Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 January 1945 — Page 12
e Indianapolis Pimes "PAGE 12 Wednesday, January 17, 1945
WALTER LECKRONE Editor :
(A SCRIPPS-HOWARD NEWSPAPER)
ENRY W. MANZ
:" ROY W. HOWARD ‘President iness Manager
Price in Marion County, 5 cents a copy; delivered by carrier, 20 cents | a week. {
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Give Light and the People Will Fina Their Own Way
Btumber ez Untied Press,
RILEY 5551
POLITICAL FOOTWORK ON WORLD STAGE
ENATOR ARTHUR VANDENBERG (Republican) last week took the limelight with a proposal for action. Senator Tom Connally (Democrat and chairman of the foreign relations committee) pooh-poohed and called for the hush-hush on discussion or action until after the meeting of the Big Three. Result: . Vandenberg found himself slipping. Now, Connally comes up with a proposal of his own, thereby abandoning the hush-hush, the Big Three not yet having met. All of which is typically American—an impor tant inning in the “great game of politics.” And as contrasted with the “I am not arguing avith you, I'm telling you” technique of the dictators, all to the good. The one sure thing about a democracy is that no issue ~~ is ever settled, whether domestic as in this case or international, without political considerations, having to do with- power as one party relates to another, individual ambition to be re-elected and all that. Fitting and proper, if we are to remain a democracy, which is what we are fighting for. ss = i AS TO THE MERITS of the Connally propesal, it is too little and too late. He asks for a provisional allied political council to operate after all the United Nations agree on an - international organization but before the treaties have been ratified. That does not touch the two chief issues. '* "One is the immediate need for such a council. The other is recognition of the council's right to review settlements made by Russia and Britain without consent of other allies. For three years this newspaper and others have proposed an allied political council. Though the big powers give lip-service to the idea, they always postpone action in order to keep all power in their own hands. If Connally’s council is not set up until after a full United Nations ~ conference agrees on all the controversial questions blocking a world league—in six months, or a year, or maybe much longer—it will be too late to change the fate of Europe as fixed by-Stalin and Churchill. ~The council should be formed at once to make tentative decisions and to protect the rights of liberated peoples until the completed world organization is ready to take over. : But we doubt that Stalin and Churchill will share with "a representative council their present power over allied decisions—much less allow it to review their Polish, Baltic and Balkan: seftlements—without the kind. of American guarantee of joint enforcement of German demilitarization proposed by Senator Vandenberg. President Roosevelt and his spokesman, Chairman Connally, are making a crucial mistake in our judgment in not pushing the Vandenberg pian...
i ~
was acclaimed and Connally
“ » » - 8 ® “
, an
+ =~ THE DISILLUSIONMENT expressed so" bitterly by - Senator Wheeler Tuesday ‘is not limited to a few. It will continue to grow in reaction to European power politics and to the flouting of Atlantic Charter pledges. We dis-
of his charges are true and they have been voiced in gentler language by Vandenberg and such ex{reme internationalists as Senator Ball. - America wants a world league to enforce peace, but America never will underwrite a Russian or a RussianBritish dictatorship in Europe. ~ Disillisionmént already is so widespread that the unfinished Dumbarton Oaks plan probably could not be ratified today-—not, that is, unless a representative United Nations council -were operating in place of the present one-man or two-man control.
TALKS RIGHT, ANYHOW
Fikn former Dies committee, in its new permanent status, ~a--g0ems likely to be known as the Hart committee, Rep. Edward J. Hart of New Jersey having been nominated to be its chairman by Democratic leaders of the house. Through 10 years in congress Mr. Hart has been distinguished chiefly for his loyalty to the political boss— Mayor Hague of Jersey City—who sent him there. Hague maehine is allied with the New Deal, and Mr. Hart
Tm
peared.
agree with much of what Senator Wheeler said. - But some |
The |
“s
REFLECTIONS Tm,
Day = Di
By ‘Harry Hansen Lin ah
-~
IN THESE DAYS when yoli can win cash, gigarets and encyclopedias by memorizing dates the new edition of “Anniversaries and Holidays,” by Mary E. Hazeltine, cevised by Judith K. Sollenberger of the Indianapolis Public Library, ought to be a useful book. The American Library association has just published it at the incredible price of $6, but if you win a prize you get some of that back, According to this book,
Jan. 11—to choose a date at random—has some fairly
interesting birthday anniversaries, to wit: Alexander Hamilton, Ezra Cornell,
Those ot Bayard Taylor,
William’ James, John Winthrop and Charles Perrault. On Jan, 11, we learn, the secretary of the treasury puts a wreath on the statue of Alexander Hamilton
in Washington.
and can't ask about that deficit.
