Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 16 March 1945 — Page 18
£
The Indianapolis Times PAGE 18 Friday, March 16, 1945 _-
ROY W. HOWARD WALTER LECKRONE HENRY W. MANZ President Editor > Business Manager
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PRAISE FOR THE PRESIDENT RESIDENT ROOSEVELT deserves high praise for his A enlightened preparations for the united nations conference at San Francisco next month. In contrast to earlier allied meetings of limited representation and secret diplomacy, he promises to follow at the:Golden Gate the successful precedent of the recent Inter-American conference. At that Mexico City meeting there was and almpst completely open diplomacy. Press exclusion at Hot Springs, Quebec and Dumbarton Oaks—not to mention Tehran and Yalta—did not provide | secrecy; there were leaks, as there always are. The halftruths contained in those leaks were worse for the governments concerned than the whole truth would have’ been. | Attempted secrecy left a legacy of public suspicion and distrust, which still carries over to San Francisco. - But the open-session rule for the Golden Gate conference, if observed as faithfully as at Mexico City, may remove most | of the public fear of secret deals. = 5 » » ~ » THE PRESIDENT also has broadened the scope of public representation in the United States delegation. First he included bi-partisan congressional delegates from the senate and house committees, as well as other non-official Democrats and Republicans. Now he has gone a step farther, and is organizing an advisory commission of business, labor, farm and social service experts, similar to the | able and representative American advisers at Mexico City. | The advantages of this method are obvious. It assures more * American brains in international negotiations on | exceedingly complicated questions. It promises closer | co-ordination between the executive and congress, and | between both branches of government and non-official groups—such as -the Chamber of Commerce, labor unions, farm organizations and cuitural agencies. This should go | far in establishing essential public liaison, the lack of which was so costly to Woodrow Wilson in a similiar situation. » 2 s » » ® OF COURSE the best machinery for congressional and public participation in United States diplomacy will accom-, | plish nothing—or will backfire—unless the spirit is genuine- | ly co-operative. Hence the importance of the President’s | pledge to the Republican delegates that they will not be expected to rubber-stamp his policies: that they will be given full freedom to uphold the national interest as they see it. This in turn, puts a heavy responsibility on the minority to rise above partisanship and personalities in seeking a united policy acceptable to the largest number of Americans. We believe Republican leaders have demonstrated “this caliber of statesmanship in their past efforts for an effective international organization and in the current Vandenberg proposals. ;
“ang o®
BROAD RIPPLE : | THE question of the hour is “where can I get tickets to the state basketball finals?” Don’t ask us to answer that. We'll try, our hand at | “the $64 puzzlers on Dumbarton Oaks, the Yalta eompromise | and, if we're backed in a corner, we might even go-so far as to hazard a guess on when the war will end. But there | are limits to omniscience. : Nor will our crystal ball produce the name of the team | which will be the new state champion, come tomorrow | night. Our Mr. Stranahaii tried that (and, by “the way, what ever became. of Kokomo?) and. if he couldn't do it, we're sure we can't—even though the field has narrowed considerably in the meantime.
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ye
, ¥ ®- 8 : ” ” » SO WE WON'T predict. But we can hope—and if wishes were field goals, Broad Ripple would be “in.” That's not entirely because of local patriotism and the fact that we used to buy cigarets (when there were cigarets) out at the corner of 63d and College. We think the Rockets deserve to win. They've been playing that kind of basketball. Of course ‘they won't be the favorites when they square off against the defending champion, Bosse of Evans- | ville, tomorrow afternoon—but they've been under-dogs | before, and it hasn't seemed to bother them. » We've been impressed with those Rockets as they | came through. the sectionals, regionals and semifinals. They have poise and condition and they play precision basketball. They're at their best when the pressure is on, | as il will be at the Coliseum tomorrow afterncon. They're a clean, well-coached team, and they've come a long way on a hard road. We're proud of thos® boys from Broad Ripple. If they win tomorrow, they'll be the first Indianapolis team ever to take the-state championship. So the law of averages is for them. And so are we.
CURFEW COMMENT HE midnight curfew, according to New York newspapers, is breeding “clip jgints,” mganing dives in which liquor is not what it's labeled and’ life is not so precious as it should be. An oldtime speakeasy owner, surveying New York's post-midnight scene, says he wouldn't dream of resuming his former trade. y . “You used to-could call a cop when you had trouble | in a respectable speak,” he explains. ‘Now with jailthreats even for your customers, you wouldn't dare call a cop for anything short of murder.” r Submitted as a commentary on metropolitan life in the year 1945, and the contrariness of human nature in the face of laws that are good in purpose.
