Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 April 1945 — Page 10
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The Indianapolis Times
" PAGE 10 Monday, April 9, 1945
ROY W. HOWARD WALTER LECKRONE. HENRY W. MANZ President Editor Business Manager (A SCRIPPS-HOWARD NEWSPAPER)
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Circulations. Gop © RILEY 5551 Give Lipht and the People Will Find Their Own Way GOLDEN GATE AMENDMENTS
HERE is good news to lighten some of the gloom enshrouding the coming Golden Gate conference, The temporary president of the conference, Secretary of State
| influence of Robert Owen has been more enduring
rn SR Ra
. e eR
REFLECTIONS—
Two Utopias By John W. Hillman
“THE PRIMARY and necessary object of all existence is to be happy,” wrote Robert Owen, found‘er of the communistic colony at New Harmony. : “Pew would quarrel with that statement. Men seek happiness in many ways, but all recognize its necessity. At New Harmony, the Rappites sought eternal happiness through mortification of the flesh; the Owenites.through the glorification of the mind. Paradoxically, the spiritual zealots came closer to material success because they made some sensible exceptions to their theological idealism; the Rappites ate well. The Owenites, however, were. so concerned with the pleasures of the mind that they set a poor table and their model civilization soon collapsed. There is a moral there, somewhere, and not a New Moral either—though it must be admitted that the
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than that of Father Rapp. Ideas are imperishable. And “Angel in the Forest” (Reynal & Hitchcock, $3), Marguerite Young's new book about New Harmony which goes on sale today, is primarily a story
Stettinius, says the Dumbarton Oaks draft can be amended there. ~ As he points out, the Big Three proposals were | offered to the united nations only as a basis for discussions. | This obvious reminder should not have been necessary, but it was. There were signs that the Big Three, under | Moscow pressure, intended to goose-step the 40-odd other | allies into acceptance of the plan for big power control of the security league. This design for San Francisco came into the open with this week's issue of the Soviet embassy publication in Washington. One of its articles asserted that the Dum- | barton powers were virtually bound “not only to refrain | ‘from repudiating or amending them, but to defend them against possible attempt . . . to amend or weaken them.” Moscow has been engaging in vicious propaganda against | amendments proposed by Senator Vandenberg and Herbert
Hoover.
STALIN WAS the first of the Big Three to reverse the Dumbarton draft, by insisting at Yalta that Russia be given three assembly seats instead -of one. That makes the present Soviet opposition to amendments rather absurd: Roosevelt and Churchill have been more cagey. First. they refrained from stressing, as Secretary Hull had done, the tentative nature of the Dumbarton suggestions and the necessity of perfecting action by a full united nations conference. Now, however, demands for a more democratic league than the Dumbarton-Yalta blueprints have grown too strong for any rubber-stamp conference at San Francisco. Amendment proposals come from the smaller European governments ; from France 2nd so-called middle powers, such as The Netherlands; from British dominions, now meeting in London. Also the Western Hemisphere nations at the re‘cent inter-American conference in Mexico City insisted— without official United States encouragement—on Dumbarton revision.
IN THIS COUNTRY almost unanimous support for the avowed purposes of Dumbarton is matched by widespread and representative insistence on constructive amendments. This ‘movement for improving the tentative draft is nonsectarian and non-partisan: It includes the'Roman Catholic bishops of the United States.and the Federal Council of
~
[ is tempted to observe sharply, “I heard you the first
of ideas—and people.
Written in a Twilight Style
THERE WILL be a great deal of local interest in this new book. Not only is the author an Indianapolis girl, a graduate of Butler and a former member of the Shortridge faculty, but New Harmony is a favorite subject in Indiana. Miss Young's two previous volumes were books of poetry, “Prismatic Ground” and ‘Moderate Fable,” both very well received. The present work was started as’ a narrative poem and then recast. It is written in the twilight zone between prose and poetry—poetic prose rather than prosaic poetry. . The medium has some disadvantages. A refrain, for example, is an effective device in poetry, but when Miss Young repeats the phrase “two Utopias” nine times in the first fous pages of her prose the reader
time.” As Miss Young herself observes, “Playing with language is a dangerous business,” and a poet striving for effects may overreach herself, as Miss Young does when she speaks of a “lonely crow gliding” or an “August booming with the buzz of bees.”
