Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 April 1946 — Page 11
DINS IN ACTION
ors Urge BalS. Finances.
s has, joined the + states in indors-
e of a balanced
a balanced budget to national sold the federal govin balancing the scal year starting
ts issued at the 30 states declared elieve that ‘“unscal practices are ce to the constiof our commongovernments, and findncial solvency.” 18 of them R¥pubthem Democrats, the proposed fedthe 1946-47 fiscal t at $35,100,000,000 deral revenues for are estimated at aving an antici3,600,000,000,
, MINN. INS AWARD
A, April 22 (U, Jayland Ayer Cup, 1» the 16th annual 'spaper typography W. Ayer & Sons, n by the Rochester lletin, it was an-
etin was chosen ) English-language in the exhibition, n the basis of exgraphy, make-up
, ‘GROWS’ ON A 500-foot lengthens a foot A cargo of oil; this
t of the petroleum, es warmed to high tures to
facilitate
co —
, who holds an important position. Mr.
3 oq ns qe Inside Indianapolis A WEE BIT ‘of excitement ‘livened up the J, S. Cruse Rgalty Co. offices the other .day. A man
walked into the office with what looked like a handkerchief tied around his neck and pulled up over his face, mask fashion. Just as he stepped in, in puffed a.policeman right on his heels. He'd seen the man and thought a hold-up was in’ the making. As it turned out, the man was a legitimate client of the Cruse Co. and was suffering a cold, hence the grask. Ernest J. Nicolai, secretady. orr-dthe company, says he’s sorry he didn’t get the policeman’s
name because the officer was really on his toes. . . . It was a pretty embarrassed man who jumped on a civillan for being a “war-time shirker” out at
Victory field the other night. The man was arguing with the soldiers, then he started in on a civilian
sitting nearby. Labeling him a “feather merchant,” the man accused him of sitting home in a lush
Mrs, Helen Jones . ..
a new cab for a veteran cabbie.
Rhumba King
LONDON, April 22. —1 want to tell you today how the British made a hero of Don Marino Barreto, the Cuban rhumba king. He tootles with his band in the Embassy club, a bottle joint de luxe where he tries to avoid looking at Englishmen trying to dance to his rhythms. This scene pains his sensitive Latin soul. When a tall citizen in a monocle lumbers by (trodding his partner's toes .as he goes), Don Marino shuts his eyes. I had gone to the club to see how gay blades of London disport themselves legally at hours when it is strictly illegal to drink anything stronger than tea. The time was midnight, long after all public resturants had closed, but I could hear the throb of Don Marino's drums even as I was becoming a clubman at the door, My name on a sheet of paper made me a member and gave me the right in my own club to order from the ¥xpress Wine Service, Ltd, a jug of drinking liquor for my own use. The waiter took care of the details, hocus pocus made it lawful, and there I was in the midst of riotous gaiety,
Is Brutal—Not Many Men
PERHAPS 200 people sat at tables in the softly lighted room, mostly just staring at each other. ' I was informed that they were not as glum as: they
looked, that they were enjoying themselves. Occasionally a couple rose to dance sedately. At intervals Don Marino squeezed tight his peepers at Londoners fox-trotting slowly to his frenzied thumpety thump thump. “Is brutal,”
Don Marino
.. * Aviation NEW YORK, April 22.—Past headaches of light plane pilots caused by inability to contact control towers through available radio sets are going to be eliminated as a result of nationwide test flights now underway. V. H. F. (very high frequency) radio installations
utilized in the tests are daily proving that clear signals can be received from as far
said later upon being
away as 80 miles where, heretofore, under bad static conditions, light plane pilots time and again ‘have been unable to
make contact at all One of the answers how being proved is the VHF flightweight transmitter mow installed in ‘the Bendix flying laboratory Ercoupe which is making the flight tests. A Cessna plane also will start tests on April 29. Newspapermen ‘assembled at Baltimore and at
Newark recently heard the signals clearly as Ruel Colvin, Bendix radio research flight engineer, flew the little Ercoupe over 80 and 40-mile courses, did 360 degree turns and contacted them from points every 10 miles out. - vy . vy Came in Clearly COLVIN’'S voice came in clearly over a loud-
speaker attached to the receiver sets in the two aire port offices. And at no time was the small plane out of communication with the towers. Results of the tests which will extend into June will be reported to the Civil Aeronautics Administra~ tion which 1s now considering plans for VHF installations at airports all over the country. The VHF one-half watt transmitter on the instrument panel weighs only two pounds. A small 26-inch whit stubmast antenna is mounted atop the fuselage just behind the cabin, Through use of this typé of antenna reception remains clear through 360 degree turns.
