Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 July 1945 — Page 3

, 1045 i] 164, COUNT |

PP) —Mrs, ved exami emoval 10 ‘1s wanted e mails to a “lonely

o allegedly early 20's yughout the der $2500 ner Edwin

Goldsmith pputed vice monial core e Inclosed $s, claiming Goldsmith ractive girl

Hill “had men; pros ), but give filling her ne said, she iting about | rent and imaginary the letters e added.

| WEDNESDAY, JULY 4, 1045

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SNS.

“YOUR "VICTORY GARDEN . . .

! Soil Rich in Humus Is Best

~delphinfum of today possesses &_chfiracteristic-beauty-of-its-ow

-sential and addi-

color by the relentless sun, and car- | casses of sheep strung out for miles $4.50 a head. A oom as 1 5.00 sarth =-across the flat prairies—that it what ¥ 8 today)\ Dr. Re enid On some,

—and none can say whether it will| oc oops—have been . fed,

- ‘hiring applications as a condition) 13 yn Book 4 must be submitted with ° SHOES—No. 1, No. 3 and No: 3

. i. hd # \ > owy Neh i

For Growing Delphiniums|

local burglars 'Stathis told police

garden or border that does not include it seems to lack an essential. The

May Be Habitable. without rival in ‘its class as a plant of tall habit with erect columns of | By Science Serviea | azure-blue, gentian“blue, shades of sapphire, tones of Imperial purple, NEW YORK, July 4—Life may and pure white with .a contfasting black center, Delphiniums are {deal |exist on thousands -of habitable as background plants when grown or - worlds among the millions of small, in groups of five or more, and espe- | frost and, if given a protective dark planet companions of bright Sally Demi en planted ‘in|malch during the winter, will be stars throughout the universe, Dr. Rn ima i large enough to transplant to the Henry Nogris Russell, Princeton unirégal or madon- garden next“spring. versit . s : / y professor of astronomy, de ha lltes. Protect seedlings with an inchiiiared here Delphiniums do covering of coarse sand, and mulch Explaining that In the sin's best in a loose, lightly with straw or hay. Del-| netary system, life ‘has scored friable soil rich phintums are more likely; to be killed | {ice out of three tries, Dr. Russel) in. humus . and by poor drainage or smothering than y,14¢ that it is reasonable to sup- : by freezing weather. Use seed only|, ce that, within the vast expanse from thé best plants and blooms. [oe the universe, there may be many Delphiniums should be divided other bodies which actually support every third year, Dig lip the plants, |life, shake off the soil, and cut the| There are only three ‘possible clumps apart with a sharp knife.|habitable bodies in the solar system Each division should have.at.least| Venus, the earth and Mars. The three good, strong shoots. fact that the maximum surface de when the plants. are six Plant in Autumn temperature on Venus is probably in high, and a the time the| Discard any poor-loeking roots. that of boiling water indicates to plants are cut back following the Mid-September is the best time for|Dr. Russell that there is no life on first bloom. planting. If you cannot make that planet, Life has probably exThrive in Sunlight your plantings in September, arrange isted and may still exist. on Mars, ‘Delphiniums want full sunlight or to do so. in early spring, —just{Dr. Russell finds. cn very little shade, and need staking as soon as the ground is workable. In Last Three Years for “protection from strong winds.| Delphiniums are often a disap- “Outside the system composed They resent crowding~—two feet be- pointment because of an insect|of our sun and its _ circulating tween plants should be minimum. known as the cyclamen mite. The|planets, there was no evidence for Staking is best done by placing a plants appear to be blackened by|the existence of other planets till g-foot stake along side each plant something, become deformed and|within the last three years” Dr. and tying with soft twine or raffia| fail to grow. Poor drainage is a| Russell said. : about 12 inches apart. Staking | contributing. cause for. crown rot, aj “Recent precise photographic obshould be done when the plants are fungus disease which forms at the|servations, however, show that sevabout 3 feet tall. : base of the plant. eral of the nearest stars have inSeeds from the first blooms, and Infected plants should be dug up visible companions, revolving about sown as soon as they have ripened, and destroyed and the soll and |them; which tan be detected bewill produce the best plants. Seed | neighboring plants disinfected with cause their attraction causes. the should be sown in a sifted sandy, a mercurial compound such as sem-| bright stars to move in slightly| peaty, loamy soil. Add no fertilizer |esan, or bichloride of mercury, one| Wavy curves, ; to the seed mixture. seven and one-half grain tablet to| “The smallest of these .companYoung plants will develop before | each pint of water: ions are certainly dark bodies, and - » = may fairly ‘be called planets. We R . can find small companions of this ecord Australian Drought D tf 20 000 000 Sh ' many millions of remoter -stars, . es roys SEER ' ' ee | there are very likely great numbers lof them. Though the conditions IN AUSTRALIA'S DROU G H Tad risk having to buy later’ 2 ; AREA, July 4—Bare red earth, red soaring prices. With the first rains, | HOt: of habitable worlds among the price of ewes fumpeq from 2; Life on all these possible worlds

