Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 August 1946 — Page 12
9, 1046 LECKRONE = HENRY W. MANZ Business Manager
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Give Light and the People WU Fing Their Own Way
eB SR 3
G. 0. P. GIVES MACHINE ISSUE |
oY both a local and state scale, the Republican party has : provided its opponents with an issue, the issue of machine rule. The refusal of Henry E. Ostrom; G. O. P. county chairman, to accede to demands of candidates in the fall election that he resign because of his repudiation at the polls, presents the issue of machine rule on a platter. Sole issue in the party primary was bossism, It is emphasized by the ruthless manner in which the statehouse machine controlled the Republican state convention, dominating selection of candidates and purging those who didn’t fit in with the long-range plans of the statehouse crowd. The pattern of machine politics was markedly similar in both instances, except that the Marion county purge didn't work. It didn’t work because sufficient voters believed Judge Judson L. Stark, who spearheaded the opposition to boss rule and won the nomination for prosecuting attorney along with other anti-machine candidates who beat the purge. ; The rank and file of the party had their say in May when it repudiated the Ostrom leadership. So will the rank and file of the independent voters have their say in the fall about those they choose for places on the public payroll. The governor and his machine, and Mr. Ostrom and his machine, have given the Democrats a machine-made issue of boss rule for the November election. They should . remember that in Indiana politics, the independent voters can swing an election, if they are interested enough to go to the polls. Such tactics could well bring them out.
5
A A RR
SEE
WE SPEND, RUSSIA COLLECTS
IRECTOR GENERAL LA GUARDIA, in Europe to # ohserve field operations of UNRRA, is at long last beginning to see the light. Austria, he thinks, might be able to get on its own feet in 1048, “assuming that the government and the people are able to work out their own salvation.” This means, he explains, that the Austrian people might begin to feed “themselves if the occupation armies are withdrawn from their country.
other agencies for relief, but doesn't tell the whole story, which needs more spelling out than Mr. La Guardia has | given it. There are two reasons for Austria's need of outside help: -
ONE: Her productive machinery has been demoralized |
- ¥ i
be replaced before Austria can attain an economic balance.
TWO: One-third of her budget is going to pay military Sg, costs, due in major part to an unnecegsarily large Russian army living off the land. .
While Russia milks Austria dry, UNRRA is feeding
_ basic fault in the UNRRA concept, and Mr, La Guardia | has admitted another—the fact that UNRRA field teams do not have freedom of movement in areas under Russian control, In other words, Mr. La Guardia's organization has _* been dumping foed into Russian-occupied territory withoyt | knowing what happens to it. Mr. La Guardia insists 1 is going to find out. He certainly should, and further "deliveries should be withheld until he does. The United States, as a result of accepting responsi- | bility without authority, is pouring money into a bottomless pit. It's a “spend and spend” relief program without the “elect,” for we have no vote. We just put up the cash.
PINK NOTE FROM BRAZIL
Lus CARLOS PRESTES, head of the Brazilian Communist party, has clarified the party line attitude with respect to the United States and Russia. Senhor Prestes denies he ever said that, in case of war between the United States and the Soviet Union, the Brazilian Communist party would be.on the side of Russia. What he said, he insists, was that, in case of war by | #imperialistic elements” in the United States, Brazilian ' party members would be on the side of Russia. The Soviet Union wants peace, he explains, so that any war between the United States and Russia obviously would be imperialistic on the part of the United States. Senhor Prestes, we would gay, has clarified the Communist attitude beyond any possibility of misunderstanding.
WE CAN GET DIZZY
EAD in Paris is Miss Gertrude Stein, who wrote “A rose
alas.” w "Alive in St. Louis, but under fire from Missouri English teachers, is Dizzy Dean, who formerly ‘‘flang for the Cardi- ~ mals” and uses such expressions as second” and “Musial looks hitterish.”
i 1 d what Miss Stein was driving at. She used words » obtain effect. Mr. Dean, by contrast, seeks only to get
of classical education, “Me and Paul,” he says,
get no schoolin’.” ‘
1 i : .
