Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 March 1946 — Page 11

Inside Indianapolis Local Lemon Tree

. WOODEN YOU know it? - The president of the ational Retail ‘Lumber Dealers association is one ar Forrest .

. It's a tough deal, this luncheon circuit; At ast that’s what some of those lucky gals who have hylons say. The women with the’ sheer hose are omplaining about rough edges on chajrs in res-

Mr. Forrest is spéaking at : lumber and builders’ convention here this week.

urant and clubs downtown. The jutting splinters - 3

atches the precious nylons and poof—they’re gone. t's so bad at a couple spdts that the women are

butting the napkins on chairs to shield their hose,’

Instead of ¢fif their lap as Emily Post advocates. . some nylon- -wearers attending a luncheon at the thletic club yesterday were using the “napkin eld,” totally bewildering some men who didn't know what it was all about, +. . The “So What” lepartment: Someone reminds us that there are nly 39 shopping days until Easter,

Flies Near Kitchen Door’

ANOTHER AGENT leaves a note on our desk aying “Signs of Spring: Mrs. John C. Hinton, 839 River ave. flies near kitchen door today.” As it urned out Mrs. Hinton wasn’t zooming around the tchen. She saw some house flies near the screen floor and decided it was a better sign that spring vas here than the reappearance of robins, Glad we ound out because the note had us worried. ... Wonder if the return of the flies will revive the otton-on-the-screen-door fad. It took a heavy snow, we remember, to break up the discussion on hether or not the cotton would scare the flies way. ... Now the Red Cross is doing it! Issuing ibbon awards, we mean. Just after we’d finally aught up with the significance of all the awards nd ribbons the armed services flood the land with flaily, we find that another one is: being issued. t's for a worthy cause, though. The Red Cross is iving - a certificate and -a red ribbon with a. red ross against a white square to its volunteer workers ‘ho gave “appreciable” service during the war. About 8,000 will be issued locally, now that mailing has otten underway. One of the first volunteers to reeive a ribbon was a staff assistant, Mrs. Donna Waren, of 5261 Central ave. The mother of a marine brivate, Mrs, Warren served 98212 fours”in three Fears.

4 Mystery Is Solv od

THE MYSTERY of the identity of the two babies /ith whom Police Captain Clifford Richter posed in picture in 1912 has been solved... . Mrs. Ethel Btewart Kugelman, 2318 Adams st., noticed the item In Monday's column and recognized the ‘picture as hat of hers and a neighbor's child, taken when apt. Richter was on a West side beat. . . . One baby

‘Pit Goblins’

SHEFFIELD, England, March 6.—Ahead, smothpred in choking dust, lies the Coalface, 2400 feet inder Yorkshire.

You've stumbled and groped nearly a mile along he coal roadways underground to get here. Now, blackened and perspiring, you wiggle like a black nake until you're completely inbye—smack against he working seam. It's only here, far from sunshine, ghat you fully ppreciate all the implications of Britain's coal shortge. Now you understand why mining coal is a irty, mean, miserable, soul-killing ‘job. + You realize more about voluntary absenteeism rom the mines and why, in these thin vaulted eams, output is so difficult. These begrimed pitmen, creeping about like gobins in a horrible nightmare, literally hold . their bountry’s economic future in their coal production ber man-shift,

Task Is Stunning

STATE CONTROL here will succeed exactly” in atio to the co-operation of the pit-worker, himself. ithout the backing of the miner, socialization will hrow the coal industry into utter, terrifying chaes. The humanistic task before the Attlee government ooms as nothing less than stunning. It needs only a few minutes’ talk with the miners hemselves to appreciate how completely 40 years of ion propaganda, fostered by an ancient, appalling istory of exploitation and outright slavery, remain mplanted on the British collier. “Wot do I think’ll ’appen when the government kes over?” Squatting against the Coalface, the miner

® * Aviat viation HERE IS an air corps flying school story which is too good to keep.

