Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 September 1946 — Page 14

(A Regular- Weekly

; "Animal Farm,

On Communism, Has Already Started Plenty of Heat

| Ta “ANIMAL FARM." By George Orwell..New York, Harcourt, Brace.|) led

a

ALL THE ANIMALS on Mr. Jones’ farm revolted and declared man their real enemy, because he is “the only creature that consumes without producing.” They called all animals equal, but when the pigs took charge they gave them special privileges for directing the farm. Everybody worked hardér than-before. Gradually Napoleon, the top pig, got rid of all opposition and reduced ;

the commandments to one:

“All animals are equal, but some are more equal than others.” And thus, by means of George Orwell's “Animal Farm,” satire gets a chance at the political scene and the American public is able, virtually for the tirst- time, to indulge in wholesome gales of laughter at

the expense of the Stalinist die- |

tatorship. This is a distinct advantage, for it will enable those who have been gnashing their teeth in anger to 1 with cooler heads. For only those who feel sure of themselves can afford to indulge in satire. : » ” " “ANIMAL FARM,” a highly amusihg and entertaining story,

..goes to the members of the Book of the Month club with a special plea by Harry Scherman, its president, asking that they do not exercise their right of substituting another book for it. Mr. Scherman says it expresses “perfectly the inner but inarticulate philosophy of tens - of millions of free men in our present anxious world.” His book committee “cried with one voice: ‘This is it!"” (That means Dorothy Canfield, Clifton Fadiman, John P.Marquand, Christopher Morley and Henry S. Canby.) It is, he says, of “world-wide - importance.” And Christopher Morley declares: “It caused a sensation when it was published in England. One of the most distin- ' guished publishing houses in Ameri- ~ casshied away from it like & fright- : ened mustang.” The horse that did not shy away is Harcourt, Brace . & Cao. * " » ”

GEORGE ORWELL, an Eng-

lishman who hates tyranny, orthodoxy, totalitarianism and political | chicanery, has given all the animals | Major, the

a role in the comedy.

THE FIRST READER . . . By Harry Hansen

Feature of The Times)

' a Satire

mals, Terror of Mankind, Protector of the Sheepfold and Duckling’s Friend. ; How he manages to get the sheep to chant “Four legs good, two legs

CRITICAL INSIGHT— to

Traced From Romantic Era

Music Since the Romantic Era.” By Adolfo Salazar. Translated from the Spanish by Isabel Pope. New York, Norton, ‘$5. By HENRY BUTLER WHAT 1S the relation between the music and the society of a given era? This is the sort of question that less astute writers than

| Adolfo Salazar into rash generall-|.

zations. It has led writers of popularized

musical history into careless .rephrasing of snap judgments. on “classicism,” “romanticism”,

and similar abstractions. it On- the first page of his introduction, Mr. Salazar warns against the “ism” terms. They are useful chiefly as shorthand. Like keywords in a cross-index, they aid rapid reference. But they - must be used with caution and, one gathers from the

better,” and the pigs to walk on] their hindlegs, and how eventually | he appears strolling in the farm- | house garden, smoking a pipe and wearing Mr. Jones' clothes, shows. the direction Mr. . Orwell's story | takes. . I have an idea you will find it | rather obvious and simplified, and | your interest will depend on your sympathies. We have had very little political | satire; writers are intensely in| earnest on both sides of the debate. | Swift, master of political and social satire, wrote the most brilliant | of these. akimal stories when he| described Gulliver's voyage to the | land of the horses, a part ‘that | many readers’ skip.

tricate inventions; he prefers to do| a simple fable without argument, {and that makes his story effective. - = " - THAT Animal Farm wil] start some heat is proved by preliminary attempts to discredit it. For instance, last.week a letter arrived by special delivery from a bookstore, announcing that it would recommend the book to its customers as a satire on totalitarianism and democracy! - It will be news tq Harry Scherman.

|

ASSORTED MURDERS—

2 '"Whodunits' Chill Reader

"THE SPIDER LILY." By Bruno “Fischer. “ "McKay Co. $2.

prize white boar, who was 12 years

old and had 400 children, calls on thé animals to get rid of man's been drunk and his management disor- |

rule, after Mr. Jones has derly. ..