"That Pythen Should Drop His False Reserve, Look Us in the Eye"
| and amateur sl
of course, delight our Hoosier nat- «BARBER SHOP PRIC | uralists} but more far -reaching AS OPERATING COSTS RISE” benefits would accrue, . Sd 8 . . influx of because Russia has removed great quantities of vital equip- | crews to immortalize the event, and i i . u f thi ust (on their heels a broadcasting unit} ment, under the guise of reparations. Much o $s m IO a ER 8 a shop prices. [debut. Picture a hole issue of the, | National Geographic devoted to an {exhaustive and colorful study of the {Hoosier phenomenon, |8hoé Recorder might even consider 'it a significant trend toward “made lin America” shoes and accessories x the country’s people. The United States provides almost and send their python editor to ber shop supplies,
T ' s xp : ™ y rap. |COVEr the event. three-fourths of UNRRA's money, yet is virtually ‘power- |; oc" ioiont scout from Hallyw
less to do anything to correct conditions responsible for might just be looking for a nw face a's i it i i {to do a re-release of “Garden of P2& Austria's inability to support herself. This emphasizes one | $ sharuening : and
Eden.” } them have all increased in prices,
entific, aesthetic, and purely com- | mercial standpoint, that any Hoo- | several months |sier python worthy of the name as an apprentice un {should drop whatever false reserve barber before he can obtain a I 'is binding him to Flat Rock and cense to barber. look his public in the eye. If Indiana tan produce a hatful good haircut or shave in le e of writers and pqliticians each gen- twenty to twenty-five minutes. If leration, it ought to be able tp pro-1he could wield a razor and shears| {duce one python—if one python is all of the time that he has to have { his shop open-~61 hours a week—he could make some money. But he {has to wait for customers apd eat {and rest at their convenience, only | [to have some come in at the 1 | minute and keep him working over Rp hours. Open 61 hours a week and then they complain because you are
promised.
| “HOW ABOUT EXPRESS BUS SERVICE TO CUT WAITING?” By Bus Rider, City
dianapolis column mentioned | advisability of making the Central- | Keystone bus express part way.
{ press to 30th or 82d st. would help, decrease the waiting done by far north siders .
of them. Then perhaps someone could per- hours a week for seventeen years, sugde the Indianapolis Railways to| Without a vacation, just to make a initiate busses which run only as!living. How many of our critics | would be willing to do that?
=" is a rose is a rose” and “Pigeons on the grass, alas,
‘Marion . slud into
w English teachers would admit failure te under- |
a his: ideas across. Unlike Miss Stein,” he missed the adto start choppin’ cotton when we was young and |
behalf, we urge a broader tolerance upon the | 8 of Missouri. Let them remember the! rd Grant White, a favorite purist of the! in his day, and an Anglophile as well: corrupted and often enriched by the ‘man who takes no thought of his parts
far as the C-K bus expresses.
1
EP
av A ee T
Hoosier Forum
-
By Ye Young Herpetologist, Haughyille
Capture of a fine python would,
Picture the and television
By a Barber, Indianapolis. newsreel
Business property never been frozen.
menths ago.
Boot and
And last, but not tonics, shampoos, ete. ood creased in
So much is at stake from a sci-
» ” ® Early this week the Inside
not open later.
It's a good idea. Making it ex-
, who already have
o Return Ticket
ES Up
just four walls, Plumhing a : : ; | equipment has to be purchased and hanging onto the. blind man's other | i165 It may be used to pay for transportation kept in repair by the renter.
such as soaps, | have in- blind couple safely to the north|
b, in the meantime also waving juxury tax added that has to be to halt a westbound Washington id. Razors and electric clippers, Streetcar and repair work ‘on automobiles. He then calmly came back, boarded the car and started A man has‘to go to barber school | Up ds if this act, which was outside and serve two years and above his assigned duties, was der a licensed only a commonplace occurrence. In i- reality it may have been the means] of saving the lives of these two blind persons, or at least their seriss than OWS injury. {Some time ap» out on E. New| York st. I saw a blind man wave {his cane and start across the street.
