Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 February 1946 — Page 11
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"AN ILLINOIS STREETCAR operator aroused the ire (and what ire) of a woman passenger when he
‘closed the door, catching and crushing a sack con<
taining her brand new hat! The woman was getting on ‘through the “out” door when the “tragedy” ocora curred: and she told the operator in no few words what she thought about it all. While he was trying to get her name between her repeated assertions that the company was going to pay for the hat, some male passengers added fuel to the fire. They began asking her to “put it on” to see if it looked any worse than any of the hdts the “other women on the car were wearing. . . . Times Staffer Larry Stillerman got a traf fic ticket for passing - through a vacant street-
| Mrs. Elizabeth Harrison . . . the The irony of it
plant is # Africa. om is that he was
en route to the office to write one of his series on the Subject, “You Have a Date With an Auto Accident.” Guess what! We have another rare lly, this time an African lily. The tall plant which grows from a bulb without soil or water is the pride of Mrs, Elizabeth Harrison, 1334 E. Southern ave. It blooms just bnce a year, producing a large triple flower for the occasion. ,., Speaking of flowers,
New Frontier
» PIERRE, B..D.—As Governor M, Q. Sharpe looks at the matter, the matter, the harnessing of all the rivers in the great basin of the Missouri is about to create for America a new frontier. It is to restore the horizons that led the pioneers West in the Eighties and establish a basis for new agricultural wealth and comfortable living such as had been envisoned by no one but a handful of farsighted
: engineers.
{ i k
!
Looking at the maps and census figures of the nine states involved, you would say that it's about time, ; Admittedly, life on the prairies Was never much of # picnic from the day when the railroads came and the Indians retired to reservations. Nobody had any great hope of becoming rich on # west-river farm even in the rainy years—and there appears to have been some. But the hardy pioneers
brought with them one thing that in recent years
has been denied the men who followed them down
. arid furrows—hope.
There were drduths in the Missouri basin long before the great dehydration that caused national concern in 1934. The history of the numerous lean years, and the occasional fat, for a couple of centuries,
can be read in the tree rings of the region and it is
pretty discouraging.
: Pioneer Could Move On
HOWEVER, in the Sixties, Seventies, Eighties and early Nineties your pioneer needed to stay in the dust
_ only 50 long as he thought the gamble was worth the
Just before the last ‘of his bulls died of thirst he
. could harness them up, toss his family and household goods into a wagon and start toward new horizons. + There was quite a lot of new land in the West in ~ those days and some of it, he had reason to believe,
might be better than what he had. The lure of green lands over the horizon was definitely finished 25 years ago and then, unfortunately, he was stuck. . There have béen mass flights of population since— notably the trek of the Okies into California, and
¢ the outbound movement from the eastern Colorado-
Aviati AIRPOWER fought two major enemies in the gecent war. One was enemy air forces and anti-aircraft gunnery. The other was Old Man Weather. This order could be reversed with the complete sanction of all military pilots. ° ‘Management of an aircraft aloft with the aid of what are commonly though incorrectly known as “blind flying” instruments is a relatively simple matter requiring fechnical training. But like all
{ other human operations, a flight must be begun and
ended, and it is in these two critical stages of flying
that Old Man Weather interposes his clammy hand.
“Zero-zero” means zero vertical visibility (ceiling) and zero horizontal visibility. The ordinary directional radio beam which we have used so long in this country on our airways is nothing more than a sharply defined radio path starting at pinpoint finness at the point of origin (airport), and extending, fan shape, for about 100 miles,
Controlled by Signals ON ONE side of this beam the Morse Code signal “A” (dot dash) is heard in the pilot's earphones. On the other side of the beam the Morse Code signal “N” (dash dot) is heard. When the plane is squarely within the confines of the beam the pilot hears only a steady dash, interrupted at intervals by the identification signal of the airport from which the beam is coming. Such a beam can guide an airman to a position over an airport and he knows when he is exactly over it as he passes through the “cone of silence” where no signal is heard. So far so good. He has made good his directional navigating. He is over the field blit he cannot see it on account of the fog and layers of clouds inter-
My Day
HYDE PARK, Sunday.—Judging from some of
fhe fantastic misconceptions that I am getting in my
. mall, it seems.to me that some of our people are not ' approaching the aftermath of war with great com- . mon sense.
for one thing. I should like to make it entirély
(clear that I never said the children of Germany
‘were ‘chubby.
