Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 April 1945 — Page 18
Indianapolis- Times
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PAGE 18 ‘Friday, April 6, 1945 : ROY W. HOWARD WALTER LECKRONE HENRY W. MANZ President Editor . Business. Manager (A SCRIPPS-HOWARD NEWSPAPER)
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STILL. A MESS | WE can’t see that the President has helped a bad matter by dropping his demand for multiple United States votes in the proposed league assembly if Russia and Britain have them. It is still a mess anyway you look at it. Never was there less excuse for a disastrous dispute among allies than this threat to the San Francisco conference. The Big Three had agreed at Dumbarton Oaks on one assembly vote for each nation—one of their few ‘unchallenged decisions. This has become an issue because of Stalin’s grab for more power, Churchill's unwillingness {o sacrifice his extra India vote {o head off the Russian demand, and Roosevelt's faith in trick settlements.
"5551
RILEY
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the hocus-pocus explanations when the thing leaked out. The official Washington justification of the President's agreement to Stalin’s demand. for separate votes for White Russia and the Ukraine is their heroic war effort. But obviously similar SasHAcesion could be offered for other units of the U. S. » td ” TIE -:SEMI-OFFICIAL justification” offered in Wash= ington and Moscow is that each for the United States and Russia. old senate dispute which helped to keep the United States out of the League of Nations. It is a phony.. British dominions—Canada, Australia, New Zealand and South Africa— are actually independent of the United Kingdom, though they often try to agree on common policy as at the current Lohdon dominion conference. But Britain does not control India, which is presumably why Churchill with two votes had to accept Stalin’s demand for three . and Roosevelt's counter-demand for three. Of course, there was nothing wrong with the President’s desire for United States equality with Russia and Britain. His method was wrong. That involved, besides secrecy, the acceptance of an arbitrary figure of three without relation to reality in Russia or the United States and without exact ratio to Britain. It also involved a multiple voting principle traditionally unacceptable to the United States and most of the allies. » Ed » » » » THE PRESIDENT’S half-reversal in one way has compounded the blunder. By withdrawing the American coun-ter-claim accepted by Stalin and Churchill, while still sup- _» porting Russia’s claim; the President would leave the United States with one vote against Britain's two and Russia’s three. That is not acceptable to the United States Gelegation, or, to the small nations. 2 a “This problem ‘cannot be Sorved id ai formula or the lop-sided Roosevelt modification. One vote for each independent nation is the normal, practicable, and just voting system—as the Inter-American conference so recently agreed. ‘That is likely to be the decision of the united nations if they are allowed to hold a free conference | at San Francisco.
>
Price in Marion Coun-
i ettes—apparently there is a nice distinction between
#lence the secrecy of the deal in the first place, and | y Ito this? Of course it is common knowledge that the |
{ women have moved in on the barber shops,
S. R., or for Scotland or the state of Texas.-| of Chanel. No. 5 and bobby pins in their Wake-—ille
Britain has six votes to one This revives the | ; I { stockings and panties hanging in the bathroom and | | the lip-rouge on the towels, The four |
’
REFLECTIONS —_ :
Trails End
By John W. Hillman i.
THERE'S A HAUNTING pathos to that famous painting, “The End of the Trail.” A lonely Indian, hud8S dled in dejection ‘on his tired pony, ~~ is outlined against the darkening sky as Te gazes out across the land that are no longer ‘his. Every line of the man and animal is a weary expression of finality and futility. All hope is gone and the Indian is homeless in an alien, hostile world, crowded by the encroaching whites from his last. haven and hunting ‘ground, * Only a consummate artist could portray that feeling. But it is a feeling that must be shared today by millions of thinking men. For we, too have reached the end of the trail, brothers, and. there is no place left for us to pitch our wigwams in this settled land. Our council fires have burned to ashes and we are about to follow the bone-bleached trail of the bison, never to return. 3
Few: Realized That All Was Lost. IT 1S STRANGE how things creep up on you without your realizing it. Most men khew that the walls of the prison were closing in, -but few realized that all was lost until Jeff Davis, self-crowned. king | of the hoboes, came to town and announced that his |- chief problem was how to get 40,000 hoboettes, tramp- |
a hoboette and a lady tramp-—and bummettes to go |
| back to the kitchens and stay put after the wa: f
That came as a shock. Hoboettes—has it come
the | saloons, the bowling alleys, the city rooms, the army, the navy and eyen the marine corps. No Turkish bath or gentleman’s club, not even the Harvard club, is safe any more—the girls have rushed in where angels feared to tread. And they have left a trail
old places will never be the same again, But we men: had supposed that _the open road was still open and plainly marked “for men only.” We supposed that when we reached the limit of forbearance, when, goaded at last to desperation by the |
we flung ourselves out the door, never to return, there would be some place where we could go, some place where a man could be a man and swear mighty oaths and spit on the floor. We could, we always thought, tum to the care-free life of a tramp, bathing not, shaving not, working not, and belching when we felt like it. For a tramp’s world was a man's WOR Id so we thought.