It's a good thing Hamilton is bronze Usually" somebody
also puts a wreath on Hamilton's tomb in Trinity
cemetery, New
York. I recall one noon ceremony
when a detaif from the U. S, army fired a salute and scared all the pigeons of wall Street and sent the’
bears to cover,
The Original Sheik
WHAT WERE the others?
Ezra Cornell was a
rich merchant who endowed Cornell. university; Bayard Taylor was the author of many favorite poems, including the Bedouin song, which begins “From the desert I come to thee on a stalion shod with fire”—
the original sheik.
William James was distinguished
from his brother Henry James by the fact that he
used the English language to expedite thought.
Winthrop was
John the first governor of Massachusetts
Bay Colony and Charles Parrault .was the French story teller who first put into form Cinderella and Red Riding Hood. . References to holiday customs and to books about them "help make this a useful work for libraries,
2 5 a
DIP INTO jar.No. 10 on ‘the mantel shelf and pull
out a plot and tell me what it is. It makes the wheels go Wolf,” a novel about a mysterious situation by Mar(Morrow, $2.50.)
motive!
jorie Carleton.
Ah, the Bluebeard ‘round in “Cry
The Bluebeard -motive calls for a woman who
wants to pry into the secrets of locked rooms. Novel- |
ists should be extremely grateful that such women |
exist.
Without them many n
written and even unread. In “Cry Wolf” the prying lady does not happen
to be the wife of the alieged villain.
She is Sandra,
wife of the nephew of Mark Caldwell, who owns the big house with the locked rooms, Sandra married Jim,
the nephew, in
a big hurry, whereupon Jim disap-
When she reaches the house of Jim's uncle
Mark assures her. Jim is dead.
New Twist on an Ancient Theme OBSERVE NOW how changes are rung on an an-
cient theme.
Bluebeard was a villain of the deepest
dye, assanyone who saw his tinted chin whiskers at
the ballet Monte Carlo knows.
But for the purposes
of this story Mark cannot be labeled a villain outright.
It is true that he has something to hide.
When Julie,
Jim's sister, complains of hearing screams in the
night, Mark ridicules her evidence.
When Mark
finds Sandra prowling around he gives her a shot of
such potent liquor that she passes out.
Yet he doesn’t
act like a dangerous man. This is all that I can reveal about the plot with-
out spoiling your worst suspicions.
Obviously, if you
are to enjoy this at all, you have to become curious
ahd suspicious. novel,
This is not a mystery thriller but a
which means that the pace is slower, more
deliberate and there is less reliance on tricky .situa-
tions.
WORLD AFFAIRS—
Buried Needle
By Wilken Philip Simms
and maybe he isn’t.
WASHINGTON, Jan. 17. '— The shining needle of democracy. is so completely buried under the haystack of propaganda, a united nations envoy said to the writer, that the war will be over long before America finds out the undemocratic treatment being meted out to some of her small allies. The railroading of King Peter "II, of Yugoslavia, now in full swing, is a case in point. Not that Peter is a Democrat. Maybe he is Anyway, he says he is and adds
that all he asks is that the peoples of his country be given an unhampered opportunity to express them-
‘Dec. 4,
A fortnight gency.
selves for or ag are against him ever getting such a chance. Here is why: world’s tightest .censorships,” this writer wrote on “indicates that King Peter .. . . between two forms of political suicide eliminate himself gracefully by legitimizing his own dethronement . . with'equal dispatch -but with less attention to form.”
It was to be temporary.
ainst him at the polls. But the odds “Information leaking past one of the
faces a choice He can either
. or wait and let Marshal Tito do it
ago, Peter readily consented to a reIt would set up
machinery for a free and democratic plebiscite to de= cide whether Yugoslavia would remain a monarchy or become a republic. Tito. Would Manipulate the Strings
has voted faithfully for New Deal measures.
C. I. O. organizers, “fomenters of disorder and exponents of communism.” But | more recently, like Mayor Hague, he has found it expedient to welcome C. I. O. political support.
