Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 August 1946 — Page 7
24,1948
4
IN
-The wake ady of the prophecies returned in ying there
of always in the casualty ying its most 1 the mutuel trading. with the gay the innocent ng this spirit tepping high,
0 survive the much more xpensive and 1 lady herself,
lor herself for her precious tradition and she sponsored
ded handbag | said: Ww you what
g season here, f the sport in Those of us believe this is re can be no is the general
al of tradition so what could
of the sport quiet, simple dy is always renity to the
> country have und who knew . the ones who the workouts, | evens and his iably they will eg. It is always
a y
07 pounds ow ee bit too lar
definitely is Samplon Byro! . A, i
Ww ®
-his 100 pounds.
Qed
= ro
Inside Indianapolis
BIG, fast-talking Jim Dawson, no minor headache
to the streetcar company, beliéves in doing what most
+ of us would like to do.
He scraps for what he thinks is right, regardless of consequences. Sometimes he is fighting a popular cause, like his present tussle with the utility; other timés it's a controversy in which he barely avoids being spattered with the vitriol of public opinion. He's been ‘called bull-headed, indiscreet and even plain dumb for not “compromising, taking an easier way, playing ball.” A lawyer, he naturally is required to bring people together and he can be the soul of diplomacy on occasion, when sniping participants in a legal battle are eager to commit no less than mayhem to one another, The 43-year- wold barrister, graying at the temples, doesn'v yearn for a fight of the physical sort, despite However, as some persons can testify, elm is capable of a jolting left hand “when I am forced to defend myself.” Incidentally, he's had training as a Boer, One wouldn't slispect the average preacher's son to receive this type of instruction at home, but his Christian minister-father, a man weighing about 250 pounds, possessed considerable talent along this line himself, often defending the Lord with bare knuckles. However, he insisted that Jim become a southpaw mitt tosser, which he considered advantageous; hence the larruping left of his son.
Attorney James Dawson . . . never dreamed the fight would assume such proportions,
Beaver Dams
ROCKY MOUNTAIN NATIONAL PARK, Colo,
"Aug. 24—In undertaking future projects similar to
TVA, the government ought to give the beavers in this park a chance to bid on the dam construction. After inspecting some of their work, I'm convinced their foremen are the best experts in the country. The beavers have about finished their project here. They have dammed every stréam many times and have created picturesque chains of lakes. They think nothing of building dams eight to 10 feet high. If it weren't for their work, the melting snow would rush down the mountains and across the valleys so fast there would be barren stretches of eroded land where we now have verdant meadows. These beavers also build lateral canals running out from their lakes. After they cut all the trees around théir ponds, they must go. up the slopes for
Starting life . at Pendleton—“Some would like
to see me start life there again”-—James M. lived in
various Indiana and Illinois towns as his father was moved from one pastorate to another. Jim attended Shortridge high school two years, being graduated from Keithsburg, Ill, where he was captain one year of the school's baseball, basketball and track teams. He played freshman baseb®ll at Butler university, but quit athletics following a fight with sharptongued Pat Page, former coach there. Missing a ball in the outfield, young Dawson was freated. to some unsavory language by the coach, he recalled, deciding then and there he did not want to play for the grisly old veteran, An LLB at Indiana Law school in 1928 followed a BS at the Fairview school. He worked his way through ‘both schools as a filling station attendant. A year earlier, he had been admitted to the bar. Practicing a couple of years, Jim took a legal job with the Indiana Bell Telephone Co. where he remained 15 years, He returned to private law practice in 1944,
Fought Golf Fee Increase
AMONG Mr. Dawson’s vocal opponents has been Paul Brown, with whom he sparred last spring over the question of increased public golf course fees The nervous attorney is vice president of the Indianapolis Public Links association and president of the South Grove golf club. He's also a member of the Athenaeum and especially proud of membership in the Butler B Men's association. The attorney's argument with Indianapolis Railways, Inc, took form as Jim relaxed in his I. O. O. PF. bldg. office one day, While waiting for a client to keep an appointment, he fingered a few tokens left in his pocket after the rate change.
“Why this is a contract, perfectly legal,” he mused. “They can't do this to.me.” And his blood pressure started climbing. “But I never dreamed it would assume the proportions it has,” he shook his head bewilderedly. “A lot of people want to know what I'm running for. But T've run for my last office.” (He was defeated this spring as a Republican candidate for county prosecutor.) “I really cut my Foiitieal eye-teeth in that race.’
