Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 October 1948 — Page 23

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Inside Indianapol

No one ever asked me what I like to watch

take up the other half, sir.) , Now, if someone would ask me what I like to watch best, I would be forced to say people. .Any. kind of ‘people as long as théy’fe people.” For my money any time, I'll take people before monkeys, ants, spiders, elephanjg, politicians (during election time), houseflies, "mosquitoes, whales—the list is endless. 5° PB You may try to argue the point with me, and no doubt, you may have some veéry fine arguments favoring a species of insect or animal, but I must hold out for homo sapiens.” Stop and think a minute, ~ “Who has more problems? . Who his more worries? ‘Who Hhas_more ‘to worry about? Who acts the silliest of all Itving: organisms? Who can get inio hot water quicker, deeper and more oftds than you - know - who - I'm - talking - about? From that, doesn’t it follow logically that man would be the most interesting to watch? OK. Let's not argue anymore about it. You'll never convince me monkeys are funnier than people.

People Always Put On Show

THE BEST PART about people is that they put on a show wherever ‘they happen to be. One of the best places right now: (the furniture is in excellent shape) is the Indiana Bell telephone center in the Claypool Hotel. An afternoon can

go by so fast in the joint an hour's snooze feels like 15 minutes.

RB A MURR OMEN

the Indiana Bell-telephone center just use the phone and leave. And then—there are othef. customers with problems on their minds.

» 4 IS «=~ By Ed Sovola Before~1 report an eye-witness account of 8 0f the things man does while using this i TR Rr Tre ARS much to have a minute's silence and inactivity in memory of Alexandeér Graham Bell? It would? Anyway, on-a typical afterfoon, ‘here's ‘what |

“you-would seg It: yourhad the time to fritter away,

in the telephone center. It's fun to imagine what! each user of the nickel wonder is going through, too. I never hesitate to use my. imagination to make someone nore interesting than he really is, A’ good illustration of that would be the guy who had a most satisfied air about him when he closed the folding door, He dialed with zest and confidence. He laughed; he slapped his plaid-| covered knee; he did most of the talking. A hearty fellow. 1 imagined that he had just found out the market fell from under the used car| business.

~The Indianapolis

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1948

ee

SECOND SECTION SP} cordoned TED

ight Of Russia Is Symbolized By Her Patient, Plodding People

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Red May Day Parade Overshadows = i A a a Se

A teen-aged girl emerged from a booth shortly | — " . after my arrival and gave everyone present a| Sam Welles, former executive in the State Departme devastating look. At the time I had no idea the, ¢orrespondent for Time Magazine, visited Russia in 1047,

Anything Else Observer Has Seen ht Ei 8 RL Reh

nt and Here

- on the floor.

OM

teen-aged girl with a devastating look was to| Is the second of two articles, condensed from two Russian chap-

spend the afternoon in the center, The reason for her chagrin? She got a busy signal on the other end of the line, One elderly man, wearing a dark blue pince-nez glasses and a big front liberally covered with cigar ashes, squeezed into a pay statu. 1 watched him fume and stew until I couldn't see him for the cigar smoke. “aid My attention for the next five minutes centered on a young fellow who obviously was unlucky

anit

in love. The way he looked I judged he had just ple walk by. quit his job and was telling his girl ‘he was leav-| Bastille Day crowds in Paris

ing for the French Foreign legion. - His feet were

on every part of the booth except the ceiling. 1,and Holy Week crowds jam- no ville medal or decoration,

almost suggested he join a circus instead of the Legion. Business really got good when I had the old en the love-sick young man, the teen-age girl with the busy signal and a nervous middle-aged

man who watched his wrist watch as if it had a

fuse on it, all working to amuse me. The fact

that they were behind glass made it look all the *

more like a show, Don’t get the idea that all Indiana Bell's customers were funny. A goodly number came in and! made phone calls and left, Just as you or I would do. Nothing dramatic at all. some who didn’t have their feet in the aisle, didn't! pound on the ledge or the glass, didn't shout, tear their. hair or take notes on the glass, Dulk

“Coins Put Into Ventilation Slots

YES, SIR, PEOPLE are wonderful man almost choked in the booth but he didn't throw his cigar away. The young gal chewed her fingernails for an hour waiting to get through and when she did she talked for An hour. The love-sick bey went springs. (Life can-be beautiful.) The man with the wrist watch left with his shoulders dragging - (Life can_be awful.) . “Quite a place,” I said to Dorothy Seaver, at the desk upon leaving. : “Yes it is." she said,

man ¢

slots.”

