Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 January 1946 — Page 7

Lain

THE ONLY HOOSIER ‘Republican - bold - enough to openly defy Governor Gates and the potent-state G. O. P. machine, has a blissful, disarming grin and "a mild, honey~dewed drawl, He wouldn't hurt a flea—until it bit him. Then SWAT, Manson L, Reichert, florid Evansville mayor and

Seeks ctory

npaign

of swat. With his sirupy voice, he speaks some of

tics is politics, not statesmanship. He's an unusually candid public official, :

Tl. Wesleyan battle, and hasn't had a good one since he told oft Seward rasvay Ye Bennett Governor Gates. x ee. Bershiarger _“Pights perk me up,” he purrs. “I thrive on 'em.” GUAT. «es 11 ues Recently, Mayor Reichert dipped his pen in’

Howard, Indianapolis; vinegar and wrote the governor a letter that now

eymou

plain-spoken message, which "he generously- released - for public consumption, stamped him as the No. 1 anti- -Gates Republican in Indiana.

Likes Ward Workers

‘MAYOR REICHERT tiffed with Governor. Gates eldho when the state -administration issued a wholesale use. beer license to a Vanderburgh Democrat, bypassing € season the rangy _ the mayor's approval. The mayor hates Democrats. | the Hinklemen on Si He used to be one himself. on, II. floor, 52-45, SAN About his blast at Mr. Gates, it which he deare current leaders SEM - clared Vanderburgh county's independence of the College conference state G. O. P. organization, the mayor says: five victories against “I would have said the same thing to President Truman under similar circumstances. . . . Hell, we were all born here on earth, weren't we?” Mayor Reichert is a wealthy (he owns 10, farms) old-schoal politician. His friends nourish a wholesome respect for what they term his “hard-headed Dutch” . determination. They likewise are alarmed over his tendency to snub Evansville’s upper-crust aristocracy in favor of hobnobbing with cigar-chewing ward workers. The mayor and his ward and precinct followers rendezvous periodically at one of his many Evansville properties where he delivers harangues, sometimes against Governor Gates, through clouds of blue cigar smoke blended with a certain’ mellow yeasty odor. Himself a lifelong non-smoker, he occasionally indulges in refreshments and poker with his cohorts. Mayor Reichert entered politics by way of a lucrative contracting business he inherited from his father. The Reicherts, father and son, paved practically every street in Evansville at“one time or another. .The mayor quit contracting when the WPA began.

Likes Trotting Horses

HE WAS “talked into” running for Vanderburgh Republican eounty chairman in’ 1936. He lost when it was disclosed he had been a Democrat in 1934, and and had voted for his brother-in-law, a candidate

Comic Chaos

BUENOS AIRES, Argentina, Jan. 12.—Unhappy Argentina, rich and prosperous, fat and soft, is getting the full impact of the “Latin ‘American social revolution. The wild snowball, which. Presidential Candidate Juan Domingo Peron started down hill with his demand of a month's Christmas bonus and pay raises of 10 to 25 per cent for all workers, rolls on. It is Impossible to. estimate the total number of persons on strike throughout the country as of today. But it is well over 500,000. People who never had any use for Peron are out, as well ‘as his supporters. They intend to force employers tb meet the original government decree based on Peron’s October suggestions, despite the fact that the government has tried to back down and give complaining companies time to show their books to government inspectors. ‘Chaotic conditions exist in this sprawling city of 3,000,000. Half the downtown section is crying from tear gas bombs exploded to disperse crowds seething around the closed and locked out shops.

Four Stores are Closed

FOUR of the largest department stores are closed by sitdown strikes. Mobs roam the streets. All political barriers have broken down. Nazis and Communists, Fascists and Socialists and Democrats march together in protest parades. Political objectives hae been lost sight of. United States companies are staying in the back-

Science

SINCE you may soon be reading ‘of new discoveries in atom smashing with the giant cyclotron now nearing completion at the University of California, this is

nference attraction, linkle's Butler unie all team will play Mel Brewer's Illinois tonight at 8:15 in

net squad has won having lost only to ana and Wesleyan. atest will again see taking the floor nent that outclasses . J. Hoffman, cend at 6 feet 6 inches nnett and J. Hersheet 5 inches and 6 espectively, y, converted center, feet 2 inches is the ayer who can come, ing these Titans in

season, however, the been able to make k of height by play= ball which has been .gainst taller oppone

y game between the " club and the Bute will open tonight's

for I. U. Hawks

Jan. * 12 "(U, P).~= ng Big Ten chame * undefeated basketight in the heart of

and partisan crowds into major factors the Big Ten and Hawkeyes invade the all at Bloomington a university in the Western conference