Passages of Pure Delight
IN SPOTS, the book is overwritten, but there are passages of pure delight and beauty. There is the melody. of the Psalms, for example, in: “There were outhouses leaning with time, suggesting faery lands forlorn, right inthe heart of the green corn country. There was an abandoned Catholic church where swallows had built ‘their nests and fluttered back and forth like bells.” Miss Young is a strange combination of poet. philosopher and realist. Some phases of the book suggest that she has not outgrown the influence of Sinclair Lewis and “Main Street,” as when she writes that “the past is an intangible in Indiana, you find, as in other parts of these United States—a filling station where there were two Utopias, Mr. Babbitt where there was an angel.” Or, “You come at last to New Harmony, a disappointment.” New Harmony, despite its decay, need not necessarily be a disappointment to a person of imagination, one who can see the footprint of history as well as that of an angel. At times one wonders if Miss Young has the breadth to see the essential humanity beneath the shoddy surfaces of “queer characters”; certainly she is at her best when ‘she sees swallows fluttering like bells in a crumbling belfry, and weakest when she wrinkles her nose at 8 filling station or an outhouse. a :
Occasional Lapses From the Facts POETS ARE NOT exact souls, moreover, angd there are occasional lapses from the ‘facts of history and
located onthe Kentucky side of the Ohio—not that
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“THEY WANT THE IMPOSSIBLE” By Alms Bender, Zionsville - Some of your contributors and columnists seem to me to be—perhaps unintentionally—about to sabotage the San Francisco conference. They want the impossible, I'm afraid. : : In 1787, it was apparent almost the moment the constitutional convefition met, that you never could get sovereign states to consent to one vote each, regardless of size. Virginia and Massachusetts stood pat against giving a little state like Delaware as much say-so as they
death
(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 forth here are*those of the writers, ° and publication in no way implies agrseren with those opinions by The Times. The Times assumes no responsibility for the return of manuscripts and cannot enter correspondence regarding them.)
less) political system, and at least
“l wholly disagree with what you say, but will defend to the
geography. In-the book ‘Dade Park, for ‘example, is ¢
had. It's practically an American tradition that more people should have more voice. That feeling is behind the present agitation .for letting the house as well as the ‘senate vote on treatiesd The senate is felt to be too unrepresen=tative of the people, especially since the women's clubs have been circulating the part of Jim’ WHtson's autobiography - that s#s people were for the league of nations at
the Russians are not conceding anything to- our economic system. We had a depression and they didn't. From their point of view, that proves their system is better than ours. What-we, shall have to do at San! Francisco, as I seeit, is to get the best bargain we can, but take whatever we get. Maybe 'wé Tan put off the next war for.a long time, if ‘we
your right to say it.”
“I WOULD LIKE TO SEE IT EXPANDED” By The Voice in the Crowd, Indianapolis If the War Memorial was abandoned as .a half-finished job, perhaps five million dollars would not be spent on it. If this five million dollars, was divided among perhaps 300,000 Indiana servicemen, each would receive $16.66. Does anybody have the gall to say that rwe would then be doing anything for those men? We as a nation, not as a community, took these men out of civil life, out of their homes and schools and away from their opportunities. It is we as a nation that must make all possible restitution to them as they return. I am one of those who believe that if we can spend 8 billion dollars ‘a- month to wage the war, we can allocate 25 billion dollars or ‘more to repair as far as possible the lives and ‘health and opportunities of those men who return.
ATIC
Moving Fast
By Thomas L. Stokes
IN OCCUPIED GERMANY, April 9.—Col. William C. Bliss who commands the 72d ordnance group of ‘the 1st army—ihey call him “pop”—was talking about the German break-through last December and how they moved the supplies out of reach of the Nazis. For five days Col. Bliss didn’t take off his clothes or get a wink of sleep. As he talked of those days, the light from & candle threw into sharp relief his big, round, cheerful face and his ample mustache. He's big all over. The lights had suddenly gone off in the old German house, which his outfit had taken over for a headquarters two weeks before, and the room he used for an office had been thrown into darkness. “It's just that gene erator,” he said, philosophically. ii
A few minutes later he was interrupted by the
telephone. “Yes,” I can move out in 24 hours,” he said. “Yes. Yes. I'll get going.” This was what I had heard all through this area, in visits to various units of the supply service. The supply support was moving closer behind the armies racing across Germany. It was going to be hard to keep up. Moving this ordnance outfit, too, would
be quite a job, I surmised, after spending a whole
afternoon visiting just parts of it.
