Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 September 1952 — Page 8

The Indianapolis Times

ROY W. HOWARD WALTER LECKRONE HENRY W. MANZ "President Editor Business Manager

Saturday, Sept. 6, 1952

PAGE 8

: i on Publish. Ota 04 purited 31g Jonge Tings buble; ce, oh Spree Nigar AMete Vor? oe In Marion County b cenis opy tor daily and 10¢ Sie EA lt hPa ithe 2 dally and a $10. A year. dally $ go a y Af. Sunda gil 8 aily $1. a month sinday 100 a copy Telephone PL aza 5551 I Give Lights and the People Will Find Their Own Way

lke Tells the Sto [DWIGHT EISENHO has spelled out a foreigr policy program every American can underwrite. In his Philadelphia speech he told how the Truman administration bungled us into the Korean War and lost the bulk &f the Far East to communism. ; He told facts—and told them well. He told it straight —why “we do not have peace and why we do have war. “We are in that war because this administration grossly underestimated the actual threat. “We are in ‘that war because this administration allowed America . . . to become weak. “We are in that war because, having helped set up the Korean republic, and knowing that strength was being massed against that republic north of its borders, there was failure to build up adequate strength in Korea's own defenses. “We are in that war because this administration abandoned China to the Communists. “We are in that war because this administration announced to all the world that it has written off most of the Far East as beyond our direct concern.” That is the record—a record of tragic blundering which has cost this nation heavily in lives. And Gen. Eisenhower nailed it where it belongs.

W v * & @ : THE REPUBLICAN candidate outlined a 10-point program for staying further Communist aggression. The No. 1 point of that program is the most important of all—to get rid of the administration which bungled us into this perilous situation. “The first step,” he said, “toward winning a peace that we can trust to endure is to establish in Washingtdn an administration we ourselves can trust.”. He summed up his case in two sentences: “Seven years ago, freedom had just won its greatest crusade. Today freedom falters and communism crusades.” That's the story of American foreign policy after seven years of Truman management. Those are facts. / “Shall we trust the party which wrote that tragic record to win the peace?” Gen. Eisenhofver asked the question in Philadelphia. His election in November is the answer,

He Did No ‘Wrong’ HOUSE INVESTIGATORS, just getting under way, are finding the same kind of “pay dirt” in the Justice Department another committee uncovered in the Internal Revenue. . And "pay dirt” is the right phrase. This committee, head by Congressman Frank Chelf of Kentucky, has just detailed the case of James A. Mullaly, a Justice Department lawyer. : A milk company was cited for criminal prosecution by the Federal Food and Drug Administration. A company official called Mr. Mullaly about the case. Mr. Mullaly recommended he sée a Washington law firm. He did and the law firm, which included three former government lawyers, took the milk company on as a client. Thereafter, the case was dropped, over the objections of the Food and Drug Administration and the U. 8. District ‘Attorney handling the case. Later the law firm gave Mr. Mullaly a check for $7560. : But the $750 was only a “gift,” Mr. Mullaly insisted. “I did nothing to earn it,” he testified. “At the time 1 had no feeling that I was doing anything wrong. I still have no feeling that I did anything wrong, but I wouldn't do it again.” Mr. Mullaly also borrowed $500 from another lawyer who was handling a war-frauds case. The Justice Department decided to dismiss the case. Mr. Mullaly participated in that decision. Later he got the loan. He also admitted he did not include the milk company’s $750 in his subsequent income tax return because he regarded it as a “gift.”

” ” # 8 ” THAT REFRAIN, “I didn’t do any wrong but I would not do it again,” has become a routine alibi in the Washington “mess.” : In the light of the moral letdown which has infested the Truman administration, it can be translated to mean: “I wouldnt do it again—now that I've been caught.”

They'll Just Have to Be Brave RS. TIGHE WOODS, wife of the new Price Stabilizer, has some advice for Tighe. She thinks maybe he should roll back all prices and “Just let the sellers howl.” The Woodses, she says, like steak, but they are lucky

if they have it twice a month. They'd like it once a week.

The Woodses live, incidentally, in a 9-room house in Washington's fashionable Chevy, Chase section. They also own a farm in nearby Virginia. For transportation, they have a 1950 Chrysler sedan and a jeep station wagon. We hope Mr. Woods figures out a way to afford some steak. And how have you been doing lately?