1i0 State's fast-step-gun for their second linois at Columbus, undefeated North anstos and Purd n at Madison. diana game is » Hoosiers were ra seas they rolled up victories, but them sed to lose to Minints. oach Harrison's e reeled off eight n their two confe= , they were slow, [llinois by two points Wisconsin by only

Wisconsin each will its first conference season tonight. The ght favorites,

E PLENTY OF

. GLOVES INVAS, ™ 23¢

Short Gauntlet 18¢ a good time to brush up on how the cyclotron works. “AUTO As I have pointed out recently, the cyclotron has T SUPPLY J been nicknamed the “atomic dison and Ray Sts. J whirligig gun,” because ‘it accelerates streams of subitomic

particles by whirling the particles around and around in a magnetic field. The cyclotron was invented at the University of California by Prof BE: O. Lawrence in 1929. The heart of the cyclotron is a

ND GAS | NACES |

large circular vessel like a covered Some Models pan. This is the vacuum cham land for | ber. It is placed between the poles of a powerful electromagnet. 'e Installation ~~ inside the chamber are two semi-circular electrodes called “dees” because they H SALES CO. are shaped like letter “D's.” These are connected to y a a source.of high-frequency alternating current. me ‘Comfort $ Hh L1-4438 Electrified Gas Used

AN IONIZED or electrified gas is introduced into the chamber, When a gas is ionized, the outer electrons are stripped from it. In the case of gases with few outer electrons, this furnishes a stream of unencumbered nuclei. Thus if ironized hydrogen is introduced into the chamber;—a-stream of protons is obtained, while if jonized helium is used, the result is a stream of helium nuclei or alpha particles.

NLERS ENTION

en All This, is because the nucleus of ordinary hydrogen Saturday {s a single proton whereas the nucleus of ordinary Pin Boys at 11 P. M. helium is the combination of two protons and two ME neutrons known as an alpha particle, 5YLVANIA : N. PE My D N. PENN. ay. 1-0078 ig / LONDON, Friday. —The great moment of the actual “opening of the first session of the general assembly 1S ALLEYS came yesterday afternoon, Mr. Stettinius asked me . ILL. ST. to drive to Westminster with him. 1-0740 As'we went out together, he said to me, “How

your husband planned for - this day.” Once we were in the hall I felt my husband's spit must be. with us. I would like to pay tribute here to the men and women behind the scenes of all the delegations who do so much work and get 50 little public acknowledgement.’ Their satisfaction in the knowl edge that they are contributing to the greatest hope that men have today for future happiness must be their reward. The hall was already crowded when ”e arrived , ‘and I found. myself sitting next to‘a Russian delegate, Mr. Kuznetzov. In: this land of shortages great effort has been

| . RESERVATIONS J

Seats

tan. at

EY|

) 8:30 P.M

(Tax Inc.) on

made to prepare a dignified and beautiful background. 322030 Po 80 at this first meeting when Dr. Eduardo Zuleta \ Angel of Colombia, president of the preparatory Both Coliseum commission, arose to open it he Stood in. front of a

: bite and ola Gsskgronud of which-a, apintlic world

Inside Indianapolis

Vanderburgh county Republican chairman, has plefity |

the sharpest, saltiest language ever heard in polite Indiana Republican circles. To Mayor Reichert, poli-

The mayor hasn't been feeling up to par lately. He has a touch of insomnia. All because he loves a

ranks as a classic in blunt, political rebuttal. His °

-

SECOND SECTION _

"SATURDAY, JANUARY 1, 19%

Evansville Mayr Manson Reichert . . . Fights perk him up.