? . BETTER FORGET IT, CHESTER - 2 WITH the best of intentions to keep down living costs, OPA Administrator Chester Bowles now ‘advocates a price freeze ‘on movies, barber shops and beauty parlors. Granted that price increases™in’ those categories have increased out-of-pocket expenses for most of us, still there ‘are some things which even an all-considerate government | can't police—as the still flourishing black market in more essential fields testifies. Mr. Bowles would do well to remember that the once mighty, powerful and popular NRA le a cropper in public opinion in an affair with a New
a En
$5 a year; all other states,”
and ‘ Mexico, 87 cents a |
ogi « RILEY 8551 |
{ axis-satellite state
| Balkan
here and in London is that of Poland.
| self in a position of Gen.
'REFLECTIONS-— -- =~
Brace Yourselves: By John W. Hillman
THERE HAS BEEN a lot of talk—some of which made sense— about the problem of rehabilitating the returning veterans. And tere can be little doubt that men who have been in combat or who have spent two or’ three years in the army, where most of their decisions have been made. for them, may find that it is difficult to make the change-over to peace-
3 time life. 2 Last week, Jim Thrasher, the
| local boy who made good as one of our high-priced syndicated thinkers, advanced the idea one step farther. He suggested that there ought to be a post-war | rehabilitation program for bureaucrats to get them out of the habit of thinking in triplicate and implanting their policies with directives at the lower level. We'll put in on that, as we suspect that after the war ends, Homer Q. Zilch, the ordinary citizen, 1s not go= ing to let himself be pushed around—and-something ought to bé done to condition the bright boys in Washington to that shock.
wide representation | How About the Civilians?
WHICH STARTED us to thinking that perhaps we might as well go whole hog on this rehabilitation business, and take in the civilians too. We're all going to have some adjusting to do, and if anyone
wants to hire a psychiatrist to help us get our post war bearings we won't mind, providing he doesn't | get too nosy about our private sins. And if someone | decides to send us to a Palm Beach hotel, all expenses paid, for a couple of weeks while we get acclimated to peacetime living, we won't object a bit. Think what a shock it's going to be when you can | buy anything you want—and can pay for—just like | that, no questions asked and no insults given. For- | tunately that isn't likely go happen overnight, or our balatice, both mental and financial, couldn't stand it. For more and more, in these troubled times, we have been living in a world where you have to know somebody. This has become the day of special privilege. You can get cigarets if you know the girl at the cigar counter, or know someone who knows someone who does. And not cigarets alone—chewing gum, white shirts, Scotch, bacon, butter, chocolate bars, dry cleaning and laundry work all go to those who move in the right circles. Everything seems to go “through channels.” The password used to be, “I can-get it for you wholesale.” Now it's "I can get it for you" period.
3
EVERYTHING! (T's JUST OVER THIS
LRTLE HUMP! £
"RanbowiChasers. or ~~
Ri ERR
EE re os a
There'll Come a Day
THIS, NO DOUBT, is rooted in the instinct for self-preservation. You have to eat, to live, and living has become a complicated process of maintaining cordial relations with the butcher, the baker and the ration stamp taker. And it's a human trait, though | not a laudable one, to think that rules are fine for
| other people, present company always excepted.
The day is bound to come, however, when we'll be back to drab normalcy—when buying something will be merely a commercial transaction and not a quest, an act, of derring-do or a venture into the realm of high intrigue. Unless -we become accustomed to this condition gradually, it will be like being plunged into a vacuum in a mirage—if you get what we mean, There will be little to do, nothing to talk about, no stamps to tear out, no points to trade, no ration books to lose, no questionnaires, no priorities.
{ and our only problem will be how to get basketball
tickets. We'll have a lot of habits to break, too. The tipoff on this came the other day when that lady automatically got in a line, thinking it must lead to cigarets, hair-pins or Hershey bars, and suddenly discovered herself in the income tax office. There's np two ways about it. We're all going to be plunged into a strange and alien world one of these days, i & 8 = And, gosh, how we dread it!
