Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 December 1951 — Page 9
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Inside Indianapolis
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By Ed Sovola : : "A COUPLE of clowns went out on a mission in downtown r
clated. They tried to bring a ray of sunshine to sales personnel, ; For a month the folks who serve us have been having a rough time. It isn't easy to stand behind a counter for eight hours and longer and be and confused cus tomers. I'm a customer, I know. : My partner, Keith Bratton; illustrator of my book and editor of Stark, Wetzel & Co. magazine “Crackling,” and I wanted to do something for the sales people. What to do? : “Let's be clowns,” suggested Keith. “That ought to be easy and fuin. Clowns have to shop.” “This clown is through shopping.” ob
IT WAS DECIDED that Keith would be Mrs. Clown and I would be Mr, Clown. Clown costumes were rented and the makeup was applied. Awful stuff. We spared no expense or effort to play the part.
® A vacuum cleaner salesman at Wasson's got
into the spirit of the gag. Mrs. Clown didn’t like the color of the dust bag. She wanted something more. colorful, She thought the handle was too. conventional. We didn't buy, of course, but we had one satisfied salesman. o ob IN THE COSMETIC department we had a picnic. Almost. literally, too. Mrs. Clown pretended cold cream was yogurt and a bottle of yellow cologne was soda pop. y Little children, around for hours, broke into smiles. Long-faced customers formed a circle wherever we stopped. The lady at the information booth in Wasson’s had difficulty telling us where we could buy a mink coat and have Mrs. Clown’s hank of hair fixed up. She squealed at our six-foot long shopping lists, ae oe oe * MR. AND MRS. CLOWN threw the lingerie department for a loss. Keith gets carried away at times. I was glad my face was covered with grease paint. 4 Florsheim Shoe Salesman Lee Nicholas, who has seen me in many costumes and never was fooled, lost that round. I think Mrs. Clown did the trick. She wanted a pair of clown shoes for her husband. Since I feel at home in the shop, the sky was the limit. We gave Bermuda onions to the customers, moved stock around, disrupted the routine of the day completely. y : Lee finally caught on when I told him my size. He hauled out a box and fitted it on my foot to the delight of the customers. i" “That's the best I can do,” Lee said. “You want me to wrap them up-or will you wear them?” oon MR. CLOWN hopes it didn't take Lee more than an hour to straighten up the shop after our visit, Mrs. Clown was dazzled by the jewelry in L. S. Ayres. Mr. Clown wasn't. When he buys diamonds, they have to be over 28 carats. If you're going to get a sparkler, get a god one, Mr. Clown always says. ? “We'll stopelater at Kresge's,” I promised. Mrs. Dorothy Carson, the city’s No. 1 infor-
It Happened Last Night
By Earl Wilson
NEW YORK, Dec. 24—This being ‘Christmas time, naturally I'm eating all sorts of candies and other fattening goodies, but I swear to you— I really swear—that tomorrow or the day after, I'll go on a diet again. I might put it off till a little later . , . come to think of it . . . no use spoiling New Year's for everybody . .. but I swear—I really swear— that before long now I'll diet, at least try it. You may remember, I invented the “Atomic Diet.” : It slashed 9 pounds: off of me in three days last summer and I boasted about that feat rather loudly in print. What I didn’t boast about was that I put the 9 pourids back on again in a few weeks.’ : ge dy ale “YOU LIAR!” some people wrote in to me at that time. “I've gone oh your diet and I didn’t lose anything but my health. I didn’t lose ANY pounds.” : a, Of course, there was a man in Honolulu who told me he lost 15 pounds in 3 days on my diet. I admit, though, that he weighed 315. All the same, I believed in the diet—for quite a lot of kind readers wrote to me saying they had slimmed down just as I had. So, without saying anything about it, I went on the Atomic Diet recently a second time—and again whacked off 9 pounds. It's so nice to talk about it today when I know I needn't think
seriously about dieting again until’ after New Year's. oo o-oo
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STILL, what's the rush? Why not wait till after Valentine’s Day? No sense in making Valentine’s Day and Lincoln's Birthday unhappy for all my folks by refusing to eat a few little specks of mashed potatoes and chocolate dake. “Don’t be a sourpuss and a stick-in-the-mud,” I always say. : , “Be sociable,” I always say, too.
