Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 August 1946 — Page 7

vestern trip of home boys were

schedule as all

double-headers,

POLIS } RH O AB 3: 0 1:08} 1 1 2 0% 1 3 3 i} O15 1:0.0 9 1 8 03 0 3 2 0 0 ge 1.0 0 0 0 1 g 2° 0 66 0.0 1 0 0'0 0-0 6 0 0 1 @ 0 1:0 0 0 0 0&0 00 3 N1'U 9 0 Cecil 'n sixth for Derringer in CITY 3 R HO A RB 3.3. 135 1% Fo 3k 0 0 1 i. 60. @ § 13) up } 0-310 @ I 1.1.0 § 2 1 s 5 1 9 2 53"1 @ 0 0 3 0 8 92115 3

10002000 0-3 02211011 x8 eczorek, Silvera 2, i, Bestudik. Twoe ree-base hit Sisti, Sacrifices——

: 4 ikeouts—By Drews

1. Hit Cecil 0 in _1, Derringer rady. Losing pitche rafin, Fabac and tting H HR RBI Pct. 165 5 61 .351 80 3.33 .334 E39 3 15 12 73 4 40 .310 141 4 65 .308 134 3 67 .209 8 0 5 .208 130 15 101 .20% 45 0 9 2713 48 3 29 287 55 0 15 271 F931 "4 ‘U3 45 5 31 a3 3 0 1 .138 e 5, Brady 5, Drews irn_ 3, Wentzel 3, 3, Bestudik 2, Po=

sti 25, Bestndik 24, 18, Wieczorek 1 rady 8, Turchin T, b 2 land 2. y 1 17, Sisti 12, Ture ‘ws 4, Wieczorek 3, Riddle 2, Roberge

es Get 1alties,

Years

Aug. 10 (U, P), ible-barreled ace | e Commissionegs oday suspend s—one for twa r one year—for minor league

resident of the e Florida Intere 8 suspended for ganized baseball side agreement hn Mann $500 to his regular

ler Smith of the e Florida State ed for one year e Ross Crucilla vith Orlandp at

at Crucilla had t the spectators apparently une irnell and Smith , to appeal their > minor league e.

nched

Aug. 10 (U. P), [armon’s college his professional the Los Angeles - Walsh said toe a leg injury n on the bench

. POINT 0SE T ITEMS

V AUTO

SUPPLY and Ray Streets

TOW CES GHT

f i:

Is

pe TW Maloy ale mr “ a Ls

Inside Indianapolis

BRIG. GEN. CLIFFORD BLUEMEL, new Ft. Harrison commander, probably will go down as one of the few generals in history who organized-a. division, trained it and took it into battle in only 36 days. It's a task which normally requires eight months to a year. Gen. Bluemel did it on Bataan before the peninsula fell to the Japs. | Now he and Mrs. Bluemel are back to the post which figured prominently in his early army career, Graduated from West Point in 1909 (along with such names as Patton, Devers, Simpson, Eichelberger and Emmons), he drew the overseas assignment generally awarded to shavetails before he came to Ft. Harrison in 1923 to serve with the 11th infantry. After tours at the infantry school and command and general staff school, he returned here in 1933 as a lieutenant colonel in the same regiment in which he served 10 years before. He later was C. €. C. district executive here before he sailed for the Philippines in 1940, where he had been almost 30 years before. : Although he doesn’t quite consider Indianapolis his home, it's sort of a “homing base.” His son, Edward, was graduated from Shortridge high school and Purdue university. © His daughter, Mrs. Dorothy Jakel, is a graduate of Butler university. “A chip off the old block” doesn’t apply in the case of this father and son. Shortly after Gen. Bluemel was taken prisoner by the Japanese, "his son entered the navy. “I guess he thought that was the quickest way to get the old man home,” the general says. Much-decorated, the general won the distin-

_ Brig. Gen. Clifford Bluemel . . . built a fighting division in 36 days.