Two young boars become lead- |

ers:

"KILL TO FIT." By Bruno Fischer.. New York, Five-Star Mystery. 25c. By DONNA MIKELS

Philadelphia, David |

scholarly reserve of Mr. Salazar's admirable study, with humility. Let 2-8 = “ .. THIS BOOK does not-pretend | to lay down indisputable judgments | but rather to suggest points of view. Its pretension to relative objectivity | rests on the fact that it does not discuss composers and their works from the point of view of the author’s predilection but from that of the concrete facts as.they present themselves.” Among the concrete facts are the procedures and techniques of composition. Modified by various in-| fluences, they are subject to chang: | from period to period. | But procedures and techniques |

me quote from the introduction: |

pensed with as some doctrinaire| composers of music by mathemati- | cal rules have asserted. With the “arbitrary minds” who have “sought to transplant the art of music to realms of their own invention not based on the reality of the aes-thetic-acoustic feeling.” ‘Mr. Salazar does not concern himself. s " » SINCE THE study is one of evolving techniques, it cannot be strictly: chronological. Chronology, like biography, enters only incidentally into “Music in Our Time,” and then only when necessary for precision. Mr. Salazar’s scope and learning | are both .so vast that a brief review cannot do his book justice. What the reader gets is a panorama of modern occidental music. Hundreds of composers of all western {countries are mentioned, some ‘briefly, some at length. 3 k But whether the mention is brief

{

critical insight (what the Frenc {call ‘“apercus”) which make

|stimulating reading.

| Of Chopin: “Chopin's use of

chromaticisnt, indeed, is mot simply {who seems to be Chloe’s favorite. |leaves Jim and goes home to Ma

a hagmonic effect but is a kind of

‘not much of a talker, “with a rep- 5 couple of “whodunit” offerings by he produces by surrounding his utation for getting his own way, | Brune Fischer. one of the country’s melodies, normally diatonic, with a and Snowball, quicker in speech io, flight crime authors.

and more inventive, the same depth of character. They adopt seven

but without

command- |, ovel A

“The Spider Lily” is a little different in the way" of a mystery returning veteran who

sonorous cloud | coloratura style.”

in the Italian

= x

CONTRASTING Debussy and Ra-

ments: Whatever g0es on two legs is |p every reason to kill his cheating! vel: “In Debussy, thie orchestra is alan Rn atever goes on four|yife finds her stabbed. Everyone ways poetic; in Ravel, it # always legs is a friend; no animal shall |ipinks him guilty—even the jury mechanical. - In Debilssy; all is pic-

wear clothes; no anima) shall sleep | in a bed; no animal shall drink al- |

» » ” THEY TOQK the rats as com- > rades, with three dissenting votes:

the two carthorses, most faithful disciples,

cohol; no animal shall kill any] Pood animal; all animals are equal. | jea)s with the veteran's attempt|obtains his shading

Three dogs and the cat, “who was afterward discovered to have voted | on both sides.” Boxer and Clover, became the | but Mollie, | the white mare, asked a heretical |

{needed killing.’ The major portion of the novel

to locate the real_murderer, when, normal register of the instrument as far as everyone else is concerned, in such a way that the performer!

{the-case is closed... As an incidental, the author does a good job of characterizing the | il-effects of misdirected sympathy | toward “section 9” dischargees.

THE SECOND Fischer novel

question: “Will there still be sugar | BTOUPS a strangely-assorted crowd

after the rebellion?”

tame raven, told the animals about | estate of a wealthy widow

Moses, the | Of week-end guests at the country

Nat-

Sugarcandy mountain, to which |Wrally, there are a couple of killings all would go when they died, and —what's a ‘week-end party without! de dd the pigs had to. work hard to!Killings?