WORLD" AFFAIRS—
Something Amiss By William Philip Simms
WASHINGTON, March 16. — Something apparently has gone amiss. with the Big Three machinery set up at Yalta ‘for dealing with liberated Europe. Unless speedily repaired, the trouble may interfere with the smooth working of the united nations conference at San Francisco. ‘ At. Yalta, the Big Three agree that their.- governments : would “jointly assist the people in any European liberated state or former . to form interim ‘governmental authorities broadly representative of all the democratic elements.” Up to the present no such “joint” assistance has taken place either in Romania, Bulgaria, Yugoslavia or Poland despite what appears to be a pressing need. Russia seems to be acting alone in these areas through communistic or left-wing factions instead of elements more “broadly representative.”
More Figurative Than Actual
FOR SOME TIME London and-—to a lesser extent—Washington have been watching the Polish and situations with increasing anxiety. - The watching, however, has been more figurative than actual, The reason is that Russia has been work-
! ing pretty much alone, behind the curtain of a news
and diplomatic blackout and the full story has yet to be revealed. In Romania the youthful King Michael would seem to. be still on the throne, but with no more authority than his royal cousin, King Peter of Yugoslavia. When Gen. Nicholae Radescu recently lost out as premier, Michael called on Prince Stirbey to take the job. But Stirbey hadn't a chance. Though
. a liberal, and an instigator of the overthrow of King
Carol, his friends seemed afraid to join him in the existing crisis, and he had so to report to the king. Meanwhile Soviet Commissar Vishinski arrived in Bucharest from Moscow, and Peter Groza, a leftwing leader of Communist leanings, took Radescu's post instead of Stirbey. Radescu began to look for a place to hide. Tt is said he first asked the American legation to take him in as a political refugee but was turned down lest Moscow take offense, In | any event, Foreign Minister Anthony Eden yesterday admitted to commons that the:British legation had given him sanctuary “because,” he said, “Britain had | no evidence that he was involved in anti-allied activities.” Russia, he added, had informed Britain that Radescu had to be ousted because he could not | maintain order behind the Red army.. |
Agreement Stipulated Joint Action
IT ISTPOINTED out here that the Big Three agreement stipulated joint action “where in their judgment conditions require,” What worries the | smaller membefs of the united nations, however, is where, if not in areas like Romania, is the§pact of Yalta to operate. | Somewhat similar situations are said to exist in | Bulgaria and, Yugoslavia. As far as known here, ne steps have yet been taken in either country to create a “broadly representative, interim regime, | But the case which is causing most anxiety both | The San | Francisco conference is .now less than six weeks distant, yet little, .if anything, has been done. to set up
a representative, democratic regime in Warsaw. It |
| looks, thereore, as if Poland-the first. of the .allies |
to fight Hitler—would not” even be present at the | conference. ann ! There has been some ‘talk of former Premier | Mikolaczyk, of the London Poles, accepting a leading role in the proposed government at Warsaw: But even if he does, the chances are that, though.g peas-
Th
| ant and extremely liberal, he would soon find him-
hard hitting men. have no place in our fair city for a Or have the law . makers forgotten the last war when men came back to stand on corners and beg for bread in the soup line although they still wore their uni1 for one advocate a huge fund to loan or give these men for homes, farms, “clothes, babies and what ever they need, Stone build-| ings and beautiful never yet fed men. hungry, cold and without jobs, they : 'acquire funny mental qirks that lead IN PEACE FOREVER to. revolutions. Granted, revolutions By Mary Studebaker, Indianapolis have never .solved anything, hungry stomgehs not their. heads Second, I have vet to see a public/times when some serious, | Politicians endeavors should occupy our citi- | munity forests meet these specifi-
war monument.
forms?
| taxes,
ness.
corps Chinese,
(a mother.
