Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 February 1945 — Page 6
‘The Indianapolis
"PAGE 6 _ Saturday, February 10, 1945
Times
.
WALTER LECKRONE Editor ;
ROY W. HOWARD: (A SCRIPPS-HOWARD NEWSPAPER)
Business Manager
Owned and published daily (except Sunday) by Indianapolis Times Pub"lishing Co. 214 W.*Maryland sh Postal Zone 9. Mail rates in Indiana, : : $5 a year; all other states, Member of United Press, U. S. possessions, Canada Howard Newspa-~ and Mexico, -87 cents a per “Alliance, NEA Serv- ! ice, and Audit Bureau -of Circulations. Give Light and the People Will Find Their Own Way
a week.
uN
WELFARE AND THE MERIT SYSTEM HE air has been cleared somewhat, apparently, in the state public welfare department controversy: by the compromise worked out this week by Republican legislative leaders and Governor Ralph F.-Gates..
Under this agreement the five-member part-time state welfare board would remain, and the appointment. of county boards would still be vested with the judges of the circuit courts in all counties except Marion, where the juvenile court judge names the members. Changes under the reported compromise provide for three regional directors and mandate the circuit judges to include one member of the county council and one township trustee on the county boards.
. » " » s .»
CREATION OF the regional directorships should im- |
*prove the co-ordination between the state and county organizations, one’of the weak spots inthe present setup. They can serve effectively as liaison officers and give closer supervision of local activities. : The provision for the appointment of a county council member and a trustee to the boards, however, is likely to increase the political complexion of welfare. activities. One of the chief objections to the previous proposal dividing the appointing’ power was that the county. bodies would be . likely to appoint one of their own members and this is now made a certainty.. : The county welfare boards should be non-political and * should be composed of citizens who are best qualified for these responsible posts. The boards ‘would be weakened by the present amendment. The judges of the circuit courts, we believe, are the officers likely to make the best appointments and their hands should not be tied in’ this manner. es = =» s 8 = THE METHOD chosen by the Republican leaders to _meet the objections of ‘welfare leaders is, in the main, a good one. It will permit safeguarding amendnients to bemade while retaining such desirable features of the original bills as the property recovery clause. Reports of the compromise do not mention’ the proposals to remove the county welfare directors from the merit system. It is extremely important that this attempt should be defeated—not only as it applies to the welfare organization, but also as it affects professional employees. Senate Bill 239, for example, would largely wreck the state health and highway departments. The only way these departments have been able to retain competent technicians and engineers is because of the security of employment offered by the merit system. And what the
* state needs. in the health department, conservation depart-
.ment and highway department is a good staff chosen for its training and ability, not for its record of party loyalty. In the interests of -good-and eeonomical service tothe state, ‘the merit system must be retained and strengthened. ~~ HA ww wi ” 8 8 8 : "THE PEOPLE of Indiana, we believe, are for the merit system. The Republican party apparently thinks so, teo. It indorsed it in its platform, and stressed that plank during the campaign. Its state leader, Governor Gates, was particularly outspoken. * Excerpts from three news stories that appeared in The Times two. weeks before the election are pertinent to the issue: ELKHART, Ind; Oct. 24 (U.P) —Ralph F. Gates, RepubHean candidate for goverfior, proposed at a G. O. P. rally that
prompt legislative action be taken to place institutional- employees on a strong merit system. . ”
“Mr. Gates said if he 1s elected he will . . . reduce overhead expenses in a non-partisan directed higiiway expansion (and) . . strengthen and.expand the merit system.—From a report of & Spes:h rade at the Indiana university convocation, Oct. 27.
BARY, Ind, Oct. 31.—G. O. P. gubernatorial nominee Sa)ph Gates last night repeated his pledge to eliminate political control from state departments under.-the jurisdiction ,of the governor, if he is elected. Those are the pledges on ‘the record. Reading them in the light of the pending bills, the friends of the merit law and other citizens who believe in efficient goverriment ‘may well ask the governor and the members of his party in the legislature: ~ : : Do you love us in February as you did in October?
