Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 January 1943 — Page 9
bh
. Hoosier Vagabond
WITH THE AMERICAN FORCES IN ALGERIA. — Being with the troops in Africa is, in many ways, like attending a national political convention. Especially if you're around one of the headquarters set up in the various coastal cities. In Oran, for instance, the cen- : AE sor’s office serves as the press box, and that's where you meet. other correspondents and exchange dope : and listen to the radio news. Everybody eats at two big messes set up by the army. If you want to see somebody and can’t find him, you wait till mealtime and you're bound to see him there. As at a convention you run your legs off from ‘one building to another, looking up various offi.cers and having confabs. EverySods’ fills your ear full of dope, rumor and fact. Most of it you can’t use, and most, of it isn’t true, anyway. ; Convention-like, people wander in and out of your room all day and night. Some of them you know, and some you don’t. Rooms are scarce, and you're liable to have one friend and two strangers sleeping ~ on your floor.
A Schoolmate From I. TU.
YOU SHAKE HANDS with scores of people whose faces you know, but you can’t remember their names or at what camp in Ireland or England you met them. And you're always running surprisingly onto some genuine acquaintance. » _ A moment ago Pvt. Crosby Lewis walked into my room. He's a brilliant young American who joined the Canadian army and was sent to England two years ago. Now he’s with us. The last time I saw . him was at a cocktail party in London announcing "his engagement. Last evennig I bumped into Lieut. Col. Louis Plain
# By Ernie Pyle of the marine corps, who was one of my friends at Londonderry last summer. He's’ a big Clevelander, hard as nails, who got the marine situation well in hand here and then lost his voice, so he just makes motions.
On my first day here a beaming fellow in British uniform came up and started pumping my hand. It
‘was Guy Ramsey of The London News-Chronicle,
whom I last saw nearly two years ago when we were following Wendell ‘Willkie in England, is the
greatest reciter of limericks in England. All of them]
are unprintable. Way out in the country one night I was introduced in the darkness to Maj. William H. Pennington. We chatted a few moments, and it turned out we were in school together at Indiana university 20 years ago.
Friends Never Say Goodby
SO IT GOES. Friends you had in England, good friends from America, people you hadn't seen for two decades. Tomorrow theyll disappear again. In wartime people leave without saying goodby—a fellow will be gone for three or four days before you realize his absence. It’s no use to inquire. You just accept . it, and months from now you'll be pumping his hand in some other foreign country. Qr maybe you'll never see him again. You never can tell. Personal luggage in wartime is a paradox. You must have it, and in order to have it you must carry it with you, and you can’t carry it with you because there’s too much of it. The result is that people’ simply abandon part of it, even if they don’t lose it. .They’ll be less comfortable, but they just can’t lug it all. In the room I'm now occupying I picked up a nice cap which fits me better than my own, and also took the blankets I found on the floor and left mine in their place, because they were nicer than mine. There's also a brand-new mess kit here if anybody wants LI
Inside Indianapolis By Lowell Nussbaum
ONE OF THE operators on the E. 10th st. trackless trolley likes to keep his passengers amused. When he stops for the Schwitzer-Cummins plant, he usually "sings out: “All out for the old men’s home.” It usually gets a laugh, so when he gets to the Real Silk mills, he hollers: “All out for the old ladies’ home.” That usually panics em. . . . A sign on the door of Kothe, Wells & Bauer Co., on Virginia ave. announces: “Closed from 12 noon to 1 p. m.” « « » A friend who has had to . walk on crutches recently because of a bone fracture suggests that people, on the whole, are pretty careless about the way they treat folks on crutches—half knocking them down or maybe kicking a ¢ crutch out from under them. Incidentally, when he inquired at a store whether they ‘still rented crutches, the clerk said they didn’t, but had them for sale, adding: “Every home. should have a‘pair of crutches, nowadays.” How true! . . . Harvey Belton, president of Stokes pharmacy, claims the distinction of buying the first war bond sold this year. He bought it at 12:01 a. m. New Year’s day from Mrs. Ralph Lochry, @irman of the St. Vincent's Hospital Guild bond and stamp sales desk in the hospital lobby. The lobby desk will celebrate its first anniversary Saturday. . ,