The Square Peg VERYONE is familiar with the World War II stories deriding the Armed Forces classification system. In substance they were all alike, to wit: An expert bulldozer operator would go through a classification center and come out with orders to report to a school for cooks and bakers. A civilian cook, naturally, was a good bet to be sent to tank training, and a man who had spent his entire adult civilian life doing nothing more strenuous than bird watching would instantly be put in charge of a physical education program. Whether these stories are apocryphal or not we'don’t know, but we would like to call attention to one of the finest jobs of fitting a square peg into a square hole as you're ever likely to see. ; Rh Remember Maj. Gen. Robert W. Grow, whose diary as swiped by the Communists and provided their propabands mills with such fine material? Prabhat The Army has just put him to work in the office of the Army's Chief of Military History, where he can in- ; duige his passion for Jyriting without embarrassing his

PT

HONOLULU, T. H.—This strife-torn paradise of the Pacific is getting set for what promises to be its most spectacular legal show in two decades-~the trial of seven alleged Communist leaders for advocating the violent overthrow of the United States government. Not since the celebrated Massie case of 20 years ago has any trial commanded such wide interest in these islands. Navy Lt. Thomas H. Massie, his mother-in-law and two sailors were convicted--then pardoned--of lynching one of four islanders who allegedly raped Massie’s wife. Trial of the seven defendants will, barring legal hitches, begin Sept. 29 before Federal Judge Jon Wiig. . Although the charge is Communist conspiracy, island residents have inevitably linked the trial to future labor and economic peace in Hawaii. i For the “big wheel” among the defendants is burly, bespectacled Jack W. Hall, 38, Hawali boss of the International Longshoremen's and Warehousemen’s Union. Often identified as a Communist, Hall is Harry Bridges’ righthand man in Hawall. Bridges is having troubles of his own along the same line. ~The ILWU, a catchall for Hawaii's longshoremen and sugar and. pineapple rkers, has tied these islands into knots in its continuing fight with five corporations known as Hawaii's “Big Five.” (“Big Five” spokesmen say there is no such thing as a “Big Five.”) In addition to Hall the defendants are Charles K. Fujimoto, a former chemistry teacher and chairman of the Communist Party in Hawaii; his wife, Eileen T. Fujimoto; Dwight James Freedman, a construction worker; John E. Reinecke, a tired-looking ex-school teacher; Koji Ariyoshi, editor of a local weekly, and one of his employees, Jack .D. Kimoto.

U. 8. attorneys charge that all seven were

members of the executive board of Hawaii's Communist Party. But only one, Fujimoto,

AF AT ALERT . . . By Jim G. Lucas

We'll Be Ready If Reds Attack

WASHINGTON-—Gen. Hoyt Vandenberg, Afr Force Chief.of Staff, says the Russians cannot escape atomic retaliation from his men if they start another war. gH

Just how soon—with what we have-—could we strike back?

Not within an hour, as the public sometimes is led to believe. The Air Forcz has never con-

sidered going off half-cocked. But we are a_

great deal readier than -many Americans suppose, Bach Air Force in the Strategic Air Command (SAC) for instance, certainly would be alerted within half an hour. The Strategic Air Forces carry our atom bombs. In each SAC unit, key men are ready to go. Footlockers and suitcases are packed and within reach. Not because anyone is afraid war will come unin the hour, but because everyone knows t can.

Reserves Picked BAC HAS 1400 reserve officers—already

picked as “mobilization assignees” —to slide into 2

the chairs of regulars who would move out with their fighting units. Nebraska's Gov. Val Peter son, for example, would drive out to SAC heads quarters at Offutt Air Force Base, near Omaha and automatically become Deputy Director of Materiel, Within a matter of hours, advance echelons of regular SAC officers would be on their way to war. Throughout the nation, 5000 hand-picked Air Force reserve officers would move into similar slots. For budget reasons, they are either called

mobilization “assignees” or “designees.” An

assignee is one who is paid for his training. He must work at his war job 24 peacetime days a year. In addition, he must attend a two-week summer course. A designee is unpaid. But he must earn 15 credit points a year to hold his job.

