Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 March 1945 — Page 10
ndianapolis Times
PAGE 10 _ Monday, March 19, 1945
| REFLECTIONS — on an
HENRY .W. MANZ Bifiness Manager
ROY W. HOWARD WALTER LECKRONE President Editor (A- SCRIPPS-HOWARD NEWSPAPER) —~
“Price in Marion County, 5 cents a copy. deliv ered by carrier, 20 cents a week.
Owned and- published daily (except Sunday) by Indianapolis Times Publishing Co, 214 W. Mdry158 R\ Postal, Bane 9, Mail rates in Indiana, Member of United Press, Scripps-Howard Newspaper Alliance, NEA Serve ice, and Audit Bureau of Circulations.
U. 8. possessions, Canada and Mexico, 87 cents a month.
ESP » RILEY 5551
THE TEST OF YALTA HEN President Roosevelt at Yalta agreed to the Russian division .of Poland and to the demand for veto power over any league action against an aggressor, he got in return certain so-called concessions. Stalin would allow
no tinkering with the settlements he had dictated in East- |
ern Europe. But he promised thereafter to respect democratic processes.
So the President wrote that part of the Yalta pact in |
which Stalin agreed that the Big: Three in the interim period would guard the rights of the liberated peoples through representative government and would later guarantee free elections. In’ the five weeks since Yalta that pledge has failed to operate, or has produced worse political
conditions, ¥ » ~
y » y IN YUGOSLAVIA, Bulgaria and Hungary, Soviet control is more absolute than ever. sian domination in Austria when Hitler is driven out of that country, Washington and London plan to resort to a three-way military occupation. But the chief Yalta failures to date have been-in Poland and Romania. . The Soviet-Lublin regime, which was to be supplanted by a representative provisional government acceptable to | a Big Three commission, still maintains its dictatorship | and terrorist activities. The Polish government-in-exile | is refused an invitation to the San Francisco conference, | though it was an original member of the united nations and is legally recognized by all of them except Russia. Unless Roosevelt and Churchill can soon get Russia's
acceptance of a new government as pledged, Poland will be And that is the nation which |
barred from the conference. first fought Hitler, which suffered the longest and worst
German occupation, and whose heroic forces are still fight- |
ing at sea, in the air, on the Rhine and in Italy. n »
» » o IN ROMANIA, Stalin has been making an governments. His first puppet, Gen. Radescu, was Kicked
” d unmaking
out # Russian Vice Foreign Commissar Vyshinsky, who |
had been a‘Yalta delegate. Though this was three weeks after Yalta, Russia did not obtain the consent of Britain and the United States. gave refuge of their embassy to Radescu, whose life was threatened. Stalin a week later set up a new puppet, Groza, head of the minority Communist-National front. Neither of the two largest parties are in this Soviet regime, and Britain and the United States had no voice. Now Washington and London are appealing to Moscow to respect the Yalta agreement before it -becomes just another “scrap.of paper.” Si We hope Stalin will move quickly to repair the damage done since Yalta. We believe that Russia has vastly more to gain in the long run by international co-operation and by respecting political rights of the Eastern European
peoples, than by defying his allies and subjugating his | . a . . | neighbors. Stalin's great liberating armies have made the | He must not now destroy | he “With political-weapons-the ‘glory won.by. Russian military | #8
world their everlasting debtors,
arms and blood.
WORK FOR THE BYRNES BOARD HE advisory board of the office of war mobilization and Teconversion meets today... . 2 That will be.a good.time for’the board to dec er to assume its statutory responsibility or lapse into an honorary society drawing honorariums. : : At its last meeting the board showed some spirit by calling upon OWMR Director Byrnes to submit the problems on which he wants the board's counsel, and. by asserting it would not be limited to subjects on which Mr. Byrnes asked advice. The law which created the board authorizes it to make any recommendation “it may deem necessary” as to legislation, policies or procedures. dealing with mobilization ‘and reconversion. But the board has not yet got down’ to specific’ work. If the hoard is to take tip where Mr. Byrnes’ former advisor, B. M. Baruch, left off, there are many things requiring its immediate attention and positive action. For instante, post-war tax policy. A lot of rosy promises are being made around Washington about 60,000,000 jobs after the war. But have unemployment rather than prosperity unless the administration and congress are ready, when peace comes, to make a quick change from war taxes to peace taxes which will permit the creation of jobs.