, counteract his tales.

Rick Traif, ex-pisto! champ, ex-

Mr. Orwell thinks up some clever |FePOrter and ex-Hollywood pub-

devices to explain how Napoleon

|licity ‘man almost becomes an “ex”

by a trick, had Snowball expelled. permanently when he becomes a Thereupon Napoleon abolished |Pottleneck in some big-time undermeetings as a waste of time and |World operations.

- ordered all questions

special committees of pigs, meeting

in private,

+ The animals who now worked like slaves, gradually saw changes in the commandments that had been

painted on the side of the barn

now sleeping beds.

in the

And “no animal shall kill any other animal” received the addi- |

tional words: “without cause” 1

settled by| Right triumphs, of course, but in

the course of doing so. provides some 150 pages of good reading for the crime fans.

Best Film Plays of '45

For instance, “no animal shall sleep To Be Published Soon in a bed” had been changed to read “No animal shall sleep in a bed with sheets,” for the pigs were farmhouse

Crown Publishers announce the Oct. ¥ appearance of the new annual collection of “Best Film Plays of 1945," edited by John Gassner and Dudley Nichols. The volume contains the complete text in play form of “The Lost t | Week-end,” “Spellbound,” “Story of

became patent that Animal Farm |G: I. Joe” “A Tree Grows in ‘Brook-

was not an elysium. ”

* a THUS Mr. , Orwell

$00 many complications. The lat

To obtain any book reviewed

Jer nan is Sevoled to the develop-| = : hy ni at peerl leader, - . : polecn, calea Father of an An-| Edits Anthology

DRS

{lyn,” “Double dndemnity.” ‘None {But the Lonely Heart,” “A Medal

proceeds on [for Benny “Over 21,” “The Southhis way, telling his story without |erner"

forme And “Thirty Seconds Over » yo.”

"MUSIC IN OUR TIME: Trends in|’

lis besieged by male admirers, whom

{per afterwards at Claridge’s (why

ge

LEISURE LIFE—

Remote But

Fascinating "CHLOE MARR." A novel. By

Farm.scene . ps “Noon,” a lithograph by George »

Gy

ve

|THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

we

pi ~~ [Lithograph by George Schreiber Depicts Life on Farm Music Trends | J

Schreiber, in the Herron Art institute collection. t ”

Bitterness of Farm Life In Depression Era Revived

SOME OF the hottest ‘debates, bloodiest battles have been waged over: absentee ownership. |

A. A. Milne. New York, Dut- | {

ton. $2.75. = ; | side, investments on the other, you|ures like labor spies and plug-uglies.

In simple, direct narrative fashion, Mr. Corey traces the battle before

NOBODY ever gets to know Chloe Marr at all well, She has beauty, wit and enough

life in and about Mayfair. she has a host of friends to provide week-end invitations to the courrtry. Aon | Still more, she has the kind of

Mr. Orwell indulges in 10 iN- are not so easily abolished or dis |ynjealous, uninquisitive nature that

enables her. to keep on good terms | with women friends, to whom she | gives wittily evasive answers when they ask about her “affaires du coeur.” » » n ; WITH SO many attractions, she

she treats with kindly impartiality. There's a Monday man, there's a Tuesday man, and so on, as she herself expresses it. But it's all a matter of luncheon or dinner or :the theater with sup-

should “Claridge’s” make us American readers almost drool with hunger and thirst? Must be British propaganda, as the Anglophobé would say.)