Moved Back in Five Days BUT THE colonel is an old hand at moving. They were at Verviers when the Nazis broke through, jus$ before Christmas.
had it worked it would have been a bad setback and prolonged the war for some time. * Col. Bliss explained that Col. John M. Medaris, who is in charge of all ordnance for the 1st army, had moved over to his headquarters right after the break-through. «He set up his maps, and I sat: there -with him and saw the whole military operation as it developed, That was a privilege. I don’t usually see all that, He was ‘constantly on the telephone, He had his own radio fleld network set up, through which he kept in touch every minute.” On Dee. 20, it ‘was decided to move Aywaille. “We moved in five days. And what a business we were doing!. We were moving out, we were ree ceiving new supplies, and we were filling orders—e all at once.+ But we got moved back to Aywaille.
Eleven Tanks Saved Depot «1 DIDN'T go to bed all that time. Then it looked as if the Germans were coming that way and might make it. We had 11 tanks that we had repaired. We put ordnance men in them and sent them out along the road down which the Germans were coming, But they stopped when they saw those tanks and started around another way. They must have figured we were ready for them there, though all we had petween our depot and them were those 11 tanks. That saved us.” He had another job when his outfit was set up at Aywaille. “We had to re-fit a whole new army. We got the order to repair and RFI (ready for issue) 6000 army vehicles in 30 days.” They got it done. It was during that operation that Col. Bliss, then a lieutenant colonel, was raised to a full colonel. “Col... Medaris told me one day, ‘Well, Pop, 1 guess you ought to have more rank with this job. So he had a couple of big eagles made out of aluminum which. I had to wear into mess one night—that's the way they do it. "I got regular ones later.” / Col. Bliss is the oldest man “in the 72d ordnance
back to
. The taxing power of the states is
can’t entirely stop it. And so fas so nearly starved out by our na-
Churches of Christ in America, as well as leaders of both |
parties in congress. Amendments suggested by Senator Vandenberg, a nfember of the United States‘delegation, are _supported generally. All of which raises hope that the con.ference’s debate will be as free, and its decisions as un- “ Tettered; as TEE TASK IE RIOMENTORE: or wrmmannions
>
BUSINESS AWAITS ITS CUE
HE curtain is about to rise on a new act in the drama of American business. The sound of the stock market ticker has fallen almost to a murmur, as dealers wait to see what is about to transpire. In industrial Detroit, where Henry P. Nelson has been named co-ordinator of reconversion for the automobile industry, the air grows tense as men of business confer with men of the war production board. Listening eagerly for their conclusions are indus- | trialists from New England, the Middle West, the Pacific | coast. | Quietly the army prunes its demands for production, | plans cutbacks in war orders. Carefully, the WPB and | other officials weigh the question: With the Japs still | fighting us, how far can we go after V-E day in unleashing | industry ? ee
We can go just as far as the requirements of the army, navy and air forces will permit. Needs of the armed forces come first. But as the government proceeds with its blue-| printing for more munitions, it should remember that | civilian goods can be produced in greater abundance and | can be marketed more readily through established business | procedures of competitive enterprise. | . » = F J
WE SHOULD TRY to maintain equality of business | opportunity among competing producers. No one firm or | group of firms should be granted advantages over others. For example, if Manufacturer A must devote 60 per cent | of his capacity to war production, then B, C and all others in that field should be held as close to that ratio as the |
armed services find it possible to arrange through the dis | tribution of war orders.