There are, roughly, 2500 Alr Force assignees and 2500 designees. As a general rule, a designee is a man who would carry his civilian talents over into the military. Surgeons, for instance, are designees. They don’t need special training. But a lawyer slated to take over as an intelligence officer would need regular, periodic briefing if he makes the switch smoothly. He'd be paid for his time and would be an assignee,

At the Ready

IN WASHINGTON, Assistant Secretary of Commerce Clarence H. Ostenhagen would put on his Colonel's uniform and report to the Chief of the Air Staff. His job-—which cannot be discussed—already has been selected. Col. Ostenhagen knows which desk he'd occupy, the name of his secretary and what emergency calls he'd make first. Brig. Gen. Ramsey Potts, until recently with RFC, is another Pentagon assignee. So is Rep. Laurie Battle (D. Ala.). Congressman Battle, just as quickly as he could, would pin his major's leaves on his Air Force uniform and report to

the Pentagon as a personnel officer. Col. Harold -

Stuart, former Air Force Assistant Secretary, would be just behind him. Rep. John Blatnik

(D. Minn.), a captain, would report to Air Force -

Intelligence.

Lt. Col. Frank Pace-currently Army Secretary—is a mobilization designee in Air Force personnel. As long as Col. Pace is the Army's top civilian, he won't be called. But if trouble starts affér he returns to private life, he'll be expected to report pronto.

has ever announced that he was a party member. - The indictment against the seven is modeled after the one which resulted in the cogviction of the 11 New York Communists, who are named as coconspirators., To prove its case the prosecution is expected to try to establish a trail of conspiracy leading all the way from Honolum to San Francisco to New York. None of the defendants is charged with doing anything to overthrow the government. Nor is it charged that membership.in the Communist Party is itself a crime. What they are charged with is advocating and teaching the overthrow of the government with the Communist Party as their vehicle. The ILWU’s highly efficient propaganda machine has already made it clear that the in-

FUTURE LABOR AND ECONOMIC PEACE . . . By Keyes Beech = © : Hawaii's Fight Will Rival New York’s in

dictment of Hall was an attack on the union itself —at least in union eyes. . Robert McElrath, the ILWU’s clever publicity man, has aroused an anticipatory interest in the trial by playing over the radio what purports to be a recording of a conversation between two FBI agents and Dave Thompson,

ILWU educgitional director.

The gist of the conversation wag that the FBI might be able to persuade the prosecution to drop charges against Hall if he Would only cut loose from Harry Bridges. That some such proposition was made seems plausible in view of the fact that the ILWU has subpoenaed the two FBI agents to testify at the forthcoming trial. McElrath, who enjoys a good joke as well as

the next fellow, claims that he sat in the base-

‘Doesn't Anybody Love Us, Daddy?"

=~ IN

ELECTION PREDICTIONS . . . By Peter Edson

U. S. Editors Support lke 4 to 1;

Say He Will Win in Close Race

WASHINGTON-U., ‘8. daily newspaper edi-

tors are supporting Republican Dwight D. Eisenhower for the presidency by a ratio of four to one. But approximately one editor in- six is supporting neither Gen. Eisenhower nor Gov. Adlal Stevenson, the Democratic nominee. The same majority of the editors believe that Gen. Eisenhower will win the election. An average of their predictions gives the Republican nominee a margin of 31 electoral votes— 281 to 250. Two hundred and sixty-six of the 831 electoral votes are necessary for victory. On the popular vote, editors believe the Republican plurality will be a little over 2.5 million. The average of their predictions is for a total Republican vote of 28,420,000 as against a Democratic vote of 25,420,000. This would mean a total vote of over 54,000,000 in 1952. It would be considerably above the 48,600,000 votes cast in 1048. But it would be considerably below the 60,000,000 total vote hoped for. These are the highlights of a poll of the 700 U. 8. newspapers receiving this column., The editors of these papers were asked 15 questions on the prospects, trends and issues in the 1952 campaigns. Over 350 editors replied to the questionnaire. This 50 per cent return is considered a good result for this kind of a mail survey of opinion. Replies came from every state in the union and were well-balanced geographically. So the poll gives a good cross-section of editorial opinion two months before the election.

Sharp Division

THE REPLIES make possible an interesting comparison of editorial opinion in six main U. 8. areas: New England and the Middle Atlantic States; the South, east of the Mississippi River; the South, west of the Mississippi River; the Midwest, east of the Mississippi: the Prairie states, west of the Mississippi, and the Rocky Mountain and West Coast states. Only in the Boutheast and the Southwest does the Democratic ticket have strong editorial support. But even here only 42 per cent of the editors sald they were supporting Stevenson and Sparkman.