» ” ” THROUGHOUT all this admira‘tion, Chloe remains enigmatic — |

not in the sourpuss Mona Lisa sense, | wane when Emily's family loses’ half jor extended, it is never perfunctory. |; in a sart of Eurydice sense.|its farm to Mid-West. And Emily, Throughout the book are flashes of | pposa)s of ‘marriage, graciously after her child is born dead, begins B | received, seem to make little im-|to hate Jim's association with the

{ pression. One by "one, the suitors make {other plans—even Barnaby Rush,

| And though, in her friendship with

| COLD CHILLS for the hot Sep- | dissolving of thé tone into an in-| : Much Hadingham Napoleon, fierce-looking but | tember days are amply provided in!finity of chromatic radiations which | 1'® Vicar - of eh HB 8 "

[here is one moment when Chloe [seems about to reveal herself, the | moment passes. EJ » ” | I DON'T like to disclose the -conclusion. Like much elsewhere in the novel, it has a quality of pathos rather than tragedy. The thread of elegiac melancholy that runs even through the comedy and satire

which acquits him because ‘she turesque and evocative; in Ravel, | (1 ohdon theater. British publish- |

And | |privation of small-farm life during flict in Mid-West itself.

{the deprgssion. .|companies are fighting the imple-

For with human beings on one |

{have the beginnings of conflict.

Farmers know that only too well. | And Paul Corey's “Acres of An-

{money to live a pleasantly leisured |taeus,” his fourth novel about farm-

|ers, revives the bitterness and gri

'""ACRES OF ANTAEUS." A novel.-By Paul Corey, New York: Holt, , $2.75.

an Iowa background.

What awakens Jim to the urgent m |need for different methods is conThe loan

{ment companies, each represented

2 ” » HALF-WAY through agricultural|{by factions within Mid-West. The

college, Jim Buckly marries an Towa | jockeying for position retards farm They plan for Production and aggravates the farm- x = =

farmer's daughter. her to teach school, him to finish | college, working summers. But Emily becomes pregnant and can't return to her teaching job in the fall. Jim _has to take what he can get,’ a job as superintendent for. MidWest Farms, Inc, a big organization dominated by loan companies and implement companies. Acquiring average-sized farms through foreclosures, Mid-West operates on & mass-production basis, cutting costs with machines and low wages, n ” » JIM at first admires the efficiency of large-scale planning, which reduces waste and eliminates the small farmer's stubborn resistance to new methods. Farming, Jim thinks, ought to be an industry, and not just arule-of-thumb process reflecting fancient- habits. But Jim's enthusiasm begins to

land exploiters. . As the conflict between Mid-West and the farmers sharpens, Emily

| Tucker. Jim holds on to his job, { hoping to save enough money to | acquire the remaining 80 acres of {the Tucker farm. * 4 8 . THE PATTERN of economic strife | {is familiar. John Steinbeck presented a phase of it vividly in “Grapes |of Wrath.” When people are strug-! |gling against the inhuman tyranny! ot money and machines, they resort to sabotage. { Sabotage, organization of workers

the predominant trait is a specific |. jy siness, society and week-end | —these in turn bring counter-meas-

feeling for the instrument. within

Ravel the

'need never force his playing. “The conductor does not have to |balance the sonorities according to {his own judgment or understanding; Ravel has done it all and, as in the |case of Stravinsky's music, the con{ductor need only ‘play’ what he has | before him in order to have Ravel's | thought appear, perfectly clear and | transparent.” *

MR. SALAZAR'S long final chapter deals with American musical con- | tributions, north and south of the Rio Grande. Beginning with a dis cussion of jazz influence, the chapter goes on to analysis of composers like Henry Cowell, Aaron Copland and Roy. Harris. By shearing away a great lot of extraneous literary and biographical material, and by concentrating on what composers actually write, Mr. {Salazar has made an exceedingly valuable contribution to books about musie. With an excellent bibliography and index, “Music in Our Time” can function as a first-rate reference work.

'Great | Books' Course Planned

A "Great Books" course will be

| bores) seems to be Mr. Milne's pe|culiar gift. It's not easy to analyze. In this leisurely organized, often {charming novel, with all its varied |intangible. Maybe the world de- | picted in “Chloe Marr" seems impossibly remote, but therein may lie the fascination it exerts.—H. B.