That wasn't funny. It just so happened that I TRB REPS IN SR EERE

ago. It made me feel”so foolish I. didn't say anything. People. They're funny.

Bury the Hatchet

By Robert C. Ruark

NORFOLK, Va., Oct. 7—The common-sense command, or amphibious training center run by Adm. R. 0. Davis, Adm. Fred Kirtland, and Marine Brig. Gen, W. A. Worton, is an amazingly intricate operation! ol ow . It is as intricate as a war, -in that it deals “pguaty in airpewear,. seapawer,, manpower, gunpower, and supply. It uses bombs and planes and rifles and -baitleships and landing craft. and infantrymen and radar and transports and submarines and medical skills and underwater demolition and freight :ghips and tanks and flamethrowers and engineers. . It is a complete and happy weld of the three services, which battle valiantly and ingloriously against each other in Washington. } ts; joh:is. to prepare to fight a war, anywhere, anytime, with a minimum of mistakes, casualties and tradgedy and to win it with what we've got instead of what we might get. It predicates its operation on three commodities complete co-operation of the separate forces, sweaty practice of all theory, and a staggering selflessness on the part of the men who run the show. World War 17; fought largely without benefit

>

of friendly ports for the debarkation of guns,

men and materiel was an. over-all amphibious operation, with the success of air and manpower dependent on how well we lugged them from hyar to thar. .

Same but More of It

WORLD WAR IIT, if jt threatens to call for even more complete co-operation of separate arms. : It is Adm. Davis’ idea that if an operation demands oversea - transport, it should be Navyrun. When it switches into phase II of air bombardmenf and support, it should be Air Forcedirected. When it achieves phdse III, the direction of landed troops, the top command should go to the Army's field forces. In all three phases, the two inferior commands should be of sharply cé-ordinated assistance to

occurs,

het board that allows actual communication berm gvers rrom the ‘Kremlin's crack

the boss commander, and all three forces should be letter-perfect in each other's jobs, To that end, his training is set. It stresses timing—split-second timing. It sfrésses repetition, until evervbody from stem to stern can do it half asleep, scared stiff. sick, wet, dry, cold. “We got a secret ingredient here,” Adm. Kirtland said. with a grin, ) hands, sore backs, sore feet, practice.” Everything is practical." When they teach a ™an how to hit a beach, they take him out and he hits the beach from an attack transport. They have two beaches one with “smooth water, one with rough. ’ They blow up the’ beach as he comes ashore. Navy, Army, Marine aircraft ly down his throat. He gets wet. * He learns to shoot by shooting. He learns gunfire co-ordination from an electronic

tween -plane, shore, ship and station.

Beat Him With Hard Work

THEY beat him to death with ground work For instance, there are 11 courses in the gunfiresupport school. One. sample course lists 18 subcourses, including everything from aerial map reading to radar, for a total of 353% hours. Just one course, If a man is specializing in logistics, there is a collection of real:planes, ships and vehicles for him to load and unload. If he is learning underwater demolition, he swims under water with a pack of wetproof explosives and blows up things. If he is taking communications. he communicates. He doesn’t play at it. The marvels of radar and radio are there to he used. Under the Kirtland-trained men, a full division can qualify for battle in 90 days, either on the premises or afield: in which case a eadre of experts pack their-equipment and travel to the scene. » The troops in that case get orientation, specialization—such things as waterproofing a jeep preliminary landingetraining and actual landing practice, The place is a miniature league of combative nations. Greeks. Turks, Canadians, Italians, Latin Americans have all gone through the mill.

The @amphib base at Little Creek: Va., is a military

babel of tongues, skills, services and practices which’ is, after all, the way you fight.