MAN OF HEFT, THE AGA KHAN
HO can help but be intrigued by the story of the Aga ' Khan, 275 pounds of a man and “god on earth” to the 70 million Ismali Mahometans who are about to present to him his weight in diamonds at a jubilee in India celebrating his accession to spiritual leadership? / At the last célebration the faithful gave him twice his weight in gold, and just so he won't ‘go hungry between 'Jubilees they allow him $900,000 a year for living expenses; _Here is one fellow who has no reason ever to be interested «Jn a diet; : “~“This descendant of the prophet, born in Mecca in-1877, has lived for years in Europe, and before the war made the headlines occasionally by owning the best racing. stable-in
England, or by serving as president of the Ledgue of |
Nations, or by getting married again. has lived in Switzerland, and has had to give up racing and the League. . : A Zurich dispatch estimates the Aga Khan's weight in diamonds—666,600 carats—as worth $133,320,000. Our jeweler tells'us diamonds bring from $200 to $1200 a carat, 80 the Aga Khan is not getting the finest of jewels as his : Jubilee present. But a man who can garner such revenue in these years of deficit financing is worthy of note.
‘We have never computed it, bus we doubt not that own. secretary of the treasury, Henry Morgenthau, sells
eight
could
S| REFLECTIONS—
- HENRY W. MANZ
a Price In Marion County, 5 cents & copy; deliv | ered by carrier, 3Q cents.
Since the war he |
in war bonds every so.often. But Henry, who | easy going. ely tip the beam at 200 pounds, is no such heavyA Khan. Yet if Henry could get the Khan in of his income tax and the excess | embodying: : : ‘ing somgwhere around the B| sea. di woos fhe 2 EE Br ud
Black Widow >
By Harry Hansen oh DON'T LOOK NOW, but there may be a black widow spider under your chair, and, if not there, then in the corner by the filing cabinet. Better get rid of it~yourself; if the janitor sees it he'll get the jitters and leave for another job, ahd where will you get another jamntor? Thesbest publicized public enemy in the world, next to Hitler, is the black widow spider, and the sad news is that it will be : here long after Hitler. It's multiplying every day like the rest of the vermin, and If you want to Rive yourself a good scare and learn something at the samé “time pick up “Black Widow,” the tale af America’s most poisonous spider, | by ‘Raymond +W. Thorp and Weldon D. Woodson, | with preface by Dr. Emil Bogen, North Carolina Press, $3.) : The authors describe the multiplication of reports about the black widow spider in newspapers since | 1034, when the whole United States became aware of the dangerous bite of this insect. Black widow spiders were suddenly discovered everywhere—in:the bottom of a chair, in a police call box, in the front seat of a stored motor ¢ar and in tomato vines.
It's a Hardy Critter
IT APPEARS that this spider has been multiplying because conditions favor it. In early days it nested chiefly in the woods, but with their destruction it | seeks out dark corners, woodpiles, weeds and rub- | bish. ~ Nothing except complete destruction. seems to put it out of the way, spraying has fire hazards as well as possiblé damage to vegetation; since the | spider survives cloudbursts it doesn’t fear water from | 8, hose. Creosote doesn't affect it in the open air; | contact poisons don’t affect it and it is not known to | suffer much from disease. Mpst effective is naptha« | lene, which is used in moth balls and sulphur dioxide | from candles, ic sealed rooms. Thus study tells every- | thing there is to know about black spiders. i r 8-8 - ! GOING TO TRAMP in the woods? Going fish- | ing? Going mountain climbing? Ellsworth Jaeger | knows exactly what to. do to overcome the handicaps | of nature. He knows how to construct camps, build shelters, make moccasins, snowshoes, packs; he knows how to get supplies and what to cook outdoors; he can tell h8w knives and axes are to be used, how to live off - the country, how to read the signs in trees and shrubs. What"Mr. Jaeger calls “Wikiwood Wisdom” is a book: so packed with specific information that poetry has no place in it. This is the practical woodsman at his best, and if you are in earnest about
weather gets milder—you will find it indispensable,
Indian. Sign: V for: Volf
IN. DESCRIBING stalking disguises for hunters, Mr. Jaeger has this to say about the original V sign: “Primitive men often wore animal pelts when stalking wild game or their enemies. Indian scouts com- | mofily word wolf skins when reconnoitering. In fact, | this was such a common gisguise that the symbol for
|
{ second finger in a V for victory sign, which meanj
| wolf as well as scout. In this disguise the Indian
scout was able to sit on some butte in plain view andl |
spy on the enemy. Often they would signal fo others | in the war party with wolf howls.” | The book is illustrated by numerous drawings that | clearly explain the problem, They seem to make the | building of tepees and canoes an easy matter. The descriptions of how to prepare corn pons, |-johnny cake, tortillas, hardtack, sourdough bread, flapjacks,’ twists Indiana cornmeal, jerked meats, grills and barbecues -are most inviting. The author tells how to flavor food with herbs found out of doors | and how to:recognize edible shoots and leaves, roots | and fruits. . [ If anything is left out you'll discover this when
choose from; (Macmillan, $2.95.)