‘New Yorker Tells

Hiroshima Blast

! | | Possibly the most conspicuous

[break with tradition in the history {of the New Yorker ‘is that maga{zine's Aug. 31 issue. | For the entire editorial space is devoted to an article by John Her|sey on Hiroshima, what happened {to the city, what happened to the people. ; Choosing six survivors of the atomic-bomb blast, Mr. Hersey has reconstructed the "disaster from their eve-witness accounts. His narrative, although necessarily including gruesome details, is not de{iberately a horror-story, It is natl-

Analyzes Woes

—characters;—the —best-—qualities Ot Accounting | x

| "PROFESSIONAL ETHICS OF PUBLIC ACCOUNTING." By John L. Carey. New York, American Institute of Accountants, $2,

IN THE LAST generation or so, publi¢’ accountants have been de-| veloping a code of ethics similar| to that governing other learned pro-| fessions. { John’ L. Carey's little handbook | on the subject is intended for stu-| dents and practicing accountants.! Covering such problems as what oc- | cupations are “compatible” or “in-| compatible” with public accounting, the book deals with matters like fee-splitting, solicitation, and so on.| n " » y SOLICITATION is considered ethically dubious. But “if a young| practitioner newly embarked on a professional career is not permit- | ted to advertise or to solicit engagements, how is he to obtain clients?! One candidate in ‘an oral examina-

ler an effort fo report accurately|tion responded to this question by and comprehensively the first great|saying that he had no recourse but

man-made catastrophe.

| sue (no cartoons, no stories)

| terse or extehded

The startling austerity of this be) re[flects an editorial policy which, in “Talk of the

{to go into the closet and pray.”

7 Popular Books

offered ‘to qualified juniors. seniors| Town" comments, has consistently Out in Reprints |and graduate , students at Butler| campaigned for world peace —H. B.|

‘universtiy this fall, according Prof. C. E. Aldrich, course director Similar to the course offered last

school year to adults, the course will

be given as a discussion seminar,

Included in the reading program | will be selections from Plato, Thu-

cydides, Aristophanes, Aristotle

Plutarch, St. Augustine, St Thomas

Aquinas, Machiavelli, ~ Montaigne | Shakespeare, Locke, Rousseau

|Hamilton, Adam Smith and Karl|

| Marx.

Ca fl Fisher's Biography

Written by His Widow

Robert M. McBride &--Co. have

to |

| Nearing Birthday

’ f

|

| Seven popular books were re{leased this week in the Sun Dial | Press reprint series. | In the $1.49 edition are

| Dolphin Street,” by

“Green

bling Leaves,’ by Walter Van Tilburg Clark. New titles in the $1 series are: “Three O'Clock Dinner,” by Josephine Pinckney: “Rickshaw Boy,”

“<+by Lau Shaw: “Burning Gold,” by

| Robert Hardy Andrews; “Most

. | Secret,” by Nevil Shute, and “Glory

for Me," by MacKinlay Kantor.

4 Familiar Reprints.

Elizabeth | % | Goudge, and “The City of Trem-|

signed a contract for a biography |of Carl Fisher, one of the founders

Edits Catholic anthology, , . Fr. Raphael H. Gross, C. PP. 8, assistant professor of English at Bt. Joseph's of Indiana, whose iM ction, “A (C Catholic F

holie Essay, | early next month cots Co.

Il be published

by 1 B. Lip-

of the Indianapolis Speedway, writ-| + (ten by his widow, Jane Fisher.

Celebrating 68th birthday. . .

| Upton Sinclair,

| prolific novelist,

| Starting in the bicycle business) Who will be 68 Sept. 20. An in|at the age of 17, Fisher attained dustrious writer for 45 years, Mr. | national prominence in three years | Sinclair has published upward of

ntury of the |He started the Lincoln highway. 50 books. rh his Speedway venture, latest book, is. due for release of Miami Beach, this month as a Book Find club

land, after (created the city : Fla, ata cost of over $10,000,000, » » x =a at : - hi »

fp

“A World to Win" his

. .

