Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 March 1945 — Page 6
P The Indianapolis
Times ]
PAGE 6
Saturday, March 17, 1945
ROY W. HOWARD
President Editor
Owned. and published daily (except Sunday) by _—c Indianapolis Times Publishing Co. 214°W. Mary-, land st. Postal Zone 9.
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v
RILEY 5551
te te afraid © ~ rd
4 Y
CHURCHILL'S “HOPELESS IDEAL” PRIME MINISTER CHURCHILL made an important Thursday,jurisdiction by the proposed league over a big power. But his re-emphasis foreshadows a dispute at Golden Gate conference of united nations next. month, of commons proposed that the new to, prevent aggress as well as-a small one, Churchill replied: as we are concerned,
eign policy statement is not new. the When a member league have authority t As far
“No, sir.
perfectly voluntary agreement with the other great powers at Yalta, and that does prescribe for a differentiation between the treatment of the greatest powers in these matters
and of the smallest for league restraint of big ideal.” Whether “hopeless
he is or
right
Many European'nations favor it. just agreed unanimously to put aggressor on precisely the same ‘basis as any
ference at Mexico City has a big power other.
subjecting themselves to penalties empting the United States from such restraints?
5 on n OBVIOUSLY the strong rather
the chief
wars.
If international restraint of the big powers remaining after demilitarization of the axis is a international many statesmert and great |
world security through
“hopeless ideal.”
of aggression.
powers." power aggression as a
wrong ,' will be decided by the Golden Gate ¢
Can anyone imagine the Latin
danger than Trem the weak: can cause little wars, big péwer aggressors can cause world
Fortunately, bodies of world opinion think it is not so hopeless opinion polls show that this country—as well as governments of this hemisphere and Europe— consider that ideal both practical and essential to prevent another world war
| about
opposing security |
This | lech, a horse,
Th
mn the sion by a big power, the bi sharpn
we made
to teil
le damned the proposal
“hopeless | occur;
“Mm race earlier in the week so I decide to have myself a dream about the Derby and if Bimelech wins, then I feel that it is necessary that I have myself this dream because I do not like any other horse in the race, and, as I say, sure about Bimelech.” Before presenting the details of our man's dream 1 must warn the customers not to beceme impatient and if there are times when confusion seems to mount on confusion please keep in mind that the science of occultism
in dismissing this as ‘onference. The Inter-American con-
I must
American nations for aggression but ex-.
REFLECTIONS—
| he writes, to it as the mystery result of all time because Bimefailed, whfle Gallahadion, a poor
vou check back vou'll find Bradley
doing he lost thé Derby, too much out of him.
had the night before the race
Dreams a la Carte IT SEEMS our man is a fluent dreamer.
don’t just come He simply orders them to
pA
méet. up with some letter
There's that
sons. (1 subjects; ency of his style.
tn horse racing,
deciding the result in advance.
“and. it stirred my memory.
great horse, won
at's ‘true: but it wasn't such a
trial on Tuesday, or four
Bimelech won
Derby g races.
ess of his form.
you:
to him. and presto! Théy do afraid of Bimelech because of
go for him.
deals with vague misty
we SR rs A ie ‘Just a Dreamer | By Joe Williams ~~ * _
= NEW: YORK, March 17.—~You interesting writers in this racket, too. Buffalo fellow who, corresponds with me regularly: 1 find him..interesting for two reas
mystery. started Bimelech days belore the trial but in, so which is to say he lost the In other words, the race took But that is not what I want I- want to tell vou.about the dream 1
symbols,
Te
His wide range of daffy (2) the ballling incoher=
His latest communication deals with “the occult world in relation with particular | emphasis on the 1540 Kentucky Derby, in which E. R, | Br adley had the favorite, Bimelecn, and how he went
“1 read your review of that race the other night,”
You refer
If
Dreams
that hard
I'm none too
the
significance of which 1s not always immediately clear
» » ” . : : ~ to the of aggression is from ~Little aggressors work I plowed
stripped of its fruit. thousands of clierry cherries have heen who like cherries.
“hopeless ideal,” then organization is .a
Unifo
Public
of pineapples
layman
look outside and see acres Theie is a lone cherry “Scattered over pits. eaten.
can land.
