Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 July 1943 — Page 9

ND rt ot

WEDNESDAY, JULY 7, 1943

The Indianapolis Times

SECOND SECTION

Hoosier Vagabond

NORTH AFRICA (By Wireless).—This is a short eries about the WACs in Africa, There aren't so very many of them over here so far. The ones who are here are a sort of test tube, but they are working out so well that many others undoubtedly will be coming along to reinforce them. There is a distressing shortage of WACs. There are only 60,000 of them altogether, and I'm told the air forces alone would like to have 300.000. If you happen to have 240,000 potential WACs around the house, would you please let us know? There are fewer than 300 WACs in North Africa All of them live in a big headquarters citv., They are not dodging bullets, not living in foxholes, not blood-and-gutsing around at any front. as some of the more romantic pieces written about them seem to intimate. They are, in fact, living not very differently from what they would in service at home. I'he first WACs over here were captains, on very special confidential work, who arrived last December after being torpedoed on the way. These five, by the nature of their work, are separate from the regular VAC unit and live together in a villa, Since then four other WAC officers have come for similar duty. » =» 5 * . “ . . y.ahph . Eleventh From Family in Uniform AN EXAMPLE is Lt Sarah Bagby. who is confidential secretary tc Lt. Gen. “Tooey” Spaatz. Lt. Bagby, incidentally, is the 11th member of her family to go into uniform. Now to the bulk of the WACs. There is one full company here—274 women, including five officers. Theyv arrived Jan. 26. They aren't scattered around Africa: thev are all concentrated in one city. Half of them live in a requisitioned five-story office

building. Streetcars, busses and army vehicles flow past it door constantly.

The other half live in a convent just on the edge!

of the city. Their quarters surround a crushed-stone patio with an ancient well in the middle. It's one of the most peaceful places I have ever seen. There are five women officers to run the company

two captains and three lieutenants. One of the five is a doctor. The officers call the girls either by their

rank or by their last name only. First names are

never used. Despite these formalities there seems to

be a gentler exchange of personalities between WAC officers and girls than between officers and men in| the army. = 5 ”

Some Officers Grim and Severe

SOME WAC officers are grim and severe. One of these might dismiss an auxiliary from her presence with a stiff and chilling “That's all, Holmes,” while another officer would perform the same mission by saying, “Get the hell out of here, Holmes, you rat.” | One very fine officer I know indulges in morale-

building horseplay that would probably shock the| Articles of War right out of their covers—such as re- | turning an extremely snappy salute with a snappier|

one that resembles a baseball pitcher's windup. The WACs have conducled themselves beautifully over here. Naturally one has a sip too much of wine

now and then, or stays out past hours in the moon- § light, but on the whole their conduct would more |

than meet the approval of any fair-minded person.

The WACs, like everybody else, are subject to}

many rumors. This might be as good a place as any |

to dispel one of the vicious ones. It has been whis- | L : : : | = } Yh built by Ameri-

pered about town that 25 per cent of the WACs| have been sent home. That is a genuine libel. Only| four WACs have been sent back. and they were older] women who simply couldn't make the psychological adjustment to being so far from home. | Actually the WACs are neither prissies nor toughies, but just nice natural girls the same as they | would be back home.

Inside Indianapolis By Lowel! Nussbaum

A BUSINESS MAN taking an out-of-town visitor to see the sights drove through Crown Hill cemetery Sunday. When he approached the tomb of the great Hoosier poet, James Whitcomb Riley, he was a bit startled to see three shirtless voung men iyving on the grass, sunbathing and reading the Bible. . . . Looks like the OPA is going to have to look into the chewing gum situation. A lad, about 12 walked into the St. Moritz restaurant yesterday and was peddling chewing gum at 10 cents a package. . . . Fishermen seemed to be having quite a bit of luck along Fall creek over the week-end. . . . Herb King recalls that William Stevenson, the Red Cross director in northern Africa about whom Ernie Pyle has writen recently. has some local connections. He is a grandson of the late Thomas C. Day, a prominent citizen for many years, T. C. Day & Co. Inc, (loans) still operates at 8 E. Market, says Herb, and is headed bv Fred Day, an uncle of Mr, Stevenson.

