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/ 3E S I X t h e N e w a r k ; n . y ., c o u r i e r ; T h u r s d a y , D e c e m b e r 19M §1ye (E a u rfer ESTABLISHED 1843 f/oi 1940 Published by The Newark Courier, rac. ' Roy Roblruvou, Pres, and Treas v William E. Larcombe. Vice-Praa. Mary B. Robinson. Sec. Lvman R Crotners. A^t See. and Asst Treas. ' US-117 West Wilier Street. Newark, New York Telephone 115 or 116 RO Y ROBINSON Publisher fCHARLES ROSS jfehagtng Editor A. EUGENE BOLI.I33 Aawsory Editor ROY ROBINSON Advei tlsjiih Manager '■Rated the Best All-Around Weekly Newspaper by v-.v:; New York Press Asso lul on. Jan 27. 1940 > 00 a Year Sm g 'e Copies 5c Outside of United States $4 00 (Entered as Second C!v.s \!&ftpr at the Post Office, Newark N Y. NATIONAL EDITORIAL— SSO C IA T IO N ^ c tu n . ^ y V lts n fttA — D t . i M B i i R 36 1940 7or the \p h - V ear—Let J<*y Register ((Watch, the fareb of the people you pass in the a^C6t' or those w ho -it oppo.-ite you m the street 'Y o u can count the wrinkles and the furrows Bd 'there s a drt p - -t uti d m u b ie m nearly every hpai't'—if one is i<. j .tdpr by the face-, of those we PR'S m public place- ■ th e re's plentv or h..nest-lo-uoodueas trouble tn tie world that s re. ponsible for a lot of the sadness afeis seen in the faces of men and women, but dost of th e trouble that we see m others is just oeatal—an d a lot of it is simply rehashed in a van- : o f form s until it i. expenenced in all the un- happy emotions of the human mind. -And not content with this we \borrow\ plenty aorej so th a t gloom may not depart and leave us e-iearted and happy ■And so we dwarf our heart-life by repressing the Best feelings God has given us. because somebody fiay thmk that were too emotional.\ ' We are permitting embitterpd people cynical peo- -soured people cold-blooded people to rob us of fcoy wiuch should be enioyed in the fullest measure Bonjt you tiilnk vou d better cut loose from this ry an d live joyously, spontaneously? Afid m a y ij” tlie smile that will come into your L eyes w ill be earned over to somebody e lse's face, id-you'll start a chain of smiles that will bnng ■j?y to a dozen heaits fense item s in another book. The big book would be left unbalanced. T h e little book is the problem. Senator George suggests th a t the corporation in come tax be raised to 35‘1 . The Republicans are getting together o n an \economy program ” to save about 2 billion dollars during the comin g year, and reduce non-m ilitary expenses, hoping to balance tills latter budget. Of course, that leaves the National Defense book entirely without help—or even slight “ considera tion.\ All of which means that the national debt limit will be' greatly increased, taxes boosted, and public borrowing expanded to the very limit. Finally, Uncle Sam is hopelessly in the red, even though there is no War of our own. N ewark Goes Ahead Newark has m ade little noise about it during the past year, but the fact that it is going ahead stead ily ri she.wn in the building reports printed else where in tills newspaper. The construction of 14 new homes and the expenditure of more than $166,000 m one year in homes, remodeling, and business 1: mid mg. besides the new $650,000 school, is a record of which the whole village m ay rightly be proud. All of that $166,000 was expended by Individuals a- an expression of their faith in Newark's future and their agreement that Newaik is a good place in w Inch tn live According to village authorities it comes close to being an a'l-tim e high record on home building, but it may be exceeded in 1941 if present plans are c arried out. In community services the Village has taken a long stride ahead during the year. The completion uf improvements tn Colburn Park give us a lighted s'jftball field and ice skating-rink; the new fire fight ing equipment adds to our safety; the shelter in Perkins Park adds to the usefulness of that place of beauty, we are assured from the response so far reported that the Newark Community Center will be an accomplished fact withm the next few weeks In all this forward movement we have not been :■ ! busy that we have forgotten those who are in need T h a t splendid project, the Community Christ mas Committee, started