We Shudder to Think
AND NOW that, too, is gone, And we shi dder to | think of what must be happening—Ilace curtains inj the boxcars, powder rooms in the “jungles” down | by the tracks. And instead of mulligan stew, served piping hot in an old tin can, and whisky that burns all the way down, a spring salad and tea with lemon. The railroad: bulls, we suppose, now knock before peering into a side-door Pullman. And tip their caps as they swing their truncheons. { *Hoboes are optimistic, happy-go-lucky souls and | they don't know women. That, we suppose, accounts | for Jeff's hope that he can persuade his 40,000 shevagrants to return to their kitchens after the war. Few others will agree—getting women back into a | kitchen is more than a king-sized job and Jeff had | better give it up. The hoboes might as well face | the facts. The women, like the automobile, are here to stay.
Yaitiafla f the: hobées, where the streams run “clear | ARS ASE. ate" birds and. bees. in, thei The Big Rock Candy mountain has
is trees. turned to maple fudge and those fabled ‘Streams -are | frothy with milk-shakes. And there are stockings and | brassieres hung out to dry on the cigaret (cork-tipped, of course) trees. |
| How Do the Hoboes Feel About 1+? THIS IS the end of the trail, indeed—there is |
THAT FEDERAL LOAN JOB ITH the confirmation of Fred M. Vinson as director of war mobilization and reconversion, -the office of | federal loan administrator is presumably vacant. We say “presumably” because there is still some. taik | « of Mr, Vinson’s holding both jobs. But that would require | permissive legislation; andave ck ok gm direm Ma Tn Prsacident would ask or tongress would enact such a law, or:that Mr. Vinson would be so foolish as to try to hold both jobs. Jesse Jones got away with being both loan administrator and secretary of commerce for awhile, but he was finally given the gate. Surely Mr. Vinson knows that the federal loan agency: larger than General Electric and Gen=1 eral Motors combined; isnot a business to be operated in| time that can be spared from directing war mobilization | and reconversion. » " » » ” » | WHERE CAN the President find a man whom congress will trust with the vast powers and multibillions of the | ‘RFC and its subsidiaries?” Congress had confidence in! Jesse Jones and in Fred Vinson, but there are not many
= is
men to whom it would willingly give over such powers of the- purse. . That is fortunate, we think. For now congress may
be forced to take a new look at all the authority it has | pyramided into the loan agency over: several vears. As Jesse Jones once summed up, the RFC can lend almost any | amount of money to anybody, for any purpose, of interest and for any length of time. And it can spend | money almost as freely—without check by congress—for | any purpose which the loan administrator and the President think would be helpful in the conduct of the war. Congress never should have ‘given such powers to Mr. | Jones. It should not give them to Mr. Vinson nor pass Them on to any other’man. It should whittle the office of federal | loan administrator down to a man's-size job, and keep the purse strings where the Constitution placed them—in Congress. :
at any rate |
LAY THAT PISTOL DOWN | OVERNMENT bureaus are firm believers in the tech- | nique of the iron hand, with or without the velvet glove. So we think the prize for the neatest hint of the week must go to the invitation sent out by the Grant county war price and ration board and quoted by Rep. Forest A. Harness in the Congressional Record. This letter begins: ; “You are a retail merchant under the néw OPA lation 580. Do you want to be in business: after. Ap “Then attend | a.com
railway station and saw him off to Tokyo. Embracing
{ Jem 11 { Japanese
| was predicted that “the European war may soon spill | | over intd the Pacific”;
| the hope that
| of the present war” and was permitted to remove
nothing beyond. And how do the hoboes feel about
10st? \ Jeff Davis answers that in a Hidsterpiece of under= | statement - “We don't like it necessarily,” he says. “«But,” he adds, “it's our duty to protect the boes and if women @re boes, they're gonna get protected.” We don't like it-either,.King Jeff. But about that | Rotation business—yoy, may REve mised RS | What we mean is, béfore we join up as oné-o | dusty knights of the now co-educational road, we'd | like to know— : Who gets protected from who?