Spying on the Goverior ONE OF OUR AGENTS was out driving on Road 87 Sunday, just dawdling along, when a big Studebaker car with license number 1 passed him. In the back seat was Governor Schricker. Our agent. knowing we like detail, decided to follow and see how fast the governor was driving. He followed about three miles and reports the official car was going about 40

services in getting the cattle across the road. How-| ever, his services weren't needed and he drove on, leaving the woman beaming proudly. Sounds a bit like Harun-al-Rashid (remember your Arabian Nights?) | —or maybe a candidate for senator, |

Arovnd the Town

DON BEISEL who used to work at the Central Rubber Co. before starting his army career wrote friends from California the other dav. He said he| always had wanted to see the famous Santa Anita] race track but never expected he'd be made to run; around it personaily. Said he had lost quite a bit of weight in the army. No wonder! . , , Mr. and Mrs. Chester Holmes, 2702 E. Northgate, were awak- | ened early Sunday by a racket in the house. In-| vestigating, they found a half-grown woodpecker had gotten in the house and couldn't get out, Mr, Holmes | helped it out. . , . Folks out in the Brcad Ripple! section got quite a thrill Monday afternoon when! the pilot of a P-38 (Lockheed Lightning) put on a} show for them. The pilot circled the area in his! speedy, twin-fuselaged craft more than a dozen times and had all the dogs in the neighborhood barking their heads off.

Closed for the Week

IF YOU FIND YOUR favorite restaurant, or| maybe some other business place, closed this week, | think nothing of it. It's merely one of the signs of! the times. Several restaurants, including both of Stegemeier's, and also Joe Stahr's, have ciosed for the week, giving ali their employees a week's vaca-|

CHAPTER NINE

I RETURNED from that world tour, which brought me back to the United States on Oct. 13, 1942, certain of one clear and significant fact:

voir of good will toward us,

That there exists in the world today a gigantic reser-

the American people.

Whether I was talking to a resident of Belem or Natal in Brazil,

or one toting his burden on his head in Nigeria, or a prime minister or a king in Egypt, or a veiled woman in ancient Bagdad, or a shah or a weaver of carpets in legendary Persia, now known as Iran, or a follower of Ataturk in those streets of Ankara which look so like the streets of our Middlewestern cities, or to a strong-limbed, resolute factory worker in Russia, or to Stalin himself, or the enchanting wife of the great generalissimo of China, or a Chinese soldier at the front, or a fur-capped hunter on the edge of the trackless forests of Siberiawhether I was talking to any of these people, or to any others, I found that they all have one common bond, and that is their deep friendship

for the United States. They, each and every one, turn to the United States with a friendliness that is often akin to genuine affection. In nearly every country I went to, there is some great dam or | irrigation proja ; ect, some harbor or factory, which has been

cans. People like our works, I , found, not only Mr. Willkie because they help to make life easier and richer, but also because we have shown that American business enterprise does not necessarily lead to attempts at political control, I found this dread of foreign control everywhere. The fact that we are not associated with it in men’s minds has caused people to go much farther in their approval of us than I had dared to imagine. » ” ”

A Political Fact

I WAS AMAZED to discover how keenly the world is aware of the fact that we do not seek— anywhere, in any region—to impose our rule upon others or to exact special privileges. As I see it, the existence of this reservoir of good will is the biggest political fact of our time. No other western nation has such a reservoir. Ours must be used to unify the peoples of the earth in the human quest for freedom and justice. It has become banal to say that this war is a revolution, in men's thinking, in their way of living, all over the world. It is not banal to see that revolution taking place, and that is what I saw. It is exciting and a little frightening. It is exciting because it is fresh proof of the enormous power within human beings to change

ONE WORLD by Wendell L. Willkie is breaking all sales reeords as a book and more copies have already been sold than any book in history over a similar period of time.

We are proud to be able to present to our readers this version of ONE WORLD, carefully condensed into 10 1installments from the book of 60,000 words, to be followed by a new and exclusive article by Mr. Willkie as the final installment.

It is frightening because the different peoples of the united nations, let alone their leaders, have by no means reached common agreement as to what they are fighting for, the ideas with which we must arm our fighting men, ” ” ”

Historical Times

FOR, HOWEVER important the role of bayonets and guns may have been in the development of mankind, the role of ideas has been vastly more important—and, in the long run, more conclusive. In historical times, at any rate, men have not often fought merely for the joy of killing each other. They have fought for a purpose. Sometimes that purpose has not been very inspiring. Sometimes it has been quite selfish, But a war won without a purpose is a war won without victory. What we must win now, during the war, are the principles. We must know what our line of solution will be.