{
i
"| do not agree with a word that you say, but | will defend to the death « your right to say it." — Voltaire.
“BUS DRIVER 137 HELPS BLIND FOLK CROSS STREET” By J .P. Murray, 1316 N, DeQuincy st. i like warmly commend an Indianapolis Railways operator: who went out The search for Indiana's giant python, lurking pomewhere in the of his” way to perform a kind and underbrush around Flat Rock river, shouldn't continue too long. Re-! praiseworthy deed. membering the national tension that prevailed during the quest for ani his name but his number is 137, ‘ ideal Scarlett O'Hara, we feel that suspense, tdo long sustained, may ‘I was riding east on car No. 131 Gy ? : ™ | prove detrimental to the state, While herpetologists and professional on the E. Washington line .about That hints at why Austria must look to UNRRA and 1p euths beat ‘the Hoosier bushes for the elusive reptile, 4:15 p. m. Sunday gfternoon, July | Illinois or Ohio, or even Kentucky, may pop up with one of their home- 28, when suddenly the brakes were | spent in any one vear will be one million dollars for grown pythons. How would that make us look?
I would
stan a :
ww
OUR TOWN. .. By
nd " * ‘ “
d?
I DOUBT WHETHER adequate analysis has yet - been made of the part. Peg Hamiltorr played in the political campaign that put Booth Tarkington into the Indiana legislature (session 1902-03), Peg, whosegreal name was James H., was the most colorful hack driver Indianapolis ever had: For years he had his stand on the levee, in front of Billy Tron's saloon on N. Illinois . st. (where the Three Sisters now do business). There was no mistaking him or his stand. As a rule he wore a derby of the type known as a “bowler;” and if for any reason the hat was missing, there was always Punch--Peg's pet bulldog, like as not sound asleep on the driver's seat, Better than anybody else, Peg Hamilton grasped the intricate geography of Indianapolis. He knew his way around. Indeed, it was he who elevated the business of hack driver into that of a cicerone. Which was all the more remarkable when considered in the light of the biological fact that Peg was not a native of Indianapoliss He came here by way of Terre Haute, his birthplace, which even as far back as then had a reputation for breeding politicians,
Campaign for Tarkington
THERE 'I8 EVEN REASON to believe that Peg was born with a politician's blood coursing through his veins. In support bf which 1 exhibit his father, a member of the legislature at the time of Peg's birth. Legend has it that his father was so tied up with affairs of state in Indianapolis that he couldn't €ind time to run home to welcome his son's arrival. : . Booth Tarkington and Peg Hamilton were just about the same age. Moreover, both enjoyed enviable reputations at the fime of the epoch-stirring campaign. As for Peg, he had made a name for himself by hauling Presidents Hartison, McKinley and Theodore Roosevelt through the streets of Indianapolis. And, in addition, he held the record for the longest , hack haul ever asked for around®™here. Peg hung up his record the day a wobbly Bates house guest climhed into his cab and demanded to be hauled to Cincinnati. Wflhout batting an eye Peg started off and got as far as Shelbyville, at which
World-Wide Sc
WASHINGTON, Aug. 2.—Arkansas Senator J. William Fulbright, who used to be a college president himself, is now proud author of a bill to provide about 314 million dollars worth of free and higher worldwide education over the next 20 years. Fulbright's bill was passed by the senate last April. It got by the house the other afternoon in about 10 minutes with not much attention and no opposition. It is an amendment to—of all things—the surplus property act. By an ingenious bit of higher mathe'matics, Senator Fulbright has found a way to finance out of the ‘sale of war junk a system of American * scholarships that makes Cecil Rhodes look like a piker. Senator Fulbright, you see, was once a scholar himself with a couple of degrees from Oxford.