sort only if they belong to some [prices still are low, with the chance | as though-it had been burned that | ts and $1.35 to as much as] Sens ’ | ise quite unlikely to be inthe same,

to which lime is added every sec ond or third year. Drainage is es-

‘Mr. Pree

tional fertilizer, rather high in nitrogen, should be

one of the féw hundred stars which lie nearest to the sun. Among the By WILLIAM McGAFFIN [ Times Foreign Correspondent {the rains will cease, or not restock | {OF habitability are fairly stringent, there may well be thousands of

. ONE [ORAZIER hash ble prove]; ore may be only primitive forms, | *hich he saw hte rag he explained. On others, there may : be living creatures far surpassing tree. a . The ants to him meant more mankind in intelligence and char- | rain was coming—so he bought | Larne .

¢ | sheep from a dealer although the

4 |price was. steeper than he had “ {wanted to pay. ! | Strong winds—bitterly cold gusts I FIGHTING JAPS

{now that winter has set in “down under”—are a by-product of Aus- . |tralia's drought and have caused| pHILADELPHIA, July4 (U.P.).— nent. Now its - ithe freakish death of many eel : : once - green flelds Mr. McGaffin | Plying sand has settled in their | CAPt: william H. Chambliss, who at are scarred and torn by one of the | ars and the first light rains have 19 is the oldest navigator in the U. 8. worst droughts in Australia’s history | hardened it to a crush weighing | Merchant Marine, is realizing his —a drought rivaling the E®at/sometimes 20 pounds. ~_ |ambition “to help wallop the Japdrought of a decade ago in our “|” Their necks ‘rigid in this “plaster |, pnege » west, : [cast,” the sheep have been unable A “ y 1 8 yn to graze even when fodder could My wish now is to go on helping HERE the locale is different. Kan- be found, -and have starved | finish Tokyo,” he said. garoos and ostrichlike emus lend a I sa # ? | Chambliss, who wears ribbons of bizarre touch to the landscape. | GRAZIERS have discovered that three wars on his chest, arrived at Devastatéd areas of saltbush, ani... p { - 'his Philadelphia “home . recently | p. have almost as hardy stom-| 4 important wild-growing feed fOrf, \,o"oc their fellow-ruminants, the after he saw action at Leyte. Be- - fore- that, he sailed to the Pacific

sheep, take the placetof charred oc... cornfields. They digest pumpkins, a os fwe zone numerous times, carrying y digest pumpkins, PPS. os army and navy materiel and personnel.

But the general picture of human . .. “hstat0es, wheat, oranges and : - ’ , , | misery worked by nature on a r&M- |, ging when deprived of their regu- | PCC page id the same. lar fare. such as native shrubs and| "1 watched the first American Here, as in America a decade 880. ype kurrajong, buil oak, boree and |troops on Leyte. mowed down by the spirits of stout-hearted men 8re py trees {Japanese guns in the hills,” he said. beginning to waver as they face "rhe drought revealed, also, that| Chambliss has been a skipper ruin. in their endless gamble WIth. o55pred Dorset Merinos are hardier Since 1884. He retired alter the the elements. |than the aristocratic, inbred firey. word war. Then came Pearl 4 s ” n i g Tr Ir. IN AUSTRALIA'S ‘drought—Riv- MEO have shown amazing] “On the day of the sneak Japerina is only one of the many areas: i, to scurry up sloping trunks |anese attack on Hawaii, I sent a affected—20,000,000 sheep have per-| . ci and on their hind legs to reach | telegram to the Navy Department ished. To absentee landlords WhO o.¢ 504 while the pure Merinos requesting that I be moved from own the huge sheep. stations,” run- p,ye starved in such circumstances, | the retired list so I could help wal ning “into-thousands of acres, it is ou lop those Japanese,” he sald. “They a grim toll. | 7 nang hat . .|told me to report.” 4 : But the greatest sufferers are nel WHEAT pT The dean of the merchant marine little men who work the places for | drought, as evidenced by the drop in proudly relates that he sailed a them and the small acreage farm-, ied from the 150,000,000 bushels of Liberty ship#in the first convoy to ers who are trying to make & 80 iy. jas pre-war harvest to only Russia. Not one ship or man was of it independently. 53,000,000 bushels on, the current lost on the trip over, ‘ In the last few weeks, the long-|, .oect After’ that, he made numerous awaited balm from heaven has be- But despite the. ravages of the trips to New Guinea, the Philipgun to fall and a thin coat of green | uoht, Australian agriculture pines and Hawali. ; is seen here and there, raising hopes |. ehow has managed to meet the But the Mississippi-born veteran but creating new problems. vast new demands of war. has his eyes fixed on even more "2 | About 5,000,000 extra persons—in- [important work. He wants to sail