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BUT THIS Atomic Diet, now—it does work, and will work again, if I ever get back on it;
Ping Pong Balls By Paul Southwick
WASHINGTON, Dec. 24 — House investigators tried today to find out if some Pentagon workers are making a lifetime job of drafting complicated specifications for such things as ping pong balls and toenail clippers for dogs. They pointed out that Army-Navy requirements, intended to make sure ping pong balls bounce true, cover 51; pages of fine print. “Clippers, Dog, Toenail” specifications take up four single spaced typewritten sheets. A House executive expenditures subcommittea, headed by Rep. Porter Hardy Jr. (D. Va.) has asked the military to explain. Ralph E. Casey, the subcommittee counsel, said the group wants to find out if Pentagon employees “make a life job out of writing up ~omplicated technical and unintelligible specifications.”
“I think the ping pong ball specifications show what I- mean.”
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THEY TELL ping pong ball makers that they must use “first grade commercial quality virgin cellulose nitrate plastic, compounded from cellulose nitrate, camphor, pigments and such other components as are necessary to produced finished balls with ‘physical properties as hereinafter specified.” The cellulose nitrate, according to the specifications “shall have a nitrogen content of 10.65 to 11.25 per cent.” Manufacturers are warned that “the balls shall be adequately seasoned prior to testing so that further loss of any volatile constituent does
stores which they hope was appre-
weary of following Mama :
—— ! : »
ouple of © Clowns - Take Shopping Tour
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3
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SHOE STORE CHAOS—Salesman
Lee Nicholas fits two clowns with shoe boxes. He laughed when they came in. So did many others.
mation lady and as much a part of Ayres as the clock, had her aplomb ruffled for once. We asked a question while standing in back of her. When Mrs, Carson turned and saw us she .gave a startled gasp. Her poise returned im about two seconds and I was glad to see her smile just a little broader. Merry Christmas, Mrs. Carson, IN THE BEAUTY parlor Mrs. Clown was at her -best. It would be a monumental task to tackle her hair but the operators were ready to try. It was Mr, Clown’s turn to shine at L. Strauss. By that time we knew the performance was going over. Clerks laughed, joked and got into the act. The lady in the Bridal Bureau of Block's was 80 surprised when we asked for a clown trousseau she called the section manager. The girls in the Fashion Bureau will never be the same if they don’t take the clown makeup off. And in the French Salon we couldn't buy an apertif and you can imagine what happened. Both of us are over 21, you know, oe < oe LADIES and gentlemen of sales, Mrs. Clown and I, performing through the courtesy of The Indianapolis Times and Stark & Wetzel, hope you enjoyed the bit of foolishness in the midst of a hectic season. 4 You folks put up with a lot. We do hope it wasn't a chore to put up with a couple of clowns ‘who love to laugh and be laughed at. It would be a pretty drab life if we couldn't,
Good Time to Plan That Summer Diet
Black coffee and half a grapefruit for breakfast. : : Boiled eggs and black coffee for lunch. No salt and pepper.
All the broiled meat you want for dinner. Black coffee. You can have one shot of whisky, too, for dinner, if you want. But no sweet cocktails. No beer. For a dessert you can have three or four stewed prunes. Oh, make it five or six stewed prunes, if you want to!
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NO BREAD, potatoes, butter, sugar, or any
of that silly stuff. In fact, it’s such a simple diet that IT can go on it with ease any time I want to. It might be much simpler for all concerned if I waited, say, till around Decoration Day. I hate to disappoint my Gorgeous Mother-in-Law by refusing to -eat her wonderful food in the winter and spring. No use in getting your Mother-in-Law mad at you, I always say.