I live in constant dread that this war may end before the people of the world have come to a

By Ernie bie ssn e World” ”

Most of Willkie’'s conferences took place over meals. Minister Dreyfuss at the Shah's lavish summer palace. water supply runs through open gutters along the sides of the streets,

By Wendell L. Willkie

Here he lunches with the Shah of Iran and U, 8, It was at Teheran, capital of Iran, “where the city's

People wash themselves and their

clothes in it, pump it upstairs to their apartments, drink it, cook with it.”

saw out bright dreams disappear, our stirring slogans become the jests of the cynical, and all because the fighting peoples did not arrive at any common post-war purposes while they fought. It must be our resolve to see that that does not happen again.

o ” "

Urges Cementing Force

WHILE WE FIGHT, we must develop a mechanism of working together that will survive after the fighting is over. Successful instruments of either national or international government are the result of growth. They cannot be created in a day. Nor is there much hope of their being created amid the reawakened nationalistic impulses, the self-seeking, the moral degenerations, and the economic and social dislocations that are always incident to a postwar period.

effort in the solution of common problems, It is idle to talk about creating after the war is over a machinery for preventing economic warfare and promoting peace between nations, unless the parts of that machinery have been assembled under the unifying effort and common purpose of seeking to de feat the enemy. It is a mere dream to talk of full employment dependent upon international trade and development after the war, unless now while we fight together we learn to work together in accord, respect, and understanding. " n on

Council Needed WHAT WE NEED is a council today of the united nations—a common council in which all plan together, not a council of a few,

brunt of the fighting are repre= sented.

We must have a common couns ¢il to amalgamate the economia strength of the united nations toward total war production and to study jointly the possibilities of future economic co-operation, And most important of all, as united nations, we must formus= late now the principles which will govern our actions as we move step by step to the freeing of the conquered countries, And we must set up a joint machinery to deal with the mule tiple problems that will accome pany every forward step of our victorious armies. Otherwise we will find ourselves moving from one expediency to another, sowing the seeds of fu= ture discontents—racial, religious, political--not. alone among the peoples we seek to free, but even

mph, which is only slightly over the 35 limit, and tion at the same time. Several dry cleaning firms| their environment, to fight for common understanding of what They must be created now un- who direct or merely aid others, among the united nations them“jul’e a bit under the average motorist's speed. Some- are doing the same thing. The plan not only avoids| freedom with an instinctive, they fight for and what they hope der the cementing force of com- 25 they think wise. selves. where near Fi. Harrison, the governor passed a the summer-long headache of trying to find sub- | awakened confidence that with for after the war is over. mon danger. They must be made We must have a council of It is such discontents that have woman standing beside the road, guarding some stitute help or else getting along shorthanded during | freedom they can achieve any- I was a soldier in the last war workable and smooth- -running, grand military strategy on which wrecked the hopes of men of good cattle which showed signs of intending to cross the the vacation season. but, in the case of restaurants! thing. and afer Hiab war was over, I under the emery of day-to- day all nations that are bearing the will throughout the ages.

highwa After getting past, the governor had his it permits the restaurant to save up its meat points = : ———————————— ————— meee I state policeman-chauffeur turn back. By the time for a week. And that's not to be sneezed at. This!