Aerial Tramway

SILVERTON, Colo, Aug. 10.—The ride up King Solomon mountain in an open ore bucket dangling from the aerial tramway of the Shenandoah-Dives Mining Co. was a thrilling and, at times, fearful experience. But it was nothing compared to what lay ahead of us as we entered the mine—dug into the face of a cliff at an altitude of 1103 feet—and started an inspection tour in the company of Charles A. Chase, general manager, and Bern Hamish, the energetic mine superintendent. The entrance was rather wide—plenty of clearance for the little electric locomotive and the ore cars— and was electrically lighted. Flanking it, cut into the rock, were various kinds of rooms—shops, an office, washroom. In the office we were given woolen stockings and rubber. boots, waterproof jackets, steel helmets and electrie headlights. On a spur track just outside was a small motor car. Howard Hammond, a member of the mine's electrical department, joined us. He and Mr. Hamish cranked up the car, and we climbed aboard with my son and myself in the front seats where we could hold on to the cross-bar. Soon after we started we entered a smaller tunnel. The electric lights were left behind. Only the lights from our hats pierced the blackness. “Keep your knees in and your head down,” Mr. Hamish shouted. On we raced, turning sharp curves and just barely clearing the walls. Water from overhead swished into our faces.

Great, Muddy Monster AFTER ABOUT 15 or 20 miles of as wild a ride as 1 have ever taken (actually about two-thirds of a mile), we came out into a big, lighted opening and stopped. Mr. Hamish went to a telephone and held a brief conversation. In a few minutes a great muddy monster came down from out of a black hole in the ceiling—a big two-storied steel cage with a huge bucket hanging from the cage’s bottom. The bucket is used for bringing ore down from the high levels. The cage stopped on our level : “All right, gentlemen. Just step into the skip.” (That's what.they call the elevator.) We got in, and a miner who was already yanked on a signal cord. Up we went, slowly. We could see the rock through which the shaft had been cut. In places it looked hard and solid In other places it looked rotten and crumbly, and was braced with heavy timbers.

Science

THE RADIATIONS given off by the atomic bomb and by radioactive substances in general which concern us most are known technically as the gamma radiations. Gamma is the third letter of the Greek alphabet. Back at the start of the century, it was discovered that radium gave off three types of radiations and these were named alpha, beta and gamma rays after the first three letters of the Greek alphabet. Later, Lord Rutherford, the great pioneer in atom smashing, showed that the alpha rays were particles, actually the nuclei of helium atoms. Thus it became apparent that nature herself was an alchemist since radium was disintegrating into other atoms and giving off atoms of helium in the process. The beta rays proved to be electrons, the fundamental particles of negafive electricity which occur in the outer portions of all atoms. It was generally thought that the electrons revolved around the nucleus of the atom in orbits but it is now believed thai their motions are far more complex. Consequently we now speak of the “cloud” of electrons surrounding the atomié¢ nucleus. The gamma rays, unlike these two others, are not composed of material particles but are forms of energy. In this respect they are like visible light but

in it

+ of much shorter wave length,

Alpha, Beta Rays Collide THE ELECTROMAGNETIC spectrum extends all the way from radio waves through infra-red rays, visible light. ultraviolet light, and X-rays, down to

the gamma rays. The reason we need not concern ourselves par-

ticularly with the alpha and beta rays given off by the atomic bomb is because these rays do not have very great penetrating power, Because they are material particles, they are stopped by collision with the

atoms of the air. The gamma rays, however, have tremendous pene-

CAP-AAE Air Show Here

Members of the Indianapolis Gas Model association will participate in the C. A. P.-A, A. F. air show next Friday, Saturday and Sunday at Stout field, it was announced to-

‘day. Harold L. Stofer, president of the

| pers ‘will participate in the show diana wing of the .C. A. P. i v. : a

y

a

£ pimpin ay Sirsa hh oboe aka bak appre JEN Sor AR Rr ry a Ti

ii nn

Vim ¢

guished service medal; silver star and three presidential citations for his action on Bataan. On Nov, 18, 1940, he started the 31st Philippine division, with four American officers and 60 Filipino officers and men. On Dec. 25 the division, 1,000 strong, was fighting Japs. Its size grew while the division was in battle. It was the last unit on Bataan to stop fighting. A infantry’s first: shots were fired in battle. eir “training” had consisted of ‘learning to care for their weapons, the old Enfield rifles, relics of world war I. The artillery fired two practice rounds with each gun . . . eight old wooden-wheeled British 758 without sights. .

