Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 May 1942 — Page 13
SECOND SECTION
RATIONED GAS FOR ALL U. §. FACING DELAY
Start to Be Made After July. 1 as Tire Saving Plan, WPB Hints.
WASHINGTON, May 27 (U, P.). —War production board officials, admitting that nation-wide gasoline rationing probably cannot’ start by July 1, today considered plans for such a program as a rubber con=servation measure befor® the end of the summer. No final decision was taken at yesterday's regular weekly board meeting, but WPB Chairman Donald M. Nelson said that the office of defense transportation had submitted plans for “rationing trans portation by rubber-tired motor vehicles.”
| WEDNESDAY, MAY 27, 1942
The Indianapolis Times
By Raymond Clapper CALL 10 35.44 | Marblehead Hero isis Kin Here
SR cently. But it is far more than that which justifies Mexico's action. If it were only that Mexico were suffering an
occasional accident at sea and nothing else was in-
volved, it would be better for Mexico to tie up her ships until the war was over. That is the way some nations have tried to escape from the war.
- Washington
WASHINGTON, May 27.—Mexico is getting ready to declare war on the axis. That will bring the whole northern hemisphere into a formal state of war. South America has been much slower to realize that it is in this war also. Some of the countries down there have been riding alone, thinking to stay on the fence. With some this has been because of a desire to wait and see who was going to win. More generally perhaps it has been the difficulty with divided populations that has held the governments back. There are complications in declaring war when large numbers of persons of axis descent are colonized inside your country. Even though they have not gone formally into the war, the South American countries have been as helpless to escape the force of the war as we have. They are having trouble obtaining imports which they need because we do not have ships to carry goods down there. We are buying a good deal and are contracting for enormous future purchases. But because we can't supply goods in return, their economies are upset. When a general war breaks lcose no country can escape a severe impact from it.
We tried it in some such way by adopting an arms embargo. We thought to escape from the effects of
war by not sending eny weapons or selling any First of Older Men will Be
weapons to the belligerents. But it is no accident at sea that Mexicc has to Drafted Next Month Says s Hitchcock.
concern herself about really. The sinkings bring the issue into focus in terms that the whole population By this time next month, the first of the 35-to-44 group of Hoo-
can understand. The Nazi Way of Life THE QUESTION IS whether Mexico is to have a|siers will be privates in Uncle Sam’s Oe pri on ee rte ihe Re army, Col. Robinson Hitchcock, ‘hi r people m Yer 3 g of o : is one of Mexico's necessary activities. She gran Belly Rid woliay. If the axis were to become supreme Mexico's fu-| As far as it is known, none of ture would be decided in Berlin. Mexico's economics {Indiana's local draft boards have would be decided there. The life of all small nations [sent any of the men between 35 is at stake in the same way. The small ‘nations of and 44, inclusive, but most of the Europe are now living and working as Berlin dictates. With an axis victory the scheme of economic man- |P08rds Will begin sending them next agement which Berlin now is attempting to exercise |month, Col. Hitchcock said. over Europe would spread to other continents. There| Some of the Marion County is no distance any more in these matters. boards have already sent out notices While traveling through Africa and Asia recently.|to holders of low numbers in the I saw superficially at least, some of the effects of|new group to report for their first colonial policy, where outside masters were at work.[cursory physical examination by But it was nothing to the kind of control that the|local draft board doctor. axis would impose and has imposed wherever it has been able to invade. Africa has been the hunting Ulasitatien Follawe ground for nineteenth century imperialism. Latin| After that examination, the draft America would be the ground for twentieth century|board then classifies the individual Nazi management. and if he is placed in 1-A he is given 10 days in which to appeal. If no appeal is taken, the draft board then orders him to report Just to the army examining board, giving him 10 days advance notice of the date to report. If he passes this examination, he is then sworn into the army. Those inducted after June 15 will be al-
Lieut. Comm. Clarence E. Coffin Jr., his mother and sister, Mrs. James D. Peirce (left to right), inspect his Yangtze River Rats certificate which is given to navy men on patrol duty there.
