very uncertain fly. At Chattanooga, Tenn, I got out and walked up and down the platform and watched with interest a lady who was also taking the alr, attired in white silk slacks and a mink coat. Later on, while we were eating dinner, two young girls came into oWr drawing room. They were on vey Graphic.” an issue of “Liberty,” an issue ef ralysis from Marion County were their way from Miami, Fla, and I “Time” and some articles from the “Free World.” One $8800. imagine that a good many people of these, on the cost of life in the past few years of ae are returning from visits to what war, and the other on Hitler's criminal code. made should have been a warmer climate. In any case, cold shivers run up and down my spine. How dare NYA BEGINS SEARCH these two girls were tanned, which spoke well for we be so wasteful of human beings? It must seem! The National Youth Administrathe warmth of the sun, even though they insisted that to the great Power above that we are presuming tion is conducting a contest to find the air had been chilly. They were autograph hunt- mightily on His perogatives. | “the NYA youth worker most valuing and, having stalked their game, retired con- Not a very active day, but on the whole a pleasantjable to war production.” Lebanon Daily Reporter from 1897, Indianapolis Times Washington tentedly. ; one. I was just as sleepy last night as though I had] The three defense workships of to 1915 and former circulation man-| Service Bureau, 1013 13th St., N. The conductor gave us an opportunity to come out been out for a long day of exercise in the open air.|the NYA in Indianapolis will an- 2-6 | lager of the old Logansport Pharos| W. Washington, D. C. Legal of our den to see the Chickamauga Dam. We both Up early this morning and spent a brief time at the nounce their selections next Thurs- : daily, died yesterday at Eldorado,| and medical advice cannot be came to this dam with the President and a tremen- hotel before starting for my visit to the University of day. Later, a state contest will be| “Happy birthday to you, happy birthday to you—Number Seven Thou- (Ark, according to word received| given nor can extended research dous crowd when it was dedicated on ¥ very warm [linois. 3 : ~ held and finally a natignal contest. sand Four Hundred and Two!” J ; ti + | be undertaken.
A
