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The Daily Telegram from Adrian, Michigan • Page 4

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Adrian, Michigan
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4
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FOUR ADRIAN DAILY TELEGRAM, ADRIAN, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, JANUARY 30, 1942 ADRIAN DAILY TELEGRAM The ADRIAN EVENING TELEGRAM Tb ADRIAN. DAILY TIMES Established in 0 100 Established Consolidated April 14 1914 Published Every Afternoon Except Sunday STUART PERRY. Publishes Office 210-214 West Maumes Street, Adrian. Michigan Entered at the post office at Adrian. Michigan, secund-class matter.

MEMBER OF THE ASSUCIATEU PRESS The Assuriated Press la exclusively ted news to the dispatenes use or credited to repruduction IL not of other- any ot wise credited to the paper, and elso the local news published therein AD rights of repruduction of special dispatches berein are also reserved TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION By carrier in Adrian or any other town where The elegram maintains carrier service, 18 centa a week. By mall or ruras delivery and only where no carrier service La tained. In Michigan, Illinis. end Ohio. 34.00 a vear, 52.25 fo: 63 nis months.

$1.50 for three montha, cents for one month. All subscriptions srirty an advance. By mail 10 any point In the United Sties. outside or the above five states. $9.35 a veal $4.70 for six months.

$2 35 for three munihs. 65 cents for ane month All subscriptions strictly in advance. Subscribers will conies a lavor by porting promptly any uregularily up deliverv by mall or carrier. Friday, January 30, 1942 WAR'S TIMETABLE We said recently in this column that the present problem of the war is to fight the enemy effectively, no matter where- to hold him, weaken him and retard. him, while America is preparing the forces and equipment that will insure victory.

One might say that we--the United Nations--are not retarding or weakening Japan very much in the Far East. Certainly the Japanese have been steadily winning and advancing, and they are definitely superior in numbers and But still the Far Eastern fighting is vastly important--even if it finally turns out to be a losing fight in that particular region. General MacArthur's magnificent defense in the Philippines diverts some Japanese strength from Singapore. The defense of Singapore takes pressure off the Indies, where American help is arriving. The whole war in that theater keeps Japan from attacking Russia, taking eastern Siberia, and making a nearer base to use against us in the North Pacific.

It keeps Japan busy in the south while we strengthen our chain of Alaskan and Aleutian island bases. And all the while Japan, despite her! successes, is expending her fighting power--with planes shot down, materials used up, and an average of one ship a day going to the bottom. The Chinese have played a marvelous part in wearing down Japan, and they are still doing so-hither1o single-handed, but we hope soon with substantial help. Russia is doing the same with Germany on a gigantic scale- -not enough to win the war on the spot, but enough to contribute greatly to final victory. Great blows must yet be struck, no one can guess where perhaps in the Far East or the Near East, or in North Africa or West Africa, and finally somewhere in Europe itself.

Our armed forces will take part wherever it seems advisable, whenever we can, and to such an extent as we are able. How soon and how greatly we can help is the one great ty--the paramount, problem of the whole war situation. That problem can be answered only by the people themselves. The answer depends on how hard and fast they work, and on how much they give up. And that in turn depends on how quickly they grasp the deadly peril of the situation and the extreme urgency of the war's demands.

The consensus of most observers is that' the American people are not even yet fully awake. There has been a wonderful change since December 7, and great things are being done; but even yet we are not moving fast enough. We are far from doing our utmost; and without doing our utmost the war cannot be won. We used to hold the comforting belief that time was working on our side, but that is no longer true. Time is certainly working on the side of the Japanese.

Our probJem is to beat their timetable, and our danger is that we cannot- -that before we are ready they will gain advantages over us that it will bel difficult for us to regain. Hitler's timetable has equal dangers for us. If he can get West Africa before we can stop him, the outlook will be much darker. It he can an assault on England before we can give enough help to insure its failure, the war will be lost. We must move faster to beat the timetables of our enemies.