COFFIN AVOIDS TALK OF FEAT
Interested in Quiet Rest With Parents and Sister, He Says.
Lieut. Comm. Clarence E. (Two-
The Issue in Focus
THAT IS NOT the only menace. If it were, then the only game for South American countries would be to play neutral and work for means that would prevent wars in the future. There is direct menace to South America by the very nature of the axis, what it stands for and what it is reaching for. Mexico's decision to go to war comes out of a wave of indignation over the sinking of Mexican ships re-
Simplest Method The July 1 date, which marks the
* * | end of the 47-day temporary rationW 2 With U / ingoy gasoline in the 17-state Atbai : antic coast area, had been men= You i 4 tioned unofficially as a possible time WAR B il NI q TIRES STUDIED |for extending gas rationing throughout the nation. Xx *
Mr. Nelson told a press confer= ence last night that gasoline rae Navy cruisers are built in two classes, light and heavy, the lat-
and tioning seemed to be the simplest method for conserving rubber and ter displacing about 10,000 tons. Our navy has about an equal
that there just was not enough of this material for pleasure car drive number of light and heavy cruisers, the 10,000-ton cruiser costing
Ernie Pyle, in poor health for some time, has been forced to take a rest. However, he Protective Jacket
is expected to resume his daily column within a short time.
‘Spring Wheels’ Tested ing. He indicated that administra-
By Technicians. tive difficulties stood in the way of
WASHINGTON, May 27 (U. p.),|immediately going ahead with na- : tion-wide rationing if such a plan
Inside Indianapolis By Lowell Nussbaum
really was the judge; he admits it. . . . The boys are teliing about a little restaurant on 16th st. that lost one of its waitresses to a defense job. A few weeks later she came back in the restaurant in new clothes
WE'VE ALMOST developed a faint liking for snakes after reading an article in the current issue of Outdoor Indiana. Snakes, according to the article, are “probably the most misunderstood of all animals.”
lowed, under a new policy, a 14-day furlough to wind up their business affairs, if they wish it.
Call to Be Proportioned
The men in the 35-to-44 group are to be called by the local draft
Gun) Coffin Jr., a hero of the U. S. S. Marblehead which had been
was home here today. But he didn’t want to talk about
“bombed to hell” by the Japanese!
approximately $20,000,000. Many cruisers are under construction and many more are needed.
—A protective jacket to fit around
were adopted.
The obstacles are
tires or a “spring wheel” are some|expected to be cleared away soon.
of the ideas that may lead to at least partial solution of America’s rubber problems.
Henderson to See FDR Price Administrator Leon Hender-
son is scheduled to confer with
The two suggestions were in-| president Roosevelt today. Mr. Hen-
cluded among scores which have derson has char reached the National Inventors|ioning "i Eat i : = council for consideration. The|cent presidential directive gave ODT council is a commerce department Director Joseph B. Eastman auagency directed by General Motors’( thority over rubbed-tired vehicles,
and had them cash her check—for $37.50. The next|boards in proportion to the number|the Marblehead saga which has day, we hear, not a single waitress reported for work. |0f 1-A men ne on He been labeled an outstanding event Guess why. board's rolls from the men in the in naval history. He was more in-
Instead of being villains bent on harming humans, theyre really friends of man because they destroy rats and mice. Very few people die from snake bites; only about 150 a year in the whole United States, and most of these are in the southern states. Auto traffic in Marion county,
To pay for these speedy and powerful ships with their heavy guns and armament we must buy war bonds. Citizens of a large town or a given community, work= ing in unity, could buy one of these ships for the navy if they put at least 10 per cent of their income in war bonds every pay
the batterea| day.