iWe Get Results
WE TOLD YOU the other day how Eddie Demlow, president of the Indianapolis Dahlia society was moving to 3844 College and had no space to raise dahlias. ‘Well, he moved to the College ave. house Thursday and the next day -got a letter from Chester Robinson of the Fidelity Trust Co. And guess what! Mr. Robinson said he owns a. vacant lot just across the street from Eddie’s new home, “Youre welcome to use it free for your dahlias,” he wrote. Eddie accepted with gratitude. . . . Ewing (Rhiney) Row who has been confined to his home several months by illness calls to remind us to remind you folks to feed the birds— especially when there’s snow on the ground. A few
‘Washington
WASHINGTON, Jan. 11.—Not since the honeymoon 10 years ago has President Roosevelt had such favorable comment on a message to congress, but the circumstances then and now are quite different. Ten years ago the country was flat on its back, confidence had been lost in all leaders, and Mr. Roosevelt stepped into the vacuum and carried the country and a huge congressional majority: with him. This time Mr. Roosevelt deals . with a congress that is against him all but in name—or it thinks it is. It is against the New Deal— the name and the bungling, screwball excesses, - boondoggling and sloppy government that are popu- - larly associated with the New Deal. The congress may not be as «much against the ideas for which the New Deal label ‘originaily stood as it is against the name and the barnacles that have grown on in these years, of which there are a lot because there hasn't been a scraping in. the whole 10 years. That's one thing Mr. Roosevelt was too soft and too busy to attend to.
3 Jimmy Byrnes Was on Hand
ja MR. ROOSEVELT began *with this congress by talking in ‘a conciliatory, moderate tone. He conceded mistakes, and somehow that went over as an unexpected novelty. Mr. Roosevelt also made some time with congress by giving a little birthday surprise party for Speaker Rayburn to which a number of congressmen, includirig some Republican and Democratic harashells, were asked. Such little friendly social occasions may become more frequent now. The White House cushions that have been polished these last few years by the New ‘Dealers may from now on feel the imprint of more
cornfed backsides. The president also will make full use of James
My Day
' WASHINGTON, Sunday.—Like every other family, we lin the White House are trying to adjust to the
‘new war rules for civilians. I had not read my paper °
the other evening and so I went out to a concert in the way in which I would ordinarily have gone. To my horror the next morn-
crusts saved from the garbage may be the means of saving the lives of song birds. Rhiney, who provides the birds in the vicinity of 2830 Washington blvd. with scratch feed, reports he has lots of red birds and -many other varieties. One starling, he swears, sings like a meadowlark. , . . Add signs (we hope) of spring: Mary Fleenor, R. R, 1, Box 619-W, reports seeing a pair of robins Thursday. Probably some of the few that stay here all winter, but a cheering sight, nevertheless.
How’s Your Conscience?
STATE TREASURER Jim Givens has a “conscience” dollar. It came in an anonymous letter: inclosed one dollar. I didn’t pay to get into the state fair two times.” Shucks, neither did we. Anyway, Jim doesn’t know whether he ean legally give it to the state fair board, or must start a ‘conscience fund.” . « «» County Commissioner Bill Ayres is pretty dis-
gusted with the “tightfistedness” of the brand new
(G. O. P.) county council. Says Bill: “They name a two-man committee to decide whether a broken window pane should be replaced and then turn it down. I wish the old Democratic council were back. They were a little better.” . . . Those sailors you see drilling on memorial plaza are members of the naval
. recruiting force getting in their daily dozen or so.
Corp. “Beverage”
THE NEW YORK TIMES (Dec. 26) carries a picture of Corp. Albert J. Beveridge trying to coax a dog, pining for his master, to eat. And .they spelled his name, “Beverage.” Al, a holdover state senator, was unable to obtain a furlough to attend to his legislative duty. He is stationed at Walnut Ridge, Ark. . . . Jud West, state store license supervisor, reports he received an inquiry from a citizen in South Bend wanting to know how much it would cost for a store license ta sell horse meat. . . . The Dick Millers (he’s manager of the coliseum and the hockey team) cele-
“brated their 25th wedding anniversary at their home
on Road 431 after the hockey game last night. Among the 100 or so guests were Governor and Mrs. Schricker, Lieut. Gov. and Mrs, Dawson and practically the entire hockey team.
