Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 November 1944 — Page 19
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The Forgotten Front By Tom Wolf] | The Indianapolis : Times nd «
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Open E n y ai 3 0'Clack : (Mr. Wolf, European war correspondent for NEA Service is substituting today for Ernie Pyle who is | on vacation, but expects to return to an assignment on the war fronts in the near future. This is the last of three articles on Europe's “Forgotten Front.") :
’ t THIRD SECTION ‘THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 23, 1944 - PAGE 19 PARIS, Nov. 23—It is one of the war's ironies decide if we are terrorists is to see how we are dressed “ k \ that the French forces of the interior were in many aad amaolt in the F.F.1 tod thice wilh 250 ) p Pa ; 3 ways better off in the Maquis than they are today. On the left is the F. TP, which by Communist Ie Supe. HOW, APPLIED . SCIENCE MAY TAKE DOMINANT ROLE IN WORLD POLITICS— * " Labo Their status today is that of an officially recognized, though a large percentage of its soldiers may not be . poeiaby Ragieied; JRogial Dart of nt reer. Communists Oi the Tghi-lse lueve Gon which N Le S R k \ / Election rmy, u ys solemnly proclaims itself to be (and undoubtedly be- t Pp WwW . sources of supply were from civil- Jjeves itself to be) “non-political” and interested only a yA S ee OC e a S ea ce ea pon Ma B ri n ns eager Yo ald She NBiStance, in fighting to rid France of the Boche. - « y g and pickings irom the an : ) By Science Servic I » ] t collaborators. ‘Today the P. F. I. Take Middle Road ? Busnes sirtice side SUGS SUE Bearly to the New Laws
* has no right to ask favors from civilians and there are fewer Germans around to burglarize. But more importantly, during Maquis days the F, F. I. played a far greater part in the resistance council—that 1s, in the underground government of France— than it now plays in France's recognized, government. It is not surprising therefore, that the F. PF. I. is not particularly happy about the state of affairs today, On the other hand, its unhappiness has not been taken out in civil unrest. Today and until the end of the war it is putting first things first. Today all groups in the F. F. I.— from Cammunist to the most conservative right wing ~-are united for one patriotic duty: to rid France of the Germans,
No Conflict
I HAVE just returned from a 1200-mile trip from Loire to the Spanish border and back via Bordeaux— that is, through territory which-the F. F 1. holds. I can flatly contradict the stories frequently heard in Paris that there is open or even near-open strife between the various groups in the F. F. I., especially between the Communist-dominated Franc Tireurs and the Parti- . sans and other factions. In each city I visited I heard tales of trouble in the next city, put on arriving there the “trouble” proved to be a figment of the imagination. For example, before leaving Paris I heard many tongue-clucking stories about “trouble” in Toulouse. Arriving in Toulouse, I found that the Communist FP. T. P. and other groups in the F. F. I. had been unified for more than two months. As one F. F. IL colonel there put it, “Seven thousand men in my command need overcoats. I know a warehouse here where there are 15000 winter coats. If I gave the word, two men could go get these coats and no one would stop them, All you need do to
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IN BETWEEN these two extremes is what is probably the largest group in the F, F. I. It wants neither communism nor 1936. program of the national resistance council—a program which includes nationalization of the great trusts, banks, mines, railroads, etc.; the program to which De Gaulle has pledged imself. This center group wants what they consider the new France ruled by the mass of people instead of by the handful of rich, powerful industrialists. These men are impatient with De Gaulle's government because they see scores of signs of his moving awdy from the resistance program. They see signs that the government or powerful influences in it are afraid of the FP. F, I. Why, they ask, are we not getting arms? Why is the government calling for volunteers for the army when at the same time the government says it hasn't sufficient to clothe and arm us? Why, they ask, are our units being split up when they are attached to regular army units? Can the government be afraid “of our unity? What the F. F. I. will do about its gripes if the situation remains unchanged none of them can say. First, there's the job to be done of ridding France of Germans. All factions of the F. F. I. are solidly united on this goal. That's why they are begging for arms now, One thing is certain. Whether the P. F. I. gets arms or doesn’t, its units are going to stick together. Great hands of loyalty were built up in the Maquis between officers and men. One can see concrete proofs of this in the fact that over 80 per cent of the men in the Maquis units have signed up to stay with their officers at the front—even though they're cold. and underarmed at the front and there was no compulsion for them to volunteer. Armed or unarmed, sticking together, the F. F. I. is going to be a force which will be felt in the new France.