(Editorial, “Optimism That's Not Dangerous,” Page 14)
ol xl
i Sn =]
the depression avoided, Ek ditorial; u
first two registrations. : : Th rown for a Loss The local draft boards are send- terested in visiting with his parents, oa Kett i y Charles F. Kettering for selecting|p,¢p, passen Yo : A ger and commercial. THE FIREMEN at engine house 17—Madison and naires to the men in the new group|3270 Winthrop ave, and his sister, inventors’ ideas that appear most| nr Nelson and President Roose= thka in accordance with the order num-| Mrs. James D. Peirce, who lives station's horseshoe pitching champ. No one else : : ; ’ : alone, took almost that many could even approach pie Bd GEE (Jiggs) bers which they drew in the nation- next door. . HN ngteven develope 0 ig indicated that: American ingenuity lives last year. al lottery. Some of the boards are| Ang another matter of more con- tute for rubber automobile tires, it| might gevise something which could 13. Ji said he'd never pitched a game of horse- : ; : ; - varieties in Indiana. One is the hoes gn life, but Ie i6 ry Levi showed |CS, are just getting started. cases which had been stored in the Bs Comore for the Hers, 8 tires at low speeds, 30 miles per timber rattler, found occasionally , Meanwhile, state draft headquar-| pacement of the federal building thoug ey would enable peoble| our or less. Neither gave the imto our informant, Jiggs proceeded to trounce him, 21 8 ~ is undisturbed land. Another iS {; g ang refused to re return match. It all 100ks boards will begin sending “ut occu-|eystoms. In those cases were arti bumps. less substitutes were in the offing the massasauga — a small rattler found in : : pational questionnaires next month|cjes he had shipped from China Auto Makers Busy soon. Mr. Nelson said that produc : i of Sigma Chi are looking forward to June 17. That's # uncommon. The third is the copperhead, found 0c- 1. gate they and the Chicago alumni are to have |Of 28® Who are not subject to mili- the Marblehead. conference yesterday that some Suaranteed although a dozen or casionally all over the state and especially in hilly, tary service. As for bringing ak substitute might be developed which |50 projects were being investigated Brook, Ind. Poisonous snakes have movable teeth called fangs. > " to regard the achievement with an miles an hour. He said technicians| Mr. Nelson again explained that There are two of these. No non-poisonous snake has Army Life Is Different These occupational questionnaires ,yx of “Oh, that.” ele working on two or three types| Ne regarded rubber as the most im- . will aid the war manpower com- i oriant. singl bi be h Against Navy Tradition of tires which do not use rubber, |Portant single problem. before the there are only two punctures, you probably have been toh d the draft Most of the experimental work is bitten by a poisonous snake. Non-poisonous snakes apolis Symphony orchestra until he was inductedjers for war industries and the draft| But he was ready to admit it HITS H Y {being done by leading motor manu-| omy is so geared to motor transinto the army a week ago Monday, reports to his|boards have been instructed to wy was a tough job. Debris was fran- NS cacttrers, portation, he said, that money is series of scratches, not two round holes. plete this work as soon as possible. tically cleared away, and the crew not a major consideration in deGosh, now we're not sure whether we like snakes that to which he's accustomed, but he likes it. He is to sta : 4 y y . ’ ; ; : y clear of any substitutes got his complete uniform Wednesday evening and was|S.miar inventory of men in the out when the pumps couldn't carry Wife of Jurist Urges SUrVeY which lack resilience and which |NOW are wearing out at the rate of 0 } f th Suckers Eh 2 have not been or cannot be inducted ’ it t about: 125: Yons 2 day. he sd is y SB TE le os ar co oailiad Se into the armed forces. LA avy ro For Post - War a short time—to say nothing of A SLENDER MAN with a little black mustache gar and milk to the tables and did other flunky ; : cecoe making motoring extremely un- Henderson and Mr. Eastman issued tary that th ” ) Rebuilding. a joint statement to correct “misme down to municipal court.” The driver threw the his life. He says the army makes the best coffee Pie i 8 ts CE gr a think two or three of anything avoiding: Friction car into gear, then wisecracked: “Oh, you're one of he ever tasted. . . . Among the newly commissioned % Fs Japanese—either ships or men—is g possibility of synthetic rubber. They : ; ‘ ; “ » i ber : ! 