Indianapolis on Route THE ERCOUPE'S itinerary for test flights includes Rochester, N. Y., Buffalo, Niagara Falls and Lock Haven, Pa., April 29 to May 4; Detroit, Tecumseh, Mich, and Wayne Mich, May 6 to May 11; Cleveland, Akron, Troy and Alliance, O., May 13 to May
My Day
HYDE PARK (Sunday) is a sorry picture to see human nature at its worst, as evidenced by the statement given to the press last Thursday by three officials of the United Automobile Workers «1 0., without consultatioh with the union's newly elected president, Walter P. Reuther. The anti-Reuther officials were able to do this
apparently because they have more votes on the U, A. W. executive board than Mr. Reuther has, even thougn the rank and file elected him president at the santenon, I care about the welfare of labor and I believe that, of all other groups, it should strictly adhere to democratic principles. Mr. Reuther was elected by the ‘majority at the convention. There were people who. disagreed with the ideas he stood for during the strike. + 8ince he 1s a human being, I would never question the fact that Mr. Reuther might make mistakes. But I believe he is &n honest laborieader-who has at heart the interests ‘of the majority of the rank and file. Reuther Widely Traveled HE KNOWS the peoples of the world through personal contact. At Wher present moment, that is one of the most important attributes any msn can have Reuthar- spent: three years traveling around the world and yorking iy various’ countries. ~ | N She labor nen who oppose Mr,
Reuthei have: a
v i »
iar di Pp nG
New Cab at Last
job while someone else fought, the: civilian informed him -he'd just. got out after four and one-half years in the navy ‘because he was 60 per cent disabled.
After he'd finished,
ar . . VN . - i
Indianapolis Times
SECOND SECTION MONDAY, APRIL 22, 1946 = es
‘ Btu : Ee o =
Grandmother Cab Driver WHEN THE United Cab got the first of its new cars in last week one new one went to their only woman driver, Mrs. Helen Jones, 908° Lexington ave. Mrs. Jones, three times a grandmother, says she believes she’s the only woman cabbie left in Indianapolis. She's: been driving for four years. Her last cab, which she drove three years, only had 16 miles on the speedometer when she got it. She doesn’t know how many she put on it, because the speedometer had been broken for many months before she sent it to the garage after she got the new one, . . , This nylon trade thing is getting too popular, Now Mrs. Renie Becker, says she'll trade butter or bacon to anyone willing to sell her nylons at ceiling pric Her number is TA-2792, . . . Paul Pfister, assistant U. 8. district | attorney until last Friday when his resignation | became effective, is wondering what his going away present is to be. The workers in his office couldn't find the gift they wanted in time for his last day, so they decided to consider his “last day” the day he gets his last check, giving them a couple weeks grace to find the scarce object. Mr. Pfister now is trying to guess which of the sgarce items it is, Collect Odd Bottles MRS. OLLIE M. DODD, of Lebanon, collects bottles as a hobby. She has about 1400 bottles which represent 40 states and.seven countries, Her collection also includes some very old items and some oddities in the bottle line, . . . One of the prized possessions of Margaret Gamage, a Technical high school journalism student, is an autographed copy of the speech which Ambassador Joseph F. McGurk gave Pan-Americdnh day at the high school. Miss Gamage interviewed the ambassador for the school paper. , , . A reader who signs her note “M.S.J.”| sends us a note+commenting on a “humorous ad.” A mineral springs sanitarjum was advertised for sale. The reason: Owner was in “ill health.” Women | who have bingo in their blood will go to any lengths | to play. And they have to, since it's illegal here. | One woman travels to Muncie almost every week, | and to Davton and Cincinnati, O, frequently. She! once went to Miami, Fla, to play for big stakes,
By Frederick C. Othman
“An rhumba in London not many
| | | | {
introduced to me. men.” I asked how many. replied: ” “Two,”
~vatch without shuddering customers having fun.
