Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 June 1943 — Page 17

Going to the Dogs

"the receiving end of the blitz.

Hoosier Vagabond

3). ALLIED HEADQUARTERS, North Africa— (By ireless)—Many things have happened since I left my gang. of flying fortress friends last January. Often in the ‘months that intervened I have watched them plow through the Tunisian skies, miles above us, and . wondered what they were up to and what they were thinking and . how things were with them, Now I have visited them again briefly. A few of .them are gone forever; but not so many. Practically everybody has gone up one notch in the promotion scale. Some of them have been sent home to help train new groups. And a lot of them have completed their alloted number of missions and are pe through with combat flying for a bs . while, and assigned to ground “duties. Nearly all of them wear ‘medals. Distinguished g crosses and Purple Hearts are galore. Some of em seem pretty tired, and those of the old original crews who haven't got in their full number of misns are anxious to get it done and rest. 5. ‘There are many new faces. Replacements arrive

ose who finish their ‘required missions and go on und dyty. Everyone knows more about his job than he used to. It’s routine now, both on the ground

? : fill the gaps left by those who don’t return and

| and in the air, and you sense a confidence that comes

from doing a thing a long time, Fliers Survey Own Work

} SHORTLY AFTER the Tunisian campaign ended,

the fiying men were given a three-day holiday, the

first of its kind since they arrived in North Africa.

Some of them went to the nearest cities by jeep or | truck for a little fling. Others took planes and went

to big cities farther back. Many went to beaches to Swim and laze. And a great many went to Tunisia— to see with their own eyes the havoc they had so carefully and perilously wrought all winter.

By Ernie Pyle

They found it an odd thing to be there on the ground looking at a place they'd never seen except from miles above and with the sky around them rid- | dled with flak and swarming with fighters. They visited Bizerte, which they had wrecked, and

Ferryville and Tunis, whose docks they had demolished |

in their numberless raids. They were pleased at what they saw. They found that in their precise work of

, destruction they had done a good job.

“The House of Jackson”—the fortress crew I have followed since before it left England—doesn’t exist any more as a “family.” The passage of time has scattered and consumed it. Two of the original members are dead. Some have been promoted, Others have completed their goal in missions and are on ground duty. The remaining few have been assigned to other crews.

All Are Veterans Now

THEY ARE all veterans of veterans by now, anc their old fortress itself is no more. The old “Devil: from Hell” that they brought all the way from America nearly a year ago went down over Palermo ont bitter day, but only one of the original House of Jackson was still on her then. The faithful old ship was on her 42d mission wher she died. She had been on so many raids they hac

"almost run out of room to paint the little white bomb:

on her nose, each of which denote a mission. He: list of enemy victims ran high, too. I supposed the boys would feel sentimental abou! her going, but they didn’t seem to. There was a day when I knew every group of fliers on combat duty in North Africa. But not any more They have multiplied and grown fantastically. Today there are more thay you could possibly know, even if you devoted all your time to it. When I go about the airfields now I feel old in Africa. Those few who carried the torch at first and still. remain are a sort of grandfather generation among all the hordes that speckle the skies today. And that is well, for that is what we have been waiting for.

Inside Indianapolis By Lowell Nussbaum

WITH ENROLLMENT tobogganing because of the war, Butler university is faced with the need of finding an additional source ‘of operating funds. Thus, a campaign to raise a $25,000 maintenance fund is being - ‘started by a committee headed by Evan Walker. Judge Emsley Johnson Jr. is secretary and Jack Atherton, treasurer. Letters soliciting contributions, small or large, are going out soon to 5000 alumni. , , . Dr. Christopher B. Coleman is in Methodist hospital, recovering from an operation last Monday and complaining bitterly at having to stay in bed in such beautiful weather as we've been having. ... A publicity announcement from the Indiana Poetry Federation quotes Miss June Winona Snider as follows: “I am well pleased with the work accomplished through the Federation of Poetry Clubs and the Rendezvous. The poet has a yision further than the RATIONAL MIND , ..”. Them’s harsh words.

