Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 February 1945 — Page 15

“Hoosier Vagabond

- ta

(Continued From Page One)

same thing to us that it has to millions of others. In

the last four years, we have been together only on

those little excursion trips to the America. y She has kept the hearth in Albuquerque—kept it under difficulties. She has been burdened by recurring illnesses, and has had to revolve between home and hospital. But she has succeeded in keeping the little white house just as it always was, which she knew is what I would want. She is back there now, trying

to cope with the prospect of ate

other year alone.. She is still, by

remote control, my guiding star.

‘She thinks everything I do is » wondertol, She even thinks I'm beautiful, which is the only flaw in her judgment, She lives only for the day when war is over and we. car have a life together again. And that’s what - I live for 400, for life to a man isn’t much good without “his woman,” and after 20 years that’s “what “That Girl” still is to me. I hope we both last through until the sun shines in the world again. And my. folks in Indiana—I visited them twice on this furlough in America, both visits all too short, but better than none.

‘We. Think He Shouldn't Drive

MY, FATHER and my Aunt Mary are still on the . farm, three miles outside the little town of Dana. They have repapered the house and rearranged the furniture, and they are very comfortable, My father still limps from his fracture-of a year ago. And his eyes are very bad now, and he

Inside Indianapolis By Lowell Nussbaum

STATE SENATOR Jack Atherton, secretary-treas-urer of Butler university, today observed his silver anniversary with the school. When he began his association .with Butler it had assets of around a half million dollars. Today, the university has a book 8 value of about T million dollars. . Capt. George A. Bchumacher, formerly alumni secretary of Butler and a mémber of the English department, is back in town. We: hear he's expecting a discharge . from the air corps soon, and plans to resume his duties at Butler. « . Margie Manford asks us to drop & note in this column . asking if any of our readers have a eertain back issue of Life magazine. Sorry, Miss Manford; no can do. The reason: A burned child—dreads—the— fire.—Some._ months ago, We mede the mistake of doing the very thing you ask —with disastrous results. We gave the name and nhone number of the family seeking the magazine. By 10 a. m. the next day they had to ge} the phone company to disconnect their phone. They had had more than 325 phone calls overnight. And we have been receiving some of the overflow. Never again. That's why no public request. But we'll see if we can't find the issue you want by a little discreet inquiry. . . . Note to Mrs. R. G. C.: Sorry, but we have no way of telling what the abbreviations in your husband's military address stand for. We asked out at Pt. Harrison and couldn't find anyone who knew. The only part we know is that ETO stands for European theater of operations.

The State’s Divvy

ONE OF THESE DAYS, the state of Indiana may have a nice bank account from oil royalties. Some eight or 10 months ago the state conservation: depart-

“America Flies

YOUNG AMERICA now has his own rocket plane and summer skies probably will be filled with them. Operated on the jet propulsion theory, the little * planes shoot into the sky with great speed. Propelled some distance by a wee rocket unit, they soar and glide perfectly when the power is exhausted. Harmless carbon-dioxide capsules—in small light metal containers—provide the power, They are absolutely harmless, thus insuring full ‘safety in handling by the youngest of air-minded model builders. The model plane rocket unit, known as the Ray Rocket JP-1, was invented by E. K. Ray, of Afrcraft Products Co., West Chester, Pa. It powers a very light high wing monoplane with a pointed streamlined fuselage and twin tails.

‘Fired by Rubber Band THE SMALL rocket unit fits into a compartment " petween the wing section and mid-fuselage, with the tapered end of the unit toward the tail. It is rubber “shock-mounted” so that the rocket unit will not

damage the plane in case it strikes a barrier. The model is “fired” from a rubber band powered pistol, the metal plunger of which pierces Whe rear end’

My Da

er Shit

NEW YORK Thursday.—Yesterday was a day of pure relaxation. I lunched with some old friends and enjoyed it very much. I spent an hour with our old friend, Maj. Henry 8. Hooker, .who is gradually going through his period of convalescence at home. In the evening Mrs, Morgen= thau, who had spent the day i ‘trying to get things for her new apartment in Washington; Miss Thompson, who had been busy going’ through mail which she : hoped some day I would work on, .", and 1 went to the play. This was a second evening of pure joy—a salute to American folk and

popular music called: “Sing Out, -hospital with a severe cold.

