Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 July 1944 — Page 9

in furs summer

ay next t FREE

Air omfort

Hvac haid wy Taolmaot ‘overs motebut to. het 14" from being soaked, Here are the names of just a few of my “company mates” in that little escapade Wat Afternoon. Ek

" nati. He was an old reader of this pola back home, and therefore obviously a fine fellow." Pfc. Robert Edie, New Philadelphia, Pa.: Edie is 30, he is married, and he used to work in a brewery back home. He is ‘a bazooka man, but his bazooka was broken thdt day so he was just carrying a rifle, Pfc. Ben Rienzi, New York. Sgt. Robert Hamilton, Philadelphia, who was ‘wounded in Africa. s And Sgt. Joe Netscavge of Shenandoah, Pa., who sports two souvenirs of the Normandy campaign—a deep dent in his helmet, where a sniper’s bullet glanced off, and a leather cigaret case he got from a German prisoner.

Boys All 9th Division Veterans

THESE BOYS were 9th division veterans, most of whom had fought in Tunisia and Sicily too. Gradually we moved on, a few feet at a time. The soldiers hugged the walls on both sides of the street, crouching all the time. The city around us was still full of sound and fury. You couldn't tell where anything was coming from or going to. The houses had not been blown down flong this street, But now and then a wall would have a round hole through it, and the windows had all been knocked out by envassion and shaitared glass littered the

Inside Indianapolis Lowell Nussbaum

WE THINK it's high time someone was doing something about the hay fever situation. dt's nice to have the attention of the nation drawn to Indianapolis—but not as the country's worst hay fever center, And that's what the New York Times did last Sunday. It's no secret that the pollen count here is higher than in any other city in the country. And also it’s nothing of which to be proud. Why can't someone organize a campaign to get the weeds in and near Indianapolis cut, thus reducing the amount of pollen in the air and relieving the misery of the hay fever victims. Ragweed is the worst offender, causing. an estimated 85 per cent of the suffering. If everyone reading this item would get out the old scythe or sickle and whack down all the weeds in sight before the middle of next month, they would be doing a lot to make this a better world for hay fever suffers. + + +» One of our agents reports that a feminine customer visited Tule's market, 2lst and Talbot, and asked for a center cut of ham. “Sorry, no center cuts,” the butcher said. “Well, give me some pork chops, but make them out of the center,” the woman ordered. Told there were no center cut pork chops, the woman expostulated: “What kind of a market is this, anyway.” Replied the butcher sadly: “The trouble, lady, is that we have nothing but center cut customers!”

Hot for the Chief

THINGS ARE GETTING plenty hot for Chief Beeker. After a conference with other administration big shots over how to turn on the “heat” more effectively on the gambling situation, the chief went home Tuseday to learn from his wife that the refrigerator had broken down. And then, to cap the climax, he was greeted by warm, stale air when he stepped into his office at headquarters next morning, The office

Target for G.O.P.

WASHINGTON, July 14.—That letter the President wrote to Democratic National Chairman Robert E. Hannegan becomes the most important document of the campaign, and it will be argued about from now till November, The important part of the letter from the Republican point of view

people elect me, I will serve.” There was no particular news -4n- that, for everyone had been counting on Roosevelt running. The real kicker in the letter, and the point the Republicans will make the most of, is this: “After many years of public service, therefore, my personal thoughts have turned to the day when I could return to civil life. All that is within me cries out to.go back to my home on the Hudson river, to‘ avoid public responsibilities, &nd to avoid also the publicity which in our democracy follows every step of We nation's chief executive. “Such would be my choice . ,.”

"Between the Lines

IN THE CURIOUS way that Americans have of trying to read between the lines and read hidden meanings in words which are otherwise plain as day, there will no doubt be an effort on the part of the Republican spellbinders to say that this is the important part of the President's letter. “For myself,” the President wrote a few paragraphs earlier, “I do not want to run.” Can that be taken as a confession of tiredness, a lack of zest for office? Republicans and Democrats alike who do not want to see Franklin Delano Roosevelt continue in office can and undoubtedly will read

HYDE PARK, Thursday. —~When we arrived at the Poughkeepsie station yesterday evening, we waited and looked around hopefully, not knowing whether the artists the war entertainment board had promised to send up were really on the train. In a few minutes ‘they appearéd and we were . off, stopping for a few minutes at the cottage to collect the most important mail, and leaving Miss “Thompson to spend the rest of the evening toiling over the accumulation of mail which had gathered in the few days we were

gore. - While I wag indoors, one of our youngest summer guests made friends with Mr, Williston, the magician of the evening, who did a

trick for him, his thumb In disappear. The child was so excited his mother ° - had to put him under. the shower calm him down

before he went to bed.

bond

‘owners had left without them, and they were run-

It was a poor Gistrict. Most, of the people had left | the city. Shots, incidentally, always sound louder and {. distorted in the vacuum-like emptiness of a nearly| deserted city. noisily back and forth.