"THE DOWNTOWN business district seems to be %'going to the dogs” these days. You ca walk a block, some days, without seeing at least one pooch of uncertain ancestry. Some walk around sniffing disinterestedly at passersby, but most, of them just sit or lie down right in the middle of the sidewalk, s{ipremely confident that no one will step on them. And no one ever does, so far as we can see. We used to suppose all these dogs had followed youthful masters downtown and become lost, but we're convinced now that some of the mutts live downtown, keeping fat on handouts from restaurants and from garbage cans. . . . A familiar sight around town, and one that usually draws a crowd of amused spectators, is a fellow driving a small wagon with a pair of goats hitched to it. Some of our agents report that the fellow is an itinerant photographer, takes pictures

Sweden

STOCKHOLM, June 4 (By Wireless).—Significant changes are taking place in the Nazis’ explanations to the German people. Nazi newspapers come over here from Germany every day, and are sold at the Grand hotel's newspaper stand, but there is no large sale to the public. The leading Nazi newspapers are taking a defensive line that corresponds to the defensive military stage into which the Nazi fortunes have declined. For instance, formerly the Nazis attempted to conceal the extent of allied bombing damage in Germany. Now the German government has issued long reports of the damage to various cities. The purpose is to take con- : trol of the terror which the unprecedented bombings have created and try to convert it into a grim anger that will sustain the fighting ‘Tporale. of the public. A It is exactly what the British and the allies attempted to do in capitalizing the disaster to Coventry, when Britain instead of Germany was on Unquestionably such lactics hold up the spirit of the people temporarily, but numerous Britishers have told me that it lasts only for a limited time and that persistent pounding wears down even the most intense anger as a feel-

| . #ing of helplessness grows night after night.

»

Nazis Sense Encirclement i

: ' THE NAZIS also are promising the German people that Germany will have revenge for what she is suf{ering now from allied bombs. Hitler's party organ, ‘the Voelkischer Beobachter, tells the people that the “Anglo-Saxons will pay for it. Provincial papers tell the Germans that the Jews will pay for the casualties and damage now being suffered in Germany. . A curious, cryptic line is attached to some of these reports in the Swedish press. One correspondent in

Berlin makes the double-meaning observation that it

My Day

NEW YORK CITY, Thursday.—I left Washington yesterday afternoon to attend the meeting of the Board of the Wiltwyck School for Boys, Inc. in New ork City. This is a non-sectarian school for Negro Hana white boys, brought in to the children’s court, either because of their parent's "delinquency, or because of some shortcomings of their own. The citizens committee of Harlem has succeeded in having writ ten into the law of New York City, a provision that no child-care in-. stitution shall discriminate in the future, either because of race or religion in the free care offered for unfortunate children. This will we a great help in the rehabilitation of many of these youngsters. : “From the Buxton ‘country day school in Short 8, N. J. a letter has been sent me writen by one I nt to

of kids driving the goals, It’s a variation of the pony idea.

Around the Town

A MAN WHO READ the item the other day about Dogs for Defense phoned to inquire how he could get in touch with Frank J. Ward, the state director. Said he: “I've got a big dog that's started getting rough. He goes around biting people and I figured he might as well be patriotic and do his biting for Uncle Sam.” . Our latest unreliable report from Ft. Harrison is that they're supposed to receive a company of WAACs some time late this month. . . . George Wissel, manager of the coin machine division of the Central Distributing Co., went up to his cottage at Lake Nyona, 17 miles north of Peru, last week-end, and discovered his 14-foot motor boat missing. A couple of hours later

a truck rolled up and unloaded the boat. The Red!

Cross had borrowed it for flood work, and while they had it they had repaired a bad leak in its rear air tank. Saved George the job.

We Couldn't Guess

THE AD CLUB has a guessing contest at its weekly luncheons in the I.A.C. Yesterday the contest was to guess the number of type characters—letters and punctuation—in yesterday's Inside Indianapolis column, We would have guessed a million or two, but that’s not the answer. It was 2747. Closest guess was that of Katherine Cleaver, advertising manager of the Continental Optical Co. She guessed 2906. Very Cle(a)ver guessing. . . . Eight candidates for election to Junior.C. of C. offices gave their campaign speeches Wednesday. As Jim Clements, a candidate for secretary, spoke, he “absent-mindedly” fiddled with a raveling on his shirt. He kept pulling on it as he talked, pulling yards and yards of thread. The audience roared. When he could be heard, Jim grinned and [4

U.S. Timetable:

NAZIS IN 1944. JAPAN IN 1946ITALY AT ONCE®

Russia and od Hs | Manpower | Are Key to Allied Strategy

in Europe. a

\ By LYLE C. WILSON United Press Staff Correspondent

WASHINGTON, June 4—Baring interference of strikes and uch unforeseeable calamities, the

ited nations timetable schedules iefcat of Germany in 1944 and Japan in 1946. Italy is expected to be neutraized or out of the war before Gernany is defeated—possibly before she end of this year. There is no intention whatever of leaving the main burden of Turopean war upon ‘the Soviet Union’s Red army. But the No. 1 Anglo-American policy, agreed upon n 1941 and reaffirmed at last month’s meeting between President Roosevelt and Prime Minister Churchill, is to keep Russia supolied and in the war.