Made Bataan Death March

AFTER THE American surrender, Gen. Bluemel survived the infamous Bataan death march and 40 months in assorted Jap prison camps. He remembers Camp O'Donnell, Tarlac, Karanka, Formosa, where his weight dropped from 160 to 116; Tamzato, where he stayed only a few hours. An American Red Cross mission was inspecting prison camps, so a number of Americans were transferred to the Tamzato camp. Their statements to the A. R. C. were written, censored and supervised by the Japs. The A. R. C mission arrived at 10 a. m., left at noon —at 2 p. m. the prisoners got orders to go back to their old camp. Gen. Bluemel has a<three-word description of the Jap soldier: “Brave but dumb.” “They should have taken the Philippines in two weeks,” he tells you. Of Japs in general he says, “They're savages of an order lower than the old American Indians.” During the fighting in the Philippines he tried some new foods, describes horses and mules as “good meat.” The Japs took all his personal and household equipment. He's still mad at them for it, especially for taking his 8 mm. movie camera with several rolls of film. Also because he had to wear a single uniform for 40 months, . No believer in a “soft peace,” he thinks the Jap occupation should be thorough . . . for 80 or 100 years. “Otherwise we may find ourselves at war again,” he believes. The veteran of 41 years of army service says the American army was demobilized too fast, thinks it was due to too much political pressure. He thinks newspapers have knocked the army too much, “The army needs all the morale and boosts it can get,” Gen. Bluemel asserts, “You don't kick a football team when it, wins,” he reflected, “and the army should be considered the country's football team.” He thinks the atom bomb might revolutionize warfare, praises the navy for its efforts at Bikini to determine the strength of the atom. He advocates a unified army-navy command, says the Philippine forces could have held out longer under such a command. Somewhat secretive about his future, hell only reveal that he plans to retire “some time .next year.” (By Dick Berry.)

By Eldon Roark

Occasionally we passed great black holes, and then lighted levels. Water was dripping nearly everywhere, and we caught glimpses of muddy men. ! Nine hundred feet up we got off and walked down | a drift to the end of the tunnel. A blast had just been set off there, and the air was heavy with powder. | Along the walls were chutes filled with ore that had |

Hoosier Profile |

SECOND SECTION -

~The ‘Indianapolis Ti

SATURDAY, AUGUST 10, 1946

CAMERA. CLOSEUP". . . By John Spicklemire

Experts Keep Old Arts Alive

7

Off with the old . .

i

. Charles Smith, 750 Villa ave., with 55 years experience as a cabinetmaker, removes the finish from an empire chest more than 120 years old as the first step in restoring this priceless antique.

On with the new .

downtown Indianapolis,

Smooth as silk ) . . George Kindred, 1016 N. Alabama st. sands an undercoat of paint

been blasted down from above. They mine upward) ... , modern white living room cabinet. The shop, in the Transportation building, always busy, handles mostly antiques which need restoring, but occasionally work is done A

as well as forward. That area was ready for a power shovel, a unit that operates on the small railroad tracks. It scoops up the ore and throws it back over itself into a car. Overhead at the end of the drift was the quastz) vein they follow through the mountain, about two feet wide, glistening with various kinds of metal— gold, silver, aeld, zinc, copper. This mine produces all in paying quantities. There was a hissing from the compressed air pipe. It operates the drills. Under it was a smaller water pipe. Water and air keep the drill bit from getting too hot. The large pipe under the other side of the drift was a suction pipe, used to remove gasses after blasts.

Series of Ladders

WE WENT back to the skip amd up another 800 feet to the 1700-foot level, the top of the main shaft. From there we climbed a series of ladders for a look into the control room of the skip—a small room hacked into the heart of the mountain. The big motor and all of the heavy hoisting machinery had been carried and pulled up there & small piece at a time and then assembled. We heard a distant boom like the rumble of thunder, and I thought I felt the mountain vibrate. Another blast had been set off. Then came a rather harrowing experience. Mr. Chase and Mr. Hamish wanted to have a look at the 1900-foot level, and to get there we had to walk a short piece, cross a big black hole on a plank—careful or you may fall 190 feet—and get aboard the little skip. This is a small, shallow steel box on the end of a cable attached to a motor and windlass. It is just large enough for two paunchless men. If you don't stand sideways, your feet stick out beyond the front edge of the box. They'll get mashed. When they are satisfied that no part of you is sticking out too far, they give the signal. Up you go through a hole in the rock—a hole just big enough for the box to pass—up a distance equivalent to the height of a 20-story building. What a ride! That placed us on the 1900-foot level, but we still | had more climbing and inspecting to do. We'll finish the trip tomorrow.