Hoosier Forum
“NO PLACE FOR A WAR MONUMENT” By Carroll Collins, The marines are clear thinking, I agree that we
men think
| building without graft have away of holding out hands to be” crossed with silver, as! fare with pigeons! the gypsies shy. Usually a good man| for the party in power gets the contract. Third, taxes are too high member from the: Bible days until {the present the tax collectors were |dianapolis pigeons? {hated and feared. - Taxes, unjust such as the Indiana state -gross—incame tax, are the:cause of nations falling into the ‘hands of radicals. - When a ,man is pressed beyond reason, he sees red. ness suffers through too much taxa-! I question tion, then the workers suffer. When the man on the pay roll can't buy,! we have panics, holdups, murders and- everything that goes with hunger, through that ‘nightmare after the last war. These fighting men will be coming back and let us have our house in order even if the women have to take over and stop all this foolish~ Remember men have given their-lives that these United States may be the land of the free. It is the home of the brave. softies, all of us, for a touch, but (would you have us different? these big husky Yanks in the signal | carrying a Italian, French or other foreign baby with the gentle care of Must these same men come home to unjust taxation and monuments to remind them every your minute of what they want most to| That is why we have legislators, to| forget—the greed, horror, suffering,|represent je hunger and sickness’ of mind and|and snow them under with your let“Boav of that old world.
pictures
Indianapolis
flowers have! When nien are
with
depressions and
“I wholly disagree with what you say, but will defend to the death your right to say it.”
|By Thomas L. Stokes
PARIS, March 16. — Before
at a
REPORT FROM EUROPE—
ERC
Conserving Tires
leaving the United States I saw at New Bedford,” Mass. the dilemma of War Manpower Commissioner ‘McNutt who ‘had tried in vain for two months to persuade some 300 skilled. textile workers to transfer from nine fine goods mills to two tire cord plants there. - The object was to speed up production to help meet the critical shortage of tires for military use. Mr, McNutt still has not solved
the problem. The first morning I was in Paris I saw two soldiers stop a truck and examine its tires, My American officer companion explained that they were inspecting the tires as part of a conservation campaign. The scope of this campaign, which began last November—and it has been tremendous-~tells more graphically than words the need for tires to roll up supplies for beating the Germans back to Berlin.
War has a greedy appetite for tires, for war moves
on wheels, and as Gen. Eisenhower said when opening the conservation campaign, “this is a war of supply quite as much as it is a war of tactics.” Everybody, including the humblest GI, has pitched into this campaign with a will. He has a job of fighting to do and it is getting down to the shart jabs
on the German front, but he is taking time to watch
his tires and do the little things to keep them in as good shape as possible. -
Posters Line the Roads
THE CAMPAIGN started with a message from Gen. Elsenhower who said: “I am not exaggerating when I say this war will be needlessly extended unless we extract every possible mile from our tires and use them only as we find necessary.” ; Orders went out to every sector. ‘Every means of information ‘was used. The need for conservation cried- out from the Stars and Stripes and Yank, the service newspapers, over radios, from moving picture screens, in huge posters which line the roads, ana in stickers on every vehicle. In the south of ¥rance, around Marseilles, posters were even ptt up in public toilets, and they are to be seen high tp on mountain trails on the southern front, showing the sense of humor of American soldiers. The Stars and Stripes was flooded with suggestions from soldiers, Two GIs—George Huff, of Broken Bow, Neb, and Lawrence Day, of Wichita, Kas.—took an electromagnet from a generator they found and made
| a road sweeper by attaching it to a weapons carrier.
“MEMORIALS THAT KEEP MEMORIES ALIVE”
By H. L. P. Greenwood When our youth, who left us as | boys and. girls and who will return to us as men and women, comes | home from the war, there will be] a celebration in the old home town. | There will be rejoicing over the {return of those who have come back and also poignant reminders of those who went but did not return. Within a year of victory day, | official memorial committees by the | scores and hundreds will be at {work on arrangements for erecting | memorials to commemorate the | sacrifices and the deeds of valor {of ‘the war heroes, Memorials of the past have been good, bad and | indifferent.
but! Indianapolis citizens have staged, It 18 in keeping with the spirit their a peculiar battle in recent months, |©°f the times that memorials sha}
considering the fact that these are |D€ not only lasting in character but genuine also youthful and attractive. Com-
(Times readers are invited to express their views in ‘these columns, religious controversies excluded. Becguse of the volume received, let. ters 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 agreement with those opinions by The Times. The Times assumes no responsibility for the return of manuscripts and cannot enter correspondence regarding them.)