_A lanky, sandy-haired youngster about 22—from 7isconsin—sallied into the air corps when instructors were worth their weight in gold. He said he could ly a little bit. This understatement soon was disBl overed. He was a “natural” in the knack of teaching thers what he knew. Sandy wanted fighter combat duty so bad that t times he cut loose and laced the sky with his Lcrobatics. But they held him to. instructing. One day a student had bailed out of a trainer, nd was called before the examining board—of which Sandy was a member.: The student had the strangest explanation for the bail-out. He said the control stick had come out of its kocket during the execution of an Immelmann turn. The board listened to the kid and had about decided to absolve him from responsibility when Sandy piped up. “Why didn’t you trim the ship with the elevator abs and stay with it to a landing?” The student looked at Sandy in amazement, The more conservative board members thought any such idea was a little too radical and too much to expect of a student. Then Sandy put the whole shebang into a spin by continuing: «Well, why didn't you climb out of your front cockpit and get back into the rear cockpit?”

Cockpit Switch ‘Crazy BY THIS TIME the ay members—all seasoned pilots—merely were looking at Sandy. Sandy-had nothing against the student. He simply

My Day -

NEW YORK, Tuesday.—I see in the papers that the en:ergency housing program designed for veterans has had a set-back in the house. Apparently, the majority do not believe in subsidizing housing, Also, a group of our legislators believe the time has come for strict economy and retrenchment. This is an interesting theory that requires great judgment in practice because, if we ecodgmfze too far and on the wrongsthings, we are apt pfind that we have cut down the people's earning po such an extent that we have injured our whol ‘economy rather than benefitted it. Many of our legislators are not economists. They, like the rest of us, learn some very wise basic principles when they are young which should govern our private lives but, when these same principles are applied to thé government, we are apt to get into trouble. In the sphere of economics, we need the most expert advice possible!

Shelter Is ¢ Basic Need

IT SEEMS obvious to me that cutting down on housing is not our best way of economizing at the present time, Shelter is a basic need. Health and happiness depend very largely on the ability of people to find decent places in which to live. I know from my own experience that,” if things are not running well at home, ‘one’s ability to work is hampered. I am sure .that a veteran who has his family in one room, and probably pays more than he can for for that one room, is not going to do ood w E We To faced pr a national telephone Thursday. But I hope it is becoming a

e on to

operation” e&h “Improve. Working

* |were “being filed a day.

Mrs, Donna Warren. ,.. She wears the Red Cross “campaign” ribbon.

was her son, James Francis Stewart, and the other was William Stevenson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Stevenson, now residents of Kentucky. . .. The babies were born Feb. 2 and Feb. 12 in 1912 and were three months old .when the picture was made. Mrs. Kugelman’s baby died just two months’ after the picture was made and her print of the picture carried in “The “Times Monday is one of her prized possessions. She's lost contact with her former neighbors, but she thinks the Mr, Stevenson is now living somewhere in Kentucky. ... She phoned her story to Capt. Richter, ending his puzzlement about the identity of his companions. , , . One of our readers who asks that his name be withheld comments on the present Indianapolis Railways cry for higher fares. He sends a transit pass from’ Cleveland. The system there apparently is ‘that a rider pays $1.25 for a weekly pass which covers all fares for the whole week, with the exception of special service. Our informant thinks it’s a good idea and says he isn't suggesting it to benefit himself.- “I've lived in the downtown district since 1925 and have no need to ride the cars except once in awhile, so it makes no difference to me if they charge 25 cents for one ride,” he comments,

.

By Nat A. Barrows

answers that question: “Bloody more pay and Lioody less work. The mines for us miners—then.” He dreams of unprecedented ease and comfort when “we owns the mines.” He knows little and cares less about the simple facts of economics. Markets and selling prices above costs lurk far from his ken.

Must Face the Facts

FOR 40 YEARS the unions encouraged that belief, for obvious reasons. . Today, with reality around the corner, they have | got to face the facts. Some miners with whom I talked realized, of course, that government ownership will not bring less work and vastly more pay. But unfortunately, too, many of the older men in the 1634 pits now operating in Britain are having sweet pipe dreams” of Utopia, The answer, naturally, is a careful clever advertisIng campaign among the miners. The government must skillfully explain that state ownership . and conditions over a period of years. It will take years to wipe out the hide-bound, often stupid superstitions or the collier. He suffered too much in the old days. He re-members-hideous abuses. He forgets how well some | companies are treating their men. Coal nationalization can eventually succeed in Britain—but only if the basic human factor, the pitworker, is handled intelligently. It's going to be a long, slow job, requiring much patience and a minimum of bureaucratic red tape.