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ALL THIS reminds me of an interesting observation I heard or read the other day. It went like this: “I met an interesting conversationalist other day. He didn’t tell me about his diet.”
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EARL'S PEARLS ... In China, allows Kay Armen, 50,000 henchmen can be Wong. , . . 0 < oe WISH I'D SAID THAT: “Slapsie Maxie Rosenbloom can deliver a very -caulifiowery speech” —Irving Hoffman. ; TODAY'S BEST LAUGH: Seen talking with a fellow with whom he’s feuding, writer Coleman Jacoby was asked what they discussed. “He was in a confidential mood,” said Jacoby. “He broke down and confessed he’s a genius.”
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TRYING TO WIN the “worst pun” prize, Jack Stutz maintains that “Politics makes strange bet fellows.” . . , Whereas Jack Perlis, noticing that Shaw's. “Don Juan in Hell” has no beards, calls it “clean-Shavian.” . , . That's Earl, brother.
the
Commitiee Probes Pentagon Waste
THERE ARE two types, both made from forged steel of a type acceptable to the Pentagon. The cutting blades should be of hardened steel and “joined by a steel adjusting screw suitable for the purpose intended.” The larger one should measure 5, inches in over-all length, weigh about 2.75 ounces, and must be “furnished with hand grip handles that are slightly knurled or embossed so as to afford a firm grip.” It also should have a catch to keep the clippers closed and a “volute spring . .. of sufficient strength to hold the clippers open when the catch is released.” The other, 41; inches in length and About 1.5 ounces lighter, should have handlés of the “double ring type" used for regular scissors. THE HARDY Subcommittee is investigating military procurement It recently revealed irregularities resulting in the court martial trial of the commanding officer at Rossford Ordnance Depot near Toledo, O., and the removal of the commanding officer at the Detroit Tank Arsenal, The subcommittee disclosed at hearings in Detroit that the government paid $306 million too much for automotive parts in the past three
years by buying through middlemen instead of directly from manufacturers,
Dishing the Dirt By Marguerite Smith
Q—TI have a red geranium that is tall and the
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Culinary Pot Shots— .
Don’t Flounder—Fish
First of a Series:
By HENRY BUTLER
(CONSIDERING the price of beef, a little essay on “Fish
for Compliments” should help the amateur cook.
It won't be a learned essay; I'm neither whaddyacalllem ichthyologist.
So I can't tell you about those
little jobbies you see in the.
market that look like fishermen legally should have thrown them back. Undoubtedly they're mighty good .eating, but they probably call for frying. With all due respect to what this region hails as good fried fish, too much of it has greasesoaked outing-flannel batterblankets that only need zippers. So let’s leave frying out, with the proviso that it's okay for the cook to get mildly fried. As in the case of Hip, Hip, Puree!, the soup described in these pages some days ago, we'll discuss technique rather than specific recipes. Let's talk about
three ways to bake fish. n 2
" FIRST - OF ALL, don't be ashamed of being as ignorant as I am about varieties. Just tell your fish dealer (there aré good stands in City Market and several excellent ~wholesaleretail specialists here in town) you want fish to bake. Tell him how many persons you want to serve. If you use fillets (cod, had-
g chef nor a or 8
dock, or the others), try to get:
them fresh. They have usually more flavor than the frozen, though the frozen are cheaper, But if you want to be adventurous, get a big, chunky fish, like a sea bass, and have the dealer clean it and cut it in the pieces you need. Get out your baking dish. (I got a swell one, about 8"x14”
. In oven glass, for only one buck
at a big downtown dime store recently). Grease it, .as per usual cookbook instructions. Then choose between these three sauces for baking: Creole, Mornay and*lemon-garlic-butter, » CREOLE IS vorite cookbook and those nice cheap little cans of tomato
sauce will help. Don't be afraid.
to add monosodium glutamate (not a gag, but a most useful product with a famjliar trade name). Herbs are important in all these sauces. The best,’ most aromatic ones come in glass containers with screw-tops. Headliner for fish is oregano, a real racy herb something like
bayleaf and rosemary in -
pungency.