Russia Seen as Key

Russia and its manpower are realistically viewed here as the key to European war strategy. So long as the Russians hold the axis in the east, the British and American

south of Europe. And the next invasion step apparently is imminent. Just as the axis foretold the United States’ movement toward ! North Africa last autumn by observing concentrations of sea power in and around Gibraltar, so they now are diagnosing a new move. The natural step from the Tunisian extremity where Rommel’s remnants were cornered and captured last month is across a 90-mile stretch of the Mediterranean sea to the island of Sicily.

May Take Islands Soon

By taking Sicily and the island | of Sardinia to the west, two tiny dots of islands to the south and the island of Crete in the Eastern Mediterranean, that sea would be substantially in united nations control. It is believed that Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower is preparing to take those islands, two or three at a time—and very soon. That such a major thrust toward the soft axis underbelly would be accompanied by feints in force against Western Europe is a reasonable expectation. Those feints might come anywhere along the coast of Europe from Spain northward to and including Norway. It all adds up to a situation in which the united nations apparently are committed this year to establishing their military forces on the

forces can invade from the west or|E}

continent of Europe pr eliminary toa!

wound up with: “Shucks, I'd give my shirt for the Jaycees.” And then he revealed it ‘wasn’t his shirt at all. It was just a spool of thread hidden in his shirt pocket.

By Raymond Clapper

Is “impossible to say what is behind the German threats.” That is a backhanded way, I suppose, of suggesting that it is all talk. In other ways the Nazi propaganda has gone on the defensive in talking to its own people. That is the point to keep in mind. Nazi propaganda is discredited outside Germany and can be handled as safely as an empty bomb case. It is important only inside Germany, and our interest in it is that of one listening in while the desperate Nazi regime tries to keep up the morale of a nation that must be sensing the encircling foe.

Hard Going in Germany

WE KNOW the allies have never been so close together as now, since Stalin’s dissolution of the comintern. German hopes of winning a stalemate through a division between Russia and America and Britain have been completely smashed. Apparently the quiet work of Archbishop Spellman is bearing enormous fruit. It seems well established that the Vatican intends to send a cardinal to Moscow. To the German people the Nazis must combat that enormous advance in allied solidarity. They are doing it by telling their people that Joe Davies went to Moscow to force Siberian bases out of Stalin under a threat of dropping the war in Europe and devoting our strength to the Pacific. The Nazi press describes the Russian position with the allies as weaker than before, although of course it is stronger. Nazi papers are devoting long articles to the Hot Springs food conference with the line that instead of planning to feed Europe, America is simply looking for post-war markets for farm surpulses. The Nazis say it-is part of American imperialism, and that the actual scheme in Washington is to force Europe into growing fruit and vegetables only, in order to leave a better market for the major American crops. When you see the controlled press full of such stuff you know they must be having hard going in Germany. .

By Eleanor Roosevelt

at home may have in the formation of a youngster’s character, and what some of our soldiers expect of us in the future. ; “You have a big job to do--home there. The things you do every day at Buxton, talking freely about current affairs, arguing pros and cons of war tactics, learning how a democracy can function, its faults and virtues; these are all a part of what must be kept alive in our nation. Far too many governments and peoples have left that flame to die. For it is you people who have not felt the hate nor seen the destruction of the enemy, it is you who must keep our heads cool at the conclusion of this conflict. “Talk freely, but with thought, act quickly but with clear minds, do your part, take the responsibility that a democracy needs to survive, and the ultimate victory will be ours. “I am looking forward to the time when the conflict will cease and the real problems of the world can be met by thought and brains.” I wonder if this boy’s' confidence will be justified and if we can keep ourselves from hate, and act with hearts, both with our

1944 spring campaign calculated to! blast Germany to unconditional surrender.

