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Journal and Courier from Lafayette, Indiana • 6
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Journal and Courier from Lafayette, Indiana • 6

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Lafayette, Indiana
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6
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LAFAYETTE JOURNAL AND COURIER Tuesday Evening, October 3, 19 1 i sabotaged industry, production in 1939 was Dorothy Dix Says: only eight percent below the 1929 level, as They'll Do It Every Time By Jimmy Hatlo Journal and Courier THR FOUNDED l2 THE COUIUKK. FOUNDED 131 4 Pk-t compared with our 1ST percent. For the privilege of carrying heavier de WWV IN vvsi A DON'T MXJ I tB rAILT (EXCEPT SUNDAY). AT r.v-i NEWS BEHIND THE NEWS By PA IX MAIXON WASHINGTON, Oct. 3 The Oaks conference opened with a flare of trumpet publicity but ended practically in official silence.

The departing announcements Mryu iikt E-PcEkLtaS KLVWOLE.INC. Dort Sr KTTEk ChECK ON fMC SUPPO.c SHE ADDRESS KlAH-BlAH -AISL OTjnriLR BUILDING. SIXTH AND UlRRY STREETS. LAFAYETTE INDIANA WRiTE LETTERS LKE I DICTATE pression burdens than any other nation and carrying them long after recovery had come in the rest of the world, the people of the THEM'? MERE! LOCK AT TMiS COMPETITION AFTER Whenever we hear of a husband who has strayed off of the premises, or who has lost or stolen, or even temporarily mislaid, we blame his wife for it. How careless! we cry! Why didn't the keep him under lock and key? How did she expect to keep her propertly if she didn't take care of it? Possibly these criticisms are just.

But while we are lambasting the wife for not HKVRY W. MARPHALt, Edltor-tn -Chief HENRY W. MARSHALL. Publisher DID WRITE TME YOUR ORDER (CO'-iRECTKJN LETTER TO PEEKLESS KEY MOLE I United States paid ever increasing taxes. LETTER EXACTLY VOUR LETTER POYj WAVE AT INC.

DID I SAY "ON OR ABOUT I SAID "ON INTIUKD AS fRCOND ri.3 MATTKII POST OrFtCE. LAFAYETTE INDIANA AS ME DICTATED I GOT A MANGOS R. TOrvvv) In 1933 national taxes in the United States took 16.8 percent of the national income and OR BEFORE! YOU JUST WE ARE SHIPPING WOW! could have been hidden in a thim IT DO SOUR JOB. I'LL RUN ble with room to rattle around WW'S THE KiEW in 1938 these taxes took 22.4 percent, an Essential fact of disagreement TME BUSINESS AND Increase of 33 percent. In the United King 1 i II 4TV Mill auhtrrlptton rttai Indiana and rroquola County.

Illlnola: Ona year la'OO: 1 months 13.00; three montha 11.7a: ona month 7Jc. Delivered by carrier. 15a per week. Mall rates In all other etates: one year. $7.00: en montha 15.00; three rnontha.

1.1.00: one month. SI. 25. All mall subscriptions are payable In advance with order. NOTICE Hubacrlhers srlahln addressee chaosed must give old as well aa new address.

where ws oh.vls- SHIPPING- SHIPPING having kept as wary an eye on her husband as she did on her mink coat, we forget that there are extenuating circumstances for her seeming negligence. For when a girl marries came out to the press through a DO THE THINKING 1 DO TME THINKING senator. dom, on the other hand, in 1933, 26.7 percent of the national income was taken in taxes ABOUND HERE IHI "ti''UKULK lOCil't. As has become generally known, MARRiED ON OR she enters upon a career in which the com Russia objected to a plan drawn while in 1938 only 21.7 percent was taken, BEFORE-(FiND OUT' up by the British and unreserved 2E-(FNC DATE)" less than in the United States and a decline MEMBER OF TUB ASSOCIATED PRESS and AP FEATURES petition is fiercer than it is anywhere else in the world, and which never ceases until her treasure is so old and shopworn that no ly supported by us, specifying that if one of the big four powers was I 1 a e- of 19 percent as compared with the increase other woman craves it. of 33 percent in this nation.