INDO-CHINA . . . No. 1—
Viet Namese Ready To Face Reds?
EDITOR'S NOTE: This is
the first of a series of four .
articles about war in IndoChina and the strength of the anti>Communist forces in that area by ScrippsHoward staff writer, Jim G. Lucas.
By JM G. LUCAS Scripps-Howard Staff Writer SAIGON, Indo-China, Dec.
24—A strong, well-armed Viet Namese army would be a major contribution to Asia's anti-Communist forces.
Gen. Jean de Lattre Tassigny intends to make it, just that. e is commander in chief of the French and Viet Nam forces. He is also the French High Commis sioner to the A three ‘‘Associated States” of Mr Lucas Indo-China, of which Viet Nam is one. The Viet Namese are a proud people and eager to turn back the Communists and run their own country. Most of them are staunchly anti-Communist. Communist excesses in the areas controlled by the Red Viet Minh alienated large numbers of sincere nationalists who first had joined the Communists. Bao Dai, head of the Nam State, contends his strongest supporters ate behind the enemy lines. Among others there are 9 million.Catholics in Viet Minh territory. On the other hand, peasants and coolies —uninterested in political philosophy—supply most of the Communist manpower. They
de
. serve whoever is in control at
the moment,
Viet
GEN. DE LATTRE'S forces include at least 100,000 French regulars plus 60,000 Viet Nam troops. A brilliant and dominant personality, he eptomizes resistance to French aggression.
In the General's mind, the old days of French imperialism are past. In the future, Viet Namese defenses will depend largely on the people themselves.- To an amazing degree he has convinced them of his sincerity and and has won their support. A few diehard French out here— in and out of uniform—would like to return to the previous colonial setup, but they are fast being weeded out. The build-up of this antiCommunist force must be a gradual process. The Viet Namese army couldn't successfully resist the Communist Viet Minh forces today. For some time the major load must be carried by French regulars and the Foreign Legion. But the French have no desire to fight on here indefinitely. Gen. de Lattre is fast getting at the heart of the problem, One of his first orders involved training and equipment for the Viet Namese army. Currently, he is training four divisions but he hopes eventually to double that. The big job is to produce capable officers. The Viet Namese GI—like any other—fights well only if properly led. In the past there have been far too few good Viet Namese officers, The Viet Namese, under Gen. de Lattre’s leadership, have set upt an officers’ school at Dalat. Members of the first graduating class already are in the field and have given a good account of themselves. The general is not thinking in terms of a constabulary force. This will be a modern army,
[rained and equipped to resist
Communist aggression. Already there are Viet Namese para-
-
Story Delayed by Censorship—
Escaped Red Agent Tells Of Questioning Gen. Dean -
The following story was written by Keyes Beech. in October. It has been held up by «censorship since. Because the prisoner of war lists now confirm that Gen. Dean is alive and held by the Communists, Mr. Beech’s story is being released.
By KEYES BEECH
“TOKYO (CDN) — Maj. Gen. William F. Dean, officially missing in action since July 20, 1950, may still be alive and prisoner of the Communists, Maj. Roy E. Appleman, Richmond, Va, official Army historian, quoted a North Korean agent who allegedly befriended Gen. Dean as saying the general was alive but in poor health when he last saw him in Pyongyang late in the summer of last year (1950). . “I cannot vouch for his story but it is the most credible
among many that I've heard as to what happened to Dean after the fall of Taejon,” Maj. Appleman said, He said he Investigated a variety of stories, including the report Gen. Dean was killed in Taejon, but believed none of them. Gen. Dean was last seen trying to rally his troops as North Koreans poured into the city.
