Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 31 July 1946 — Page 13

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Y 31, 1946 ion st pay Russia nodities. ANIZATIONS — s not to permit

efce and active tions of that

[§—As in. the | drafts, Finland to restore prop=United Nations 5. But here too, United Kingdom ether reimburse- , property should e-third or full nd its nationals * rights to propAllied nations as and other axis

’S MAYOR v 3 70 MILES uly 31 (U, P.).— Sitka’s newly ape mmutes between and his home, 70 narck.

Is new mayoralty in operates a bar the boom towns pomed along the ding to the Gare

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Yaye te Peye | -Lagawey

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“lamps and other lovely gifts.

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Inside Indianapolis

RESIDENTS in the 1500. block of E. 49th st. needn't. be surprised if they find us cooling off in one of the children's wading pools or stretched out on one of

these grassy front lawns one of these-hot mornings. Only a strong will kept us from doing one or the other—or both-—when we visited the neighborhood recently. (That and the fact that the wading pools were in use most of the time) , .. We found our first 1500 block resident as we got off the bus and ambled down Indianola. She was Mrs. Ernest Todd. "The Todds, now vacationing, visited in Madison and in Kentucky for a few days and came back home to rest up. ... Over a coke and potato chips we admired a flock of war souvenirs which Richard H, Pier, of 1510, brought his family from Italy and Switzerland. Mr. Pier has been a “Mr.” again only six weeks. He came back loaded with cameos, clocks, watches, cameo The fanciest of his souvenirs is a de luxe accordion, with as many gadgets as the control board of a B-29, that Mr. Pier brought back for himself. The Piers are trying to locate the man who found daughter Sherry’'s glasses at 52d st. and College ave. recently. The man made a round of the shops in the vicinity, trying to locate the owner of the glasses, He then left word he would turn them in to the Hoosier Optical Co. So far the company hasn't received them Mrs. Pier says. The Piers would be glad to go get the glasses if the finder would contact them, _—

Family Has Its Own Band

MR. PIER, incidentally, is only one of several musicians in his neighborhood. There's a whole band in the Marshall Reehling household, 1524, and a good one, according to neighbors who listen to the family’s nightly recital. Mr. Reehling plays bass viol, Mrs. Reehling, the ukulele; son Forrest, 13, the Hawaaian guitar, and: Ronald, 11, the Spanish guitar. The youngest member of the family, three-year-old Phil, doesn’t play anything yet and the family is hoping he'll turn out to be a vocalist. . . . Also musically inclined is Norfred Weaver, of 1511. Mrs.. Weaver also plays—she was playing the phonograph when we dropped in. The Weaver home was one of those equipped with an inviting looking wading pool. , . . Know what a farrier is? We didn’t until we talked to Mrs. Harris Dennis Lee, 1501, whose husband is a farrier, or as we would call it, a “horseshoe-er.” His mother, Mrs. Mary T. Lee, told us both of her sons, “Denny” and Charles, are farriers. So was her husband, the late Arthur E. Lee. The family has always been amused at the number of people who don't know what farrier means. Young Dennis wasn't in a very receptive mood when his mother asked if he was “going to shoe horses when you get big?” “I'm already big” scowled her son—age four. . . Mr. and Mrs? Albert Samuels, of 1505, have lived in Indianapolis five years. coming here from England. The Samuels, refugees from Germany at the outbreak of the war, went to England and then came to this country. Their three-year-old daughter, Frances, speaks both German and English. Because her parents

Politics in the Rough By Eldon Roark foe phe of milk will kill the

ALAMOSA, Colo., July 31. — Ex-Governor. Billy Adams, white-haired, 85-year-old rancher and cowpoke, seated in a big chair in the hotel here where he makes his home, chuckled as he considered my question. . What advice, I wanted to know, would he give a young man ambitious for a political career. Governor Billy has never been beaten in a political race, and he had been in plenty of them. He looks back on a long list of public offices, climaxed by three successive terms as governor—1926-28-30. And he's a Democrat, too, in a state considered normally Republican. “I'd get out and rough it with the crowd,” he said. “I'd meet the people and be myself. Too many young fellows nowadays want to get by on the family name. “A young man who wants to get on in politics ought to try to get into the legislature. That's good schooling. I had been a member of the legislature about 40 years before I was elected governor. That's where I got to know people, and where they got to know me.” Governor Billy was born in Wisconsin. ‘When he was 10. he, his mother, sister and four brothers came out in a covered wagon. The year was 1871. They came seeking health for one of the boys. Their father remained in business in Wisconsin. They camped where the city of Manitou Springs is now, and Brother Alva helped earn money for their living by hauling railroad ties. The ill brother died, and the family moved back to Wisconsin. But Alva and Billy stayed.