rr ——
4
WORLD AFFAIRS— or = pats - . . 15 al 3 = Straws in the Wind By William Philip Simms { > re Th | or a WASHINGTON, Feb, 10.—More handwriting on the wall was clearly seen in the fact that while the Big Three were deciding the fate of Europe, Capitol Hill took time out to cite .the Philippines as -an example of what peoples everywhere have a right to expect after _ the war. : Senator Tydings (D. Md.), started the ball rolling. He observed that while the American “flag again floats over Manila, thanks to Gen. MacArthur and Adm. Halsey, it will hot long. remaih there.’ The Philippines will soon be as free as the United States. “Our people,” he said, “do not want to hold sovereignty over any nation by conquest, particularly | when the people who are subject to.that conquest.do not wish te be held.” >
{ |
Cites Example for. Other Nations
| the other nations of the earth.
| | the only spirit which will insure justice to the small (was so tough, Now if someone couid I don’t think the pigeons are ve | nations and lay the foundations for a lasting peace. figure a way to make them tender | appreciative.
A peace founded .on‘-such justice would be more
~ | enduring, in his opinion, “than all the armies and
navies and air forces iri Christendom could. ever erect or maintain.” Senator Burton (R. Ohio), concurred. : Only a short time ago, he remarked, he and Senator Tunnel] (D. Del), were in North Africa. “We constantly heard comment as to the attitude of the United States, he said, “and the outstanding reason why the people
in North Africa express confidence in the Ujiited | | States is not because of anything the United States-|
is now saying but because of what the United States has been doing with regard to thes Philippines.” Kentucky's Senator Chandler (D.), recalled how 90 300 Filipinos fought side by side with Gen. MacArthur's troops in the early days of the war. To which Senator, Tydings added that but for this®unstinted co-operation, thousands of American boys now living would certainly have died.
Tobey Recalls Some- History
4 an x APPARENTLY FULLY sharing -the sentiments expressed by his colleagyes, Senator Tobey, (R..N. H.), récalled a. bit ‘of history. After defeating Spaln in 1898, he reminded, the. United States paid Spain for | the Philippines archipelago (instead of demanding a | war indemnity from her), then acted as big brother | to the Filipinos and trained them in self-government. | Senator Taft. (R. Ohio), spoke of his own boyhood
in Manila. = “Certainly.” said Senator Taft, “the spirit | with which we went into those islands was very, dif- | ferent frag the spirit im which many. nations:today are moving into lands and attempting to set up governments,” a ~ Senato¥ McKellar (D. Tenn.), reminded his hearers that there had ‘been some powerful opposition ‘to Philipping, indepehdence; that it had not all been
be
These views are regarded as particularly significant
chamber fyhich must soon to
wit
irritating, the human race. )
(University of |"
the outdoor life—not. necessarily today, but when the |
camping-—but you won't miss it; there is so much to
at this time. ‘They came from both sides of the h pass. upon the treaties .#hé decisians of the Big Three now meet.’ To ignore |"
T Another Big Three |
| {
pp
: : : . : | The Hoosier Forum 1 wholly disagree with what you say, but will defend to the death your right to say it.—Voltaire.
| “GET THE ICE ; [| OFF THE SIDEWALKS” By. Albert F. Grieb, Indianapolis { [| I saw in the newspapers where | | our park board head was going to give University park back to the
people. ‘The correct thing for him lto do is-to get the ice off the sidewalks around University: Park and
| i =, i ; : : ot scout—in—indian.-sign..talk is the upraised first and. o_sidewalks back to the peo-
ple so they can’walk sjpund the park in safety. ’ A “The way I look at life is “God 1s the Creator of man and birds,” and each was put on earth for a purpose and each has the, same right to enjoy life. I think there is enough destruction and sorrow in the world today without the destruction of poor innocuous birds. | It would be far more sensible to put men to doing things that would do our ‘good -city more good than ‘building bird traps and save the taxpayers’ money. 2 Live and let live is my motto. i 2 2 8 | “PIGEGN PROBLEM: | WOULD BE SOLVED” By Fred K. Eisenhut, Indianapolis
|...Now-that-the. pigeons.are making
{news again, it reminds me when 1 was street commissiofier a few years | ago. land Iwas. asked. to do something] |about: it. We made traps and set them in University park and on the
{court house lawn. Then came Mrs. |
The pigeon questiofi came up|
(Times readers. are invited to express their views in these columns, religious controversies excluded. Because of the volume received, let: -. ters should be limited to 250 Letters must be Opinions set forth
words. signed.