ET _—

Aerials in Hats

WASHINGTON, Oct. 7—Now it looks like

everybody, including my revered employer, is lining up at the Federal Communications Commission demanding a license to ‘build his own private broadcasting station. This is a horrid prospect. As I understand the scheme, I am supposed to lug around a suitcase full of B-batteries, tubes, and other weighty widgets. Say I am stretched out ‘on the sofa of some friendly Senator, comfortably, so that I can think better about the problems of the honorable boss. My suitcase is ‘by my side. It starts to, vow! and goes clankety-clang. And there's the editor on his private radio .telling me to get up off my big. Wide couch and beat it: out to Fourth and Main: where a. street car has rammed a beer truck. This is going to play hob with my thinking“ Yours, too. Cops are going to have aerials growing out of their .hats so the chief ean catch ‘em napping. Truck drivers, hackers, roadbuilders, ferry boat chauffeurs, firemen, railroad conductors, tree choppers, movie directors, electric linesmen, auto mechanics, newspaper. reporters and. no. telling

who else will be under the boss” thumb tohstantty

via radig,

Keep Close Tab on Husbands

WORSE STILL is another government idea whereby there will be a radio-phone service so that any wife can phone her husband wherever he.is, so long as he has his little suitcase with him. If he doesn't” answer, this Indicates he's ditched his machinery and I don’t envy him. when he gets home. . This is no nightmare dreamed up by a spacewriter for amazing science magazine. It is upon

us, fellow cifizens, and we've got to act fast if we:

are fo escape the perambulating telephone. 1 got my first inkling of this unhappy prospect in the commission's vast green and gold sanctum where more than 100 big-wigs were presenting

arguments about the kind of ultra-high frequency wave lengths they needed to keep in touch with their help. I saw no wives, but I presume’ they will be along later. These demanders of personal radio stations included representatives of all the fire chiefs in America, all the police departments, the Delaware Lackawanna and Western railroad, & couple of television outfits, the newspaper publishers, the city of Indianapolis, the Florida Foresters, the San Diego Gas and Electric Co., the Albuquerque Gravel Products Co. the Boston Tow Boat Co. the Yellow Cab Co, of Philadelphia, and the Western Union Telegraph Co.

Phone for-News. Directions IF ONE OF the latter firm's messengers gets lost, he can phone headquarters for new streef

ever possibly underestimate the might and magnificence of Russia. I stood at one spot and watched a million peo-

In fact, there were

The old of the parade. which took up the

out the door turning hand °nlY

aid, “stick around until that ance of Stalin and other memAMIE BIOETH TORE RRNA Hea Ay Bes al the Relies. 4, 1he TERN ater Gling 1 hag d asks for the money he just put into the ventilation Sewing level atop Lenin s tomB. [0 "gialin was in his box at fhe

Th WekkY officers “not soldiers, ! of them was an officer—flung all

Across the hundred-yard cob- . : . ) hose : - 3 ’ ment against the light of the nation far greater than . thos n : terrible .bled width of Red Square, other 3 : Co TERR. t wv A i! tur thelr faces quite naturall +I shall remember your \ files of troops were placed every D33sage outside. (His favorite for a Eident, the only Ameri-ituried. theif jaces 4 destruction and your children’s

“Work, sweat, blistered Ces ARR Sf othe Square Aron... the

By Frederick C. Othman

ters in his forthcoming “Profile of Europe.” { - rior

HE people were the single most impressive thing T saw in Russia. They made the Red Square May Day parade my single most impressive experience there. No one who has seen Moscow's May Day parade could

I have seen! ored simlpicity of hs plain mili-

tary top coat and uniform, with

contrasted sharply with the other

TE a ian T od uniformed figures up there—who seen the - Easter parades of all dripped medals, ribbons, and i Seville, Spain, 1eWeled orders. In Britain Stalin occasionally moved from have seen the side to side of the 40-foot reprocessions and viewing walk on top of the tomb,

to stretch his legs, But he never sat down, and he never long stopped waving in acknowledgement of the cheers. He was within 60 feet when he came to the end of the reviewing walk near- _ est me, and through powerful field 8 a Hoy Sum glasses 1 had several good, unall shrink beside hurried looks at him. a Moscow May He ig a short man, even among Day. : me short COMpRRIOnS. He has a ‘ apy +.sallow complexion, sees e 1.do not mean the military part sunlight. His hair and mustache were graver than I expected. his features had life and expression when he talked, and once or twice chuckled, with his associates, Otherwise his face was an impassive mask, with many wrinkles and pockmarks that do not show in his official photographs. It is

vast crowds for a king's funeral and a king's coronation. 1 have seen the crowds at Coney Island

3

all

Mr. Welles

first hour. The troops, the tanks, the trucks, the guns were well deployed but nothing special. The 310 airplanes (which included five four-engined planes, three of them bombers) were not impressive compared to Western

nations’ air spectacles, the strongest face I have ever } ..8.4 seen. Stalin was right when he NOR DO I mean the appear- .,,.e steel” for his party name.