Cowboy Career Starts ALVA HAULED more ties, and then became a merchant. In 1878 he opened a hardware store in Alamosa. Billy worked in it and learned all about it, and in 1882 he took charge of it. Six years later they sold the store, and young Billy went for the life he really wanted—that .of a cowpoke. He started riding roundups, and he saved a few dollars and bought steers, sold at a profit, bought more and kept building up as a ranchér. Also he started dabbling in politics.

Sci It seems reasonable to suppose that atomic bomb No. 5—the second bomb exploded at Bikini—expended more than half of its energy blowing water up Into the air, This bomb, unlike the four atomic bombs previously exploded, was detonated under water. How=ever, it wasn't down very deep in the Bikini lagoon, having been suspended beneath a landing craft. I imagine that Joint Task Force One has no intention of ‘making public the exact depth at which the bomb was set off, but it is well known that the lagoon is less than 200 feet deep. There are plans for a test next year in the open sea, in which the bomb would be put down at a very considerable depth, The explosion ‘of the underwater bomb sent a peach-colored geyser of water and steam up into the air to a height of 9000 feet. Twenty seconds later, the geyser broke, sending tons of water toppling down into the lagoon. It is estimated that there was 1,000,000 tons of water in the geyser. The bomb explosion was also accompanied by a very sharp air blast. This would be another indica~tion that a very considerable amount of the bomb’s energy escaped into the air.

That may

y Energy Escapes in Air

THE DAMAGE to the ships in the target array seems to have been due chiefly to the underwater shock wave. That part of the energy which did not escape into the air or expend itself lifting water into

My Day

EN ROUTE TO CAMPOBELLO ISLAND.—I read with a great deal of. interest an item which came from Mexico City not long ago. In their famed national opera, Verdi's “Alda” was sung by an American soprano, Ella Belle Davis. - She might have made her debut on the operatic stage in her own country, where she has made a name for herself on the concert stage, but racial prejudice is nard to overcome. So perhaps she will go on from Mexico to sing other operas in other South American countries. Perhaps when Europe has been rehabilitated, she will sing there. And if she is great enough, some day some opera company in the United States may have courage enough to let her sing in an operatic performance in her own country.

Let Others Discover Artists _WE IN THE United States do let our prejudices spoil our enjoyment of talent. Sometimes it seems a little foolish, but perhaps it’ gives us more pleasure to let the rest of the world decide whether or not our citizens are great artists before we make the decision ourselves. . 8s After stopping overnight in Portland, Me, I have driven on up the coast, looking for. familiar landmarks as 1 went. Where was & € a w pits AL ’

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that nut shop or that’

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By Donna Mikels|

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SECOND SECTION {MEDICAL SCIENCE SEARCHES FOR

Immunity to Pol

(Third and Last ‘of a Series)