And that means everybody from the President to the man at his bench or the woman at her knitting. The slowness of the nation's effort cannot be charged to anybody or any class in particular. Officials, manufacturers, workmen, everybody are doing well, perhaps what they think is their best; but they must all do better. Above all the whole mass of the American people must get fully in step mentally with the fast pace of total war. That mental attitude is the soil from which all national achievements spring.

AN AMERICAN ARMY Speculation on what disposition would be made of Negro soldiers in the new American army, and a few scattered complaints of alleged discrimination, is put at rest in a recent War Department statement. Negro soldiers are being the same as any American soldier. They have the same for advancement and the same chance to serve in different branches, It is an American army being created: Down at Tuskegee, Alabama, the 99th Pursuit Squadron, is completing training it began last September. It is an air unit composed entirely of young Negroes, and the cadets when they have completed their flying instruction are to be commissioned as second lieutenants and assigned immediately to' the training of new Negro cadets. The army has set plans in motion for organizing the 93rd infantry division and it will be composed of Negro regiments now in service and additional men drawn from various replacement centers.

Its artillery components also will be made up of Negro batteries. The entire enlisted personnel of the 758th Tank Battalion stationed at Claiborne, is composed of Negro soldiers. In addition the 184th Field Artillery, the 366th and 372nd Infantry and the 369 Coast Artillery regiments are composed of Negroes and staffed by officers from lieutenants to colonels. There is no line of color or race in this national crisis. An event at Fort Knox, illustrates that point.

The main parade ground there has been named Brooks Field in honor of the first casualty of the armored force in the Philippines. Private Robert H. Brooks for whom the parade ground has been named was a Negro soldier. He died on the battlefield near Fort Stotsenburg on the first day of America's participation in the war. Backward Glances From Telegraro Files 20 Years Ago Today Eighteen adults and 23 children were examined today in the first of the sessions of the Associated Char-! tuberculosis clinics.

"Charles Wesley has gone to New York where he will sail on the Empress of Scotland for a 90 day cruise. He will also Mediterranean, European countries before he returns home. Mrs. William Lutz fell today on the ice at her home 715 East Toledo Street suffering a broken left arm. 10 Years Ago Today Adrian high school smothered Monroe in the annual basketball game tonight by a score of 41 to 9.

The Uniform Rank of I.O.OF. held installation ceremonies tonight, for Canton lodge. C. A. Nash was installed as captain for the fourth consecutive time.

Miss Irene Daley, daughter off Mr. and Mrs. H. J. Daley, who cently moved here from Lansing, has enrolled in the senior high school.

She completed her first se-: mester in the Lansing schools. 5 Years Ago Today The flood relief fund in Lenawee county has reached $6,800. More supplies, including food and clothing, left Adrian by trucks for the flooded districts. Shirley W. Alien, professor of forestry at the University of Michigan.

in an address before a men's dinner at the Episcopal Church says he found all Europe armed in a trip abroad last summer. Orval Elliott of 767 West Beecher Street caught a pike in weighing 14 and one quarter pounds Devils Lake today. The Lenawee county Democrats in convention today elected nine delegates to the state convention be held in Grand Rapids ary 10 and 11. News Behind the News By Paul Alation WASHINGTON, Jan. 30 Dark tales of racketeering in rubber have been reported here, and you will shortly see the Truman Committee seeking the culprits.

Profiteering prices for second-hand tires are only one of the leading features of the market" that has been established. Even the American Automobile Association is quietly lending its weight for exposure of conditions. The whole question of the Leasibility of the existing rationing system is likely to be opened. The government itself has announced that 000,000 000 new tires were in stock when it cut off sales. The limited list of eligibles for these tires would not be able to consume so many until much of the stock had rotted from age.

