Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 March 1945 — Page 10

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The Indianapolis Times |’ PAGE 10 Monday, March 5, 1945 ;

ROY W. HOWARD WALTER: LECKRONE HENRY W. MANZ President Editor ; Business Manager

(A SCRIPPS-HOWARD NEWSPAPER) lp

Price in Marion County, 5 cents a copy; deliv ered by sartier, 20 cents a week.

Owned and publishéd Is /daily (except Sunday) by Indianapolis Times Publishing Co. 214 W. Mary«

Mail rates in Indiana, $5 a year; all other states, U. S. possessions, Canada and ‘Mexico, 87 cents a month.

«Pe . RILEY 8551

Give Light and the People Will Find Their Own Way '

Member of United Press, Scripps-Howard Newspa- | per Alliance, NEA Service, and Audit Bureau of

GIVE TO THE RED CROSS

ABS the war fund proceeds, many of us are likely to think of the Red Cross in terms of the doughnut girl at the front, the field director under fire, the blood donor here at home and that glamor girl of the world, the Red Cross nurse. And well we should. They are matchless. However, the Red Cross scope reached on and on. It has many other functions during the last 12 months—. | It enrolled nurse's aides and taught home nursing; ! recruited nurses for army and navy; provided 17,000 gray

REFLECTIONS —=

An Old Friend

By John W. Hillman

> NOW THAT steps have been “taken “to preserve the old Whitewater .Canal from: Metamora to Brookville as a monument of Ine diana transportation, = someone should start a. movement to re-.

was discontinued a week ago. We owe that to posterity. On the time-tables, that unique train was called “The Hoosier.” But to Indianapolis, it was simply = “the 5 o'clock Monon.” That was identification enough, for everyone here knew it and most had ridden on it to Chicago, not once but many times. And it was as much a part of Indiana as basketball, the statehouse, fried chicken or the Circle. : To understand Indiana, one should have made at least a few trips on this historic carrier. It had that family atmosphere which develops on an ocean cruise after the second day out. The faces.across the aisle were familiar, the names you heard mentionéd were those of your friends or friends of your friends. There was none of the don't-speak-to-any-strangers stiffness of an ordinary train—this was just part of Indiana which happened to be moving in the same direction at the same time.

Journey Through Familiar Scenes

ladies and set up day rooms in camps and hospitals; it gave | 150,000 movie shows in hospitals and made 775 miilon | surgical dressings plus 3,340,000 kit bags. It set up 727 clubs overseas and provided 194 clubmobiles and cinemobiles; 1t sent out 10,800,000 food packages for prisoners of war and an undisclosed number of communications for prisoners of war; it provided 12,700 | prisoner of war medical kits, 10,000 prisoner of war capture parcels, 125,000 prisoner. of war monthly bulletins, 7100 Red Cross field workers overseas and 10,000 field workers altogether. Sam ITS FIELD DIVISION aided 4,850,000 servicemen and families; the Junior Red Cross made 15 million articles for the. armed services; it set aside $104,000,000 for foreign war relief; it instituted arts and skills courses for injured servicemen. In nation-wide disaster relief it aided 68,000 persons at | a cost of $1,677,000; it issued 600,000 first aid certificates; it granted 400,000 certificates to women whom it taught to cook more efficiently. ~.There are a few facts. The army and navy depend on the Red Cross to accomplish a staggering war-time job. | This will take more money, It is our job to provide the funds. : ,

s yn » J

~

SECRETARY WALLACE

ENRY WALLACE, the new secretary of commerce, has a great opportunity to help this country toward’ goals | that almost every American longs to achieve. F ew, even | of those who thought Mr. Wallace's appointment unwise and unfortunate, question his sincerity or the desirability of his stated objectives. If we understand them correctly: He wants full use of America’s productive capacity to ~ provide better living and greater security for all. So do we. He believes that some 57. million people must have useful, | well- paid jobs after the war. So do we. He wants to! preserve free private enterprise. So do we. He wants _ business, industry and agriculture to prosper. So do we. | " He wants a fair and favorable chance for small business.