By KENNETH HUFFORD THE HARMLESS barberry bush, whose only crime is a thorny selfdefense to its medicinal fruit, once was accused of the heinous offénse of communicating. poliomyelitis. This is an jedication of medical thought concerning the disease understand German and her playmates, English, (even as recent as 20 years ago. At Frances thinks all adults understand German and all| that time, several prominent physichildren English. It confuses her when she speaks cians actually felt the search for to adults in German, and finds they speak only Eng-/the method of transmission had lish—a children’s language to her way of thinking. ended. i : | Still no one knows today, long Have a Neighborhood Pet {after the barberry bush theory pre- | THE PET OF THE BLOCK is Simba, a big gentle|cedeéd in discard dozens of other police dog who adopted the neighborhood. She be-|similar beliefs. longed to people who used to live on Rosslyn, but NW spent all her time over on 49th. When her owners) MOST OF these ideas have been moved, the dog became so unhappy they gave her to| considered carefully by a quiet, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Schnabel, of 1506. She's the slender physician here, Br. Walter favorite of all the children (and they are numerous | Stoeffler, state health board conin that block) and especially of the two Scnnabel | sultant in child diseases. children. Kristin, three, and Bruce, three months, . , .| Recently discharged from the A decided contrast to Simba is Babe, the Lee's dog. navy, Dr. Stoeffler collects medical Babe is just a good size handful of brown fur, com- literature on the subject of poliopared to towering Simba. . . . By the way, two Ralphs, myelitis, studies it with interest, Ralph Schnabel and Ralph Duckworth, of 1502, live hoping continually that one of his side by side. And in the next two houses are Richard! colleagues has made the all-im-Pier and Richard Wagner, 1514, and their families. portant discovery. We got all the last minute information on the Nor- “We've learned a lot about the ristown python when we. visited the Wagner resi-| disease, even though not what we dence. Mrs. Wagner's mother, Mrs. Ralph E. Wor- are anxious to know, the young land, of Shelbyville, was telling her daughter the physician pointed out. latest developments in the snake hunt which has . 8 8 » turned a national spotlight on her home vicinity, , ..| “FOR EXAMPLE, we know that Kay Stephens, eight-year-old granddaughter of Mrs. swimming pools must contain more Laura Kelly, 1530, has the longest hair of any child | than an ordinary amount of chloin the neighborhood. Her hair hangs way below her rine in order to provide protection waist: when braided it's so long she has to be care-| 88ainst the infantile paralysis virus, ful when she sits down. , . . There's never a block although common gastro-intestinal without a “first” resident. We found the “oldtimers” disorders may be prevented by a of this block on one of our last stops. They are Mr.| lesser amount. and Mrs. LW. Jackson, of 1523, “oldtimers” only “It isn't difficult to locate the from the standpoint of residence in the 1500 block | virus,” Dr.” Stoeffler said. "It's on 49th. They've lived in their present house, which found in sewage, milk, water; flies was about the second built on that street, for 20 years. Carry it; many persons unknowingly g carry the virus in their nose and - % | throat.” The physician emphasized that

The long and short of it . . . Kristin Schnabel and her dog, king-sized “Simba” and Dennis Lee and “Babe.”

| virus; however, it is not disturbed have been due somewhat to the influence of Brother py freezing. : Alva who had become governor. But how does it enter the body? The ex-governor now has 10,000 acres of grain x un and grazing land here in picturesque San Luis valley.| IT IS known to be possible for He goes to his ranch nearly every day and still rides | the virus to enter nerve-endings, despite his years. He wants no better recreation, he such as through the nasal passages says, than to get on a horse and “work a bunch of | into the brain. This course of cattle.”

Riley hospital's amazing facilities victims. Gilbert Pring, assistant

travel is similar to that of rabies . His cattle are up in the mountains now for the and other diseases carried by the] DESPITE popular belief to the summer, grazing on leased land. | netves rather than the blood. In|contrary, there actually is a rela- ; a | experimental animals, the virus has|tively high degree of immunity to President Truman Praised ey investigators GOVERNOR BILLY said he and his fellow cattle- in the creature's arm.

| been introduced by exposing a nerve the disease, medical have found. Even in severe epimen are making some money. “Cattle are awful

Dr. Stoeffler pointed to another demics, the rate of those contract-

high." {medical report in his possession, ing the disease is seldom greater | susceptible to the disease until heli, infection by the virus.

He is optimistic about the future, thinks President | showing the virus is known to be| than one to each 1000 persons, comTruman is doing a good job. | n As I arose to leave, I noticed the framed photo- through the gastro-intestinal tract. least 10 times that high. graph of a dog—an alert little gray-and-white pooch.! A large group of research workers,| “Civilization develops immunity She was so fat that she looked deformed.

“That's Anna,” he said. “She was my pardner.”| disease enters any way except board consultant opined.

Yes, Anna was dead, and he certainly missed her.| through the nerves to the spinal | Half the cases involved children! ] Although born: with the! “ This group exultantly emphasizes blood anti-bodies of his mother, ‘aKeD.