Agent Escaped Reds
The story of the missing general was told by a North Korean agent who escaped from the Communists and passed through South Korean lines in the hope of getting help to Gen, Dean, Maj. Appleman said.
“South Koreans were about to execute him as an enemy agent when the Americans got wind of his story and began to question him,” Maj. Appleman said.
n EASY. Your fa-.
“MONDAY, DECEMBER 24, 1951.
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TORE .
“Be adventurous—try a sea bass."
Mornay calls for white sauce (see your cookbook) and dry white wine. California sauterne
.
troopers, signalmen, There will be more each year. Viet Namese paratroopers are exceptionally good. On a number of occasions they dropped
tankmen, - radarmen, artillerymen, etc.
behind enemy lines and destroyed stores and communications. Since Viet Minh arms are bought from the Chinese Reds with rice, each foray is a serious blow to the enemy's morale and fighting ability.
I watched Viet Namese paratroopers and artillerymen in training exercises outside Hanoi. They jumped from old threemotored German Junker planes. Some of the planes dropped ligh artillery. The field pieces were firing 12 minutes after the exercises began.
In thig army there are difficulties peculiar to the Viet Namese. The paratrooper is a-lit-
His story was this: After Taejon fell, Gen. Dean wandered lost in the hills, living off berries and whatever food he could find in the fields for 30 days. Hunger finally drove him into a Korean village in search of food. A Communist agent spotted him and he was taken prisoner.
It was not until Gen. Dean was taken to Pyongyang, however, that Communists discovered who their tall, powerfully built prisoner really was. Gen. Dean no longer wore his insignia of rank and there was nothing to identify him as the commanding general of the 24th Division, first to fight in Korea. 3
Questioned for Days Once they learned his identity, Communists put him in a
house separate from the other POWs and surrounded him
is swell. Add two-thirds cup sauterne to one cup medium white sauce, stirring vigorously over
w
tle guy—he averages 95 pounds —and doesn’t drop as fast as big men do. In joint exercises the French find it wiser to jump first, If the Viet Namese go first, the heavier French frequently catch up with them,
. drop on them and collapse their
chutes, causing casualties. In the exercises I saw the little Viet Namese seemed at times to be literally suspended in midair, Unlike many non-Communist Asian forces, the Viet Nam Army has no food problem. This area traditionally has produced
90 per cent of the Orient's rice.
Though production has been disrupted, there still is enough to feed everyone adequately. .Once the Viet Namese could defend themselves, they undoubtedly could do a great deal in feeding other non-Com-munist armies in Asia—the Nationalists on Formosa and the South Koreans—both of whom maintain fighting forces on substandard diets, y : Any contribution by Viet Nam to an integrated anti-Commu-nist force in Asia necessarily must come after Viet Nam's own problems are solved. That may be some time. Without more arms and men the best General de Lattre can do is hold and adjust the lines. He recently returned to France to plead for more men and money ~but France has spent almost as much .in Indo-China as she has obtained from the United States in Marshall Plan aid. Chinese Communist intervention could change the pic--ture overnight. Since intervention must always be anticipated, the Viet Namese are in no position to think about much else. Meanwhile, training goes on. A respectable, worthwhile antiCommunist army is. taking shape in the jungles and mountains of Indo-China. I asked everyone 1 contacted—Iinclud-
with heavy guard. Then they began to question him. It was then that the North Korean agent, who claimed he was a language student in Seoul when the war began and was unwillingly pressed into servicee by Communists because of his command of English, was assigned to Gen. Dean. = Gen. Dean was questioned almost without letup for eight days in a row but refused to
give the enemy information they wanted, despite his weakened condition.
He apparently never recovered, from the effects of his wanderings. He suffered an attack of diarrhea that almost killed him, then recovered to be struck by another illness that wasn't identified.