Inside Indianapolis By Lowell Nussbaum
A CERTAIN young woman, wife of a serviceman, is looking forward to Christmas with dread. The dread is the result of an advance tip on a present she is to receive from her brother, of grade school age. The youngster saved his money to buy his “ sister a Christmas present. Finally, when he had $2, he started shopping and decided to buy her a hat. - He saw one in a window and fell in love with it. It had feathers and other ornaments sticking out at all angles. When he priced the hat, the lad found it was being held at $5. But the proprietor of the shop took pity on the boy—and also the opportunity to get rid of a slow seller—by letting him have it for $2. The boy took it home and enlisted the aid of his father in hiding it until Christmas. The father<-he’s pretty well known around town—took one look at the hat and nearly fainted. And then he got his daughter in a private conversation that
went_something like this: “Now, look, daughter, I
know you're grown and married, but you're not too big for me to turn over my knee and whip. And that’s just what I'll do if you don’t wear that hat and ach as if you like it.” So that’s why the young
to hold’” See—we're right sometimes—even accidentally. . . . The Camera club at the Illinois st. Servicemen’s center has sent out an 8. O. 8. for some used 4x5-inch photographic film holders. We're told you can’t buy them in stores now. They also need film hangers. Herb Elliott of Lieber’s is sponsor of the class. . . . Miss Mildred Stilz tells us that the appeal - for a small press for use of convalescent patients at Billings hospital has been answered. A press shuitable for printing linoleum block greeting cards made by the military patients has been donated by Lewis Warrenfelt. She said several other persons offered presses, Shortly after she called us, D. R. Winegarden, craft consultant for the city schools, visited us and left with us for the veterans another linoleum block press—one he has developed and which has the advantage of being light enough to be placed on the beds of patients unable to get out of bed. That way they can do all the printing themselves.
Watch Your Step
WHEN YOU WRITE a column, you have to be
“mighty careful what you say, because you never know
where your next correction is coming from. F'rinstance, back in September we had an item in which we mentioned a GI having “opened a can of K-rations,” From over in England comes a letter from Cpl. Sexson
what we mean? . ., John Millis, the local public rela-
Its program is the avowed|
VW ASHINGTON.—T he council of four. top Nazis now believed to be in control of the German war machine, Heinrich Himmler, Joseph Goebbels, Marshal Keitel and Gen. Guderian, are showing how applied science, in the form of V-1, V-2 and other rocket weapons, may play a dominant role in world politics. Nobody knows when der Fuehrer and Hermann Goering will again appear on the Nazi scene, if at all, but it is now more than a possibility that Hitler is not responsible for the new kind of warfare Germany seems to be preparing to unleash, warfare to force a negotiated peace. » » -
AMERICAN rocket experts agree that the V-2 is still in an experimental and developmental state. This means that the Germans have not put i{ on a mass production basis, aiid probably will not do so until they receive word from target areas against which the stratosphere rocket is .being launched that it is accomplishing the job for which it is designed. At present the V-2 penetrates as much as 30 feet into. the soil when it hits, leaving the tail sticking up about 20 feet like the end of a telephone pole. This limts the area of the blast, causing only a local earthquake. ” # »
IT IS BELIEVED that what the Nazis want is a devastating cloud of hot, sharp fragments from an above-ground explosion. They will probably continue experimenting until they get a bomb that gives this result: Unlike the V-1, the stratosphere V-2 is a true rocket, of the type known to designers and engineers as a spinner. It carries enough fuel for about seven to nine minutes of flight, using about a ton of fuel a minute, and enough bottled gas, either compressed air or possibly compressed nitrogen, to force the fuel into the. nozzle where the hot gases that thrust the rocket up
60 or more miles into the air are-
formed. ” » »
THESE GASES leave the combustion chamber through a series of special jets which form a ring on the back plate of the rocket.
