Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 February 1945 — Page 12

"PAGE 12 Tuesday, February 27, 1945 Ga

' ROY W. HOWARD WALTER LECKRONE HENRY W. MANZ President

* an amendment, known as the Baruch plan for an across-the-

may prove irresistible. If the law is permitted to die and . stabilization controls are lifted before civilian goods are

Editor Business Manager

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’ Give Light and the People Will Find Their Own Way

|

REFLECTIONS—

Tickets: Please By John-W. Hillman

THERE ARE a lot of ‘people in this world who love railroads. We do, ourselves, though not with the single-minded passion of a real railroad fan. Like Lewie Edwards wlio used to sit at the east end of the copy desk and who could tell you off-hand how many journal boxes there are on a triplex Mallet locomotive or what time No. 67 on the Denver, Rio Grande & Western is due at Whistle Twice, Ariz. Possibly the fact that we can take our railroads or leave them alone is due to the circumstance that we grew up in a town which was the end of the line TWO raliwavs. So we never saw trains gO roar-

for

RENEW THE PRICE LAW

N November, 1941, the house of representatives was con- | sidering the administration's first price control bill. That | was the measure which was going to “stabilize the economy” | without losing: any votes. It provided a price freeze for | gelected items, but permitted farm prices to rise to, 110] per cent of parity and put no limit whatever on wages. . Young Rep. Albert Gore .of Tennessee—he's now a| private in the front lines somewhere in Europe—proposed | board freeze of all prices and wages. Sixty-three congressmen marched down the aisle in the teller vote for the Gore amendment. Being a teller vote, their names were not recorded. That is unfortunate. For had it heen an aye-or- | no roll call the names of those who voted aye could now be | inscribed on a roll of honor. The farmers who demanded special treatment then | have since paid for their folly in higher costs of farming. For millions of workers wages have not kept pace wit! rising costs of living. And many billions, which might have been saved, have been added to the costs of the war.

}

3 5 n 5s 3 | BUT THAT'S: looking backward. The need now look forward. The stabilization law, which congress passed a vear after it turned down the Gore proposal, was little | and late and it imposed cumbersome bureaucratic controls. | But the law has done much good in preventing a runaway | price and living-cost inflation. Stabilization Director Vin- | son, Price Administrator Bowles and the war labor board | have done the best they could with the tools they have had | to work with. Unless renewed, that law will expire in June. | Congress should act at once to continue the law for at | least another year. By June the war in Europe may have ended, and if congress delays action until then, the political pressures of labor for higher wages, and of farmers and producers and other business interests for higher prices,

is to

produced. in a quantity approaching buyer demands, welll | let ourselves in for an upward spiral of prices and living sosts such as we have scarcely dreamed of yet. Incidentally, what has become of the advisory board for the office of war mobilization and reconversion? That | board was directed by congress to advise the OWMR direc- | tor on policies and legislation. If the board has done anything to date, the public doesn’t know of it. Here is certainly something on which it should start work.

5 4

HITLER IS FRANTIC

HITLER'S latest anniversary whine is that of a man who is cornered and knows it. His customary predictions of victory are faint, almost drowned out by his frank admissions of Germany's desperate position. It is not surprisihg’ that he admits so much. The

| ing

| fire

| warm feeling for the railroads. We like the distant |

I-the steel rails reaching out to the horizon seem a

=

through, throwing a red glow from their opened doors into the night as they passed. In our town. the trains .coasted in, took a startled look around and backed .hastily away. 0 There wasn't much glamor in-that. The faces at the car windows were not mysterious strangers on their way to some appointment in Samarra. Rather they were those of Lem Swartzlander, returning from a trip to Omaha to buy cattle, or Doc Carpenter, leaving for the convention of the Iowa Dental Association in.’Des Moines,