By David Dwiz

trating power. Like X-rays, they go through solids, although they can be stopped by thick enough walls of lead, concrete, etc.

Radiations Contain Energy WHEN THE FIRST bomb exploded at Bikini lagoon, we exposed photographic plates on the deck of the U. S. S. Appalachian. 20 miles from the blast. These showed that we had received at that distance

an amount of gamma radiation approximating the dose if your physician fluoroscoped your chest. Some students of physics might well call my attention at this point that in speaking of the wave length of various radiations and in calling them electromagnetic waves, I have been sidestepping the quantum theory. The fact of the matter is that while we still speak of the wave length of radiations, the quantum theory teaches us that raidations consist of little particles or bullets of energy, known technically as quanta and photons. This latter word, incidentally, must not be confused with protons, the positive particles occuring in atomic nuclei. The late Sir William Bragg once said that physi. cists used che quantum theory of light on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays, and the wave theory on Tuesdays. Thursdays and Saturdays. The situation is still almost as bad as that. For some experiments can be explained only on the assumption that light or other forms of radiation, consist of photons. But still other experiments can be’ explained only on the wave theory. An attempt to reconcile the two theories has been | made by regarding radiation as consisting of photons | moving in waves, not unlike rain drops blown into | waves by the wind. | Under this theory, the wave then becomes a wave | of probability. It indicates the place where the photon is most likely to be.

Will Include Plane Models -

and put on an exhibition of pre-|Models will be displayed at 4:45 cision flying of gas model aircraft.|p. m. on Saturday and Sunday. The association has recently been reactivated after a period of inactivity during the war. “The boys will make their models ! perform as long as spectators wish to view the. exhibition,” Col. Walker association, said nearly all mem- |W. Winslow, commander of the In-

The C.'A. P.-A. A. F. show itself will feature exhibitions of nearly every type of military and civilian aircraft, as. well as static displays by. aircraft manufacturers. Nationally known stunt flyers will give daring exhibitions, Col. Winssald. | low said. - Pri gl

“ \

gis

~ 5 « .

on modern furniture of good qualit

+7 :

Father and son . .

French secretary, left their native

many, in 1939, going to England before comihg ‘to

the United States.

. The Samuels, Ludwig and Albert, finishing off a 110-hour job on a 240-year-old

k

Strassburg, Ger-

. « An expert of 67 years experience, William Crosby, 330 N. Beville ave., carefully fills the pores of wood with a filler. He is one of the experienced employees in the repair shop run by Ludwig andl Albert Samuel, German refugees, in

New for the old . . . Sometimes large portions of antique furniture must be replaced. Here, Byron Coffing, R. R. gate-leg table on a lathe, one of the few power tools in the shop. Most of the craftsmen prefer to work fine pieces by hand.

mes

>

"a

1 Fo : ; % F Eo 3

A protective coat . , . Third step in restoring valuable antiques is a coat of sealer sprayed on a walnut Victorian table by Albert Samuel to keep out moisture.

a Labor fr Allis Petition Stresses Bias Of Labor Law

By FRED W. PERKINS Scripps-Howard Staff Writer 8 WASHINGTON, Aug. 10.—~Ths prolonged strike of the O. I. O, United Automobile Workers against eight plants of the Allis-Chalmers Manufacturing Co. has produced an unusual move in labor-management relations as they are now cone ducted. The company has petitioned the national labor relations board to order the union to meet with the management to engage in collective bargaining. This is unique because the Wags ner act names unfair labor prace tices that may be charged to eme ployers, but none that charged to unions; the employér may be penalized for refusal to bare gain with a dully accredited union, but the law sets up no similar com pulsion for a union to bargain with an exployer. » » . PROPOSALS for the law's ree

vision to provide unfair’ practices

session of congress, and efforts to amend the Wagner act in this and other particulars have been fore cast for the next session. Whether the union has refused te bargain is only part of the contros versy. The union makes the same charge against the company, and its allegation is now before NLRB. The union charge in ordinary course will get to an investigation and hearing, although the company charge will not. However, in a fore mal hearing on the union charge, the company would have an oppor tunity to bring its counter-charges

to the attention of the board. » . » THE ALLIS-CHALMERS charge is directed specifically against local 248 of the U. A. W., which was cere tified in 1938 as the exclusive cole lective bargaining agent for the production employes in the West Allis works, near Milwaukee. The petition was filed in the Milwaukee sub-office of NLRB and was received here today. The Chi« cago regional office will have firsg disposal of the case, and il appar ently can come before the national board only as a by-product of the union's case.