several years ago. has been in action again and brought happiness into a long list of homes that would have been cheerless had it not been for these loyal men and women The whole splendid record of the year has been added evidence of the \Spirit of Newark\ in action. Ai R a n d o m ; George Morse retires from active service in the W ayne County Farm Bureau with a big load of hon ors. During his 16 years of service m an executive capacity he had an important part in making that fine organization a leader in the State, both in m em bership and in excellence of service It is umored that signal lights are to displace the crossing gates at the West Shore on North Main street. G a tes m ay be old-fashioned, but we predict that the accident list at that point will increase. \Sm a rt Aleck' drivers are often tempted to beat the light, while they would hesitate to crash the gate O U R -by M at jiTy and c o u n t r y a r e BUDDIES, IN AND OUT ‘ OF UNIFORM —FARM AND RANCH-STORE AND FACTO R Y - UNLESS EACH WERE ABLE TO BUY THE \ OTHER'S FOOD OK GOODS. WE’D 0 0 BACK TO THE DARK ABES. “Czechs Determined to Face Blockade”-Masaryh (Following is official script of broadcast to the United S tates from Ja n M asaryk, Czechoslovak Foreign Minister in London, on the a l tude o f his govemnqpnt to the blockade:— > “■The -Czechoslovak nation is determined to withstand without com plaint. the combined effect of German oppression and the Britis blockade, whieh result in a serious ♦ _______ _ food Shortage in our country. From our point of view, it is much better to get along without material nec essities as food and clothing, than th a t our souls should be destroyed. Pettengill 1940 has been a bad year for free I am convinced that other peoples o n e representative demoe- whose territory is occupied by the racy after another has fallen. In Germans feel as we do. all history the casualty lists of re- BROADWAY BYSTANDER: The Story Tellers: Arturn r chini, head of Italy's scent , . ; owed his job to Old Baldy- \, i streak, accordingto Philippe n n ... , . publics have never been as long. The blockade was instituted in “ In the oath which all immi- order to deprive the Germ an w a r ” ^ usl take before they be- industry o f important raw m a ter- “ ' cltizens which all citizens strength. Can anyone believe th a t k befo-e they hold any ials and undermine her fighting „ offlce or commission in our the Nazis would not rob the con- > ReDUblic against \all enemies, quered peoples of an y food sent a ‘forces. men swear to defend them, as they have already robbed f and domestic.\ The first we understand. We know who they may be. Colored spots on the map show where thev live We can photograph their bombers, tanks, battleships. And against these pos sible foreign foes we have voted seventeen billion dollars without question or hesitation. That Amenca the old America -—:an be conquered by any foreign foe few are so timid as to believe. But domestic enemies are differ ent and dangerous Thoughtful men have become concerned about them At the moment I am not think ing about the fifth column, the Trojan horse, the subsidized agent of a foreign power We have had them before. During the War of the American Revolution the col- Ask The Scientist I f you have a question to ask * the scientists, m ail it to the New York Press association. The Castle, Syracuse, N. Y. The Science Board of the radio workshop a t Syra- T I I E S E R M O N cuse university will answer each A I\pW \ e a r S R e s o l u t i o n week in the Courier those ques- tions considered most interesting y and timely. Rf.'Y. JA M E S M. G R A Y , D.D. Q UESTION 1. What kinds of President o f the Moody Bible trees are used for Christm as trees? Institute of Chicago ANSW E R . evergreens, that is pines; firs, (or1 My hope is in three P.aim 39.7 Czechoslovakia, Poland, Norway France and the others of every thing they wished? Does anyone actually believe that there is any way to force the Nazis to change their methods and m ake a hum an itarian effort to supply the hungry in Czechoslovakia, Poland, Fran c e 0 The G e .m a n Governor of Poland. Frank, recently declared in all ser iousness th a t he will treat the Poles like obstinate beasts. It u danger- out to expect the Germ an leopard