at was interesting, not least Bolshoi Theater. He enters this

interesting because a pod box, at stage level just to the left & QUEL Nz: LE nz ROSEN Pld 8 Dok every. oie lights have gone Sc Btad Mien eurtain up. so thé“ ®udience's attention will be concentrated on the stage, He similarly leaves just before the end of each act, returning only when the curtain has again risen. .

dea b ¥ 4

ARF BAN PARADE «This alow, steadily. moving, Mass. goes on pou shies hott the whole great width and length of Red Square. "No procession | am ever likely ™ to see will have the force, impact or sheer splendor of those million ragged people,” reports Sam Welles,

four sides of the tomb and kept alert through the long parade by. being replaced with files of fresh officers every half hour. These officers first appeared a

few minutes before the Politburo "y, “oye yy a corner of the box back. of each box and put in its appearance. After the _ o.. "= c © the audience, so sprinkled thickly through the or-lin the square to “Hurrah for had both secretly agreed with me, military ‘part of the parade, extra == = 0 (116 one sees him there chestra, easily recognized by their Stalin!” “Hurrah” is the same each of them would nevertheless files of secret policemen were =, =. draws aside the cur- ill-fitting blue or gray suits and word in Russian as in English.) have had to report fully on the marched in to line the entire cir- "on 0G 00 of the box tothe fact they never talk to any- Those opposite the tomb always “propaganda” they had heard. 1f cuit of Red Square, before the ...... 1 ve Then some people body or watch the performance. did, though there was never aonly one had reported, it would people were Allowed o Jor their i certain parts of the theater Such are the precautions to cheer from the whole crowd in have gone badly with the other. “spontaneous demonstration. : i . keep Russia’s leader from assassi- Red Square at onde. ‘ ve ly he can see him silhouetted for a mo p R But a Is as they came by YES, I should have told her,

whenever he is there two at the or gap or pause. A voice over the were in the Soviet security police. : others loudspeaker regularly. bade those! Even if, by some chance, they

Bolshoi performance is reportedly can official so protected. (Three and spontaneously up toward, Tchaikovsy's opera ‘‘Eugene American Presidents have been Sfalin and the leaders on the r ) FORegIneT "= rh wor gasnssivated wimee 1885) in that tomb. Shifting the -range--of my Historical Museum on the west) =p 0 40 06 cacret policemen period only one czar, Alexander II field glasses around through the to St. Basil's Cathedral on the! =. .. where in the Bolshoi in 1881, and one Politburo mem- crowd, 1 could see that most of east. These troops stood literally : shoulder to shoulder and alternately faced opposite directions 50 they could watch everybody. ~ . ” EVERY THIRD one of these troops was also a secret policeman; the rest were picked sol-

pale faces, I shall remember that ,you want peace and many things "besides peace. You want x I !people’s state, for .instance, and Ts ber, Sergei Kirov -in- 1934, have them were smiling. The children freedom of Movement in your been assassinated, both in the ¢ity especially would wave and cheer, | OWN SoURUY and a fia * i that is now Leningrad.) In ‘the]. At last this seemingly endless| vy... cannot move anywhere, . | Soviet system, not one man but stream of humanity did gradually gay {0 Moscow, without the state's \ thousands are constantly - pro-/taper to an end. It was Russia permission. If you have no per-| tected. ’ that had passed in the shape of mit, you are sentenced to hard - 5.8.8 ‘her greatest strength: Her pa-labor. You cannot even visit FOR WEEKS beforg that May tient, plaint, almost tireless people places like the Kremlin. Day. parade .l had séen various who can-make up for almost any| I shall remember the Russian civilian columns around Moscow stupidity, brutality,” sr miscatens 14 met only once. for a. few during which we hap-

15 feet, stretching the _ whole

Guards Divisions. These 20 files

of treops split the people's pro- practicing for their part in this lation of their. masters. The minutes, cession into 20 ‘long narrow “spontaneous” people's demon- Russian people did that against pened to walk past it. She said: lengths. like 20 parallel pieces of stration. That, plus all the guards the Tartars, Napoleon, and the We Russians envy you foreignspaghetti, and of course con- I saw in Red Square, made me a Nazis, They would do it against ers. You can visit the Kremlin, trolled and directed the people bit cynical ‘about this “people's” any other invader. No procession We Cannot.