“LET THEM ROOST
their zens—instead of this comical war- | cations; living memorials that keep
|alive the memories we want to How can such organizations as cherish. the Federated Patriotic Societies| L1ese are lasting in character and Daughters of the Union pub- | Yielding their products and services lish a petition to reqiiest that the|{Or-8enerations. Their strong appark superintendent destroy all In-|Peal to people of all ages and all | Classes keeps them always attractive At a time like this, such organi- | © the hearts of the people of the zations could much better shew community and makes it a certainty their patriotism in sponsoring con- that as memorials they will keep structive, wartime “endeavors. in- tthe. memory. of, the war heroes fresh | stead of this trivial, destructive ac- (I! the minds of the people. tivity. | Louis Bromfield, the noted writer, their statement that | Tecently expressed the-sentiment of |the majority-of the-peeplé when he memorials.” Have the pigeons, | Woe, “tome it seems that the new during the centuries, ruined the idea of a living memorial is. on€ that Acropolis, or St. Paul's, or any. of should ‘have the most serious con-| the- other ancient buildings which sideration from every community | were built te lusts «+ {large and small. , Most of the boys] | .1 fancy that mother nature an the pigeons. combined ‘have done nothing to harm stone buildings compared to the harm done by mankind with his bombs and guns. I move that we now drop this battle against the birds—and let them roost in peace forever more. ” .
Re-
Busi-
pigeons are destroying our “sacred
‘We. liwd
as all wars, love the out-of-doors. [They love trees, swimming and fish- | |ing. They loved cooking # good steak lover an open fire, they loved shooting ducks and pheasants and rab hits. Out of these things came the] {boys who made our best fliers, our | ; » {best sailors, our best fighters. I} “WRITE TO YOUR think any and all of them would | See LEGISLATORS” prefer to be remembered by a forest, | lBv a Reader. Indianapeli 1a game sanctuary or a lake, than by | polis {some useless ugly castiron statue]
Why don't you people who are or by piles of cannon balls hung] opposed to building this war me. (OF Ey chains " |
morial write to your legislators? It 5 should do some good—but you cer-| A community memorial forest nly wun? ge any pice wring SU UL Je ho se i h A = nuiments. in. the papers blooded Americans in large and small towns in-the U, 8. A. When it is purchased it* should be large enough to accommodate a goodly portion of the area sponsoring it.
justi
Yes,
small
the people. Get busy
{ters and see if it will do some good.
| It should havérat least one hundred
|
Side Glances =—By Galbraith : Liye be convenient.to the
a
iy
goPR 1948 SY MpdERvICE, ING T. M. AEG. U. 8. PAT OFF.
"You're the only- one of my" friends ~ commodating enough to join ma in ignoring the.
[cities and easy access to-the public. | It should have water, a stream or a lake. If a stream’ is available, a pool large enough for swimming lcould be, created. What could be nicer than the inclusion of a sylvan
theater where open air concerts could be held? The tree planting should and]
could be done by the people of the community, the more the better; ! Ithis should not just be sponsored by one organization but the entire combined group of civic and fraternal organizations should get behind it, for in so doing it becomes inspirational and a keener interest and personal pride becomes mapifest on the project. : ’ School children should be encour{aged to take part in the undertakling from the standpoint of education along conservational lines.
helped plant a school forest of which there are upward of a thousand today. What could be more appropri#t¢ than that ten thousand more *} | schools throughout, the land establish forests as memorials to the boys who offer to preserve. the démocratic ways of life, and that these
work of training mew generations |of school children -to the task of maintaining democracy?
DAILY THOUGHTS Xs ~ ‘He that keepeth his mouth keepeth his life; but he that open‘eth wide his lips shall have destryetion.—Proverbs 13:3. BE silent and safe—silence never betrays you.—dJohn. Boyle O'Reilly.
an
without a maid who is ac-
~
gk fo go to a movil”
“
4| who have lost their jives-in this war
Many a boy fighting overseas today |
memorial forests be dedicated to the *
It picked up bits of shrapnel and other metals debris. They reported picking up more than 100 pounds. In another case a battery reported it had reduced flats 50 per cent since enforcing a careful tire inspection system.
The Need Is Apparent A PRIZE CONTEST for a slogan brought bundles of entries. The winner was -8gt. Robert J, Porter, of the 19th corps headquarters, with “Nearing Victory, End the Fight, Conserve Tires, Day and Night.” This now shouts from posters everywhere. Some of these boys undoubtedly got headed for the advertising
business after the war through this campaign, The reason for saving tires has been proclaimed broadside, but-they are obvious to any soldier of the line who raced across France with Gen. Patton after the breakthrough, to any soidler. of supply who rushed trucks with supplies, day and night, to keep up with Patton,-to any soldiers who fought through to the German border and across, Supplies must be moved in a steady stream to keep the front slugging forward, to keep the fighters fed, clothed and armed. * The ppasons are: even obvious to a newcomer, stich as. my HM, who has watched trucks roll along the roads below, in an endless processiori while flying over the country from the Normandy peninsula to Reims.