INTERNATIONAL AGREEMENT . . . By Richard Starnes

Russians Play Fair On One Bi

Best record seems to have been A son. blue that stretchod 881; feet from stem to stern,

WASHINGTON-—It may be just a fluke, but there's one international agreement which the Russians observe. That is the International

shucks,

authenticated makers, and with good rea-

It provides ACTH, insulin, vitamins (particularly

A big Vitamin A), meat , extracts

g Issue—Whales

Convention for the Regulation " of Whaling, signed at Washington in 1046. Whaling is a big thing in the Soviet and, so far as anybody can tell, the Reds are as hon est and law-abiding whalewise as any Yankee sailing master. Regulations require that catches be reported to the International Bureau of Whaling Statistics in Norway, which * demands detailed data on species, size, sex and location of all of the big animals that are taken. & 8.8 ; %. IN whaling circles, at least, the Boviet ‘seafarers are regarded as honorable men who don't try to cheat. The Russians rank fourth in whaling countries, being led by Nor way, United Kingdom and Japan in that order. The United States, which once had over 800 whaling vessels under its flag, runs dead last nowadays. We didn’t send one whaler to sea this year, but may have one going for us in 19. The whale is the ‘biggest animal now extant on earth, KX blue (or sulphur bottom) whale over 70 feet is no great

é

blue- will yield more than 100 barrels of oil—the most profit. able product of the whale. One big reason why this country no Joages Is much interested in catching the big fellows is that vegetable ils such as cot tonseed, soy and peanut are 80 plentiful and cheap here. In some European countries whale oil is used in margarine and a lot of experts claim it

makes a better butter substi-

tute than the vegetable oils used here. a

- o NEXT to oll, whale meat is the most important product of the industry. Some is frosen and fed to humans In leu of steak. In Japan, dried and salted whale meat\ is highly regarded. Some whale meat is dried and ground and used as animal food. . Whalebone, meaning the cel-lulotd-like substance some species have in place of teeth, has no market these days since other materials have

‘it in women's corsets. Its cor rect name is “baleen” any-

The whale lately has been

greedily eyed by the medicine

v States, claim f too

and hormones. For purposes of regulation, whale catches are measured in “blue whale units,” a BWU being one blue whale, or two fin whales, or two and half hump back whales, or six sel whales, Rules governing the United States’ nonexistent whaling industry have just been issued by the Jdnterior Department. They list more than 50 names for species of whale, including razorback, devil fish, rip sack, little piked whale, sharp headed finger, bowhead, great polar whale, southern pigmy right whale, coalfish whale and pot whale. 5 8 =»

vo» - - UNDER whatever name, the

whales of all species. - Some members of the con-

z 2 o - “KEEP YOUNG folks busy, . there's dothing they should do

In the Southeast, 42 per cent are supporting Eisenhower and Nixon. In the Southwest the Republican ticket has 35 per cent of the editorial support. But in this area 24 per cent of the editors say they will support neither candidate. This is also the sentiment of 16 per cent of the editors in the Southeast and 18 per cent in the Midwest. By. contrast, the Republican ticket is supported by 73 per cent of the papers in the Midwest, 84 per cent in the Prairie states, 85 per cent in the far West and a high of 93 per cent in the Northeast. The national totals show 68 per cent of the papers for the Republicans, 17 per cent for the Democrats, 12 per cent supporting neither and only 3 per cent not having decided as of Aug. 15 whom they will support, if anybody. On predicting the results of the election in both popular and electoral college votes, the editors’ views varied vastly. About half the editors admitted frankly that it was still too early in the campaign to tell. : .., Of those who did make a guess, the range was from a prediction for a Reptiblican landslide of 405 electoral votes out of the 531 made by the Reflector-Chronicle of Abilene, Kas., Ike's home town, to a Democratic victory of 375-156, predicted by the Parkersburg (W. Va.) Sentinel,

Midwest Sees Big GOP Plurality

NORTHEAST and Midwest editors leaned more towards a bigger Republican victory, which was only to be expected. But an average

of Southeastern editors’ predictions gave the

Democrats a victory by only three electoral votes—267 to 264. « The same Southeastern editors guessed that the Democrats would win by a popular vote margin of less than a million—28,700,000 to 27,800,000. If this prediction is borne out, it will be one of the closest races in history. On the other hand, an average of Midwestern editorial opinion gives the Republicans a victory by a plurality of over four million votes—29 million to 25 million.

dence the fact that each year it becomes a little more aifficult to take a full quota. We've tried to get the limit reduced for six or seven years but each time we try the big whaling countries, particularly Britain, beat us down.