Possibly
by
rmed Policeman Enters
tree. the ground are This indicates to me the small
“In this dream I see myself working as a kitchen hand-in-the Builalo state hospital. and from where I
of freshly It is
boys
his eves off the strange scene and as I stand there
fin my
A LONG ROAD TO DINN
AUL V. McNUTT, war
open after curfew time if:
The restaurant files written application specifying the | period it wishes to stay open. The employing firm certifies in writing that its workers have been or will be served by the applying restaurant. The written statement may be filed by the labor union rep-
resepting employees involved.
The police or similar government officials report in writing that the restaurant has been open forthe hours indicated and that it has been patronized primarily by war workers employ ed in nearby plants. The exemption is approved in writing . Look, fellows, wouldn't it be simpler if we all carried |
our own lunch?
MANPOWER NOTE AST July®A: credit
et
administration, Since September, Mr. work to "do. in Kansas City;
to his salary he has drawn an allowance of $6 a day because y from his home office at St. Paul. to $700 a month for doing nothing. dismissal is
“he is aw: question of Mr. Utterback’s Yet give executl industry.
ER manpower chief, announces restaurants serving meals to war workers may remain:
C. Utterback, an examiner for the farm | got in bad with his superiors | over a report he filed on a co-operative bank in Texas. : Utterback has been given no Yet he has been reporting daily to his office sitting out the full work. week before an empty desk, plus eight hours overtime.
some people. wonder why congress is reluctant i ye agencies more power
dream)
next—bingo—I'm awake.” .
wondering what he is going to do
The customers will now kindly retire to the library
and analyze the foregoing recital in an effort to
| Indeed,
if he hadn't,
discover the-hidden revelations; a task of no simple 1 doing, for even our man confesses he had his troubles just by chance, come across a
certain Irishman—but let's get on with the dream.
deal, win
the ho P for
| possibly Mioland? I studied the dream the nigre confused I. got, decided the dream had only one clear revelation for
me, na
| who spént
‘What
and. he’ { policemen,
7 off?’ 1
| look ve give m
| if any
And in addition
SAVING IDLE SHIPS
TEW rust preventive and dehumidifving
have heen developed by a future emergency will not the
The new processes are s
been the case the mercha
nt n
Deterioration cost us
the navy, find our fleets in the deplorable condition that they present European war began. ald to save cost and labor, and to enable an idle vessel operation in a matter of days rather than month These processes will be made \arine as well as the navy. heavily
“Now what did the dream tell me? but it did tell me Bimelech wasn't going because no Bimelech appeared the dream. My problem now was to identify one of Like P for police,
the Derby,
"he didn’t.
| 'What Is a Gallahadion?'
“THE DAY after the Derby I met an I much of his time reading ancient history. | I -asked this learned cook, 14th century
informed on ancient Now if the customers will please depart while I I'll be much obliged, and heard of a gallahadion being don't. mention it.
readjust my
a policeman in, any century Gallahadicn;-ef cour. se, gat is name from his daddy,
rses with - the policeman. Pictor, etc. It was a temptation
The plowed land. that was too far-fetched.
win. No,
mely, Bimelech eouldn’'t win.
And, Gallahadion did. *
is a gallahadion? told me gallahadions who wore strange
were
asked, and he said yes, indeed, ry much like that e the -winner, but I history
was not to recognize
straitjacket of them ever
looking hats. Ffhese- hats resemble pineappies-with their tops cut they would So you see the dream did well
Not a great
to in
to go for
| Pictor, but I knew he was a bad horse and couldn't Could that mean
The more so I
of course,
ish cook
Would
enough it.”
Sir ‘Gallahad III.” But how did our man ever get out of that State hospital, even in a.dream? talladds wp? = = = mises r It is reported that the "WORLD AFFAIRS— ‘pending.” uw Pp I h Bl kb I over labor in i Oo IS tay William Philip Simms WASHINGTON, March 17.—
have giving promise that war and merchant were when
PPro eSSes
both maintenance to be put in 3, as has available to
The nations
their between
own tuture
Failure Francisco created a which, unless .corrected, ously hamper the the proposed new world ganization Can a member nations ing, be merely sons of its own,
of t
outlawed or
to invite Poland -to
workings
beeause another, chooses- to break
San precedent may seriof peace or-
he united
otherwise in good standblackballed
for rea-
off relations with’ that. member?