to publicly and
I do not know
Surplus Property Is Source
~ THE WAY BSBENATOR FULBRIGHT worked this thing out, definite amounts received from surplus war material sold abroad will be earmarked for foreign scholarship funds. The maximum amount to be
applied, the car stopped and the each country cut in on the program.
operator
ave. Looking
People ignorant of facts should See what had | withhold their criticism of barber operator franflically wave down a)
quickly 1 > ' A | pence the ador A Jeane J: extremely difficult for most of the war-broke countries ! elieve it was about aml ton | to find dollars to pay for war surpluses they buy. He
occurred, I saw the
left his seat,|
Fylbright ‘sold this idea on the theory that it is
out the window tl figured that funds kept in the purchasing countries
| and spent in their own currencies would ease the burden, in addition-to which the United States would
| automobile approaching from the| ,. }.0 gainer by having a cultural relations program
rents have! West, run-over and grasp the arm My shop rent of a blind man who had left the
was increased 25 per cent three CUrb and was waving his white cane | ,.,n0rty sold abroad and earmarked for this educaA business room is Amd starting across the street. A
second to none. Money received from the sale of U. S. surplus
tional fund may be used in a number of ways. It may
nd all woman, also apparently bling, was | go to pay the expenses of U. 8. students in foreign
Bdr-|
price and have had a Cur
A barber can not give a really
Most. people these days seem to have money to spend in taverns, vacation trips or anything else that
affords them pleasure, but begrudge | “BLIMINATE SUGGESTIVE
a 45-minute to 1-hour ride ahead Paying someone else enough to SPORTS EVENTS” {make a living. I have put in 70 HUMOR AT SPORTS
Side Glances—By Galbraith.
!
arm.
| of foreign students coming to the United States for
The operator gently guided: the higher education, to endow a professorship enabling
ast MY car and assisted the poo | to the opposite curb after the traf-|
| fic slowed up.
{all of us to be extra considerate of | | these people who go walking around lin perpetual darkness. Remember, |
| A speeding car swerved crazily | larqund him, barely missing him.| The man jumped ‘back on the curb, | | probably scared frantic. I s{opped
!
several westbound |
LOS ANGELES, Aug. 2.—People who make movies | are fond of bragging that their medium is far and | away the finest methed of story-telling vet known. In the same breath, they apologize for their many trite,
what they want, It is easier, they say, to deal with a tested commodity than to spend time ‘and money making films to provide uplift and education. Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, sometime in October, will release “The Beginning or the End,” Bob Considine’s, story of the development of the atomic bomb, jg’
man| No Ham in Script : ‘| THE BOX OFFICE SUCCESS of this ventuve— 1 hejleve It behooves | to me, at least—is an important indication of the { future value of motion pictures in painless education’ | . and also of the willingness of the movie goer to
allow himself to be educated. It may be that the
the badge of their affiction 1s B man with the ticket wants only Betty Grables legs
white cane.
i BY Ben Davis.
kept clean?
and the vacuous comedy of Red Skelton, and will bitterly resént an effort to inform him when he is looking merely for an hour's escape from income taxes, e Although M-G-M’s pictorial rundown on the bomb
o o
Why can't Indianapolis sports be was swiftly made, it has been a gigantic undertaking.
What is the use off It is a hybrid documentary and dramatic film. Out
| bringing small boys up with a high of 212 speaking parts, only three are fictitious.
moral standard if everywhere they | turn they see and learn just the
| opposite?
My boys like to see the midget races. This is in itself a clean and
exciting $port. tracks every few minutes the an-
nunc, "sam. masesive, 0. WORLD AFFAIRS . . . By H.
called joke.
Glancing
gusted looks.
| Hays office,
thing?
COPR, 1946 BY NEA'SERVICE INC. TM. REQ. U.S PAT, OFF - ois ’ 3 3
Will you wait till | go out of town to eat them?"