This, he said, was important to him because they | smaller commercial record manuwere the same ones who taught him that even he|facturers over the nation, is ironing
could be brave. ceiling. It once was mirrored. “Buzzzzzz bombs,” Don Marino explained.
The Price Is Plenty
FOR THE first year he fled to the subways when | the explosions started. His band played on, leader- | less. The dahcers continued to dance, rhythmless. |. ’ “Was still scared,” Don Marino reported. “Was| also ashamed. Decided if people could dance during! boom-booms, could rush out, help injured, come back with soot on faces and dance some ‘more, then Marino was what vou call it louse. “Bit lip, always scared, but staved on band stand.
i
2216 College ave. |. |
{spinning in a mad whirl these days as the disc- makers Jockey into posiHe considered carefully and | tion for a banner year of recording.
industry's history is the local RCA-Victor plant, the largest platter Don Marino added that he hoped eventually to|manufacturing plant in the United States.
He pointed out the Clothe -draped | out reconversion bugs to meet a s = great pent-up demand for records, | a hang-over from war days when | tory more than 90 per cent of production | no promotion is needed to sell rec{went to the armed forces.
lof some 4000 employees employed Who've just been able to get rec-|ihe
crying for more help. A program thing that's waxed. of expansion to help meet demands | thas been mapped out, spearheaded ord-pressinig work down to a fine also is faced with the -by construction of a $300,000 ware- | point,
Labor . . Little Unions . To Press Fight . : ope For Recognition By FRED ‘W. PERKINS WASHINGTON, April 22.—Inde« i pendent unions, resentful at what they charge is favoritism for their competitors, will make another stab this week at convincing federal officials that they deserve recogni tion on the same basis as the American Federation of Labor and the C. I. O. A delegation of 35 to 60 from the Middle West is heralded as the largest group of independent union spokesmen that ever moved on Washington, and is said to repre= sent more than 300,000 workers. They will demand equality of representation with the major labor bodies on government committees and panels dealing with labor mate ters. They also will charge that some official agencies discriminate against them and in favor of the
A. F. of L. and C. I. O,, particularly the latter.
FACTORY WHEELS SPIN TO MEET PUBLIC HUNGER FOR TUNES—
| RCA Increases Recording Force
Hn il EET
ii PEER Eo
” . ” THIS dejegation will represent Independents banded together in | the Confederated Unions of Amer {ica, an organization that recently | went “through a reorganization ine
p d Tatung volving withdrawal of its former
End of the line . pleted platter,
. Mrs. Mildred Hanna puts the jacket on a com- |
| Sumers before they fall from pub-:who have records want new { lic favor
: players and vice versa, so it's From the master wax, made in| rosy outlet for the music canneries. president, Matthew Smith, peppery | studios in New York, Hollywood —- 8 2 # {head of the Mechanics Educational
{and Chicago, they make as many as 50 duplicate plates, At the same {time a powder compound is being mixed into biscuits about 8 inches » !square for 10-inch shellacs, a little bigger for the 12-inch waxes.