be” WORLD AFFAIRS—
} Showdown :
By Wm. Philip Simms (Continued From-Page One)
just as—next to Pearl Harbor and the weeks following—it came at a | very low ebb for Great Britain and Arnerica. Marshal Stalin accompanied the Jap foreign minister, Yosuke Matsuoka, to the Moscow |
the marshal is said to have re‘You know, Mr. Minister, I too, y 4
Matsuoka warmly, marked with a smile: am an Oriental.” A glance through newspaper files of April 14, 1941, Poh eals that the pact fell on the world like a bomb- | It surprised foreign circles even in Tokyo. The premier, Prince Konoye; called it “epoch | making,” and the press harped on the theme that the | China situation could now be cleared up. Shanghai, saw things even more clearly, There it
that American, British, French | and Dutch interests in that area would soon be subjected to increased pressure.
Honeymoon Soon Tarnished BERLIN GLOATED. “News of the pact,” Nazi | spokesmen said, “will have a sobering effect on the | United States.” | In Washington it was realized that, with her fears | of attack in the north eliminated, Japan would be | able to proceed with her South Seas program with | greater confidence. { The Soviet-Japanese honeymoon, however, began to tarnish as far back as March of last year. wid The oil and fisheries agreement came up for.renegotiation, and before Moscow signed Japan E forced to give up her oil and coal concessions in northern Sakhalin as she had agreed to do as a by- product of the 1941 pact of non-aggression, Pravda bluntly charged het the three-year delay was due to Japan's
to postpone negotiation in t be defeated by Germany.
Then Came the poff EVEN 80, Japan drove a hard bargain. She obli- | id Russia to supply her with 50,000 metric tons of annually for five consecutive years “after cessation
(this nation to adhere
Hoosier
“NATION DOESN'T NEED LARGE LAND ARMY” By E. R. Egan, 701 Markwood ave.
This country, of all nations, does not need a large land army. We have a two-ocean navy and no mili-| tary nations as neighbors, indeed | no neighbors with population large | {enough to be a hazard if they were | 50 minded, not to say armament. | Even Argentina is as far away) as Europe, and Russia no nearer than was England to the nearest] embarkation point for Germany, |
| who twicé in the past couple of
decades vainly tried to bridge the! | English Channel wide.
It is inconceivable that any com-! So alas for the Big Rock Candy mountain, that | bination of nations could invade wit 4 Garand rifle, we have an! POSSEs- | around the clock Rir Serwiie. around’ meat packers’ group testified before sewed pi cSomimiitee, blame for ‘the present hegt shortage was. on the OPA; but he further ‘declared that he ‘did ‘not with the OPA. {There dre two ways of reading a | newspaper, one to read the lines and the other to read between the lines.
this country; or any of its sions; Tih ihe. auemapiss, DaSY and, Ir TOITE We How, posis; matter of history Da aggressor [nations beaten as badly as Germany and Japan ranely emerge again as military powers. Regardless of this phase of militarism, the “ramparts we watch” will ‘be strategically located, ade-! (quately fortified, which' includes a | constantly augmented and improved!
| jt—the few that remain in this masculine paradise |8it force, amigo amaonnt:-of dipio-:
{matic “meyital face saving” will pre-| vail against this policy ‘or for al-! {liances which will be as advantageous to any other nation as it is to! to commitments. And this is the crux of an | alliance, together with an interna{tional sense ot responsibility; for
AE Rn a hE EAR TY
| which ‘passes ‘for * ‘sovereignty of ha-|
{tions,” and which too often is sanc-
tioned by. courts of justice in favor
lot commercial organizations, cartels,
{etc., for small groups and for which millions of potential consumers are wasted in the stupid greed of war, “Sovereignty of nations” isthe cloak-—that—covers a multitude of rimes against humanity.