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

By Maj. Al Williams

was one of those. serious chaps who did his own thinking and gave his audience only his conclusions. After the meeting the board members began joshing Sandy about his “crazy” idea of climbing from one cockpit to another aloft. Sandy insisted it could

The Indianapolis Times

SECOND SECTION

WHAT EVENTUALLY may become the greatest toll of this war is being taken each day in the divorce courts. A year ago. 15 suits for divorce « Now the rate has risen to more than 40 a day. Death and destruction ended with

*IV-J day, but quietly and insidious

ly the war god is collecting a daily installment from the American home. Spend a week observing Marion county's six divorce courts in action and this will become apparent. » - n MORE and more divorce suits are being Tiled—far more than fol lowing world war I when bathtub gin and a changing moral code stamped that period as the Roaring 20s. In any attempt to survey this soe ciological scene it should be taken into consideration that world war II was a total effort. Everyone had a part. Few escaped its farreaching influence. This disruption of individual lives accentuated hopes and fears. Aware that civilization was being] tested, people lived recklessly and | basically.

|

” » » | DURING .the war many Indian-| apolis young men and women did what others were doing after war-shortened some ory afew weeks—in length. Then came enforced separation. Some marriages of long-standing, | court records show, failed to last] during this separation ‘period. New| relationships brought by the war sometimes proved more practical j and interesting. There ‘are other courses of divorse, too. “1 want a divorce, your henor,” one middle-aged woman told Judge] Hezzie Pike of superior court 2.| “I lived in hell for the sake of my| children. They're grown now and I'm making my way.” | n = » | THE WHITE-HAIRED judge was once a pauper attorney. He has

—marrying!

|seen the seamier side of life, with]

its family ugliness.

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 6, 1946 MORE AND MORE DISRUPTED HOMES—

~ Divorce—A Major Toll of War

By KENNETH HUFFORD - »

A familiar but tragic post-war sight In Indianapolis courts .

While no moralist, Judge Pike | feels that the intemperate use of {alcohol is a familiar pattern in most of his divorce cases. ' The most pa-| thetic, he believes, are those situations in which the alcoholics family

isuffers while their usually meager

income is spent on liquor. Drinking is on the increase, most [of the six county divorce judges feet; of the war and its effect on the delicate machinery of hymtah emotions. ” WHILE the. war rs blamed for the increase in divorces, naturally few

{couples realize their troubles are

traceable to it. Most of them know

only that they don't want to live]

{with each other for some immediate | reason, War made couples critical of their, differences in religion, education,!

‘age, family background and appear-

ance, “Yes, even politics,” laughed youthful Judge Halph Hamill superior court 5. The big, faced judge observed:

round“It's either|

discord, poverty and/too much money, or too little, in|

isome cases. Then, there's the usual!

By MARGUERITE SMITH

HERE'S AN_IDEA for garden. mifided home piinners “Whoops

Henry Fechtman built their home at 4572 Broadway, they included a small (about 6x9 feel) glassed-in nook on the south side of the

house just off their dining room. Here they have had many inter esting plants, one year raised small oranges that “were wonderful tasting” rand .certainly handy to the breakfast table. Now Mrs. Fechtman has an azalea beginning to bloom. It has flowered for her “for at least the last three years.” She gives it “a little water every morning because they like a lot of moisture.” When the pink single flowers have

be done, and the matter seemed to end there; though! the board members were intrigued into discussing |

all opened and faded, after the | weather warms up, she plunges the

their dreams will materialize before too long. When Mr. and Mrs?”

the idea among: themselves at various times,

One day someone noticed that Sandy had taken later landed |

off seated in the front cockpit and occupying the rear coekpit. “Sure,” said Sandy, had to prove it to myself.

cockpit. nose of the ship tilfed sky high, back into the cockpit and thought some more,

He Finally Makes It

“THE NEXT TIME I trimmed the ship so it

“I said it could be done so I I took the ship up to 5000 feet, balanced it with the tabs, and proceeded to try to climb out of the right side of the front With the shift of my weight rearward the so I scrambled

{pot in the yard in semi-shade. #® = IN THE FALL brought in “rather little cold spells come.