' Made by Bantam

Latest additions to the’ popular '25-cent Bantam reprint: serfes include four familiar titles. The four most recerit Bantams to reach The Times book page are: “The Tonto Kid,” by H. H. Knibbs;

Train; “The Love Letters,” by Chr: Massie, and “The Amethyst Spec-

er<’ hardships. * »

s "

AT THE conclusion, when things

are brightening for Jim and Emily,

Jim thinks to himself: “The days of even

building empires were over, agricultural empires.

“The land had to belong to the land was too much of a living thing to

people who - farmed it: the

be left to the quarreling and bicker-

ing’ of men interested only in mak-

ing money. “The farmers would have to learn to own the machines of mass. pro-

duction so-operatively: then they could compete with the growing

corporation farms.” = = =

TO THAT extent, “Acres of An-

taeus” is propaganda. And though

judgment on proposed economic

measures may be outside the provinge of literary criticism, I find Mr. Corey's book convincing.

It's a fairly matter-of-fact book,

with more reporting than poetic imagination in it, as befits the subject. Even the tensions characters are related to the economic tensions.

Mr. Corey has ‘his eye on the depression-era

problem. If the storm and stress may seem somewhat dated, nevertheless is absorbing reading. —H. B.

“Acres of ‘Antaeus’

Merrill. $2.75.

between them and the white race people.

It does nol preach a sermon on the race question. Neither does it deal in wholesale didactic situations or statements. But through the inter-play of characters in the plot, the author drives these points: The blame for the Negro's situation and for his relation to the white man falls upon the members of both races. And if conditions are to grow better, both “whites” "and

mighty effort to bring it to pass. . ” »

WHETHER you are concerned

‘| with race relations as a social prob-

lem does not bear upon your giving your attention to this novel. By the same token it is unimportant wha literary standards you set for the books that claim your time. “Quality” is good reading. Along with entertainment, it gives a deep insight into the mind and heart of the Negro. Thus the author is able to drive home- certain truths regardless of your former attitudes. .-'. " ® PN MRS. SUMNER paints neither a bitter nor an overly-optimistic pic- | ture. But in the natural way of life in the United States today, she brings into contact good, bad ant mediocre Negroes with white people of the same three categories. Pinkey, a mulatto girl, born in Mississippi and educated in Boston for the profession of trained nurse, holds the center of the stage as heroine. .Pinkey easily passes for white in the North. She falls in love with a young white doctor in Boston and becomes engaged to him:

|

AS THE wedding day draws near, she becomes increasingly burdened with the knowledge of her deceit in not revealing her race to him. Unable to support her predicament, she flees to her granny, “Aunt Dicey,” in Mississippi. ” Dicey has lived with painful frugality in her bare liftle cabin and taken in washings to put Pinkey through her training: . The girl's sudden return 'is a great surprise to the elderly woman. » ” ” - IT IS HERE, in the deep South {that the most dramatic scenes of Pinkey’s life in the period of “Quality” takes place. She becomes representative of countless Negroes throughout the nation in their struggle for fairness and justice and the right to live and have their being according to the Constitution of the «United States. In addition, Pinkey serves as a vivid example of the Negro of

this continent.

between the! 8-8

MRS. SUMNER writes from long experience as a native of Mississippi who grew up and was educated in Jackson. She did graduate work at Columbia university and lives now in Massachusetts. Thus she has seen the reaction of the Negro and the

RS SATURDAY, SEPT. 7, 1948) | Novel, Without Preaching, |Portrays Racial Problems - "QUALITY." A cove by Cid Ricketts Sumner, Indianapolis, Bobbée

By EMMA RIVERS MILNER BLAME FOR the plight of American Negroes and the tensions “Quality” by Cid Ricketts Sumner maintains its status as a

‘of unusual suspense and inferest and at the same time brings a sure - | indictment against the guilty persons. wil

Negroes must share equally in ‘all

mixed blood and all that entails on.