Bunch o f Yowling Dogs Worry Us

ALL OF a sudden a bunch of dogs came yowling down the street, chasing each other. Apparently their

ning wild. They made such a noise that we shooed them on in the erroneous fear that they would at tract the Germans’ attention. The street was a winding one and we couldn't see as far ahead as our forward platoon. But soon we could hear rifi& shots not far ahead, and the rat-tat-tat of our machineguns, and the quick blirp- || blirp of German machine pistols. For a long time we didn’t move at all. | While we were waiting the lieutenant decided to go into the house we were in front of. A middle-aged Frenchman and his wife were in the kitchen, poor people. The woman was holding a terrier dog in her arms, belly up, the way you cuddle a baby, and soothing it by rubbing her cheek against its head. The dog was trembling with fear from the noise.

Lots of Our Wounded in Hospital

PRETTY SOON the word was passed back down the line that the street had been cleared as far as a German hospital about a quarter of a mile ahead. There were lots of our own wounded in that hospital and they were now being liberated. So Lt. Shockley and Wertenbaker and Capa and myself got up and went up. the street, still keeping close to the walls. I lost the others before I had gone far. For as I would pass doorways soldiers would call out to me and I would duck Mm and talk for-a moment and put down a name or two. By now the boys along the line were feeling cheerier, for no word of casualties had been passed back. And up here the city was built up enough so that the waiting riflemen had the protection of doorways. It took me half an hour to work my way up to the hospital-and then ne excitement began, .

air-conditioning system was out of whack. With re frigeration repair selvice the way it is, the Beekers have been eating out temporarily. And, until yesterday's cooler weather, the chief had trouble concentrating in his office, since it has no: ventilation other than the air-conditioning system. It's a tough life. . » » Incidentally, his predecessor, Mike Morrissey, has been borrowed from the U, 8. public health service by the Canadian government to .help Canadian cities control social disease as a protection to the armed forces. Former Mayor Reginald H. Sullivan has received two post cards from Mike, one from Victoria, B. C., the other from Winnipeg. Mike said he is making the larger cities from coast to coast, expects to remain in Winnipeg until Wednesday. It's a nice compliment to be borrowed by the Canadians.

Modern Tragedy

IN THE PRE-WAR days, it was annoying to have your car stolen. But when you got it back, you could have it fixed like new again with the insurance company footing the bill, It's different, today. You may have your car insured, but that doesn't guarantee that you can buy a new one, as good to replace it. Take the case of C. R. (Pink) Gutermuth of the OPA rent division. Pink has babied his 1941 Chevrolet ever since he bought it, keeping it in perfect condition, and almost never let the speedometer needle slide

for OPA, Pink isn't entitled to first grade tires,

have to content himself with third grade tires—and; they're & gamble. And if he doesn't get the car back,

there's slim chance of acquiring another its equal Yes gir, it's a real tragedy.

By Ernie Pole]

pavesauts, Goared telephone wire was Ing every- :

Lonely doors and. shutters banged -

They were}

{Director James F. Byrnes, Senator

{Speaker 8am Rayburn of Texas -or

Nomination of Vice President Will Reveal Status Of Minority Groups.

By LYLE C. WILSON: United Press Staff Correspondent WASHINGTON, July 14. — New Deal Democrats see today in the dispute over nomination of a 1944 vice presidential candidate one of the first great tests to determine whether the coalition of right and left wing minority groups established in 1936 - shall continue to function. 0 Renomination of Vice President Henry A. Wallace or the substitution of Associate Justice William 0. Douglas, or Judge Sherman Minton, of Indiana, would mean that the coalition forces still prevailed in the Democratic party. All three are 100 per cent New Dealers, Nomination of War Mobilization

Alben W. Barkley, of Kentucky.

almost any of the others being men~ tioned would represent a compromise with the conservative elements of the Democratic party.