The jets are bored into the back
1 SAN FRANCISCO
CHICAGO
NEW | - La dR 321% 1
UNITED STATES
Although it has not been possible actually to rebuild a German V-2 from exploded parts, as was done with the first flying bomb, the V-1, British experts have a fairly good idea of what the Nazis’ latest vengeance weapon looks like and how it works, The cutaway
sketch at top is an artist's conception, drawn from all available information. Thirty to 50 feet long and five feet in diameter, the “flying
telegraph pole” weighs about 13%; tons, but holds only one ton of explosive, the same as the V-1 robot bomb. Range, with the highest trajectory of any missile ever fired by man, is estimated at 250 to 300 miles, shown in terms of U. 8S. geography on lower map.
cerning the highest speed of the -V-2.— These reports —have —indicated that it goes as fast as 3500 miles an hour; actually, however, its greatest velocity is probably
space from the intense*heat that
jacket around the one-ton warhead containing the explosive. » » »
SINCE the V-2 strikes the earth with the terrific speed of 700
» ” » FINALLY there is an open com= partment containing fuel nozzles and the jets themselves at the very end. The rocket is thrust through the air by pressure against the forward end of the combustion chamber, not by the rush of gases out of the nozzle. There are several means of launching rockets: from launching ramps such as the Nazis used for the V-1; the larger tennis-. court-size ramps for the V-2; sunken pits, which are safer since they are not easily detected from the air and hot exhaust gases would not be a cause of danger to the launchers (such pits have been observed by correspondents in France); and from launching {frames or tubes, Ramps become so hot that they have to be sprayed with ice water {6 keep them from melting when a rocket is launched. » » ” REPORTS from Nazi Adm. Doenitz and from neutral sources
indicate that Nazis are fitting up submarines for launching he 25foot V-1 rockets against erican coastal cities. Super-submarines, or an easily detected suicide fleet of ordinary U-boats, would have to be built in order for the V-1 bombardment seriously to threaten Boston, New York, Philadelphia and Washington. Nazi subs would have to come to the surface to launch the rockets, making them easy targets for the coastal defense planes and blimps, which have recently been increased in number, Because of their size and weight, and the weight of the fuel they must carry, the subs could only accommodate about six or eight flying bobmbs each. Special ports and a sturdy winch would have to be installed to make it possible to lift the jetpropelled V-1 to the deck of the sub for launching. Nd » . ROCKET launching U-boats would probably have folding or collapsible launching platforms, which could be quickly erected on
- deck,
“The entire operation from the time the submarine comes to the surface could not take less than 30 minutes, and the crew would be in constant danger of the explosive going off before the rocket was launched. Too, launched easily in the rough, turbulent waters off the Atlantic seaboard in winter. .
rockets could mot be |
By FRED W. PERKINS ~ CHICAGO, Nov, 23.—~The elec~ tion victories won by the C. I O, Political Action Committee may prove to be ‘costly through new laws intended to prohibit some of the work in which this organization specialized, according to opinions of congress m e n on both sidese of the party fence. Re presenta~ tive Brown (R. 0.), a member of the house campaign investigating committee, pre- Mr. Perkins dicted a bi-partisan effort to clarify as well as strengthen the election laws so that “no attorney general will find it difficult to interpret them in the way ine
.tended by congress.” -
Studies by the committee, al« ready in progress on the basis of experiences in this year’s campaign,. Mr. Brown said, “should result in overhauling of the corrupt practices act, the Hatch act and the portions of other statutes that deal with the subjects.” ” » » SOME DEMOCRATS, particu larly many from Southern states, are expected to join with Republicans in this effort because they are obviously alarnfed over what labor polifical forces may do to them unless the curbs are made more severe. Another factor of higher caliber was pointed out by Mr. Brown who said, “there is no present reason why big col could not follow the C. I. O.-P. A. C, example and organize as many richly-financed political committees as they please for so-called educational purposes. “This is possible so long as corporations and labor unions, which are forbidden from making direct contributions to political campaigns, may spend large sums in many other ways that undoubtedly influence the out come of elections.” s =» MR. BROWN emphasized that his criticisms “do not apply exclusively to the C. I. O, nor to
the Democratic party alone. Both
sides gave -demonstrations in this campaign of the need for tight
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ne ’ . ening up the election laws in a ndlewick lady isn't anxiously awaiting the arrival of Santa Humphreys, The Times' telegraph editor, on leave,| Pate at an angle of about 45 de- 50 greqter than 1000 miles an Biles on hour, hire than He Rockets can also be launched, righ . Claus. Says Sexson: “We soldiers of AMGOT cannot claim| S7¢€S 50 that when the flaming ou" or about 300 miles faster roma qr coors Kel, as Well 83 and more effectively, from sur- | RUMOEr 0 WAVE ROBES ’ . to be experts on combat rations, but we do know that| §3Ses Tush out into the air they 405 the speed of sound. 3 ne fuse, i face ships and barges. These “Some organizations that apIt's Not an Accident K-rations come not in cans but in cardboard boxes,| C®USe It to spin and literally chew 54 gpeeds of 3500 miles an hour is system of multiple detona- yoopets, like ‘all other Nazi rock- | parently worked for the RepubWE MENTI three boxes for a day's rations. The C.rations do| its WAY through the air as a screw ho v.2, like a falling meteorite, po brtoy Ca Clmnales the Pos” ets, would be indiscriminate in | lean ticket. deserve to be looked ONED Monday that the streetcar . ..o i tin cans, two per meal, six per day” See| Pites into a piece of wood. would probably destroy itself in sibility of duds. Few, if any, of he gestruction they would cause. | into just as the operations of 98 painted to advertise the recent United War Fund ’ y : This spinning motion stabilizes the stratosphere rockets reach- the C. L. O.-P. A. C. and its out- 3
ddler colorful fluffy candle.