» it has to be early . before " She has

to renew soil acidity. She gives it sheep manure after it is through blooming. That's an important time in an azalea’s life since it gets its next season's buds ready during the summer. She also carries a cyclamen over, from year to year “with just about the same treatment.”

would be nose heavy, wings level, and made another try, The ship's nose stayed on the horizon, but the farther back I climbed, the faster the wing dropped down until it was spiraling: A couple of bumps almost shook me loose. “So I made another try, this time trimming the ship nose heavy, and put the left wing down- before starting to climb out the right side of the front cockpit. I had to move fast because my weight on the right side plus the wind resistance offered by my body | started the ship in a right-hand turn. 1 had gone too far to" try to get back so I scrambled and scratched my way into the rear seat. And I was pretty glad I made it.” : I

By Eleanor Roosevelt

set up to prevent strikes is not adequate, then they | must set up machinery that will do.the job. At the present time, to hold back production by any strikes is to injure the whole community—labor | and management alike, The use of the telephone/ has come to be an essential part of-aqur business procedure. If we cut off something which «facilitates the conduct of business, we are hampering produc‘tion. Telephone Necessary to Business FIFTY YEARS AGO, everybody did their business by letter, or journeyed slowly from one place to an- | other to discuss their business in person. Today everything moves faster and the telephone is one of the ways in which we facilitate the doing of business. For that reason, a strike will bring serious resentment and the same lack of consideration of the rights! and wrongs at issue which always results when the public 1s seriously inconvenienced. 1 was trying to get a taxi this morning when a man’ actually offered to get out of his and give it to me! This courtesy seemed too much to accept, so 1 asked him if I might take him to his-destination. On the way, he told me he had just come. to New

servatory, “really belong to Bill”

Many of the plants in- the consaid = ‘Mrs.

Bill Fechtman, 12,

Mrs. |

“His slips did real well,”

Fechtman said, then added with a |tention Bill, {mother’s talents BILL'S BROTHER, John, aged 8, confined to horticulture,

‘doesn’t have dny connection with \quite formally, pie s, also.”

twinkle, “but. my -plant. died.*

Ld n ”

{

> HANNAH<. ||

York from Arizona“ bringitg-100~ of} cattle; 40 Head to a car. He had been in the navy and had | seen many, places during the war, but I admired his | devotion to His own.state and his joy at being back on his father's ranch,’ These are the men that make our nation strong, and I was glad that I could tell him that I too had i affection for his state and was looking forward to there, later this month, His sturdiness and

Fechtman, plants,” does collect stamps,” inherits his |mother defended him, grandparents’ love for flowers. Not | {their small brother, Henry, who ‘is | long ago, he told me, he started a going to be 3” even -now waters ihe conservatory to have an attractive number of cuttings from his grand-| plants for her when the boys come {plant collection, Mrs. Fae McGaw, mother's rose geranium, :

lover concentrated "nitric test tube, and a white ring forms at the junction of the acid and the| |urine, abnormal amounts of® albu-| to push the spine forward, min are, present. If urine is niixed| with acetic acid and heated, and a white precipitate forms, it also in- |urine on sitting or “standing “and dicates excessive albumin.

never repotted it so has not had

Mrs. Henry Fechtman

according tp Bill. “But he John's grandadding that

[to visit.

The frequency of this latter atis possibly explained by who feeling that his grandare entirely told me s the nicest

not “she bake

The boys are the sons of Mr

O'BRIEN; M. D.

poor muscular tone] their urine] might have postural albuminuria.

Albumin enters the urine from the| blood through the kidneys as the result of irritation: or infection of the kidney or from faulty posture.

Normal urine contains traces of

albumin too small to be detected by ordinary tests,

When a sample of uriné is poured acid in a

In the past, many persons be-|

| lieved that albumin in the urine | meant disease of the Kidney, but| | there are several other causes, especially n young pers.

urine after severe

# ALBUMIN oy be detecied in urine o Tollowig n° an attack of. sore| physician Who

CAL JCI,

+ ++ A garden-minded home planner

‘mental strain,

| the albumin to disappear.

superior court 4 for a divorce.

drinking, black eyes, desertion and) infidelity.”

FORCES that are breaking up| marriages also are responsible for | much of the increase in juvenile delinquency, the six judges agree. For a long time, it has been recognized that divorce and quency operate © hand-in-hand. | Broken homes often result in de-

{linquent children.