a party in an aggression dispute, I should retire from the delib Between 1929 and 1939 the national debt erations about what action to Tha Aasoolated Press la axclualvely entitled to the usa for publication of all news dispatch credited to It In this paper and alao tbe local newa published herein. MEMBER AC PIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION 4011 Telephones 4011 If you will consider the competition that all wives have to buck, you will not wonder that some of them lose out. You will marvel that any of them manage to hold on to their of the United States increased 139 percent, take. In the United Kingdom for the same period Russia wanted participation by the Involved party, and wanted it MM xfM it increased only 9 percent. Whereas na husbands.

To begin with, there is the Glam our Girl with whom all wives have to com so badly agreement was impossi pete. Every wife knows that she gets old ble. tional income in this country decreased 21 percent between 1929 and 1939, in the United Kingdom it increased 14 percent. Thus while the ratio of government expenditures to and fat and grizzled at her peril, for no man's eyes ever get so dim that he can't Speculation on the meaning the disagreement has been diffi Typographical Union No. 64 states that all printers employed in the Lafayette Journal and Courier composing room are union members.

i i see a pretty little wolverine a mile off. It is conservatively estimated that it costs the 60- cult for fear of embarrassing Russia or over-interpreting her L- Jtf tV---CLS year-old wives eight million dollars a year to position. Off the record officials national income decreased 6 percent abroad, it increased 207 percent at home under the have attributed Russia's stand to keep in the running with sweet 16. GOVERNMENT BY DECREE New Deal. her extreme sensitivity of capital In a current magazine article titled, "Will istic and imperialist nations from Then there is the Office Wife.

It takes some doing for the woman who has been up half the night walking a sick baby, and who We Save the American Form of Govern is the record of profligate indifference to the welfare of the people that the beginning. No doubt she thinks some small has had to get breakfast and the children the New Deal has shown. This is the rec off to school and husband on his way to the UUAN L.VALLNT1NE nation could get a council led by Britain and the United States to exclude her from consideration of ord of spending our way into national 'poverty on which they seek a return to power for ment?" Stanley High tells us that regulation of cit'iens' live by executive directives and the flowering of unlimited bureaucracy are giving us a new form of government that is no longer real democracy. And he adds that FOREST H1LLS.L.I. office to present the spick-and-span appearance that little Miss Pothooks does, who has 1 re-fps any dispute in which she becomes had a good night's sleep, and plenty of time another four years.

involved and perhaps take joint to comb her hair and put on her complexion Although they prolonged the depression action against her. the war is not solely responsible for the Also, it 13 much easier to yes-yes a man who pays you a salary or doing and whose for eleven years, longer than any other de But Mr. Churchill, in the sharp- pointed words of his speech to phenomenon. Between March, 1936, and June, 1944, cantankerousness you don't have to stand pression in our history; although they tiave spent more money than any other admin parliament, contrived a few typi but eight hours a day, than it is one whose grand total of 78,541 directives, grants, or disposition you have to live with all the time. cal phrases which may have carried more meaning to the Russian Then there is the husband's mother who istration in our history; and although it took the costliest war in our history to solve ders, permissions and prohibitions were is sued by the New Deal regime at Washing delegates than to the casually every wife has to compete with from the al reading public.

tar to the grave and who, according to her ton. To print them required 62,202 pages containing 93,000,000 words. "Reading at a He said, in effect, a peace agreement could not be effective unless the unemployment problem even temporarily, the New Dealers think they are indispensable to our government. The people will decide son, made bread that was angels' food, ran a house without spending money, and who made in full and confident accord never had nerves, or tempers, or any opinions good clip" continues Mr. High's article, "it would take nearly ten years of uninter and advised that another meeting of her own.