Traditions Can Be Too Dear

DESPITE THIS environmental lag. we have a

| music of a train whistle fading across a spring night and we get a thrill out of the bustle and excitement in a crowded terminal. Our pulses stir when an express thunders past a crossing, and even

living thing, a shining finger pointing to adventure and far places. If a layman can feel this way, how much more must railroading mean to those who really have it in their blood, those to whom it has long been a part of their lives. That {s right and proper, but we suspect that this-affectionate loyalty, expressed tangibly in such heroism as the round-the-clock battle to break a sraffic bottleneck in blizzard-frozen vards has some advantages, too. Traditions can be so dear that they become a barrier to progress. Much ‘of the resistance to change which has handicapped the railroads in their competition with newer modes of transportation may be traced to the aver-

age railroader’'s nostalgia for his calling. He likes things as they are, and as they always have been, and he distrusts innovation. He hates to see the old order passing, just as the master of a sailing ship detested the ugliness of steel and steam—because it was alien to the world he had known. Years ago Arthur Brisbane used to preach about the advantages of lightweight trains—yet it was not until long after that the streamliners were given a chance to prove themselves. And even today, the modernizing of the railroads—considerable as it has been—still has ‘not removed some notably archaic practices

Short Order Tickets on the Way

Te 1 ANYONE, FOR exaniple, who has stood in line as a clerk deliberately ‘filled out a yard-long transcontinental ticket must have wondered if there wasn’t

a better way to do it. Apparently there is, for a recent article in Collier's predicts that at the end of

the war the railroads will introduce a miraculous new | Blaze itleident—but we had better take that- up later.

machine to print tickets on the spot. No longer will the clerk poke through drawers for the proper form, |

rummage around for an assortment of rubber stamps, | before the promotion was made of-

thumb through schedules and rate books and spread | the ticket in front of him while he fills it out in long hand, with the first cousin to a post office pen. No, indeed. In this brave new world of tomorrow, the articlel explains, “you will simply tell the clerk where you are going; he will punch a few buttons on a small machine that looks like a cash register, | pull a handle and the ticket wil] fall on the counter. | “There will also be a complicated model which will be able to turn out long-distance strip tickets with lightning speed.” — The computations will be made mechanically. All the clerk has to do is make change, we are told. And all the customer has to do | is ‘to dig up the money to pay for the ticket and remember, when the conductor comes by, which

The Hoosier Forum

I wholly disagree with what you say, but will defend to the death your right to say it.—Voltaire.

POLITICAL SCENE—

Laboratory Test

By Thomas L. Stokes *

ro ’ &

NEW BEDFORD, Mass, Feb, 27.—This city, in {its struggle to solve an acute: war manpower shortage in tire cord production, seems to offer another significant test in the slow, stumbling process by which éur democracy accoms= modates itself to total war. New Redford squirms about une comfortably,” if still defiantly, in the spotlight. The eyes of the country have been directed this way. The nation, and Washington in particular, is keenly interested in the problem here of rounding up enough skilled textile workers to get out badly needed heavy-duty tires, for the situation is matched elsewhere in the country in varying de= grees with other types of critical war production, Also, this city and the attitude of its people may be a symptom of the country generally at this stage of the war. How it comes out of it may tell some= thing of. the future, may determine how we. are going to meet the_gruelling final stages still ahead’ of us, if we are to move ahead purposefully to complete victory ovgr both Germany and Japan This is a hard period of testing. Ny

Typically Individualistic American City |

A GOOD LABORATORY is provided. in this old city of 110,000 populatiorr, once a whaling port, which evolved into a typically individualistic American city through the various vicissitudes incident to its up-and-down history as a textile center. Here on a bottom layer of old New England stock has been imposed, through the years, other layers typical of New Enge land mill towns—English mill worker immigrants, stubbornly independent; French-Canadians, also strongly individual, and Portuguesg, among others, This individuality comes out in examination of what has happened here, ° Everybody involvgd—workers and their labor union leaders, textile mill managers, the citizenry—-has a grievance, it seems, and a reason for opposing the war manpower commission's attempt to transfer a comparatively small number of textile workers from one plant to another. Some of the grievances are based in justice. This present quandary was long in the making. It involves many human factors, and is complicated by mistakes by all the groups concerned, including the government at Washington, Everybody, too, has a solution to offer, .

|

|“THERE WAS NO | FAVORITISM”

| By. Fred ‘Lee, 1050 Cornelius ave.

'a general in the family, namely, {one Elliott Roosevelt. man was commended by somebody lor other, but nobody seems to know {what he did tion.

|in their - cases.