Maj. Appleman quoted a
"ple
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“PAGE 9
For Compliments
hot fire to prevent curdling. When wine is all mixed With gently boiling white sauce, put
.. same in double boiler and for-
get your worries during a courounds of Moxie’ with" To x . " o ” x
DURING THAT time, sauc
your
' will have diminished in volume,
Add plenty of grated cheese, American and Italian types, stir well, and pour over fish for baking. Lemon-butter-garlic sauce will have least volume, but plenty potency. Half a stick or more of butter, depending upon fish quantity, with a couple of good-sized cloves of garlic well chopped, two or three goodly pinches of oregano (crumble it while you sprinkle) and juice of a lemon (slice another for placing atop fish chunks) will do the trick. Gently saute the garlic in the butter before you add the lemon juite, but don’t allow the mixture to brown.
Standard baking time is 1520 minutes at 350 degrees. With midriff chunks of a hefty fish, you may need .a longer time, You can test with a fork, and if fish is flaky and,white by the spine-bone, all is well, One swell feature of this baking deal is comparative odorlessness. You don’t get that pervasive Friday smell of downtown hash joints. Tomorrow: “Don’t Curb the Herb.”
°
DONALD HEATH—They can
make a contribution.
ing Brig. Gen. Francis Brink, head of the American Advisory Group, and Donald Heath, U. 8. Minister to Viet Nam—if they felt the Viet Namese army could make a worthwhile contribution to anti-Communist defenses in Asia. The answer was an unqualified “yes.”
Viet Nam has no air force and probably would have to depend on the French for some time. But there are Viet Names? pilots serving with the French and—in the future—might be used as a nucleus for a Viet Namese air arm. A navy also is essential. The French Navy's blockade has been extremely effective. Apparently a Viet Namese Navy is. being planned. Adm. Arthur W. Radford, commander of the U. 8. Pacific Fleet, told a press conference in Saigon that the United States would turn over naval equipment to the Viet Namese as fast as the French could train the men to use it,
North Korean agent as saying Gen. Dean was ‘very despondent” when he last saw him. “I'm inclined to believe his story because it was obvious he
knew Gen. Dean intimately as only a man could who had been around the general a lot,” said Maj. Appleman.
“He described Dean perfectly, even to minor scars on his body. He knew all about his family back in the states. He even knew little things about Dean that his associates didn't know.”
When American troops entered Pyongyang last October, immediate search was made for Gen. Dean, Maj. Appleman said. Pyongyang residents said Gen. Dean had been there but had been moved to a POW camp farther north when the capital was threatened.
List Of Contributors To Times Clothe-a-Child Fund .&
alter the physical properties of jeaves get brow . eil CONTRIBUTIONS | ance Co. «..oco.ou..s 16.50) Hamilton, Mor g a n- .. | Ladies of 2112 N. Del- |Lois and Linda Hess .. 2.00 pot Jen iacanyly or ip ik : Tow An spots. Would JL please teil Previous Balance +++$28,079.65 Mr. and Mrs. W. F. town, Ind. ........... 5.00, aware St, ........ ave 25.00/A Lover of Children .. 5.00 “All tests shall be conducted at-a temperature were beautiful. I did not change the dirt on Employees of News- . Evans .............. 5.00 william L. Fortune .... 