juestion is raised by which see,
status
Poland is a charter member of the united nations
the two wars. : a. Raniens : " m ‘ . 23 v yood standing. None has suffered more ior According ‘to Frank J. Taylor, president of the Amer- Hi goog 8 pgm ning y . . iilled cause ore € . ican Merchant Marine Institute, only 113 cargo ships were Today, through no fault of her own, Poland is left in 1939 out of 1000 laid up after world war 1. And of | barred from meeting with the other united nations the or i ; © because Russia has extended recognition to a Polish ne 113, only 25 were in operating condition. faction: oreanized 26 MOStOW 1¢ 18% >C OSC . Shipping shortages and cost us heavily for a Under the same procedure the United States, with long time after Pearl Harbor, and the problem is net yet equal logic, might be prevented from attending some licked But it is at leas . i “7” | future unitéd ‘nations meeting. Or China could be ailing Sid by 38 RY cast encouraging: 1o learn thal, if | kept away by one natipn withdrawing. recognition there should be a “next time,” an adequate reserve fleet | from the Chungking government and extending of merchant ships will be in the front line .of our national | cosnition, say to the Chinese Communists, Or any defense’ wher bel . united nation? member could bar any other member oe tre 1t. belongs. mote or less al will,
"WE COULD TAKE IT, TOO
R. ANTON J. CARLSON, University of Chicago physi- | one of the Big Three. ologist and adventurous eater,
for three days. at the invitation of the army quartermaster |
Corps.
of Dr. (
Carlson's
Adds
SUCH. AT ANY RATE, would seem 'to be the logic | of the situation—that she is barred merely to please |
lived on a K-ration diet A observe,
| powers. Pe
blackBall
to Veto Prerogatives
But that,
only aggravates the incident, fdr
The co-ordinating
Meantime resentment among Americans of Polish scent. is“ mounting.
committee
K-ration includes those rare but well-remembered comesti- | of American Polish organizations has wired President Roosevelt requesting that they, at least, be permitted to send observers to the Golden Gate.
bles, meat and cheese.
UCKS, deer, coyotes,
'DRESSIN \G FOR THE HUN
rabbits, To and their - game neighbors are. in for it. “Wartime tests have nn |
The action against Poland, says the message,
“s. A
| tragic scandal almost unprecedented in diplomatic
wild |
| history.”
Yet; it adds
“it would be even worse to have Poland misrepresented by ‘a government with- | out any mandate from the Polish people. ernment that may be created by the commission in
Any gov-
onstrated that a hunter wearing a camouflage suit like a | Moscow, headed , fy Mr. .Molotov who signed the
..commando’s can get virtually within patting range of game, #0 far ag optical deception is concerned. Sele forecast for the well-dressed post-war Inter. ouflage suit to blend with every season's Sannt go tpt to wild game; gh a don't look,
of
"Russia
As
Molotov-Ribbentrop pact
and Germany in 1939),
America at Yalta, the telegram
be
continues,
“assured co. responsibility for conditions in Poland, ae our F Hationai honos 3 is at stake.”
some of the smaller. in the Polish issue, a menace to |
the little nations | it adds to | the veto prerogatives already claimed for the great | Any one ot the Big Three, or Big Five, could: | ? any of the other 44-odd nations whenever ‘We should i more impressed by the Spartan sacrifices | | it suited .its.convenience.
rugged experiment if we didn’t know that | de
(dividing Poland between will not be recognized by the Polish people as anything more than an instrument ef foreign powers.”
-
Cd MVS RL i ew GN, 0 Bim
|
a
WITH APOLOGIES (@ TC TONY PASTOR
Hoosier
“MAKE IT BYY A MAJORITY VOTE” By S. Sgt. Har.ison In your editorial column of last Friday, March 9, 1945, you wholeheartedly agreed with Rep. Ludlow in “that the proposed constitutional amendment to approve
“PRESENTLY a uniformeds policeman enters the | kitchen and soon his eyes are fixed on long rows What fascinates the policeman is that the top parts of all the pineapples have been removed. They look like little fat people, all beheaded. The policeman does not seem to be able to take
Henry F. Schricker Jr., Ft.
treaties by a simple majority vote!