No one in Asia or wartorn Europe
is chubby. I did say that while there was hunger in
. Germany, as yet there was rio starvation.
The ‘thing one dreads in war-torn countries is
epidemics. These are more apt to occur where the ' people have been on low and undesirable diets for a
long time and, therefore, have had their -esislance undermined. That is the case in Europe wherever Germany was the conqueror in the early days of the war and yas able to syphon off the available food into Germany. They left the conquered nations a far lower rinimum of calories than Germany herself is being allowed today. : Fifteen hundred calories is not enough, _ ut 1500 calories a day for a year or two is better than less than 1000 calories for four or five years. The record will show that the German occupation, in many cases, meant less than 1000 calories a ray and that babies did die of starvation in ihe allied countries.
People Dying as War Aftermath , IT 18 TRUE that people all over Europe, voung
and oM, are dying perhaps more rapidly than they
would have had there been no war. I hope that a visit to .Germany or any athér country 1 make anyone conscious of the absolute necessity of’ working ) 5 I
.
to say that until
car safety zone.,
dis
2203 N. Jefferson st. called read a garden column recently whit a big flower she had. Now since hers is 54 inches tall, all coming out of a bulb. It was a beauty, she said, until it began to droop recently. . . . United Air Lines made a wise choice when it selected its inter line trafic manager to announce the use of a 220-mile-an-hour plane. The manager's name is Richard W. Goodspeed. ., .Add pearls of wisdom that drop from the lips of orators: “George Washington began life at an early age,” said Governor Gates at a D.. A. R. anniversary luncheon speech Friday. ,.. Mr, and Mrs, William PF. Milner, 5535 Guilford ave. had to get up at 1 a. m. the other morning to answer the phone but they didn’t mind, It was a call from their son, Capt. Maclin Milner, just back from Germany. He's now in New York, being placed on terminal leave, after which he and his bride will go on a belated honeymoon—postponed since two and onehalf years ago when they were married and he embarked for overseas.
Witnessed Jap Surrender JOHN D. HUGHES, 812 West dr., Woodruff Place, a local attorney just out of uniform, is a member of an exclusive “club” and he wonders how many other Indianapolis men belong. Mr, Hughes has a small card with the red rising sun on it that bears the signatures of Gen. MacArthur and Adm. Nimitz which was issued to those present at the signing of the Jap surrender. At the luncheon for Adm. Spruance he spotted Ear! Hoff, member of The Times’ staff, whom he remembered as being with the press group on the U. 8. 8. Missouri and also a member of the exclusive “club.” Mr. Hughes, a. lieutenant commander and an aid to Adm. Halsey, figures that with that percentage at one luncheon there might be enough members in Indianapolis to organize formally a local club of some sort. ,'. . Another organization was recently formed here, an organization of chairmen of the Shortridge vaudeville, Jeanne Snodgrass, 1041 8. State st, a Shortridge senior who was chairman last year, purchased a gold signet ring engraved with “8, V. C.” (Shortridge vaudeville chairman), This year she presented it to the '46 chair-
Mrs. Tresa Taylor,
she didn’t know just she knows, though,
man, Marge Hartley, a junior, of 4419 Washington |.
blvd., who next year will give it to the '47 chairman and so on.
. By Robert J. Casey
western Kansas dust bowl. But those were different. You left your own acres without much hope of getting something better. There seemed to be ng haven save city slums. This situation has affected the Missouri basin probably more than any other section of the United States. Montana, with a population of less than a million, barely held its place between 1930 and 1940. Nebraska, North Dakota and South Dakota showed a definite falling off. Wyoming gained only about 25,000 in 10 years. In some parts of the gumbo country around Ft. Peck, Mont, there are whole townships virtually without population, Crumbling, half-deserted towns only a few miles inland from the river are no novelty all the way down to Sioux City.