So do we. He opposes business monopolies and trade- | restricting practices. So do we. He favors a vast expansion of foreign trade. - So do we. i

as x »

BUT, AS we undarstand him, Mr. Wallace believes that | the free private enterprise: system cannot attain these objectives unless to a large extent its operation is planned | and managed by government. And in that, we think, he is di ta wrong.

rough. many great and. essential, functions

Sm

2.

prevent it from operating improperly. When to any extent government exceeds these functions—when it begins to boss rather than to serve and police—private enterprise begins to lose freedom. And it’s not just business whose freedom is threatened. It is workers and farmers, too. It is everybody. Thé whole big issue, we think,- boils ‘down to this: If government becomes the control planner of our economy, it, will and must compel the people to conform to the plan.

» » Ld

WE BELIEVE Mr. Wallace, with the best of intentions and convinced that he “was trying to save free private enterprise, would start this country down that road, if he could. We believe that this country does not ‘want to travel that road—that most people hope, instead, to retrace the steps necessarily taken on it in wartime. We believe that the free private enterprise system, effectiv ely helped and policed by government, can do more to promote the

= welfare of all Americans than government planning and

management could ever do. We opposed Mr. Wallace's nomination until the huge lending powers of the Reconstruction Finance Corp. were divorced from the commerce department, for those powers would have enabled him to go far along the road he wants to travel, without check by congress. But, as an earnest advocate of desirable goals, he can serve his country well. And if he will make clear that he intends governmental decisions, as to methods of reaching the goal, to be made

only by the people through congress, he may gain the confidence and ¢o-operation of the business community and the country,

‘OVERSEAS E EASTER MAIL

ASTER mail for oversths delivery should be sent at once. Overseas postal sérvices are handling 45 million pieces of mail a week. Much of it goes astray, the army reports, | because it is incorrectly addressed. Edch piece should carry | the soldier's full name, rank, serial number, or ganization | and unit, army postoftice number. It should be sent in care | of the postmaster at the port of embarkation. And Jor Easter, better hurry!

© SEEING RED

B that telltale smudges on shirts and collars are | LB potent. cause of. divorce, a Tennessee state legislator. outlaw lipstick by making its usd idlshaiie by heavy and imprisonment. isn't likely that such a law oi domitich good, We that a lot 9% Saspielopis wives would hii Be able to

| journey with good companions. { out of the train shed,

Boulevard station on 38th st. the train paused while | men with brief cases or fishing tackle, kissed their |

| Frankfort, | Pleasant ‘Ridge, Fair Oaks. and Rpse Lawn.

| Council Fires of Long Ago

| knew this land, and loved it.

| mark in the

| dence,

5 Ypres Tor PE re RT amare AROS AR SE I, EE ET

{ tradition in Indiana.

at ees ag to

scenes, this trip across the twilight, a' pleasant As the coaches slid the: afternoon sun slanted

through the windows at the end of a day. At the

wives and climbed aboard. And then the train rolled northward through the real Indiana,

wheat in the shock, of chalky sycamores and lonely

oaks and spreading beeches, of fat -cattle standing | at

the barnyard gate, of neat farms and village. homes built companionably close to the tracks. Your newspaper lay across your knees unread as the flatlands of Central Indiana slid past, .the little market towns and county seats with intriguing names and tall grain elevators. field, ‘Quaker way stations on the ghost railroad that led to freedom in the days of slavery. Kirklin, Rossville, -Owasco, Ockley, Rensselaer Town Delphi and

names can tell a lot about a state.

Monticello, the first gateways- to the resorts that |

extend northward to Cedar. lake at the dooryard

[of Chicago.

THE CAR WHEELS drummed oitt Gershwin harmonics, as the sun sank in the ‘west, turning the clouds to gold and staining the sky with crimson.

| And then as the darkness deepened, the distant wood-

lots seemed to close in, reminding you that this was once a place. where a squirrel could run across the

treetops from the Great Lakes to the Ohio.

Those far-off lights near the vague horizon might have been the council fires of those who long ago Black Hawk came this way. Tecumseh and the Prophet. They moved on but left behihd a name for the white man to use— Monon, the swift-running. As the lamps were lit, you moved to the dining car. And here again you were finding Indiana at its. best, with good food, the kind that George Ade and John McCutcheon and the giants of their generation—for they, too, rode this line—relished and remembered. You ate as one Should eat, slowly | and well arid among friends.

| ltself'a Landmark in the State

AND THEN you returned to the coach, or to the | parlor car which in itself had grown to be a land- |

life of our state. You smiled as the | men in ‘the forward chairs chaffed the veteran | porter about “his company.” For, by some coinci» he bore the same name as the president of | the Pullman company, David A Crawford. Perhaps {that was the reason for the proprietory. air with | which he stepped; soft-footed, a. gracious host among !