Jap Thrust Forecast

Weather conditions and the agreed upon strategy of smashing Germany first combine to delay the opening of major operations against Japan. But that delay may have some compensation in the acceleration of effort once the full force of united nations military power is directed to the Pacific, especially as Russian air bases become available against Japan after Germany falls. Japan's strategy is expected to embrace a full dress effort this summer against some part of the Alaska-Hawaii-Canal Zone triangle. If they broke through anywhere in that vital American defense area the 1944-1946 timetable would undergo sudden and depressing revision. 2 China and Chinese manpower are regarded as the key to war strategy in Asia.

Plane Survives Flames, Bullets

LONDON, June 4 (U.P)—A Sunderland flying boat—scarred by flames, riddled with bullets and one of its crew of four dead— came home after shooting down three German planes that attacked it over the bay of Biscay. The exploit of the Australian plane was described last night in an air ministry announcement. The plane, piloted by Flight Lt. Colon Walker, was attacked while doing submarine patrel. The eight Nazi Junkers 88's attacked from all sides 20 times. The Sunderland caught fire. Walker and his co-pilot were burned. An explosion shell killed one gunner. The rear gunner was knocked unconscious. The Nazis finally broke off after three of their planes went down and one was damaged. Walker and the co-pilot put out the flames and landed in England after a 300-mile flight.

CHANGE KOSHER POINT VALUE WASHINGTON, June 4 (U. P.).— The OPA today announced that on June 6 the red stamp point values of some of the more popular kosher beef itsems will be increased. It said many cuts of lamb and mutton and some veal and variety meats for which demand has been slight will be assigned lower point values than they have had.

ARREST ‘NAZI REPORTER

iment to train American-born and

STOCKHOLM, June 4 (U.P.).— Reliable sources said today that Finnish police handed Friedrich Ege, correspondent of the German

tapo a few days ago. Ege had been under aypest Sb Sharges of giving

LAUNCH DESTROYER ESCORTS news agency DNB, over to the Ges-

av

Farmers Are Generous In

the Midwest

Into the nation’s Midwest “Food Bowl” went novelist Phil Stong—on assignment from NEA Service—to talk to farmers and farm leaders about their wartime problems. This is the third of six articles. .

MIDWEST FARMERS are, socially and economically, about the most generous persons in the world. When they were staggering into bankruptcy during the deflations they kept on working to maintain their function—feeding everyone. It is doubtful that they were conscious of this side of their effort; it was. - probably as instinctive as a doctor's impulse to relieve suffering or cure wounds under any ecircumstances. My tenantpartner out on Lind wood Farm, in Iowa, became my partner 10 years ago, when he was 65 and had plenty of resources for retirement. My grandfather died at 84, shoveling wheat. He put down his shovel and said, “I'm a little bit dizzy.”

Phil Stong

» 2

Farmers Fight Cemetery

OLD GUS CRANE, up above us, ran his orchard till he was a year and six months older than the arch-angels. The good farmers have to be carried from the cornfield to the cemetery, fighting every step of the way. The young farmers have a sense of duty and a training. That is what our armed forces have. One of the great problems in this war has been to keep trained farmers from joining the marines or the air force. Nearly all of these boys are mechanics of sorts, and able-bodied. Someone will keep the troops fed and they will run tanks and airplanes, they think, without bothering about who is to harness the horses. That is the mistake of the situation. The food question goes far beyond this army or any army we will need to supply. It goes to the food production of the United States and its capacity, as an element of world policy and a peace treaty. ”

Farm War to Go On

NO ONE DOUBTS the outcome of this war. The united nations and time are overwhelming favorites. But the long war is the farm war which will go on a long time after the axis is beaten. We can always recruit enough American soldiers and furnish them with enough munitions—if we can't, who can?—to trim anyone, in time. But we have here a situation which has changed from the use

ASSAILS DIES ACTION ON JAPANESE LABOR

WASHINGTON, June 4 (U. P.).— Dillon S. Myer, director of the war reiocation authority, said today that the statements of the Dies committee about management and surveillance of Japanese evacuees “revealed either an ignorance of the policies and procedures of this agency or a wilful intent to misrepresent the situation.” Meyer blamed “the recent unfounded allegations made by an investigator of the Dies committee” for the cancellation by the national youth administration of its agree-

2

naturalized Japanese for war work. Myer’s statements were contained in a letter to Rep. J. Parnell Thomas (R. N. J). Thomas had called on Myer to “pay more attention to the sensibilities of the general public on the Japanese question and less to the ‘bleeding heart’ cabinet members who seem to be in such dire need of Japanese servan Thomas referred to the Dies committee’s protest against release of 1000 American-born Japanese nationals from relocation centers and the employment of an internee by Secretary of Interior Harold L. Ickes.