Hart or any Hague henchmen to head a committée on unAmerican activities. Many of Mayor Hague's own activities, including his attempts to*deny freedom of speech to his opponents and the dictatorial methods by which he maintains his power, strike us as anything but American. Contrary to that background, Mr. Hart now publicly talks like a man who understands.what such a committee should - be and do. There is a great need, he says, to watch unAmerican activities, and to start by defining clearly what | un-American activities are. . He “deplores” the attitude that a thing is un-American just because it is ‘opposed to the personal views of those who denounce it. [He recognizes that people’ who disagree with him may be as good Americans as he is. He thinks a congressional investigating committee fias a “moral obligation” to adhere to rules and
In 1938, |
| yeviteh, | Slovenes -don’t like the Serbs anyway, If we had to make the selection, we wouldn't pick Mr. | [Eo Tio would be dictator. Peter therefore objected to the proposed regency. Thus thimble-rigged, it would not givé him a Chingwithout a single Serb in his -
THAT WAS the plan. helping the mayor to fight an invasion of Jersey City by | that Marshal Tito, Communist boss in Yugoslavia,
he made a ringing . speech about | would manipulate the strings.
But it quickly developed
Three men were pro-
| posed for the regency—a Serb, a ‘Croat and a Slovene.
| But the Serb, population,
man's chance. cabinet in
was to-be the a respected but senile figure.
London, Neither London nor Washington is giving him much encouragement,
a majority of the total 94-year-old Atza StanoCroats and so in effect and
representing
Today,
he stands. pretty much alone,
As in- the case of Poland, they had
been hoping the political troubles in Yugoslavia would
simmer down."
Meantime things are beginning to happen in Belgrade, now Tito's capital. carrying pictures of Stalin, Churchill and Roosévelt and crying “Down With King Peter!” “
demonstrated,
Over-the week-end crowds
Communists’ Are in Command
THE SOFIA regime, according to reliable accounts,
is sponsored -by the Fatherland Front,
This is com-
posed ‘of members of the four major Bulgarian par-
ties.
The Com munists for a tiny minority—certainly
less than 5 per cent—but they are thoroughly organs
"to be fair in ifs methods. An: able committee operating along those lines .could | serve the country’ usefully and avoid the errors that marred | the record of its predecessor. A great many citizens, who believe that congress should keep itself and the country on guard against Subversive efforts, will be watching Mr. Hart and his work.
‘RE-EMPLOYMENT
ARTIAL solution of thé veterans’ post-war employ= might be to let ‘the soldiers Hey 7
Asea result,
y Ward.
poh t
ized and highly disciplined. the Communists are in command. They coptrol the militia, or ‘polite, and what they say goes, In Yugoslavia, Soviet-backed Tito is both the military and political chief. have been executed: around Belgrade alone, and thousands have been sent to concentration camps, who have given aid to Gen. Draja Mihailovich, Peter's | former minister of war and ‘Ruerrilla leader, almost automatftally qualify for the purge. King Peter and Mihailovich defied the Nazi blitz in 1941, during the allies’ ‘darkest hour. hailed as heroes on both sides of the Atlantic. sought and followed the advice of London and Washington. But after Russia entered the war, and Tito appeared on the scene, Mihallbvich. was ditched and |: now Peter is being pushed from his throne, all with- |- out the democratic processés being given a ehance,
The others are neither.
Scores of ‘‘collaborationists”
Serbs
They were ‘They
2 Ee ——
“At Last! Meat on the Menu!
- a v »
aria
|
novels would remain un- |
"upon the county board:
The Hoosier Forum
I wholly disagree with what you say, but will defend to the death your right to say it.—Voltaire.
“DIVIDED AUTHORITY IS POOR PRACTICE”
By Indiana Congress of Parents. and Teachers, Indiana League of Women Voters, American Legion Auxiliary, Publie Affairs of Y. W. C. A.—State, Public Affairs of Y. W. C. A., Legislative Commi‘tee Representatives of the organizations listed are in unanimous agreement in opposing certain recommendations of the Indiana welfare investigating commission. 1. We oppose abolishing the present state welfare board, as provided under the law of 1936, and creating a new paid board of three memFers. Experience has shown such divided authority to be poor administrative practice in public, as well as private business.
2. We oppose placing the appointment of county welfare boards with the circuit judge, the county commissioners, the county council, and the township trustees. This would develop a divided responsibility for the board, .and would make the selection of a well-bal-anced board a matter of accident. The success of local welfare programs depends, to a great extent, and the greatest care should be used in their selection. . We believe that there should be a sugle appointing BULhOrILY.