Hundreds for, Five guint
HUNDREDS of persons have called to offer their support in the trolley firm fight; only five have been against him, Jim declared. “One of these was a League of Women Voters member who said she wouldn't vote for me,” he chuckled. Most of the supporters offer advice on how to get in some good punches against the utility. In the midst of his campaign, he received this telegram from his wife, isolated from newspapers on a Great Lakes cruise: “News travels fast. other guys look?”
Congratulations. How do the (By Kenneth Hufford.)
By Eldon Roark
disappearing Rocky mountain sheep or bighorns. Superintendent Dave Canfield estimates there are about 200. Their greatest enemies are diseases which they pick up when the come down from the tops in the winter and graze where domestic sheep have grazed. Domestic sheep leave germs to which they have become immune, but which are fatal to the bighorns. The animals, however, are not the park's No. 1 attraction. That, according to Mr. Canfield, is the Trail Ridge road. People come here to get the thrill of driving high above timberline, he says. The road climbs up 12,000 feet over the mountains among the small glaciers and snow fields and is one of the most scenic drives in America. It is wide and well protected at danger points.
Snow to Fill Passes Soon
Hoosier Profile
e Indianapolis Times
SECOND SECTION
State
John C. Adams ,
By SHERLEY UHL Times Staff Writer
JONESBORO, Ind., Aug. 24. —The muted cadence of drum and fife and marching men in blue still haunts the memory of the only Indiana G. A. R. member to attend next week's national encampment here. He's 99-year-old John C. Adams Lof Jonesboro. one of the five survive ing Hoosier veterans of ihe Union army. Age ‘finally has inactivated the remaining four, something a whole batch of whooping Confederates couldn't do 81 years ago. John F. Smith, 103, of Marion, oldest Indiana Union army veteran, is unable to travel. Frank J. Barton, 100, of Knox, doesn’t travel alone any more either, and his aid. and companion can't make the trip. Isaac Sharp, 99, of Warsaw, 1945 |
has been ill since last October. W. E. Whittingill. 99, of Lebanon, refuses to leave the bedside of his invalid wife. » = =»
Indianapolis,
SATURDAY, AUGUST 24, 1946" LONE HOOSIER TO BE IN: CIVIL WAR PARADE—
GAR Ranks Dwindle
+ « time hasn't jaded his interest in current events.
He takes gardening in stride, eats anything he pleases.
jae never Indulges in alcohol. > every Sunday he sits in the front pew at Jonesboro's church.
Sometimes his great granddaughter, Caroline Suzanne Turner, accompanies him on his strolls around town,
| Virginia Infantry, Company C, as ajus off and we switched directions. |quaintances. He stays at the home
| drummerboy at 17. Groping for].
Va., for the front: “It was hot and dusty but we
kept step through town and I was
mighty proud up there with my
MR. ADAMS will be driven to|drums. Whenever we passéd a little |as he takes his daily in his son-in-law’s|settlement people came out and through" Jonesboro's tree
. We pitched camp at Bull Town,
commander-in-chief of the G. A. R.,| recollections, he recalls the inspira~ | Ohio. I spent the rest of the war han. He also has another daughtional hike out of Wheeling, W. {there scouting for bushwackers. Oh, | | ter, Mrs. Lester Theibert of Arnold,
yes, they promoted me to an or-| { derly.” » ~ ~
hard of hearing,” says he cupping a hand to an ear.
but I've voted in every presidential election since Grant.”
“He was the first president I voted for. I saw him once when he passed
: PAGE 7
| 10.5
We Wonder.
It Seems Best To Go On and Take a Tablet
By FREDERICK C, OTHMAN United Press Staff Correspoadent WASHINGTON, Aug. 24. — You take one tablet when you get up in the morning, see, and hold it on your tongue. It goes flzz-z-z-z and fills your mouth with foam. Then you scrub your teeth, You may do this with an oldfashioned toothbrush, but if you are a child of the atomic age you will use an electric power toothbrush, $8.75, price slightly higher west of the Rocky mountains. I hate to sound bitter about these and other post-war dillies now in the shops, but I have made a survey and believe I can prove in three minutes of your valuable reading time that it must have been great to be alive in 1892, » . » THE NEWEST shoelaces are made of fireproof plastics; stainless steel pipes are for sale all over. I'm not talking about water pipes;
|
in heatproof paint.