According to the geopoliticians of {80Ing to be some changes made on|duction of pork and marketing
the militarists, this nation is an island nation and peace planners, thave come to accept this analysis! inasmuch as armaments are con-
cerned, together with alliances and wielding at all the conferences will | three
some 25 miles -
is Ee PIAEAALLS Tp. air mad).
‘nomenclature (and would if diplo-
> LWRT
i - Not-What-the Label.o onthe Package Promised
you say, but will
Forum
(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. 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 manu- | scripts and cannot enter cor- | respondence regarding them.) °
scrutable.
| co-operative
{ withdrew,
By W..
limit, which today could ‘be covered |
ihe: arid liad; ra RE A both but are not obvitimes and the bright lexicon
SH zivee — nat ignal SOV Of course,
We the. people kriow that politicians, statesmen and last not least, militarists, ously behind the only world in their of diplomacy iereignty, the big boss, etc Nevertheless, and not Withstanding, armaments must be relative {both for large and small nations, which does not infer large nations. {need huge armaments and the old | saying “use your head to save your! heels” could. supplement diplomatic
want to do
1S
mats ever had any fighting to do) with - much benefit to humanity.
twill be a liability. “will be a fear | Litovsk to haunt Mr. [the ways of power politics are in“The wheel of fortune] |1s ever turning, who can say I will | | be on top tomorrow?” Letters must be {ord with Japan does not rate him | any advantage, so far. attitude in Poland, Ro- | mania and the other countries he has occupied,
» “THE HARD ROAD | TO DICTATORSHIP” C. Reese, A few days ago Mr. Wilson of: the |
“I wholly disagree with what
defend to the
death your right to say it.”
of -dnother Churcl
after the G
Shelbyville
He ‘stat away he,
as a meat
did not want
The
ll.
ermans
ed that
packer,
tif. the price could be arranged to net a. profit, away with the OPA. | Public - service companies do-
to do various not
want to do away with the public | service commissions because | determine a certain fixed return on {the investment, and now that, big | business has the assurance of the | continuation of the OPA after
they
It 1s my opinion that there are took over the regulation of the pro- |
the diplomatic as Germany capitulates. (raising hogs. When the with Germany ition is not ends, the big stick Stalin has been|may roam t years
war
Now the beef situa-
the same. Beef cattle he pastures. for two or | and’ the farmer or
every nation bordering either ocean'be reduced to the size of a match. rancher does not always have to The balance of power will then rush his beef cattle to market and
our natural ally. Another way joceans are ponds,
to. put and all nations
| bors, which is literally true in these! {days of rocket bombs, planes, etc
{eyes our foreign policy _ Instead of the three- mile shore
have the industrial plants,
food—the sinews Then if
of war. Artificial
Stalin won't co-operate,
lend-lease sha irply
sinews are likely reduced. His Japanese pact we see in th
J Sono et vt me 1h unr. : w
“ viotced the boss sizing up your aon spring. outfit: denrtyou| ! look id » million dollars, but | hopa he ost dhink
are making
| return
: free world.
‘4-6
rous!" .
prices . always
it—both | shift back to the democracies, who the meat packers want an induce- | | planes, ment of higher prices to get the [bordering them are our good neigh= chips; -guns-and munitions and. the (cattle into the plant.
ruin a
{market and this is not the first time | | And we see developing before our nor join in the war with Japan, .his|that nations have tried price fixing |
to be and it has resulted in the situation |
e¢ markets today.