Sweet Land!” Alfred Drake, Burl Ives and the whole cast, in fact, are very good. The music takes an old-timer like myself back through the years. We three are all old enough to enjoy every minute of ‘ it, and we are still young enough to like the mode things as well; so the whole evening was a gran success. Tonight I have'a speech to make for the Knights of Pythias, ‘and the weather is anything but propitious. At the moment it is stiowing hard, but I' have a feel“ing that T shall enjdy being out in the snow this afternoon, : We have been seeing so’ much in the papers lately ~ of our need for nurses, and sometimes I imagine the | italy ‘have thought ave Soapded, rather critical of EL tow day nen 1 seceived * bier trom o moth

can't see to read. But he gets around all right, and even drives the car to town now and then. We think he shouldn't be driving, but every time Aunt Mary mentions ‘that, he goes out and gets in the car and drives to town, so she’s stopped mentioning it. My Dad listens a lot to the radio, and helps with the dishes, and Aunt Mary. reads to at night, and last summer he even helped some with’ the harvesting when the neighbors were hard up for help. He raises a few chickens. Outside of that, lie" is without duties or energy for him,

She Doesn't Take After Her Nephew’

. AUNT MARY is almost 79, and her spirit is boundless. She goes all day long, like a 16-year-old. She _cooks the meals, cleans the house, works in the ‘garden, does the washing for two or three families, goes to her club meetings and to church, does things for the neighbors, and never finds time to sit down. I was amused at a letter that came from her the other day. One of our neighbors, Mrs. Howard Goforth, came down.with a violent rheumatism. 80 Aunt Mary. drove over and put hot cloths on her for several hours, got noontime ‘dinner for the farm hands, did the weekly washing, and ‘then .got supper ready for them before she came home for, her, own evening chores. Next day-a blizzard was on. The ice was so slick she didn’t dare take the ear out of the garage. The’ snow on the roads was two feet deep and it was bitter cold. So what did Aunt Mary do? She just bundled up and walked three-quarters of a mile over to Goforths, worked all day, and then walked back in the evening through the snow. She sure doesn't take after her nephew,

ment gave the Carter Oil Co. of Tulsa, Okla., permission to drill oil wells in the Wabash: river. The company struck oil in one well, in Posey county, about Oct. 1. The state’s divvy, a check for $2465, arrived Wednesday. That was only for the first few months. There will be more. The company struck oil in another well in December, and ‘some dividends will be coming from that one, too, before long. If they could just get enough wells going, we wouldn't have to pay any taxes. . . . A couple of weeks or so ago we carried an item relating how the 6-month-old pup owned by Dorothy Conaway of the OPA price office

pulled her radio off the refrigerator and broke it|

into smithereens. We added that the dog “now has two strikes on him! one more and out he goes.” We've just heard the sequel. The dog must have heard what we said, and become worried over it. At any rate, he did get that third strike. He fanned out the door and never came back. Mrs. Conaway now has a new police dog which she obtained from the dog pound.

Pet-Robin-Is-Back MRS. HERBERT CRABILL, 2619 Central, reports that her family’s “pet” robin is back—earlier than they've ever séen him before. They're sure it's the same one because it responded when Mr. Crabill whistled at it. In previous summers, the bird would

fly up to the house to get food whenever Mr. Crabill whistled. . Mrs. John Slhan Kittle was thrilled

Wednesday ‘night when she heard her favorite dog story over the air. Mrs. Kittle, president of the Animal Welfare league, sent the story in a letter to Gabriel Heatter and he used it in his broadcast Wednesday. It was the story of a half wild mongrel dog which “adopted” a resident of the Highland Golf club district. . . . In Tuesday’s column we mentioned - that Mrs. Walter N. Walker was looking for a Mrs. Patsy Arvin in order to give her some mail, This is to report that ‘Mrs. Arvin has been located She now lives on Tecumseh st.

“By Max B. Cook

of the rocket unit and releases a thin stream of carbon-dioxide in a jet. per cent of the takeoff weight of the plane, thus the Ray Rocket propels itself through the air by hurling one-seventh of its weight rearward.