5. € air corps officers is Stuart McKnight, auditor for the Col. Hiteheoks said, “but many war an thing American. The Japanese Indianapolis have “vast slums” that| The jacket which might be placed | agreed that no rubber can be spared With a straight face, the passenger replied: "No, I'm Republic Creosoting Co. and deacon of the First workers also will be obtained from y : need clearing, Mrs. Samuel I. Rosen= the guy that sits up in front; the name’s Niblack.” It classes 4 eferre d for physical de never attacked unless they had us| Dee f New York. chairman of the|Of asbestos, plastic material, fiber|synthetic rubber must go to the war er B 4 © [outnumbered five to one. Miah 0 or leather, Thomas R. Taylor, staff | effort, and that the most optimistic for military service are well quali- Emergency, said last night in an| | » said. kind can be used for anything but By Leland S towe fied for civilian activities. address here before the Indianap- He said there was some question military purposes for the next two Mrs. Rosenman, the wife of Judge jacket and tire, and that the two MOSCOW, May 27—Outside Moscow, rolling fields young girls in their early 'teens. The draft head pointed out that FOR U STUDENTS Rosenman who is a close adviser of babl 1d hav to 1 to ‘turned ea ing ti rai i : i -|the occupational questionnaire is r Wi President Roosevelt, suggested that|Probably would have to be glued to-| Those grim prospects, officials of fresh-turned earth are being tilled, rain or shine, Through such panoramas we proceeded until, final pa resident Roose 88! gether. said, make it obvious that pleasure into delicate green, intermittently stretch a backdrop crossed a temporary bridge and climbed a long ridge] draft questionnaire. W. 43d st. has established a loan|defense houses and then after the , 4s : : : t A i “The two questionnaires are en- . 1 most radical ideas offered—could|able tires must be carefully preof warmth and loveliness which is so peculiarly allur- from which a splendid vista of many miles could be q fund of $1000 to aid students at|war to embark on a slum clearance have several variations, Mr. Taylor served for only the most essential grasp clings stubbornly into early and vertebraed with trenches, dugouts and fortifica-| plained. “The occupational ques-\p Gatch announced today. She said that the people of In- : > Mav. Now Spring is d T ins : k ir | tionnaire is sent to a registrant of ot : ; is “should ¢ of short steel springs projecting] On the other hand, Mr. Nelson fay. Now spring is here and out- tjon systems, which are now in a state of disrepair The fund will be known as the|dianapolis “sho go out and ge from a steel rim, these being cov-|pointed out that complete stoppage the countryside wears a cloak of On the crown of a hilltop, nestled among pines|Possibility that he may not be quali- | 4 and it was presented to I. U.|heeds” so that they would know » S ity. i i fied for military service. Both ques- " he si ; springs might be longer and extend |mendous burdens on already overpeaceful serenity and birches, were several buildings—a rest camp for in memory of her two sons. The|just what the situation is and what from: a-certral nb. crowded. bus, strechcar: and: {rain siderable distance from Russia's tioned in the vicinity. turned.” gift for the same purpose The speaker based her statement 3s 4 : : than five tires sprawling capital, and then well : i on the local housing situation on motarisis: with more D The Handshake of a Friend In making the gift, Mrs. Louden g ’ 1] LL M D would be asked to give them up quent intervals, our car threaded 10: Moar. fitch tome. subud its way through barricades, past i in . ; : i wou e - - > idyllic spot, and here we were luncheon guests of students to continue their work vo She is in the city attending the Na CREDIT STUDY HEAD iary of the reconstruction finance : Russian airmen. There was a bountiful zakuska— HISTORICAL SERIES that they may not only meet tls tional Conference on Planning. corporation GI LR LER . : R demand of the military services -or London Expert Speaks Mrs. Clarence F. Merrell, 60 W. trenches. These fortifications ring Moscow inside as i 85th st. was elected secretar f —and among all the food that followed, you would ih ill leave in the medical] Capt. Richard L. Reiss, London |ine newly.oreat o Sze : Y Oifor the Texas-New York pipeline Soviet army's readiness to defend