THE FIELD looks so good, that|gosiety of America.
some 210 labels have made their] MESA, as it is called, repeatedly appearances on record shelves in|defled the national war labor board recent months, Prior to the war|during the war, and its president there were only a few commercial has been in frequent conflicts with 2 2 = {record manufdcturers, led by the Other leaders in the confederated - THE BISCUITS, with the label! Big Three of Victor, Columbia and unions. : attached, are put into presses to| Decca. Now discs by companies that The new CUA president is. Do which one of the duplicate plates| bloomed during the war are rank-|Mahon, of Des Moines, head of th has been attached. The records are|ing along with the Big Three in Katona, Bivtherhood of Packing. pressed by a steam process, cooled |the top-popularity brackets. . land made brittle by a cold water| jo ge of the nation’s| The CUA delegation will be head treatment, and rushed to the finish- [record buying capacity is seen in|ed by Thomas M. Law, of Chicago, ing department. Both sides are!the mass production methods used.| President of the Automotive Workpressed in one treatment. |Often the plant has as many as 50 | Tidusitia) vion. o Here rough edges are smoothed | |different presses turning out copies ,.. |off, seconds discarded and the in- | {of one record all at one time. Victor IT WILL spend four days here, pt virtually | 4iyiqual records are boxed while the | pressed 50,000 coples of Perry|and has engagements for confers . : album pieces are sent to be pack-|Como's “Well Gather Lilacs” be- ences with the following: . ons Beople wie Soin La aged. They're off to distributors fore one pullic mention of the tune Secretary of Labor Schwellenbach, RCA has more than one-fourt from the shipping room and onto had been made. Conciliation Director Edgar L. Warcounters while still] Even after the first post-war! : ber of the |warm—RCA hopes. splurge settles down, the companies | Ten; Gerard Reilly, member o The other part of the local RCA plan to keep records selling out at|national labor relations. board; W, The RCA plant here has the rec- { plant, makers of combination sets, a rapid fire pace through such new | Willard Wirtz, chairman of the na“more de- methods as rack distribution or [tional wage stabilization board; _Provjem. People; record of the r worth clubs. | Harold Young, solicitor of the de- | partment of commerce; Senator La,
Hot off the griddle out of a press at RCA.
. «+ « Miss Hazel Neff grabs a record as it comes
By DONNA MIKELS-
AROUND AND AROUND and around. . The record industry is
And one of the hubs of the biggest record making splurge in the
The local plant, like hundreds of
house which is now almost .completed.
n FOR THE first time in the hisof record making,
they're nthe record unit alone and they're | Ord players are snapping up any-
to get tunes to the con- mand than supply”
Was no more coward. Felt better.” My story should stop here on its climax, but vou may also be interested in the "price of London bottle clubbing. So may the gentlemen in New York who soon will. he auditing my expense account. - Here's how it adds:
Two dollars to get in. $16.50 for a .bottle of Scotch
whisky, $2 for soda, $3 for a tip, and $4—so help me Exceed 5000 Miles. BOXING accidents caused by Out by a blow on the chin insist may last for some time. | Wallace and economic stabilization —to get home at 3 a. m. Cabs don’t run after mid- Ha v driver ever driven [3lls may be prevented by thicker that it is painless. The idea that | 2 8 8 | Director Bowles. night. Swarthy gents in baby Austin autos charge .Q: Has any driver eve floor padding. The ropes shauid|® knockout is caused by ramming, A BLOW on the side of the neck | “We expect to get to the bottom what the traffic will bear; more than 5000 miles in actual com-
| petition at the Indianapolis Motor gutside the ring should be wide in the neck, or by hitting a special | hon it strikes the carotid sinus, |not to belong to C. L O.or A, F. of Speedway? When did a foreign-| enough to prevent boxers from fall- nerve in the jaw, is no longer be- |
built auto last win the race?