Temperature Is Important

TEMPERATURE, MR. RAY says, has a great deal to do with the efficiency of the little plane. The units have about twice the efficiency at 75 degrees Fahrenheit as they do in winter's below-freezing temperatures. Ray now is working on a special “jettisoning” feature that will expel the rocket unit as soon as 1t has expended its power. He predicts-that the largest rocket unif of the carbon-dioxide type will hold only two ounces of liquid carbon-dioxide. This because of the necessary weight of the metal container to withstand the great pressure. He predicts also the development within a short time of types of jet-propelled models using fuels, such as gasoline, alcohol, liquid oxygen, hydrogen and other fuels which will be “practical and safe.” The-Ray-Rocket JP-1.comes in kit form and the model builder is given the added enjoyment of constructing the entire plane. It is probable that many model builders during 1945 will experiment with rocket * ‘takeofl” units for. their gas-engined models. The realm of jet propulsion and rockets for flights is not going to be confined in.the major aircraft industry alone.

3 po

By Eleanor Roosevelt

whose daughter is a second lieutenant in the army nurse corps and who has spent her third Christmas in “some gold camp in Europe.” At home she made $50 a week and her food. But her brother went into the army, and so in '42 she went in, too, accepting the munificent salary of $80 a month. That has gone up a bit, but she has worked for it. She started in England, went to Africa and Sicily, and since last October has been in France. “Their unit always arrives first, when they must live if ice-cold tents or barracks, wash out of their helmets and wade through the mud,” writes her mother,

“Last January she nearly died of pneumonia. This time, when reaching France, she was again in the

“When they reached France the enemy had put cement in all water pipes and heating facilities, so it took some time to get organized. But the nurses worked and froze. “Now she works 15 hours a day, walks 20 minutes to the hospital in slush and cold. “She was offered a leave to come home, but once

in France she hoped to see her brother and so refused, |

saying'she wanted to stay until the last gun was fired. “She never complains, she is the life of the party.” Her mothe has painted a picture of a very fine young woman, a widow, 38 years old, and I think her ~.mother is right in feeling very proud of her; 1 hope only that some day thése women who look like angels to the wounded men will get not only the ‘praise which 1s their due, but 1 ,. promotion |

low cutisens us bua, |

By Ernie Pyle

The gas represents only 15|°

SECOND SEoTio

AR plants, working round the clock, need - power night and day. And’ everyone expects the electricity to be there whenever he or she gets-the notion to “push the button.” That explains ‘why a utility's work is never through, In ‘war and peace, it need: people to keep the wheels going round. Right now, to meet the extraordinary demands the war has placed on the power lines, the Indianapolis Power & Light Co needs 64 men, and has been given the “green light” by the war manpower commission. None of the jobs requires highly-skilled per sons. 5 2.» OFFICIALS of 'the utility have nqticed in recent weeks, possibly because the war news points toward the final collapse of Germany's war machine, that applicants for jobs seem to be more interested in work of a permanent nature than in war jobs ‘which may end soon. “Ours is a 365-days-a-year business noted for its stability,” said one company official. “People like to work with an old, established business and they stay on. We have 74 persons on pension now.” » o » THE UTILITY’S group insurance program, Which provides for retirement at age 65, Jncludes

Ȣ

life insurance, health and acci-

et Indianapolis

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 1945

4

HELP WANTED: TO KEEP THE WHEELS OF INDUSTRY GOING 'ROUND—

.The Power Co.'s Work Is Never Through

shop, paint shop, welding unit,

_ a forge, machine, shop, work. for

..8. Ripe,

Digging holes for telephone poles certainly isn’t what it used to be, with the back-breaking jobs done by such mechanical chore-boys

dent coverages and hospital and surgical benefits. Working hours are 44 a week in all departments, and 48 hours in a number, All ‘work over 40 hours is paid at time and one-half,

A

“We also find that people, like the variety of work there is around our company,” a personnel man stated. “In our mechanical and construction department, for example, there is a carpentry

J bricklayer, truck driver, air tompressor operator— oh, I suppose there are some more if I could think of them all. The point is that a person gets a chance at all types of work and may specialize if he wants to. aw “A LOT of the hard, manual vork has been eliminated by me= chanical operations,” he continued. “For example, the coal ve burn is dumped. into hoppers nd conveyors do the rest. There: s no shoveling coal into boilers. “Our linemen are given ground raining first and then go on low'oltage work for several years efore they are given first-class nemen’s work.” = ” . JOBS OPEN for men at the atility include two laborers to work in the pole department, two water softener operators, five meter readers, 10. apprentice linemen, a stock clerk and an appréentice engineer, five bill passers, an apprentice mechanic and a mechanical engineer, two car washers, two janitors, 20 coal and ash ‘handlers, a. boiler repairman and a boiler fireman and 10 maintenance men for bricklaying, carpentry and so on. -=2 Those interested may apply at the U. 8S. employment service at the southeast corner of" W. Washington st. and Senate ave.