the big green chairs. turned congenially together |

into little groups. *. Finally you paused at Hammond. and left Indiana behind, physically but not in spirit, as the. lights of Chieago grew into long strings and clusters. The schedule said that vou were due at 9:15, but that was more of a prediction than a promise—with no_ wance for. hot-hoxes or the vagaries of one

seemed care. Time mattered little when you a the Monon. The journey ended, appropriately. at ‘the Dearborn station with its turn-of-the-century appointments and worn sills.” Like the _5 o'clock, it, too, seemed conscious of the past, lost in the shabby dignity of history. This was Chicago, but not the sophisticated city of Michigan blvd. and the Outer Drive; here it was older and mellower and less hurried, a Chicago

“that is closer to Indiana in ngore.than miles;

was the 5 o'clock Monon. It was it was an institution and a And its passing is like the

‘This, then, more than* a train;

loss of a living thing. An oid friend has gone to the Valhalla of steel and steam.

WORLD AFFAIRS—

World Pattern

By William Philip Simms

(Continued From Page One)

of Chapultepec, that will no longer be the case. The Monroe Doctrine, by unanimous consent, has been made the joint responsibility of all the Americas. . The regional pact of the western hemisphere, the senator ob- " served, will of course be integrated and co-ordinated with the larger world organization. Nevertheless, “it constitutes a pattern for democratic action which the San Francisco conference would do well not to ignore, The one fly in the ointnient is Argentina. Every republic ‘represented here—and they Tare all here except Argentina—would give a good deal to see her back in the fold.

All dgree that the act 6f Chapultepec can work’|

as it is planned to work only- if she comes in. It will be like the old league of nations without the | United States,

The Way Back Outlined AND ALL AGREE that the economic charter will

be serigusly weakened if she stays out; 50 per cent of |

South - America’s total foreign trade .originates ih Argentina.

.-Something may still be done abot Argenfina | before the parley adjourns. - Yet, with few exceptions, |

the delegates here all say it is up to Argentina herself, The way back has been clearly charted for her. | She has only to subscribe to the sister republics have laid down for themselves. Unanimously, these 20 republics havé pledged themsélves to keep war-breeding axis ideologies and _Agen#s out of this hemisphere. They propose’ 10 ¢elean house of such as are already here. That ‘done, they plan, by joint action, to’ prevent Lor sto from . within * or ‘without. this 4; Collaborate Si vi politically,

store the 5 o'clock Monon which

IT WAS a pleasant journey through familiar |

the Indiana of green cornfields and |

Carmel and West- |

ee LOUDLLY.

rilés which her 20 |

The Hoosier Fos he Hoosier Foru 1 wholly disagree with what you say, but will defend to the death your tight to say it.—Voltaire.

“WHO REALLY WANTS | THIS PROGRAM?”

By F. H. B,, Indianapolis Referring to a letter written to Representative Heller, signed by “Seven Hoosier Marines.” I wonder if other persons, reading this article on. the war memorial, feel as I do on this subject. I've hesitated in writing on this before {in the: Forum. Now-—since the | fighting men have voiced their { opinion, I shall say my piece. 5, ‘as many others, pay these taxes {that are assessed on us, and I for! one am wholly out of step with this

big project” of building immense, }-

| cold, - meaningless buildings, which! [the average person never sees the {inside of. I've had people" tell me| | that they lived only two blocks from | the Memorial Plaza and have never | been inside the buildings, let alone {ever ascended all those tiny numerous steps. This, as many other memorials, {is not a memorial, it’s a show place, {of more or less value. A result of { useless speriding of - public money, | which eventully finds ‘its way into | the pockets of a large building and construction company, which has a { politician handy to swing the deal. v°1 say .yes—build average cost {buildings on this plaza to house-Le-gion and post-war employment offices for ex-gervicemen and other like government offices. And as for big auditoriums and marbled halls, | leave them ouit. We have -such -/ buildings scattered all over the Of whi =fise are they to SAE aha SE I TER A memorial to our dead, you say? No, the only memorial to our dead is carried in the hearts of the ones that have lost their own. Those I'buildings only remind them in later years of their terrible loss. If I had my way—for my money ~—(now hold your seats, for I have no children. of ‘my own—but I sug-| gest this): I'd turn this large memorial plaza, that is situated in the heart of our city, into a large, beautiful, $eenic’ playground for children of the city; a real live memorial to the ex-serviceman and his children. { Bquip this playground with shelter house, full play equipment and! supervision at all times. This would be a memorial to our men, a. monument to life, not a cold marble one, dedicated by a bunch of politicians for the benefit of their own ego. Now, if you've read this article by these seven marines, you will under-