Also there is the question of how defense workers living miles from the factories are going to be able to get to and from work when their tires out. With 28,000,000 car users in this country cut off from tires, and bidding for second hands and retreads, it was inevitable that a situation somewhat like that of prohibition would arise. If this nation is to avoid some swift jumps toward inflation, Leon Henderson will have to freeze prices where they are now- or were on a recent date. Mr. Henderson has been fixing prices for a year now, just as if he always had the legislative authority he is now 69 getting.

items. Even He has including only, his informal steps, of all restrained commodities today have escaped his coverage by schedules or freezing orders. Since he started to work, wholesale prices have risen 18 per cent; farm prices 36 per cent (more than one Food is cent, up 26 After per Christ- cent, textiles 33 per mas the Bureau of Labor Statistics index of 28 commodities rose on 18! consecutive days (mostly on agricultural and foodstuff, prices). It is obvious Henderson continues to work commodity by commodity, the war may he over before he establishes a price level. He may be limited in what he do about farm prices, but the can only way he can stop the general rise is to step in with an overall freezing order.

Mr. Roosevelt revealed no startling military information when he said six, eight or ten American "expeditions" have been placed around the world. Anyone who has read all reports closely (as the Japanese sear and Germans do daily) could count them -Ireland, Iceland, Greenland, Dutch Guiana, Australia, Dutch East Indics. The first four were officially announced here, as was the presence cf a substantial number of army bombers in the Near East. The Australian government announced that fleet bases were being turned; over to Americans, that the dollar was accepted as a local unit of money-official facts which could" be easily interpreted although comment has been offered here.

The operations of American flying Business Methods Are Needed By DAVID LAWRENCE WASHINGTON, Jan. 30 one positive good that may come out of the Roberts report on the Pearl Harbor disaster. It is a revival of respect here in ton for the managerial tion. For more than eight years an attitude has prevailed in the Roosevelt administration which has regarded business men as merely selfish persons whose methods and practices were all suspect because a small minority were accused of cutting corners in the financial world. Because it was politically fashfionable to denounce business men, many New Dealers have developed a sort of contempt for business administration as such.

And yet the Pearl Harbor fiasco could never have happened in the ordinary routine of a large business It couldn't have happened on the railroads which moved 600,000 troops recently in record time and it couldn't have happened in any large industrial enterprise where the fulfillment of any vital order had been entrusted to any key executive or his subordi- nates. While there was an era in American life when success in business administration overemphasized, and efficiency was few will question today the fact that efficient organization such as Germany has perfected in war time is absolutely indispensable to the successful operation of a military service. The greatest surprise has, therefore, been expressed among business folks that either the Army or Navy could be so poorly equipped in its executive mechanism as to permit important orders to be issued without a checkup by anybody to determine whether such orders were fulfilled. The Deal administration has assiduously cultivated the idea that business methods are something to be treated with suspicion. To some extent every administration in Washington has ignored the of business discipline but that's because the political motive or the vanity motive interferes.

Politics sometimes becomes so much ingrained in a governmental Suburban Heights ONE OF THE THINGS FOR WHICH FRED PERLEY IS THANKFUL THESE DAYS 15 THAT, WITH THE NEED. OF KEEPING ATTICS CLEAR, HIS WIFE CAN'T KEEP SENDING HIM UP TO PUT AWAY OLD BOXES AND BROKEN PICTURE FRAMES AND ODDS AND ENDS, 1-30 WHICH SHE ALWAYS FEELS MAY COME IN USEFUL SOME DAY (Released by The Boll Syndicate, Ine.) WILLIATIS GLYAS fortresses in the Dutch East Indies have been duly reported. What enabled General Rommel to rise and strike again at the British was Hitter's secret diversion to him of substantial forces massed in Sicily to attack Malta. The Libyan desert has been turned into a shuttle, run by whichever side happens last to have accumulated reinforcements. From Halfaya to the base of the Sidran Gulf, where all the fighting has taken place so far, the ground is comparatively unimportant.