for county treasurer, in the 1936 Democratic primary. (The same brother-in-law is now his city controller). He ran again for county chairman in 1940. Again he failed. So by 1942, he decided the best way to clinch the Vanderburgh G. O. P. in a gluetight grip was-to get himself elected mayor. This he did, win-}{ ning handily from both his Republican organization foe in. the primary and his long-entreriched Democratic opponent in the general election. With all the patronage.in his hip pocket; Mr. Reichert was elected county chairman by Vanderburgh county precinct committeemen. He loves horses, was once a champion sulky driver. A picture of his favorite trotter, “Happy Kid,” is engraved: on his personal checks. He once.almost owned a circds, A charter member of a group called the “Circus Fans association,” he traveled to West Baden to buy a bankrupt show there. But by the time he arrived, all’the horses and elephants were already sold. Mr. Reichert lost interest. Whenever a circus comes to town, the mayor ‘entertains the performers at his sprawling, 21-acre “summer estate,” replete with swimming pool. At 53, the mayor is certainly no reformer. But last summer he closed a Democratic club because of its ‘gambling activities. : “It wasn't political discrimination,” Mayor Reichert insists. “Why, they played bingo all the time, day and night. They even played on Sundays. It took all the business away from our respectablé non-profit lodges.”

The mayor is an Eagle and an Elk.

By Ernie Hill

ground, but British firms here are currently challenging Peron’s bid for the presidency in the Feb. 24 elections. Scenes of disorder center around Gath and Chaves, the big British concern, which occupies two corners at Florida and Cangallo and Casa Tow, which occupies a third corner, as well as half-a-dozen smaller shops in the immediate vicinity. Gath and Chaves employees, barricaded in the sixstory building, are letting down baskets to receive cheese sandwiches, pajamas and notes from home, to carry them through the strike. Women in the building are waving to families in the street below.

Crowds Encourage Strikers

ON Buenos Aires’ most popular street, Florida ave, milling crowds are at work encouraging the strikers to stand firm. The police employing tear gas chase the mobs sending supplies up to the workers. While the crowds roam and fight in the streets the political campaign continues in full force, but Peron says nothing; merely watching the wild and uncurbed forces at play. Branded internationally as a Nazi tool, Peron has support among the masses, who neither know nor care about fascism, but merely want raises in pay. And the Communists, who are opposed to Peron, are demanding that the strike continue while reiterating their opposition to the Peron ‘candidacy. Both Peron and Dr. Jose P. Tamborini, candidate of the Democratic coalition, have speaking tours scheduled for next week. The Buenos Aires disorders, meanwhile, are looked upon merely as a manifestation of the bitterness between the opposing camps.

Copyright, 1946, by The Indianapolis Times and The Chicago Daily News, Inc.

By David Dietz

, By VICTOR PETERSON THERE IS a very small city named Sixton which lies within the boundaries of Indianapolis, It has a population only of 40 but is complete. with a mayor, clerk, recorder, fire and police chiefs and all ‘the boards and politics that go with a metropolis. Mayor James Owens, however, is but 12 years old, which is about the age of all other officials and constituents. A ~ » - CITY LIMITS are confined to room six of school 72 at 1202 E. Troy ave. Its citizens are students in the sixth grade presided

“It won't: be long before these children will be voters” Mrs, _Stoddard said. “Some will hold public office. It is desirable that

a city operates. You'd be surprised at the interest they show and the good results we have had so far.” That they are interested is no

doubt. # . -

TO GIVE this reporter an idea of the way they operate he asked

responded immediately and with a smoothness that would put some official city meetings to shame. Mayor Owens knows all his committee heads, in fact all his constituents, by name. He works without a hitch and all members called on for reports had something to say. All motions were promptly seconded, votes cast and there was debate Wise debate was needed. - Sixton’s city Sous] meets every Wednesday afternoon and each citizen has an opportunity to express opinions and to share in formulating policies. They are conducted in the old-fashioned town meeting style. . Ed ” . EVERY STUDENT Is on at least one committee. © Officials other than Mayor Owens are Billie Jean McCandless, clerk; James Weber, recorder; Danny Powers, school superintendent; Willlam Hankins, police chief; Kenneth Larrison, fire chief, and Marvin Anderson, head of the health board. As in all democracies, the citizens are conscious of the needs of others. The Pearl Harbor day savings stamp sale netted $1381.55 which gives them a good start to-

$3000 hospital unit. They also have sent packages overseas to

the armed forces and to the hospitais.