“3. We oppose RR the ex= amination for county directors with the local boards in each county. Few local boards are equipped to handle this service, and we believe that examinations should stay in the hands of the Indiana state personnel division. We believe an independent agency can best administer the merit system.
4. We oppose abolition of the board of parole review of the division of correction, and the transfer of the classification system from the state board of public. welfare to the various penal and correctional institutions. The success of parole is dependent upon a thorough knowledge and study of the parolee; -and it is reasonable to believe that a board of trustees could not give to each applicant for parole the time and attention his case demands. A similar plan was tried in Indiana and discarded for thé method now in use, which provides greater safeguards for the publie. We believe ‘that adoption of the four ‘recommendations listed above will lower welfare services and standards in Indiana, and will deal
(Times readers are invited to express their views in these columns, religious controversies ‘excluded. © Because of the volume received, letters should be limited to 250 words. Lettbrs must be signed. Opinions set forth here are those of the writers, and publication in no ways implies agreement with those opinions by The Times. The Times assumes no responsi- ~ bility tor the return of manuscripts and cannot enter correspondence regarding them.)
a severe blow'to the Indiana merit system. The representatives of the organizations listed agree with the investigating commission in its | Jroposals: 1. To increase the allowance per | day for children cared for outside their own homes. 2. To establish a preferred claim against the estate of a deceased re- | cipient of an old-age pension.’ We ‘hope that these two recommendations. will be adopted. spel 88 8 “WE'LL SEE WHAT CAN BE DONE”
By Pile. 'B.. .. France 3
After reading Mrs. Ralph Fisher's letter in your column (Nov. 21, 19044) we feel very depressed. So we decided to take a few moments out and. write ‘you a letter. Due to the generosity of the] folks back home. we soldiers at the
fronts’ are enjoying sufficient smokes. We are also receiving our packages from home regularly. For all this we are most grateful, but we do not want to disrupt the morale of the home front. We can't really use too many cigarets because at night the light attracts Jerry fire; and during the day, we are rather busy trying to get them dried. out. So if anyone has had their morale seriously affected by the short‘age, please have them write to us and we shall see what can be done. C'est la guerre. P. 8. Tell the secretary of state that I received my official election
Brubeck, Somewhere In
war ballot.
Side Glances —By Galbraith
Ft |
a |
sie.
L_corn. sos br an seve, ING. T. 0.0.9.1 OFF.’
{By. C. L. E,
tried to enlist in the army and navy,
rnamely the “work or fight”
11945) into war work. Here is the choice we 4-F's are have learned Be two.
“IS IT TOO MUCH TO ASK?” Indianapolis This is a 21-year-old 4-F'er talking and here is my story, whith is the story of thousands of guys like me, who too, are caught in a vast network of legislature, red tape and public opinion. Over three years ago, while the
draft age was still 20, and America was yet on the threshold of war. I
but due to a minor defect, was rejected and later classed 4-F by my draft board. Since that time I have
been called everything from “draft dodger” to “slacker” by both ‘civil-
|
‘Working Po a Thomas L Stokes
x American people got a double dose of disappointment,
” gs - ro cb og
POLITICAL SCENE—
“= «¥
-
' WASHINGTON, Jan, 17.—~The United States senate, which can make or break effective interna tional co-operation, has moved into a working partnership ‘with Pregldent Roosevelt in the field of foreign policy that should’ be very helpful in realizing the basio : Peace aims of the American peo= ple, This has come about through a series of recent events, some ac~ cidental, some carefully planned, but with the whole situation capitalized in a fine spirit of teamwork exhibited both at the Capitol and at the
{ White House,
Like many good things, the present situation developed from a potentially bad one—the sudden reappearance of power politics in the intrusions of
Great Britain and Russia in the affairs of liberated i
countries. That caused a disillusioning reaction here. And it came just when the fortunes of war in Europe had turned temporarily against the allies, so that the
Sour State of Mind Has Been Changed
THE NATURAL suspicion thus engendered gave = birth to questions about why Russia was not moving A sour state of mind
forward on the Eastern front. was in the making, Now all that has changed. President Roosevelt,
himself, helped’ to dispel the disappointment over |
political incidents in Europe by explanations of the practical phases that contributed to them and by counseling patience and understanding, Meanwhile, our armies checked the German. offensive, and the Russians began to roll forward again, But the real job of steadying the nerves of ‘people in this country, of restoring a balance, has been done in the senate where so much mischief could have been stirred up. That it did not is due to the clear think ing, and the good sense of several senators, Credit must go to Senators Connally (D. Tex.), foreign relations committee chairman: Vandenberg (R., Mich.), Republican leader on foreign policy; Ball (R, Minn.), and Hateh (D, N. M.), among others, on the positive side. And, on the negative side, it was heartening to see the restraint exercised by others who might have exploited the European ' political
situation for temporary political advantage to thems |
selves. : For sizing up what was going on, and what i% might lead to, Senators Ball and Hatch deserve thanks. They were ready to step .out in front again, as they did months ago with Senators Burton (R. 0.) and Hill (D, Ala) to create public sentiment for a united nations organization, They considered as a good vehicle a senate reso« lution which would express disapproval of power polis” tics, would advocate a+provisional united nations ore
¥
ganization to handle politica] problems until a pers |
manent organization could be set up, and would, at
the same time, assure Gur allies that we intended to
back up an international organization this time. They discussed this procedure with other senators and through the newspapers the President and the country knew the senate was ready to play its part.