. Starts Appeasement

By agreeing to accept renomination without conditions, President Roosevelt already has undertaken the appeasement of the conservatives. Four years ago he made his acceptance conditional upon the nomination of Wallace for vice president, a chore which the convention performed in sullen obedience. Chairman Robert E. Hannegan of the Democratic national committee is believed to have persuaded Mr. Roosevelt to abandon any hope of compelling the convention to accept Wallace. Hannegan has been pulsefeeling around the country and evidently found that the vice president would be a liability in some important areas. But abandonment of Wallace would not mean surrender to the party forces attempting to shake off the left wingers who came aboard in small numbers in 1932 and by the tens of thousands in 1936. It was in the latter year that the New Deal-Democratic party actually took shape and it was just four years later that Mr. Roosevelt tossed Vice President John N. Garner—a. conservative—back to private life.

Coalition Proceeding

The coalition program still is proceeding because the political strategists assisting Mr. Roosevelt knew that .the Democratic party, on the record, is a minority party and needs recruits to win elections. The most remarkable instance of

By Peter Edson

such an interpretation in those words, with the argument that there is none of the “happy warrior” stuff about this—that this is the tired warrior, worn by the fray, longing to return to the. fmiry and quiet of the fireside, -not-to chat, but to si If this be the correct interpretation of the President's letter, if this be the part to emphasize, then the question is raised as to the psychological fitness

+ of such a man to continue as commander-in-chief. Regardless of his patriotism or his loyalty or his

willingness to fight on; does a tired general force the battle with the vigor of a fresh one?”

Not-a Quitter ‘WHATEVER ELSE you say about Franklin D.

Roosevelt, it cannot be said that he is a quitter. He!

has never admitted defeat, never given up on a single one cof his objectives. When he has met with reverses from congress or from the voters who have repudiated his favorites, he has bided his time, renewed his attacks at other angles, frequently turning his temporary setbacks into victories. In that same sense, it TByhnot be said that the President is quitting now. He has taken criticisms and beatings such as no figure in American public life has ‘taken. He has not whimpered as other men might, but has fought back. Twelve years of that, however, will leave their mark on any man, If the President is now tired it is no small wonder, He has earned retirement, yet he is willing to serve on—*if I am so ordered by... the sovereign people of the United States.” Is this volunteering for service or is it waiting for the draft? As a message to rally the Democrats to his support for another fighting campaign, this letter of the President's is anything but an inspiring document. “I would accept and serve,” he says, “but I would not run, in the usual partisan, political sense.” That is listless and pd The old fight is missing.

By Eleanor Ruvsonih

They had transformed the old boat house on the Vanderbilt. place, and it looked very attractive. They found a few chairs and tables to put around outside, and a little paint and bunting did the rest, course we had to have a band thunderstorm, and even though you know it is good for the crops, you éan’t help being annoyed if it breaks up your party. However, there were strong and willing hands to bring the piano in, and the orchestra moved indoors very rapidly. The dancing began, and then the show went on, The soldiers and the girls brought-by the Red Cross Motor Corps from Poughkeepsie, as well as the committee of the evening from Hyde Park, and the wives of the men; sat on the floor and enjoyed

of | .

coalition has just taken place in Minjgagia after eight years of maeuvering. Mr. Roosevelt started. it in 1936 when he visited the state on ‘a campaign swing. He found Republican, Democratic and. FarmerLabor candidates in the field and knew that the Republicans were reasonably sure to win top places if the other two groups divided the rest of the vote. So the President summarily withdrew the Dem'ocratic candidates for governor and United States senator. In this week's Minnesota primary the Democratic-Farmer-Labor party appeared for the first time as a political entity. It has a slate of nominees who will oppose a slate of Republican nominees. Pri{mary returns, however, showed the | Republican party polling more votes than the combined Democratic-Farmer-Labor organization,

New Masses Comments

How far the Minnesota codlition has gone in absorbing the left wing is indicated by a recent article in the New Masses, Communist weekly magazine. It tells about the formal amalgamation of the two parties. “When Farmer-Laborites, after many hours of deliberation, of ironing out legal entanglements, old and traditional prejudices and schisms,” said New Masses, “walked as a body, by invitation, into the Democratic (state) convention, a new and dramatic venture had begun. “This is a bold and unprecedented alignment. Sitting in convention, seeing history made again, were old timers from the I. W. W,, the NonPartisan league, the old Socialist party, the Farmers’ Alliance of the 90s and those who saw the great merger, 48 years ago, of the People’s party with the Democratic party of Bryan.” So

HOLD EVERYTHING Mownd

, : BOULNER ry y 4

i

a 4 ~y

-

By HENRY T.

