Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 November 1942 — Page 24
PLANE CRASH KILLS [8mm nom ee = Love Is Winner
1 AY I¥ BLOOD’ | NOTRE DAME CADET/ oe si ~~ After 40 Years ; The dead are 2d Lieut. Lloyd G. oak vie CORPUS CHRISTI, Tex, Nov, 5| Compton, Bedford, Va.; 2d Lieyt.| LAKE WORTH, Fla, Nov. 5 (U. P).—The navy announced to- Fobers E. Brasfield, North Nampa, day that the crash of a train Ida.; Staff Sergt. Garfield -A.
(U. P).—Two childhood sweethearts were married here today— the bride was 85 years old, the plane Tuesday night took the lives| FUESChe of East Bernstadt, Ky. who 84. L of Lieut. (jg) Thomas Wesley Jen-| The injured are: 2d Lieut. Charles . Elizabeth King and WilMilitary Exes Say Tardy Tr Tardy Training Jeopardizes kins, instructor and Aviation Cadet|W- Byrd, Lillington, N. C.; 2d Lieut,| iam Donohue first met in Wyan- ’ . William J. McJunkin, a 1942 Notre| William J. Denton, Paris, Tex.; Teen-Age Soldiers; Quote Kaiser on Pirie Gidlite Staff Sergt. Warren H. Clark, Predicament in World War I. McJunkin recently entered train-|Thompson, Utah; Sergt. Floyd R. By WILLIAM PHILIP SIMMS
dotte, Mich., where they attended school. After 40 years of not séeing here. His mother is. Mrs. Nell Hudgens, Delta, Colo.; Sergt. Grant Francis McJunkin, Chicago. .|P. Donahue, Pontiac, Mich., and Soripps-Howard Foreign Editor WASHINGTON, Nov. 5—Assuming that the 18-19-
ing each other, they met again’ Sergt. John C. Schiiebaum, Sey-year-olds are going into the armed services, every day their] &
b; AKENED, new congress will carry out the task| 1£11€ DR UNWE J [entrusted to it by electors—promot- Asthi ma M LONDON PAPERS SAY|:e ne mo viserous sna emcin: | .|conduct of the war,” the Times said Loosened F frst ) ,
in an editorial. LONDON, Nov. 5 (U. P)—| Despite the flood of news on the The loss of a number of seats in ForThousands of S
congress to those opposing Roose-|. Chokin ing, g spasms Egyptian campaign, London news-|velt’s party will not weaken his au- | oom a Sues Yor EEE
|papers found space today for edi-|thority as a leader of the nation at torials on the American elections.|War,” the News Chronicle said.
None assumed that President Roose- RED = ITCHY = SC ALY : ES
velt’s position had been weakened
ji ALLE MA “What may be more important
than the change in the numerical #Dilications of wonderfully sooth-
proportions of the Republicans and Tee: tor’s TRY A WANT AD IN THE T : Democrats in the senate and the fori 3 relieve torture. Also aids in IT WILL GET el RESULTS. 3
house is the spirit with which the $50 Jus. : ZEMO
—, Lm
I
unless EEE tista jiajacte 3 satisfac AE
Donohue, a retired: Washington postal employee, said they have common interests which include dancing, shuffleboard and bridge.
while wintering here. EL PASO, Tex., Nov. 5 (U. P.).—|mour, Ind.
‘armies were too weak and too tired.
_Yet the experiences of these masses
* blood.”