3
By Raymond Clapper
F. Byrnes, his director of economic stabilization. Jimmy, former member of the house and former senator, was up in congress when the president delivered his message. But was Jimmy at the president's elbow to show his old congressional cronies how close he was to the big boss? No, sirree. Smart; Jimmy was sitting way back there with the run-of-mine Democrats where he used to sit as a young congressman, He sat back with the boys, just the same old Jimmy. Hadn’t changed a bit. From Tommy Corcoran to Jimmy Byrnes—that’s the cycle of White House liaison with congress. It tells the story of the transition from the old days of sending up “must” bills to these new days of sending up “data” for congress to study.
Humanity Climbing Up the Hill
ABOUT THE REAL things for which the Roosevelt administration took up the battle in the early days—as against the outside trimmings—I don’t think Mr. Roosevelt is compromising. I don’t think they
.are going to be wiped out.
This congress, and the country, are tired of a lot of things and fed up on a lot of things. But when Mr. Roosevelt says we must fix it so that seven or eight million soldiers and sailors come back to jobs and ‘not to selling apples on the street corners, they gare not going to turn him down. "Responsibility will sober the Republicans. They won't sponge out the genuine advances that have been made in the last decade. Indusirial changes bring political changes. Just as the airplane has changed military conditions so that isolaticu is impossible for us, so economic and industrial changes bring new policies. Industrial and agricultural capacity ' have besn multiplied so that society cannot justify permitting men to remain idle and hungry if they want work. After all it is all part of the long climb of humanity up the hill.
By Eleanor Roosevelt
aside from taking bags to the station, until the present emergency is over. As far as food goes, I find the adjustment to those regulations is very easy and I do not think we will have to resort to the substitutes which friends in Great Britain told me about. In spite of
“Please find {-
one of my|
Germans May Make Full Occupation; Hungary Is Also Angered. LONDON, Jan. 11 (U, P.)—Dis~ that Germany may have to take it;
advices from the continent said today. It was reported that Hungary, alarmed by Rumania’s state, wantecl to take its entire army out of Russia.
Rumanians were reported in. creasingly angry over their heayy losses in Russia. Stockholm re. ports said Rumanians charged that their best troops were being sacri‘ficed by the Germans to protect their retreat. : It was generally reported that the German: minister to Rumania hac warned Hitler that the Rumanian situation was dangerous and that as the result special German secret
sent there from Czechoslovakia. Hear Bishop Arrested
British reports said several Ru. manian reserve divisions had been mobilized to maintain internal order and the gestapo had arrested the bishop of dsylvania, a chief trouble center, as leader of an antiGerman campaign. Armed bands were reported active in some parts of the country, all anti-German but not necessarily pro-allied. ‘There were increasing indications that an alleged revolt plot in Rumanig had been concocted so that men inimical to the Germans and only incidentally against the proGerman Rumanian government might be disposed of.
Italians Seek Furloughs
Madrid heard reports that the Italian ministry of war had issued drastic decrees designed to get some 300,000 Italian soldiers back into the army. These men, after getting leaves, managed to have them extended, it was said, and many army units were depleted. Italian casualtv figures for December listed 1449 killed, 292) wounded and 2066 missing. Of the missing 1369 were navy men who probably were killed. In North Africa Italy lost 492 killed, 1027 wounded and 396 miss» ing, according to the figures.
LARGE FIRES SET BY
LONDON, Jan. 11 (U. P).--Large areas of the great industrial city of Essen in the heart of the German Ruhr lay in smoking ruins today following a full-scale attack by upward of 140 R. A. F. bombers. Chief target of the raid was the Krupp armament works. Pilots returning from the bombardment which occurred Saturday night said a great quantity of bombs—many of them the. two-ton blockbuster type—were unloaded. - Visability was. good and some fires were visible for 100 miles. It was the 50th raid on Essen. since start of the war and the fifth on Ruhr industrial areas is seven nights. Seven R. A. F. bombers failed to return, Pilots reported unusually heavy anti-aircraft fire and considerable opposition from swarms of German night fighter planes.’ Today, possibly in retaliation, German planes raided three towns in East Anglia, resulting in nine deaths and several casualties.
TECHNICAL SELLS $200 IN WAR STAMPS
A total of $200 in war stamps was sold by the Technical high school Service club during a recent 5-day{an drive. Most of the stamps were used in corsages. Club’ members who made: the corsages are Mary Sidebottom, Martha Jane Suez, Ida Marie Luck, Winifred Marriot, Jean Brown, Shirley Esmon, Frances Gentry, Martha Ginger, Caroline Eppihimer, Barbara Dearing, Rebecca Taggart, Alice Dove; Virginia Hicks and Tina Botermer. Lester Isaacs,-assisted by Robert Childs, was in charge of the sales. Mrs. Martha Turpin is club sponsor.