to change his spots. \When the Germans began their propaganda to lighten the British blockade by America's sending food to Europe, representatives of the Vichy Government told me in the United States, that the Germans have no authority in unoccupied I i-armc T h e y insist that it is cruel om e rw e re ImnVvMmbed'wTth dis- not to send food and other goods lovah5tR But neiUier ' malice do- to the suffering m southern France mestlc . or ..foreign levy\ pre- I T h o se are fairy tales. France is v<,med Yorktown i ,o.i her back wath a robber kneeling Arms d]d not win our freedom. : ^ e,r ClT 1 ' *22** her I \ \reeking tube and iron shard” | thioat. Even if hei left hand were wp were hopelessly outnumbered. I free, who can affirm that the rob- But in W ashington's , 0U1 and in her cannot seize any ^oncy she the iiearts 0f continentals was mnv clutch in that one hand T h e tbe Splrdt ^ c r lfice—something Germans are sinking British ships dully, rtgardle-s of whether they i , 1 'iy fn-d. munitions nr children A c mplefp bloekade is e sential tn \ ict:;,-\ — h a lf mra lire, .ire not 1 enocgh. j We on the front line of battle can see the splendid 'acnfices the B iifu h people are inakirv Argu- UIUj nut a watchdog to be fed. , i n n i * lor softening the blows of that a picture of America or their armies of defense, the jS it not9 Only the other day I , blockade are unthinkable to us. read of a labor union demanding ; tven though they m ay recur to that the factory m a k e u p the dif- | >Lme persons thousands of m iles fcrence between the soldier's pay behind the front, say m California of the conscripted worker and his It would be a great injustice to former wage at the factorv. No accuse the British of indifference court in The Living Ag played-Clay pigeon to a few i tents -and he had enough had the towns policed u f showed his knob among ins 1 subjects . . . Frederick 1 - assures young playwright- that lots of times an idea i . you after you have resigv self never to have another Mr. L. ased to do so pruii’..; can always repeat ati old n> The medical books, a cmm\ You reveals, list 203 came, ache. You can relieve ttu , by failing to tunc in un i; >, Hessian soldiers did not possess. Have we that today9 Only last ‘ umme. Marshal Petam san France fell because Frenchmen de manded rights and .sh’rked duties It fell becaus** thev had become coft. fat and corrupt It regarded government a cow to be milked The Front Pages: Tin }\ denied the beat NANA sc- : speech of Riehard-Walth .[> riculture minister, quoted , the world would be Na/i -1, the war ends. At the - m dispatches sneaked thr..u;n of forced labor in Poland jf, French prisoners of wjr banan tells on himself was readied for its fall m : hannes Steel reports m ' ki “ Eyewitness.” That year • cists corrupted the Frr-n • 65,000,000 francs worth ui train its armies in Ethi\f permitting . . Dorothy p isn't all the H-Trib staff dm i you notice Walter Lippmutu a wisp of a wallop at Mark \ his pagemate, for finding i Party under his bed : press is needling Hitler mt in to give Benito a lift n The Reds can't be reading • muniques of the Italian H.. mand. They are master i “ silver lining” evasion. .Almost all kinds^of , Text^Anci now ^ o rd._ what .wait I | t„ lh“e need_, othrr io o ^ T m ^ lw e r s ^ m w i I l i^ o ^ k e i the present circumstances compro- povrrnment contracts unless in- raise is lmoossible even from the pured against every hazard of the Oh- we needr.: be hilarious, or loud, or cheap it'.ba n a tu ally happv because we've given joy a nee to regi'ter - th a t s all 'Bet joy register'' Can vi u think of a better slo- or th e year 1941 a vear that will be crowded ath sadness and despair nr m a n y millions through- the world? By Di Charles Stelzle teaEConseri'ution i Amdng the major conservation practices directed i theU m ted States Department of Agriculture It is Sorted th a t the AAA farm program resulted in 00460 farm e rs joining in Agricultural Depart- d f jplans and improving by conservation measures Ult'i8 p e r cent of the total cropland In th e United gltateS. totaling 355 million acres. - T he-report to the press from th e Department says ; -26 m illion acres were seeded to g reen manure cbver crops; 26 million acres of land protected ■erosion control practices th a t have been tested (.proved: applications to the soil of nearly 5.