Brae : ai -
LU 3 . : : E roti | "V've got so | know these chicken personally, watching them grow! | ENVY!’ eldest-born CharleseJennens,
I thought I would take them to| see the thriling acts of the Hell Drivers at the Midget Speedway. It was a good show, well worth the money, until they had to ruin the| whole evening by putting in a filthy Mexico and made the country its own but, paraact, a dirty suggestive stunt using! an outside toilet and a clown, I always thought clowns were used] | to make children laugh. This act |eyen embarrassed my small boys! ypable to get the 10,000 signatures necessary to win | who are taught that such things ' {are private and not to be talked about or éxhibited in public. casually crowd that night I saw many dis-
nat needed to attract the crowd, Tt is bad enough to sit down next to a! drunken couple, who are nolisy,| | smelly and brazen. | {| What Indianapolis needs
DAILY THOUGHT ‘For where envyifig and strife is, there is confusion and every evil work.—~James 3:16.
A flock of scientists. have been tethered to the studio. Dr. Henry T. Wensel, of the bureau ot standards, who was chief of the technical division of the Manhattan project, has devoted a couple of
But at both local months to seeing? that the movie makers got their
Red Influence
MEXICO CITY, Aug. 2.—Communism has invaded
doxical the Communist party as such has but a feeble role in the Mexican political arena. This latter fact was demonstrated in the recent presidential elections when the Communist party was
a place on the ballot. ‘Russian Diplomats Active THOUGH THE PARTY IS scoffed at in this country because “it is behind the times” while other parties are away ahead of the. Moscow line, every
around the!
This sort of thing is
trated by individual Communists and communism was actually an underlying issue in choosing-a new president. The leading candidate, Miguel Aleman—now presi-
is a Will | ident-elect—shied carefully away from the subject
| This may aiso help to stop some i i | 3 may al Lop some | ; ; shi t, | of this child delinquency. How much | during his campaigning While lip shief monet
can you expect from a child in a city that tolerates
former Foreign Minister Ezequiel Padilla, charged \ | flatly that communism had all Mexico in its grip. this’ sort ‘of But Aleman’s righthand man took a leave from his Ly job as editor of El Popular, a leftist newspaper with "+ | strong Communist leanings, to campaign for him. Furthermore, the top figures in the Partido Revolucionario Institutional (P. R, I.) the dominant party of ‘Mexico, of which -both Aleman and - Presidént | Manuel Avila Camacho are members, have strong Communist backgrounds, :
of hell! Now the Communists “have learned their lesson,
Anton Scherrer -
IN WASHINGTON . . . By Peter Edson
branch of the Mexican government has been infil-
They prefer to bore from within, Labor unions were
¢
place his customer sobered up sufficiently to want
te return to Indianapolis. Peg charged him $50 for the round trip, which, everybbdy regarded as eminently fair, considering the excessive overhead of hacks, horses and dogs at the time. Peg was a square shooter. Compared with which, Booth Tarkington had twe novels to his credit. Peg was not unmindful of the superb quality of his friend's books, but he seriously questioned the propriety of a novelist running for a political office. Peg's opinion was posited on two deductions: (1) The hunch that Mr. Tarkington couldn't possibly win unless all his readers cast their votes for him, and (2) the suspicion that there wasn't a ‘chance of his getting all their votes because of a distressing incident in “The Gentleman From In-
diana.”