I mean pipes in which to burn tobacco. - Some of these are finished They've got
{pink daises on 'em. Smoke one of
these too much and your breath
Imay smell like burning overshoes. "Then do you chew sen-sens?
|
And Presbyterian
“I feel fine, except I'm a little “I was never active in politics,
\ . . ~ . GENERAL GRANT was his hero.
through Wheeling. He could really swagger, “I've seen all the presidents since, too, except Mr. Truman . , . Garfleld, Hayes, Cleveland, McKinley, Teddy Roosevelt, I've seen 'em all” Mr, Adams retired 23 years ago as manager of the shipping department of a Jonesboro glass factory. But he still likes to stroll around town and reminisce with old ac-
|of a daughter, Mrs. Maud Strana-
{Pa., and a son, E. B. Adams of Marion, Ind.
Not in August, 1946, you don't! You chomp upon a pill which makes your breath smell like a breeze through a redwood forest. The ad guarantees it. ’ . » » EARRINGS built like crystal chandeliers in miniature I don't mind, because I don't wear ‘em. Bottles filled half with beer and half with ale at the brewery don’t bother me, either, But there is a new refreshment made of part
" |water and part potato alcohol.
The back label adds that it is colored (a nice brown) with caramel and flavored with roasted wood chips. This is- called bourbon lqueur; ladies, pin that white ribbon on me while there still is time, . » ~ FOR PIANO students there is the electronic metronome and for sensitive souls the alarm clock that does not jar the nerves with a bell, but . flashes a light in their faces. I saw a new automobile this morn« ing (name on request in case you {don't want one) with its parking lights built into the bumpers and ready to sprinkle glass on the street at the slightest nudge. There is a widget that makes ice
“That Rebel general,” he observes,
HE STILL steps sprightly enough | “kept me from seeing any real ac-|
paitytional tion on the front line. He inter- . by = - | cepted us before we got there. my
cream at home with the aid of com= pressed gas; there are pants with { self-locking hip pockets, and there
is a razor that winds. Then it vi» =
le most ¥ rela more. So they dig canals and float the logs. automobile, Star t cheered. But at i: *e oy i dn ie ih Ta your. whiskers: ae » That. Hebigna. the, ob, af wets their IF XC make the drive this. & ar cry. from. ti wi eer ut at Clarksburg: same; wavs: He isis resis a Ear ¥ iets a een i pp Se Sx heir boiler Bi Ah ill start. Alling up yous pone, he “traveled after foitimg tre ~~ Rebel general, Forrest’I believe, cut | hig fancy ‘but, a a teetotaler,| was just a kid anyway. | or the “gold- Pind a model; $24.25. today, whil subterranean huts at the pond’s edge or on an island. within a few weeks, and then the road over the top js | THE LATEST thing in wrist gles with bantam They eat the bark and leaves of the trees. will be buried until June. «Hw 5) shi the phases ia side. Sometimes the beavers have to be restrained. They Rocky Mountain National park is one of the most | SAG IN INDIVIDUAL WORKER PROD UCTION ‘LESSENED : |meckies {e2F How R pnses
Oliver, who las nament in 194 he Western ope with Uncle Sam, the heights hi pre-war days. es Bogie final nine two: the mettle of back and kno ith the pressu al par-five hole; hot 15 feet fron® sy par as Nelson h—and trouble
1so had to com to win. Trailing nd of the morn he five-under-pa n Frank Moore, ogan spent thé yd taking an old lesson. very club in hi ent to work o id 4 victory. He for the day. he hot man o on the out nin Jim Turnesa. Th t six up at thé and then coaste 6 and 5 triumph Chuck Congdon ll the way, toa at the end of 1 d out the match
tries
secretary of t obile association from Washingto be accepted b abor day 100-mi 3a. to big car ownen lis area.
BALL
¥ FIELD
1:30 P. M. 3 vs. Columbus 3 or Information oy 4488
JE POINT THOSE JET ITEMS
INT AUTO
SUPPLY
» and Ray Streets
TO CES
CARS LIER, IND.
UG. 25
$s 12 NOON AT 2:30
Lamb’s mess
fmpound so much water they flood roads, trails, and private property. Then the rangers have to cut the dams. That, however, doesn't always solve the problem, says Raymond Gregg, park naturalist. the rangers cut a dam and the beavers plug the gap overnight. Sometimes the rangers trap the beavers alive and move them to a new location. Some of the less intelligent beavers will cut a-big tree trunk close to the ground without noticing that they are cutting only a stump.