Barbs—

WHEN a girl sets out to get a model husband and winds up getting the wrong model— divorcee. . » » . - IF IT weren't that the plain truth sometimes sounds like a poor excuse, fewer lies would be told.

» » THE SUN'S age is put at about 5 million years. Maybe we should try going to bed early every night.

advises a police judge. When

is when they do things they shouldn’t. EVERY TIME a GI returns home some girl answers the call to arms. “ ; 18 Tem FALL election going to prove how many people can vote unintelligently? ,

“Oh, we can

> ws

SIDE GLANCES

Ed 3

Trial To Oust Communists

ment of Thompson's home with a recording machine and half a dozen cans of beer while the FBI men talked with Thompson. A “bug” secret microphone—was planted in the room, he says. At one point in the conversation one of the FBI men says that Hall and the others would “make poor Communists in the lowest cell in

California . . . but they take themselves seri-

ously and we're stuck with them.” ; This was followed by laughter. How the FBI permitted itself to become ine volved in so painfully embarrassing a situation has not been explained by the FBI The government has assembled a numerically imposing battery of lawyers to present its case. The chief prosecutor was imported from New York for the occasion. He is John C, Walsh, who doesn't want to be quoted on anything including the time of day. Walsh is a wary man whose reluctance to discuss the forthcoming trail is matched only

by his willingness to talk about himself. 7

There is considerably less reticence on the part of the defense lawyers, Harriet Bouslog and Myer C. Symonds. Miss Bouslog, a trim, good-looking brunet who wears a man-sized hibiscus in her black hair, and her partner are the islands’ leading labor lawyers, a fact attested to by their expanding, air-conditioned offices. Bouslog and Symonds are plainly preparing for the legal battle of their careers. They will be joined by Richard Gladstein, whose behavior at the New York Communist trial won him a jail sentence for contempt of court. Gladstein is scheduled to get out of jail Sept. 23, six days before the local trial is scheduled to start. : As the principal defendant, Hall is less enthusiastic. When a visitor remarked that he was “sorry” he wouldn't be here for the trial, Hall replied: “I wish I wasn't.”

Hoosier Forum

“I do not agree with a word that you say, but | will defend fo the death your : right to say i"

ETO ERT TO IVINS RN RRR ARE I ORR RE

ssssasnseseenInal

v

Supply and Demand MR. EDITOR: Lm . The first step Tighe Woods is going to do to pretend to reduce prices is to spend some of your hard-earned deduction pay money, tour the country, and decide whether or not the public wants price control. el I can give him the answer now. Stay home. Resign and save the taxpayers the money. Billions of dollars, already squandered for this farce has only helped fill the pork barrel. Common sense should clarify this issue for any thinking American. This nation was built

-on competition. The consumer sets the price of

the product. As a result the manufacturer has built bigger and better rat traps. Supply and demand sets the pace. Demand usually creates a furor in the so-called Price Control Bureau, By. the time they get around to solve the difficulty, after sponding billions of dollars, the supply has a tically taken care of the situation. i : Food pfices are up because of governmental interference. When the supply is plentiful the government buys up the product, stores it and feeds the rats while half-starved kids (yes, even Suring U8 boom run around the streets half SICK. Wake up, America. Kick the blood-sucking leeches out of the government which you maintain with your taxes. Give the government back

to the people. | «M. R. R., City.

|

Supermen MR. EDITOR: Last-S8aturday one of your correspondents in the Hoosier Forum seemed disturbed over the build-up of Gen. Eisenhower as & superman. He is a great warrior-statesman. His work has shown wisdom and vision, courage and action. To meet this great man, this superman, the Democrats knowingly or not had to create their own superman. 80 we find a very réluctant governor finally accepting a presidential nomination. The Democrats had their superman in Sen. Kefauver. I reckon he was too hot a potato. He didn’t talk the I of the leadership. The Benator is a lot better friend of the

New and Fair Deals than the Democrats realize. °

He is their real friend. Stevenson still has to prove he is a great man. He undoubtedly came out second best to the general in the White House briefing episode, lending color to the captive charge,