In that book Mr. Tarkington had attempted to de-* scribe the sound of a rain crow, with the result that it split his readers into two fighting factions—one side insisting that the author didn't know what he was talking about, and the other side just as sure that the description approached the quality of lyric poetry, But Peg Hamiltén was not a man to let his friends down, least of all a customer as distinguished as Booth Tarkington. And so it came to pass’ that Peg abandoned his stand on the levee for a while to devote all his time to his friend's campaign, With the help of his hack he hauled the candidate to "the innermost recesses of Indianapolis— to 8. East st., where the Italians lived; to N. Noble st, the-abode of the Germans, and to Irish Hill. Indeed, he combed every area, lest votes be overlooked, and finally even invaded the fringes of Indianapolis, wheré the farmers lived,
‘The Good Neighbor’
IN ALL THESE PLACES Peg Hamilton never once introduced, or even referred to Mr. Tarkington as “the author of two books,” as less inspired politicians did, but always as “the good neighbor.” Booth Tarkington's phenomenal victory cemented the friendship between him and Peg Hamilton into what still remains the outstanding example of fraternal love around here. Indeed, Peg carried it to the point that when it came time for him to have a son of his own, doggone if he didn't give the baby the complete moniker of his literary campaigner—namely, Newton Booth.
holarships Provided
some visiting American professor to teach in a foreign university, provide scholarships for students studying in American universities abroad like Roberts ; college in Beirut and the American college in Istanbul. Or it may be used to establish other such colleges and American cultural centers in foreign coumries, Nations which may cash jn on the maximum penefits of a million dollars a year-for the next 20 years include England, France, Italy, China, Mexico and the Philippines. An agreement has already been worked out with the British on this basis, First of these reverse Rhodes scholars will probably go there. If the average individual grant is $2000 a year, the plan would give scholarships to some 500 students and profs in each of the six countries. Countries with smaller amounts set aside from their sale of surplus property would include the Netherlands, Belgium, India, Egypt, Iran, Australia, New Zealand and Brazil.
Detailed Plan Not Complete
SELECTION OF STUDENTS and professors is to be made by a committee of 10 educators to be known as the board of foreign scholarships. Actual work of handling applications, conducting examination and payipg out money, will probably be delegated to a section ‘of the division of cultural cooperation in the state department. Needless to. say, the state department people are pretty happy about the whole thing. They had ‘to work like the dickens to get a five million dollar apropriation for cultural relations work all over the world this year. To have 314 million dollars dropped in their. laps is almost too much. All they ask now is that nobody rush in with . pis application to get one of these scholarships. The board to select students hasn't been named. The rules haven't been written, They're not open for business. They'll announce when later,
REFLECTIONS . . . By Robert C. Ruark Hollywood Tackles A-Bomb Movie
facts right. Pour more scientists, including Dr. Edward Tompkins of Oak Ridge and Dr. David Hopkins of the University of California, passed on the authenticity of the Tennessee and Los Alamos phases °
| valueless: pictures by saying that they give the people _ of the bomb’s manufacture.
The government has provided. much of the photography, but, tor -additional stuff, M-G-M actually bought a B-29, and bought, rented or constructed a mass of atom-splitting machinery. Col. Charles Sweeney, of the Nagasaki raid, was around for a while to keep the studio straight on the actual A-bamb attacks on Japan. 5 The main actions starts with a conference between President Roosevelt and Dr. Vannevar Bush. Included is a faithful representation of the Chicago brickpile test at Stagg Field, when, ‘on Dec. 2, 1042, the first self-sustaining chain reaction was achieved.