” ” » " n ~
THE BARUCH-HANCOCK report on post-war, under st ’
the subtitle “Loans not Enough,” said: Let us not provide credit to the returning soldier or smalt-businessman which will only chain him like a galley slave to a lcan he can never repay. We must also make. it possible for a man to repay what he borrows. At current _ tax rates, few -new enterprises or individuals could repav their borrowings out of earnings less taxes in anv reasonable period. of time. There will be general agreement {hat tax rates shouid be reduced after the war. However, until it is definitely known that post-war taxes are to be reduced, the launching of new enterprises and the expansion of existing ones will be deferred, recommend therefore: “That a post-war tax law be drafted now, during the war, and put on the shelf to £0 into effect at the end of the war.” Messrs. Baruch and Hancock said that in February, 1944—more than a year ago—hut nothing has been done to carry out the recommendation.- And that's just one ting on which the OWMR advisory board should start work, ! Lk
ACCENTUATE WHICH POSITIVE? HAVING listened to a variety of radio commentators. we still aren't sure whether : Nazi hopes hit the toboggan” ; On the Rhine bridge at Remagen or whether iv Hitler's boasts were put to shame again When we took the bridge at Remagen,
ee
$5 a year; all other states,‘
To prevent.similar Rus- |
| appeared.
The British over Russian protest |
cide whet]
we'll |
We |
| tries and so, from the German po
oy es 1 By Harry Hansen a ; Spay A MAGAZINE EDITOR, . who deals with’ plots and _ situations built around men and women so that there may be a story, said the: other-day: Tal “There seem to be plenty of stories, but there is no “literary art” . I said he surprised me. Our writers had put in 20 years Killing off art and artistry. In” some groups it was heresy .to mention art. Quite generally it was called
literary embroidery, | became tough-minded and hard-boiled. | “But there was such a thing once,” he continued. “It meant using literary tools to achieve beauty, rhythm, balanced sentences, effects. Maybe it cannot | be used-for stories of the streets and thé tenements, | but it exists somewhere. It's like music, which at , its best, is a conscious art.” | Imagination Has to Fill In | I REMEMBERED this when I | Godden’s novel, “Take. Three Tensés" which is described as “a fugue in time.” (Little, Brown, $2.) | Here the author had consciously tried to use literary art. She had been most conscientious in explaining it. A fugue is a musical composition of “two, three or four simultaneous melodies which are constantly on the move, each going its own independent way. For this reason the underlying harmony is often hard Often chords are incomplete; only two tones are sounded so that. one's imagination has to fill in the missing third tone.” It is well to remember that when you read “Take | Three Tenses,” which is unlike any recent novel. In place interwoven melodies there are interwoven | memories. An old man, nearly 80, sits in a large, old ouse in a London crescent, recalling the members of his vanished family in“youth and middle age.
; Of
Nobody had wanted it since we |
read Rumer |.
dE
He is Gen. Sir Roland Ironmonger Dane, and fill- |
ing in the blanks, you become aware that at different | times he has been called Rolls. Rollo and Roly. His | mother died when he was born, but he remembers what was told of her; his unmarried sister grew old | in the house with ‘him, after she had. managed it many years: an.orphaned girl, Lark Ingoldsby, whose parents were" killed in a railwoay accitient; lived there, disturbed their emotions, and one fine day.disAnd now, in the presence of war and bombs. over London, a young American WAC arrives —Grizel, his grand niece—coming with more assurance and less sentiment than Little Lord Fauntleroy.