‘a heart attack aggravated by battle

continuous combat activity since D-day, when he led a first wave of

assault troops onto the Normandy It was expected that he would be

uted in a cemetery not far from| past machinegun nests and snipers,

that landing spot and in the coun-! try where his brother, Quentin, was! killed in world war I. ! Carrying on the fighting traditions of his father, the former! President and Rough Rider, he had ¢

France for weeks. | He had been ill four days but declined medical attention to Te- | main in the front lines with sol-| diers of the 4th division, of which he was deputy commander. Friends said he never had fully recovered from’ pneumonia, which he con-| tracted shortly after his arrival in! Britain.

Hobbles Into Attack

He died peacefully in his tent, | 3 attended in his last hours by an ® army doctor, Maj. Kenneth MecPherson of Beckley, W.*Va., and surrounded by doughboys who knew him as “the fightingest little guy in this man’s army.” Over-age for combat duty, he obtained special permission to lead an invasion ‘assault force. He hit the Cotentin beaches 16 minutes after H-hour, wearing coveralls, his only weapon an army 45 pistol. Hobbling on his cane, he waved on his doughboys whom he| led into the interior under fire from | German cannon, rockets snd con-| crete emplaced ‘machineguns.

One of War's Bravest

He personally supervised the de-! molition by engineers with TNT of the seawall at the beach. I landed in one of the waves behind the first in which the general was the leader. | I found Gen. Roosevelt in the thick] of it, cheering on his men and lov- |

ing the hot smell of battle. { I noticed something wrong with his thumb and asked his young aid, Lt. Stevie Stevenson of Texas, what was the matter. “The general's luck is still holding out,” Stevenson replied. “It’s just a scratch from a piece of shrapnel.” In the last hours of the battle of Cherbourg he led a reconnaissance

has come to be regarded as one of! the bravest acts of this war. He walked a long way through!

PLATFORM IDEA

|

Bearing Approval of Administration.

CHICAGO, July 14 (U.P).— Members of the subcommittee of the resolutions comrhittée of the Democratic national convention meet here today to begin work on the platform to be presented at the party’s national conclave which

opens at the Chicago stadium next Wednesday. Reports from Washington said that a 1500-word proposed draft of the party's platform had been prepared with administration approval and forwarded here for study - by the subcommittee. Although a 1500-ward platform would be short in comparison to the 4600-word statement of policy adopted by the Republicans here last month, a movement was reported underway to pare an additional 500 words from the document.,

Women Represented

Eleven women are included in the | 23-member subcommittee named {last week by Robert E. Hannsgan, chairman of the Democratic national committee. The group, which also includes 11 members of congress, is headed by Rep. John W. MacCormack, house majority leader. Public hearings before the subcommittee are scheduled to. start Monday at the Stevens hotel, two days before the convention meets, but it was indicated that some groups may be heard prior to that time. The Democrats completed most of the arrangements for their convention yesterday with the appointment

head of.the credentials committee; Robert W. Kenny, attorney general] for California, chairman of the rules committee, and Governor Harold McGrath of Rhode Island, head of the committee on permanent organization. Governor Robert Kerr of Oklahoma, temporary chairman are} keynoter, arrived in Chicago yesterday and said his speech before the

prepared. He indicated it would be brief.

{SCHOOL 9 PRINCIPAL

United Press Staff Correspondent

AMERICAN 1ST ARMY HEADQUARTERS, France, July 14-—-A full military funeral was being arranged today for Brig. Gen. Theo- |! dore Roosevelt, 56, whose death Wednesday night was attributed to

the been in the thick of the battle of

vision in the offensives at Cantigny,

'G. Harding as assistant secretary of ithe navy in 1921.

{to Alfred E. Bmith. Under Presi(dent Hoover he served as governor general of the Philippines.

Group Starts Study of Draft!

e Indianapolis

FRIDAY, JULY 14, 1944

GORRELL

fatigue which resulted from almost

beaches.

and almost reached the sea north‘west of the city.