Rayon Maps, Now Surplus, Clothe Girls

WASHINGTON, Jan. 12 (U. P). —Here'’s the latest thing in reconversion and please, girls, don’t crowd. It is a gaily colored aircraft navigation map of waterproof rayon converted into blouses, skirts and kerchiefs. Wriston' A. Thompson oot the

Alpha particles released from radium were used| as the projectiles in the first atom-smashing experi-| ment performed by Lord Rutherford in 1919, But let us get back to the operation of the cyclo-| tron. When the high-frequency current is turned on in the “dees” it creates an electric field in the chamsber. Each time a proton or alpha particle crosses the space between the two dees, it receives a “kick” or acceleration.

Moves Faster and Faster

THE TENDENCY of the particle thus accelerated is fo move in a straight line. However, the magnetic field furnished by the electromagnet causes the path to be bent into a circle. Now each time the particle crosses the space between the dees it gets another “kick.” ‘As a restlt, it moves faster and faster, moving in an ever-widening circle until it finally emerges from ‘the chamber at high speed. , The first cyclotron built by Dr. Lawrence was a small affair, almost pocket-size. But its success impelled him to build larger and larger ones. This necessitated the use of bigger and bigger magnets since the faster the particles moved, the more powerful did the magnet have to be to bend their path into circles, Dr. Lawrence built a cyclotron which weighed 85 tons, most of this weight being in the electromagnet. It worked so well that a number of other institutions, including Columbia university, installed similar devices. Then Dr. Lawrence built one weighing 225 tons. Just before world war II, the Rockefeller foundation made available a fund of $1,150,000 for a 4900-ton cyclotron. This is the device now nearing completion,

By Eleanor Roosevelt

map appeared with two great ‘olive branches crossed below it. ‘ On the whole, there were very few women on the delegations, at least sb it seemed to me yesterday. In talking to a Prench assistant delegate at Mr, Bevin's reception after the meeting she told me she felt sure there were more women still to come. So far no complete list of delegates has been published. But I would like to feel that women will be represented in the future in greater numbers in the

assémbly, particularly from the countries where they|

participated so fully in fighting the war, as well 'as enduring its hardships as civilians. Everyone of these delegates will play a part on the committees to. which they will be assigned. - There I think personalities will count. It will not matter whether you come from a big or little nation, if. yol have a contribution to make to the guestions that are brought before your committee. It will be your own ‘ability to think clearly and speak tactfully, and persuasively that will enallle each one to render valuable service. I overheard one woman say, “It's’ a big undertaking. They must succeed, the future of the world depends on it."

idea while serving as a gunner with the 8th U. 8S. air force in Europe. He made some inquiries -upon his return home last June and found that 100,000 of the maps were scheduled to be declared surplus in October. ” By the time he wags discharged in September, he had lined up a manufacturer to process the maps, installed his brother as a partner and arranged for retail outlets. The maps were issued to air crews before each mission. They are colored in rich greens, buffs and browns to depict topography. They display various shades’ of blue for oceans and bays. There's only one hitch: Each veteran is limited to 3000 maps at a cost of $1 each, slightly more than the original cost of manufacture. Thompson did not say what he would do when he and his brother had exhausted the 6000 maps they are eligible to purchase.

Manages Trophies At Herff-Jones

LYMAN G. HUNTER, 5694 N. Pennsylvania st, today was named manager of the medals and trophies division of the Herft-Jones Co. A graduate of Butier university, Mr. Hunter has been engaged for several years In advertising and sales promotion. He formerly - was sales manager of radio station WISH. Mr. Hunter now is engaged a as. an instruc-. . tor in sales ana Mr- Hunter advertising in the evening division of Butler university. He is a past president of the Indianapolis Junior Chamber of Commerce and the Advertising <¢lub_ and served as associate general chairman of the United War and Community Fund campaigns in 1944 and 1945. He is a member of the board of .directors of the Central Indiana council, Boy Scouts of America and the Family Welfare society,

And that was, I think, the thought in the mind of every delegate as hé left Westminster hall’ and d his way homewarg, ’ .

and is active in the Press club, Optimist elub, Sigma Chi and © Blue Key. :

* a

»

over by Miss Alvaretta Stoddard. .

they learn something of the way -

# session be run off. The children

ward the purchase of a second

CITY WITHIN CITY. OPERATES WITH EXEMPLARY EFFICIENCY—

a Camas

‘Sixton’ Mayor Knows All =

school 72, holds a council meeting in which every ‘citizen has the voice an opinion and ald in formulating policies. .

Officials of Sixton straighten the city limits sign and adjust the key

to the city.