She used to go with him everywhere. Wouldn't let|cord and then. to the brain. anybody but him pick her up. She died in 1944. “What kind of a dog was she?” I asked.

| under 5.

‘WEDNESDAY, JULY 31, 1946

A completely equipped shop for making appliances is a part of

ports that will help some child to walk again.

| capable of entering the human body | pared to a measles incidence at anti-bodies

| however, resists any belief that the|to all appearances,” the state health | DR. STOEFFLER shuffled his! Public health officials shake their

that the vitus never has been found | providing . protection for the first “Blood from those who have re-

— Labo mmm Study Leading -Toward Labor Laws Expected

By FRED W. PERKINS

MEANS OF TRANSMISSION—

io is Rather High

one aproach, -

“It was found to prevent mon- WASHINGTON, July 31 keys from contracting the disease

in average exposure. But it had Chances are improving that cons

no effect on curing the disease once |E¥ 5% before it quits late this week, it was contracted.” will authorize a thorough commits A vaccine principle, similar to one tee study leading toward labor lege used in rables serum, also has been |iqatio session studied. Some experimental ani- n io a Ue ; beginning mals contracted the disease anyway, ary. This would be one of the few

discouraging workers. Investigators have been handicapped to a large results from the highly disturbed labor-management situation in the

extent by the relative scarcity of monkeys. They are about the only |first part of this year, which pros

animals of value in poliomyelitis duced many days of heated debate experimentation, laboratory work- Over drastic proposals to curb labor ers say. unions, The study committee was urged by President Truman for long-term legislation in connection with the emergency proposals he dramatical« search efforts. ly laid before congress in a joing “Oddly enough, there is no evi- session May 25—when public excites dence that poor health or lack of ment was at fever heat over the vitamins makes a‘child any more coal and railroad strikes, susceptible to the paralyzing dis- y » =» ease,” Dr. Stoeffler continued. "In| THE HOUSE immediately aus fact, many robust children seem |thorized a joint committee, almost to be sprinkled liberally among the as quickly as it put through the unfortunate.” Truman bill which would have eme Some medical authorities believe |powered the President to draf this is because the robust child strikers under military control in often exercises harder. The rela-|great emergencies. tionship of fatigue to onset of the| Both measures went to the sens disease has been of interest to|ate, where after a long fight the investigators for a long time. It is| Truman bill was toned down by's recalled that {he late President|coalition of conservative and more Roosevelt became exhausted from | leftish members. It was returned to a.long summer swim, suffering a the house where—the excitement later chill that often marks the having died down and no big opening stage of poliomyelitis. strikes being immediately in prose "0" pect—it was pigeonholed. HEALTH board officials through-| The senate referred the joing out the country continue to issue|commitiee proposal to its commite warnings against tonsillectomy op-| tee on education and labor, which erations during the summer months. finally reported a bill specifying 10 Many ear, nose and throat sur- of the 14 members must be chosen geons refuse to perform the opera- from it and the house labor coms tions after June until late fall. mittee. While no one is prepared to an-| dE swer this question any more than| THE BILL went through the sens many others concerning the malady, ate audit and control committee, for there is evidence that the disease | approval of a request for $50,000 often develops following the removal for the joint committee's expenses, of tonsils and adenoids, even other| The audit chairman, Senator Lue operations involving the respiratory cas (D, Ill), has just reported an tract. | approval of $30,000—half to be paid One current theory, without by the house—and has placed the standing among leading research |bill on the senate's calendar, but workers and medical authorities, is with the statement that he bee that poliomyelitis is caused by ex-|lieved the measure should be res (loses these inherited immunity fac-|payusting effort that dilates smaller stored to the form in which i$ |tors, developing new ones of his|pjnoq vessels of the spinal column. passed the house. 0 fesearens iy are Incined) often, it is reasoned, this is fol- 5» to ve. Ss 8 » j0- | myelitia a rs oa lowed by a chill and spasm of these| gg gArD he agreed on this with ! ) vessels, lasting long enough to dam- |}. majority leader, Senator Barke { his mother, the child becomes more | age spinal nerves and lay them open : ley (D. Ky.)—which means conside

erable force behind the view that the senate and house labor come

- » ¥ THERE is no assuted reward for posure, | vigilant parents, anxious to protect mutiees should not dominate the : = s i .