However, there is a tendency to consider minor children and their future welfare above everything else. This is making divorce an expensive procedure, where children are involved.

a couple asks Judge Walter Pritchard of

delin- |

“PAGE n

Labor

Phone ee | Offered Aid in Strike Threat

“By FRED W. PERKIN © = =

WASHINGTON, March 6-~The 17 telephone unions threatening to tie up tomorrow morning a large part of the country's communica« tions are “independents”—not part = of the major labor organizations but they have offers of help from both the A. F. of L. and the C1. O. This aid would not immediately take the form of sympathy strikes, acording to union spokesmen, but would include legal assistance if the telephone companies tried to get injunctions against mass picketing. It also would include help in ore ganizing and in publicity. Less than a year ago competing electrical units of the A. F. of L, and C. I. O, as well as of the United’ Mine Workers District 50, were “raiding” or attempting to raid the telephone unions, but the picture has been reversed. » ” s

BOTH THE A. F. of L. and C. I. O. are wooing the telephone unions for membership and the offers of help are regarded as part of the flirtations. The recent national strikes planning telephone meeting in Memphis was attended by Allan Haywood, organization director of the C. I. 0, and George Googe, southern - representative of the A. P. of L. Both ‘attempted to sell the advantages of their respective

tested,” Judge Lloyd D. Claycombe of circuit court declared. “This is a terrible indictment of society.” He referred to the practice of agreeing in advance that one or the other of the partners will get the divorce, with the other partner assenting to the usual charge of “cruel and inhuman treatment” by his abSORE; aithp——— m——— Judge Judson L. Stark of superior court 1 philosophized: “The damage is done before couples ever get to court. If there is a contest, it's not over the divorce, but over the property.”

dent of the National Federation of Telephone Workers. The telephone unions have ®& committee studying whether their interests will be best’ served by affiliation with either C, I. O. or A. FP, of L, or of keeping their present status. A report is expected

» ” ” WHAT IS the solution? No one

In some cases, where family income is limited, it is prohibitive {for the wage-earner to maintain {two homes. Result is he thinks twice before breaking the marriage | bonds. Of course, if the fault lies

in June, and may be affected by strike activities, ” = » ANOTHER reason for the offers of A. F.of L. and C. 1. O. help is that both major organizations are

seems to know. It's a price of war, they agree, and.whatever solution eventually is found will depend, in

all probability, upon some formula to outlaw war itself.

with an errant wife, the husband

of usually can get custody of the {hundreds elsewhere over the nation,

children and keep them with him, n ” “NOT OVER 5 per c:nt of the | divorce cases in my court are con |

Meanwhile, as society awaits a; solution, the six county courts, like

alert to prevent successful use of court injunctions by employers. Wage demands of C. I. O. and | grind the grist of humanity. A. FP. of L. units also will be aided In 1941 there were 3470 divorce {if the telephone workers win their suits filed, 3215 in 1942, 4305 in|objective of $2-a-day raises, 1043, 4810 in 1944 and 5688 last year. A. D. Harrington, public rela.

GARDENING: Care Keeps Plants Blosming | in Glassedsin Nook

Even Oranges Grow Near Dining Room

5

* easy to raise kinds, in between these

, Blazed flower pots. One ivy that

and Mrs. Central ave,

Hugo Fechtman, 4523

” ” n BUT YOU don't have to have a

1636 College ave., takes a number of the most easily*-raised foliage plants plus a window handicapped by eastern exposure and an overhanging porch and makes it into “a bit of beauty that one needs.” She does it largely by good ar-

'tions representative of the N, F. T. Ww. said today the telephone strike ‘will tie up all long distance lines ‘in the United States, all trans {ocean service, and all manually | operated local service. The stoppage will extend to dial he said, she has placed a large grape ivy Shee She mechanic get out on the sill under it. The downward |* °T¢" sweep of vines she relieves and accents with tall sansevieria, that practically indestructible plant so disagreeably. named mother-in-law’s| tongue or snakeplant, She tucks other small vines, all

nr » ” . THE TELEPHONE federation, this spokesman said, represents 250,000 communications workers, but strike notices that have been filed under the war labor disputes act cover only 150,000. The remaining 100,000, he added, are likely to be affected by picketing and other con ditions, “ a. | Unless Edgar L. Warren, director | alee the wid. given spe of the U. 8S. conciliation service, ry heads it off in the last hours be-

..A8 TO now with limited torie she | fore the deadline, the telephone keeps ther: all looking so healthy, will cause more immefliate “I water them a little every morn-, iD to the general public , ing before I go to work. About than any of the recent or Sarat ¢

points of emphasis, adds color with

came from her husband's home in

twice a year I buy some enriched |industrial disturbancés, - dirt and give them a few table-| IT. long continsed it may affect spoons of it on top of the pot; I action of the senate on the labor wash them off at the kitchen sink | legislation it is due to receive’soon, with a syringe maybe once in two including a modified version of the weeks and use soap and: water on | Case union-restrictive bill already the: leave es occasionally. " passed by a heavy house majority.