the capital yard by never guess the piece de resistance. Just simple, og talks sponsored by the Indiana His- | ce or Wot 1 the newly-created committee toc mitted by Ralph K. Davies, dep- ) 0 i f tatoes, than which nothing coul ; : yard, 1ast October anid November. agin fed xX i OL E torical Society will be given by| Mrs, Louden is an alumna of I. U|the planning conference, detailed ization meeting of the group yester-| wii recommend whether it will be : : ; Curtis G. Shake, judge of the Indi- and a former resident of Blooming-|t0 the local builders the British|qay in Governor Schricker’s office. £ kept up or are even in process of dismantiement. But 4 We Lad fl It Len oy court, at ¢ p to- | ton advisable to take steel away from er i inner speeches. e had a couple of speeches before|ana supreme court, fie LO 1 WOM ; wherever we rode, during several hours of Sunday, we began to eat. and others i scattered through |morrow in the Indiana state li-| ID accepting, Dean Gatch pointed | tories Sor war plant workers in the named to launch a technical sur- build the project, to find some noncropped up between fields, across streams and through out that with the war-acceleration congested areas. vey of the consumer credit situa-| .itjoa] substitue or to reject the urge happened to strike. Maybe that was why the “ : WhoHianas neh short and t6 the worth y Judge Shake will speak on “The |in., 50 per cent of the students|construction relieved the housing|G. 8. Blue, Lloyd S. Henderson and Fuel Off € First Beginnings of Cultural Movements yj) need aid to continue their stud-| shortage and conserved critical ma-|the Rev. C. E. Oldham, all of Indi- Pe Ty aregiia propriate kind of place. We enjoyed the potatoes, the| aroline Du ibfari i . aa Mr. Nelson indica 8 HIGHWAYS AND secondary roads are also strict- toasts, and the fellowship equally. ons Oufoline nn, lbrarian,) The W. K. Kellog foundation, Capt. Reiss is in this country to|Haute; Paul Jones, Marion, and J. Iv guarded and patrolled, and traffic is almost exclu- E will be hostess. Battle Creek, Mich, recently gave advise American builders and hous-|C., Harger, Danville, ably Sows be used i move fue) ot : . ; ; ‘ : ; uch petroleum produc thing which goes a very long way in my first impresof the scenes of plowing and sowing. sions of anybody, pl Bs any Ai Bor on library will be on exhibit in the |shool each $10,000 for was-time|is doing to meet the housing prob- [by the governor, is to make a re-|are needed in the factories turning In fact, upon closer glance, you observe men and cases. Included are pictures of] qent loans. lem, port to the 1043 legislature. out war goods whereas the gasoline through your palm and through every finger. It as if spring and summer threaten to pass too quickly. would do the folks back home a world of good if they|S0™ the work of Charles Lucien Petroleum Corondinagos Bamnls Then, too, there are a great many women hoeing and Ickes in a speech a 0S SHER WIG WEPS Gur unis of Sided. bash,” by Paul Dresser. to ask sailors “to risk their lives for any but the most essential require=ERYTH! M y Da y By Eleanor R oosevelt HOLD EVERYTHING pipeline would help solve the Eastcom : in building during the pre-depres-)complishments of the county land-|ern oil problem. WASHINGTON, Tuesday.—On Sunday the group dealers that they should proceed on ings at the age of 12, and from the early discs, has other line of endeavor such as re- diana, praising them for the work the assumption that rationing of all i : : found a way of transferring some of the voices which of hearing Jerbidings made his Robert Yintseh These this war, Frederic A. Delano, chair= “There must be managed finance | conference. severe basis,” probably will be necesrecordings, which Yale university is preserving for He has something said by every president since man of the National Resources|in the future,” he emphasized. In an address last night, Eliza-|sary throughout the East for an inGrover Cleveland, except President Harrison. I was ay Iya z ments. tinued prosperity after the war, he |Massachusetts state planning board, sds" ——— i rted today. , With the co-operation of President Theodore Roosevelt. It sounded absolutely ant Roosevel, ase ‘on. | mentioned the great shortage of emphasized the value of the home AWARDS DAY HELD natural. Another record made by my aunt, Mrs. many of our armed camps. He has ference on Planning at the Clay-|hujlt up and the fact that federal] “For every fighter at