- lOOO tons o f lime and about 640.000 tons o f super- ssphate: and the construction of 354 million feet erracing. *“In^the past we have heedlessly taken fertility rthe s o il that was built up through th e eentur- says th e AAA Adm inistrator and he a d d s : “To- ■faim e rs in every rural county in th e United gtes efre working cooperatively to meet an obliga- ■ tb future generations of America— tlvat of re- bg t o the soil enough fertility so that the nation i live abundantly in the future.\ he U n ited States is becoming too sm a ll for the \distance motor tourist. It won't be long be- i the foot-itching motorist can drive a l l the way 1 'A lask a down through M exico. Panam a and the of th e Incas. then across to Buenas Aires and . through Brazil. ht u p to Election Day. Adm inistration boosters tall \h e t up” over the sins of the Pendergast ft. an K a n s a s C ity. Two weeks a f t e r election Federal government dropped charges against lj&endergast in the 9 million dollar ta x refund Com m ent would be superfluous. Newark without a ' B altzel Siure\ will not seem Like the old home town. Maybe in tlie course of time, the new owners can make the store in the theater building as popular a meeting place as it has been under Frank Baltzel's management for more than 30 years fact that, although we have lost Frank as a m e r chant. we keep him as a citizen. He has been an ac tive factor for many years m promoting all good things for the Village spruces, hemlocks, cedars, and cy- , _____ __________ _ ____ ______ ____ press are used in different paits Another twelve months have j h u m anitarian sta n d p o i n t C z e c h - „ lb And cu-iouslv those who sav of the United States Som e are rolled around and we are still heie. ^ u,vait children will be pale after m at fh e nres^nt war is <Tur w ■•hipped for distances of 1.000 to Some people think death is the the war is won. but their spirits a!si) msist that ''o f ^ u m e we w i ll' 2.000 miles. Hundreds of carloads greatest wonder of human history, will be free. In love and sympathy I come annually Into the Boston, but life is a stranger miracle. The we must think of their spirits and New York and Philadelphia mar- engine in a vessel tied at its dock I their future as much as of their kets from eastern Canada and New Ls not so extraordinary as one in Newark is consoled w ith the [England. About 20.000.000 Christ- a vessel plowing the broad seas: consoiea w ith tne , ^ ^ ^ used each year ln and it ls le?s sirig i!ar than the this country. m achineiv of our existence should Tills great use of trees at Christ- cease to operate, than that it m as time need not' deplete our bnould operate at all. fore-ts If these trees were all When we thus reflect it Is not slashed down in one stand and to be wondered if like David, we clean and clear, that would be sometimes ask the question as to verv bad practice and bad for- what we are waiting for estry but if the forests are prop- Putting the question to nur- crly thinned and handled we can .‘ elves, is it enough for bovs and al! 'he Christmas t-ees we g:rlss to sav thatt the. aie effort that is being made to glue our gaze on oondi- Considering the extent to which we have already moved toward a Supreme Central Power; the m eth ods that have been employed to that end; the fail ure of recent Congresses to check our slipping, the have an 'no enrustm as t-ees we girl to sav tha the a ie '.i.iitini want without Injury to our for- to be men and women0 Or for ests —Prof. Nelson Brnwn. forester, youths to say th it thev are wait- QUESTION 2. What is the best ing to get a start ln life? Or for Christmas tree to use in New York fathers and mutlieis to say that state? . they are waiting to see their chil- ANSW E R . Balsam fir is pre- dren educated and established? Or ferreri bv m any persons because ^or others that there are enter- the leaves do not drop off readily Pn 'es to whose success their ln a warm house. These trees Presence is still necessary? Are yield a very pleasant odor and these things reallv what we are are highly regarded because of. waiting for\ tions abroad and to fill us with fear of immediate attack, the insistence that the Executive be given a free hand in foreign affairs and in domestic pre paredness to fight, there seems need for citizen con cern—concern as to what m ay be \Behind the News.