IN WASHING TON— Hospital Inquiry
By Ned Brooks ni
WASHINGTON, March Congressional defenders of the veterans administration have moved to head off a full-dress inB vestigation of that agency by -..making less sweeping inquiries of their own. 4 . The house veterans committee yesterday summoned Brig, Gen. Frank T. Hines, veterans administrator, for closed session questioning on ‘charges of negligence
16.— |
in caring for patients in veterans’ §
Chairman Jehn Rankin (D, Miss.) mean-
hospitals. while disclosed plans for inspections of the 95 institutions during the proposed two-weeks Easter recess
of congress. He said the visits will be made by com-
mittee members and other congressmen whose homes
are in the vicinity of veterans’ facilities. The committee's actions were designed to avert an inquiry proposed by Rep, Philip J. Philbin (D, Mass.), who last week offered a resolution calling for creation of a special group to investigate hospitalization of
both veterans’ and present members of the armed §
services, the administration of loans, benefits and de~ pendency allotments and the education and rehabilitation programs. Some of these activities are administered outside of the veterahs administration,
‘Splendid Job,' Rep. Rankin Says REP. RANKIN said he saw “no need” for an independent inquiry in view of his committee's pro-
gram, adding that Gen. Hines “is doing a splendid job.
under difficult conditions.” z Rep. Philbin, however, sald the Rankin “doesn’t go far enough.” He made the same eriticism
inquiry |
of the investigation just started by Gen. Hines, who | authorized leaders of the American Legion, Disabled :
American Velerans and Veterans of Foreign Wars to i
go into living conditions and medical treatment in
the hospitals.
Yesterday Rep. Philbin repeated his §
demand for a special inquiry and charged that there
were “intolerable irregularities in army, navy and veterans’ hospitals. ; “What we need is an independent inquiry into all phases of véterans and servicemen's affairs,” the New Englander said. “It should be handled by a commit~ tee with subpena powers and should go into programs being administered by the war and navy departments as well as the veterans administration.” -
Early Hearing Is Promised .
THE HOUSE rules committee has promised Rep. |}
Philbin an early hearing on his resolution.
effectual and that bureaucratic red tape ir throttling the granting of relief, loans and educatiunal privileges.” a Ru Particularly’ he wants the proposed committee to inquire into charges that tubercular and psychiatric patients have been neglected, that hospitals are overcrowded and understaffed and that the building expansion program ‘is proceeding too sowly. "co "Allied with Rep Rankin in the move to head off a full-scale inquiry are Chairmen Andrew J. May (D.
Ky.J of the house: military affairs committee and Carl | Vinson (D. Ga.) of the house naval affairs commit- |
th of whom contend the veterans administra-
tee, ) isting operated satisfactorily under Gen. Hines.
tion
%
The May committee is currently conducting its own
inquiry info the operation of army hospitals.
He. sald his inquiry is intended to “determine || whether there is any basis for the general impression | that the veterans administration is meribund and in- |
»
a
FRIDAY
Park Boar Propos Awa
Like, a gre it will cost nm The park b ered favorabl Tyndall's ad mittee that t be increased. The afternc be 15 cents while it woul . at night. Park board - proval of the upon public |
Notes
‘The presen the assumpti will increase V. Brown, cit explained. swimming 1 higher. Frees time 1 be increasec move, Mr, B two hours fi pools will be four hours d Prom 10 a. will be free, 15-cent char; 6 p. m. until the charge w
PEDEST AND 5
Two pede old and the last night w biles. Noah D. New Jersey car driven member of t ages commi Central ave injured. Pive-year-1414 Richlar when he wa: by Albert Si at Richland A tractor Huber and Co., Inc, an yesterday in dian st. TI by George ° burst into utility pole. The feed Charles Wir was turning Wilbert PF. st. address, curred. .
INSURA OBSER
‘A luinche Columbia c¢ proximately Mutual Ber They will | Cass and a state agenc It will col ——persary of i . Company include Oli icent, and superintend . Infliana ir will speak.
iL eh » »