Roosevelt, Vandenberg Spoke Out
THE RESOLUTION never went into the hopper, For President Roosevelt did speak out, Then Senator Vandenberg spoke out, giving assurance of his power= ful support, and along with it considerable Republican support, to the basic administration program. Sen-
jans and men of the armed forces ator Connally, meanwhile was busy in his effective (with the excepticn, in the latter| way, pulling the strands together behind the scenes, case, of the majority of men who| He must necessarily go slow as spokesman for the. have been overseas seem to have| administration on foreign affairs, make sure of his a better understanding of what is| ground.
taking place).
He arranged to have leaders of the foreign rela-
Now this is only a natural re-| tions committee go to the White House for a frank
action and little was thought of it,
conference with President Roosevelt to discuss the
but now .a bill is before our con- | current situation and the forthcoming Big Three
gress, suggested by a man supposedly representing “democratic i government,”
|
which is the most un- | | democratic piece of legislation in united nations organization as an objective at the
meeting. The conference, it was indicated, was very satisfactory all around.
Then Senator Connally canie out for a provisional
its present form ever entered in| meeting of President Roosevelt with Prime Minister
the annals of American history,
get the “stubborn 4-Fs”
quote frori the Times, Jan.
given. We can go .into war work until the return of men serving in
we will be boosted out in preference] to those men. We will have two| and a half strikes against- us in trying to obtain a new job, as employers have agreed to give pref- | erence to veterans in hiring per-| sonnel. The second choice we have under the bill is going into labor battalions, “which the army and navy want no part of” (quoted from the Times, Jan. 11, 1945), and which “will be made so undesirable (quoted
the 4-F's would gladly accept war work.” What good will winning the war do us if the youth of the nation loses faith and men walk the streets aimlessly afterward? I ask you, people of America, is this still America? “Or are we slowly being led into the very thing that your husbands, sweethearts, brothers and my “best friends, have died, and are| dying, for? ] If we 4-F's go into the servige we want the same opportunity fdr advancement, the same benefits and the same rights that the other noncombatants of the armed forces get. There are thousands of 4-F's that wanted into the service in the first place and, like myself, still do. We want to help get this thing over with, but we are still Americans. Is it too much to ask to be treated as such? Wake up, America! o as » “YOU HAVEN'T TRIED VERY,K HARD” By Jean Brown, Indianapolis I don't know what more Miss
A
7
"| dreamed that Fook-that desiirg onan o ours all though the. : house and showed her how she had en ‘all the ~~ Siareap she Edn 0 I
Err ar
Lwith. God
Christel. Walters could ask for in| Brightwood and vicihity—there is [the Hep Cat Hall, teen-canteen, | which needs—more=cats with. more! hep. | tion
program. My suggestion to
from the Times, Jan. 8, 1945) that}
Churchill and Marshal Stalin. President Roosevelt
bill, to| accommodated himself shrewdly to developments and (and I consequently will go to the meeting with the situa11, | |
tion at home apparently in good shape, It looks as if the President and the senate both
the armed forces, at which time| [IN WASHINGTON—
On Opposite Sides By Daniel M. Kidney
WASHINGTON, Jan, 17.— A$ the kick-off of the 79th congress it appeared that Rep. Louis Luds low, Indianapolis Democrat, was going right down the line for the C. IL. O.-P. A, C. program. He voted and spoke against making the un-American activities (Dies) committee permanent, it being one of the pet peeves of P- A. C. ~Then he introduced a bill to repeal the Smith-Connally
do not like. Today, however, Mr. Ludlow is on the opposite side'of a C. I. O. issue. For the eighth time he has introduced the so-called “equal rights” amends ment in the house on behalf of the National Woman's party. It has the platform indorsement of both the Democrat and Republican parties. But the C. I. O. News, published here, gave it a two-page blast this week. "All Mr. Ludlow said was “they always have been opposed to it.”