of both house and senate would further weaken congress. editorial went even further by saying “It would also weaken treaties.” 1 appreciate your editorial for two reasons. First, . because you brought. to my posed amendment. Second, after %looking up a few figures and doing my best to remember the last few hnes of Lincoln's Gettysburg address, I strongly and Rep. Ludiow, I honestly believe amendment would sove-the situation, but because ' the" present method is unfair to the citizens of the United States Of the two houses of congress, the senate is certainly the .most unrepresentative of the American people. The state of Nevada had ‘sBghtly
Not because the proposed
more than-a population of. 110,000, state of New York
1940. The had nearly 13,500,000 same census. HoWever, when it comes to voting on a treaty, both states have two votes each. ‘Thirtythree senators—one more than onethird—can prevent the making of a treaty. The 17 smallest populated states account for 34 votes, ter than one-third; yet these 17 states constitute only a fraction over 8 per cent of the people of the United States. The 10 largest populated states ac{count for 53 per cent of the total {population of the United States, yet the 20 senators that represent over half the ‘people of this country when it comes to approving treaties and other legislative acts, constitute approximately 21 per cent gf.the members of the United Stateg senrale I ask you, is this “government ot the people” and "by the people?” There can be little doubt that the
in by, the
present method of approving treaties is unfair. It would be much fairer if treaties were approved. by
two- thirds vote of the house of rep-,| if the sen=-|
resentatives, However, ate is to approve them, then makg it by a majority vote,
Louis |
"Your
attention the pro-|
disagree with you!
or bet-u
Forum
nited to 250
sumes’ no
death
nD wv 3:3 ® Q oO o 3
O 3 OQ 3 v
"WONDERFUL WORD PICTURES” By Myra Carey Morgan, Indianapolis I have praised our bond
Forum.
F Hoosier Vagatime through the time I want to write
time after This
a few more words of and
thank Ernie Pyle for his wonderful
praise
word - pictur he night in The Times, to add a word or two of praise for Mildred Koschmann for -her abcut. the reunion with Ernie in the Marianas last monili.
es gives us every
Hoosier Vagavond is playing in this war is indeed -wondggiul beyond Wort
un ” =
“RARBIT JUST LIKE ANY OTHER ANIMAL" By S.J Leaman, Please’ business before you close ft. I would like to take issue with this Mr. Dodd. He may lot of rabbits in his back yard but he evidently nevei did much hunting of the little bunnies out in the field, for if he had, I am quite sure he would change his authority on ideas. : The rabbit is just like any other animal in running up or down hill And the down hill run I am sure will be much faster if watched closely. Or say that you try to shoot one running either way. I expect I have killed as many rabbits as-the average man, and I have never seen a rabbit break any of his ‘legs running down hill.
4851 Primrose av e.
let “me, in on this rabbit
have a
I would like to wager on the poll”
received from some more old time hunters of these little bunnies.
Side Glances=By Galbraith
1945 BY NEA SERVICE, INC T. REG, U. 8._PXT OFF,
“3m
"Thess old busses are acting so jolty that: sometimes | ales A think Ll hy, to finish droning at. home)”
SHORTAGE |
“I wholly disagree with what you say, but will defend to the
Also. I. wish: article ,
The part our
«4 |eran and help him in_his time of:
jcautious are the wise!—Homer.
i pi
+
* OF THE
your right to say it.” “WILL NEVER. PRODUCE : ANOTHER LINCOLN"
{By Ira D. Fields, Indianapolis
I have been thinking that it will be a terrible disgrace if we disappoint our boys in service, who have gone through hells for us time and time again, if we betray them by failing to have a high standard of morals, homes of love and devotion, and lastly, a universal belief “in the living God. After world war .I, morality and Christianity deteriorated: rapidly and today the homes of our America are torn apart by dissension and divorce. ; There is a radio program called “Never Too Old,” which requires Its participants to Qe over 70 yea:s of age. - And the master of geremonies asked them whether the homes of 60 years ago “with no! moderr conveniences” were happier fa the homes of this modern ag The unanimously agreed that ee” were. Hence, the shameful divorce statistics of this present modern age proves. conclusively that “modeérn progress” has been detrimental to the homes of America, L-was--brought “up in a plain | country home-—nothing modern, but every morning father and mother would have we five childrén bring our chairs around the old stove and we would read from the Bible and then all kneel in prayer. We did! {this every-day. Y¥ou. ask how we | found time ‘to.dc this. Weis, dag didn’t haveyto_break fis neck dig- | ging up the money to make big monthly payments. on an automobile. No autos, no fuel or gas hills. We secured wood out of the! forest with no cost to us. Mother and sister never heard of a beauty parlor, and they were better off. Never a ‘divorce in‘ this home. | Abraham Lincoln, America's greatest, achieved his famous in-| spiracions lying on a bare dirt floor | reading by a home-made tallow] candle light in a log hut, That! would be condemned today as in-| sanitary and unfit tor human habi- | tation. | This present modern, moronic age
shame and
living
will never produce another Lincoln. |.