So President F. D. R. at last has

The young

to earn the promoOf course, there was that]

Congress put on a little ““show”

ficial. The debate assumed a ludicrous nature when one senator endeavored to compare young Elliott with Generals Sherman and Custer, two of our. civil war immortals. Comparing. Elliott Roosevelt on an equal military footing] with these two fighting men

{really doing the young man an in-|ing, | justice, for there is not the least friendly fashion, billing and cooing, |semblance of an equal comparison. |strutting about the park—a few of | Sherman and Custer received their |them. But out of bounds, they, too, Great flocks of hungrv birds, roosting on our beautilittering |

promotions the hard way. There] was no favoritism nor political pull No greater dare-

(Times readers are invited to express their in these columns, religious controversies excluded. Because of the volume received, letters should be limited to 250 words.* Letters must be signed. Opinions set. forth here are those of the writers, and publication in no way implies agreementrwith those The

views

opinions by The Times. Times assumes no responsi bility for the return of manuscripts ‘and cannot enter correspendence regarding them.)

{to happiness, his real concern, will

eating from your hand

become pests.

ful, expensive buildings,

is | pigeons are pretty and very charm-

“VETERANS WANT A GOOD JOB FIRST” 'By Industrial Chaplain, Indianapolis The first thing the veterans of this war want when they return to home and health is a good job. This is why we should all work for the 60,000,000 jobs, regardless of how violently we may disagree or how loyally we may agree with Henry A. Wallace. For make no mistake— if we fail here, the veteran's right

be endangered. If. there are not enough jobs to go around, there is certain to be a fight between the veterans and war workers. By watching two crabs trying to crawl out of “a bucket, you will understand what will happen to both the veterans and war

workers. If you put one crab into {a bucket, he will crawl out. Two {crabs pull each other down. - They

Production Must Be Stepped Up

THERE ARE two plants here making heavy cord

for use in tire manufacturing plants elsewhere, One |

is a Firestone plant, the other a Fisk’ plant of United States Rubber. They are two of .many plants in the country, but they supply a sizable percentage of tire cord. Production here must be stepped up.

third, night -shift. The shortage 230 skiHed workers, 173 at Firestone, There is a shortage also of unskilled workers, amounting currently to 147, but that

brought here to ease that. After. many ‘futile attempts to meet the shortage

for “#ormer” textile workers, by seeking voluntary transfer from other textile mills here which make fine goods—the war manpower commission moved workers to transfer from fine goods mills, a specified plants by arbitrarily lowering employment ceilings. of the first 118 called for interviews.

show up at all and appealed their cases.

‘They Can't Shove Me Around’ -

{never get out. | As long as there is one group of {employed, that group can be used las a wedge to destroy the whole {wage structure. Truly the human family is one family.

collusion. The city government is backing the workers. So is the community in general Why all this has happened will be explored in | subsequent articles, because of its significance for

There is a shortage of skilled workers for a necessary | is estimated at J 67 at Fisk, 3 problem is | relatively simple. Two hundred Jamaicans are being

extending .over several weeks—by combing the~town =

in with its plan to force the required number of ! number from each of nine‘ plants, to the tire cord ; This is vigorously resisted. Only a dozen volunteered §

Some didn't 3 Seventy-five refused to transfer |

2

WORKERS ARE RESISTING, backed by their © union leaders and with at least the tacit support ©

i

of the mill managers in what looks very much like 3

cer ese cee

TUES]

All (

< ® %

WITH Germany all over ag Villag of Norma and torn

b. I

SIok

Luxor, ~ Allin 0

By G Times VALLEY Egypt (Vi same nor Rome or Px the resting Tut-ankh-a His houst a placid r days to plo Cairo to L but a C-4 takes two | His hotel winter pala Savoy 0] Luxor. And his: are the in brothers | purveyors o solutely ge scarabs sinc now workin It all seer listment po To see Thebes use turn—f{rom With no shouting Ar phony plast fenseless.

At C

Today the ~ fleld in Cai morning, se ing pace, ar Sunday nig about $12 t But he has He sees | service offi Trauscht of Jeanette Vi in his Cair nothing un army off f{ tombs. All Qu

The Abot out. the ri Valley of 1 hamed and set - paint ancient hie ‘very snepp appeal.” A handsome, 1 egotist.” As is app year-old to hind... Amo ~—heavily G two captain Ata GQ ] of royal to