, {their children as much as Pusetsle. Under the house bill the joint

| committee would be named by the presiding officers of the house and “All possible approaches are being| th rich, the rural and the urban, | Preare Seven members would the pediatrician declared |B SOPE and the weak, the come from each body. The come , cloistered and the street urchin all} ittee could sit during the recess have about the same chance of of congress, and would be directed J to report within six months of its

~ . » RECENTLY a species of rat has been found to contract the disease, however, and this has renewed re-

for treatment of infantile paralysis bracemaker, finishes a pair of sup-

| usually develops his own specific through minor ex-

literature again. | heads, admitting that the poor and

“She was a—" He couldn't think of the breed. lin the biood of its victims, |few months of life, a child soon covered—known as convalescents'|contracting the disease. “Fox terrier?” I suggested. “No,” he said. “She was a terrier, but not a fox

... I'll think of it in a minute.” “Well, when I write about her I'll just refer to her as a terrier,” I said. “Wait a minute,” he said. By then he was exasperated. He phoned friends who would know what kind of a dog Anna was. But they were out! I said it didn't matter. But Governor Billy was| v determined. He called the woman clerk at the hotel By MARGY ERITE SMITH | She knew Anna well, but she didn't know the breed.| THERE'S a hint of the Mediter- | The governor's ire rose to the boiling point. He ranean in Joe Siracusa’ garden called his niece, but the question stumped her, t00. |behind his grocery store at 903 N.| “Don’t go to any more trouble, Governor,” I plead- Pershing ave. ! ed. “We'll just call Anna a terrier . . . Goodby, : ; } Mr. Siracusa is well-known in

and thank you.” : : He said goodby reluctantly. “If you could wait local gardening circles for his large fig tree. And well he may be, con-

around a while, I..." " |sidering the effort he makes each . . year to dig it up, lay it down, and By David Dietz cover it up against winter's cold. - | § 3 But that's not the only interesting | part of his garden. Sweet “basilico” | and “slick” (Batavian) endive neatly edge his garden path. The endive |will presently make better tasting |salad, he says, than the curly kind | {more commonly raised. He prefers] : : [pila leaved parsley, too. | » ” » » | Bomb Teaches Lesson { HE TOLD me how he bleaches| THIS WAS the case where the bomb fell into the fennel, planting it in a trench, | water arid exploded below the surface. The shock of filling in as the stalks grow, then] , i {eating it raw, celery fashion. | the explosion was then transmitted by the water to Buy the really exciting vegetable] the hull of -the ship. lin his garden is the perennial, globe | In the case of atomic bomb No. 5, the underwater|artichoke. Four plants started from shock wave apparently caused the Arkansas to sink|seeq this spring are now about a almost immediately. It went down in a matter of foot tall, the leaves somewhat re-. minutes. {sembling thistle leaves. He'll have The aircraft carrier Saratoga, likewise, was split to cosset them like the fig tree, open, but it sank more slowly. Adm. Blandy hoped t0| covering them with straw this fall. | GH beach it and sent two tugs into the lagoon with that| Next year hopes to harvest those Si idea in mind but the radio-active condition of the|flower buds you buy in market as i lagoon made it necessary for the tugs to retreat. artichokes. | One lesson can be taught immediately from the| Mrs. Siracuse described a mouth- | Bikini bomb tests. It is that no ship is a match for|watering stuffing she uses for the an atomic bomb which goes off in its immediate vi-| artichokes they buy while waiting gently steamed. It's tasty stuffed cinity. There is absolutely no doubt about the fact |for their own plants to produce. It into half a cabbage! that one bomb can sink one ship, even a battleship. | consists of fine bread crumbs, grated | oN N I ships are close together, as they were in the ytaiian cheese, and minced garlic| MRS. CHARLES BOLDREGHINI, Bikini tests, the bomb can be counted on to get more worked into a paste with olive oil a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Sirathan one ship. and stuffed into the “leaves” of the |cusa, mentioned that basil, besides {arfichoke bud. Set upright in “just being good in spaghetti sauce “and a little” salted water the whole is'almost everything,” gives fish. a