\ That South M ain street transformer that burned out and left several Newark storps in darkness on one of the busiest shopping days reminds me o f some people who failed to join in the \night of light\ on Chiistm a s eve. So Curtis Scofield will add \mine host\ to his titles when the new year begins. Well. Newark surely needs a first-class hotel. - t h e retiring m an agement has made many improvements, and with Scofield, a successful business man. at the helm, we are assured of a continuation- even a betterm ent -- of service. Rev. Theodore Meyer, when he leaves Newark to enter a laiger field in Albany, will take with him the good wishes of all Newark and leave behind deep regrets over Newark's loss. 'fo f M w o p e tiCre l& iio harcl-heaAed opposition in W ashing- fcagalhst sending fefodriind relief to a n y of the Safes' t h a t have {W n wiped out. and their peo- nppVetished by the War. T h e r e a l difficulty is i\ th e re is a fixed conviction in the^Administra- ■anfl legislative circles in W ashingtofr-Jjiat it Hid ,be- impossible to keep food from being cap- ed Uhd used by the Germans, and that they would jjee j t ayvay from countries like the Scandinavians, nee. H o lland, and others. It'tn the World W ar terms were arranged under uch'-American food supplies were distributed to dlfl honntries. T h e re is only one reason why \iS impossible a t the present time. T h a t one on i s t h a t Hitler controls the European situation I is the World's No. 1 liar. o v i e a n d Spending b tyajy the statesm en figure things in W ashing- the r e tu r n s from income taxes and oth e r reve- are expected to total about 7 billion dollars the [g y e a r . Even New Dpalers haven't been able idi a w a v to.pay the year's expenses, which will aoDut 1 3 miiion dollars. 00 the wise bay,, who are at the head o f Govern- efit a f fairs are talking abbut putting a l l the Na-. . u. ?.iif Ir<» ik' .in, 1■ the jnnn-de-■ •'.aiionai D rf . y The veto of the W alter-Lpgan bill and the re fusal of Congress to pass it over the veto is but an other indication o f the government's determination to let nothing interfere with beaucratic control. The m eat of the W a F er-Logan bill was that it gave the right of appeal from rulings of bureaus and agencies set up by the Adm inistration—that is a constitutional right, but the Constitution seems to be just another piece of paper to the new deal gov ernment. A lot o f American people will approve the Pres ident's plan to aid Great Britain in every possible way \short-of-w a r ,\ but why all the subterfuge on the part of the President? W hy not come out in the open and call a spade a spade—or tn this case call a loan a loan. Poor Benito, as if his disastrous defeats in Libya and Albania were not enough, now come the na tives of Ethiopia rising in rebellion against Italy’s \benevolent\ rule. not send our boys overseas:” that we will let the British do our fight ing for us. Their war crv is: \We will fight this war to the last Eng lishman.\ I never thought I would live to see Americans ask \Hessian sol diers\ to fight our battles. In s a y ing this, l do not admit that it is our w a r but those who say it is. b .Jips T h e .e will come a day when America can help feed tlie hungry and restore weary bodies, but that d a y has not come yet. \To all who offer food to Czech oslovakia at the cost of delaying our victory, we say \Thank you — not yet Germ any and her ally in high places or low, have adopted must be defeated first Let them an ignominious attitudp toward it return what thev have stolen from We must not \sacrifice any rp- occupied areas and there would bp rent social gains.\ Time and a no need of lifting tlie blockade \ half for war work must be paid, not 'Herp is a case m point A voune tn those on sweatshop wage, but to ai.