‘Bighorn Sheep Vanishing
THE ANIMAL life in this park is one of its most Interesting features, Here you will find the fast-
f A ° t1 ACCORDING to a press report, three Swedish pilots in a reconnaissance plane were killed when their craft collided with a rocket bomb. These casualties substantiate repeated reports from Bweden concerning the continual passage of unexplained rocket bombs, undoubtedly originating from Baltic sea bases now under control of the Russians. Obviously the Russians are using German scientists to perfect the missiles they had been working on before Germany surrendered. This is the first pay-off "from that secret order from Washington which halted the victorious armies in their headlong dash for Berlin. You recall that incident when no one seemed to know why our men didn't keep right on driving for the German capital. Someone had decided, for reasons sufficient unto himself, that our armies should permit the Russians to capture Berlin. So the Russians grabbed all the rocket and jet Propulsion &xperimental centers east of Berlin,
Couldn't Do Job Alone
NOBODY can blame the Russians for seizing such invaluable assets, along with the Nazi scientists whose brains had created these mechanical monsters of the next war, The Russians probably wouldn't be able, alone, to build the atomic bomb or the guided missile for a few more generations. There is no product of engineering that levies a greater demand on the scientific brains and manufacturing facilities of a
My Day
HYDE PARK, Friday-I have just finished reading “Dinner at the White House,” by Louis Adamic. I always find this author interesting and stimulating. Much of what he put into “Two-way Passage,” 1 think, would have helped us through this post-war period, and I wish that even now some of it could be done to awaken in us, as a people, a better understanding of conditions in the rest of the world and our tie to other peoples. Some things in this new book amuse me-—for instance, the wonder Mr, Adamic expresses that two young English girls had been asked only a day ahead to come to dinner at the White House. It never occurred to me that this would seem strange to anyone! We lived in the White House as we had always lived at home. There was rarely a meal when we did not have guests who had been asked on very short notice.
For Dinner Only * I DO NOT REMEMBER this particular case, but I imagine I asked those girls because I had meant to see them some time or because I thought they would be interested in meeting their own prime minister, Winston Churchill. Whenever T wanted anyone to see my husband, he or she had to be asked to dinner and was often told that the invitation was just for dinner, because my husband would
Sometimes»
popular in our national system. prewar year, it drew 685,000 people. being broken this year, All park employees are now on a five-day, 40hour week. But some rangers love their work so much they work overtime and on their days off “unofficially”—without pay. Trying to run the park with an inadequate staff is not the superintendent's biggest headache. “It’s seeing the layout go to pot,” he says. “It's| seeing the utilities deteriorate. We haven't the money to maintain them properly.” Back in the CCC days the national parks got a lot | of help on construction and maintenance. When it was discontinued, nothing took its place.
That record is
By Maj. Al Williams
nation than the building of an atomic bomb and guided missiles. The Russians just “ain't got what it takes,” but with the help of Washington they now have the men who have “got what it takes.” We face the payoft, I have been asked why the Naz scientists work for the Russiansiwhile the Reds pillage their native land. + Anybody asking that question ust doesn’t know how exquisitely the Reds have learned to use food, or lack of it, to compel all within the, eK power to carry out orders,
Work or Starve Edict \
ASSUME that you are a Nazi or any other scientist, You will work and produce for your Red masters or your wife and children will starve to death. Will you work? Against Russian development of guided-missiles, take a look at our home picture. The head of our army ordnance tells us that we haven't yet been able to improve on the Nazi V-1 or V-2 robombs. Underneath, we find army ordnance fighting our army air forces for control of this development. Guided-missiles involve the science of aerodynamics, whether the vehicles be passenger planes or expendable pilotléss planes carrying explosives. You know the difference between developing guns and shells launched by guns -— ordnance’s function and_the field of winged objects.
By Eleanor Roosevelt
have to go to work afterward and I would have some other engagement. I am sorry that Mr. Adamic felt that Mr. Churchill was an evil influence. When Mr, Churchill and my husband first met as the leaders of their countries, I imagine there was speculation on both sides as to how they would get on. Though they had met before, they had seen very little of each other,
Differences and Similarities
THERE WERE FUNDAMENTAL differences in their political thinking but, in their intellectual and social background, there were many similarities. As the years went by, I think a great respect grew between thé two men, and also a great affection which was purely personal and did not preclude differences of opinion on political and even military matters, I think when Mr, Churchill called my husband “Mr, President,” he was not trying to flatter any more than my husband was when he said “Mr. Prime Minister.” Both of them recognized that they were playing great historic roles and that heavy responsibilities rested upon them. No matter how much we may differ with Mr, Churchill in political philosophy—and I personally
.differ with him on many things—we must never
forget what we owe him as a war leader and what
he meant to the people of Great Britain when they
were all that stood between us and Hitler.