s | : nl i : NOT NEAR enough rain has fallen| ding hundreds of thousands of into Tokyo.

you see when you drive into the Riverina dis trict of Australia.

In normal times, it is the mainstay i Australia’s economy, the greatest producer of wheat and Merino wool on § _the entire conti-

continue and break the iron griP|, 4 feq well, in addition to the 17,of the ig + decid ow | 000,000 population of Australia. - But @ graziers mus golden | Copyright. 1045, by The Indianapolis Times WEAPONS IN RIVERS

whether to restock their flocks while and The Chicago Daily News, Inc. CHICAGO, July 4 (U.P) —A new

YOUR G. I. RIGHTS . . . By Douglas Larsen Ie B ° ° type magnet for lifting revolvers and New Hiring Applications other weapons from rivers and lakes

Eh {has been developed by Chaftles M. N of Requi red of Vete FQN Wison. director of the Chicago : | police “crime detection laboratory. WASHINGTON, July 4.— Jobs) job it can only be in ‘a war plant. |’ The magnet will lift 175 pounds. and getting. started in, business|I want to get a permanent job. | Heretofore; police have used cumcontinue to top the list of ques-| Who should I see about that? A |bersome electro-magnets with <a Hons received from recently dis-| A—USES will give you advice lift of only 40 pounds. = charged servicemen, ’ 'and help you get a job that is) Principal element In the device : i lant if you want it, is an alloy known as alnico which ust got -out of the air|iP 3. War P alioy : a Bove decided to sup-| /Q@—1 have gone into partnership is easily magnetized. Once charged, plement my knowledge of radio |in a- hardware store, I understand | the magnet will retain its power with a correspondence course. What we can get surplus army goods for .six months and can’ remag"are the job possibilities and how

direct from the government: Who |netized. can I go about getting started while should we contact to get these| One of the magnets, 28 inches I am still taking the course?

goods? |long, has lifted a 90-pound electric A—Apply to the nearest office saw with motor and stand. It can Ayouy best bet hy 10. 5 tle of Smaller War Plants Corp. You lift nearly twice that weight, Wilheares . y can get surplus property direct son sald, and will easily pick up

joo yore. TN agi from there, of course, under con- revolvers, rifles, shotguns or knives. and give you oall the advice ditions set up by law. | from a river bed. necessary,

Q—Before 1 was inducted 1 was

a laundry ‘driver. 1 went to see RATION CALEN DAR

my old boss and he said he had| MEAT-Red Stamps K3 through; CANNED GOODS—Blje Stamps a job waiting for me but I would | P2 are valid through. July 31, Q2|T2 through X2 are valid through have to fill out a new hiring and [through U2 valid through Aug. 3i{July 31. Y¥2 and Z2 and Al-through bonding application, This doesn’t | V2 through Z2 good through Sept.|Cl1 valid through Aug. «31 -D} seem right to me.I did that once 30. Stamps Al through E1 are valid | through Hl g through Sept. 30. before when 1° got my, job in the through Oct. 31. Meat, dealers will|J1 through NI are valid ‘through first place. Is it necessary that I|pay two red points and 4 cents for | Oct. 21. + do it again? : {each pound of waste fat. x

A—The war labor board has

ruled that employers cannot ask pounds through Aug 31. veterans with .re-employment forms.