“THERE ARE MORE PLEASANT THEORIES” By Dorothy Mooney, Terre Haute Any native born “Hoosier” would sympathize with Lt. Raymond R. McOrmond Jr.'s refusal to use the term “Hoosier” if he considers as {authentic the int€rpretation of the | origin of the_ term as given. "However, there are two more
—~hera-are-those-of-the-writers, |pledsant, equally plausible theories
and publication in no way implies agreement with those opinions by The Times. The Times assumes no responsibility for the return of manuscripts and cannot enter correspondence. fegarding them.)
and: savory, the pigeon problem would be solved. If a man will walk miles to. get a rabbit, he wouldn't hesitate to trap pigeons in his own
{back yard if he knew he would have !a nice juicy pigeon pot-pie for dinner. This would create a. market |for these birds with the meat short-
age and, save red stamps.
let's have it. 8.8 8 “ALL RIGHT; SO THEY ARE MESSY”
By Irma Druding, 3517 Shelby st. 1 want to let Mrs. Hunter know
which may be more satisfactory to the lieutenant. One, that “Hoosier” | comes from a drawling -pronuncia{tion of a pioneer inquiry, “Who's |heyer?” Two, that in the distant { past, there lived an oldcsettler who | would gaze with admiring eyes at avery pretty girl with a masculine | escort, afl ‘would say, “Who's .your | |girl?” So the query spread until it] | now is a descriptive term applied to all’ of the fair citizens .of Indiana. { I hope that either of these may | help to clarify Lt. McOrmond’s im- | pression of the term. | : 28» | “WHAT DOES A HOUSEWIFE DO?”
| By Mrs. Helena Lane, Indianapolis I find myself writing a letter to
If you know how to cook a pigeon; ‘the Hoosier Forum again—this time |
as a housewife. I agree With Mrs. J. E. R. of Indianapolis. Sometimes I wish I had a hole to crawl ih—ag a matter of fact, what does a house{wife do if it isn't defense work?
{Hunter with her bag of corn. The that someone is behind her. I think | With & husband working long night |trap scheme failed. Then we hired {he work she has done in behalf of | hours and two boys in school, my
a pigeon catcher to go into down- +
| sack.
| pigeons each night.
| town buildings (with consent of the |
the pigeons is wonderful. up the good work, lady.
Keep day starts at 5:30 a. m. and ‘ends : : I don't] | owners) witha flash light and a Personally, I don't “have much have tor go to the trouble of exHe would catch a bag of respect for a bunch of men Who|plaining the routine but to keep But when you | will spend their time hollering at|life pleasant for my little family, I
{many nights at 1 a. m.
|come to realize that one pair pro-|pigeons.and sweeping up corn that|find you don't have to work in a
(duce about 20 young each year, it {looked like a lifetime job for the
was meant to feed them. could
t They certainly find = something | a very goou title to hide behind to
| defense plant; all that do find that
pigeon catcher, and we gave it.-up. more important to do with théir | get attentiotn.
| The citizens were divided in their | time, There is a war to be won,
opinion about ‘thése birds. Those
| |
{buildings
and most businessmen | were opposed to them. They messed
{you know.
|even damaged slightly. <All right
{so they are messy.
Let's stop and follow a soldier through. . Let's see how many times
{whom the pigeons did not bother | I haven't seen that first thing (he throws up he's a soldier and the weré for them, but the -owners of that the pigeons have destroyed, or|fact that he is defending his country. Now, Mrs. J. 8. or Defense Aren't dogs | Worker,
what ~do *you want the
{up the buildings and it was not safe and cats messy, too? Yet those men| housewives to do, put a halter
| |
{an umbrella. - °° .