10.00 Employees of Mercantile - [Lloyd D. Claycombe, of 70 to 75 degrees F. and a relative humidity of them, Mrs. Ralph Cecil, Martinsville. paper Boys of Amer- Brownsburg State Bank 25.00 Employees of the Rough | | Mortgage Co. ........ 400) Judge Circuit Court of 65 plus or minus two per cent after conditioning ~~ A_1 think there really ought t6 be a labor ica, Ime. ..... ceserens 300i Reliable Insurance Notes Co. ........... _ 25.00 The Variety Club of In- Marion County and ~ for not less than 24 hours.” union for geraniums. Or maybe they don’t really C. B. Carpenter ....... 15.00| Agency, Ine. ...... 25.00) yo vrolet "Indianapolis, dianapolis ........... 25.00) Staff ........c600sss 48.00 : > & @ : Indianapolis Union Sterling R. Anderson... 10.00 25.00! : > : are : P Mrs. J. H. Taylor 50.00| Engineering Dept..... 25.00 In Memory of Mother {Tn Memory of a Friend 5.00 THE BALLS must be tested for.bounce ac- Read Marguerite Smith's Garden Column Printing Crafts Bowl- . J. H. Tay Sarry 9 anner Bros. Co. Inc... 3000] Ea EN. Ll. 30.00 yn Sli di supplied by the : "i n The Sunday Ti ‘ ing Association, Inc. = 25.00|\etna Casualty & Surety d 1 Ts mployees of Challenge cording to a full page diagram supp y +n uncay 1imes — Employees of Maple- | - Company Employees. 10.00 | Indianapolis Sewing Ma- Indisuapolis hb mal Gauge and Tool Co., OINASY. height to which the shadow of the ball need it—for they just sulk when you try to make hurst Farms, Inc. ... 28.00 Mrs. Hallle Cook ...... 5.00 chine Exchange ..... vd A ma oN mn BHO. coos iiidiid eres 29.00 ‘ rises on the ruled backboard (shown in the them work winter and summer, Too. That's prob- In Memory of Mord % |Georgann Suit lebut. isin o Desahue ..... » 10, '. a8 SIE alesse, © Yoo Homer J. Williamson, oe liagram) measured from the platform to the top ably the basic trouble with your plant. It wants Carter .............. . . 5.00 _ ger, Martinsville, Jn . J5.001 uiomagie Screw Prod- 50,00 708 Sub Deb Club +s. S000] JE + cease sansansine sSNA of the ball, is recorded to the nearest inch as the to rest now and it jolly well is going to. So be Dept. 9, Night Gear Cut- In Memory of J. E. F... 10.00; ucts Co. ........... . Hd Abd gent S0\Link Beit Co... Dept. A rebound,” the specifications explain, good to it—just as you would to a cranky person ters, Link-Belt Co. .. 82.00 Vickery Engineering Co. 3300/Enployess 20th Century- SO Toa aper ut fuk apa Ye hin $105 “Five readings shall be made and averaged, Who is tired and sleepy. Put it in a cool spot. R. F. Irby ............ 10.00 No Name ............ rai 00 Fox Fil Corp, -- 25.00: Fiom Jonny cap i a Bg 23:eis an the ball being placed in random position each Keep it quite dry. Do not try to stimulate bloom Indianapolis Public Re. Er Cow TE TO ATI oy tis — ce S : time in the dropping methanism.” p : £0 with water, fertilizer or ‘warmth. If you can : lations Koctety +-vee 25.00 1 nployees 0 NS Rew S23 Trae “5 rs. Cora ¥. Grisso = Total fr riestasicy HGH 0) : sendin endi + y er ar Y y » »: ho es + : Sales Nn A Haro oe ¥ ’ 0 0 Date ‘cu ceee $24,148. Juire maguicetirers to se that the Clippers ate then in apring Rt Wil begin to Brow agai; Then Lo R. HME «ony -.umis Bel Tolpis Corr SBA arom Wain 6000) West, Spencer, Indic 540 DIRECT DONOR “#% “properly adjusted, smoothly finished, and free you can either slip it or cut back the old plant Employees ‘of Empire Bell Telephone Co.... and fom Abel i 50) dana vaeess BOIS. B. Props Cor ssesee & Children = " " for a new season’s bloom. 5 i: ] Life & Accident Insur- Edith and Mary, Jane ; In Memory o .e ox 8 00 " wis snenaey sess v ! ey as ——————————— FTIR “= * Z iA Li E