18, Box 137, turns out a replacement for a damaged

BRITISH REPLY T0 IRAN TODAY

Answer to Protest Note Sent at Once.

| LONDON, Aug. 10 (U. P)—A British reply to Iran's note protesting the presence of British

troops in Iraq near the Iranian frontier will be dispatched ' to Tehran immediately, a foreign office spokesman said today. The Iranian note, informed sources said, asked Britain to withdraw her troops from Basra, Iraq, because they threatened Iranian sovereignty, Premier Ahmed Ghavam's government said it was able to maintain internal law and order alone, Exact contents of the British reply were undisclosed. A foreign office .announcement that Britain would move her troops into southerh Iran if British interests or lives in the southern Iranian oilfields wery' endangered indicated a strong Bh Aish stand toward the Tehran government. The spokesman said the British would not wait to consult Tehran or any other capital before moving her troops into Iran if an emergency arose. However, he professed that he did not expect such a situation. - British forces will not move from Iraq into Iran so long as the Iranfan government maintains order,

GARDENING: Old-Fashioned Flower

Plantain Lily Needs Little Sun

Bv MARGUERITE SMITH THE FRAGRANT old-fashioned white plantain lily has a number)

side of house or garage where many | ing season, with a plants resent the lack of sun. {fuls of chemical

has five kinds in her yard. In ad-|to the plant when

small flowered lavender with its|success formula. narrow leaves, the large flowering lavender, whose leaves more closely resemble the “plantain leaves” of| Arlington ave,

around. It's easy

variegated foliage. One of these Mrs. Orr describes as | “curly. leaves,” the foliage striped | green and white, while the other| warm weather, has a fiat, rounder leaf edged with!ner of the yar

. » » WHILE oleariders in our climate | must spend the winter indoors, various gardeners manage to have them blooming in the yard most of the| summer without too much care. | Mrs. Owen Phillips, 1625 S. Ran-| ANOTHER

strike the glass.”

|every year for over 10 years. manages it quite easily by setting /dener who has it for its delicately lit out in the ground each spring,|tinted lavender and pisk lily-like potting it up in the fall, to winter flowers. of relftives. ‘They offer a variety| wor on an inclosed porch. Plenty|lily, surprise lily, amaryllis halli, for treatment of the difficult north|of water during the summer bloom-| hint of its odd growth habit and its

Mrs. B. F. Orr, 5337 Kenwood ave, | bottom of the hole but not close

dition to the white, she raises the |little water during the winter is her t

= = MRS. FERN SARGENT, 2620 N.|to produce its cluster of blossoms keeps her oleander ON & completely leafless stalk, Mrs.

the white sort, and two kinds with Potted in a large pail the ‘year

|the -inclosed back porch for the|the ground. She has found they do

winter, equally easy to move out in| In a protected cor- | : d between house and | bloom and to multiply. white. She finds they all do well| porch where flowers in with rich soil, plenty of moisture | hide ~ the container, ‘the oleander goo, Park ave. who is ‘successful and in shade. They bloom at dif-|gets plenty of sunshine, wind can-| i, hers in “poor ratler gravelly ferent periods during the summer, [not toss the blossoms. | 1 \ | Mrs, Bargent's mother, Mrs. Olive |, “ |says they should he “worked around Herold, started the plant seven years ag te as possible.” ago from a cutting rooted in water,

“put in a window where the sun can | plant them it's best done right after

” . interesting plant now|in well-drained soil they'll soon prodolph st., has one that has bloomed |in bloom in the Sargent yard is the |

Thrives in Shade=—

She wonder lily, favorite of every garIts various names, magic

| relation to the amaryllis, though it's quite hardy here, Mrs. Sargent explained how the | foliage appears “about daffodil ime,” then dies away completely. In mid-summer the flower stalk suddenly appears, quickly shoots up

“couple of handfertilizer in he

I set it out” with »

r Sargent’s plant flowered 10 days then to move to|8fter the stalk first peeked through {best when undisturbed, as trans. planting makes them less inclined|

front of it| mpg NORVIN STSIWKLAND,|

| soil” and the partial shac\ they like,

If it’s really necessary to trans-

they've blossomed. Set several

inches deep, and five inches apart

duce a clump of unusual flowers.