DAY BY DAY By CHARLES B. DKISOOLL NEW YORK The September hurricane, now history, but ill recorded, did not hit New York unexpectedly. The weather bureau had plotted the course of the storm from hour to hour for several days, and on this day it had said, in effect, "The storm will strike New York at five o'clock, will be violent between six and nine, and will be terrific from about nine to eleven. Wind will reach at least 70 miles per hour, and all will be serene about midnight." I'm not using the scientific weather bureau language, but translating it. The prediction was correct In every respect.

The storm went off as scheduled. would have to be held at the otherwise in November. NEUTRAL SHELTER Then there is the woman who always looks under secretary level to get that like a million dollars, but who tells every accord. The intimation was that it would have to be soon in order Fraternal Rally At Monticello MONTICELLO, Oct. Canton No.

13 and Ladies' auxiliary held a special meeting in Monticello. Grand and rt grand officers present were Dorothy Toll, association president, Peru; Grace Toll, association clerk, Kokomo; Brulah Sowers, grand officer, Lafayette; Anna Erh, guard, Peru; Nannie Hoover, past president, Lafayette; Fern Gustin, past president, Klwood; E. P. Stewart, South Bend; J. N.

Nuium, Elwood; Maurice Curtis, Culver, and K. C. Thompson, grand senior warden, Monticello. A class of six was initiated. The patriarch militant degree was conferred on a class of ten candidates from Monticello.

Refreshments were served and talks given by Gen. Gustin and Dorothy TolL Mr. and Mrs. Mark Perkins and daughter moved Monday from the rupted going merely to wade through them." Bureaucratic restriction on individuals was well on its way long before the war came on. When war arrived it only in husband she meets that she spends absolutely nothing on her clothes.

Every wife has to to prepare for a big joint confer Secretary of State Hull, warning neutral nations that if they shelter" Axis refugees they will lose American friendship for years compete with her and have her own husband ence with Stalin "as soon as the creased the speed of expansion and stimu bawl her out because her basement bargain military situation permits." clothes shriek aloud where they came from. At Bretton Woods, the Russian delegates could not agree on anything until they heard directly Then every wife has to compete with the Attican Reported German Prisoner ATTICA, Oct. 3. Mr. and Mrs.

Jake Jones received a telegram from their daughter-in-law, of Cornell, stating that her husband, Lieut. John J. Jones, is a German prisoner at Stalag Luft 1. Clinton Kight and Alton Kight, of Danville, 111., are here for several weeks' visit with their grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.

Glen Bowman. Mrs. Dale Hiller has started work at the aluminum plant, Lafayette. Mr. and Mrs.

Robert Clark, of Evansville, returned home after spending a week here with his sister, Mrs. J. Roy Burlington. Mrs. Clark has been convalescing from an operation in Lafayette.

BACK TO STATES Mrs. Charles Williams has received word from her husband. Pvt. Williams, that he is being brought back to the states. He said he would be in a U.

S. hospital for some time yet. He has walked a little with the use of a cane, for the first time since receiving injuries. Mrs. Edgar Keefer has received a letter from her husband in Italy, stating that he is sending a box of gifts home.

Iated the growth' of the multiplicity of directives. And be it known that the people were not in on the establishment of this to come, spoke not a moment too soon. When Germany is conquered, Nazi authorities will have to go elsewhere or think they will. FBI as a detective who can put her hand in the dark on whatever it is her husband has lost, and who knows what he did with from Stalin and any change in their instructed course was occasionally delayed as much as three days while thev got in touch with unprecedented code of rules and regulations Mny of them were created in direct disre Those at the top, with ill-gotten wealth stored in other countries, will wish to follow it. The Allies have other designs, but some his fish hooks and where he left his hat gard of the expressed will of tbe people's And, above all.

every wife has to compete him. Presumably thev have with with that invisible, deadly rival whom she may escape. drawn now to let Moscow think elected representatives. The numero agencies which have been Sweden says her frontiers will be closed this over for even a longer period can never even hope to equal the woman he didn't marry, the woman who never grew The subject seems to me to con created are not government by law; they old, or lost her beauty, or was tired, or cross. tain the heart of the whole peace or contradicted him, and who was a miracle problem, although the officials worker who could conjure good dinners out to persons who "by their actions have defied the conscience of the civilized world or betrayed their own countries." Turkey has announced that her frontiers are closed to all Axis nationals.