House Embraces Family THIS ATTEMPT to do a fuque in prose is scarcely a story for these .who prefer the harsh realities of the commonplace as described in “Lower Than Angels,” or an action story as “Pury in the Earth.” No | “Take Three Tenses” is for those who believe a writer 1s Justified in consciously practicing a literary art. | The weaving back and forth of memories confusing { at first, gradually become a theme in prose. And. toward the middle of the book it develops its own spell. | For the writing is disciplined and graceful. It creates its own type of fragile beauty. It makes plain ‘how much the unified life of a family centers about’ a house, and how the house acquires special merit in the imagination of those who live in it. More than a convenient roof, it is a sanctuary. That-is* why the bombing of homes, whether in Britain, France, Russia or Germany, is a | major tragedy—it breaks down family life, makes { nomads of the young, destroys the mellowing influence of the elders, wipes out security and stability. | That is what’ will create great unrest in past-war years and make political excesses, Some, who want to tear up all roots everywhere, rejoice in that. Though that 1s not the author’s theme, that is what comes to mind as I read this story of the influence of-an old house. :
WORLD AFFAIRS—
Peace Feelers By William Philip Simms
|
WASHINGTON, Mafch “19.— Informed sources here say there is little reason to doubt that Ger-many-has. put out .peace Feelers., both to the Russians and AngloAmericans.. ‘Thesé feelers are part of the Nazi stock in trade. As early as January, 1944 the official Communist party paper, Pravda, published “rumors from Cairo” that ‘wo leading British i personalities ‘had discussed. a -sep-
“Minister Joachim
or Pertugal I'he Britis
t before 1
von Ribbentrop somewhere in Spain.
h
h foreign cffice promptly denied the tale, died, it Kicked up considerable irritation oscow and London, which is probably what the 5 intended in the first place, for the yarn was pinned on Franz von Papen, German ambassador to Turkey. He had tried to induce Ankara .to relay peace proposals to the allies and been turned down. Whereupon, it appears, Dr Goebbels, Hitler's minister of .propacanda, had planted the “rumor” in
bt in M Nazis 1all
Cairo where he knew it would thrive
Germans Never Seem to Learn ABOUT THAT time this writer learned from neu-
tral diplomats that Goebbels planned to inspire more
when he believes he might create
allies
such reports if an bad blood amoung t The anything Britain separate reason
any
if Gern never seem to forget or: to learn > Was never a, moment when Russia, or United States remotely considered peace talks with the Nazis. All the more herefore, that none of them would entertain uch ide: the eve of total victory. plain that if Hitler wants peace It on the Casablanca basis of un2ll fronts last war, the kaiser tried to and discourage the United war at one stroke by making | According to-Field Marshal | the kaiser actually believed it would | 0 that the German general staff was in
pla
e
tl
+
nder on
dle of the ean allie: ering the
{ near oy eace orier
onic alliance The T }J1R8
had failed ple Entente had likewise The war had reached -a stalemate. dismal and the Kaiser moment for a peace drive ”
10 get
a deci been
on
lnoKed very 80
> psychological
ived
Allies Invited to Discuss Peace : IN "DECEMBER, 1916; Germany, Austria-Hungary Bulgaria fnd Turkey simultaneously submitted almost identical to the Vatican, the United States, Switzerland ' and © other neutrals proposing | negotiations forthwith.” No concrete terms | were offered but the allies were invited to discuss “an Appropriate basis for a lasting peace.” On Dec. 30 the allies re- |
1 notes Spain
“peace
le And there was a nibble, plied. jointly saying “No peace is possible so long as the Hive not secured reparations for violated | and” Iiberties,” recognition of the prineiple of | nationality and of the free existence of small states,” | and so on. Although the scheme fell through, it gave | rise to a certain amount.of defeatism in allied counint of view, was
alles
™
ht rgal
‘congidered worthwhile. . : : In July, 1017, the month in which the military | power of Czarist Russia received its death blow. the German reichstag passed 4 "peéce ‘resolution’ and again, in the summer of 1918, there were more | | peace feelers. ~ At a &acret conference at the | l.kalser's headquarters at Spa, Aug. 14, it was agreed | that Germany could no. longet hope to win the war, | Therefore she must initiate peace negotiations. between that date and Nov. 11, the air was fiféd. with peace feelers gvhetéby the ‘enemy still hoped to hoodwink the victors, That, is‘ what they may be trying to do now, ‘ :
lafford a memorial,
arate "pface with German Foreign ..