our agent got turned around, he saw the governor particular week was chosen because it's a short week. Fi Thir S, a Gra m nN Nn 4 bi 1 U Id V ti Ti | | ! talking to the woman and apparently offering his anyway, what with Monday observed as a holiday. { IXIN In rea erican d SE€S e aca on e F s : s ' i ; ollowing is the last of a series things, fun fixing things. The ; gt! Hitt. usually used in shuffleboard. Flip of articles specially prepared by Americans are the greatest make puitiin a Hit {i det them with finger or pencil n r1Ca By Raymond ( lapper Sy Fecreatiatial experts and ers and fixers in the world be- att ; ii i 3 In a few minutes you can make | authors to suggest fun and re- cause they like the activity; it is ght : ~ ~N HEHE a bowling game that can ba laxation at home for travel- recreation to them. : - played indoors or out. Get a pole ALLIED HEADQUARTERS. North Africa, July 7 The threatened breakdown of price control means | restricted Americans, But it is your vacation, Pop, 85 ‘ew torr & Cre A VR A : about two inches in diameter and (By Wireless. anna soldiers A North fh that the allowance the soldiers are sending their de- By MARY BREEN well as the family's, and don't : ) 21 RL Lil 7 feet, 6 inches long. Maple is (YW irlv w > ] © 1 SOY : ; / | Hf {i \ i 5 De 1s 1 ey lec Kw 5 FUR Be In pendent families won't go so far. Soldiers read that and ARTHUB. LAWSON let anyone forget it. Get Johnny ty Ug Jil 1 ss | est, SW us inte eleven: Pieces of the news that comes over is discouraging. ; i Times Special Writers to help you with the shelf in fliiby / HH fl HME (one spare) 4': inches long, and I talked with a young fighter pilot who has heen butter in San Francisco bounced to $1.25 a pound | YOU ARE only kidding your- Swap for your helping fix the ? AY - ily 7 il > {| three pieces 14 inches long. Ba out on 50 missions. He has five when the price ceiling was lifted. You can imagine self, Pop, if you think you ean Wagon. Then get evervone to . F || $7] HH \ | very careful to make all cuts Nea tos oo, a os the worry over how their families are living. The! spend your entire vacation at help build the playhouse. Put it a off the Core train ew Baols He is Lt Daniel Picture over here is that congress’ vote refusing to; home loafing around, sleeping late Near the victory garden so you \ i IT Rn > tt Sr Gene allow subsidies actually invited a wild break in prices, and doing nothing constructive, ean add a closet on one side in = : 2 8 ¥ Pe . ? © 4 av of " a if that is t what 608 Oh, you can start out that way which to store your most-often- " NOW YOU have three or four on o . on : PE e oe ae an J yy’ ol BY s un. 4 i So ial c ol and everyone will leave you alone Used tools. Johnny will really en- ; games in one bundle. Use the joine 1 army. 1 he wanted gress favors it wou e a good idea to get the cor-| "oot the third day, when ov helping on this. Betsy will do Pop will be busy on his vacation. short pins as tfen-pins and bowl

to talk about was his P-38 plane. rect impression across over here : ; : fond wel wy q i ; : | they become used to having you the decorating and painting. . 4 them over with croquet balls, ‘ & ; 4 i lc > , . a b ¢ - . . yar : It's got it over the 109 Focke The Wallace-Jones dispute also was reported in around the house, Then Mom will “» # board. Best of all, you can make long. Use three-quarters plywood set them up as tenpins and

Wulf.” he said, and he told how the Stars and Stripes along with Roosevelt's lecture _ : such a table easily, and be using for the top. A folding table will OW yy sticks at he picked off three of them intwo to the press. Such public quarreling at the peak of | ant a shel! bull} lor Hote Huns THERE ARE other things to it before your vacation is half be the i, f — ote an aah minutes. He modestly described the home front structure is known to practically every! . Pegs of cans of vegetables She make. There will be a long winter over. < on ness : the feat as a combination of luck soldier here. It seems to be going on just the same | is Putting up this year. Little ahead of us, a winter that prob- We will not give full directions You can paint a shuffleboard There are endless things to plus the ability of the P-38 to out- as when most of them left civilian life or left the Bey Wi . remind a on the ably will be spent mostly at home. here. Your local library has ex- design on your table without in- make. How long since you flew maneuver the Focke Wulf. states for the war theater. Ea D ise nit 9 ; uild. Do you have a ping-pong table? cellent books on how to make terfering with the ping-pong a kite? Or made a pinwheel? Our soldiers are getting good equipment and plenty Qe . hn Po 100 abou : Xing my wagon, If not, you can make one this games and equipment, If you are game. Make it a foot wide by a Maybe Johnny's cart has fallen of it. That is a job in which the home front can “€€ Abnse of Democracy - » s busted! summer. On such a table you a real handyman, you only need foot and a half Jong laid out as to bits and the time has come to take deepest pride. But that is largely an industrial WE BABY ourselves with the idea that democracy | virtue, too. es have aking can play table golf, too; table know that the table is 30 inches shown for bullboard. Use plain turn 1t into a pushmobile., If achievement. even in wartime must have its bickering as usual. On| 00 at > Jun mally Croquet and miniatufe shuffie- high, four feet Wide and J nine feet checkers for the wooden disks Betsy is small, this is a fine time The management side of the home economy pic- the contrary, from over here it looks like a careless! 2 for you to add to her doll house