Naa : # or - . . 7 a

<

falls upon two specific groups a

¥ |

A nover

Ny

R a ce - problem novelist . . . Cid : Ricketts Sumner (Bachrach).

and south of the Mason and Dixon line. : She writes with sympathy and understanding for both races in the tragically difficult world. of their own making. .

Handbook Is Now Available

"THE JOB HUNTER'S .HANT BOOK: Where and How 14" Find a Job.in Your City." By “Martin W: Schaul. New York, Prentice-Hall, Paper, 75 cents, Cloth, $1.

Designed for mass distribution by organizations: under their own imprint, this handbook is available in single copies from the publigher, Listing federal and state agencies and types of private agencies that may prove helpful, the handbook describes application forms and

gives hints on appearance, conduck and similar matters. ; Possibly the best feature is the advice on systematic planning of a job-hunting campaign,

Classic Reprints Appear Sept. 20

Hartsdale House, Inc, New York publishers, announce the appears ance Sept. 20 of the first 20 titles in Hartsdale House Illustrated Classics. Copiously illustrated, the series comprises reprints of famous books, | Sample titles are: Voltaire’ “Candide,” illustrated by Mahlog® Blaine; “The Way of All Flesh” by Samuel Butler, illustrated by Howard Simon; Mark Twain's “Ade ventures of Tom Sawyer,” illustrate ed by Richard Rogers, and Fitz gerald’s translation of the. “Rue baiyat of Omar Khayyam,” illuse

white man to each other both north

|

|

| vol

HL. P. WASSON & C0.

Announces

DAILY

STORE HOURS

For the Fall Season Monday Through Saturday Store Will Open 9:45 A. M.

-

| Store Will Close.

V 2:15 P. M.

Tutt—and Mr. Tutt,” “by Arthur |

tacles,” by Frances Crane, = |

Nev ld A £ fed

Daily Throughout Fall .

- i ®

trated by Edmund J. Sullivan.

> « 5 ; i

- Editorials .

15S TRA BY

As | 0

A shakeu ment, today gzmbling” e Mayor Tyn pn vice in ] Police Ch shifted 15 se trict squads is good for faces once The shak . The Times | closed a “I tween the board "at cil Mayor Angered | were being bling” syndic town” the action Scurrying mayor's es made the Three “vic terday were They are Sg Beck and O Replacing Haney, Mel Pearsey, for Nine othe taking over day. » They are Graham, Ex ham, Edwa Charles Cr woody and Sgts. Will end Charles eniergency ame jobs. -In an “gambling li over the we Six men Army and 8. Illinois st found a pok Vi Maurice ( gt, club ma keeping a g tion of the act. Arrested | a garhing hk 32, of 1108 C ton, 32, of 3 Noel, 32, Huber, 27, © and - John Illinois st. In a raic Udell st, p Harry Br Bddress, wa and keep Charged w house and g land, 75, of R. Brown, Hubert Har st, and Mze W,. 34th st

Arthur T State st, Ww tising a lott when police a tip, picke block on E 13 baseball Five men ing and cor of dice take yesterday w session on | Saturday ployee of tk ing establis! for operati enterprise, They sai Durante, 30 had 14 bas session, An Sunse diana ave, huddled in Arrests wer there was e had heen in

LOCAI

peep 3333

TI}

Amusement, Eddie Ash. Boots ..... Business .. Classified . Comics .., Crossword

Fashions Foreign:Afl: Forum .... ‘G. 1. Rights Meta Given Housing» In_Indpls. . Inside Indp

“Jim Lucas. F NATIONALLY & Charley's Re