The objectives points (Cairo and Tripoli) would be of major importance, but neither the British nor the Germans have been able to get close to them' -and are not likely to. Widespread thefts of stickers on windshields have been reported to authorities, and apparently a minor bootlegging trade has been established in this line also. The rising value of all usable articles and implements, the tremendous increase in re-sale and second hand values, requires that each citizen take unusual precautions to guard against thefts not only from his automobile but his home. I Distributed by King Features Syndicate, Inc. Reproduction in full or In part strictly prohibited.1 Communications Blames Rubbish' Pick-Up To the Editor of The Telegram: I wish to offer my sympathy to Mr.

Foote whose protest appeared in the Telegram Tuesday. It is true that an old, discarded! piano placed on the curb is not a gation pleasant may object show to that see, and the investi-1 woman; who lived alone at address mentioned had paid taxes for many years and was under the impression that part of the taxes were going to pay for a rubbish collection service. We do have this service but it is quite evident that there was no appropriation made to chase' an axe, and of course the idea of sending more than one man on a truck once in a while to pick up large objects would evidently put our city in the red, Mr. Foote also feels that discarded bath tubs and washing machines are eyesores. Perhaps I can prove to him that we are more likely to get eyesores from seeking out old scrap iron in the near future than we would be by ing at it on our curb today.

Our national existence might depend entirely on the number of old bath tubs that we are able to pile on our curb, because it is a known fact that the real end of the first World War was first indicated when the enemy found it necessary to use concrete for shot due to the exhaustion of iron and steel supplies. The iron or steel that can be resmelted and reforged may help make the gun or the shell with which we can save our country and the lives of our loved ones. It is for this reason that I do not agree with Mr. Foote. It is my opinion that the matter of good citizenship can best be judged by the.

number bath tubs and washing machines that he or she is able to pile on the curb, and the ones who have decided to store them perhaps should give this a second thought. Max L. Raseley 834 Erie St. Books and People By AGNES 'JEWELL I like books. I was born and bred among them, and have the easy feeling I get in their I presence, that 'a stable-boy has among horses.

(Oliver Wendell Holmes) A Glance Along The Shelves "He Opened the Door of. Japan," by Carl Crow. With Japan standing across the Far Eastern trade routes with a STOP sign, the dramatic story of the opening of Japan to American trade and Townsend Harris, the New York merchant who brought this about, becomes immediately significant. Carl Crow, the author of 400 Million Customers, has lived in Japan and knows the Japanese fully as well as he knows the Chinese, "Young Man of Caracas," by T. R.

Ybarra. The famous foreign correspondent and radio commentator recaptures his fabulous youth in a South American capital at the turn of the century. Nobody could have selected a stranger combination of parents than "Tommy" Ybarra: his father was a dashing, mercurial Venezuelan general, and his mother came from (of places!) Boston. The story of their family life is a hilarious South American "Life with Father." "Shrubs in the Garden," by Vernon Quinn. The history, folk- SLEEPS Crossword Puzzle POLLEN Arno SO DEAN ACROSS 1.

Dressed 5. Away 8. Stafts 12. Take on cargo 13. Chum 14.

Send forth 15. Malign 16. Gone by 17. Illndu deity 18. Tributary of the Ohio 20.

Arden supporter: slang 23. Toward 23. Caution 24. Secure 27. Fish 28.

In a line 32. Poem 33. Obese 34. Edged implement 35. Restaurant attendant 37.

Revolve 38. Urged 39. Young reporter 40. Spread to dry 41. Small depression 42.

Exactly able 43. Numerous 44. Shower 46. Fast 47. Burning 50.

Kind of cape or collar 54. Kind of dance 55. American author 57. Tailless leaping amphibian 58. Brave man 59.

Incision CO. Nobleman CI. Paradise 62. Age 63., Trees 20 21 32 33 35 37 38 Rebecca West. A new.

candidate that was fourth in non-fiction sales at Brentano's, N. last week. Mission to Moscow, Joseph E. Davies. new candidate and postChristmas book that came to the fore immediately.