130,000 NAZIS TRAPPED IN LODZ FEEL VERY SORRY FOR THEMSELVES— nt

Want Nice Americans’ to Save Them

By LEIGH WHITE Times Foreign Correspondent LODZ, Poland — (Delayed) —1 had been told that an “American couple” wanted to see me. And when Henry Immoor and his wife called at our hotel this morning with red, white and blue silk boutonnieres on their overcoat lapels, I really thought they were Americans, 2 Although, as “i I told them, their homemade badges ~: more plosely ; resembled the Re French tricolor Mr. White than the stars and stripes. . Immoor was a tall man “with

a dumpy hausfrau. Both seemed exceedingly well fed and were far better dressed than any Poles I had seen in Lodz, s » » IMMOOR accepted one of our cigarets. “Ah, but it is good to smoke an

balding, gray hair. His wife was -

"American cigaret!” he said. “You know, I just finished my last drop of American whisky yesterday.” He spoke with an accent and so I asked if he and his wife were of Polish. extraction. “No,” he blandly explained. “We .both were born in Germany, but my wife and I lived in the United States for 20 years.” 8 » »

AT THIS point Hls~wife re-

“marked that she was from Law-

rence, Mass. Her maiden name; she said, was Dimmlich, and she had relatives in Lawrence, New York, Cleveland and Denver. Immoor revealed that until Pear] Harbor he and his wife had lived in New York. He had been a tourist guide, he

said, for the Steneck Travel bu-

reau, whose former office was in the Yorkville section where most of New York's Germans live. ¥ 84 8

HE SHOWED me an advertis-

ing blotter, printed in. German, headed: “Ask. for Henry. Hell help you arrange a visit to beautiful Germany on the HamburgAmerika line.” (I was becoming nervously

aware that Mr. and Mrs. Tmmoor were not exactly the sort of people I had thought.) “Yes,” said Immoor, assuming his” heartiest travel agent's manner, “I used to visit Germany almost every year.” ” ” ” “HOW DO you happen to be here?” I asked. “Oh, we were repatriated in the summer of 1942,” he replied. “My travel agency had to go out of business, and nobody would give me a job. “I tried to work for the Brooklyn navy yard but they wouldn't have me. So there was nothing to do but go back to Germany.” “We did not like it in Berlin, so when he had a chance to settle in Poland, we came here.” 2 = =» I ASKED him what he had been doing. He explained that he only had a harmless little job as superintendent in the local factory which made machinery that could, or could not, have been used for military purposes. The Immoors had been given a very comfortable furnished apartment.

By JACK BELL “Times Foreign Correspondent

WITH THE U. 8S. 2D DIVISION, Hellenthal, Germany, Feb. 8. (Delayed)—“We took the Hel lenthal today without too much resistance,” said the briefing officer at headquarters. But, “that ain't the way we heard it,” was the answer of soldiers of the 3d battalion of the 38th infantry regiment, who did the taking.

You see, two ¢ 0m panies expected to saunter in a’ quick Mr. Bell line down the hill before dawn and catch everybody asleep. One platoon did get there—and spent the day in houses on the edge of town, with Jerries in all the others. ; It wound up in a desperate fight all day and night and until noon the, next day. : ” n »

AS 1 WRITE at the burgomaster’s mansion, there is a lively skirmish on the edge of town. And I pause here only because Lt. Col. Olinto Barsanti, Tonopah, Nev., assures that “we've just kicked hell out of 'em.” It was the 1st platoon under Lt. Charles Curley, Richmond, Va., that hit the town the first morning. And nobody was asleep because atop the hill Capt. Jack Murphy, New Rochelle, N. Y., had stumbled into 10 sleeping. Germans, which made the welkin ring. - . 5 ” td MURPHY’'S carbine jammed, with a giant foe 10 feet away. Murphy smacked the Jerry on his helmet with. his revolver, ‘It went off, the Kraut thought he was shot. Everybody began shooting. We wound up with nine prison ers after the wildest mixup ever known. » » ”

mm. gun into the street to“knock down the house Curley was, in. Six more clésed in from the left. . Pvt. Jolin Symons, St. Clair, Pa, got six Germans with his automatic rifle. > Sgt: Ray Cleveland, Warsaw,

another house, set up a

ja Ghghraticns SH ANTS from their fel-

| a.