By Max B. Coo
| | |
He
— petition. They are Cliff Bergere, a with 5704 miles;
|b
la
J
|
| fl
At the pilot's fingertips . . radio contact, 18; Indianapolis, Milwaukee, Wheeling, Ill., and Holman field, St. Paul, from May 20 to May 25. make tests from May 27 to June 1 at E. St. Louis, | Kansas City, Mo., St. Louis, Mo., and Denver, Col. The Degsna itinerary follows: Hagerstown, Md., Middletown, 4, Wichita, — 6 to May 11; Okla., and Tulsa, Okla.,
Coffeyville, Kan., Enid, May 13 to May 18; Dallas, lo Tex, Ft. Worth," Tex, and Garland, Tex. May 20] to May 25; Houston, Tex., Memphis, Tenn.; New Or-
miles, and Wilbur Shaw, 5048 miles, | medical supervision of physicians| Solar plexus knockouts follow | permanent damage seldom follows. | crimination is practiced against The last race won by a foreign-| familiar with athletic dangers,/a blow delivered over the upper Kidney punches are much less | our unions, when the national la uilt- auto ‘was in 1940 when Wilbur} tand every effort should be made | portion of tne abdomen. Many box- dangerous than is usually believed. | |bor relations act guarantees the | Shaw, driving an Italian built Mas- to avoid injuries by enforcing the ers are able to protect their] Permanent mental damage—the ker io. bel to the | serati. e in first rules. stomachs by training or muscular celebrated “punch-drunk” condition | right of a worker to belong to Serall, came BL. 2. nn un development. Severe pain, suffo-| —results from brain injury. Boxers | |labor organization of his own Q: Is the winner of the Indian- THE MOST frequent cause of a cation, and loss of muscular who have been knocked out many | choice.”
champion?
the American Automobile Association contest A. A. A-sponsored races through-| [out the country. | the | score at the end of the racing season becomes national champion.
| recently discharged army air forces
{to the agency | England Mutual Life Insurance Co.!
It willl here.
| schol {Wild is a veteran of 226 missions, ., and Columbus, O., April 29 to May | 48 of which were made over the| two weeks after V-J day, more than | “hump”
THE DOCTOR SAYS:
Follette (Prog. Wis), member of {the senate education and labor com= mittee; and Representative Welch
Boxers Risk Serious Ailments ===
Tentative engagements have been By WILLIAM A. O'BRIEN, M. D.| knocked and from below. the effect | made with Secretary of Commerce
Beware of Head Injuries.
Ask Me
Three Speedway Drivers
Those who have been and
be in good condition, and the space|the jaw back against the arteries|may cause loss of consciousness| of why working people who prefer L. unions do not get a fair break |ing off the platform. Well-padded lieved. from government agencies which gloves should be used by amateurs, Loss of consclousnass following | [resembling the . solar plexus at- are supposed to be fair to all,” said a blow on the jaw results from |tached to the carotid artery.
{which is a special set of nerves
A. Yes, three drivers have topped |
and thick headguards should be, Mr. Eller today in making public he 5000-mile mark in actual COm-| worn in training, even though they concussion of the brain, which| Punches below the belt can in-|the plans for the delegation, do not prevent all brain accidents. varies from a simple jar to a con-|jure the genital organs and may Ad
Louis Meyer, 5249| Boxers should be placed Vins | Sole (hemorrhage). cause loss of consciousness, but| “WE WANT to know why dis-
race the national knockout is a blow on the
chin strength follow a blow to the ab-!times, or those who have won most A delegation of New Jersey and delivered slightly from the
side domen, but seldom does loss of of their fights by close decisions, New York independents presented and upward rather than directly consciousness occur. may have sustained great brain their case two weeks ago to Secrefrom the front. A boxer may re-| Concussion of the heart (jar- injury. | tary Schwellenbach and Chairman gain consciousness-immediately and ring) may follow a blow delivered Brain injury may follow a single | Herzog of the NLRB. Investigation continue fighting, or he may re- over the left side of the chest, blow, yet some boxers escape it of their charges of discrimination main ungonsciops for hours. ‘especially one e struck « on the far left despite years in the ring, | was promised.