-taid warden in the defense ef the highest paid worker, to be London was rerently killed on charged to his own children. And duty. He was engaged to a lovely taxation—wfftit is our attitude to- |RirI who works in an offiee which ward th a t 0 The income tax base was evacuated 50 miles outside the should be broadened to include mii- crty. Since his death, she con tin - lions now exempt, and those now lies to work by day at her job, and paying should pay twice as much, three nights a week comes into Yet Cong'ess and the President London to take* h(*r fiancp s pl&co in arp fearful to ]pvy noccssarv the defense of their city. These taxes which should be accepted are the people who will win the without protest provided rigid w a r and save the souks of Czprho- economy is enforced in ail govern c l n t f f i it o n i l d e n w ’ J ' U / \ r c n m a C l “ Typewriter Ribbons: I : gow’s: The only difTcmu • a rut and a grave is in Vi sions . . . M ayor I.i(i It makes no difference if I bridges behind me, since I treat . . . H. Walpole’s 1 is a comedy to those wh tragedy to those who feel Milestone’s: F a r c e is thing. It’s a bubble you tr in the air, and if you’re ■ it becomes a medicine b >:i child’s definition: A sn . whisper of a laugh Quillen's: Violent exerc < cold bath. You think it « good because you feel L* * you stop it . . . Anon’s habit of spilling his word yawns . . . J . Mahler’s pie spend so much tinv* for rainy days, they d«m t sunny ones . . . Benjar lin’s: Doing an injury pi: low your enemy; rtvF» makes you even with Iv\ ing it sets you above h.: toast: Never above >• neath you—always bi-M-h H- their rich green color, symm etri- Let us ask God the question. a s | sJova^ children Those are G o d ’s ment outgo We are not vet lev\- t _________________ . _ fv r r r n T v A r t r i l a n n / 4 n t i i i M . ' cal crown and horizontal branch- David did balsam flrs are aval>- 1 It may b? that you are w a it able. however, and they are ex- tng t0 de saved, for God is not pensive as a rule. willing that you should perish, but The red spgure m the Adiron- that a}l should come to repent- dnck*. commonly known around ance and live. How He has been here as a spruce, is the next best, pleading with some of you. during It is widely used because it is the past vear. through sermon, available ln large quantities and song and circumstance! is reasonable in price.—P r o f ., 2. It may be that you are wait- Brown. ing to bear fruit By the grace QUESTION 4. W hat m aterial • of God you are already saved, let can I get to put on the logs in the us suppose, but for what purpose? fireplace at Christm as time to W hy did God not call you to Him- m ake the flame multicolored? self a t the moment of your con- ANSW E R . Several different salts version? “ Y e have not chosen such as copper sulphate, calcium me.” said Christ, \but I have chos- chloride. strontium nitrate, and en you. and ordained you. that ye barium nitrate might be used for should go and bring forth fruit that purpose. If you vzant the and that your fruit should re flam e to last for some time I sug- m ain” (John 15 1 6 ) . Ls the dress- gest that you get some of these er of the vineyard pleading that salts at a drug store or a chemi- you be let alone this year also, that cal supplv house and soak the lo g . if you bear fru it it shall be well, in the salts and then allow the and if not. then after th a t thou log to dry before using it in the shait be cut down? (Luke 12:6-9 own people -and we wil] not weaken them in battle.\ fireplace I 3 It may be that you are wnit- How long it will take the log1 ing for Christ’s coming. This has to dry depends upon the kind of i e v e r . been the hope of the true wood and the tem perature and humidity in which it rests during the drying process. Three months m ight be required in the spring and summer seasons for a good sized log of ten-inch diam eter to dry sufficiently to bum.— Dr. Al bert L. Elder, chemist, and Prof. Brown. QUESTION 5. Will a Christmas tree keep better if it is put in a pail of water? ANSW E R . I f the tree were put into water immediately after it was cut the water would help to keep it fresh for a longer time. church, and blessed is the man whose heart is animated by it. Ataept Him, serve Him. wait for Him. “ Happy is the people whose G o d is the Lord.