Congressmen’ Should See It
DEVELOPMENT OF the Oak Ridge plant, experiments at Los Alamos; President Truman's consent to Gen. Leslie Groves to allow the dry run at Alamagordo; actual tests at that site; staging of the Japanese raids at Tinian and actual attack on Hiroshima and Nagaski—M-G-M is attempting to arrange titem neatly in order. Iv would be very nice indeed if “Beginning or the End” were both sensibly produced and attractively packaged enough to be agreeable to the average guy who is unsure of the spelling of nuclear fission. It might, 1 suspect, be especially valuable to some of our congressmen. ’
Stuart Morrison
Is Strong in Mexico
the backbone of the Aleman campaign and some of their methods those of communism, Against this backdrop, Soviet Ambassador Alexander N. Kapustin plays a waiting game with great patience. He makes no show, but he and his aides— Moscow's embassy hére has a staff of between 25 and 30—appear at all diplomatic functions replete with full uniform and. ornately jeweled “diplomatic daggers.” There are, moreover, the usual appendages such as thie Mexican=Russian-cultural-exehange; the Young Communist league and similar organizations, And they do a thorough job of spreading Soviet propa- . ganda. ’ 3 : \ . Carlos Sanchez is titular head of the Mexican Communist party. He ls editor of La Voz de Mexico, "a thrice weekly newspaper which screams the Moscow line in big black type. ’
Is Old Influence ;
COMMUNISM HAS PLAYED an important role in Mexico for years.. Avila Camacho’s predecessors have fought it, been. overwhelmed by it and succumbed to
it. True, it has had to go underground several times,
bit has always emerged in great strength—inside some other party organization, The Mexicans believe themselves. to be like the: Chinese, who have said for centuries that while China colild be conquered its people could not because China assimilates~the invader and makes him Chinese. The Mexicans have assimilated communism. They are now more’ communistic than the Communist party, .
TH
a Peg Hamilton, Hack Driving Politico J WINN
Three G Che
© Billy wils and Charl judged gran the 4-H Ga the Marion Class 1 ¢ of Warren {i vegetables; class II cha ship exhibit his sister C hibit of six pion of clas The Maric awarded tro
.and $95 in p
hibitors in 4
R. F. Spre vocational were in cha
Other wir garden exhil
Class I — ¥ Frank E. Pflu Hilton;
and Charles B
Class II—Pir Reilly; second ard Stephenso Record; third Durbin, Kitty Echols; fourth
© Applegate.
Class XII} second prize, | Kendall; third Kendall and prize, Carolyn
Winners in Best educati Best market first; Edwin E third; D. E. Rosemeyer, if Best display
. =-Reva Dilling
Best display L. J. Albrigh han;
;_ potato pers, Reva D Winners wil at the fairgroi
4-H AND | 4-H OC)
Wayne towns! catur townshi ship; Tommy Ferrell, Way Harper, Way Wayne towns! township: Bill Edgar tting Don Merrifiel Naames, endine, Way Washington t
4-H Class members ex] Charles Dillin; and grand chi ren township
ship; fourth, ship; mmy ship. 4-H Class exhibit of Dillingham, Wayne towns! township; sec township: Ma ship; third, township: Vie ship; Edward ship: fourth, township.
Class T—Ho:
-—-Reva Dilling George Reilly,
Class TI—Be tables—Reva I
ship, fourth. Class III—E Rosemeyer, W Class IV—S§] Dillingham, W man Eichoff, Karl Illg, Wa
second; Wava George Reilly Green Snap } township, first ship, second; third; Norma ship, fourth, Wayne towns Wayne towns
--Karl Ilg, ward Schuh, Wava Wade, lyn Bolander, Corn —- Tho!
first; Edwajyd second; Fre third. Pepper
township, secp township, thi Wayne towh Wayne. towns Wayne towns Warren towns
4-H Enton foynsbip, firs ship, ond; ship, tHird; . fourth. 10 Lbs, T township, fs ship, second.
19 Lbs, On township, firs
Honey—Alle first. 4-H
Grand chan pullets Was | son of Warr
U.
—— HORIZO}
1,8 Pictur: Assistan retary © 14 Declare 15 Come 1c 16 Donkey 17 Robust 19 Art (La 20 Place 21 Signify 23 Assent 24 Either 25 Exist 26 Myself 28 Susan ( 29 Approa 31 Urge 33 Owns 34 Operats $5 Musical 37 Germar 40 Greek | 41 Compal suffix 42 Apart ( 43 Negatiy 44 Annoy 46 Candles 51 Ear (cc , form) 52 Preser\ 53 Peruvis 54 Encore ' 55 Publica head 58 Greed 61 Surgics , threads 62 Puls bi