We, the Women: Mature Persons Consider Voting A Privilege
polis Speedway
A. No. Points are awarded by
board to ‘winners of
The driver’ with point |
Sightseers at Grand Canyon DRAWS WATER, AIR Expected to Break Record OUT OF CONCRETE
By Science Service
largest aggregate total
OHN F. WILD GETS INSURANCE POST
John F. Wild of Indianapolis,
Times Special forma-
GRAND CANYON, Ariz, April 22. -—The thousands of G. L's whose training columns made regular {bivouacs at Grand Canyon during, | the war will give way this year to other thousands—civilians enjoying A graduate of Shortridge high
and Davidson college, Mr, | peacetinie freedom. During Labor day week last year,
world's most colorful rock
PHILADELPHIA, April 22.—By tion, the pink cliffs sucking water and air out of con-} The Indian’ name for the area means: “Red rocks standing like crete, dwelling houses of this non- | By RUTH MILLETT men in a bowl-shaped canyon.” | eritcal material may be more | UNSEEMLY as was their behavior, - ‘Bat Spectacle’ quickly constructed. The process,; maybe it was a good thing a group For the vacationer who takes a demonstrated here, involves the use|°f bobby-soxers squealed at’ the Tes : . | cnt sevelt dedication ceremo= southern route from Grand Can- of a vacuum to tause concrete to ies a Hyde Park when their idol, yon, Carlsbad Caverns national harden rapidly, and a mechanical] Frank Sinatra, who happened to be park in New Mexico will offer allifter which raises precast side-|one of the guests, came onto the
startling contrast to the red rocks|walls into position, without danger | Scene.
i moat he ot — 1100 persons visited Grand Canyon ad gla Utah aridtl of dainage. For another guest was President f the combat cargo tas orce Tr a é f iki ooh , ‘ nis year park Truman—the man who has gone ren | HRVIONE] PRFE ally $y Pp | Arizona. The vacuum concrete process Is|
J i ' d as favoring letting 18« expect all previous atiend- [on recor Sflicisly exp to be BE The great limestone beds of the not new; it has been in use for| year-olds have the vote.
has been appointed | staff of the New
ying officer,
gorges. of
leans and Nashville, May 27 to June 1, and Atlanta, St. Petersburg, Fla. and Orangeburg, 8S. C., June
*HANNAH ¢
Mile-deep, 217<mile-long Grand | Carlsbad area were raised out of|about eight years. The details of Maybe the squealing bobby-sox-
3 to June 8.
By Eleanor Roosevelt!
perfect right to stand for the policies Lhey believe. in, | and to-fight them but on the convention floor, But! once the vote is cast they also have an obligation, I think, to uphold the will »f the majority IL seems to me quite outrageous that in their statement they should attack otner labor groups that aad done wha: they thought was right, and alco !iberal organiza-| tions which they think upheld Walter Reygher by showing an interest in him as an individual. |
All Should Be Heard |
I HAPPEN to be one of the sponsors of the "Jnion | for Democratic Action and I kaow that many of their | speakers cannot always represent the views of the| board, or even of all the members of the Union for | Democratic Action, I did all I could to help the women and children whose men were on strike in the U. A. W. recently, because I belieye that in our couniry we want to alleviate suffering wherever it is possible to do so, since the harm done, particularly to chiidren while their elders fight out their various points of view, seems. to| me unjustified. : I have always liked R. J. Thomas, U. A. W. vice| president, though I have never known him well, But I want ‘to see labor strong and unified. The kind of | thing which has just happened within this group!’ will give the opposition to union leadership a great | hope that they can control labor groups for their special interests, rather than find these groups uni-| fled and disinterestedly fighting for | the best interests! of the average labor man. '" 1
; n Canyon is one of the great natural| the sea millions of years ago, in|the process, however, have been| ers, more interested in Frank
The national Sinatra than the President of the
wonders of the world. the same movement that produced pretty well confined within the| United States, weren't yet 18-year= pak ae Js 5s es long nd eon the Rocky Mountains, and the caves trade. The mechanical lifter 1s| gigs. ains S > W 2 : frequently thundering Colorado themselves have resulted from con- new; with it entire sidewalls, pre-| a a 9
BUT IS the Sinatra fan of 18
horizontal
er stan rain and water seepage cast in forms lying on ' Faves, cal $ I ; : | going to be mature enough to vote On the canyon floor and along through the limestone the earth, can be handled quickly at 18? “ims ° ulti-colore -ock he : : . ; aE ! the rims of the multi-colored rock Park rangers conduct daily tours and easily, and put into position The growing-up. maturing process
walls some 500 ruins of ancient Indian pueblos have been discovered, and along the lower walls may be open to the seen the cliff dwellings of a bygone $1.50 civilization. Home of Indians
through the seven miles of caverns without stresses in
a fresh concrete because the lifting!