{offered a recipe for cooking a pigeon
on the sidewalks unless you carried wouldn't think of “giving up their|around their necks. Don’t worry,
{ personal pets because they required I'l] bet you just don't have the We have heard of numerous ways a little care. Pigeons don’t require | experience of a good housewife. I fto “control these birds, but-no-one any care, so.there’s a big difference. don't take your Monday night shop-
If they feel that the fair city THE SENATOR suggested that it would be a fine {Especially one from one to five year: fof Indianapolis needs cleaning up, thing if the Philippine example could be followed by |old. I tried it and when the cooking |let them start where their efforts For, he said, it is |was over, it could not be eaten it are needed and will be appreciated.
Side Glances=By Galbraith
|
|
| |
{
“Jack and the Beanstalk? that 4 r 5
Never mind tha at tax situation you say my generation is
ping hours, neither do I take your space on the bus with my boys of 6 and 12 years... But remember, like soldiers we have our home duties to
ry | perform to keep it tidy and pleas-
ant. As a defense worker, my husband seems to agree that my duties are perfect and that he finds quite a bit of spare moments where I can't. And child care is important these | days. Now there are lots of women calling themselves defense workers in order to get away from home duties, while at home their babies or children need them worse than they need their paycheck.” That's why I'm not calling myself a defense worker, but just one of those housewives. ; Wheh my duties are done, and well done, I get a chance to’ get a few moments recreation with my husbarid and two children. I'll take it, and I don’t believe that any .of the 8 to 9-hour defense workers will have to step aside, for that is on Sunday afternoon. 1 have four members from my family in the armed forces, three of them are in combat zones and one is in a hospital, And I know that if my brothers could see my
“| duties they would say, “You're O. K.,I
8is, take care of your two boys.” I hope this letter will be printed, every bit of it, because a word for gripers—if you were hurt by this war, you'd do your duty like a goldier and ‘a housewife.
DAILY THOUGHTS’ For I know this, that after my departing shall grevous wolves enter in among you, not sparing the flock. —Acts 20:29. - OLD CARE has a mortgage for
te. And that's whe
; -
-
ia
Plant Scramble oe By Thomas L. Stokes
WASHINGTON, Feb. 10.—The scramble in prospect over ‘the
built for and owned by the gove ernment plant ‘corporation, an RFQ sube sidiary, as foreshadowed: by dee velopments relating to two weste ern steel plants. First Benjamin Fairless, presie dent of U..'S. Steel, announced 8 that, his corporation -expects to Sib negotiate with the government for the purchase of the $200,000,000 Geneva plant at Provo, Utah,, and the $100,000,000 plant at Fontana, \
who fiow is operating the Fontana plant, sald he wants to buy it.
plant as a complementary unit in a post-war western steel industry, The Geneva plant was built for the
steel subsidiary.
Brings Basic Issues Into Open
some of the basic issues in the current Jesse Jonese Henry Wallace conflict—who shall have jurisdiction
govern their disposal and utilization, and what will be their place in the post-war economy?
giant into the west coast area,
not utilized for production to employ dabor. Full
Wallace. post-war policy,
DPC Owns 920 Complete Plants
"fact that tlhe defende plant corporation now own
| 920.complete plants, in which slightly over six billion
dollars are invested, and in addition it has invested $740,000,000 for expansion of facilities in 122 others, They include steel, aircraft, chemicals, machine tools, aluminum, synthetic rubber and ordnance plants. Acquisition: of ‘some of them will require a huge financial responsibility, as Jesse Jones pointed out,
limited, such as the two western steel plants, Big, bluff Henry Kaiser will bring into this cone tést a good deal of public support, He impressed the public, as a vivid personalify rather than a cold core poration. He stirred the imagination of the country with the flashing, dashing, it-can-be-done progress of his business career, culminating in his various war
of ships. ; Big Boys in Industry Fought Him
labor, and he knows how to express hiffiselt on the subject. of democracy in industry and full employe ment. It is significant that he was oné of the speake
Henry Wallace in New York recently.
than the question of ownership,” Mr. Kaiser said in an interview on the steel situation,
all employment—pot only in the terms of jobs, but a worthy standard of living. - “It is the creation of real competition. It is the decentralization of power in industrial organiza'.on;
and South, as well as the East. , . . If all we wang |
had. The 130,000,000 Americans will see the end of
fighting for.” : . -. He is a-man-to be reckoned with, .
IN WASHINGTON— Surplus Disposal By Roger W. Stuart
rials are mounting steadily.
ggencies to sell at fair prices the goods turned over to them for sale or auction, the selling is by no means keeping abreast of surplus declarations by
owning agencies. This is the case even as the new surplus property board is. drafting. regulations intended to veterans, government departments, farmers and other _ preferred groups an opportunity to purchase goods before they are may further retard the disposal process.