By Eleanor Roosevelt — etme r 'FIVE NEW SUBJECTS GLERMONT CHILD, d * ADDED AT BUTLER U. On the way up to Campobello island, I used to] Five additions to curriculum of

make acquisitions which my family enjoyed, since it} KILLED ON HIGHWAY the Butler university fall semester

is not very easy on the island to get a variety of food. | Five-year-old Carol N. Spikes, (oo division have been ani Jays ntiful there. Gardens are late, but fish is always ple daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C. R. nounced by Dr. George F. Leonard

vy Tne “ A Spikes, of Clermont, was fatally in- ) tor. Will Unveil Memorial to FDR a ran director

I MAY BE in time for the late strawberries, be- against the side of a moving auto- | cause they ripen slowly. flavor, somewhat like the ones grown on the Ile| wars Spikes said she saw her hours; philosophical problems, two D'Orleans, in the St. Lawrence river, near Quebec. | gaughter start to run across the po... urban sociology, three hours: These are famous for their delicious flavor. highway and yelled at her to sto ¢ijesmanship, two hours, and trafIt used to be easy, when we had a boat, to 80 put the child kept running into the gq. management, two hours and come to the mainland, but a storm destroyed our path of the car. ; = boathouse and boat last winter.’ Carl Songer, of Veedersburg, On Aug. 1, a monument will be unveiled in the driver of the car, swerved sharply little village of Welchpool, Campobello Islands N. B. to the side of the road to avoid in memory of my husband, who went there so often|the child but-she ran into the side in his boyhood and early manhood and loved not only of his machine before he could the island itself but the waters all around it. | stop. : . at He knew the coast of New Brunswick and of Nova| She was taken to Methodist hos-| Scotia and was as good a sailor man thereabouts as pital where she died later of al gr many of the natives. : fractured skull and internal fo- 400 last night. They asked me particularly to try to be in Campo-| jiries. : The missing prisoners were listed bello on Aug. 1, so I am glad that, with my son| Besides the parents she is sur-'as Roscoe Linkiter, 19, of 1221 EngElliott and his family, I will be there. Soon after- vived by a sister, Phyllis, 11, and lish ave. and Robert C. Derringer, ward, we will start for home. "a brother, David, 3. 1 lof Connersville,

the air, was transmitted as a wave of pressure through the water. Water is practically incompressible and experience in world war II taught the dangers of these underwater shock waves. Frequently a ship was more damaged by a “near miss” than by a direct hit.

Joe Siracusa, 203 N. Pershing outstanding item in his garden.

place where, in the past, I stopped to buy jellies or Jams?

£

The courses and credits given

2 PRISONERS ESCAPE FROM REFORMATORY

Officials of the state reformatory Pendleton reported two young prisoners escaped from the institu-

GARDENING: 75 Days Remain for Vegetable Growing—

Local Grocer Raises Fig Tree and Endive © mines

They have a wonderful mobile on Highway 34 in Clermont. therefor are play production, three |

appointment. 5 Its recommendations on new labor laws would be reported direct to the two branches of eongress,

that the proposals must go through |the regular standing committees, * 7 are borne off and on all summer; | This is the core of the argue (quite out-blooming her large flow- ment, for neither the house nop {ered blue variety. They are followed | senate labor committee has ever |by attractive plumy seed tufts. She acted favorably on a bill opposed {gives the vine a little lime around | by organized labor, Such unione the roots. | opposed legislation as has passed In general clematis do their best | either or both bodies has been {in full sun with a little shrubbery | Prousht Vo. \he Noor through thy y strategem of by-passing the regue {growing up to their knees to protect | jar lahor committees {roots and lower vines from 00 | - {much heat. They like plenty of | | water, but not standing around the {roots, and lime—a pound dug in |around each vine is not too miich {for average soil.

