Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 July 1942 — Page 25
—By William Ferguson ~~ OUR BOARDING HOUSE OUT OUR WAY.
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AFRICAN DESERT, CLOUDS OF SWIRLING DUST NOW CHOKE AND BLIND THE. FIGHTING TROOPS, ONCE WAS COVERED BY A GREAT ocEAN/ THE MEDITERRANEAN 1S ALL THAT IS LEFT OF IT,
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COPR. 1942 BY NEA SERVICE, INC.
A FINE IS IMPOSED ON ANYONE FOUND GUILTY OF KILLING ONE.
IN AMERICA, WE KILL GARDEN MOLES ON SIGHT IN FRANCE, WHERE THE ANIMAL'S
EA WHEN NOU GERNE TWIGES THAT FRA ABOUT LOSING HIS
THE GULKY
STORY FOR THAT KIND OF HAN/ | ee
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ANSWER: Don’t Sit Under the Apple Tree; Jersey Bounce; I Went Out of My Way.
W. C. T. U. ASSAILS WARTIME REVELERS
EVANSTON, Iii, July 23 (U., P.).[Women's =Enough money to pay war bills| Union claimed yesterday.
for more than five months—more than $25,000,000,000—was the price| president, said the money wasted on of liquor, crime, gambling and vice|liquor, crime and gambling last in the ‘United States, the National|year would buy 10 $25 war bonds for Christian
Mrs. Ida B. Wise, W. C. T, U.
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COMMONS AIRS RAF ‘SPY’ STORY
: Imprisoned Pilot Was Jap Agent in U. S.
LONDON, July 23 (U. P).— Squadron Leader F. J. Rutland, who has been held in prison since last
States for five years as a spy for Japan, Admiral Sir Roger Keyes said this week in commons: Rutland, he said, was in “close touch with the United States naval intelligerice,” and the names of naval officers with whom he dealt are known.
+ Keyes, former head of the British commandos, discussed the case during debate on the government's power to jail persons without trial under section 18 of the defense act. He said he was not attempting to defend Rutland, but he argued that the government erred when it refused the R. A. F. officer’s offer to
Japan’s military intelligence at the disposal of the country.
Helped Jap Air Force
Keyes said Rutland was sent to Japan in 1919 or 1921, when Japan was an ally, to ‘help that country
to. Japan and then for five years worked in the United States as “a Japanese secret service agent.” “I have been given the names of American naval officers with whom he dealt,” Keyes said. “But in 1941 he became most concerned about the situation in the Far East and consulted with American naval intelligence officers who urged him
Keyes said the navy flew Rutland here at U. S. expense, getting him priority on a clipper plane. He arrived Oct. 5, and Oct. 25 he laid before British authorities a complete scheme for intelligence work against Japan.
ALL-PLASTIC PLANE GIVEN ARMY 0. kK.
HAGERSTOWN, Md., July 23 (U. P.). ~The Fairchild AT-13, a twinengine all-plastic plane designed for training full bomber crews, has passed its test flight and will soon be put in production as the largest and fastest army training plane. It is made almost entirely of plywood molded with plastic resins under heat and pressure. The Duramold construction will give it greater speed, unofficially “in the 200-mile-an-hour category,” by eliminating rivets and overlapping joints on the fusellage and wings. The only strategic materials used in construction are in engine
mounts for bomb racks. The army will use the Fairchild trainer to train full bomber crews of pilots, navigators, bombardiers, cameramen and gunners.
|FRENCH WARNED OF
‘DARK DAYS AHEAD’
VICHY, July 23 (U. P.).—Max Bonnafous, French secretary of state for agriculture and food supply, said today that France is not at the end of her troubles and that very dark days probably lie ahead. “During the war,” he said, “too many Frenchmen hoped for a miracle that would .lead to victory without them having to fight, and today too many of them hope for a miracle of peace that will let them live as they did previously without them doihg anything about it. People must get it into their heads that no one is going to do anything for France except Frenchmen.”
SOLDIERS’ FATHERS TO MEET _ Fathers of Sons in War Service
| win meet at the World War memorial at 1 p. m. tomorrow. Fathers|too. who wish to discuss their sons’)
security after the war are invited
December, worked in the United|
build up its air force. He returned ||.
to return to Britain immediately.”
mounts, cowlings and tubular steel| }
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A BLESSING FOR WHICH T AM DULY THANK FUL
TRWILLIAMS, 7-23
‘—By Al Capp
~~ \T GIVES ME A DIVINE IDEA ?”-11L GIVE A “YOUNG YA
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They Are Dur Allies in the World War Against Hitlerism
By Science Service . WASHINGTON, July 33—Uzbi ‘Kazaks, Mordvians, Chuvaskh, [i jiks: Ever hear of them? No? Well,
you should. They're all {riers of ours now, allies in this war Tile in. Only they've been in it longer than we have; many of them. ire been shooting ‘at Nazis for inge than .a year now. And the UE - murts, Maritsi, Osetians, Karska!paks, Komi, Khakasi, Oirots, Edier, You've probably guessed if i now. They're all minor but ef
nitely distinguishable peoples liv :
in the huge section of the map under the blanket label of USSR. Some of them, like the Uzbeks and Kazaks, number several millions; other groups are counted in a few tens of thousands. . The many peoples who make up what we lump as Russia are described, and their family histories outlined, in a new Smithsonian Institute study written by the veteran anthropologist, Dr. Ales Hrdlicka, who has traveled extensively in both European and Asiatic Russia and is in constant correspondence with fellow-scientists
throughout the vast area.
Many of the minor peoples in Asiatic Russia Dr. Hrdlicka class= ifies as “yellowbrowns,” related to our own American Indians. Altogether they comprise about a tenth of the 197 million people in the Soviet lands. Eight-tenths are white, the remaining tenth mixtures. Fair-skinned Russians intermarry freely with their darker neighbors, so that the eventual absorption of. the minor groups into the great mass of the Russian people can, be expected. : - ‘The three great stocks of European Russia, the Great Russians,
thus constituting a- heavy majority of the total population of the USSR. In general, they are fairer of skin; hair and eyes than the mixed-race “Herrenvolk” who despise (and fear) them; though they are less blond and rounder-headed than the
real Nordics of the Scandinavian lands. : ‘Russian population increases at 15 per thousand per year, is nearly twice as rapid as that of Germany or the United States, both standin;
Little Russians and White Russians, | sto
together number over 132