15,000 AT RITES FOR BUZZ WAGNER
JOHNSTOWN, Pa., Jan. 11 (U.P). —Pennsylvania’s No. 1 flying hero of world war IT was buried with full military honors in the Grandview cemetery yesterday. In the largest funeral in the history of Johnstown, about 15,000 persons paid tribute to Lieut. Col.
in a plane crash near Elgin Field, Fla., Nov. 30. He was credited with downing from 15 to 50 Japanese Blanes pring Aging 1 the Puilip-
pines.
George Ww. Henley, Republican floor leader in the house of repreSeiatives, will Shenk ab a meeting of the Irvington Republican club) at 8 p. m. today in the.club rooms, 544612 E. Washington st. Mr. ley is a Bloomington
UNREST GROWS _ IN RUMANIA AS LOSSES MOUNT
affection in Rumania is so serious :
police agents and SS troops were]
RAF IN ESSEN RAID|
Boyd (Buzz) Wagner, who was killed |
over as a fully occupied country,| #
— The Lockheed “Constellation,”
gives an idea of its size.
outils Tm a 15 SH Le To i at last Saturday afternoon. 'A-1gokheed 'P-35 being pulled Seross {|
PN.
Javen
Test
SB
based ‘plane and spéedy enough itsed Vane aa. Burbank, Cal, ET STL 08 nessa ig Wa
RUSSIANS SEIZE 17 MORE TOWNS
Three Caucasus Rail Cities May Be Taken Soon,
Moscow Says.
By UNITED PRESS Russian armies, making a steady advance in the Caucasus, today had by-passed the important railroad city of Georgievsk, 275 miles southeast of Rostov, and were driving into German defenses both .north and south of the town. Red army men actually were fighting in the outskirts of Georgievsk and ‘they were in position to menace Mineralnye Vody and Budennovsk, two other key cities in the most important railroad system in the area. Employing the successful envelopment tactics they have used throughout their smashing offensive along the lower Don and in the Caucasus, Soviet troops recaptured Lysogorskaya, 12 miles southwest of Georgievsk, and Oblynoye, nine miles north of the rail junction. The left wing of the Red army forces moved into Kamennomostoye, 25 miles southeast of Kislovdsk and the right wing crossed the Georgi-evsk-Budennovsk spur line at Kuma, 16 miles north of Georgievsk.
Tanks Lead Drive
Tanks led the way for the advance through the north Caucasus,
teen towns and villages fell to the Russians during the night in addition to 43 that had been captured in the previous 24 hours. - The Germans were losing large amounts of equipment in the Caucasus fighting. The Russians reported the capture of 20 tanks, 170 motor trucks, 180,000 artillery shells and 25,000 grenades.
Lower Don Drive Goes on
- Throughout the night, the Germans sought by counter-attack to slow the drive in the lower Don, the noon communique reported, but the Russians smashed the attacks and made new gains. In the lower Don area the Russians already had reached a point within 32 miles of Salsk railroad junction, 100 miles southeast of Rostov. * Striking westward above Rostov, in a new threat to that city at the mouth of the Don, the Russians were advancing -on Shakhty, important mining city 47 miles north of Rostov on the railroad to the north,
Hint Nazis Plan Line
Diplomatic quarters at Ankara, Turkey, said German strategy on the southern Russian front calls for attempt to dig in on a winter defense line stretching from Novorossisk to Voronezh and send supplies by air to axis troops trapped in the Stalingrad area. The middle of the defense line would be anchored on Rostov, it was said, and the Germans apparently are preparing a stubborn defense of that city which is the gateway to the Caucasus.
and would be the southernmost point of the line.