ture reaching here is of petty politics, reckless bicker- apuce of the privileges of democracy. COMMUNIST ORGAN Fi J w furniture while Mom helps her ing and shortsighted controversy that makes sweat- In England they have got over most of that kind | ive ap arships Have Fol BREAKS JAIL JUST with drapes or a new wardrobe, ing, dusty soldiers here wonder what kind of country of thing because it is not compatible with the best { A bird house set up in the backe he is going back to. war effort. They have free dchate but have held it PRINTS LAST ISSOE Go . AHEAD OF HANGMAN yard now might well draw an Soldie P'S s IF ear In flation without limits by a general sense of responsibility on | reen Hornet’ S Deadly Sting | occupant next spring. the part of politicians who feel they can wait until | MOSCOW, July 5 (Delaved) (U. | Remember, the children will

THEY READ the Stars and Stripes. The circula- later for their real go at their opponents, |P.) —Th : SAN FRAN "1 HAMILTON, Bermuda, July 17) think theyre having a vacation —The last iss 8 CISCO, July 7 (U. P.). l The Hornet is ny ‘ aan | ’ ’ { tion figure is secret for obvious military reasons but American and British forces in the European the- | st issue of the magazine t one of eight P-T|(U. P.) —Harry Sousa, confessed | too. So let them help yvou—or

; " The Green Hornet, th [boats comprising “squadron - roy y 2 practically every man in Africa reads it. ater and here in the Africen theater are working to-| communist International,” organ he navy’s| prising X, un-imurderer of a woman attached to! you help them. Even a child of 3 will find that sandpapering a

der co : ‘ Here's the news from home that greeted tens of gether with a smooth co-ordination which I never ex- of the Comintern, was published |M0st deadly torpedo boat, has sunk | 15 mmand of Lt. Cmdr. A. R.ithe imperial censorship offices here, escaped from his death cell tenpin is a very pleasant active

| Montgomery of New J thousands of American soldiers on the African front pected to find in either place. The French act like today, 920 times her weight in Jap war-| couadron has sunk a ng or on a single day: : we do at home and most soldiers here are disgusted | The number was devoted pri-|ShiPs, her skipper reported today. |destroyers, the destroyer leader or Muay 8 few Bours efore he was to| jty—but he will have his own Secretary Ickes appealing to miners to go back to With their political bickering. Our news from home marily to official resolutions dis-| Ihe P-T boat is here to stay, and |cruiser, one patrol ship and “quite os 1anged on the second anniver-| jdea of how to play the game. He Ro on Whe “eve of Wie greniest Aullleiy calbibaipnin Suit 1 Sieh 1:k6 gemirelised French affairs Th 1vi tl : you can quote me,” said Lt. Lester | a few landing barges,” Gable re- = Tetiiing. i will not bother rolling the ball history.” both give democracy a bad hame solving the Comintern, as an-\y Gamble, mosquito boat skipper ported. in Sod States troops joined local| at the pins. He will throw the nounced several weeks ago. An with the longest list of victories. All Still in Action Sejehioriies po Search of We sai) wi He fence inte the neigh= ih pond iE givin’ ) ; ‘ ? § or's chicken yard and kick dow editorial review of the mageasine’s| The Homet's sting sent 184000 «ay ejgnt boats in our squadron | (1000) was posted for Sousas cap-| the pins : oe da y eanor ooseve t history concluded: ns Of Teavily.srined | deputies are still in action,” Gambl ture on i ! “Discontinuing the publication, | Y2rShips to the bottom of the Cammile sald, ih 1; Sohave = nies time)

South Pacific from last October to|® navy-approved interview. “None Sousa confessed the Killing of Margaret Alianora Stapleton, 43, |

two years ago today. Two guards were outside his door when Sousa escaped, evidently through a transom which was be-