_lorganizations to J. A. Beirne, presi-

rangement. Centering the window with a hanging Blass Dowl of vy,

or prolonged exposure to cold, but the commonest | variety seen in tall young persons {is caused by disturbance in eircu-| | lation" of the kidney from forward | curvature of the spine. When postural albuminaria is suspected, the patient ted by| keeping him in bed, which, causes As soon as he. sits or stands, the albumin reappears, The amount of albumin in the urine -in postural albuminaria can be increased by placing a broomstick across thg small of the back and hooking the elbows behind it

» ” »

ALBUMIN which appears in the

| disappeal on lying down is always associated with normal kidneys. The condition completely disap~ pears as the' person grows older and improves his useulag strength, Hulaition and postare. In the

THE DOCTOR SAYS: Excessive Albumin Easily Detected

‘Posture May Cause Albuminurial

By. WILLIAM A, TALL, thin adolescents and young | persons with {who pass albumin in

PERON HAS BIG EDGE ON RIVAL TAMBORINI

BUENOS AIRES, March 6 (U. P.) —~Col. Juan D. Peron, nation-alist-laborite presidential candidate, held a lead over his Democratic opponent, Dr, Jose P. Tamborini, today in all except one of the states where votes iif the Feb. 24 election still were being counted. Peron’s popular vote had increased to nearly 60,000 and his potential electoral college vote had increased to 232 while Tamborini’s dropped to 38,

ASH WEDNESDAY SERVICE

An Ash Wednesday service will be held in Zion Evangelical church at | 7:45 o'clock tonight preceded by a song service at 7:25 p. m. The services will be conducted by the Rev. Frederick R. Daries and will be followed by the partaking of Haly Communion, Song and Lenten services will be | held at the same time every] Wednesday until Easter. |

ts |

of the kidney (nephritis), germs and their toxins circulate through the blood and cause the kidney infection. Dropsy in nephritis results from failure of enough water to leave the system through the urine. This variety ‘of kidney trouble also has a tendency to "occur in young persons, 3 y n » INSURANCE companies have learned by experience that appli= cants who have albumin ing-their|

The|

— We, the Women ———

Scarce Good's Are Tourists!

‘Open Sesame’

By RUTH MILLETT

THIS IS the year for that longpostponed vacation, This is the year when you mean to load Mama and the .kids in the old family car with its one new tire—maybe-—and head for a spot that looks good because it is far, far away. Well, you might have to add something, if you can get it, to the mountain of luggage a fam vacation always seems to call for: ” ” ” A COUPLE of Minnesota busie nessmen making a trip through Florida recently piled 50 pounds of butter into their car—just to assure themselves hotel accommodations. When hotel clerks said “Neo room,” the travelers casually mentioned the 50 pounds of butter they had brought with them, adding, “We might spare a bit.” The Minnesotans reported buts ter was the open sesame in every hotel visited. u ” THERE'S -no_telling now, what is going to be scarce next sums mer, what commodity will talk when money won't, So it won't do any good to plan ahead. Nylons won't be persuasive if, as women are promised, they'll each have a backlog of six pairs by July. And the butter short . age might be a thing of the past.

still be scarce, and there

§

s

urine are poorer risks than those who have normal urine, but this does not mean that everyone in the group is/Suffering with a serious kidney disorder. Exemination of the urine is always included in a general “checkup. Promoters of health schemes may urge persons to submit their urine to them for examination and

corrective - measures. This kind of| health examination is not of value, |

as the result of a urine tion must be interpreted by

§

“~be other shortages, won't know until rolls around. But maybe when

fe Fie

g 5

1k il

f g

makes. & complete’ ; ation of the p

But shirts and shorts might |