kd But |
|
.
» Hoosier “HE HAS ANOTHER THINK COMING”
By Pfc. Bernard E., Broviak, Army of the U. 8. |
This is another thoughts about that proposed World War II memorial. ; It isn't any good from our point of view. You can't spend it, or eat
it.« All it would be good for is dec- | It wouldn't decorate any city or town in the state other than| me- |
oration.
Indianapolis. morial and
We have is enough.
one
it Hardly
anyone goes in it, and it would be If we|
the same with a new one. are going to waste a lot of money, why not waste it to a good purpose? Give it to the servicemen of Indiana. If you could take a poll of the men, I believe you would find that 90 per cent .of them would rather have a cash bonus. Most of
{us will have fo buy new clothes. In
addition, I for one will*have to.start from scratch In furnishing a. home.
Our two or three hundred dollar dis- |
charge pay won't go very far at that rate. Mr. Gates says the statg can't gfford a servicemen's bonus: but he turns right around and says .it can That is a lot of baloney. If he thinks a pile of stone will Be more appreciafed than a bonus, he:has another thin¥ ing. So, come on fellows, speak up. a n ” ass “PEOPLE-OF INDIANA HAVE LET US DOWN" By R. FE. G., ABderson In reply to the bit of sour grapes that was sent in by John W. Roberts, 3137 Park ave. I, asa member of the American Legion, weuld like fo have a list of the schemes that the Legion have concbeted to-vain the U. 'S. Treasury. “Now I kisow that through the American Legion many servicemen, who have been discharged, and their families have received . benefits from our government. That brings up this question —Just what is wrong with that? 1 receive a pension from this war and I also have a civil service pesition. My advice to Mr. Roberts is to don a uniform and do something and then come back and he, too, will be one of the eligible persons to raid the U. 8. Treasury, . I sincerely believe that the American Legion will be one of the outstanding groups of public influence after this war. In a lot of cases
{what the Legion says, so says the
general public. We fellows will re-| member some of the deals that we have received from® our so-called leaders of today. We appreciate the
“I wholly disagree with what you say, but will defend to the death your right to say it.”
Forum
By Thomas L.)Stokes wT
serviceman's!
(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. .Letters must be signed. Opinions set fdrth 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.)
G. I. Bill of Rights; we don't approve of the state of Indiana turning down two soldiers’ bills in the period of a month. Looks to me like the people of Indiana would wake up some day, if not for their own good, then for their sons and { daughters.
Our govergment of the state of Indiana refuses to pass a soldiers’ preference bill to assure a G. I. a Job after the war. Then they turn *right” around and say they don't have enough money for a bonus byt they can build a memoriil for thousands of dollars and raise the pay of our state officials. They can even afford to give ex officials’ .wives
|would not only benefit our service-
| men but the city as well. Many peitizens have felt for a long time
Tthat "Indianapolis needed such a
[center to take care of its numerous {cultural and other activities, so that it could take its place with other cities having such centers being |operated economically and proving |of great benefit and pleasure to the (citizenry. Mothers of school children view {such a center as an opportunity for inspiring demonstrations of music |and pageantry by- all of our school
[children together. Music festivals
{could be produced on a grand scale, |
bringing fame and credit to our! | Indianapolis.
| Since money is to be spent on
projects for soldier jobs, we would |
like to have some of it allocated to this one.