Russian advance ac¥oss Ed4stern Germany and Eisenhower's | pocket he put the darned thing in. Everything else [devil ever stepped on the battlefield fountains and statuary, window Ss The fight between the veterans | 'P¢, OUBtY generally. Meet the in drive from the wést can not be covered up. There are too will be automatic : = aa than Gen. George A. Custer. The and even the court house doorway land war workers would be used hy It reminds the stranger who comes in to look There ar Spr a \ Hold your hats, kids, that’s the millenium dead. worthy senator also brought up the Well, that is just too much. | management to destroy the labor at it of a man with a complicated problem who assistant n: many millions of .Germans within sound of the guns, and [.ahead. Or is it just a rosy mirage from another name. of Gen. Nathan B. Forrest, | Why all the outcry against com-| Inanseement Yoves none too | Walks about his robm, mumbling vindication of American too many other millions of refugees. Not a single large | post-war prospectus? another famous Civil war soldier.|mon sense? Would those who would |» mop management would pe | Nimself to himself as he goes back over his situation Norfolk. Va city of the Reich, or major transportation center or in- But Gen. Forrest fought on the| Spare every pigeon, even 3 half- well on its way toward new | step by step, and then strikes a self-righteous pose | of Chicago. dustrial ar : bombi wrong side, being a Confederate; |starved, be willing to share the stupidities. | before his mirror and says to himself defiantly: Bit all o usirial area, escapes bombing. WORLD AFFAIRS — and I rather think that Elliott expense of cleaning the BUNSAES/ If the Taft group defeats the 1 “By gosh, I'm right. They can’t shove me around.” orders of a

Cpl. Bernar lage.

‘How Lo

this | OF slg nai o dove- | Wallace group, then the best thing e that cou e spray C8” Ito do will be to think the problem

sionally with firemen's hose, in a } h see 8 ely — suitable’ place? through and see how absolutely [IN WASHINGTON

might not be very happy at particular comparison if he were to check on it.

The most significant part of this strange outpurst by Hitler—or whoever wrote it—is the hint that# German

Joint Policy

morale is breaking. Fear 18 a contagious thing, and nobody As for the Blaze, incident, why fair we can be in dividing the | knows this better than the Nazi masters of propaganda. does not F. D. R. nominate the dog Jhousents of aims S04 fows available jobs between those who | ~ When 3 When the leader is afraid, how can the peeple—even the | Al os for » major or eolonel? Jt seemsjare Saugnieres dally ‘or ‘Sod. VAY were selected to do the job at. home U d D / chould pay, By So WwW Pesp By William Philip Simms to have a priority over all service-|S0 much sentiment about Umiting ang those who were selected to | PS an : owns should pay, goosesteppers—stave off panic? hat must be the effect men. the size of the pigeon flock? OF pear the heavier burdens abroad. | samé thing on the faithful of this left-handed eonfession that so-called Fe ne Rees a glasings Cranes | . ¥ 4 d in’ Egypt?” i : r y Bah OT “ "ON ey eat a lot of insects, but surely]. 3 . < cowardice and sabotage are so widespread that German | - = MEXICO CITY, Feb, 27.—Alter “LET'S NOT LET xem oO er hurioc | CAUSE IS JUSY, By Peter Edson ry morale is now an “if” question: : 2 ig and : gral: Mie {SENTIMENT OVERBALANCE” | the winter time, too |THE NEED IS GREAT” ; Karnak's tal 5 Monroe doctrine, No rinciple | | ’ . : brs : : “If the front and the homeland are jointly determined of United States ie A y, {BY M0ared MeCoutel $500 Birchwond wie. 1 Olea jiness Is next to Godliness. ren Reng WASHINGTON, Feb, 27—Vice handsome b J . oh ‘nt "2 vv vay Jisitors in our city cannot be deep- | ' - ! ity of ~todestroy those who renounce the law of self-preservation, seems about to attract support of | A hen confined in a poultry yard,| = tmpressed ‘with our I — | This is an appeal to the women President Harry Truman, after 45.80 Cle E those who act like cowards or those who sabot the fight , other nations of this hemisphere. |scratching for her brood, or cackling yy o rr dv tolk Bb act d t of Ind I only a month on his new job, is lope . : E Whose . age ihe gh, First enunciated byPresident | merrily, after leaving her nest is an i W.can unudy ‘0'y Je exp w dianapolis on behalf of the discovering that it has a lot more soon, those ’ then they will save the nation . . . the only thing that 1 Monroe in the early, 1820s, the titative fowl. BUT WIth she por keep Hele Premises Beal 11 We hil 1000 wounded soldiers being* Ye- ups and downs to it than his old piste, my . 7h 4 < attractive fowl, s r- 7 “cit; 5” ep | ; ; ; ohame should not be able to bear would be the weakness of my pronouncement, warned Europel to sists in pecking the best tomatoes, downtown Indianapolis clean? P| timed lp sry genera] hospyials, nmr big ig Po : ber Dr. Br s Ww eOGEAFY ae | an? : ; ood fellow ut him in sever keep hands off any country In the | oy wine in your favorite flower) Come, let us all encourage those" this country, every day. ‘To . sp he yor Dr. Henry