Switzerland says simply here say 90 per cent of the pro of the air. gram was agreed upon, including Many offices and institutions closed at noon or in midafter-noon, to give their people time to reach home. They remembered the swish of the 1938 hurricane that many New Yorkers and killed a few. I made an appointment with Kay Kayser for four p. and appeared at his Waldorf apartment at that time.

He and his beautiful wife, Georgia Carroll, came in at five. They had been marooned by the forerunner of the storm in a Third avenue antique shop. Georgia had taken Kay over there to get him in a mood to buy a lot of early Ameri So it is no wonder that with all of this the creation of the top council of competition that sometimes wives don't have large nations and the assembly that she is "fully alive to the problems which time to watch their husbands and keep them of all nations. would arise, should Axis leaders find asylum from being kidnapped. DOROTHY DLX.

They must be measuring by the in Switzerland." It is not a categorical amount of foolscap upon which (Copyright, 1944) the agreements were typewritten The Russian position certainly re refusal of refuge, but Switzerland usually takes a right path. Spain twists out of a are government outside of law, and that is often the way they operate. And Mr. High points out that the precedent for operating that way is set at the top. This readiness at the top to govern outside the structure of representative government has been transmitted down through the whole labyrinth of executive agencies and their numerous sub-agencies.

It is a kind of government that has not come about by accident. By no means can It be blamed on the exigencies of war. It Is the result of widespread conviction among those who govern us that theirs is the kind of government we ought to have. NEWSPAPER WRITING Revolution in Europe (Chicago Tribune) flects her intention to retain free dom of action, if nothing more. direct refusal by saying that there is "no basis for supposition that Axis leaders might A dinner was given at the Attica hotel by fellow employes, honoring Miss Betty Mornout, daughter of Mr.

and Mrs. August Larry Rue of the Tribune agrees with But what is most puzzling is other observers in Paris that France is going that the Russians have great in left. The radicals contemplate the national! find refuge in Spanish territory." This gives a loophole for entrances "never expected." fluence upon China, which is to zation of heavy industry, finance and utilities. sit on the big four council and Mornout, who will be married about middle October to Joseph Van Sycle, of Williamsport. Portugal has been an ally of Britain for upon France, which Is to join The state will make a beginning by expropri ating properties which the Germans them can stuff for their Hollywood home.

I already had called up the Empire State building and asked to be permitted to spend the high wind period In the topmost cell of the "mooring mast" atop the tower, and had to make excuses to the Kaysers. later. She certainly would get a Mrs. Roland Butler spent the hundreds of years, is proud of it and usually co-operates. But a definite stand would be selves had expropriated and by declaring for full hearing through them, even if Britain and the United States week-end in Paris, 111., with her parents, Mr.

and Mrs. C. F. Propst, welcomed. feit the possessions of Frenchmen accused of collaboration.

There is an intricate snarl of property rights due to the occupation and were inclined oppositely In any who Sunday celebrated their 56th wedding anniversary. Argentina is the weak spot. A govern given case. the usurpations of the Nazis in rencn eco To me personally It appears the Goodman property, Illinois and Harrison streets, to the property recently purchased from Mr. and Mrs.

D. W. Danley, at 525 West Harrison street. Mr. and Mrs.

Danley moved to the Goodman property. Mrs. Wilbur Gorir. has gone to Norfolk, for a visit with her husband, who is attending achool at Camp Bradford. Mr.

and Mrs. Frank Koestner received word from their son, Sgt. Arthur Koestner, that he had arrived in France. Harold W. Townsley.

son of Mr. and Mrs. A. O. Townsley, of Bur nettsville, has been promoted from corporal to sergeant, Mr.

and Mrs. Parker Hughes, of Bumettsville, are parents of a son, born Monday at the) Cns county hospital, Loganaport. Mrs. Hughes is the former Bonnie Gwl-breth and is the daughter of Dr. and Mrs.