¥
In 1941, its biggest
Individual Called Key to Auto Output
(Last of a Series)
By CHARLES T. LUCEY Scripps Howard Staff Writer DETROIT, Aug. 24—Production engineering and assembly-line magic are great stuff, but the volume of work a man does in a day—indi- | vidual productivity—is still in the | pay-off. Individual productivity in the auto industry has fallen off in | recent years. A given number of men made fewer and fewer spark | plugs or axles or steering gears. | But there are signs that the downward trend is being arrested and that individual output is starting up the hill again. That is important from many angles. » = » THE WAR, especially in its later stages when the country was over the production hump, was bad medicine for individual workers’ performance. _ Management often was working a cost-plus-fixed-fee basis, with Uncle Sam picking up the tab. Cost wasn't the dominant factor because you don’t sell tanks or heavy artillery in a competitive market. So, on both management and workers’ sides, there are some cases where the boys coasted a little, Also, war brought into the factories thousands of men and women with little , experience. productivity. 5 ” ~ NOW, in peacetime, auto production hasn't yet moved into the top capacity pace that helps boost individual productivity. But some of
{look at what 1s happening. Henry Ford II said a while back that, individual productivity in Ford plants declined 34 per cent during the war.. One group of operations which took 96 minutes in 1940 took 128 minutes five years later,
five years later. A third group took 28 minutes in 1940 and 49 minutes five years later. " ” » WHEN General Motors has been able to check operations which are the same today as before the war, worker efficiency has been estimated to be down about 20 per cent. This rate probably is. higher than the industry at large, but not high enough to suit management. Productivity spells out costs, com= pany officials point out, Until high productivity lowers costs, the public cannot get cheaper transportation from Detroit. At G. M., productivity is. higher now than two months ago. At Ford, officials believe they have the downward trend licked and see some encouraging upward signs.
| say, if the industry is to prosper. ” o "
THE NUMBER of units a worker
on rate,
That cut |
the companies are trying to take a |
Another group which took 1188 minutes in 1940 took 1943 minutes
{ Productivity has got to go up, they
on time studies—what reasonable production ought to be.
It is management's prerogative to
if the union stewards decide re- | quirements are too stiff, the ques- | tion may be adjudicated by an out{side agency. Both parties agree under their contract to be bound by the findings of this agent. Auto workers union heads still talk of sweatshop conditions and are vociferous in seeking to fight off any new ascendancy of the old incentive payment, or piecework, plans, ~ » » MANAGEMENT abused these plans, union leaders claim,
set these production standards, but]
by |
| changing the standards as soon as { workers began to make increased | earnings under them. Either the number of units required per_hour {or per day was stepped up or the unit payment price was cut. Strike and material shortages have made high volume production difficult up to now. When a worker knows the “bank” of parts aor material on which he is working will last only three days, he may try to stretch out the work. That doesn’t make for high productivity.
Labor turnover has reached high:
| proportions, especially in the larg- | est factory centers. In May, according to the U. S. employment service, one out of every 14 Detroit workers quit or was laid off,
IT TAKES time to find replacements and costs money to train new men. In Detroit, turnover affected 7 per cent of all workers; in Pontiac, nearly 12 per cent. Jobjumping among veterans has been especially high. This doesn't help productivity, either. Labor relations and. ability of management and workers to live together peaceably affects individual productivity. So do matters of health, housing recreation and the like, Some companies are taking a new look at the social side. In this whole productivity issue lies much of the answer to producing an abundance of goods cheaply, so the greatest number can afford them, in days to come.
By MARGUERITE SMITH
MRS. CHARLES 8S. Wiltsie, 5144 N. Delaware st. raises her own scouring pads in her garden! They're the fibrous centers of the luffa (dishcloth or sponge) gourd. . “I've always been integested in gourds,” Mrs, Wiltsie said. My grandmother had a large dipper gourd that hung by the rain barrel. But it wasn’t until I raised {gourds myself that I realized how | fascinating they are.” A member of the American Gourd society, Mrs. Wiltsie has gone into the subject thoroughly. “Squash, pumpkins, cucumbers and melons are all gourds,” she said. “Some kinds we think of only as omamentals are used in their immature state in other countries as food.” The 700 kinds are divided into hard and soft shell gourds, white and yellow flowering. They're easy to raise, Mrs. Wiltsie said, adding that she found cucumbers more difficult than most ‘ornamental gourds.