\ ' Nothing else a fam ily buys has so large a part in fam ily-well; be- ing Jas food. How to choose, buy. and'use food wisely when the fam ily Income is low is explained in irnirnell Co bulletin E-236 which New o r k ' residents may obtain free from the Office of Publication. Roberts Hall. Ithaca, N. Y . The W hite House says, “ two or three firm s are not cooperating In the defense plans,\ but nothing is said'—or done— about those Union organizers who tax a m an $75. or more, before he can take a job to wJ?en Placed in water hhinetiiateiy help the defense program. a-fte-r cuttmg W,U last longer than It is not always easy to arrange of the tree. You are moving it to do this, however, because there j from th e acetic to the tropics with- is generally a considerable Inter- in a few minutes and then chang- val between the cutting of a tree ing ;it back to the extfem e cold and its purchase for use in the home. W e all know that cut flowers ', George W ashington directed that the Capitol be built not in the valley on the level with the W hite IHouse and executive departments, but on th e hill where it would Overshadow all other buildings and institutions in W ashington, to symbolize that Con- if this is hot done. This effect of temperatures of winter. The tree normally<has a dormant period in theAvtater time. There is a period of several months between the summer and winter during which the tree goes the use of water holds true for all . through a transition to accustom form s of plant life.—D r. Ernest j itself to the extreme Warm of Reed, geneticist, and Prof: Brown. | suihfaer &nd vice versa into the I Q IIESTIO N 6. W h at cape should j winder. I f one tries to make such be given a living Christinas tree, a change within a few minutes, he to preserye it for future planting is destroying certain physiological and growth? ! conditions within the plant. The gress must always remain supreme, Thom as Jef- ' ANSW E R , The idea Ls to move chapge , from the temperature o f ™ ..-rr,-. i». ____ _ ______ ___ _ a tree with the roots on It. When 1 oiir f h o fises, to that outride our ferson said. The authority of Congress can never be yo(, this ym ^ |o houleW dt Christmas time u , too wrakrnotl a ithout injury to. thf* Union rliangp tlie rh tiie natural habitat ijfed t—Pro Brown.- The Dog Tag Law ing sufficient Federal taxes to pay even the ordinary expenses of gov ernment Two tax bills in 1940 and we are still not paying a dime to cover the national defense ap propriations we have voted' And yet I am not too pessimis tic In talking the other day with Henry Srhricker the newly elected governor of Indiana. I said that before his four years expired we CUB REPO R T E R ’ S NOTE- ! General Metaxas, th' '■ | amazing Greeks, is ah\ ■ • One of the anecdotf; I deals with the tim e he « . 1 a seaplane . . All «m i \ , the commander of the «t they were gliding tow .t drome . . . \Excuse n i Metaxas.” said the i ■ “ but it would be better to ■ on the sea. This is a si.u “ Of course,” said Met.n was I thinking about” saying he turned and l.-in.o on the water, end then s., • mander, I thank you hr \ shall not forget the tact « you drew my attention t.. ' der I was about to ma ■ Metaxas then turned, i' door and stepped into th 1. The law provides that every would see people turning from the dog must be licensed, and when type of public official who is rot- a t large must wear the metal tag ting the heart of our faith in dem- issued for surh dog: otherwise the orraev to the Grover Cleveland dog is subject to seizure and if not kind— men of enflexible honor: redeemed m ay be sold or de- men who put the city and the na- stroyed. tion ahead of every group or class. 2. All puppies running at large. L sa'd we w°uid see what Senator or upon becoming six months of rah foresaw.—a \constitutional age, must be licensed. renaissance. And I venture the 3. The fact that a dog is not ^ V f ^ U \ ^ ^ wearing a tag is presumptive e v r - , Years am »n nw dence that such dog is not licensed. Thomas Jefferson w r ^ e that 4. The owner of a dog who ne- Americans must cease to be inhab- glects or refuses to obtain a ii- > tan Is and become citizens, cense for the dog. as required by Americans have not forgotten law. inrurs a penalty of $10 and hrw to rrspond to an appeal to the costs. heroic. We see it everv fail on 5. The enumerators of towns and ncJreds ° f football fields. A the police department of cities and tluar ter tack with his back to