is good for six and C8 are good; E2 and edch

: ugar forms are avail 2 rights to Il out new bonding and HTL Ci apare Stamp|°ich Sood for five gallons.

wv F 3

oc Cemrousaousmees “LIFE, MAY EXIST C[ocEt 5 PAORE Jap War Will Take Greater Oil Supply. ONTINYPLANETS i sess. vl

apparently has been elected “the man |don’t do it. That's the advice ofjof ! ss ht : i ~~ |we would most like-to hold up” bY) petroleum administration for'war. |to PAW; there will be no increase PAW warned. THERE is a subtle lure about the perennial delphinium, The flower: ions g! The reason ‘is. that more oil “of|in: the amount of: fuel oil: set aside stand not as a matter of prefere : p Seip er Dark Companions of Stars he has been held up four times inthe" type used “for~home heating|for civilian Use until. we have but as a matter of necessity. “The to his shop after he saw his“flashe } {oil simply is not available to per-iing a $1500 bankroll in a tavern, Applications for converting from mit such conversions, even though| put by the time Tracey reached the. new ofl burners may be placed on shop he had disposed of the roll and had only $77 in his pocket. 3

four months, getting smiled.” The last haul .reached a prior to V-E day, according to PAW | coal to oil In the East and Midwest |

low of $110, have increased ngarly_36 per cent|the market.”

SUGAR—Stamp 36 good for five| gallons; B7 and C7 and BS} ‘good for one gallon; R2 and R3

of reinstatement. © © |sppijcation for’ each person listed |“airplane” stamps in Book 3 good is They tell me if I go to the|All applicants must establish eligl- indefinitely, A new shoe ration

¥

. Ro : j ‘

v ~

Gunmen have been purposes will be needed -to catry whipped the Japanese,

less. each time, Stathision the Pacific war than was needed

The - agency . believes that there

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STRAUSS SAYS —

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WN

“We hold these truths to be self-evident that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain inalienable - Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the Pursuit + of Happiness!”

From the Declaration of Independence

JULY FOURTH, 1776—JUNE TWENTY SIXTH, 1945

It is significant . . . that the signers of the Declaration wrote "All men." The “pledge to the Flag" ends on the challenging note . . . with liberty and justice for all.” :

President Truman addressing the Conference . . . spoke of it as a Charter of Peace . .. a World Constitution . .. _ "looking forward to the time when all rl worthy human beings maybe” - ; permitted to live decently as free people.”

From the Declaration of Independence . . signed in Philadelphia 16% years - ago . . . to the signing of the Charter . . . : by 50 nations of the world in \ “. San Francisco just a week ago’...

11'S ONE, DAY. NEARER

wy ar

> same period last year.

“PAW takes this| changed.

§

PEACE!

And Junior—on occasion— erases the celebratious look— and with the Lincoln hand-over-the-heart Salute—pronounces reverently ; —“I pledge allegiance . to the flag of the United States of America — and to the Republic for which it stands — one Nation indivisible, with liberty and justice for All!”

and continuing today in the Far East . .. where our men are carrying the Flag deeply in their hearts . . . and proudly and valiantly in the field of battle . .. (they bought 2 Air Fields on Okinawa -at'the price of 3 cemeteries}. — the Flag is steadily, irresistibly, irrevocably moving toward its destiny. . . . It is a flag in the Service of Human Brotherhood . . . of Universal Liberty, Universal Justice. It seems ordained to be the Divine Instrument through which the Divine Spirit is bringing to the peoples of the world . . . the fulfillment of the ancient prophecy . . . the answer to their

prayer, the injunction and the blessing . . +

"Peace on Earth... Good Will Toward Men!"

~L STRAUSS & COMPANY = THE NANS STORE

[THIEF LOSES HA WASHINGTON, July 4 (U.P).~If is “a widespread, but ei th ber ved AW TRAILING vicTI . ; ] , July JP) ~If|1s “a 5 erroneous im-|over the num recel in thel. g y uly 4 you are ‘planning to convert your|pression’ that fuel oil will. be more FLINT, Mich, Jult 4 (U PJ cA,

home heating unit from coal to oil, [plentiful as a result of the defeat Germany.” .. Actually, . according

! + lrobber who forced the door of & “The majority of -these -applica-|pFlint shoe repair shop. and struck its tions must of necessity be rejected,” owner on the head was short

nee,| - He followed Benjamin’ G, Tracey

HAUL