——We, the Women—— . - ' Divorces Don't » ~ » ) WHAT DO we have time to plant Guarantee aq . |In our vegetable garden now ‘that | ! August is here, asks a beginning | Happy Solution |gardener? The first killing frost in {central Indiana arrives . mid- By RUTH MILLET? |October in an average year. The. | WHEN A Cleveland judge, who |oretically you still have 75 growing 2d heard 3500 divofice cases in six days. But drouth, poor soil, as wel] | months, Tecently advised veterans |as waning sunshine will slow up| 30d their wives 10 40 -some lof growing time. To play safe plang | 81ving and forgetting of wartime such quick maturing crops as greens. | Unfaithfulness on either side, he chard, collards, endive, lettuce, | "°° swamped with angry protests mustard, spinach. They'll grow well| Apparently, a lot of people think in cool fall weather, that the advice-giver who recome | Kale planted now and not used Mends forgiving in the face of une {until after frost will have a sweeter | f8ithfulness condones unfaithfule |taste as ‘well as linger on for use| Pts itself. {into early winter, go 8. 2 88 | THAT IS foggy-minded reasons BEETS, carrots, and bush beans|\N8: Nobody can now help what \have an excellent chance to mature |N@PPened to marriages during the {unless frost is early. For carrots, | War years. It is a fact that many (wonderful flavor when mixed with select the chunky Chantenay or Ox-|°f them were scarred by unfaithe {garlic, finely chopped, sprinkled over 'heart types. They will produce fat| fulness on the part of husband or Li fish. |roots quicker. Turnips are better| Wife. But divorce won't change the | Mrs. Harold Bohnstedt, 33 Lock- fall planted than spring planted, |{act—or guarantee a happy solus burn st, has a variety of clematis| For a fall garden plan to give it|tion to the problem. not commonly seen. Labeled only extra attention. Plant seeds a little | All that divorce will do in many |“red” clematis, when she bought it, deeper if ground is dry. Water when | Cases is bolster, momentarily, the

the flowers are a soft fuchsia and !rains fall. Keep it growing. {pride of the wronged husband or po A - —— te. mt WTR,

TWO WOMEN ROUT WAR MOTHERS SET | IF THE aie on bo saved by

{ FISH FRY FESTIVAL |forsiveness, then what is so wrong BURGLAR PROWLER y jabout that? Surely a marriage is ' | Final preparations are being made | more important than pride—especie one by the Wayne Township War Moth. | #1 so when children are involved, The judge was simply being a |realist. The wartime unfaithfulness is done and past. But there is still the marriage. The judge was simply asking the husband and wife to put their mare riage ahead of ‘their own injury and to try to hold it together. - = . THAT, CERTAINLY, is no cone doning of unfaithfulness. It is sage

ave. . . . the fig tree is only one

Two Indianapolis women, armed with her dog and the other ers 2, for their third annual fish with a gun, routed a burglar and & fry and festival to be held Thurs-

.prowler from their homes on OP- | dav. Frid posite sides of the city last night. |» Friday and Saturday, at 6128

When Mrs. Dennis Griffen, 1411|W. Washington st, Marlow ave, went to investigate a| During the past two years, the noise in her garage last night, she war mothers have donated more

saw a man dragging her daughter's bicycle toward the alley. (than $2000 to activities that have

“Go get him,” she said to her aided the veteran. dog, Buck. In a flash Buck dashed| Mrs. Dewey S. “Hoss, presi into the darkness of the alley, yelp! amed th ys HNowt president ing that a patched-up marriage f8 ing and snarling. { ? e following committee often better than a broken marWhen Mrs. Griffen got back to Members who will be in charge of riage the garage she found the bicycle ly- events and concessions at the ing in the alley, The thief was not femival: : |in sight. Mrs, James Campbell general chair|cover that their marriage has been | About the same time on the West lire.’ ay Barker, Ht mamess Christian, | 4 |side, Mrs. Mrs. * Charles -

Sue ‘Chadwell, 516 N.|schank. Mrs. Perry in, Mrs. CD |can either patch it up—or Fansler, Mi L. Luett st., encountered a man on her| Fansler, hrs. Sau on, Mrs, it up.

{porch who refused to leave. She Pelley, Mrs ar, : r got her gun and fired two. shots at|jester. Mrs. Orle Fowsl | Mrs. ° the fleeing mah, but. she doesn't! ell i yr AE think either of the bullets hit him. 'FUFTi0e, Mr Ors Wright and Mra

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