the editors express the profound iF NEW YORK. Tuesday.—Tomorrow, July the Tth, the people as a whole have never, as far as I know, |conviction that the fraternal Com-|oWne The “kill” included four de-|of the 80 men in the entire squadis the day which marks China's sixth anniversary of thought this question through as a question of future munist parties and their publica- stroyers and a light cruiser or de-|pon was killed, but a few were hit resistance to Japanese aggression. The citizens’ com- world policy and made their wishes clear to their tions will concentrate all their |SifoVer leader—Gamble could not by shrapnel during the 15 engagemittee has written to me of their desire to honor government. Perhaps the time has come when thelefforts on facilitating the speediest be 1b th Which because they arelments: the squadron has particiChina on this day, and of their belief that the greatest people of this nation have got to think of questions|destruction of Hitlerism—the wick- | Cut the same size. pated in.” leved escape-proof. A wind honor we could pay the Chinese such as this for the very reason that we are counting|edest enemy of the workers of all Gamble had a perfect score with opened on Ber j i d Wi + people is to repeal the exclusion today on our Chinese ailies to give their life blood countries.” SEND AIR SERVICE torpedoes, never having missed a a, ois On eared

act and place immigration on the in the struggle against Japan. so ———— target, until he aimed at a New |(ie wan wee not HOw Sous scaled

same quota basis that we have for If they should decide to give up the struggle it BUYS TOWN JAIL BY STAFF TO COMBAT | Zealand corvette one night. ———

any other nation. would not be of sectional interest to us or a purely “I missed the allied corvette, 1 imagine that the country as a academic question. 1t would mean that boys from MISTAKE FOR $1 50 PATTERSON FIELD, DAYTON, which had been mistaken for an LOCAL POST- WAR whole has given very little thought all over this country woud face in the southwest . O, July 7 (U. P).—~Maj. Gen. enemy ship, but I sure was glad MEMBERS T0 MEET to this question, but there is no Pacific a far longer war, a far more dangerous war., HARVARD, Neb, July 7 (U.P). Walter H. Frank, commanding gen-|!0 spoil my record,” he said. doubt that the Japanese have been Even when the war was won, the whole nation would | —The town council admitted loss of | ...1 of the air service command, an- “The skipper yelled at us over| Mayor Tyndall's post-war planusing it as a great propaganda still be faced with an Asia arrayed against the rest the town jail today—at the price of ed today tl ’ the radio: ‘The bar of his majesty's| ning committee will meet tomorweapon. They hope to undermine of the world. It would mean that we must be pre- $150 in a tax foreclosure sale. nouhe ay that every soldier In ship is hereby closed to Americans/row night. An organization session Chinese morale by telling them pared to meet that idea with a smaller population, The proud new owner is Robert the air service command not now in|for the duration.” is slated at city council chambers. that we show quite painly that we necessitating better equipment, and equipment costs!Pinckney, 16, who discovered the|the field has been ordered to combat etme ti ———————————— Post-war Chairman C. A. Huff will never intend to deal with them on money. Jail was on one of 10 tax delinquent duty. INDORSE GAS COUPONS preside. an equal basis. They report that China, in the future, I do not know and have no way of finding out/lols he bought for $15 as sites for| The order will release approxi-| WASHINGTON, July 7 (U.P.).—| Other members of the planning has a better chance in a solid Asiatic block than in what the people in this country as a whole really | victory gardens. mately 8000 adidtional troops to the| The office of price administration body have not yet been announced. © trying te make the world a peaceful work in which want to do, but I do think it is a question that they| A letter from the council notified |fighting fronts, Frank said. The|today announced that beginning | Post-war Secretary Harry Calkins “all nations ean deal with each other on a friendly must think about and think about seriously. China Robert the town was yielding to his|order is effective at all air service|July 22 holders of gasoline ration | yesterday extended invitations to basis and consider each other's citizens as individuals has fought for six years. Madame Chiang Kai-|ultimatum—quit using the jail or/command installations. The duties|books must indorse all their cou-| prominent citizens who are expected and as having equal rights wherever they go. shek made it plain how the views the future and'face an eviction suit. But the let- of the men transferred to combat pons immediately on receipt of new |to serve on the committee, but any- ; We have no real policy as far as I know on this perhaps she and her people await our answer. It is;ter warned Robert, pointedly, that duty will be taken over by limited |ration books, and also indorse all one interested in Indianapolis’ post- "1 want to be deferred until togestion. This law was passed primarily with sec- an answer which no government officials can Bives the city fathers will have their service personnel and WACs, Frank coupons they now have before that|war future is invited to the open| morrow—Beity asked me te play backing

ans because of special i ts, but ha, pope Shtintive Rs eyes on him, he aah ) I meeting, be sald... 2 How tedat”