Promised Land
OF THE 692,849 people listed in the 1940 census of South Dakota, 125,270—or nearly one-fifth—live in urban communities. The greater portion of the remainder is registered from the good corn lands east of the river. : The population of the nine counties comprising what is known as the west-river country is 39,338. One of these counties registered only 80 people. Not one of them showed any growth worth mentioning between 1930 and 1940. South+Dakota is little worse off, if any, than the other states which lie wholly in the basin and is taken as an example merely because the figures on its situation are available here. However, the promise given the west-river country by the Missouri river reclamation plan may also be taken as typical for the whole area. It has been estimated that the 12 dams, scheduled for construction in South Dakota (in an area where a population only slightly greater than that of Sioux Falls is now rattling around), can irrigate enough land to support about 3,000,000 people. When you
recall that the population of the entire area at present | Remonstrants appearing before| Reasons for Mr, Brownell's ree is only about 7,000.000 you begin to see the basis for the county liquor board this morn-|tirement were not immediately disGovernor Sharpe's talk about new frontiers in a ing said they were objecting only|closed.
promised land.
Copyright, 1046, by The Indianapolis Times and The Chicago Daily News, Inc.
By Maj. Al Williams
vening. If there is any “ceiling” (the distance between the ground and the bottom of the cloud or fog layer) and if there is enough horizontal visibility, the well-trained pilot has no difficulty working out an approach to the field and landing. Under Civil Aeronautics Administration regulations each airport operates under permissible ceiling and horizontal visibility. These minimums vary with the location of the airport and its surrounding terrain.
Led Through Fog by Beams .
OBVIOUSLY an airport in flat country is allowed lower minimum ceilings than in the case of a field in hilly country. To aid the pilot in breaking through the overcast and “head” directly at a desired runway, “localizing” radio beams have been used. Instruments in the plane and radio from the ground were designed and perfected to enable men to fly toward determined landing areas blanked out by fog or clouds. Radio aids were ruled Jout in England and in other war sectors within the. range of hostile air forces because they also could serve as guidance to enemy airmen. 3 ~ The British are accustomed to fog and recognized that successful air warfare could not be waged unless bomber and fighter formations were operated around the clock. Thus they quickly devised a scheme for burning off the fog known as FIDO (F-og, I-nten-sive, D-ispersal, O-1), In its original form the FIDO system meant edging the runways with concrete troughs filled with ignited gasoline. The heat dissipated the fog, raised the ceilings and enabled planes to land and take off despite the fact that the surrounding country was blanked,
By Eleanor Roosevelt
for the United Nations and making it the neople’s instrument for peace. Throughout most of Europe, from all I was able to learn, people living in the Sountpy are better off than those living in cities. That 1s true of people living in other nations during the war as it is true today in Germany. ’ . Starvation in Wake of Japs BECAUSE of the early bombing of Berlin, poor people in that city probably were hungry for two years before the final defeat of the Germans. The people in other German cities fared better. Nevertheless—and I want to repeat what I said—as far as one can see, the children even of Berlin look no worse off than the children of Great Britdin, who have been on a reasonably good, but extfemely restricted diet, ever since Germany began the war.
Wherever the Japanese have passed, starvation’
is staring people in the face, as it is in India. That is partly because of the narrow margin on which the people lived anyway. Whether we can keep a great number of people from dying of starvation, I do not think is yet known, It can only be done by co-ordination of all available food supplies in the world, and by careful direction of shipping and distribution, I think we should be willing to do all we possibly can to prevent famine anywhere. But.when peopie talk about feeding Germany better at the present time, yet do not seem to be concerned about giving our allies in Europe a better diet first, I think they have logt their sense of justice and have become hysterical and therefore unable to act in a commonsense fashion, ; si :
Rare Lily|
SECOND SECTION «
By JACK THOMPSON
his bed and staring blankly at the ceiling in Billings General hospital, Pfe. Richard Alexander of Rushville is employing his time wisely. He can be found peering through a magnifying glass or engrossed in a big volume on criminal investigation most of his waking hours, The 26-year-old serviceman received a leg injury in Weissenfels, Germany, He has four more months in the hospital. Then a discharge and civilian clothes. » » ” DICK became interested in the investigation and identification phases of police work while on duty” with the federal police in Panama back in 1042-44, Before the war he was with the Rushville ‘police department and to return there as chief of the identification bureau. Analyzing handwriting. for patients and nurses in his ward plus study keeps him pretty busy. He has no time to worry about his leg. » ” » DICK is not the only Billings patient who employs his spare hours with concrete plans for the future. James Hutchinson, 342 Edison ave, devotes most of his time to drawing plans for a new home. He caught a shell fragment in his leg while fighting in Italy. His plans for the future, however, are just about to materialize, for he is on his way out. A home by 1947 for his wife with a sunporch on the roof for his two-year-old daughter is his main goal. Secondary plans are to take a course in electricity or radio. s » » ONE OF the most energetic and enthusiastic invalids in the hospital, according to nurses and doctors, is Cpl. Norman Torck of Detroit, Mich. » Girls at the Red Cross arts and skills shop say that they should move the shop with him when he leaves, because he has worked on every conceivable project there. i After spending his first two months out of the army reconverting his family’s home into a double,
They Pre
NSTEAD of lying idle in
Cpl. Norman Torck, Detroit, is, hard at work on plans to reconvert his family’s home into a double fingerprinting to IL Mildred Simendinger, Cincinnati, nurse at Billings,
during his first two months after
Mr. Torck is going to complete a pile of plans he has for a new house with “no. dining room and a big workshop in the basement.”