My Day

NEW YORK, PFriday.—It seems to me that one

the spokesman said.

VETERAN EMPLOYEES

OF BURDSAL HONORED

J. A. Mitchell, president of A. Burdsal Co., this week paid tribute to employees who have been with the paint firm for more than 25 years. y Established here 80 years ago, the company has seven employees with service ranging from 30 to 41 years and an equal number nearing the 25-year mark. . 2 Honored in personal letters were Laurens Rudbeck, Miss Laura Hart« man, C. M. Fields, Reuben Alexander, J. A. Cecil, 0. H. Carpenter and C. C. Griffith,

Re

of the first things we as a people have to learn is that our experience as a nation has been completely ! different from that of most of the peoples of the | world. Fortunately for us in our eariy formative days, when we were a weak nation, the oceans on either side of us were a real barrier against invasion. We, suffered in our trade by capture of our merchant ships at sea, and therefore we built up a navy which, though small, distinguished itself for valor and in‘genuity. ; We fought wars, and our land was invaded, but it has been a long time since any enemy forces were on our soil.

Fear Throughout Europe OUR CHILDREN have not grown up in the shadow of the constant fear of ‘ifivasion by specific nations on our borders. On the other hand, French children have grown up expecting that almost every | generation would fight A war with Germany. Italy ‘might be: either friend or foe. - .

. ‘= x

The Allis-Chalmers petition states: “After decision of the Wisconsin employment relations board, order ing the union to cease and desist illegal picketing, meetings under the auspices of the U., 8. conciliation service were held with considerable regularity from June 3 to July 24. But during these meetings the union did not bargain in good faith, » n ” “THE UNION’S” refusal (since July 24) to meet with the company for collective bargaining purposes, constitutes a dereliction of the union’s duty to the production eme ployees as their agent for collec tive bargaining. “It is implicit in the national labor relations act that the board, having the authority to appoint an exclusive bargaining agent, shall have the responsibility to order the agent to fulfill its responsibility.” That point is one with which NLRB lawyers do not agree. - - ¥ THE COMPANY further req ed, if the stalemate continues, that“ the NLRB conduct a secret-ballot referendum among the 11,000 West Allis employees to determine wheth« er they wish to accept the come pany's proposal or continue the strike in support of the union's dee mands, which involve union-secure ity items as well as wages. No provision for a referendum, either, is in the Wagner law.

We, the Women Love Conquers

All, Cupid Aids

House Hunters

By RUTH MILLETT THE STORY came to light in the society - column of a New York, newspaper. It seems that a young couple who were living in a suburban home bee calise they couldn't find a New York apartment introduced their unmarried landlord to a young lady who had an apartment in the city, Result: The landlord married the young lady and told his tenants: “Give me back my. house and you can have my wife’s apartment.” Now everybody is happy — the bride and groom as well as the voung couple who let Cupid solve their apartment-hunting problem, - » . THERE'S A tip here for other young married couples. If you need an apartment, and

By Eleanor Roosevelt

In the Balkans, where races are ‘mixed, it has

been constantly possible for big powers to incite}

warfare. The Germans have feared the Russians. Scandinavians have feared both the Germans and the Russians and thd British. The British have been feared by many peoples because of their far-flung empire and their strong navy. They themselves have feared invasion of their island now and then, and also attacks upon various parts of the empire.

Constantly Feared Attack

SO WE LOOK upon a world that has lived In constant fear of actual attack upon its homes. The United States has been a refuge for people from many of those harassed lands, because here we could allow more freedom. We could develop gradually through the processes of democracy because we were so free from the fear of invasion. By the time the oceans became less of a barrier, we had become a strong nation. This gave us the confidence which made our brand of di possible. :

The |

if you happen to know a working girl and a bachelor who have their |own establishments, why not ine | troduce the two “eligibles”? If mare | riage results there will be one va cant apartment, and the grateful couple should be willing to turn it over to you. We keep hearing that the house ing shortage is largely due to the fact thit so many young couples are marrying and setting up their own homes. - . . BUT WHAT about the not-see single men and women who

may be °

for unions were made in the last -