30,000 printed. The Doctors Mayo, Helen Clapesattle. Led non-fiction last week at San Francisco stores reporting to the Times. Young Man of Caracas, T. R.

Ybarra. Among the first six last week at Brentano's, N. Time Out Three, slightly deaf men were motoring from the north of London in an old, nolsy car, and hearing was, difficult. As they were nearing the city, one asked: "Is this Wembly?" "No," replied the second, "this is Thursday. put in the third.

"Let's. stop and have Felloe, Highland Park, Michigan. MORENCI Ontario Country Club The Ontario Country Club met yesterday afternoon in the home of Mrs. Charles Converse, with Mrs. Clarence Miner as assisting hostess.

Nineteen members were present. Mrs. George Flint, president, held a short business sion. answered roll call by telling their favorite song. Mrs.

Dan Shafer and Mrs. Estelle Joughin were in charge of the entertainment. Games were played, in which Mrs. E. N.

Eversole, Mrs. John Ely, Mrs. John Hawkins, and Mrs. Clarion Heckert won prizes. Refreshments were served.

The next meeting will be held February 9 in the home of Mrs. Bernice Ferris. Mrs. Gayle Ferris will be assisting hostess. Roll call will answered with "Facts about Washington." Mrs.

Clyde Partee and Miss Ethel Gust will be in charge of entertainment. Lloyd-Packard Mr. and Mrs. Ira Packard announce the marriage of their daughter Doris of Detroit to Knox Lloyd of Ferndale, which took place January 18 in Napoleon, Ohlo. Mrs.

Lloyd is a graduate of Morenci high school with the class of 1933 and until her marriage was employed in Detroit as a beautician. Mr. Lloyd is employed with the Chrysler Motor Corporation. They will make their Ferndale. Morenci Notes A regular meeting of the ParentTeacher Association Blood school will be held Friday evening in the school house at 8 o'clock.

potluck supper will be served. The Daughters of the le Covenant of the Congregational Church met for a 1 o'clock luncheon Wednesday in the church. There were members and guests present. Mrs. Elmer Bringman, the president, conducted a short business session after which the remainder of the afternoon was spent with Red Cross sewing.

The arrangements committee was composed of Mrs. J. B. Munro, Mrs. Arthur Buck, Mrs.

William Kast and Mrs. Rex Riley. The next meeting. will be announced later. The committee in charge will be Mrs.

Henry Geisler, Mrs. Loraine Bancroft, Mrs. Earl Reppert and Mrs. Albert Renner. Mrs.

George Leacock returned to her home in Cadmus Thursday from the Blanchard hospital where she received medical treatment for a few days. A. E. Boxerne of Rochester, New York, was in Morenci on business Thursday and Friday. Oscar Anderson is spending few weeks in St.

Petersburg, Florida, witha Mrs. Anderson. Mr. Ferguson are visiting relatives and in Detroit this week. Mr.

and Mrs. D. Lee McLain and Mr. and Mrs. Theo Reppert were in Toledo on business Thursday.

Mrs. Sadie Wiley of Grand Rapids is a guest this week of Mrs. Thomas Heckman. Clare Double was honored in his home Tuesday evening by Mrs. Double and daughter Maxine observance of his birthday anniversary.

The evening WAS spent playing pepper and prizes were won by Mrs. Maynard Eicher, Mrs. Leonard Bailey, Lonnie Lemons Named for. Heroic Action First Lieut. George H.

Cannon (above) of Ann Arbor, was cited for especially heroic action in a report on the defense of Midway Island issued by the Navy. Cannon refused to be removed from his command post after he had been seriously wounded, the Navy said, and died from loss of blood. and Homer Keefer. Other guests included Mr. and Mrs.

Walter Miley, Mrs. Keefer, Mr. and Mrs. Lansing Burnham, Mr. and Mrs.