~ n n “SETTLE down? I should say not.” That is the sentiment of Capt. Jack Galvin of Maumee, O., who hopes to spends his life traveling with his wife, A tank battalion commander in France, Capt. Galvin received leg injuries at Metz. He has another year in the hospital. After that, three months at Lake Louise, Canada, then a job as a traveling salesman. Pvt. Richard P, Taylor, Farmersburg, who was wounded in the Elbe river fighting, spends many hours studying agriculture and designing barns. In his opinion most of the present day barns are far behind the times. :
| MONDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 1946 _
PATIENTS AT BILLINGS TRAIN SELVES FOR FUTURE JOBS— =
pare for Civilian Life
“ Ple. Richard
discharge,
HE PLANS to study vocational agriculture at Purdue university for two years, then begin work on his 400-acre “dream farm" that would make any farmer envious. A visitor at the Indiana State fair every year since he can remember, his beef cattle took four ribbons in 1941, Cpl. Wade Howell, Elkins, W. Va, who was wounded on the Anzio beachhead, devotes many spare hours to the arts and skills shop and studies money and banking on the side. He plans to study foreign economics so that he can join the state department in ‘a European office. } » » . PFC. FRED C. SHALLER, Newark, N. J, has turned out ieather|
wallets and handbags that have)
x § di
Alexander, Rushville, : explains
created a demand throughout the hospital. He plans to make .athercraft an avocation.
Working en plans for a private motor rebuilding business in Detroit requires all of Pfc Newell Smith's time. His home is at Richmond, Mich.
T. Sgt. Richard Howenstine, Decatur, Ill, who had both ankies broken in the Terre Haute train wreck in September, 1944, is reading every book he can “ind on accounting. ; 8S. Sgt. Edward J. McSwe aey, Long Lake, N. Y.. 8B. Sgt. Hugh Schreiver, Malvern, O.; T, Roman Dukarski, Saginaw, Mich., and Pfc. Kurt Harzman, “Thicago, Ill, are others who have jeen industriously applying themselves at the hospital so that they can swing into action as soon as they throw away their uniforms. 3
COUNTY OKAY GIVEN FOR MALED'S TAVERN
Over the opposition of neighbor{hood remonstrants, the county | liquor board today recommended issuance of a tavern license to
{Joseph T. Maled, legless world war
By DANIEL M. KIDNEY Times Staff Writer WASHINGTON, Feb. 25.—Herbert {Brownell Jr. will resign the chair
II veteran.
Mr, Maled’s request for permis- al committee April 1, according to
sion to operate a tavern at 3619
Massachusetts ave. now goes to the| The reports came from a conferstate alcoholic beverage commission she of the chairman and ‘some 30
{for final approval.
Ibecause there already are two! taverns within two blocks of Mr. Maled's proposed location. They said pupils from School 51 and St. {Francis DeSales schools would be (obliged to walk inl the street around {parked cars becalse there is no {sidewalk in front of the tavern! istructure. | Mr. Maled presented a petition {bearing names of persons testifying .as to his good character and recommending the license. | After a protesting delegation filed an opposition petition last week, the county board postponed action until today. ,
OFFICIALS TO PASS ON PARKING METERS
Bids from six parking meter firms were referred today to the engineering, purchasing and legal departments in the City hall. The companies bid on “pennyprogressive,” one<shour nickel and two hour-two nickel machines. The bids were Dual Parking Meter Co., Canton, O. $68 per meter, $64.50, and $68; the MaGeeHale Park-O-Meter Co.,, Oklahoma City, Okla. $59.50 all machines; Michaels Art Bronze Co., Covington, Ky., $50.50 all machines; M. H. Rhodes, Inc., Hartford, Conn. all at $58; Karpark Corp. Cincinnati, O., $66.73 all machines, and the Duncan Meter Corp. Chicago, Ill, $78 all machines.