They are (left to right) Billie Jean McCandless, clerk;

James Owens, mayor, and James Weber, recorder.

As we left, one little girl came up, said a few words and ran off. Miss Stoddard said: “That's what will make us re-

By ALLEN DRURY United Press Staff Correspondent WASHINGTON, Jan. 12.—The supreme court has put aside until next week the question of whether Esquire’s Varga girl is or is not art. The justices took up the problem yesterday, including pictures, without once losing their judicial poise: The arguments were on an appeal by the postoffice department from a federal appeals court decision. The decision held that former Postmaster General Frank Walker did not have the right to deny Esquire a second-class mail permit because of its content, Her Legs Long? Walker's ban was issued <in December, 1943, ‘on. grounds that Esquire's cover and Varga girl were not “information of a public character.”

Myron Taylor, a government attorney, said he didn't want to pass on the question of whether or not the Varga girl is art. Buty he informed the court, the legs of the curvaceous cartoon beauty “are too long and other

Irked by Noise, Shoots Preacher

OKLAHOMA CITY, Okla., Jan. 12 (U. P.) ~The “noise and rantin'” at a prayer meeting next door made Isaac E. Coker “a mite nervous” so he shot the preacher, the 75-year-old man admitted today. Coker surrendered to police and handed them a .410 gauge shotgun which he said he fired through a door into the home of Mrs. E. M. Schwartzstein where more than 10 neighbors of the community had gathered for a meeting. The victim, Rev. Haskell Coppedge, a Pentecostal Holiness minister, was treated at a hospital last night for wounds in the chest and arms. He refused to remain - for further treatment. “The Lord will take care of me,” he said.

EINSTEIN HITS MOVE FOR ‘JEWISH STATE’

WASHINGTON, Jan. 12 (U. P.). ~Prof. Albert Einstein believes that Palestine never should become a Jewish “political state” but

J|instead should be placed under the

United Nations Organization, The famed solentist told the Anglo-American Palestine committee that the idea qf establishing a Jewish political state in Palestine was “old fashioned” and “an imitation of the weaknesses of Europe.” “Burope is ill from’ nationalism,” he said. ‘Einstein coupled his ideas on Palestine with ‘a scathing denunciation of British colonial policy. He

in Palestine between Arabs and Jews as part of their . policy “to

: divide and le,

en

Supreme Court Deliberates Whether Varga Girl Is Art

sald the British “instigated” trouble|

main strong in our nation.” The child said: “We're not. perfect in our democracy. Half of us are pretty democratic, the otHers are trying.”

things are all out of proportion for one reason or another.” Esquire Attorney Bruce Bromley disputed the point. “Of course the Varga gir] is art,” he said, “regardless of what we may think of its qualify.” The magaziier contends that Walker's directive was an unconstitutional attempt to abridge freedom .of the press according to “his own moral yardstick.” Bromley accused Walker of “seeking a guinea pig to test out how far he could extend his power.” He cited a two-page spread of army camp paper jokes reprinted in Esquire and criticized by Walker. “Fallacious Appeal”

“The obvious purpose of this was to inform the public what our boys were getting in the way of Humor,” he said. Taylor denied that Walker had attempted any “moral judgment.” He said the ruling was based upon the “fundamental purpose” of Esquire; which, he said, was to “put out a magazine to build up a circulation on fallacious appeal.” “That purpose was bad,” he said. “By what standard?” asked Associate Justice Willlam O. Douglas. “By the ordinary standards of decent people,” Taylor replied. “Cheesecake, leg art and illustrated girl gags arent literature and aren't art.” “I see a good deal in the art galleries I don’t think is art,” come mented Chief Justice Harlan PF. Stone. “And it goes through the mails.” “It doesn’t go second class,” “Tay lor said.

>» HANNAH<

WASHING TON— It Hums Even When There's Nothing Doi othing Doing By FREDERICK C. OTHMAN - United Press Staff Correspondent WASHINGTON, Jan. 12.-The big-wigs are meeting behind closed doors-in-smoke-filled rooms, period. All my life I've beén waiting for the chance to write that sentence without getting fired by my out~ raged editor; this it is. Boss, that sentence contains no clinches. It's an accurate statement of fact. Throughout Washington today are closed doors. Smelly, smokefilled rooms. Guys arguing about strikes and threats of strikes. Issuing statements. Calling press

conferences. Working their stenographers overtime.

u » » I EVEN got thrown out of one

little gent in a booth near the ceiling sHined it down on ‘em. Some of the head men are hopeful of industrial peace and some are not. While they sweat it out perhaps we'd better look into the other important developments in town, such as the sale by the government

tion tokens. The New York lady who bought 243 tons of same and who now is negotiating for the red ones, said she figured that anything costing $1 a ton was a bargain. What she's going to do with ‘em she has not yet announced.