H. P. Galbrcth, of Bur. nettsville. J.

Harvey Dornn. local business man, has been ill with shingles. Mrs. Hannah Grafton, who struck by a car last Friday, sustained several broken ribs in addition to bruises. X-ray examination revealed at the Jasper county hospital, Rensselaer.

DIRECT FROM THE PEOPLE Comrnunlcattooa aant la thi de. partment ahould be limited to lut vor.ls and must carry the writer's etanature ami adiliesa. The written (not trparti nam will not ha used necesaar11y but must accompany the letter. Anonymoue latter not used.) Charles Lee Butler, recently in nomic life. There also is a desire for revenge fact of the disagreement is not aa ducted into service, writes his on the industrialists and the propertied class important as that Russia stressed ment which does not represent the people of a nation is apt to be corrupt, and much Axis money is believed to be there, helping to keep the present government in povvx-r.

mother, Mrs. Theda Butler, from Texas, that he is now taking basic accused of treason. it to the breaking point. In actuality, even though the agree In spite of soviet disavowal of world rev infantry training. He left Purdue Sleet was driving down Park avenue, slanting at first, then running almost horizontally, while we looked out of Kayser's window.

The peculiar whistle or shriek that is always associated with the hurricane was beginning to sound. Light was fading. White clouds, in violent motion, were overhead. Argentina will stand careful watching. The recently for induction.

His cousin, ment called for unanimous consideration, everyone will appreciate that a big four power could olution the Communists are active in France, Italy, Yugoslavia, and Greece, if not in other countries which have suffered from one or Robert Steinecker, employed In a Allies are now watching it, and it is hoped that they did not begin too late or any gates unguarded. defense plant at Fort Worth, Texas, spent a week-end with him. in reality take independent action another of the brands of totalitarianism. Bui if she chose, even without con WF.DDIXG Tins WEEK garia already has gone red. Among the in consistencies and contradictions of the dis Sgt.

Harold DeBord. who was suiting the big four. Nations inclined toward war seldom consider Vice President Wallace says all should tracted continent is this one of desiring to recently returned to Fort Meade I talked with Kay awhile about his gout, and how the radio announcers nearly always call his themselves stopped by agreements continue some form of the original curse. from New York, where he expect Perhaps Russia might claim she ed to be shipped out, is now on There is a terrific although delayed study and vote. As a reward they may be sent to China some day to get rid of them.

home town Rocky Mountain, in wanted to watch the others in backwash of the Russian revolution. It sLeaa or uocKy Mount. 1 sym leave, visiting his mother, Mrs. Clarence DeBord, of Williams- pathized with him on both scores. every dispute involving herself so closely that they could not act without her knowledge, but- this It is high time Hitler brushed that lock brought about the conditions which made the war by creating intolerable systems of gov port.

His fiance. Miss Daisy since I have had a lot of arthritis ernment and filling the continent with fears Thornton, of Baltimore, accompanied him here and their mar is a fuzzy thought as action with if not exactly gout, and a radio smartie recently said that Carry of hair out of his eyes and took a good look at the situation. and hatreds operating on a decadent econ riage will take place some time out public knowledge in demo cratic nations is impossible. this week. Nation came from Madison Lodge, Kansas.