> HANNAH ¢
lo. P. chairman since 1944.
manship of the Republican Nation-
reports here.
G O. P. congressional leaders here,
It is thought that he will devote his full time to his New York City law practice. A manager of the presidential campaign of Thomas E. Dewey, Mr. Brownell probably will remain somewhat active in the Dewey campaign for re-election as governor of New York. He has been G.
Speculation began immediately about Mr. Brownell's successor. Names mentioned. included not only members of the national committee, but also prominent Republicans in and out of congress. One of the questions to be decided upon in selection of a new chairman is the feasibility of putting the job back on a full-time full-pay basis.
Report Brownell May Resign As GOP National Chairman)
swe vou, ge fo—
CASTLE BARN MAY
the case. That was when John Hamilton was chairman at $25,000 a year and expenses. Talk now is of a $50,000 figure. This is the sum which was offered Mr, Brownell at the meeting in Indianapolis after the Dewey campaign. But Mr. Brownell always maintained that he felt he could function more freely on a non-salaried basis, so he turned down the offer. National committeemen being mentioned as among those who might be considered are former national chairman Harrison Spangler of Iowa; Werner Schroeder of Illinois, and Ralph Cake of Oregon. Other: names suggested include Red Charles A. Halleck of Indiana, chairman of the Republican congressional committee; former Senator Henry Cabot Lodge of Massachusetts, who recently left the army and Senator Kenneth 8. Wherry of Nebraska. ‘ Republicans meeting with Mr. Brownell expressed satisfaction with the organization he has built since the Dewey campaign. Als they expressed confidence in winning the congressional elections this year and the presidential race in 1948.
Only once’ before has that been
TROLLEY EXTENSION | HEARING DELAYED
The hearing on the proposed one-| block extension of trolley lines on E. Michigan st. was postponed until | March 13 by ‘the works board to-| day. { Members of the works board as-| serted they were not informed of| the hearing today. “I knew noth- | ing of a hearing until I read it in| The Times,” stated Board Member Gideon W. Blain. The Indianapolis Railways Co. proposed the installation of trolleys’ along E. Michigan st. if a “turn-| table” on the triangular piece of| ground at Ellenberger park ‘could be obtained. | At present the company has street | cars switching at the intersection | of Emerson ave. and E. Michigan st. |
THE DOCTOR SAYS: . Thyroid Disease Can Be Checked
. lodized Salt Prevents Goiter
By WILLIAM A. O'BRIEN, M.D. MANY plans have been proposed for elimination of common goiter, but none has been more successful than the universal use of a salt with a proper iodine content. At one time physicians recommended giving iodine tablets to young persons, and some communities put fodides in the water supply, but neither of these methods was practical. . Goiter in adolescent children is prevented by using natural salt containing .01 per cent of potassium jodide or its equivalent, for cooking and seasoning. This can be used by both children and adults, as it is not harmful to patients with thyroid disease. : \
’ ” » ” IN COMMON goiter the gland is enlarged and firm and may contain knobs of extra thyroid tissue or cysts.
ar extends down inte, the chest |
wl
In excessive enlargement _{the gland presses on the trachea
MISS AGNES DUGGAN T0 BE BURIED HERE
Services will be ‘held at 9 a. m. Wednesday at S8. Peter and Paul cathedral for Miss Agnes Irene Duggan, 1527 N. New Jersey st., who died yesterday at St. Vincent's hospital, ‘Burial will be in Holy Cross. Miss Duggan, a native of Lima, O., had resided in Indianapolis 40 years. She was a member of 8S. Peter and Paul cathedral parish and was active in the Tabernacle and Altar societies of the nathedral. Her survivors include six zousins, Mrs. Lawrence Cummins, Mrs. Paul McNamara, Mrs. Preston Woolf, John FP Cummins and Lawrenc? Cummins Jr., all of Indianapolis, and Mrs. William H. Frazee, Los
John H. Williams, president of Castle Barn Corp, today was investigating a possible appeal to the courts to obtain a three-way liquor license at the Lawrence night club. He charged Saturday that political influence was exerted by Republican County Chairman Henry Ostrom to have the state alcoholic beverages commission reject his application. It previously was approved by the county liquor board, despite remonstrance by some Lawrence residents against the Castle Bam application and also one filed by Capt. O. C. French, another applicant. Although no previous attempt has ever been made to mandate the commission to grant a license, such a legal move is possible, authorities said. However, evidence would have to be presented that irregular steps had been taken against the applicant. Commission rules make it impossible for a rejected applicant to refile within a year. Another person might obtain a license, but any attempt to transfer it to Williams would require a public Nearing, it was explained. This move, however, would enable the Lawrence night club operator to obtain another hearing within the year limit. Mr, Ostrom denied he had used political or any other kind of influence. Dr. Burrell Diefendort, commission chairman, agreed.