The surplus property act describes preferences for these groups, but the -board has not yet issued its
regulations.
Average Is Near 50 Per Cent
THE MARITIME COMMISSION, which got off to a slower start than some ‘others—notably the recons struction finance “corporation and treasufy procures ment-has sold new and used surpluses amounting to $4,975,000. At the same time, however. maritime has acquired $23,008,000 worth of surpluses. In only one month—November—has its sales exceeded decla= rations. Total disposals up to the present amount to only 21 per cent of the goods available. The average for all six of the disposal agencies is somewhat higher, approximately 50 per cent. With more than two billion dollars worth of surpluses so far declared, sales have totaled slightly over one billion. it Largest seller so far among the six agencies Is the RFC. Senator Mead (D. N. ¥.), whose war investigating committee is examining. the record of auctions conducted by an RFC agency, the defense plant corporation, through a New York liquidation firm, says the RFC has “done a good job."
Almost Impossible to Sell
THIS AGENCY so far has had more than one billion dollars’ worth «of surpluses turned over to it—e and has sold less than $100,000,000,. or one-twelfth,
Aircraft and related equipment, of course,’ come prise approximately 71 -per cent, of the RFCs sure pluses. And these, particularly= combat planes, are almost impossible to sell. Only 2 per cent—$17,943,000 worth—had been sold by Jan. 1. ; One encouraging aspect, however, is that selling prices secured by the agencies this time are conside ‘erably higher in relation to cost than was the case at the.end of world war 1. Total sales then amounted to only 35 cent of the original cost. (Goods costing $4.1. Billion were sold for $1.5 billion.) The present average is 60 per cent. J _. Best record so’ far achieved for both disposal in
glant aggregation of war plants |
through the defense |
Then Henry J. Kaiser, the west coast industrialist, - He also has his eye on the Geneva |
government, by the west coast subsidiary of the U. 8, | Steel, Columbia Steel Co., and is operated by a U. 8,
THIS BRINGS into the open, by concrete example,
over the disposal of the conglomerate array .of gove | ernment plants; what philosophy and motives shall }
Nothing could dramatize the issue more clearly than entry of U. 8, Steel into the picture, thus proe § Jecting a possible full-fledged expansion by this } In general and without gpecific reference to these | two particular steel plants, Henry Wallace and his § followers are against expansion of monopoly. They | fear that some war plants might. be shut down and" §
utilization of war plants is a cardinal principle of the.
THE SCOPE of this problem is indicated by, the |
and the list of possible purchasers of the big ones is |
production jobs, including the making of a multitude §
IT HAS helped him with the public, too, that the § big-boys_in established industry fought him, just ag § | they fought Henry Ford. He is sympathetic with
ers in the new republios testimonial dinner for : “The real issue in the future of Fontana is more 3
“It is the kind & of America we hope for after-the war, It is, first of §
it is the independent 'industrialization of the west |
to do is to make big industry bigger, and consol; cate concentrated ‘controls, we will go batk to what we §
their hopes for the kind of a world they are
WASHINGTON, Feb, 10.—Surpluses of war mates |
Despite the efforts of six government disposal |
offered to the general public—which §
foot at home him a suitab a business lic John said in his busine
Max Millel's rier in the F hope that wi aboard a car Max Mille He has writh hurts him a his first oneMax 1s no and he and Pacific togeth ing companio our separate for the navy. of this presen
Lee Mille
~ OUT IN ( my boss and | of the Scripp All these y Washington in, written be -1 am, ‘handle
Insic
JOUR AGE that the Tho been featurir thought “con on the windot
tells us that to the fact tl Co. there is 2 on the payrol know if it’s tr for carrying | erators try to there are em we find, is a | the WLB apy operators. It quarter of a 1-cent increas mile. But th not any one i increase. So difference wh
How Man
BEING A avoiding any year, sO we Wi [then along ca onthe spot found it has five days in N and seven th
Wor
- THE FUT United States scientific and tent. So decls house Electric
resources are “Our lush 1 says. “The er of iron ore is lead of Oklak “Our petrc known, at pre to last from 1
They Are “WE ARE, whether unde minerals last mains that th pending them
My
WASHING this morning immediately c room of the : zation’s wome