~C. H. Hopper, 310 N. Iilinois St., City,

'SEARCH FOR LOVE'

For years folks have been searching . . , for A certain priceless treasure . . . and none will doubt me when I say . . . its worth no one ean measure . . . it is something that gold can’t buy . . . or no one can command . . . but it can come real suddenly . . . by holding someone’s hand . . . they've hunted high and hunted law . . . In many lands and places « + » and up to now only a few . . . are blessed with all its graces . . . so if X may Pd like to give . . . advice to those who look . . . you'll never find of what you seek . . . in movies or a book . . . instead you must be pure of heart , . . be honest and be true . . . and then you will not have to search . . . for

love will come to you. > ~Ben Burroughs.

By Galbraith

yor look up that stuff in a few nl , k up tuff in minutes at the yi

be. aim

TRL kag 0 Wed]

SATURD ANNOUI 1 Death No

ALDRIDGE M1 1132 N. lino er of Mrs. ) ers_and Roy

BENJAMIN--Ne! 2330 N. Illinc .. Benjamin | Ts. Nettie Ped also survived w passed away F day, 1:30 5 CENTRAL CHA Burial Washing after 1 p. m. 8

BENTLEY—Clar of Audrey Ga

NERAL HOME, after 6 p. m. Sa ice Monday, 10: neral home,

Floral Park. DILLON—John ' son of the la and Mrs. O. son of Joseph Thursday. Fune 8:30 a m., 8 USHER MORTU {ington Bt; 9 Church. Friends Cross Cemetery, the mortuary a

GRUNER~—Patri wife of Wilbe David, John, Jo ner; daughter ol beth Woirhave; Rodenbeck and assed away LL 30 a. m., at t FUNERAL HOM : a

100 p. m. Satur, meet Saturday, HUSBANDS—RO ington Blvd, |

. | ces FLANNER ARY, time ls at mortuary af JACKSON—~WIil! calm, husban Mrs. Burl Buc grandfather of nie Buckner, » omfort. IS. oa Mrs. Matti away Thursday. BON “CHAPEL . a. HE CHAP] after Saturday papers please ¢

hter of CI dausnier of Mr a pas ed 14

c Vig , 3429 E. fon soph,

R030. 8. me Ee ral Park cen KOS8—Glenn Friday, age Glenn M. Koss Helen Gierke, and Frank Kos at HARRY W. M EL, 2050 E. Mi noon Bunday. service given la

EOWEN—EIV N.

call at e OME, 2428 E. 1 Bandy. Funera 10:30 a. mm, f Presbyterian Ch senal Sts. Frier men Washingtor CER—Charl 1539 oat arle, Taetta fe, Ind ercer: I Tot hes NG FUNERAL

pect, after 22 Monday. ATE bari Hl

MoE fet MUDREY HN

y Talat the fun E—Mrs. SCHOT mother el, sister of Mi } a Beach, Fi ‘bell, Mrs. Mari and Mr. Oliver assed o" Buct onday, 10 a. riends may cal

Rev. One 1113 Ww osephine Boy fr Todd, b

Legal Not

LEGA ALBERTA WEBB f

Li n name, refi Court in and fo the first esday ta bes ng to n FRANCIS SPRAG! is absent from ¢ unknown. herefors ’ Order ndency Publishing this 0 ost a newspaper and the Indianape printed in Indian fvely, commen Sth day of, Se] te . Clerk_of Asst Cle Fail STATE OF CONNE

. UNTY OF FAI cou within and

A Sheriff ‘of th ——————— NOTICE OF SAL TTER ™ Ty BAR] PROBATE COUR] “is hereby scribed court 5 m! . ut ah Frestams ased, to sell

De estate, 8 orl

t Dot less than Her ive (5) day! alle Number Two

Executor

Testamen By E C. —————— orien, or Board of Cer Hi ans wi hol an cants for certific Axsounitnts ln 3 y u Fi 6th and 7th ad “Central | Wedn¥sday, Nov

ursday, Nov. Accounting Practi TR ommer 0 jday, Nov, 7,

Applications for be Received until

fom: jnications sl RE Is Bae

T. M. HINDMAN Secretary.

NOTICE Notice is hereby Vr a nh ar \ until o'clock | , for twen h No.

ed