DESTROYER LAUNCHED SAN FRANCISCO, Jan. 11 (U.P). —The U. S. destroyer McCord, named for the commander of the ill-fated dirigible Akron, was
pushing through icy slush. Seven-|
Novorossisk is on the Black sea|
in the past 36 hours. The} Georgievsk almost surroundel The continued recapture iy cations is one of the most im} if aspects of the campaign & :d bound to hamper his movemgi iis ' The early fall of Georgievss pears probable. Russians on the ‘main norti: There also are lie running from there to the narihc: s and southwest which the Russi will be iif a position to threat: In addition, in their southw drive from the Don, the Rus: are about 50 miles from Rostov are threatening to take Shakhiy the main railroad leading north ‘Voronezh and Moscow. T: southeast of Rostov, they 5 miles from Salsk, on the Black © Stalingrad railroad. Thus Hitler's entire comm; i tions system in that area is tire ened and the army in the Caucasus in danger of being
south line.
off.
The success of the Russian LHe
That will pu
J Tod: v's War Moves
By LOUIS F. KEEMLE United Press War Analyst ition in Russia is getting increasingly led army closes in on Rostov from the from the east toward the railroad juncvhich is only 32 miles from their lines. 12 time, the German army which had oil fields is falling back steadily and aim the capture of 60 towns and villages ve the important railroad center of
Hitler's serious as { [i lower Don: i» tion of Sal ik At the 5: struck’ for il the Russians
se Russians of Hitler's rail communiit is
sive, which is speeding up instead of diminishing after two months of exhausting warfare, is convincing proof of the strength of the Red army. Its rate of progress is greater than that of last year which began later in the winter. - Several factors account for the Russian success. One is the thousands of tanks, airplanes and other material ‘which the allies have gotten into Russia since last winter, despite Hitler's attempted blockade. Another is the increased quality and confidence of the Red, army, e{and a probable deterioration by the 2| Germans in that respect. A third and important factor is the front in North Africa, which has caused Hitler to weaken the Luftwaffe «in Russia and perhaps make other withdrawals. The Rus-| ;| sians have been able to give an ex- | cellent account of themselves in the -{ air.
ao
LAUNCH ATTAC AT SANANAND |
MacArthur’s Troops Seize, Village; Planes Keep lin | Convoy Blows.
MacARTHUR’'S HEADGUA | TERS, Australia, Jan. 11 (U. 1’) American troops, opening lire: ¢ erations against the last Jap: in Papuan, New Guinea, have va tured Tarakena village, one-half miles from Sanajin ic Point, where the enemy is pin:
1 Bomb Wrecks
Germans’ Base
| ALLIED NORTH AFRICAN " HEADQUARTERS, Jan. 11. (U. |. P)—Maj. Fhilip G. Cochrane of . Erie, Pa., destroyed the German | headquarters ‘yesterday in a onei man, daylight raid on Kairouan, where the Germans are attempt- { ing to mass their forces, it was { disclosed toclay. {Flying alone in a Curtiss (P-40) Warhawk, Maj. Cochrane dropped | one bomb. As he left for his base, he saw the place a mass of flames and wreckage. The German headquarters building was destroyed. Cochrane’s plane was attacked by a Focke-Wulf-190 which inflicted some damage on the P-40, but he returned Hed Safely... i.
one a
against his beachhead, Gen. Diu: -
las MacArthur announced fod. The Americans advanced up f coast from Buna to take the wii killing 40 Japanese and capfiii: five machine guns and a morta’. Directly inland from the pai the Americans and Australians Wy & moving slowly but steadily aon: t trail which leads to the interior a
were reported only about on¢ a1. one-half miles from the main fap - ¢
nese positions.
Convoy Attack Continues
Allied planes continued s nicicl less attack on the remnants «i Japanese convoy which had been a most destroyed in attemptir; | land troops at Lae, 150 miles w coast from Sanananda Point. ing fortresses, Catalina C-O a fe boats and B-26 Marauder medi bombers scored direct hits on ie Yiey fled along the soit Britain island, Bas
a series of raids on airdy: in installations along the nt New Guinea coast, allied plane; i vy damage and damaged anofhe; badly that .t probably crashed, This brought to 138 the fot: planes downed or damaged in:
and
launched yesterday. !