I- shall remember the farm

part of the proceedings before it I am ever likely to see will have youth who was born “the

started. . the force, impact or sheer &- year But nothing prepares one for splendor of those million ragged Tour darms were eolieetivized, He that Parade. What a milling nase people. y wa |farms in America?! When I said of humanity was. is, in the , ) no, and added that I myself living, slowly moving flesh is the aor MY. Brealya Jurpiias in owned a farm, he said: “I would great flowing tide of man, wom- O0€ i a I had ¢ sudden jive Jand of my qwn. If I farmed an. and child power that is the deep happiness I had at being an ji” well, I would get something chief single characteristic ‘of this American. I have spent more from it. If I did badly or the. vast land. Part of the procession than five years of my life abroad, weather was against me, I would was in organized groups. Most In over 20 countries. I have be the one who suffered. Either of it was people, just sauntering Never before had that feeling with way it would be up to me.” along. Whole families~were there the intensity Russia gave it "10| 8 os Mothers walking hand in hand Me I SHALL remember the Soviet . with ‘little girls and boys, fathers I am not one of those who says, intellectual to whom I quoted that with still smailer children on their “MY country, right or wrong.” statement. His comment was: shoulders fal Our. country . has often been oe ean yoy seldom say it now, 4 w oo Wrong. It is wrong in some ways bU ussians ore * There were not only endless WIONE os nh Ye Americans than you might think.” pictures of Stalin and the Polit- "0W. ‘We must. try to correct as

ror apm. Your rulers, I wanted to sa buro; endless red. flags; endless Ry evar a3 we van; to him, tell your many hars factory, club, shop and organiza- : things about America. They

tion floats and banners. There N*M Is so strong. But when you "yor crim picture of life Dain were kids tugging at toy balloons !lve awhile in Russia, you are yat any American who visits the and occasionally, as at any circus, 8lad to be an American, [Soviet Union comes away deeply losing: their grip. so the gay- Since leaving Russia, I have aware that, for all his cquntry's colored bubbles floated up over Often thought-of a woman border shortcomings, America has’ a

every instant they were in Red Square. ’ When Stalin arrived, just as thé Kremlin clock struck 10, he came through the gray-painted door under the small - turret in the Kremlin. wall directly behind the tomb. On either side of this door are the hlack marble squares behind which are the ashes of @ommunist heroes buried fh the Kremlin wall, including one American. John Reed. He swung round the tomb and walked up the steps on its front, Red Square side to the lower reviewing level. accompanied by the Politburo, a few other top Soviet figures, and. , some bemedaled secret “police officers. Then he mounted the steps to the upper reviewing level all by himself, to a patter of applause from the small crowd of pass-holders. Once he was up there in the center, alone, the- other leaders started

STALIN—A voice over

up, with Molotov in the van. the crowd: inspector who, when I told her I most precious heritage: Freedom. = ww * x ou was going to write about my| Not the four freedoms, or this THEY GROUPED themselves the loud speaker bade THIS SLOW, steadily moving Russian visit, asked me to “write|sreedom or that one. . on either side of him. But the : mass goes on hour after hour the with the heart.” "I could not hose in the Red Square g rt u Freedom. leader, had first made his solitary, Ose “ 5 po whole great width and length of ‘answer her then. She and the ern. symbolic appearance. The tail- to Hurrah for Statin: Red Square, without ever a break captain who . accompanied her| THE END

Strauss Donates Trophy for Fishing Rod ‘ By ART WRIGHT Mich The jackpot of prizes continued to mount today for The Times baits. Fishing ' Rodeo which will be staged Saturday from 8 a. m. to E. H. Peckinpaugh Co., Chatta3:30 p. m. at Bryant's Creek Lake in Morgan-Monroe State Forest. nooga, Tenn.—Peck's lures,