When I called up the program to protest that there is I have told the possibilities Blessed is the home with shelves full of Mrs. Dale Hiller received a let mentioning Russia only, as she is ter from her husband, in France, no such place, nobody was inter the declining party, but they ap freshly canned stuff in the cellar. omy, The revolution has not extinguished its torch. Controls are passing into other hands, but the Idea that it is profitable to manage a dictatorial state is not dead. Men who suffered from Hitler and fought him on the continent have not rejected the governmental system under which they led tortured lives.

telling her that he was able to be ested. They had their pay in ad ply equally to Britain, the United out of bed about half of each day, vance, I guess. Carry came- from recovering from shoulder wounds Seems Germany has lost the war, but Medicine Lodge. States, China and France. In short the British proposal seems to me to be on the theory of ren He wrote he was sending home nobody has yet won it.

the purple heart decently awarded This may seem strange. Peoples which dering judicial judgment in dis Another radio smartie (better description than smarty), adver him. Announcement has been made suffered from dictatorship might be expected to regard totalitarianism as the greatest of evils. But these same peoples thirst for re putes. The Russian idea would be like putting the defendant or prosecutor on the court to help Out of the Past 10 YEARS AGO TODAY IN THK JOIKXAI, AND COIKIKR Lafayette firemen set a record last night of the approaching marriage of Mrs.

Leota Haller, of Goshen, to make the decision. venge upon some of their own countrymen Henry Pease, her brother-in-law, and for purposes of revenge there is no form also of Goshen. No date has been Newsnaner Follows WHO SLINGS MID? Editor Journal and Courier: I was jast reading Mary Rsls-ncr's comment on President Roosevelt's address Saturday night. I think she has the wrong idea of who is the mud slingcr. I listened to both Roosevelt and Dewey and I say Dewey is the on who slinks the mud.

He has done so in every speech he has made so far and myself, think Roosevelt's address grand. There was enough humor in it to make people laugh once In awhile. We surely need to laugh now and then to keep up one's morale to help win this war. We just can't always look on the dark side of life and get anywhere in this world. I hope you set but they expect to leave soon after the November election for Lakeland, to spend the win Soldier in Pacific Pfc.

Charles R. (Ike) Lewis of of government so useful as the dictatorship, freed as it is of restraints. That is why the liberation of Europe may be accompanied by the rise of new dictatorships with all the usual paraphernalia of concentration camps and gallows. in a hose-raising demonstration at the Lafayette Life building, the event being a feature of the state fire school at Purdue and a local campaign of fire prevention. Firemen had water flowing from a nozzle on top of the Life building three minutes after the ter.

Lafayette, writing to the Journal tising a headache cure, told the customers how farmers in Kansas wear steel helmets when they work in the fields, to protect them from the hail. Some nit-wit in an advertisii.g office probably got money for that one, and his boss didn't have sense enough to know that there are plenty of people in New York from the plains who know that such stuff is so much crackers. So we sympathized, and I admired the beauty of beautiful Georgia Carroll, until the storm got to whistling so loud that we had to put down all windows and batten the hatches. Mr. and Mrs.

Charles Hurysch went to Indianapolis, where they took a plane to Tulsa, to hose was attached. and Courier from the 15th base postoffice, Pacific theater of war, says copies of the Journal and Courier are reaching him regularly, although he has several visit their son. Pvt. Charles The patrol of Centennial school won first A Split in the Ranks (New York Bun) Ten of 21 members of Rhode Island's Hurysch, stationed at Gruber rating last year. Pupils who are members TO HOSPITAL times changed addresses.

Leonard Bossaer was taken to of the safety patrol and the school principal, Miss Effa Horn, were given an ovation at a meeting yesterday. Industrial Trades Unions Political Action Your paper followed me a long committee, subdivision of the ClO-Political some controversy nas naiuraiiy aeveiopea from a book recently published by the veteran newspaper man, Oswald Garrison Vil-lard, entitled "The Disappearing Daily." Mr. Villard drastically criticizes newspapers in general for alleged carelessness in handling the news and deterioration in the quality of reporting. Along with another critical journalist, he finds "sloppiness in product" the outstanding phase of metropolitan newspapers. "Nobody," he complains, "seems concerned about the real meaning of words.