campaign still is ‘on the streets and we made a wisecrack about it, asking if the street railway were “keeping it for next year.” Came a call from Evan Walker of the street railway. Says Evan: “That's right; we are keeping it. There aren't any dates
tions representative for the Curtiss-Wright propeller division, has been promoted to assistant public relations manager for the division, with offices in Montclair, N. J. He leaves probably in a week. Succeding
the rocket in flight, so that it needs no fins. Some British rocket authorities believe that the V-2 has a gyroscopic or servo-sta-
friction of air on the metal jacket produces. Even at 1000 miles an hour some sort of cooling device is undoubt-
ing England have been duds. The V-2 is long and slender, shaped like a telephone pole with the nose of the warhead rounded, according to Stockholm reports.
THE BIGGEST drawback to Nazi rockets is this lack of accuracy, due to the high trajectory and the speed with which they
growth, the National Citizens P. A.C” If the house committee rec ommends legislation regarded by
| r dus on it. And the idea is that it will give the fund him here will be Jack Stark, who has been in the bilizer. ecly necessary to prevent it from rhe warhead takes up the for- fy. the C. I. O. and other labor orgt Pa ty year-round advertising. The same is frue of the New York office of Curtiss-Wright. Mr, Millis, in New On, Juice} Pie rockets such getting so hot that it detonates ward third of the wy of the Frequently the rockets plow | ganizations as unfavorable, the - es. 3 fo b streetcar painted to advertise the war loan drive. Jersey, will take a position held until his recent resig-| Mechanical devices a . its explosive warhead long. before rocket tube. into the earth before the detona- | occasion may provide the first ; ' It doesn’t mention the sixth drive: just urges: ‘For nation by Vern Boxell, formerly with The Times’ edi-| S3T¥, though Nazi engineers may i; reaches the earth. The propellent charge and the tor has a chance to act. test of how greatly the influence 3, $2.98 your post-war security buy war bonds—to have and torial department, have toute Uw ihe va orks This cooling device may resem- bottled gas, as well as any sta- Therefore, even if the Nazis of labor as heen: oh Bened
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World of Science
A VAST AMOUNT of research will be necessary before DDT, the miraculous insect killer that won the
second battle of Naples, can be put to general use on
the farms and gardens of America. This is pointed out by the Agricultural Insecticide and Fungicide association whose headquarters are in New York. As most readers know, DDT is being used by the army against lice and mosquitoes, After the conquest of Naples, an epidemic of lous-borne typhus threatened. It was stopped by dusting -more than a million inhabitants of the city with DDT and that heroic accomplishement, carried out under the direction of the U, 8. typhus commission, has come to be known as fhe second battle of Naples.
DDT, the association points out, is not a finished From all this, it is apparent that ways must be “Coward would need no Bvin shot out and the electrical system |p, "o) close 1t seemed he nicked| finding it 7 insecticide. To be effective, it must be mixed with the Worked out of combining DDT with appropriate car-| §ear, either oy t st. Lo » yesahe. my guns as he went over.” easier to say i proper carriers and in the proper proportion. riers so that it will reach the insects which are pests| Who was wouded uf ho NUH In addition one tire had been| Thrash said the crew threw| wyecs than to J 3 and not destroy others, quoted. “We'll hit him right in shot out by a Zero which the navy yes :
Little Available Now
AT THE present time practically all the DDT produced in this country is going to the armed forces and very little'is available for agricultural research. (DDT, in case you have forgotten, is dichloro-diphen-yitrichlorethane, It was first synthesized by a young German chemist but its use as an insecticide was developed by the firm of J. R. Geigy in Switzerland.)