John Morgan and son, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Whitmore, Mr. Bailey, Mrs. Lemons, Mr.

and Mrs. Delton Moe, Mr. Eicher, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Frey, Mr.

and Mrs. Sullivan Johnson, Mr. and Mrs. George H. Peeper and Mrs.

John Bany and a son. Refreshments were served including a decorated birthday cake and Mr. Double was presented with a gift. The Morenci public library will be -closed Monday and Wednesday for redecoration. lore and superstitions of such shrubs as the lilac, barberry, and privet are added to the essential horticultural facts in a way which have made the author's previous works unlike any other garden books.

"The Silent Drum," by Nell Swanson. A story of the struggle between traders and settlers in and around Fort Pitt in the 1760s. Same characters as in an earlier novel "The Judas Tree." To what extent "Ambassador Dodd's Dairy" was edited by Martha and William E. Dodd, we do not know, but this "off the reclord" account of one who as a university student in a happier Germany, was unprepared for conditions he had to face, is a document which shows our ambassador's struggle to uphold the ideals of this country against a system opposed and inimical. Only death could end his efforts.

John Gunther will spend the next six weeks revising "Inside Asia" to bring it up to date. replied: "May-ow, may-ow." Best Sellers of the Week Fiction Which reminds us of the borrower who came to the Blocmfield, N. Free Public Library recently and said to the desk assistant: "You're going to get that new book of John Gunther's aren't you? You have all of his other 'Insides'." Harper's will 'not release the Stalin book written by Leon Trotsky, which was all set for publication, until the war is over. According to H. B.

Clapesattle, author of "The Doctors Mayo," the Mayo clinic became so famous that when visitors arrived it: Rochester, Minnesota, where the clinic is located, the cab drivers would ask them: "Are you a patient or a doctor?" Then there was the visitor who stopped to pat a kitten on the street. "Who do you belong to kitty?" asked. And kitty in true Rochester fashion The Keys of the Kingdom, J. Cronin. Continues to lead fiction at the majority of stores throughout the country, Saratoga Trunk, Edna Ferber.

Judd's, Clapp'e, Rich's, Vroman's are a few more of the stores telling us this led their Christmas novels in sales. The Sun Is My Undoing, Marguerite Steen. Outsold every other fiction title during the past month at Gimbel's in Pittsburgh, Lowman Hanford's in Seattle, and Hampel's Book Shop in Milwaukee. Windswept, Mary Ellen Chase. Reorders poured in on the day after Christmas.

Wild Is the River, Louis Bromfield. Has led fiction for the past two months at the Argus Book Shop in Chicago. Botany Bay, Charles Nordhoff and James Norman Hall. Consistently selling. Non-Fiction Berlin Diary, William L.

Shirer. Many stores report increased sales since the war began. Inside Latin America, John Gunther. The war adds impetus to this too. Clifton Reading I've Fadiman.

Liked, Brentano's Edited by Chicago, Stewart's and Kidd's have all told us this was their non-fiction best seller during the month of December. That Day Alone, Pierre Van Paassen. The favorite this past week in Philadelphia bookstores reports the Inquirer. Reveille in Washington, Margaret Leech. Increasingly good sales.

Candidates for the Best Seller List A Leat in the Storm. Lin Yutang. Definitely headed for a place on the month's best seller list. All That Glitters, Frances Parkinson Keyes. Consistently gaining in sales.

Storm, George Stewart. The best seller this week at six San Francisco stores reporting to the Times. Genesee Fever, Carl Carmer. The only new fiction candidate this week, it was published after Christmas. A Subtreasury of American Humor, compiled by E.

B. and K. S. White. This is proving immensely popular.

Black Lamb and Grey Falcon, Your Federal Income Tax (This is one of a series of 49 articles explaining the who, what, when, how and "why of the federal vicome tar. The series contains information of vital interest and importance to the millions of persons who are required to file returns this year, many of them for the first times No. 19 Who Is the Head of the Family? For income-tax purposes there can only be one head of a family. In addition to being the chief financial support, the head of a family must be related by blood, marriage, or adoption to his dependents, and he must have a legal or moral obligation to exercise family control over them and provide for their As such, he is entitled to the same exemption allowed a married person- that is fifteen hundred dollars. are some unusual cases under this classification.