. One of his pastimes was to cover| §

the general's star on his steel helmet with chewing gum and walk along front areas, mingling with the assault troops. Once when he was {walking along I saw an infantry man stick his head out of a slit trench and ask: “Who's that guy?” “Not so loud,” one of his mates hushed him. “That's thé toughest little fighting man in this army. | That's rough ridin’ Teddy Roosevelt.” Born at Oyster Bay

Roosevelt was born at Oyster Bay, N. Y., Sept. 13, 1887. He was graduted from Harvard in 1909. ’ In world war I, he commanded the 1st battalion of the 26th di-

Soissons, St. Mihiel and MeuseArgonne and was wounded twice. After the war he entered politics and served under President Warren

He ran for governor of New York in 1924 but lost

He returned to military duty before the outbreak of the present war land in December, 1941 was made a brigadier general. He went to Britain as assistant commander of a division and later saw action in

the North African and Sicilian | campaigns, {

Commander at Oran

IFighting Gen. Teddy Roosevelt Dies at His Battle Post | In France After Heart Attack; Full Military Rites Set

imes

PACE 9:

was wounded June 20 in fighting on Biak island off the New Guinea coast in the Southwest Pacific. Roosevelt was married in 1910 to Eleanor Butler Alexander of New York. Besides Capt. Roosevelt their children are Mrs. Grace McMillen and Theodore 3d and Cornclius of the U. 8. navy,

Gen. Roosevelt : Last Here in 1940

Brig. Gen. Theodore Roosevelt Jr, made three addresses here, the last Feb. 8, 1940, when he spoke at a Boy Scout rally at Cadle Tabernacle. He made an anti-New Deal polit ical speech here in ‘January, 1936, before the Hoosier Republicans, Inc., and in the early "20s he addressed a Navy day gathering of which his close friend, Maurice E. Tennant, 3710 N. Pennsylvania st., was chairman. Mr, Tennant, who recently retired as a lieutenant colonel serving as inspector general for the 6th service command, was a classmate of Gen. Roosevelt at Harvard.

Was Guest of Lee

He commanded the first combat am to attack Oran in the North, African landings in November, 1942.! He and his son, Quentin, a cap-! (tain, fought together in North Africa and . were cited together for gallantry in action. The general’ received an oak leaf cluster representing a second silver star for going to a forward observation post and remaining there until threat of a

{counter-attack had been repulsed.

FOE

Brig. Gen. Theodore Roosevelt

Gen. Roosevelt appeared here in

11940 as a guest of Arthur Baxter,

{then president of the Central In{diana council, and Wallace @©. Lee, {8cout, commissioner. The rally {which he addressed celebrated. the {25th anniveisary of scouting int In- | dianapolis. ‘ { Jack Cejnar, public relations di- | rector for the American Legion na{tional headquarters here, said that | Gen. Roosevelt was known as the “father of the legion.” He said that Gen. Roosevelt con{ceived the idea of a national club of world war I veterans and fostered {the Paris caucus at which formation of the legion was decided upon. The legion was organized in St. Louis, { Mo., in May, 1919.

OYSTER BAY, N. Y., July 14 (U. | P.).—MTrs. Eleanor Alexander Roose{velt received word of the death of {her husband, Brig. Gen. Theodore | Roosevelt, last night in a manner

ice just as their father did before typical of the military family into

them. One brother, Lt. Quentin, attached to the 95th Aero squadron,

was killed in action near Chamery

which she married. | She said the general had written her regularly and that he had been

July 14, 1918, when his plane was working “very hard,” but added he

attacked by a German squadron, Another, Maj. Kermit, who served {with the British and American

I never was known to have had heart trouble.