(Times readers -are invited to express views these columns, religious controversies excluded. . Because of the volume received, let ters should be limited to 250 Letters must be signed. Opinions set forth here are those of the writers, and publication in no way implies agreement with those opinions by The Times. The Times assumes no responsibility for the return of manuscripts and cannot enter correspondence regarding them.)

their in

2 words,

{

stand how all our boys will feel:

about such legislation on memorials. |.

Who really wants this program put over? Ask these same legislators how far they will go toward voting this money for- bonuses to the exsoldiers instead of for. these huge buildings, which never will keep or feed them ‘in their days after .re-

{turning , from the fight to protect

I'll-grant you'll get a Why? Well, you

our ‘homes. cold reception. fizare it out. icemen come back, ov will see. that there are ex-servicemen in legislature, to vote these bonuses. Have you thought of that? . = = a

La?

“VETERANS SHOULD

5 BECONSELTED?

iL (TR Won Aha

But. when these: serv:-,

| find

that city. How about cities like Gary, Madison, Ft. Wayne, Evans-

{ville and many other cities of Indi-

ana who have sent their boys to War and many who will not return? My home is somewhere in the southern part of Indiana. -I have spent two years in the south seas. I have been discharged for injuries!

{which have rendered me unfit for

duty but I am still in one piece. I. could use a bonus to get started back in civilian life again. But I! am sincerely thinking about some! of my huddies who are not in one piece. Don't you believe that they | could really use that bit of money

| to get started in life again?

I suggest that the veterans of

{this war should be consulted about

this matter before it is passed in the state. After all, it is their. blood,’

‘sweat ard bodies that are really

paying. for this. & ” “THE UNIVERSE IS MADE THAT WAY”

By Industrial Chaplain, Indianapolis. Cynics ask why the C. I. O. fights for the Negro's American rights.

Cynics imply that the C. I. O, is-

motivated by gross selfishness and that white C. I. O. members are. just as prejudiced against colored workers as-are non-union workers. Active C1. O. members study discrimination and race prejudice and learn how foolish it is. the theory that the white man -is better than the colored man has no scientific foundation. Of jcourse, ‘this understanding does not’

ROROLE a Clegusg the subconscious mi ; Bi hs 4 28

=f wich: ge van

They |*

POLITICAL SCENE— :

End of Isolatiori By James Thrasher

WASHINGTON, March Si Cmdr. Harold Stassen recently said that, in his "opinion, this country has “definitely left dscla tion behind, and that applies to both parties.” The same evening that the former Minnesota gove-. ernor made that statement, Sena~ tor Burton K. Wheeler delivered a radio speech that may hive added some slight weight to Cmdr, Stassen's hopeful words. Mr. Wheeler tore the Yalta

A Rid

‘| conference apart. He has done much the same thing

with the administration’s whole foreign policy, right down the line. He didn't pull his punches. The . Democratic senator from Montana never does. Wheeler was one of the most powerful and voluble of prewar isolationists, it isn't Mr. Wheeler's fault. Yet.it. has seemed recently that when Mr. Wheeler has mounted the rostrum to discuss our foreign policy, that rostrum has been moved an inch or so fsom its previous moorings.

Kind Word for Atlantic Charter IT STILL DOESN'T stand very close to the posi-

tion of Cmdr, Stassen and millions of like-minded

Americans. But it can't be overlooked that in this

latest gpeech the senator did say a kind word for the

Atlantic Charter. 4 If Mr, Wheeler is moving his rostrum ever so

‘slightly away. from isolationism, he is undoubtedly

taking his audience with him. Mr. Wheeler has always commanded a considerable following. It is doubtful, however, that this following will go beyond him and demand a more international stand from him when the senate debate on international organi-* zation finally begins. We believe that Cmdr, Stassen’s estimate of public sentiment is about #0 per cent right. Whether that

-| sentiment. can translate itself into two-thirds plus

one of (lie senate when the time of treaty confirmation arrives is another matter, It would be a tragedy of incalculable effect if-it could not. We hope that the grain of concession in Mr, Wheeler's speech is a symptom of a move toward

"a truer reflection of public opinion in the senate.