The association points out that as an agricultural insecticide, DDT has both its good points and its bad
By David Dietz
points. The great need at present is to learn just
what good and what harm the material may do.
Field and laboratory tests to date indicate remarkable insecticide properties against a large number of insect species using very small dosages of DDT in the form of spray or dust, i However, present DDT gompositions have not proved effective against some insects such the Mexican bean beetle, the cotton boll weevil and the European red mite, :
Kills Bees in Some Cases
IN SOME CASES, DDT not only kills an insect pest but also the insects which prey on the pest. Cases have also appeared where DDT killed the honeybees which are so valuable for pollination. The situation with respect to honeybees is confused because in other experiments DDT seems not to have harmed the honeybees.
The question of protecting the health of human beings must be considered. There were no ill effects from DDT in the second battle of Naples where it was used as a dust. There is some question, however, about the toxicity of DDT in sprays which are absorbed by the human skin, The association poifits out that commercial applications of DDT in the post-war world will have to comply with regulations of the U, 8. public health service, with the federal insecticide act, and with the food and drug law.
F
. = » VARIOUS reports have been received from neutral sources con-
'HIT HIM IN KISSER'— Wounded Gl's Answer Coward's Brooklyn Slur
PARIS, Nov. 23 (U. P)~—A Stars and Stripes creporter with the 35th infantry division somewhere in Europe said yesterday that Noel Coward had been invited to’ a “vegetable and egg dinner with fruit for dessert” by Brooklyn men in that division,
the kisser with the dinner.” That seemed to symbolize the Brooklynites’ reaction to reports of Coward's uncomplimentary observations about Brooklyn troops in a Salerno hospital. ” » y
“COWARD couldn't fight his way into Ebbets field with nine tickets, and he's knocking the
. guys fighting their way to Berlin,”
Pvt. Charles Burns was quoted.
ble the equipment used on highspeed liquid-cooled aviation engines, that is, a coolant liquid circulated by a pump through a
[through a storm with one motor
bilizing mechanism, and the firing pin that sets off the rocket by either a minor explosion or a burst of electrical energy from an out-
attempt to bombard United States cities with rockets, the chance of their doing little more than localized damage is small.
Yanks Land Crippled Plane After Bagging Ship, 5 Zeros
By H. D. QUIGG United Press Staff Correspondent A LEYTE AIRPORT, Nov. "21 (Delayed) — A four-engined navy search plane had a hectic day on a recent lone bombing raid on Japanese shipping near Palawan island. It blew up an enemy cargo ship; thot down five Japanese Zeros, and then flew four and one-half hours
gunners later sent flaming into a bay after it tried to ram them, But the navy pilot, Lt. Thad Williams, Monroe, Utah, did a masterful job of landing and the crew emerged unhurt, Williams explained that he dived down to 100 feet to get a direct hit on the cargo ship with a 250 pound bomb, - ) Seaman 1-¢ G. C. Owen, Washington, D, C., sald the ship split
other four Japs chased us a half hour but we did some fancy cloud hiding.” . Bow-gunner, Donald L, Thomas, aviation machinist mate, Lake City, Minn, and top-gunner Wallace Thrash, Greensboro, Ala, teamed up to down one Zero, “That Zero,” Thomas said, “came in, did a split ‘S’ and dived right for our bow. If our pilot hadn't dodged he would have hit us. He
everything overboard on an effort to save enough fuel for the three motors to bring them through the storm to their base.
Army Film Earns Its 7th Million
WASHINGTON, Nov. 23 (U, P.). --Gen, George 8S, Marshall, army
po
by Democratic gains in congress.