the front recorded letters for many of our The commencement exercises at Washington col- pool hotel, Mr. Delano said that|and state officials are even now|Plus every worker in the war induslege at Chestertown, Md, yesterday were serious as Outstanding Shortridge seniors so the recipients may hear the got to be planned production and] He said that we would continue|Whose plain duty it is, first of all | were honored today in awards day voices of the boys they love, even fully carried out. The governor of Maryland gave the planned consumption.” finding new ways of tapping the diplomas to the graduating class. junior class presented the school them for many months. I can governmental machinery to accom-|is the real wealth of our country”|bonds and to keep the flags of the|with $500 in defense bonds. well imagine that letter will be sary of the admission of women to the college on an equal basis with men, it was fitting that the highest Mr. Delano said that the errors of [ish Columbia would be great areas|prompt and generous compliance|club announced citations for Ruth ; mother, sweetheart or wife. the 1020s, such as the huge expan-|for development. with whatever regulations may be|Ann Densford, best news story in Mr. Vincent has also recorded The last time I had been there was when Presi- . dent Mead was inducted and the president spoke at lowed to be repeated—that produc-|that will be encountered after this| “We are at war and all of our|story and sports column; Betty some dedicated to the president, some to the outfit with jhe are serving. He a a tr Ea less erowded occasion, but afterward we went to lunch
ing draft and occupational question-| Mr. and Mrs. Clarence E. Coffin Sr, Prospect—have been ribbing Levi Yount. He was the i : worthwhile. velt at press conferences yesterday There are only three poisonous J a 0 ron hie helt fairly well down their lists and oth-| cern to him was a pile of packing appeared today they won't be quite|pe seq as substitutes for rubber in hilly, rocky areas where there I ty than, Storie ters announced today that the draft|in the custody of the collector of fo get around without toc many pression, however, that such rubberslightly off color to Levi. . . . The Indianapolis alumni : : marshlands, especially in the lake region. It's very : pe to the men between 45 and 65 years when he left Peking to serve on President Roosevelt told his press|tion of such “devices” was not now their annual outing at George Ade’s estate near ; stony country. Aids in Job Mobilization Marblehead home, he was inclined would permit speeds of 30 to 35|bY WPB technicians. angs, but it may have teeth. If you are bitten and FR 1s may LEON ZAWISZA, concertmaster of the Indian-|mission in the mobilization of work: ng a Deore ne sometimes bite, but they leave a tooth scratch or friends that army life is somewhat different from i in i i . Local boards also are making alformed bucket brigades to bail her Tule WAIN INISNUOR, If ADDERS, IODing: tires. to. Feniace: (ot: that or not. up at 4 a. m. the next morning—on K. P. duty. Hell. Md second registrations Who the flood of water. might “jolt the life” out of a car in Only last week, Mr. Nelson, Mr. flagged down a taxi, climbed in and directed: “Take work until 8 p. m., and swears he had the time of|, .¢ iS from men beyond the mili-| And he added cryptically, “We still plencact, leading” information about the " » » The Negro-populated sections of the suckers, eh? Been driving too fast, I suppose.” the male recruits for war work,”| needed for a match with one of over well worn tires could be made | for ordinary passenger cars; all Presbyterian church. He drew a captaincy. R ° 9 S . IY MEN Vw re ca: National Commitee on the Housing director of the inventors council, |estimates indicate no rubber of any Pp g Defines Questionnaires ESTABLISHES U D olis Home Builders’ association. as to possible friction between the| years. Pleasure Driving Out : : ; ; not to be confused with the regular i i i i bui ew and woods of beeches and white birches, freshly leafed ly, we turned down a thickly mudded side-road, g Mrs. William M. Louden, of 36|it might be wise now to build n The “spring wheel’—one of the|driving must stop and that avail : iy i i ; : i i tirely separate in purpose,” he ex- . ' ing in a climate where winter's geen. The entire backbone of raised ground was ribbed p purpos the I. U. medical school, Dean W.