Reports of his death had reached

His decorations from world war I armies in the first world war, died her, she said, but she was inclined ‘included the distinguished service [June 4, 1943, of illness while serv-|to doubt them because the war de=

the purple heart, legion of honor and croix de guerre. ) | He was one of four sons of the,

SPRINGFIELD, Ill, July 14 (U. P.).—Battles in the New Guinea war theater between American PT boats and Japanese aircraft are bad enough but when American seacraft and American airpower tangle, even although due to an. error, you know there is a war on, a sailor who participated in such a battle related here. The incident occurred last April 29 and the story was told by Radioman 2d Class Dean Whitmore of Springfield, who was aboard one of three U. S. boats which U. 8. planes sank during hours of strafing and bombing. The vessels were stranded on a reef when the planes first roared over about 7:30 a. m., Whitmore said. Gunners were under or--ders -to- “return fire from any planes which attacked us—Corsairs formed for the attack—so we let them have it and one of the group was set afire and downed.” The pilot was killed. . Constantly, Whitmore said, “officers tried to give the planes our identification by radio and blinker tube but failed. “It seemed to us the rest of the war had stopped while those planes attacked. After (the first) attack and strafing, they left for a while, but shortly before noon they came back and put on their real show.” Frantically, the sailors tried to

in force almost to the sea in which! cross, distinguished service medal, ling with the U. 8S. army.

The third, Archibald B., served as an infantry captain in world| war I and was wounded while lead-

country infested by German strong |former President, all”of whom dis- | ing a trench raid March 11, 1918.{on = his points at the head of a battalion, [tinguished themselves in the serv-|Archibald, now a lieutenant colonel |

contact headquarters, which were under Gen. Douglas MacArthur, but the signals did not go through. Meantime, 500 and 1000-pound bombs were crashing and two of the boats were sunk on the first bomb run. On the second run Whitmore’s.boat was sunk, killing four “sailors and wounding many more. Whitmore suffered an eye injury. During the attack, the desperate sailors flew U. S. flags and painted stars on the decks but the attack did not stop until a flying boat landed near the wreckage and picked up four critically injured men. Whitmore told the story of the battle while on leave at his Springfield home. Late that night, he said, ships from the base rescued the survivors of the three PT boats. “It was an error which could not be avoided in the speed of the war,” Whitmore said. “None of us are mad. We know that we must take yisks and once in a while there are difficulties such as that.”

OPA CALLS FOR LAWYERS With the statement

Birkett L. williams, OPA regional

any lawyers interested in employ-/

vania st.

that the! needs of the armed forces have cre- Posed merger today with a commit-

ated vacancies on OPA’s legal staff, ! administrator, suggested today that

ment by his agency should contact | John E. Scoft at 429° N. Pennsyl-!

| partment informed her it had no | confirmation. When informed that United Press War Correspondent Henry T. Gorrell was filing a story

reconciled herself to his death.

DEMOCRATS BET| Rest of War Stops’ as U. S. [LAW SCHOOL Planes Attack Our PT Boats

MAY JOIN I. U.

‘Merger of of 50-Year-0id Local Institution Is Discussed. 3

Details of the proposed merger of ithe 50-year-old Indiana Law school at 1346 N. Delaware st. with In- | diana university were discussed at a meeting of the law school’s board |of trustees at the Columbia club: | today. The Indiana university board of trustees will discuss the matter at | Blcomington tomorrow. James M. Ogden, president of the | Indiana Law school, said that if the | proposed merger goes through, the | school here will simply become a | part of Indiana university and will |tontinue to conduct ‘night law rclasses on a three semester basis.

Affiliated With Butler

The law school has been affiliated with Butler university since 1940 {but is not a part of the university. | Butler officials are agreeable to the merger. ‘ Butler officials discussed the pro-

from Indiana university. The Indiana Law school was founded here in 1894 by a group of i Indianapolis citizens as a pdrt of | the University of Indianapolis. In 1936 the school was merged | with the Benjamin Harrison Law | school and. Mr. Ogden, former In-

1|

Up Front With Mauldin

of Senator Abe Murdock of Utah,

convention Wednesday night was all} |

WINS RADIO ‘ORCHID’{} |. The “Good Neighbor orchid™ is. 1g air-expressed to Miss Agnes| of school 9, by

i “With the Marines at Tarawa™

| diana attorney general, was at that time selected as president. The school purchased its. present loca ‘| tion in 1938.

| It graduated 10 in its last class.

‘WILSON HEADS GROUP TO FORM NEW CLUB

The state organization of Junior Achievement, Inc. has named Walter M. Wilson of the Delco Radio

in Kokomo. Russell C. Bowers, executive Cirec« tor for the movement in Indiana, has announced that Kokomo will be the third city besides Indianapolis in the state to establish such a program.

CIVIC SERVICE CLUB TO SEE TARAWA FILM

death, Mrs. Roosevelt

Division of General Motors to head ‘a committee to establish a chapter

iri

Eri