URGES ARMY FANFARE

LONDON, June 4 (U. P.).—The Earl of Cork and Orrery, admiral of the fleet, deplored in the huwise of lords, the great lack of publicity given in Britain to the names and deeds of British army units and suggested that successful generals be “received at the station and driven through the cheering crowds.”

“Sa. Battle of the Food F Front

Harvesting is hot dusty work—which makes a oi draught of cool well, water all the sweeter.

of farmhands to that of experts. Otherwise, the tremendously increased production of products by fewer men with less power over that of the last generation must be explained, and no informed person will believe any explanation except that expert farming is now being done by expert farmers. My farmer, Sam, and his son, Vernon, and their wives run about three quarter-sections for me out in Jowa. Sam will be 100 years old in 1968 if a snake doesn’t bite him or a train hit him. He is one of the three best farmers in southeastern Iowa. Sam would be first to admit that he is not as spry as he was in 1900; nevertheless, I would not trade him for four football players. 5

Machines Equalize

SAM’S ADMINISTRATION, his ability to plan crops and then use the crops with complete efficiency in producing pork, beef, milk, mutton, wool, chickens and cash are worth the strong backs of several young men. Carlyle mentioned in “Sartor Resartus” that the pistol made all men the same height; mechanization, to a great extent, has given them the same strength so that apart from his managerial abilities, Sam was able to “spell” Vernon a few years ago when weather conditions made it necessary to run the tractor or the cultivators from dawn to dark. The motor was never stopped. Mr. Kimberley, with his large farm at Collins, Iowa, can go this one a little better. One of his tractors is equipped with floodlights and can be operated 24 hours in 24 hours. In speaking of mechanical problems, Mr. John Lacey, of the Chicago headquarters of the

td #

. American Farm Bureau federa-

tion, said, “What the layman does not appreciate or count is the ingenuity of the farmer.”

U. S. Plane Sinks Sub Sun Bathers

WASHINGTON, June 4 (U. P.). —An enemy submarine whose crew was sun bathing on deck was machine-gunned, bombed and broken in two by a navy Catalina patrol plane in the South Atlantic several months ago, the navy has reported. Three members of the submarine’s crew were later seen swimming amid: the debris, and two of these managed to climb aboard a life raft which the plane dropped to them. No other survivors were sighted. Lt. (j.g) R. Ford, Crescent City, Fla., the plane’s pilot, dived .on the submarine so swiftly that members of the crew were still lying stretched out in the sun when the bombs fell.

RATION VIOLATIONS BY MAXON CHARGED

DETROIT, June 4 (U. P.) —President R. J. Thomas of the United Automobile Workers (C. I. O.) today

‘renewed his charge that Lou R.

Maxon, deputy ‘OPA administrator in charge of information, violated rationing provisions to secure huge supplies of food for his lodge at Onaway, Mich., and asked immediate removal of the Detroiter from his government post. : Thomas produced photostatic copies of local rationing office records which he said showed the lodge had been granted 7812 points for processed food for the months of May and June, although proper deduction of the lodge’s inventory would have allowed 1 only 568 points.

TAKES A COSTLY NAP JERSEY CITY, N. J, June 4 (U.

BOSTON, June 4 (U. P.)—Thelc destroyer escorts U, S. S. Lovering;

and U, 8. §. Sanders were launched]

P).—A 16-year-old boy left in charge of a food shop during a lull in business fell asleep. When he

woke the cash register was openit

There are several ways to replace brawn on farms, but skills do not run on gasoline. ” ” o

Know Farm Problems

MR. LACEY AND John B. Kimberley, one of Iowa's four agricultural adjustment administrators, probably know as much about the field problems of farm labor and food production as anyone in the country. The Farm bureau is definitely non-political and we members pay our dues simply for value received in statistical matters relating to markets, information on improved farming techniques, and the general encouragement and improvement of agriculture. To get one small partisan matter out of the way at once, the anomalous “farm bioc” in congress does not represent any clientele that I have been able to discover. The speech of a cotton senator about the “farmer” does not concérn a pig farmer in Illinois or Nebraska or an orange farmer in Florida or California. And The thing is complicated by a mongrel Washington alliance with the labor lobbies. ” ” »