|program. explained, It might have a series|uses. i 2 A i iles, iti military age only because of the : h i g side Moscow, for miles and miles, but easily reconditionable. 8! Lila B. Louden scholarship loan|the unbiased facts on local housing ered by thin rubber or fiber, The|of automobile use would place treWe drove to an airport a con- oficers and pilots of the Soviet air force who are sta-| tionnaires must be filled out and re- contribution supplements a previous| Was needed. re ar arent. Horan beyond it. Along the road, at fre- SH AKE T ALK 10 END declared that “the greatest need in|the 0 uss which reports the voluntarily; that the government is t S Af number of houses in r ition. ’ IN THE MIDST of springtime’s verdure, it was an Indiana today is to assist mcdical 2 Ses 21 poor cotidition imbedded, iron - rail anti - tank salami, caviar, smoked salmon, radishes, and all that : WPB experts are going over plans : ’ : : 11 the gaps which well as outside the city limits, reminders of the The last of a series of historical | doctors but also fi ge g profession.” housing expert who is also here for | study consumer credit at the organ- uty co-ordinator of petroleum. They Today, many such entrenchments are no longer I that ti Ris k hat 4 46 about t seems that the Russians know wha o abou practice of building huge dormi- A special sub-committee was ships, guns, tanks and planes to tank traps, trenches and other defenses suddenly h : od 6 Whe a When th torical e meal, according to where and when the oratorica h ¥ brary, Senate and Ohio sts. program at the medical school, more| He pointed out that this type of|tion in the state. Its members are plan for a third time. er , ork It was the right kind of party, in a uniquely ap- “ Ever y body Hard at Work F ria toes (he|in Vincennes. es. terials. anapolis; Fred R. Waldron, Terre : pipeline eventually is built it probBut what I enjoyed, most of all, was a very little taki sively military, all this belying {%: peaceful illusion y Several recent acquisitions to the ihe school and also the dentistry|ing authorities on what his country| The committee, named last week mostly. When a Russian officer shakes your hand, you feel it women of the soil working with exceptional intensity, American birds by Alexander Wil- might be used for pleasure driving. ® could shake hands just once with any of the Soviet Bonaparte and a part of the manu- N S / C B A d d S D / planting, and also a very considerable number of y seript, “On the Banks of the Wa- ew u m P an e VOI e i ays e an 0, night said the nation has no right ® ° Uncle of President, / ere for Planning Parley ments” and that construction of the sion decade had been spent in some|use planning communities in In-| Mr. Ickes told independent oil He told us that he had begun to do these recordFi mitth® NOR the usd We MehSuie Aer Yuin A depression can be avoided after | huilding the country's railroads. [they have done in a talk before the etroleum production, “on a rather most of us had thought were lost to posterity. the Tut, Will be mos: ;mbctung histofical Gotu Planning board and uncle of Pres-| As signs pointing toward con-|beéth M. Herlihy, director of the|definite period. very much interested to hear a speech by my uncle, U. 8. 0, Mr. Vincent has visited Here attending the National Con... mers goods that will have been | front in this war, Douglas Robinson, was equally good. AT S HORTRIDGE boys and sent the records home to avoid a depression “there has making plans for the post war era.|try, there are four civilians at home such exercises must be in these days, but very beauti= to keep the wheels of industry turn-|ceremonies in the auditorium. The though they are separated from He said that he believed that the country's resources “which after all|ing through the purchase of war Since they were celebrating the fiftieth anniverplish this was already in existence./and that Alaska, Alberta and Brit-|{united nations flying through| Meantime, the Shortridge .Press played over and over again by the academic honors were won by a girl. sion of buildings, should not be al<| “I don’t minimize the difficulties|issued,” she said. the Echo; Nick Ricos, best sports songs and pieces of music written by the servicemen; the ceremony and received a degree. ay was a tata, as sung over ry o 1 5%
at) - bc Ee
tion should be planned. war, but I do say that a depres-|thinking and all of our action must |Heassler and John ” neliide: ! the pla ine of J . 3 oh the first| the rest are bringing ores | been as bac