Millsite Indestructible

I.. Strauss & Co. has added: a trophy for the champion fisher- South: Bend Bait Co. South man tor woman, or child) of the day. Bend, Ind. — Oreno Good Luck Vonnegut Hardware Co. is giving a $45 Hurd rod and fishing tokens and “Angler's

built-in reel, Prayer” plaques. Bush-Callahan Sporting Goods have promised. valuable prizes. pqrue Temper Products (AmeriCo: will award. a tackle box. with In addition to the local sports- oo. pork and Hoe Co., Cleveland). trays: de ‘men co-operating with The Times _ True Temper. Speed Shad lures, $e Robert TI. Dyvig~ 5102 Pendie-in..the prize awards are. {Nese pre Temper Crippled Shad lures. M8 ton Pike, distributor for Pole-N- nationally known manufacturers: ¢ ¢. Tuttle Devil Bug Co., Old Rod will give away three of these Fred Arbogast & Co, Akron, Forge-N. Y.—Tuttle Devilbugs fly

directions, . compact rods that fit into a case. O. ~ Jitterbugs, Hula There was a good deal of jockeying over who One rod. worth $25, is made or Hawaiian Wigglers; gets which wave band and most of the téstimony Beryllium copper; one wor Ashaway Line & Twi

involved kilocycles, megacyles, and other elec- and one worth $7 is made of Aronic gibberish. Chairman Wayne Coy-announced ajyminitm. ooo 2000000 {50-yard nylon tne and ‘that the proceedings probably would ‘be’ The Tonge gn ith-REbINEo Tre, sporting fivion: slip-casting line. and the most complex in the history of the Com- goods store at 455 N. Emerson | munications Commission's history. The lawyer of the Association of Police Chiefs Spinning Reel. did mention, though, their fond ‘hope that soon! The Sportsman's Store will Pro-ignoons for game fish every cop on his beat will be connected constantly vide a fisherman's surprise. gift. Chum -3poonA,’ Pliueger with the sefgeant at the desk. Mr. Coy hasn't ‘Bill Beck, of 4914 W. 15th St. \wiooiers ' psked me to testify yet, but I am ready. } has contributed a quantity of dry| no ‘1 don't want to be connected constantly by flies he makes by hand. radio with anybody. Nor do I feel strong enough -Already "announced - in to carry a radio station on my ceaseless rounds. Times is the $65 plywood boat Tackle As for the boss, by name Laurence Rutman, 1 that-an be carried on fop of an —FTathish. like’ him fine. But if he figures he's going to phone automobile, the gift of Em-Roe _dJohn 4. Hildebrandt me wherever 1°am. and thereby jnterrupt my Sporting Goods Co. [gansport «= Shm-Ei thinking in his behalf, he can go blow out a Hoffman's Sporting Goods Co. Trophy. detector tube. |251 Massachusetts Ave, will Or, 50 help me. 1'll drop my suitcase by acci- provide a useful prize yet to be fsle, Minn.—Free Spin dent on a cobble-stone street every time the|selected. [Aquatic Wigglers, thing buzzes. . : | Other local sports goods firms| Millsite Tackle Co,

$12.50 is a steel-aluminum alloy, facturing Co. Ashaway, R. IL Fifty-yard Ashaway casting line,

| Enterprise Manufacturing Co., River Spinner. Ave, will give a $22.50 AShaway 4yron, O.—Pflueger Kleen fish

|scalers, Pflueger “Limper" Jigger With

dames Heddon's Sons, DowagThe isc, Mich..—~River Runts,

Helin Tackle Co., Detroit, Mich. plank to The Times, you still have

Mille ‘Lacs Manufacturing Co. with the entry blank.

Dancers, rod specials, Tuttle’ Devilbug Wet Flies. J Weezel Bait Co, Cincinnati, 0, ~Weezel Sparrows, Walter 8S. Wilson Lures, Shelhy-<7b-yard:ville, Ind —Assortment of Frogvermin Ben Loare, Wilson Wiggler and Blue

n Manu-

Arrangements have been madetwo Martinsville church Pflueger 8roups to provide for the sale of Wizard food and soft drinks during the contest. A Any type of fishing tackle may be used, If you haven't sent your entry

. FISH FOR RODEO--Dimping Jagged fish (big ones, too) f The Times Fishing Rodeo Saturday in Bryant's Creek Lake at Mars / Roster Bastin, R. R. 3, Martins.

. time to file your entry. If more Co.’ Lo- than one member of, the family Rode Btatuette \wiji compete, you s add their. gan-Monroe State Forest are C : ‘names to a slip of paper sent ville (left), and Tlarence May, "Fish Hatckiry, where the fish were obtained. Sorry; fi Tagged fish in the lake Will [oi is closed until 8 o. m. Saturday, when the Rodeo include Blue Gills, Crappies, Bass - - int Pi on Paxs 30 Howell, and Catfish, try Blank on Page

Spinners,