A single person, who supports and maintains in one household one or more individuals who are closely connected with him by blocd, by marriage, or by adoption, and whose right to exercise family control and provide for them is based upon a legal or moral obligation, is the head of a family, and as such is entitled to the exemption allowed a married person--that is, $1,500. In addition, may claim a credit of $400 for each of such individuals who is under 18 years of age or incapable of self-support' because mentally or physically defective, except if the taxpayer octhe status of the head of a family solely by reason of the istence of one or more of such individuals, the credit of $400 for one of such individuals is not lowable. Another example not so much out of the usual is this: A widowwho supports in household his aged mother and his child 17 years of age is the head of a family, and as such is entitled to an exemption of $1,500 and a credit of $400 for one dependent. system that it overflows even into the services and agencies of government which should be the last to succumb to its wiles. Thus Washington has heard comment from time to time that generals or admirals who kow-tow to the political big-wigs are given the favored posts and above the heads of those who deserve promotions on merit.

Then there is the tenacity with which some men in the Army and Navy have insisted on performing executive functions in Washington when they are not Fitted for them at all of them who may be excellent with troops in the field or with men on shipboard have had little experience in actual, business management. handle enormous war contracts and property. Civilians, on the other hand, if introduced into the Army and Navy and given commissions find a certain hostility to them because they haven't won their right to a uniform through either West Point or Annapolls. To get trained executives and put them on a civilian basis is not always satisfactory either. The dollar-a-year-men for instance who have volunteered have been denounced as disloyal to the government and loyal to their former employers.

While occasional instances of this kind may have occurred, the charge on the whole is baseless and unfair. Yet it is made some members of Congress every now and then and results in a disservice to war effort because efficient then do not like to volunteer for war duty only to be abused by the politicians. It is a well known fact that the ablest men in America are in Washington helping to run not. war machine. The ablest men happen to be political opponents of the Administration and for that reason the President would' not have them in positions of importance in the government.

Mr. Roosevelt prefers men who for the most part are his political supporters or personal friends. The present cabinet has not been streamlined for war. No President in recent history has kept so many men over a period of eight years in his cabinet. Mr.

Roosevelt rarely fires and when there is likelihood of. dismissal the atmosphere in any organization soon reeks of inefficiency and neglect of duty. ANTES AVERSE SA RAS SPOT ELS RECUR EVE RE RESUMES AlT SIRUP BEFALLS ELUS DELE REPEATS REDES EM SCRAPES LA PUG EAGLE PET OLAS ISE LEND SATURN AVATAR TUDES A DENSE ENATES Solution Of Yesterday's Puzzle DOWN 4. Make pubile 1. Ball of thread or 5.

Marine fish yarn ruck 6, Exhaust 1: Brightest star 7. Pertaining to In The Rowers Dragon 8. Ringing 9. Skip 10 10. Low haunt IL.

Chlet actor 19. Therefore 21. Correlative of either 23. Rainy 24. Disseminated 25.

Proverb 26. Simulate 27. Auditory organ 29. 1.1890 30. 31.

Full Frequently 28 30 of noxious plants 33. Gave food to 34. African lope 36. Four-sided plane 6gure 37. Deep groove 39.

Metal container Former U. 8. President The common trailing periwinkle 45. Morning: abbr. 32153 47, Pain Exist 48.

Ran away hastily 49. Learning 50. Genus of the beet 6l. Implement 62. Damage 53, Totals 56.

Belonging to us Pearl Necklace Jewelry of Quality at a Fair Price Chain Key Accessories Budget Plan Use Our Sheldon Jewelry Store G. G. HATHAWAY 108 E. MAUMEE ADRIAN 24 25 47 55..

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Pages Available:
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Years Available:
1942-1992