REPORT FROM EUROPE—
Fact of History
PARIS, Mirch 19+SNew. wars and old wars inteimingle in this country. They have fought back and forth across France for centurfes. That is a simple fact “of history. “°° . There's another simple fact, too, but it strikes you suddenly, with the -compelling force of the present one, as I did at ‘Reims. The trenches of that other war curl and twist down below for miles and miles as you fly over that country. The compelling fact is that the United States now has an old war here. That ought to have real meaning for-the future, It should end our isola= tion as a national credo forever. For there is an old war, and we couldn't keep out of this second one. We probably will never be able to keep out of another one, the modern world being what it is and our interests being what they are, unless we do something positive about it. In that last respect we can find some hope. I re member the explanation for this isolationism given by former Senator Bennett Clark of Missouri, He told how after the last war, he went to Paris on leave and went out to see Versailles. He told how, ‘after he walked about the palace ooking at the pietures, seeing one triumphant warrior entering Cha= teau Thierry back: in the 13th century, and another victorious chieftain entering Chamont in another century: and so on and on, all being at places where he has fought,
‘Never Again' Was Natural Then “I LOOKED around there and I said to myself, ‘Bennett, they've been fighting over those same places for centuries. What business has a boy from Missourk, got away over here? I'm going back where I belong.’ ™ “Never again” was natural then. It was the first experience and comparatively short one, and much easier for us. : The United States became involved in another war. The American army this time had no foothold on the European continent. But it made one-—on the .beaches of Normandy I looked down the other day on those beaches where young Americans had plunged from the sea on to the continent, An officer who had been there in those desperate days told me about it all as we looked ‘down from the plane, flying very low. No old trenches were here as. we followed the trail back to Paris: But/there were mementoes of this war, still fresh—bombed rows of houses and buildings about Caen where the British had such a fight of it; the tracks where the tanks had joined in the combat of modern behomoths, twisting and turned, so vou could visualize it, the shell holes, round scars of bombs dropped from the -sky, gun emplacements, square little wounds in the earth, still resisting the cool comfort of the grass.
These Boys Have Known the World
IT IS peaceful country now. Cows and sheep stood patiently in the fields. People moved about their ordinary aflairs. The American boys came this time with machines of terror spewed from American factories. They came in far greater number. They marched across this land as conquerors,’ and are still marching to the north, but at a terrible cost, to themselves and the enemy. They want to go back home when the job is done.
A
| |
We trust that the plan- |
ning committee will place this proj- |
ect among the “musts. " : 8 2 2 “WE CAN'T SURVIVE WITHOUT “THEM”
By Edward A Stinson, Frankfort
“What is America's greatest weak- |
ness? Can you and I agree? us try. help. ; | As T see it, our greatest weakness
is lack of unity." A general state of
Let |
An honest attempt may |N WASHINGTON—
$62.50 a week pension. Now by some mental confusion, doubt, fear, su-| LWay, some.one marries an afficia]/Perstition and hates; not only among
\and ‘gets’ this money. We veterans Ourselves, but we extend all” these] ugly feelings to’ minority groups; to.