money,
and sell and to make a lv
corrupted
| It developed that the large chain operators of stores had men close to the OPA and the prices fixed are | agreeable to the chains because they The Siottne | business has been takemgrover OPA and ‘under that schedule » {has determined that about a one- | third profit goes to the merchant. The New Deal has used “the war | to reinstate the NRA. The OPA is as unconstitutional as the NRA, |but it will have to run its course | until the country finds out that in| {order to have good business we must to the free market the Constitution with free competition and hard work as an incentive | to make profit. There are said to be 17 million | beef cattle on hoof in this country, no shortage of stock, but regulations | and eontrols have produced a cha- | otic condition in the industry. We are on our way to try col-| lectivism, and if the people want to set aside the Constitution, they have the right to try these experiments, but it ‘means the hard road to dic-| atorship—and that is what the people ‘want to avoid after having sacrificed Hives and money to maintain {a democratic form of government, i That cannot be done unless we also | without intended insult with a glance over the shoule | have the right to.contract, to buy | der at the record of the United States of Americas, This ‘country was that way in 1919 and ‘20 and 21,
under
8 in a
- DAILY THOUGHTS
They have selves, their spot is not the spot of his children: they are a per-. verse and Socked, generation
them.
There no longer! | Brest! So, |
| Stalin's rec- |
And his non |
may react against him | {later by the power of world opinion. | Stalin’s-power lever is slipping. =
{ Cologne to Julich,
the. (war, they know that they will be
of | ront just as soon | the same and many farmers quit |
+ BEHIND-THE FRONTwer- 5
Path of Ruin By Thomas L. Stokes
AACHEN, Germany, April 6.— From Cologne we took the road to this city. It was a raw, dreary day, with occasional squdlls of fine rain. It was a fitting atmosphere for traveling this path of “devastation, the. trail of the armies. There the victorious Americans fought their way, stubbornly. From the skies, the bombers hurled their thunderbolts. For miles and miles on each side of the road are the scars of the fighting. Thousands and thousands of foxholes still speckie the green earth. The land looks as if some giant had stamped along here, some giant in modern armor, kicking the earth angrily with his spurred heels. Occasionally there are long lines ‘of temporary trenches, not so deep as those of the last war, where tired and dirty men lived for months on end. Here and there are gun emplacements, and there still are the deep, criss-crossing tracks of the tanks, symbols of titantic struggle.
‘Litter of Conflict Still Strewn' THE LITTER of conflict is still strewn along this road of destruction—overturned and smashed vehicles, the tattered remains of an airplane, an. occasional
backward along
German helmet, left to lie and rust. We saw two American tanks that had been knocked out, steel ghosts of modern warfare, and farther along. we saw
two German tanks, equally in ruin, tered: “That makes it even.” We had left Cologne, the great metropolis which had
Someone mute
smaller towns, like many sections of our own country, the towns where.the farmers bring their produce and buy their supplies, All of them had been cannonaded from the. sky. Then, suddenly, we came upon Julich. It was unbelieveable, We entered a city in which nof a single house or building had been left standing. Here and there were piéces of a house or building, half a wall, occasionally both -walls with nothing in between, crazily askew. There were huge, vawning gaps where there was nothing now but heaps of rubble. Tt looked like a forest that had been swept and seared by hiv cane and fire, with pieces of trees sticking up. here and there.