‘Neither Equal Nor Right' i
ACCORDING TO the C. I. O. articles the proposed amendment is “neither equal nor right” and “would wreck wage- -hour, laws and other legislation protecting women.’ “A" golden apple filled with acid has been dangled for the last 21 years before the eyes of American woman, under the seemingly-harmless advertising slogan of ‘equal rights,” The C. I. O. News says, “The_ poisonous fruit consists of a so-called equal
They are having a revitaliza- |
you is to join this fine organiza-|
tion you desire, drink bar. Also, there is the Northeast Community Center and Brookside Community Center which are both nice and: respectable places. I really don't think you have any right to say there is no place for teen-agers to go. Evidently you haven't trjed very hard to find what the people of this vicinity have provided, so please, let's open our eyes and see what is already provided for nice young people; a Ct
“DAILY THOUGHTS
Thou shalt make thy prayers unto him, and he‘shall hear thee, and thou shalt pay iy Vows. — Job 2:21.
entire
which has the requirements, a Jjuke-box and soft]
EVERY via io Tike a prayer | dE. B. Blowgiag....
rights amendment to the U.'S. constitution. Its meaning is contained in this sentence: “Equality of rights under the law shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or by any state on-acecount of sex.’ “The fraudulent base of the equal rights amends ment was exposed by C. I. O. President Philip Murray, who said that the proposal actually conceals the means of robbing women of many of the rights and protections that have been won for them.
Sees: Threat to Minimum Wage Laws
IN ANOTHER article the C. I. O, paper continues: “The so-called equal rights amendment is loaded with more jokers than there are nfarked cards in a gambling : house, “The amendment simply says that states cannot deny equal rights under the law. It cannot require equal pay for equal work. It is up to the 48 states to pass laws providing for equal pay. "So far five. have done so—without benefit of an squall rights -amendmients—ahd - the other 43 can do so, too, also without the amendment. “More important to women’ workers is the fact that the equal rights amendment would wipe out leg-
islation which provides for mining wages in Antra« 2?
state industry. “Twenty-six states and ‘the District ot Columbia have minimum wags laws for women. ‘Not a single one of these laws covers men too. If the equal rights amendment, were Jasseg, these laws would be wiped 38 the, oss”
anti-strike law, which they alse .
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WEDNE r
“Flight Office husband of M Moomau, 1310 pilot, was kille in Italy July 1 Overseas sine and entered th He was the sor lin, 1302 Cruft Survivors be mother are a Bryan Edward F. Moomau, N a sister, Mrs, I waukee, . » Pvt. Joe Seri Louise Sering, was killed in F * aA member « division, he aircraft unit s seas 18 month army in March ‘Mrs, B8ering purple heart w!
Survivors be two sisters, MN Newark, N. J. Rubin, India brothers, Store Sering, San F Charles Sering, A graduate of he trained at ( and Ft, Bragg, |
Pfe. Furl Co; of Mrs. Marjor son of Mr. and all of 1841 N. missing in Eur An infantryn Panther divisio been overseas ‘is a member of cathedral and Cathedral high tering the arm was employed Hosiery Mills. A brother, S Kenneth McMi school at Mare
» Seaman 1-¢ | ford, husbanc
Crawford, 7551 missing since aboard the U. was sunk in the time the Hull lost. Seaman Cra service in Ma overseas in Se was home las again for sea di A former em ardson Co., Sea He is the son Crawford, Law Crawford, Indi: A brother, Mi is serving with i ~ S. Sgt. Ever Mr. and Mrs. G Fulton st., has
~ tion ‘over Italy s . serving as a B-
A former Te student, Sgt. T been in the se 1941. He went A brother, Pf was one of 80 rescued from a Siegfried line t ”
Pfc. John Ri
"band of Mrs, 1
Prospect st, h
- Luxembourg ‘sir
Overseas four ST