z yy 8 8 “lI HAVE CHANGED | MY MIND” | By
|
Dorothy J. Davis,
On the first round, I was all for | a new auditorium as a memorial | |to world war II heroes and so exPressed myself. However, since the | | expressed sentiment of many of the |
Indianapolis
| returned veterans themselves is] against it, I have changed my’ mind. While but comparatively |
| few are here to voice their opinions, | as more and more return they| should do so unceasingly—and soon | | wonld far outnumber those that | signed the petition for said audi- | torium, No doubt the money to the vet- | eran ‘himself would more practically | meet his needs in returning and | getting himself re-established in| civil life again—and this would be more of a living memorial than one| of wobd, brick and stone. Isn't there something in the | Bible about -doing unto others as {we would be done by. Also, the story of the Good Samaritan seems pertinent here. Would we be one of those who passed by on the other side? Even the picture of the Judgment seems to depend favorably on those who wisely discharge their duties to their felowmen. In other words, to bring this down to the point at issue—do we wish to help re-establish the vet-
need, or to strive for what we ourselves want, under the delusion that we are honoring himy solely, : a
DAILY THOUGHTS
See thén’ that ye walk ecircumspectly, not ‘as fools, but as wise. - —Ephesians 5:15.
HOW prone
-
e to’ doubt,
| and pug=-nosed,
| forces directed by Gen.
| and the story of Sypply.
z ”
how
REPORT FROM EUROPE—
Normandy Beach
By Thomas L. Stokes
GRANVILLE, France, March j _17.—This little coal port rambles “about a hill overlooking the gulf
channel, perched close to the elbow “where the Normandy periinsula joins the mainland, To the north, at the tip of the peninsula, is Cherbourg. Djagonally northwest across the peninsula from here, below Cherbourg, are the beaches—known forever now as Omaha and Utah—where the American troops landed on the continent. * We flew over those beaches en route from Paris to this
port, coming down low and circling around. «
The colonel in the plane who was there in those days’ pointed them out as we approached. He singled out particularly the bluff on Omaha where the Ger= mans were ready that day. “They weré there at the
time for invasion: practice which, they turned into.
the real thing as they poured deadly fire down on the American boys, struggling through the water,
'Where History Was Made'
THE COLONEL, an old army man, big, grizzled had a sort of personal connection, for he and a friend of mine, Kenneti Crawford, of Newsweek, had come over in the first wave and were together on Utah that day: There were strips of beach there below with ships lying offshore, after weathering the winter, a serene marine scene. But I became very conscious of that feeling which comes over you when you gaze on a spot where history was made, as I have felt it in
| our country when I stood in the break of the quiet | woods on | dragged their boats ashore, to disappear thereafter
Roanoke island where the first settlers
in one of those mysteries of history, and at Jamestown, there by the church. Over that beach they came, the American armies. They fought their way across the: flooded lowlands, battling tor the causeways, and then to the hedgerows back of that, slowly advancing on the continent. We hear much of the soldiers who fought there in those days, accomplishing what it was said could not be done. We hear much. less of those who brought them over, who supplied them, who for months in England organized the armada for the invasion, who got together vast-'stores of everything needed by an army.
‘Service Forces Got the Armies Over
ON THESE BEACHES, too, was the beginning of the great service of supply on the European continent, those manifold agencies embodied in the army service Brehon B. Somervell. The service forces got the armies over and have moved constantly behind them, operating a vast network which now is moving up the hundreds of thousands of necessary things over a longer and longer line to .the armies -for the final blow against Germany. The line which ends there begins at the coast ports,
and back of that is the bridge of ships and back of
that the American factory. The job of supply: had been a mammoth and magnificent one, though not the dramatic one that catches headlines. They pushed (forward from thé beaches with the armies, opening up the famous Red Ball highway down which the trucks poured supplies, moving faster and faster as Gen. Patton broke through at St. Lo and started off across France. They repaired and opened up railroad lines with speed called impossible. They performed virtual miracles! They fehabilitated the ports after the army had captured them, Cherbourg first, others afterward. There were big ones and small ones, like this port through which coal is brought for the railroads.