GIRL FIRE VICTIM IN FAIR CONDITION
Clara Mae Konrad, 24, who was burned when fire swept through her home at 5004 W. Morris st., late Saturday night, remained in a fair condition today at Long hospital. Her sister, Irene,’5, who was sleeping with he when the flames shot through the room, was released from the hospital yesterday. Six other members of the Konrad family escaped injuries when the blaze destroyed two rooms of the home. Damage was estimated at $1000. Firemen «+ from Drexel Gardens, Fleming Gardens and Mickleyville
Angeles, Cal,
and causes shortness of breath, Following the educational campaigns between 1920 and 1030 cn the ‘use of iodized table salt to prevent goiter, goiters in children decreased rapidly. A recent survey by O. B. Kimball, M. D, of Cleveland, indicates they are on the increase again as the consumption of iodized salt has gradu~ ally declined during the last four or five years. ‘ Michigan health authorities made a study of 50,000 school children between 1924 and )928 who had used iodized table salt as a goiter preventive. In 1924, from 30 to 55 per cent of the group had goiter, but in 1928, only 7 to 9 per cent showed enlargement of the gland. At that time there was a fear that iodized table salt might be harmful to persons with toxic goiter, but ‘the study showed that no one suffered the slightest ill effect, ” ” . MANY patients with goiters formerly underwent sur opera-
-
|in older
fought the fire,
tions for relief of symptoms. Between 1930 and 1940 the number of such operations declined onehalf from the previous high because of the decrease in common goiter in young people. Simple enlargement of the thyroid gland is found chiefly in inland regions where the soil lacks iodine. As a result of the low iodine content of the soll, iodine in the water, plants and animal tissue is also low, Children reared near the sea usually obtain plenty of iodine from the soil, water and animal tissue as it is blown inward in the sea spray and then brought down by the rains. ’ Health authorities recommend that only a natural salt containing 01 per ‘cent postassium iodide or its equivalent should be sold and all other salts should be withdrawn
from public sale. This would result|
in the practically compléte: - nation of common goiter in chil-
‘th Gr.|’
FILE COURT APPEAL!
tion, Mr. Reuther’s candidacy to dis place R, J. Thomas as president
convention opening March in Atlantic City, if Mr, Reuther before then can claim with no need for personal credit, Jhgh Mr. Thomas has appeared the negotiations at intervals, but
issues, with both sides doing some of the injecting. One of the latest obstacles concerns the length of vacations with pay. The union wants to increase, if possible, the standard period, while the corporation in sists on reducing it this year for the time on strike. Thus, this year's vacation period would be only three-fourths of normal because the strike already has lasted three months.
dren and fewer persons,
le nig
— We, the Women——
Nylons Better For Trading
Than Currency
By RUTH MILLETT THE POWER of the nylon stocking is an almost incredible thing. In Detroit a housewife who had’ ignored a new maid's stealing money from her three times in a row, hauled her into court when she walked off with a pair of nylon stockings. In Salt Lake City a basketball fan unable to buy with mere money a ticket to the Utah« Brigham Young game, advertised: “Will exchange four pairs of 51gauge nylons for four tickets to the Utah-B. Y. U. basketball game.” »
- ” AND. THE offer of a pair or two of nylons for information about an avallable house or apartment is no rarity among newspaper “Wanted” advertisements, ) Apparently nylons have become
A —
With a few extra pairs (if you could get them) you ought to be
able NG Wor
CUT OUT your rivals for girl's grateful attention. - Get you self a maid. Get a line ‘on place to live. Get a
" some new tires for your car. Fi
wd
pr