» = » PRESIDENT TRUMAN handed Gen. Hap Arnold two new medals. Rep. Albert Thomas of Texas broke his leg in the congressional gymnasium; his opponent, Lawyer L. R. Dilney, stumbled and fell on it. The-society gals speculated onthe chances of the Duke of Windsor and his duchess setting up house keeping here, A Houston banker applied to the interstate commerce commission for authority to buy some landing ships (tank) from the navy and use ‘em to haul freight on the Mississippi, The Very Rev. Hewlett Johnson, dean of Canterbury who toured the U. 8. In a pair of gaiters such as grandfather wore, finally got back to London where he announced that this country is 100 years behind the times except in religion, where it's 150 years.

» 8 un THE ARCHITECT called in the press corps to see for itself from his blue prints that he's not turning the White House into a high-class slum. The executive offices will be bigger, all right, but the pedestrians on Pennsylvania ave. won't notice the change. Butterless housewives everywhere -wére reported to be buying cream and churning their own but ter in their mixing bowls. An agriculture department expert said this was one way to do it, but that the finished product cost $1.20 a pound. Not to mention all the work. Maury Maverick, the Texan who labeled bureaucratic doublé-talk “gobbledegook,” quit the govern ment and headed west to practice law in Los Angeles. He said he had to. Before he came to Washington he was worth $150,000. Now, he added, his assets had dwindled to 150 cents.

a 8 & GEN. DOUGLAS MacARTHUR

{asked the war department, please,

could he dump a few shiploads of bombs in Tokyo bay? He said he had no use for the bombs, but he did need the ships, which have been anchored, fully loaded, for months, As for me, I feel much better, Closed doors, Smoke-filled rooms. Lime-light. The boss can’t fire me. for writing that, He can't even

bawl me out. I hope.

———————— ALBANIA A REPUBLIC

meeting of striking phone operators where not only were the doors closed and the room smoke-filled, _{but—1I fremble to say. it—the limelight was glaring on their shiny faces. Clinch nothing, boss. It was a lime-light, sure as shooting.” A

of all the OPA’s left-over blue ra-|

LONDON, Jan. 12 (U. P).~—Radio|

walls and those

president of General the Auto Workers union wishes, CW . fi « :MINQR government officialy must explain the purpose of their calls and convince the person at the switchboard that the call is

little trouble on this score.

The labor department, which is doing a land-office business in long distance telephone calls, says that all of its calls have gone | through with a minimum of delay.

~~ Most departments, of course, are limiting their out-of-town calls to "Serge. - . THE WHITE HOUSE and other government agencies could, if matters go bad enough, use the army-navy tie lines which run fo most of the nation's principal cities. But this hasn't been necessary yet. : Government officials say that persons operating switchboards in other cities affected by the strike have been co-operative in rs through’ the calls passed by the Washington

thing to do with the public health and safety. Each case is decided on its own merits by the person at the switchboard.

We, the a— Veterans Take Etiquet Course

For Manners

By RUTH MILLETT THERE is something a little sad about it—those veterans ate tending a Midwestern college who have asked for a course in etiquet | which is to be taught them by

proving his valor, civilian society will judge him Jy other stande ards.

. » » HE HAS wo kaow how-to tal a hostess for a boring evening without letting her know he was bored. He has to remember to light a woman's cigaret and not flick ashes on the rug.

a strict course in etiquet that will teach them all the rules, :

ss » » FOR a long time it has been enough for them to be men. Now they have to be gentlemen,

And if they are to get ahead In civilian life what they appear feo be will, perhaps, be even more important than what they are,

It is a little sad, isn't it? To picture a group of men long used to considering only the funda~ mentals of life, how to keep warm, how to stay whole, etc., listening intently while a dean of women drills them on such’ matters as how to balance a plate at's buffet supper and what to do shout finges bowl. ; 5

@

Scarce Cigars. - y Taken From Safe