the villages issuing dog licenses a r e . the old response to a i equired to prepare each Ja n u a r y , g heart warming a packed a list of dog owners. The omis sion of the name of an owner from t*1® quarterbacks in such lists does not relieve him ! ^ «str£ J md from obtaining a license. i k nnt £ a me If you do not own or harbor a ' t yet lost not in America, dog. it is advisable to see that your : EiVP m m l r f o f i i f 1™ 85 season we nam e does not appear on the list cod on en ' the filed with the Town Clerk. j somethine m rJ ^ ° n ' I*3*13® 3 c n u m t, ■ • someuimg; to the doctor who came 6. On Feb. 10 each year t h e ; through the blizzard a t d e a d o f clerk shall make a report to th e ) night, something to our church, to commission containing the nam es , our pet charity. I propose that ttfis of all owners of dogs who h a v e ; w a r we give a present to our failed to obtain licenses. The clerk country, this blessed j«nd Let's of the town shall immediately fo l- hang up a stocking for Uncle S a m i lowing th a t date bring an action T o p v right. 1940 . America's Fu- in a justice court, in the nam e of | tore. Inc.) the People of the State a g a i n s t , Heyronnd Braun's fai : '■ about war correspondent A Woolloott was told him hv w McNutt . . . All hell hr i loose one cold night on the w Ffont . . . As McNutt «\>' cover, he joined Woolic \ • other reporter, who were s \ the ground where Alex hr ' a shawl he always carried : such things . . . Suddenlv . exploded not far from \ h*' were all sprawled . . 7°\\ scared stiff, tnlt not W\ who indifferently remarked me Maude Adams as Peter r gay and spirited and charming as the silver star Of toe tree of Christmas mm The newsboy who peddle- h - ca pers near The Roney-Pic71 ' J daily lairgh-provoker . . r»bf'r ™ he kept yelling: “ Mussolini <•>■• um a pew war dance! One ster f»[ ■' ’ and two steps.backi” each person owning or harboring | tbe Purchase price to the clerk-and in his town an unlicensed dog fo r a“ P obtain a license for the dog* i recovery o f the penalty of $U) im~ *• “ ° aottan s h a ll be m aintained posed by law . ™ recover the possession or valued 7. The owner of a dog seized m a y ? L a d° gL ° r f° r. damages for In- redeem the dag w fSiin five days by destruction of a dog, not; producing to the person seizing the attached to a collar, dog a license tor the dog and by Unto 2 1 Dec- 3 1 > paying to the clerk $2 as the cost I ' 194t dog license are, o f the s e izure.' I f not so redeemed ^ y°u rs now to the owner shall forfeit all title to a rush. thed0.s the dog. Shall be sold The m i lk 'o f sheep.' goat and Dorothy Thompson was till.'C 0 a ruse she once used to get rul . ” bore . . . He Came over t.. art table' ha toe Stork Club one and started -telling her how to wnie her nexttencoiyum s \I-111’” l‘ remember anything you arc «•■>' we she interrupted. ,rWhyf’ be asked. \is i°ut r ory that bad?” “ I f s terrible,” replied La Thomp son.' “In fact, euy roemcry bad I don’t even remember \fraa asked yon to s it a t this table' or killed b y ffie p e h c e officer o r ; buffato such- representative. In the case * lh m a n L R K n t n f f i G a y Kabbce. whose genial. pathetic portrayals have ^ him to 'millions of film started work to the title rn '’ ‘•Seattergood Satoes.\ at ^ ' Of-Cfiarence Budingtoi' Kl\ of sale;, the . many . European and Oripntal purchaser must pay ' cnuntrirs ,u vjrienuu •tliiestf o r uw r e n r c o r w ; ’; ' lahfl. authdr of the. pop '1'®.’ i Series Oft, Wffich the be: UK Fo r U * * * New jets goes urd. Te labt qpf .iwling ronze c raut ar ay now Gref titmg ( . Bert t t gan IPs an Jefem 1 s year Larr ■ t gam ps’ spr oucher ivy . . pbinsor Fran eps pe< wllng 1 Irool b hoolers 11 repla Ted ly s Bro fhool te . . B Broa ge she iks,\ h pare a cents ,ys shi ! Publ f : ace [jots 67 fitude : Kin soc leci no p hots Eldo werful eler (a is seiv d Jeffr Pugh Sh . . . Colgi [m's Sit shoi Imes . . jmargu defei “ Gtu : L e a g Joe I |tier as ip r o g Sanl Iretarj ■itch\ I t repi |y crop . H a s |it he 1 g e e I Ray le d th Jims ai feht., rery we Irm an | s t tiin er tf. ( s whis action: Ti en G iriod h o ish t t le n d s itag tei *m e r j achesti le 1 ‘ dio feature Is beinc nted £ otball. hoolxe 1 N e w ' 'k-Gea . his at