embarrassing positions. cheesecake photograph, with Lai‘ren Bacall sitting on the top of an upright piano while he gazed into her eyes, brought him no lit-

nation.” |maintain their efficient care, which began on the battlefield, 8000 women are urgently needed to join the

Women's Army Corps as hospital

come back?’

Copyright, 194 and The (

Western Hemisphere; that any at- | hive Hei/ep: Etropean. nfl bed ant roosting on the front porch, t 0 e LUY a uI p she becomes a pest; and soon closes

ence to this part of the world would |. "2 cer served on a steaming the United States. Now Brazil pro- | Jl, , g

who are working to make our city clean and beautiful, and quit grip-| ing about limiting the size of our | flocks of pets. - Let's not let senti-

td * # » » ”

ON THE BASIS of these unwilling revelations, and

rocicted v ' be resisted b platter.

| the known chaotic conditions in the Reich, it is reasonable { pEsed that all the nations of this hemisphere unite in Just like ‘her. the downtown ment overbalance common sense technicians. " . | 10 FRO] to hope the enemy is cracking up. But reasonable conclu- | making the famousqdoctrine their joint responsibility. | _~_ : : ¢ | You know there is a ecritical Sle criicism for being yneignined. 4 gions are not always accurate regarding Germany, as the shortage of nurses. Each army nurse Then he went to an informal luncheon of Capitol DEGRE ’ = vr a Development of Utmost Importance Sid Gl B G Ib ith is taking care of almost twice as workers, which he used to attend more or less regular ae ances==py alpral : lly as a senator, saying what he pleases without any- Ten Ind

allies have discovered so often. The only safe assumption

many patients as she ordinarily

is that the German people will lang on until their armies | THE DEVELOPMENT, one of ine moss fatereaty should. Yet each soldier must be |"00Y Caring. Bub the frst of Wiese Sessions hie ab: feived bach : ing of ‘the conference, is of the utmost Importance to | p= iven th X ended as V. P. hecame a news event a a few o yesterday are completely defeated in ‘the field. . the American people. Until now we alone have hE ae fulless Sars ace by the stories rubbed the wrong way. Hereafter, the 79th comme : undertaken to guard the entire area from Alaska to help to relieve the pri i Sm vice president may not be so free and easy in his They are | C Horn. . Undes the Monroe formula if any for- doctors an ways. Thomas C KEEP THE BLOOD COMING SR ATEiCwOr attacked any other American republic, under the gure These Jace s .8 8 Jeanne Peet * | urs was the self-imposed job of going to the defense tors and nurses, perform highly im- NATIONAL SERVICE legislation, otherwise known strong, Mar LOOD plasma collected by the Red Cross is defeating |of the victim. : portant semi-professional duties, | 48 the work-or-else bill, has made some strange part Elizabeth : : : ho, : During the first hundred years of the doctrine, this They have one com im: _ ners in the lineup of supporters an opponents. as Becker, Car death wherever our men are fighting. Its value is was entirely understandable The United States was store the wounded dr Yo Tov tional Association of Manufacturers and nearly all Alfred Sper beyond price. the only American nation strong enough to impress reward is a smiling soldier who labor unions have been violently opposed. But Na- Everett Voy: low w ' g q : m i other major powers. Since the turn of the century, ; tional Steel Industry advisory committee, made up . Now whole blood, as well as plasma, ‘is being flown in Jor J walks again, a happy soldier once y y : , f Iw ES 4 : however, several American countries notably Argen- more becomes a useful citizen. It of people like Eugene Grace, and the heads of the FRIEND containers even as far as [wo Jima. On that bitter tina. Brazil, Chile and Peru developed tremendously is work that will be long Yemen extreme left wing unions like Harry Bridges, favor it. Cumberla nd our casualties are appalling, but our death rate ‘is | while others, including the smallest, have shown bered. It may be the beginning of . observe frie atively low. themselves eager to contribute. a new and successful career. Dog-Eat-Dog Note the Cumb Thus the Monroe doctrine is likely soon to hecome Previous medical experience is Officers fro