The city and copy desks no longer care about blunders." He thinks the newspapers were better written in the first two decades of this century than they are now. Many discriminating editors and reporters will disagree with him. It may be granted that the quality of newspaper writing in general has deteriorated in the last decade or so from the standpoint of correct English. This fault probably results from a growing emphasis, in high school and college, on science and mere factual knowledge rather than mastery of good English. And there is a good deal of bad writing In the current war news, by men who know their news better than their language.

But even so, any critic who looks over the typical journalistic writing of the first decade or two of this century will probably find it much worse than it is now. OLD JOBS UNATTRACTIVE When congress wrote into the Selective Service law a proviso that drafted men ahould be given their old jobs back the action was in accord with public sentiment. But recent experience leads to wonder how many will want their old jobs. The area director of the War Manpower Commission discloses that 75 per cent of all veterans interviewed refused to rtturn to their former jobs. They prefer places in electronics, radar, aircraft engines, plastics or motors.

Ir many of these fields remarkable progress has been made since the war started, and prospects for their future dim when the Selective Service provision was written are bright. The returning veterans apparently are thinking ahead," and prefer young and growing industry to established businesses. This development is not strange, b'tt a typical reaction of ambitious young Americans. Their willingness to take a chance with new enterprises has led to creation of many present-day Industrial giants. NEW DEAL DEPRESSION By restricting production and making the unemployed dependent on government dole Instead of creating Jobs for idle workers, the Roosevelt administration prolonged the depression of the thirties several years beyond its natural course.

New Deal spokesmen are completely stumped when asked to explain why this country was bo far behind every other major nation In achieving recovery. In June, 19U'J, industrial production in the United ates was 18 percent below 19i9 whereas all the other important nations, except France, had increased production over 1929 figures. Even in France, where the Fopular Front government had deliberately allow Democrats as well as Republicans to write in their ideas once in a while. So I hop to see my article published, too. The West Point school building was ways," he writes.

It came to me while I was training on the desert Action committee for that state, have re broken into last night and several boxes of candy and $2 were taken. St. Elizabeth hospital, Lafayette, Monday, for a general check-up, from the home of his cousin. Miss Sylvia Bossaer. West Washington street.

He was returned home later in the day in the ambulance. He recently spent six months in in the fall of 1942; and it fol signed. A statement Issued by nine of them says that "after careful consideration we By bribing a doorman, I got a taxi to the Empire State. Traffic Mrs. C.

E. Kious, Brookston, Indiana. Basket dinners will feature the annual lowed me up to Attu and now into the pacific." have come to the conclusion that we would benefit by leaving politics alone," and adds: observance of "Ouiatenon Day" by the was beginning to disappear from Sept. 29. 1944.

He tells of receiving 42 papers pecanoe County Historical association Oct. 6 the streets. Taximen who had families didn't relish the prospect this hospital. at Tippecanoe battlefield. Wilbur Campbell, of Hillsboro.

at one time while on Attu, and says that pictures, stories, and editorials were clipped and placed thickly, and what few customers was taken to the Lafayette clinic were afoot did not know whether My driver must have been single and not too happy. He said he didn't care what happened if I in the Yegimentai scrap book. they were afoot or a-horseback. for a second check-up Monday, by his daughter, Mrs. R.

A. De- 23 YEARS AGO TODAY IN THE COl RlUt R. G. Siegfried, of Mulberry, has been "I got quite a kick out of you They didn't look for wheeled Sutter, Attica. traffic as they bent before the Mr.

and Mrs. ilham Hutson didn't. I told him to go ahead: nothing ever happens anyway. It was hard to see the intersections. Sleet and rain were driving across appointed a member of the faculty of Indiana university.

rising gale. are the parents of a son, born Sept. 21, at the home of her hus (McNaught Syndicate, Inc.) forecasting about the Marshalis being hit soon," he said. "I had the honor of receiving the infantry combat badge. I have been relieved of combat duties now.

so I am working in the base post- Last year the Jewish Ladies Aid society band parents. Mr. and Mrs. levi GROWING PAINS Hutson. near Attica.