{get $23 a month. . Sometimes I wish
|T were a girl-and had some state! loreigners, to péople of many other|
|official for a husband. Séems to me and a lot of these returned fellows that it is time to do something about this.. The people of Indiana have let us down and now. we are going 10 call-sn.the American Legion, I might add that the Legion is “made up of guys like me-who have given their bodies and blood for our country. I think that we have the right to have things right for a change. n ” ” “PLACE THIS PROJECT AMONG THE -MUSTS”
By Mrs. Porter Pate, president: Mrs. William G Cross, vice president, ParentTeachers’ Association of Schoel No. 3
The Parent - Teacher association of school No. 3 unanimously indorses the movement ¥or -a civic.and music center with auditoriums. as a part of the citizens’ post-war planning committee's program “designed to-create jobs for returning servicemen, We commend the Indianapolis district of the Indiana Federation of Music Clubs for starting such a movement for a building which
Side Glances=By G
albraith
{ {
]
%
-
COPR. 194% BY NEA SERVICE. INC. TY M. REG U. 8 PAT OFF,
"Everything has gone wrong this and the maid quit—I1'll sim house tomorrow and
week! We're: out of red stamps ply have to get out of this
|and forces that make history' and
{countries are woven {home policy. | These same hates and fears color and determine our foreign policy|
Walter Lippman® aid “otters agree | that dur foreign policy is the ex-| |lension ‘of our domestic policy. Every day we are told about -the great productive power of the U.| S. A. We lead the world now along |this line. Yes, but, airplanes, sub-| | marines, great battle wagons, tanks | {and radio are not the best evidence of civilization, Did not Germany, Italy and Japan have an abundance {of these instruments, and we have| | discovered that these. nations have lost all traces of civilizatioh™ if they | {ever had any.
| There comes a time in the affairs|
These are the forces that! into our domestic or|
, With other nations. Charles A. Beard, |
| was 18 million.
It is hard to think they won't remember. Nations on this continent know how America, like a mighty tornado, can swéep her strength upon Europe The Japs also have learned on the other side of the world that she can reach to the uttermost ends of earth, even when her young men must be landed on bare beaches in the face of galling fire. These boys have known the world and have learned how small it is. Even though they like their own part of the world best, they know they can cross an ocean now in a matter of hours. They know others can do it. Their sons: should pot have to come back right across their ‘paths, as-id -the sons of the father wio lived in trenches like those about Reims. If they do, there's no hope for us.
x
Still Critical
By Peter Edson
WASHINGTON, March 19. Revival of rubber and tire cone servation programs now seems “inevitable. No official would today. be willl to stick his neck out to say there should be further . gasoline rationing. just to save ‘rubber, but the tire situation-is pow $0 bad that such a proposal could be justified. 3 Every estimate on: rubber demand made in the Baruch report and in military requirements has been exceeded. The” stockpile of raw rubber is now well below the 160,000 tons minimum reserve set in the Baruch report, and immediate possibilities for building it up are nil Further, more than 300,000 tons of rubber disappeared last year through having been worn out:
Tire Quota Far Below Normal MANUFACTURE OF passenger car tires last year It should have been 30 million. Manufacture of big tires is today the most une
a
|of nations when. they find them-| finished business of the whole war production pro=-
|selves standing at a cross-roads, where a choice must be made be- | tween either of two ways. America | stood at this cross-road in 1920. We | made the wrong turn then a)
[chose isolationism because it looked {like the easiest wa
y out of the] world's troubles, but it led us| straight into the second .world war
| which cost us a tremendous sum of
money and the loss of a million or
two American lives. Now if we are!
|to avoid repeating the tragedy of |
1920 we must take an inventory of |
| our ideas, and seek to weed out! | those fears,
hates and confusion. How can we accomplish this mental house cleaning? I would suggest that vou read a remarkable book, just off the press, | written by one of America's out- | standing statesman, Sumner Welles. | This book, “Guide to Peace,” deals exclusively with the social, political, cultural and economic standards and history of 80 countries, covering the period between 1914 and 1044. It is written in plain simple language that any mind can comprehend. It deals with the subtle facts
wars: It is not the kind of history that combines bunk with dates and personalities. If you will read in this book about- Finland, Poland, Russia, China, Germany, Italy and the Balkan countries, tien I believe you will be able to comprehend our post-war problems and the peace to follow. Also “forget some of your ‘fears and hates, and see this as one small world and America just as one intregal part. These nations need us and we can't survive without them. :
"
~ DAILY THOUGHTS
And 1 was with you in weak-. ness, and in fear, and in much trembling. —Corinthians 2:3,
FAITH is a higher faculty
get a new hair-do!"