» » » THE LUFFA gourd may grow as much as 10 feet long. Its spongy central section is so long wearing it was utilized by the navy during
gloves.” One year when the Wilties were away they returned home to find a Hercules club that had grown three feet long, weighed nine pounds. Turk’s turban is a specially nice ornamental because of its color when mature, which is watermelon green and Chinese red. Crown of thorns or holy gourd has an odd crownlike shape. Balsam apple and balsam pear have shiny small leaves as attractive as ivy. Their seeds are enclosed in red pulp. The rough skinned gourds dry more slowly than the smooth ones. | When Mrs. Wiltsie hollowed out | the crown of thorns that now makes a much used wren house in the
rat
year's drying the inside of it was still .somewhat moist. » » ” GOURDS, like their vegetable garden cousins, do best in rich but well-drained soil. Mrs. Wiltsie gets the ground ready in the fall, adding cow manure for humus and fertilizer. When manure is hard to get she uses. commercial fertilizer with mushroom compost. Gourds need plenty of sunshine, a long growing season. The vines grow rapidly to make good shade.
the south porch. or egg shells insures an early start
s0 the fruit can mature fully before frost.
the war, isiqalso sold in “cleaning |
Mrs. Charles S. Wiltsie, 5144 N. Delaware Ste vine makes in a day or an hour is based back yard she found that after 8 scouring pads.
Mrs. Wiltsie often raises them over |
Starting the seeds indoors in in-| necessary chore done, verted sod placed in a paper cup
GARDENING: "Scouring Pads Grow to |0*Feet Long Gourds Are Fascinating to Raise| Tricks or Not
TO DRY gourds for waxing they should be picked after the stem has turned brown and the skin has hardened. Protect from surface scratches, wash, dry and store them in a warm place to dry. When they are light to the touch they are ready to wax. Mrs, Wiltsie also raises crape myrtle. She planted her four shrubs close to the foundation of the house on the south side. Then she ordinarily protects them in the winter by covering them with burlap. But last fall, because of illness, she didn't get this supposedly The shrubs not only survived but have put up good sturdy growth which will soon be a mass of pink “crepe-paper” clusters.
ing brushes ($12) carries its own lather in its handle. Luminous fish hooks are here. So are frozen melon balls, refrigerators with their innards bathed in ultra-violet light, non-spillable, gold-plated perfume bottles, and— I wouldn't spoof you—airtight suit cases. These are made of aluminum. { They have hermetically sealed edges. | They are for clothes-carrying, but should be handy for saving the gas, should a fellow puncture his toy balloon. I don't think I can stand much more of this. One more post-war wonder and I am going to warp my head in a non-thermostatically cone trolled, old, unelectrified blanket.
We, The Women
You Can't Hide Your Age, Ladies,
By RUTH MILLETT
WHEN WILL women learn that they can't push back the years by: Plucking out gray hairs or get ting their hair dyed? Making a lot of noise at parties? Going in for shorts and halter tops? Fibbing about their age? Choosing their clothes from teen. age fashions? Putting on rouge with a lavish hand? » » WY WEARING THE highest of high« heels, which are no longer com= fortable? Saying of other women—particularly those a few years younger-= “She’s beginning to show her’ age, | don’t you think?” | Saying: “She must be every day [of 40, of the woman who has fooled a few people into thinking | she is younger than she actually is, then trotting out dates to prove it?
comfortable “Moms” to their halfgrown children?
! | Refusing to stay at home and be |
| {
o ” ” DRAGGING THEIR husbands out every night? Borrowing’ teen-age slang? Spending more time improving their faces than improving their | minds? Being coy with men? The sad thing is, women can see those tricks don't work for other women—but each one thinks they are working for hs A
ARMY AIR RESERVE TO TRAIN AT STOUT
Members of the army air force reserve will soon be able to receive flying training at Stout Field, Col. Henry A, Sebastian, commanding
officer, said today.
oy ee own
v
| Col, Sebastian sald plans were | under way to inaugurate the entire {air reserve program but for the present only “small scale” training flights were. pa,