Satisfied With Prices

MR. LACEY'S AND Mr. Kimberley’s farmers are quite satisfied with prices as they are, provided the prices of pork and beef and the prices of plows and overalls stay at the present reasonable parity. This is not merely the feeling of these two generals on the food production front, but the feeling of every farmer I talked to in April and in November of last year and again in March, 1943. The farmers made some money last year; up to July, 1942, they had used $50,000,000 of it to pay off mortgages to only six of many insurance companies. They have

AL WYNKOOP QUITS "LEBANON REPORTER

Times Special LEBANON, Ind. June 4.—Al H. Wynkoop, newspaperman and afterdinner speaker, resigned today as city editor of the Lebanon Daily Reporter to join the United States Machine Corp. as director of public relations. The concern manufactures Winkler stokers. For 20 years, city editor of the Reporter, Mr. Wynkoop served as toastmaster for nine of the Ulen Country club’s annual gridiron dinners. Last fall he acted as M. C. when Bud Abbott and Lou Costello sold two million - dollars worth of war ‘bonds to 1000 Hoosiers at Thomas Taggart’s French Lick dinner. He also produced and took part {in two radio features which had long runs over, WIRE in Indianapolis. Recently, in. a reportorial capacity, he accompanied executives of his present firm on a tour of the Atlantic seaboard in the interest of converting industries to coal when they were threatened with a fuel oil shortage.

LITTLE HOPE IS HELD FOR LESLIE HOWARD

LONDON, June 4 (U. P.).—An air search for a passenger plane shot down Tuesday en route from Lisbon to London continued today but little hope remained of finding any of the 13 passengers, including the actor Leslie Howard, and four crew members. A Netherlands communique indicated the search would go on sev~ eral days on the chance that some of the passengers or crew of the British-chartered Dutch KLM airliner had managed to. launch rub-

paid a areal deal more since then, The question here is not, “How do they happen to have so much money?” but, “How did they hap= pen to be so badly in debt?” The farmer gets about 75 cents of the consumer’s dollar for his pigs, according to Mr. Lacey's figures, which would seem absurd to a housewife buyfng chops from a pig that sold in the yard for 15 cents a pound, except that hogs do not consist entirely of choice ham and chops. That is the highest relative return. Beef returns about 70 per cent of the consumer's dollar to the farmer, white flour a little over 40 per cent, corn flakes slightly over 25 per cent, almost the same figure as oatmeal. Soda crackers ree turn the farmer about 10 per cent for his wheat, on

No Porky Granules

ORANGES DO ABOUT 35 per cent and macaroni falls a little short of 20 per cent. What this means, bluntly, is ‘that the less processing you buy,

the more nourishment you will get for your money. No one has vet learned to prepare Porky Granules from hogs and pack them in cellophane, so the farme er and consumer come out rea= sonably well on meat. After the packing scandals of many years ago it is only decent to mention that the boys are be=ing fair now—there’s lots of competition. The inspected steak you bought last night was reasonably priced, at current levels, unless it was bought from a black market, The farmers will take the blame for the prices on a black market which gives them no extra returns and for which they have bitter disapproval. The farmer has no quarrel with the legal prices which enable him to pay up some of the debfs incurred during his deflae tion, 20-odd years ago.

'‘L' Is Nemesis For Sneaky Japs

A PACIFIC NORTHWEST ARMY HOSPITAL, June 4 (U, P.). — Wounded soldiers back from Attu told today how the Jap snipers suffered from their fatal inability to pronounce the. letter “L.” “Once our password was ‘Sally's Alley’,” said Lt. Thomas LIL. Me Carthy of Omaha, Neb. “They'd try to sneak through our lines at: night and when they were stopped, they'd say something which sounded like ‘Sarry’s Arrey’.” : “Bang. Another dead Jap. I$ was that simple.” “And, boy, you should have heard them the night we used lollapaloosa!”

REPORT HERRIOT DEPORTED: i ' + By UNITED PRESS ¥, The British radio quoted an Ale giers broadcast today as saying that Edouard Herriot, former pres mier of France, has been deported to Germany. /

HOLD EVERYTHING.