We, the Wome Civilian Life Also Changes, Soldiers Find
By RUTH MILLETT MAYBE IT WON'T be as difficult for the returning serviceman to fit into civilian life as many people think,
It is being assumed that be cause he finds it difficult to make his own de-
cisions (having {77 "0% obeyed orders for so long), A
take a negative point of view, the returning serviceman will find the going tough in civilian life,
roy Miss Millett Well, not unless civilian life changes in a hurry. » ” »
THE civilian doesn't make as many of his own decisions as he
i 2 8 3 P 3 .
; : He, too, was wounded at St, Lo. right in the middle and “the last chief of staff, yesterday was pre- used to. i ot has am. My Day By Eleanor Roosevelt “Tl take him with me.and get I saw of it nothing but two triangles| sented with the seven-millionth oi 18.304 whiat x Shi Si yu 3 The Span amr re 8 rey — Rik 2 vsved seat i 3 Tone were sticking out of the water.” | dollar raised by the motion pic- | pow far he can drive his car. He = nkies, ) : “hi ” " bk ne Be. or NEW YORK, Wednesday —1It is amusing that this done so because they could find more profitable work| guys act.when they are hit.” Ax they of. the. poctie, Williaa ture, This Is the AT” Jor 156 | tg WW Jiat how such Ho cun set, HES in eto, year we are having, in different, states, different days away from home, and not because the roof had been “ou =» Ba TV apanEs planes jumped benefit of army emergency relief. ol, Seftain 1 ol, ules he i wil al ble; Si on which we celebrate Thanksgiving, To be sure, in destroyed over their heads by war or because they had “I DIDN'T cry when I was po —— Harry M. Warner, president of tainly find plenty of lines to A BUS; Wass on a Thursday, But some states to flee from invading enemy armies. : wounded,” William Loren, wear. | Brooklyn ean lick the toughest | “One. Which we shot down, had| warner Bros., the producing com- SFU TY TO, PEO Fomor 8 : the. traditional last Thursday in This mers fact makes i possible for us to have| er of the purple heart, said. “I | playwright in the world, so I [knocked out our electrical system pany, reported that the proceeds | {SIC CUCL ne Ne Guity for November, the 30th, while other great opportunities in the future, We have strength, didn’t know I was hit until I | challenge Coward to fight my [2d one motor.” he explained. *I| reached the $7,000000 mark on | (00 & MCLE V0 ® (uF "s . 8 states. have decided that that we have great industrial and productive resources, saw bidod 'jenking. from the | Wife” said Sgt, Peter Olson.’ “No [didn't know until we landed he alsof Nov. 1 and is expected to tally | S8I'ER Fo Wo uM "loyy comes too near Christinas, and are both in agriculture and in industry, Our people have » i man in Brooklyn would hit a |had shot out our tire, | another $500,000 before the picture | orl Teas » or out of a hotel celebrating on the 23d, We, here developed new skills, We are, on He whale probably{ “The children in the streets of ' playwright.” “We dived into clouds and. the| completes its run, : g. i a table ia 8 ; in New York state, turn our minds better fed and more physically fit y than we were ; . . " — restaupsnt. while-he waits to. be + i to the business of Thanksgiving on 10 years'ago,- This is something for which to be de-| BARNABY : ” % .By Crockett Johnson - | soda form to fill out for the the 23d. voutly thankful. . The opportunity to lead in the world : : ; § Danded a OM 50 then while B80 : , 1 realize that for many people of the future may fill us with a sense of awe, but a Not with that live furkey rH | ution hoard, SE ming owt - in the country the thought of any should give us a great sense of satisfaction. = _ Yes. Myles got away. of . I sfopped b of did any good S ya kind of Thanksgiving is bitter be- On us, the people of the United States, does depend And yesterday he set ada ! ay A a yond words, They have lost their whether our feet are set in the paths of peace. If our off for Plymouth. And S8IV8-yOur But, look! : "thats od dear.ones in a war far from their feet are set in those paths, the rest of the world may he'll the old nfown and Bu, AND AS for saying “yes, “i : “ own shores. Life seems vacant of follow suit. We must be.the example and the torch tradition of Turkey-of- [i [Here's Mylest Back again? |} | what most of us are doing these ™ all interest for them. Perhaps bearer, however, and we cannot afford to forget it. Thanksgiving after all. . ays, o. We dob loved ones still in jeopardy, Yet, in Everything we do at home will be viewed in the light,|. pe or : We aren't arguing. hy 4s a nation we have : not just of its effect at home, but of its on other ? an pushed around . tod and this a 0 2! J & ‘. LS x