THE JERRIES wheeled a 75-

Ind, dashed with his platoon to

fire into the Krauts’ big gun that the crew never got it going. 2 » t J

AS THE DAY wore on, things got hotter. Curley radioed Murphy for artillery. .- “It'll come on you, too,” Murphy replied. “Let it come anyway,” Curley insisted and tossed a grenade out the window, so they’d know which house he held. And the artillery poured into town. : ” » » LATE in the afternoon, the 2d platoon, under Lt. Carl Ingram, Four Oaks, N. C,, and the 3d under Lt: Richard Halley, Richland, Ore, came down the hill under intense tank and machine gun fire. Looking at the terraced hillside, it doesn't seem possible that the men got through fire‘from a few hundréd yards away. But aside from one killed, and Capt. Murphy's sprained ankle,

5 Planes Bagged In Single Raid

LT. CLEMENT CRAIG, son of Mr. and Mrs. A. Frank Craig, 4450 Marcy Lane, can chalk up a big “A” for marksmanship for members of his naval air squadron, The squadron, serving with the 3d carrier fleet in the South Pacific, recently shot down an entire enemy flight of 15 planes, five of which were bagged by the I n d ianapolis man himself. A dispatch from Admiral McCain's flag~ 3 ship off Ryukya i isiands ne a r ~ Clement Craig Japan accredited Lt. Craig's squadron with the highest individual mark ‘for a single day of 3d fleet operations this year. Lt. Craig's parents, who heard the story after the. dispach was read on a broadcast, said this encounter’ brings number of Jap planes to 14.

Lt." Craig, who : 30, is a 3

e lieutenant’s,

HTHAT AIN'T THEWAY- WE-HEARD iT" SAID-THE: BOYS

There WAS Resistance at Hellenthal

caused by an involuntarily swift descent, there wasn't a casualty. ” 8 FJ

BUT GERMAN dead lie there, And sad was the face of M company, coming down the other hill. Every tree stands, stumplike, on the now bloody hillside, mute evidence of the fact that German mortars caught M company. Murphy's company attacked next at dawn, aided by tank fire that hit every enemy house. The battle was furious for a while. It caught an aged, white-bearded civilian on a roof armed with a burpgun. “And that old cuss held us up for 10 minutes,” Barsanti cried angrily, Prisoners, interrogated, said they had pledged “to hold Hellenthal till hell freezes over.” But by 3 o'clock every cellar had been cleaned and the smoking town steamed in a steady rain; satanic but not frozen,

Copyright, 1945, by The Indianapolis Times

and The Chicago Daily News, Ine,

2 MISSING IN FIRE

AT CHICAGO PLANT

CHICAGO, Feb. 9 (U. P).—Two

men were missing and’gdamage in excess of $300,000 was caused by a ‘|fire, followed by a series of explosions, that swept through the Vier ling steel works early today. .

The processing: building was de-

stroyed and a section of the foundry wrecked by one of a series of explosions.

Fire Marshal Anthony J. Mullaney

sald damage to the buildings aptproximated $150,000 and company officials said that the plant con.|tained $600,000 worth of machinery in its seven buildings.

Damage to machinery was esti-

mated at slightly more than $150,000 but the exact loss cannot be determined until the machinery in the destroyed building is recovered from the ruins.

SHUTDOWNS SPREAD

IN BRIGGS’ STRIKES

DETROIT, Feb. § (U. P)~The

They were understandably vague as to who had occupied it previously. : But I gathered that it had formerly belonged to a Polish family which had been “sent away,” as the Germans euphemistically put it. 5 » » I WAS becoming more and more uncomfortable. - Here Were two of those 130,000 German-—civilians- whom the Red army had trapped in Lodz. Nothing has happened to any of them yet, except for a few whom excited Poles have lynched. ‘But they are all going around to Poles they formerly treated as slaves and begging them to sign “certificates of good behavior.” : #8 8 :

MY TRIP to Lodz has become a most revealing experience. Now at last I know how Germans be= have when they have lost a war. They grovel. They smile. They plead. They feel very sorry for themselves. «.‘Above all, they want us “nice Americans” to save them. » ” » . FORMERLY, there were seven

categories of food Jad Clothing

“rations hi Todaz~ The Germans had the first five. The Poles had the sixth; the Jews, the last. Now the Poles have turned the tables. The Poles and Jews qualify for “Reich-Deutsch” (A-1) ra-

' tions, pending the issuance of new

ration cards. The Germans do not qualify at all, ang are they fearful of going empty!