Everybody Should See Julich
NOT A SOUL lives here any more. “it 18 ominously quiet. life ; This might have been Frederick, Md, Ga., or Topeka, Kas., or Lansing, Mich., Mass, : Just as Cologne might have been Detroit. or Pit{se burgh, or Cleveland, or New Orleans, or San Francisco, 4t would Ye .good if everybody in the world could see Julich. There have been pictures; but they do nog tell the stoty, do not give the coldness that grips you inside as you look at the reality, It would be good if all Gérmans could see it. many won't. see it. = There are so many towns like Julich in oup country. There are so: many like it in every country. Tt would be good if the politicians could see it, and the diplomats, who are soon to assemble at San Fraicisco to try to set up a world political organization te keep peace among nations. It wotild help perhaps if they could take a trip from It. is a terrible demonstration of
what -a man might do again unless we all learn 10 live: together,
i= mere skeletons,
Like Cologne, Nowhere is there any sign of
or Macon, or Fall River,
So It would be ggod if our own people could
|
IN WASHINGTON—
I SW
AA mucous Mair Bouc By Peter Edson
WASHINGTON, April 6.—In all this squabbling about who gets in-’ vited to the San Francisco confer~ ence, it. is all'too easy to lose sight of the one important objective, “That objective is to set’ up an organization ti will end wars. Getting: sidetracked by a lot of back-room braiis over waging procedure, small” pations vs, large, Poe land, Argentina, the Ukraine and suth small potas toes is utterly futile. Granting that the making of a secret Big Three deal at- Yalta was st atesmanship of the lowe est order, still the present ery that the San: Fr:
at,
«
But ee nat oi % CO, ding to. West! Ri. rest 25 the ingestmey cise Rolence musk, 7 DPW. be, dyad, AS. re. 8 ER Whee Ri o> Rn ~rhirad Cw i> CAN t ey OIATHIE SOT ol Meh Px ah WER {land roi nor Rs it regard uni- ment to Keep down prices only ends) . Nothiftg could set bat the cause of world pe: 8 yen Tans | by serving the ~ money changers and security more than a postponement at San hoi nefit. In i which were to be driven out under! I rancisco. To moan low that the Dumbarton Oaks ri a | the New Deal. Proposals are foredoomed to failure is to admit that “THERE Wht. ve The farmer during world war I Jian! propaganda is Fight and to fall for the Hite - : | received $20 dollars per. hundred = bbels line that peace-loving nations can never bs SOME CHANGES MADE” for hogs, $6 more than he gets) united, Why be such suckers? By The Watchman, Indianapolis today -on ceiling price. The OPA!
Initial Criticism Rife WHEN ‘THE Dumbarton Oaks proposals were first announced there was naturally .much questioning, Perfectionists could think up a thousand details Lh i | might be changed. Until the past week the volume of these criticisms had seemed to be subsiding as people realized that the form of a united nations organization, the mew chanics of its operation, was far less important than its objective of ending wars. “We're not interested in hew you work it 1 | the average citizen seemed to be saving to his FOV ernment “just give us peace.” Jobs, food, personal security, solution of eco 10min problems as they affect daily living—these are a things which are uppermost in the minds of a 1 jority of the people. The machinery of governments and‘ foreign" relations are important only they | contribute to lasting peace in which there will hs | Jobs, food, security. That is the objective worth | striving for.
out ™
i=
as
| They Can Come in Later A PROPER PERSPECTIVE on this present flares | up can perhaps best be gained by looking back on the Constitutional convention in Philadelphia in 1787, when the document was being framed on which the | United States of America was to be founded. Only 12 of the 13 colonies sent delegates. Spunky little Rhode Island stayed out and didn’t ratify the Cons stitution until two years later, when she was forced into line by threat of economic sanction. Today it is the united nations of the world to be organized. What difference if the Lublin Poles, or Argentina or the Ukraine aren't at San Francisco? | They can come in two years later, with or without threat of economic sanctions. " There was an issue of large states vs. small at Philadelphia just as there is dn issue of large natiens vs. small facing the delegates to San Francisco. At Philadelphia the issue was settled by compromise, Tt can be so settled at San Francisco if the statesmén | who represent the nations are of a mind to do it. | .
Political Immaturity
ture in its international relations. That can be said
Suspicious, isolationist-in the. extreme, _unwilling to co-operaté with other nations unless ae could ‘the ticket just the way we wanted it. The ‘States, as a nation in 1920, was like as a work it “in 1945.
1920 and it probably won't work: any better
been’ virtually leveled. Now w& Were in the area of
SY
MORE AND MORE, a feeling grows that the gove J ernment of Soviet. Russia may be. politically imma-
Fre hiad”
Rhode Island olony in 1787. It didn’t work in 1787, it didn't
©. But nations* learn: slowly and the history. of 1187 Sed 1650 wi be feented if ue is wis refessess mations now become in protocaf,
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best man 1 usher will |
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Capitol ¢
for a wed Cal.
The |
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The Indi: Clubs will
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Mrs, Guy F land, Me,, Federation will speak
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So PL y FTE 5 Ancther . a tea, at 3: club, with |
Grandmoth
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Mrs. A To Hav
Mrs. Albe will hold o
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Mrs,
Rok
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Museu
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