ys one surgeon on the scene: “I know five men

In fact,

not required. The army will provide

SEN. HARRY FLOOD BYRD of Virginia lives in

-

be honor g

. ; a ‘joint, rather than a unilateral, obligation Washington ab th k Shoreham hotel and there ves definitely were saved by whole blood and plasma. fo 8 gnsiderable degree, stich is Siren the ease, all the training needed. Women reine et creat Dane. After its evening re ; Sing e outhreak of t seco world war, ‘- iS rhe ' " ’ | places the blood fluid, but not the cells. aio it met at a a betwen the ages of 20 and bo, m walk with the senator, the dog goes into the hotel ithe folks at home to keep it coming.” Rio De Janeiro have pledged all present to co-operate beg Sisal), am Tin ars drug Store June Sounter, Whele a Sots Sevier Jee 4 > h ( or 18 j , . » [the big animal a couple of anemic, war-time weenies, note that last sentence. The Red Cross blood | in hemisphere defense. The declaration of Havana are eligible. Not only does thé army |¢,, ho the 3 up later pays. “It helps a little,” MEAT—R on the seventh floor of the Hard of Trade DL Daley a Sh av) of sapTesson anainm Hain you, we army will feed YoU, [yy guys, Ss Eoog \ f y "108 state w stit - . show you haw, iis A Eni feign ag Rg i os ae raring ui ry essence, this language is identical in purpose with I join the governor of our state CONGREESSMEN are being swamped by pleas gem through Ju » | parents of servicemen, asking that their soldier boys that of the Monroe doctrine, Hon. Ralph PF. Gates, and our ; come good H ¢ ’ who have been overseas for a couple of years or more * All for O d One for All mayor, Hon. Robert H. Tyndall, In |, oven leaves to come home. - There isn't anything through Jur ; Petri or Une an ne tor their scall for volunteers in the |p." noressmen can do about these requests as the pay two red es Caesar Petrillo { | * “THE BIG DIFFERENCE 1s that whereas in the Women’s Army Corps. The CAUSE |c5giers are chosen by their overseas commanders, each pound ’ G : : is. just the need is great s Worth Clark, addressing the senate, | first instance we: stood alone in the event of trouble, he. soldiers. have. dore their “« x a CANNED . , : : hereafter, if the present proposal is approved, hemis- share. ‘We must .now do Ours. ON HIS TRIP to Russia and China last year, X5 through Badias 11 Se. uf . | phere defense will be officially a matter of all for one : ! e Wallace thought he was so healthy that he .through Ma lo's) power, if allowed to remain |i... & ; : Henry Wal gh althy thi ETRE : ,, | and one for all. i DAILY THOUGHTS wouldn't have to wear an oxygen mask on hops over good . throug ateur talent all over the country.” | The preserit confiict, however, has shown how vital \ the higher mountains, as required by army air trans- ~ M2 are goo 3 Brown, two. and a half years is the need for continental” solidarity. Without fhe Ye have feared the sword: and |port command regulations. Twice the {hen-vice “through 82 he : RuPDoR of Latin America, the Unie States might I will bring a sword upon you, |president refused pilots’ orders to don his mask. The ] and are vali i WAL Fy { have been unable to wage successful war iff Europe |" saith the Lor d.—Ezekiel 11:8, third time the pilot; came back te. give his order he SUGAR king for it and it's time con- | and Asia at the same time. Similarly, but “for the : 2 : 2 Su 2 K “" lhad better luck. for the vice president all but, passed . good for. fi bi, 0. oo Tong 0 [United States the countries of Latin America even | 5 eer a TE 4. | THE divine power moves with out and was powerless to resist the pilot who slipped . mortow. 8 B ft © i | mow might hive been the economic if not the politi- | The mayor? Wonder ¥ he :isn't mare interested in strutting |difficulty, but at -the same time the mask in place and gave him a good whiff. After June 2. An ru : eal satellites of Germany and Japan, his stuff in 8 welcoms“home program than he is in mel’ ~~ lsurely—Euripides. that; Wallace wore the mask without protest wi valid May 1, § 4 SEL ta i i inde i Cl v Sa ’ . fii a Se 3 its ry y L ee ih

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