Chain of Supply Begins Here
THEY HAVE been under. fire. = Every. 30 .often one of these service forces officers must step into the post of military command. That happened one night recently to Maj. John L. Brown, port commander here, when there was a German rald from the ehannel islands which the enemy still occupies. Maj. Brgwn used to oe manager of a chain store in Pueblo, Colo, and perhaps never imagined he would be in the middle of anything like that, . But he took over quickly when German ships appeared “in the bay. ing parties, one going through the local hotel, other attempting sabotage. They were driven off after a couple of hours leaving one boat behind. Here, . in the port towns, such as this and the other small and large ones, begins the chain of supply, It ends at the front lines. It is my purpose to follow it through and tell the story.
pales » oo.
IN WASHINGTON—" - ™*
Bombing Policy
LT
‘By Peter Edson
WASHINGTON, March 17.— Army air forces headquarters in Washington insists there has been no change in strategic bombing policy, in spite of the results announced after two all-incendiary raids by B-29’s on Tokyo and after near-obliteration raids on Berlin, Dresden and other key cities in Germany. Charges that the United States was now indulging in what has ‘become known as ‘terror bombing,” in the belief that extra heavy raids against’
{ the civilian populations of enemy countries might
hasten revolt and end the war, are officially denied. Says an air forces spokesman: “There has been no change in the basic policy of the USAAF, which still confines its bombing efforts to attack on military objéctives.” But this spokesman points out further that, ‘Enemy military objectives include transportation facilities and industrial targets as well as military. strongpoints.”
New 'Goop' Bomb Is Effective
“GOOP” BOMBS are responsible for much of the increased effectiveness of incendiaries. Goop is magnesium . developed in new processes employed by Henry Kaiser's Permanente, Cal, works. Magnesium for bombd was previously prepared by pulverizing ingots. The Permanente process, however, begins with a still more finely divided dust. form of magnesium which had to be concentrated to produce the metal. Kaiser had a number of fires and considerable difficulty in ‘this last stage of the process. By eliminating the condensation, and by eliminating the pulverizing used in other processes, it was«found that the Kaiser goop magnesium could be used directly to make bombs of much greater incendiary force. 2 = G. O. P. CONGRESSWOMAN Jessie Sumner of Milford, Ill., was questioning Secretary of the Trease ury Henry Morgenthau on the Bretton Woods inter= national bank and stabilization fund plan. “This is terribly complicated,” confessed the plain< speaking Jessie, “Even bankers say that. How do you expect Sorigressmen to Sngersiany i?” ” ‘a MISS SUMNER was also interested in the effect which U. 8. ratification of .the Bretton Woods agreé= ment would have on foreign delegations dt Ye Sn
+ Francisco conference.’ .
“You're more of .a diplomat than 1 “am.” she
began, Secretary Morgenthau isreupiel her with, * 1 won't agree to that.” “And that,” said Bank and Currency Committee CHairman Brent Spence of Kentucky,” proves you're 3 bl
of St. Malo, an arm of the English.
The Germans landed raid--the. .
| |
oh a ———
a —--
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BT ——— Th a I v———
'
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Insid
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Three -times
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I've run onto {i ice cream—they at
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AN ELEVAT
downtown office Job yesterday -m , tendent asked h that he just cou
course,” he say your friends re uary and Febn snakes, saw’ a robin to another look at have vou been Informer”—How ways like to k whether or not spring, have yo the early-leafin burst open? ... Keystone ave. a up for the sum voices seem ‘to | heard from bef
pink el
Posies for | DIRECTORS
a resolution the at Bill Book, tt for his, They especially
Ame
hard
MAXWELL were Being giv 902-pound ‘plan 35 years ago. 1 are taking off a
the training co success caused February in B will take on Bit was announc
700 Landi
TRANSITIC smoothly and e liners. There | one time, usual Each plane av every 15 minut ing what Toky flying overhead The day's a hour day. The of night, runws
NEW YORI I lunched with a panel arrang
man of the D number of oth
labor, Miss’ Pe ization; Mrs: ' ference, and D proposals. The summi of the state ¢ stories” apropos up of Demoera
of education fc
‘I imagine t
| national com Bind of educat