1 than reason.—Bailey, EEL 5
+»
| gram. The capacity to manufacture enough tires
just doesn't exist, though war production board and defense plant corporation are still authorizing tire factory additions and new facilities to bring produce tion nearer requirements. Lack of heavy duty’ tire manufacturing capacity is further augmented by shortages of carbon black, rayon and cotton cord for tires, and by capacity te make enough carbon black and cord. Apparently no one foresaw or planned adequately to meet this de~ mand. The one bright spot in the picture is that there is and will be enough synthetic rubber. This is pretty much in the nature of a lucky break, When the synthetic rubber production. program. was planned, the greatest possible foreseeable demand was for 672,000 tons a year. Actually, 763,000 tons were produced in 1944. Scheduled production for this. year is 930,000 tons and for 1946 is .1,100,000 tons. This production of nearly double the planned output is due soleiy to refinements in process and the ability of the plants to produce far beyond rated capacity,
Losses Have Been Heavy THE SHORTAGE of big tires, in spite -of an adequate supply of synthetic rubber, is due entirely’ to an inability to foresee how many heavy duty military= type tires would be needed. Losses of rubber-borne vehicles in peachhead operatioms, long truck supply lines in France, operation of trucks on 24-hour schedules, excessive destruction of “run-flat” tires which have to keep going even after the casings have been . punctured by bullets or flak fragments buried in mud, the greater need for motorized equipment In Pacific operations moving far faster than had been anticipated—all ‘these things for-which there was no previous '-experience on which to base estimates of requirements contributed to the ghortage. Tires have been produced in numbers far beyond any record set before the war. In 1939 approximately eight million heavyduty truck, bus and aviation tires were produced: in 1944, 16 million, But the scheduled demand for 1645 is 27 million and for 1946 may go as high as 32 million. The hope is that by 1946 a start may be made at catching up on back requirements for the civilian economy. : If at first glance It" Jooksy overexpanding the industry beyond any possible post war use, that isn't quite ‘the’ picture. ‘So jew is the. world's stock of tires that it may be three years’ after the end of the war before enough new tires can be built to equip all the old vehicles still running, all the new vehicles that will have to be made and restock the dealers’ empty shelves,
as through this were
NUME for the spri at the Hill clude Mr, a Fledderjoht The reser Gocding, K. | David F. Filz Also, Mes PF. M.-Morris,
gon Jr, Lione V. L. Campbe
Nursery A A LUNCH of the Junio Harold P. Re V. Burns, Fr meeting will » Saturday, the date for | will be at 10 & is the daught groom's paren Mrs. Jose the bridesmai Quinlan, Cpl the ushers wil
Alpha Chi’ A CARD | Alpha Chi Or chapter hous
E. Smith. Her assist William Rohr
Elaine Nichol president, Mr nominating ci thropic work F Officers w in the Propy discuss “Time » Members Mrs. Frank C
Harry v Will ¢ 11] At Ari “Design ar tion” will be Wood on Thu tic art exhibit auditorium, 1:45 p. m. Exhibit hos morrow and Mesdames MN Smith, John and William ( A.; Mesdames Leffel, Jame: Reuleaux anc school 43 P.-" Mrs. A. G. canteen; Mes Eugene Pratt Ralph: Simon, Henthorne'. ai school 20 P.- * Mesdames A Raymond Cla G. Frederick A.; Mrs. Sam Altes, school dames Rex and Earl Wi P-T. A. coun
...The display Saturday.
39 Girls |
In Nursi o Thirty-nine the March « university Sel
§ .
!. Cordetia Hoe
director, anno five per cent have enrolled nurse corps, 1 Indianapolis Barbara Bays Im Jo ,Gre Louise Matso; L. Wagaman, Elizabeth Yag
Informa
Red Cross staffing booth give informa Jobs. The b throughout tt