The father is in the armed forces. By Phillips "As free men we wish to have our rights to vote for whom we please." There is a tinge of ingratitude however great the truth in the final remark: "We have many laws today favorable to working men and women and it was not Sidney Hillman or the CIO who got them for us." The Rhode Island action follows that of union officials in Utah who similarly resigned, because they did not want to be told how to vote. Neither Utah nor Rhode Island is among the states that are most powerful politically, although the latter is one of the most thoroughly unionized. They may be small, the one in population and the other in size, but they raise a complaint that is likely to be echoed in larger states before election. Factographs Civilians anywhere In the United States who are American citizens and have suffi of this city expressed the opinion that instead of sending flowers upon the occasion of a friends death that the money be turned over to a fund and when a good amount was realized that the contributions be given to office." Mrs.

Wayne Livengood took her son. Lynn, to the Home hospital. some worthy cause. Yesterday the sum of Lafayette, where he underwent In God We Trust "Lord increase our faith." Our heavenly Father, humbly do $100 was turned over to the campaign com treatment for spleen trouble. mittee of the American Jewish Relief to Hi Bov.

the pony owned by R. A. DeSutter II, won first place be applied to Tippecanoe county's quota. The First Christian church, this city, is the 47-58" pony class at the we approach Thee, acknowledging Thy greatness and Thy goodness, beseeching Thee for a continuation of Thy manifold kindnesses. Thy prosperous and highly developed.

The property is now worth more than $60,000. Waynetown horse show, Sunday. Judging was on the pony and the merciful love and care for us who President Wilson is a very sick man. His rider combined. He took tnira place in the hackney pony tingle daughters have been called to his bedside.

are so often unworthy of Thy consideration. We thank Thee for blessing us and we pray Thee to in harness. Captain G. F. Spnngman and forgive us for our weak lapses.

50 YEARS AGO TODAY IN THE MORNING JOIRNAL A contract was awarded a few days ago family of Fort Knox. came to spend a week with her par scurry r. a- I LV ents. Dr. and Mrs.

R. D. Chew, for a $6,000 residence to be erected by A. W. Caldwell at the corner of Ninth and Colum at Covington, and his mother, Mrs.

Corielia Springman, and sister, Mrs. Leslie Kirkman, and family of Attica. bia streets. It will be one of the finest homes in the city. The Monon on Saturday nights now runs cient mechanical adaptability to permit them to learn how to repair guns, small arms weapons and army motor vehicles can now be trained to become expert Mechanics at ordnance specialised schools.

Recruiting for this training is done by the nine service command headquarters throughout the country, which recommend the civilians for this type of training and pay them trainee wage scales while they are learning. The Army ordnance 30-caliber carbine is now being supplied to naval officers and chief petty officers in place of the 45-caliber automatic nistol. In World War I an infantry division required 153 motor vehicles and 4,400 In this war, however, a division requires 3,500 vehicles of 160 different types, but no horses at all. a sleeping coach from Chicago to West Baden and French Lick Springs. War Memorial CLEVELAND, Oct.

3. (INS) A crucifix and altar carved Purify our heart, we beg Thee, that we may be able to see Thee and enjoy Thee and make the most of every opportunity to minister to our fellowman in need, thus bringing glory to Thy Holy Name. Bless, us. Lord, that we may be obedient to Thy will, following it lovingly a ad faithfully, both in sadness and in difficulty as well as in well-being. All this we ask of Thy graciousness confident of Thy abounding generosity.

Through Jesus Christ. Amen. Florida's Everglades cover nearly 5,000 square miles. Prairie chickens pre now being served at John Wendling's cafe. All day today throngs of beautifully at rom 18 tons of granite by P'er tired ladies were seen going and coming from one millinery opening to another.

Ghirla, 60-year-old Italian-born artist, is being completed in Cleveland. The monument is intended James W. Noel has left Purdue and is a memorial to the service men now located in Indianapolis engaged in the study of law. of the present war. 'Fine! Now will you put cherry on top and wrp It a glftf.

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Pages Available:
1,165,578
Years Available:
1920-2024