IN WASHING TON-

"' Man of Steel

By Peter Edson

WASHINGTON, March 5.—Rivalry of Henry J. Kaiser and U. 8. Steel Corp. interests over the postwar ‘market for iron and steel production in the West offers a perfect case history on the subject of reconversion and disposal of war plants, at because it can be reduchkd to relative simplicity and understandable elements. Pirst is the big Geneva Steel works near Provo, Utah. It is a government-owned, defense plant corporation facility, operated by U. 8. Stee] Corp. It was built at a cost of 204 million dollars. It is probably the most modern steel plant in the

The bther element in the picture. is the Kaiser

i | company 's Fontana plant in the Los Angeles area.

| It is privatelv owned and privately operated, though

! it ‘wag built by Kaiser on money borrowed from the ' government's

reconstruction finance corporation. Total of the RFC loans for construction and operation is 115 million dollars. Kaiser has pald back in cash some five million dollars plus: two-#nd-a-half million - dollars the Kaiser company would like to pave ‘= as a post-war reserve for reconversion, which RFC “has not allowed.

€M Aang “Pladmed fa Repayment

cat 4

of some of his shipbuilding operations in the West to further retire this debt to the government. There

. is fiow pledged for this repayment some 80 million

dollars.

tA ery Smt Soa A Raritional.

Shipbuilding mav not continue long enough

To you folks who are thinking | save us ph exposing our ignor- | profits from ship repair operations will be credited

about your sons and daughters in| the service, I wish to put this ques-| tion before you. “Can the state of | Indiana afford to erect an expen-|

ance. Enlightened selfishness is “the name for the C. I. O. attitude to-| ward Negroes. The C. 1. O. realizes |

to the account so that it will he materially reduced, the exact amount depending on the length of the war, The Kaiser management estimates that on war

‘sive memorial to the soldiers and| that so long as there is one group! business alone, some 60 million dollars may be avail

sailors of this present war?” You of “unemployed,” management has| able to pay back RFC, so thtt at the end of the war

say, of course we can afford it. It is the least that we can do for our sons and daughters who are giving their all for us. Now let us look at it this way/ Just a few weeks ago, our Indiana!

an entering wedge by which em-| ployers can break the wage struc-| ture of all workers, The C. I. O. leadership has simply learned “that the solidarity of our thuman family ts a fact. The uni-

the government will have an interest in Fontana of something over 40 million dollars.

Both Fontana and Geneva have been antirely on war work, producing the ingots, plate, bars and billets .

i neadad far shire and mi'nitions. Both mills were built

government turned down a soldiers’ | verse is made that way. ‘Where for just this purpose. Before either can be of any

bonus bill for the reason that the! state could not afford it. cerely believe that the state of Indiana cannot afford not to pass the: bonus bill. Here is the reason. Thousands of dollars will be spent by the state of Indiana to erect the memorial. It will be erected in the]

T sin

suffers, we all suffer. really free as long as one man is a | slave. Poverty and intolerance are like any other contageous disease in that they endanger all. ” n -

“TAKE THE PROFITS OUT OF WAR”

No man is|

city of Indianapolis and will have |g, W. E. Leslie, Indianapolis

quite an effect on the beauty of

Side Glances==By Galbraith

W Ne : ) f Loom me 1 wou mr or. Ls

‘Mem. is proud of her hands, - “50 you say:

hang you ve Eo . hen

»

What bosutiiul, wit the pantry will be ours”

| | Israel. ~Judges 5:5.

It seems to me if there ever-was a time when people should express themselves who are opposed to military training, now is the time. The U. 8. has had no peace-time

| compulsory . military Uaining for

over 150 years. All the other nations who ‘have

had compulsory training are now

| reaping the harvest,°who have hot

| only bankrupted the entire world

{but have also sacrificed millions of

"| fine young men and the end is no|

where in sight. I think if the screen could only be lifted we would find the ones who are so much in favor of military, training are composed of two groups. The first group is composed of the old army generals and navy admirals who ridiculed Billy Mitchel to. his untimely death be: cause he could see what a vital part the airplane would play in the future war he had the vision to see coming. The second group is composed of the national manufacturers associa= tion, also the U. 8. chamber (and I might also add the Indianapolis chamber of commerce) who will get the huge war contracts on a 10 per cent plus contract. Take the profits out of innocent blood. and we will have’ no need of military “training.