‘military
‘they arrived ‘quite up to the level of modern re-
“a fully trained army. For united
‘much, perhaps everything, again de-
‘burg said. But. they had what it
important Meuse. Speak of them as “the American
training is delayed will eventually be paid for in blood. That is the view of the most experienced among the
* military observers here. In They say it is axiomatic, not a question of
their “view.”
fact, they object to calling it
opinion, and they quote Marshal Von Hindenburg on the American scldier to prove their point. Twenty-four years ago this week, Kaiser Wilhelm’s em-
pire was collapsing about him. practically undefended. The Syria had melted away. Constantinople had given up the ghost, and Georgia, toward which Hitler's troops are now driving, was being evacuated. Austria - Hungary faced revolution, and the infection was spreading to Ger-
many itself. ‘Neve®heless, Von Hindenburg still believed he might save the situation. -On Nov. 1 he sent Gen. Groner, his new first quartermaster geni eral, to the west-
“Our immediate i concern,” he wrote afterward, “was the withdrawal of our line of defense to the Ant-werp-Meuse position. It was easy to decide but hard to carry out. Precious war material was within reach of the enemy in this line—and 80,000 wounded were in our advance or field hospitals.” But, the old marshal went on to say, it was already too late. “Our
Moreover, the pressure which the fresh American masses were putting upon our most sensitive spot in the region of the Meuse was too strong.
will have taught the United States for the future that the business of war cannot be learned in a few months and that in a crisis lack of this experience costs streams of
Praised U. S. Courage
What the grizzled old war-horse thought he foresaw was a system of training for youth in peacetime. That was the only lesson he could possibly imagine growing out of our sanguinary “experiences” in the world war. For while he praised the doughboy’s courage, he commented that when “they were not yet
quirements in a purely military sense.” : The United States, however, was not to live up to Hindenburg’'s expectations. Instead of military training in peacetime, it went almost to the opposite extreme. As a
consequence, it now faces another |:
lifc-or-death year like 1918 without
nations officials are almost unani-
mous that 1943 may very well find| 3
Herr Hitler's position fundamentally similar to the kaiser’s in 1918, with
pending on America’s ability to deliver the knockout blow. ‘Lavish With Blood’
: Perhaps our doughboys were not yet quite up to the desired level in a purely military sense, as Hinden-
took to turn the tide on the all-
Mosul and Aleppo had fallen, armies in Mesopotamia and
fresh American masses.” masses” took on the flower of Hin-
back on their heels wherever they
lavish with their blood. Hardly anyone now disputes that today we would be far better off had we taken some of old Hindenburg’s left-handed advice. We
American]
would now have a thoroughly trained fighting force numbering many millions and ready for whatever might be in store. But all that
gress must now decide is how to
past mistakes. Nex{ Wednesday is Armistice day. Military men are convinced that the 12 months between Armistice day, 1942, and Armistice day, 1943, will tell the tale.
cial moment arrives, as the doughboys were in 1918, their training cannot begin a moment too soon.
CHURCHILL PLANS
LONDON, Nov. 5 (U. P.).—Po-
lengthy war review at an early session of the house of commons, they said. His war review to commons, it was understood, will include devel-
chaining of war prisoners.
Use Milnoti in ncoffceforcookiag, in desserts... as would use milk, cream, w i ing cream, or a canned milk. not confuse with eva rated milk. Your MONEY ACK if not satisfied.
Carolene Products Co., Litchfield, Hl. MILNOT Costs Less
He refused to
Than a Canned Milk
army,” but referred to them as “the |= But “these|3
denburg’s legions and rocked them|S=
met, and the only criticism he could E make was that they were somewhat |=
is water over the dam. What con-|2
make up, in so far as it can, for|:
So if the ’teen-agers = are to be there when this war’s cru-| =
BROADCAST SOON|Z
litical sources said today that Prime|2 Minister Winston Churchill plans]: to make a radio speech soon dealing |= with the war. He also will deliver a|==
opments in Africa and the contro-|= versy with Germany concerning the |=
WEL Su, BREAD
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FRESH FRYING
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Cut up
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Assorted
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| B DEPARTMENT STORE —— 0 | |
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P & G SOAP
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SWEETHEART 4 a
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WOODBURY’S 3 a 22¢
WRIGHI'S SILVER CR! sare 390 OLD DUTCH he Beat Buy *
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43 GHICKEN
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