bending the | just isn't that speedy, is it? It looks as though anyone who Yavors giving 18-year-olds the vote just isn’t well acquainted with 18-year-olds. The majority of them “plywood mats under which a vac-|are still living in the little world Four. Indian tribes, including the A a Re uum is created by a vacuum pump, of their own age group, with some Navajo which numbers over 48.000, & pion protrude giant and irregular removes the water in the plastic lofty ideas, periiaps, about how the the Grand Canyon the residue of {mixture that is not needed to hy- enough experience in living to know | today. dripping water and evaporation|drate the cement. It removes en- whether their ideas are practical. One to three-day horseback and through the ages, trapped air also. This permits the » no»
A weird attraction is the "“bat| concrete to shrink as it hardens. AND the pat line “if he's old muleback trips through the canyon | spectacle.” Every evening at dusk | In the process, suction alone is not enough to fiat he is old enough at rates from $5 to $30 may be af-| from April to October millions of| used, With it is combined pres-|to vote” doesn’t hold water. Fighte | ranged at the park, as well as bus| bats rise like a column of smoke| sure to compact the material. This|ing is a physics feat. The young {and auto tours. Hotels, lodges,| from the opening of a cavern 180 pressure is an integral part of the|make the best soldiers because they cabins and campsites are numerous | feet deep to return before dawn | process, and it approximates 1500 have the physical strength and ~ “throughout the park, at rates trom | after a night of foraging for insects pounds per square foot. : endurance necessary for the job. 81.25 per day up. | on the, surrounding plains. mines But voting is a job for maturity, Colorful Bryce Canyon national | Copyright; 1046. by The Indianapolis Times [We haven't taken the vote from park, 100 miles north of Grand 8a Te hes Chisago Dally Ne Neds. Ine CABOT ouT FOR SENATE men past the fighting age—so why | Canyon, offers a series of\magnifi-| N. y POPULATION UP BEVERLY, Mass, April 22 (U. should we give it to a group just cent sights from its fafnots Rain- P.).—Former U. 8. Senator Henry because they have reached the fight bow mountain, NEW YORK, April 22 (U. P.).—| Cabot Lodge Jr, announced yes-|ing age? ~The entire park area can he seen, New York City's population has in- | terday he will seek the Republican| The Sinatra craze ought to be | from the peak, including the beauti-| creased from 7,455,000 to 7,768 000} nomination for the senate to rinlan indication to anybody that youth |, ful. natural amphitheaters of Black | in the last five years, according to| against a longtime personal friend, is still impressionable, flighty, and [Birch canyon, Agua Canyon and an estimate released by the’ «Con | U, -8. Senator David I. Walsh, vell- [that kids aren’ maturing any
I'here Is which is uniform over the entire area.
public.
tour
charge for the takes about five hours. Among the marvels of Carlsbad
The vacuum process, by means of !
live in region columns of stone,
Willis Creek, and 30 niles of the soldated Edison Co. » ‘eran Democrat, faster than they ever did,
oa § » - \ . - . » ‘ ~ : witin o> i his y JG RAIL Y : Alli pa Bah ok