» s ” " I ASKED the Immoors. what they wanted me fo do for them. “Well, you see,” Immoor said . + « and then he began a spiel about how much they would like to go back, He had done “nothing wrong.” He had just gone back to Germany when he thought Hitler would win the war and accepted a comfortable job in Lodz—called Litzmannstadt by the Germans— which they and other Herrenvolk did everything they could to Germanize. ” » . IMMOOR had one more favor to ask. He wondered if we couldn't put in a good word with the Polish commandant to fix them up with a ration book. ar hurriedly said goodby and ft. And needless to say, we sald nothing to the commandant,

and The Chicago Daily News, Inc.

: imes

PAGE 5

Copyright, 1945, by The Indianapolis Times

> HANNAH $

Labor —

Thomas Averts World Trade Parley Split

(Continued From Page One)

labor organizations in 35 countries

was on the brink of disaster,

- ‘with tempers rising.

The row centered on the obe Jection of Sir Walter Citrine, British labor leader, to a plan

backed by the b i g¢ Russian delegation to admit spokes= men for the labor groups in countries just freed from + German grasp —Finland, Romania, Bulgare ia and Italy, * Less than Mr. Perkins = yo hours after his arrival, Mr. /Thomas roared through the microphones “Hitler would like to hear we can’t get together in this conference. We can’t afford to be rent asunder. We must unite to com bat naziism and fascism for the good of the working people of the world.” 5 = 2 MR. THOMAS, with long exe perience in walking the tightrope between warring factions of his own union, proposed a comprQe mise, Under this, the conference de cided that invitations will be sent to labor groups in liberated parts - of Italy, Romania, Bulgaria and

Finland. But the hot potato of ~~

deciding whether they will sit as observers or delegates was tossed to the credentials committee. This body is headed by John Green, president of the C. I. O, Marine and Shipbuilding Work ers, a canny Scot who was hane dled a basketful of*delegate cone flicts without a bobble, : ” = = ANOTHER trouble spot, whether to invite labor spokesmen from the Lublin government in ‘Poland - as desired by the Russians and ope posed by the British, remains foe today and another bypass is forge cast. ; Several other basic ations

, remain to be settled, but the de-

cisions can be delayed to the end of the meeting, Feb. 16. Tense feelings came to the sire

face before Mr. Thomas appeared.

M. P. Tarasov, one of the Soviet delegation leaders, declared that the: objections by “Comrade” Citrine were not persuasive and he asked; “Are we to be ashamed of our 27,000,000 members in trade unions which you will find represent true democracy? How can you hope to defeat fascist Germany while

trying to frighten the people with .

Soviet Russia? os = ”

JAMES B. CAREY, youthful

acting chairman of the C. I. O.

stop the row, but the situation steadily worsened uritil Mr. Thome as dramatically rushed in and saved the conference.

We, the Women— Men Get Best Of Bargain in Cigaret Hunt

By RUTH MILLETT IN A SOUTHERN city a woman reporter conducted a private sure

vey among cigaret smokers and discovered that men were having

. better lugk than women in the

hunt for cigarets. In spite of the fact that wome en do most of

a family's mare

keting and

shopping and -s0-should have more prestige with clerks, they can't get cigarets. But, then, “men always fare better than women when they are ready to spend “money for something- they wang, % » 5 a

MEN GET much better service

in restaurants than do women, The reason is supposed to be that they are better .tippers, but even the poor tippers among men seem to command more respect than

. women who are known to tip

well and unfailingly. And In stores it so often is the min who gets waited on in a hurry, while women customers are

_ allowed to wait while two sales

clerks compare notes on the eves ning before.

Men are treated more respecte fully, toe, when they go to buy theater tickets or ask for railroad

delegation: tried unsuccessfully 10%

; i