DAILY THOUGHTS _ The mountains melted ‘from be-

‘| fore the Lord, even that - Sinai

from before the Lord God or

1

|p aa 1 es

1

ood 'for_nast-war nurposes. additional facilities will

have to, ‘be built to produce the sheets and shapes

| required by civilian ‘manufacturing industries in the

West. To make either mill suitable for peacetime

| production will require. additional investments esti-

mated at 40 million dollars:

West Wants a Steel Industry -

MAKING THESE additional” investments will be up to Kaiser in the case of Fontana, up to whoever acquires Geneva—unless the government decides it will have to make the further investments to save its present investments or to provide jobs for steelworkers now employed in the two plants. , + The West very definitely wants a steel industry of its own which will be independent of eastern dominance and will furthermore be able to sell steel

differential between eastern and western prices, due to freight costs from the eastern steel mills. { Before the war, the western steel industry had a capacity of 840.000 ingot tons a year, though the West bought 4,000,000 ingot tons. Today Geneva has a capacity of 1,200,000 ingot tons, Fontana 700,000 ‘and the six steel companies which did business in the West before the war huve expanded their production to 1,350,000 tons. The grand total of 3,250,000 ingot tons is nearly enough to meet all western market demands and the West could be made Independent with relatively small afdivional facilities at Fontana and Geneva,

Costs WilFHave to Be Written Down

TO THINK that eastern steel companies will let this expanding western market get away from them without a fight is, of course, silly, U. 8. Steel has shown some interest in acquiring Geneva for private operation after the war, and also Fontana. This latter move, however, is. generally the 28 8 guiture to annoy resid bo. 2 Dae saying he might be in-

terested in acquiring Genev Before either plant is posed of, the costs will have to be written down. so private operators on

thought in government being

world today. a beautiful engis«_ i neering job, the answer to a steelman’s dream. °

at from $6 to $12 a-ton less, that being the prewar.

~of competition, a -

. If any American does not know that Mr. ~~

It is worth looking

IN ADDITION. Kaiser has earmarked the cuttings

: Mother

~ MOND A | Funer . Cou

Rites will Lambert st. 1 Nellie-B. Law Services fc Saturday, will and at 9 a. m.

MRS. RITES

0 To Be Bu In

5 Services wil

” Wednesday a

Rebecca Jane 15 children w the * home .0 Bonnie Oltean Burial will be A former re Mrs. Johnson here six mor her daughter. © She is sury James; 10 da Mrs. Mabel Mrs. Mary Bt Johmson and of Fillmore; | Mrs. Lila Ke Va.; Mrs, EF Edna - Johns Yates, all of sons, William dianapolis; P! the army in I son, Amonat: Benjamin Jo!

GEORGE FR The Rev. conduct servi Funk, former 10 4. m. omc son Chapet o will be in FI Mr. Funk,

*the-Big Four

here, ‘died T hospital -in © . He is survi Mrs. Margery gnd Miss No apolis; two Funk of Che Pvt. -Victor F and one gral

JULIA FOLE Rites will a. m. Wedne neral home Shine, chief dianapolis Ur died yesterd: N. DeQuincy Requiem m a. m. at Li church and | Cross. A resident

«of her life, N

had been chi and was a | Flower chur and the Legi Surviving 8 and three bi and Leo Fol

MRS. CHRIS Services fo drews, who Bowe, 2415 N at:2 p. m. to

Funeral Hon

Memorial Pa years, Mrs, | had been em Lewis Meijer facturers. -S Calvary Bag United Garm

ica, Local No ALO

Mrs, Dorcas Stivers, 'both Mrs. Naomi Cal.; two Francisco, Cs: dianapolis; 1 great-grandc!

MRS. CLAR/

Mrs. Clara city’s most a ters, .died ye 85 N. Irvingt Mrs. ‘Landi knitted 101 scarfs for Bundles for Harbor, She First Reform and the Mon Surviving | tor, Indianap Lena Schmi Bertha McC Mrs. Millie brother, Adc Ill, and a g Landis, India Rites will Wednesday a ington chape Hill,

ROBERT F.

Memorial Leslie, husba He, 1019 Riv ducted at 2 River Avenu the Rev. G. I * "Mr. Leslie, in action: De Surviving

«three daught

2k

Karen ‘Leslie,

Merle Ar

NEW YOR Merle Elliot Scripps-How: yesterday at Tracy, who west Harbor shortly ‘after eration perf; eight months ly limited si He regaine was 40. Th

0 explanation’