It's a lot of fun, watching your senators at work. : The legislature session’s only three days old, but witness: :
G.0.P. CLUB TO HEAR | HOUSE FLOOR LEADER
Several members of both houses|5
The elderly senator ‘who sits in
days—89 downed for sertaih
Your State Senators Have a It's Amusing fo Watc) Them in Action
is a farmer but looks like a lan ve moved that congress be aske
Th followed by a sugges i from the senator who is a bert | k
EISENHOWER LAUDS JUGOSLAV FIGHTERS
LONDON, Jan. 11 (U. P.).—The , |[Jugoslav government in exile said , today that Lieut. Gen. Dwight D. . Eisenhower, allied commander in chief in Northern Africa, had telegraphed Gen. Draja Mikhailovitch, Jugoslav guerrilla leader a warm message of congratulation on his fight against the axis. The message, as made public. by the. Jugoslavs, ‘was: “The American forces in Europe and North Africa congratulate their} comrades in arms of immortal, courageous Jugoslavia under your brilliant command. “Your immortal warriors, united on their mother soil, have determined to drive out the invaders and with ‘a noble spirit of sacrifice to serve the common cause of the united nations. “May the rew year bring them every success.”
LIONS MEET WEDNESDAY Williarg Remy, safety board president, and Folice Chief Clifford Beeker will sptak on their departments at the Lions club luncheon meetifg Wednesday noon at the Claypool hotel
Lok of Fun;
om
destroyed |
The committee couldn't make any sense out of it. “Get the guy who wrote. it,” said the chairman. The author was “We were just reading your bills,” said the chairmnan. - “Don’t bother,” said the author. “They just let a saloon-keeper get drunk.” 2 o » 8
$s “—And I've been a keen observer for years—" Your senators; have a lot of fun,
Theyd a ge. hotue for tell
Two Positions West ~~ Of Tripoli.
LONDON, Jan. 11 (U. P.. lied planes are striking hard both ends of the axis armies fi North Africa in a race to dest bases and communication lines b fore Marshal Erwin Rommel form defense lines east of Trip communiques and front dispatch said today. Railroad yards and oil stors tanks at Gabes in Tunisia were bombed yesterday with “highly s cessful results,” it was said af s North African headquarters. Gab is the point used by the Germans transship men and supplies fro the north to combat areas. Tripoli, the big axis base in North Africa, was hit from both sides, American Marauder bombers, es-
car
the airport 10 miles south of Tripoli and scored hits on hangars, bars racks and other buildings.
Report 2 Lines Thrown Up A Cairo communique said bombs
defense lines east of Tripoli and delay the advance of the eighth
One line was said to be based on
Tripoli, and the other on Hcms, 60 miles from Tripoli. Advices from eighth army hea quarfers in Libya said Rommel was extending his lines far inland in an obvious attempt to forestall any big British flanking movement and at the same time guard himself against a thrust on his rear by the Fighting French column advancing northward through the Tripolitans ian desert toward Tripoli. These, advices sald the German transport which had been moving westward toward Tripoli from the present axis line around the Wadi Zemzem, had turned first south westward and then southward.
U. S. Planes Raid Tripoli This transport included tanks and armored cars and its altered route was taken to mean that Rommel was not, as had appeared possible, starting a general Withdrawal on Tripoli. The Evening Standard report that another strong French force had fought its way from Southern Tunisia, 25 miles into Tripolitania north of Ghadames and was ti
in fierce fighting, about 300 miles southwest of Tripoli. The raid on Tripoli by the United
that ‘area by the American air force in Tunisia. In clear daylight the American planes struck at the aire drome 10 miles south of the city proper, scoring hits on hangars,
4 buildings and the military barracks.
Three Messerschmitt figh planes Which tried to intercept were
planes returned to base intact.
ALLIES’ FRIEND IN ARGENTINE IS DEAD
BUENOS AIRES, Jan. 11
Agustin P. Justo, 66, first DIO nex ; Argentine to embrace publicly the cause of united nations after F Harbor, died at 12:25 a. m. today a cerebral attack.
dential nomination in the 1943 elec= tions, and his anti-isolationist a titude had made him an outstand ing critic of the administration ¢ President Ramon S. Castillo, wh had declined to break relations 1
(the axis nations, insisting on st:
neutrality. Justo was ent f
1932 to 1938.
NAZI ARSENAL BLOWN ul
STOCKHOLM, Jan. 11 (U. P.). A German munitions depot blown up at Tjoeme, near Oslo, cently and a number of miss German officers and soldiers being sought on charges of sabot: an Oslo dispatch to the Demokraten said today. The sion was reported to have ‘many German soldiers. - AUXILIARY TO MEET The Social club of Monumenia
too, and a preliy gooa sense of fy
humor.
them ba .