Limitations on manufacturing should he removed as | rapidly as needs of the war will permit. Rationing and | price regulation of certain scarce materials and products will be inescapable for a time, but the sooner we get back Lo free competition in a free gnarket, the better for all. Our country is short on houses, automobiles, retrigerators, toasters, electric irons, farm implements and a host | of other things—and wants to get going again. |
JOBS" FOR ALL
PHILIP MURRAY makes sense, we should say, when he talks about post-war employment. He reminds us that as vaterans discard their uniforms they must receive their just and legal preference for jobs, a senti all Americans heartily agree. ° '
There is danger, Mr. Murray points out, that demobilized veterans may fall into disputes with other civilians over such matters as accumulated ‘seniority. He sees this ‘possible mis-alignment of civilians against civilians as a ~~ sorry and mutually destructive experience. an J Mave? emphasizes that, while preference
xd re-employment are important in themselves, full benefits unless there are enough
- mass of detail and handles it with skill and imagina-
.rise, like an angel in the forest, before your eyes.
all else, jobs for
us, is the heart of
|.this ‘matters in thesé¢ days when no.one goes to races, and Mme. Pretageot's name is spelled “PFratageot.” And Miss Young's prismatic prose, imagism and Kaleidoscopic treatment may prove confusing at times, particularly to any readers who are not already weli versed in the history of New Harmony. Despite its occasional heaviness and obscurity, this is an-absorbiig hook. - Carl Sandburg. did a similar job better in - Prairie Years; bui—fre—is—a mature artist while Miss Young has still to find herself. . Her style lends itself well to the never-never atmosphere of the two Utopias and she has collected a tremendous
tion. Such characters as George Rapp, a hard-headed Messiah, and Robert Owen, the dream-smitten business man, come alive under her touch. The pageantry |
of history marches with a resounding tramp, and ideas
Miss Young has done well in an alien field with a difficult medium. And what she has done holds promise for her forthcoming novel, “Germ in the Wheat,” | since poets are notably more at home in the world | of fiction than in the sober realities of exposition. |
WORLD AFFAIRS—
Asiatic TNT
By Wm. Philip Simms |
WASHINGTON, April 9.—One 8 of the by-products of Russia's denunciation of her non-aggression | pact with Japan was a report that, f at Yalta the United States and. | Great Britain may have given the Soviet Union a | free hand in Manchuria and Korea. Such a report, of course, could be’ based on | nothing more substantial than surmise. Even so, {hose familiar with tile Far East agree that it is filled with TNT, and _that unless scotched quickly, it may do incalculable harm to Sino-American relations. It is no secret that Russian influence used to be | dominant in Manchuria and that Japan forced her out. Nor does any informed person doubt that postwar Russia will seek to regain her position throughout that area, including Korea. But from this to a secret
| agreement between the Big Three at Yalta giving her
carte blanche out there in exchange, say, for inter-
| vention against Nippon; is a long jump and China
should be give proper assurances without delay.
Renounced Territorial Gains WHEN PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT, Prime Minister Churchill and Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek met at Cairo in November, 1943, they pledged their couritries: 1. To press the war against Japan unrelentingly. 2. To renounce all territorial gains for themselves. | 3. To restore to China the lost lands of Manchuria, | Formosa and the Pescadores, | 4. To guarantee the future independence of Korea Were the Chinese generalissimo now to get the impression that Washington and London are weakening on the Cairo commitments, or anything re- | motely like that, it would be tragic. Yet after what | has happened to Poland, Yugoslavia and :in other | spheres, such whispers, rumorg and guesses might fall on fertile ground. * The Soviet Union unquestionably has certain welldefined interests in Manchuria, Few dispute her right
to greater security there, or to improve her political @Ir | and economic position. GLa F ment with which |
Rumors Might Play Havoc SOME OFFICIALS here express alarm lest come ment en Moscow's termination. of her pact with Tokyo, injure the allied cause. “Speculations or statements’ regarding the probable intentions of Soviet Russia toward Japan, however eironeous they might prove to be,” the office of censorship warned, “could possibly lead to a Japanese attack on Russia.” The fact is, Japan has far more first-hand Information regarding’ Russia than has Washington.
Jap “observers” openly or disguised as workers, are | able to report every Russian move in Eastern Siberia, | If and when the Japs attack the Soviet Union, it will | |
‘not be ‘tlié result of rumors from this country.
the very time the senate was maneuverilg to defeat it!. And, of course, all the public opinion polls today have shown the people in {favor of the Dumbarton Oaks proIposals by a large majority, but ng {poll of the sefiate has shown the necessary votes there to ‘pass It. So—the American - tradition shows
if it gets aggressive—well, do you| think you can do that by just {votfhg? No matter how you arrange {it, no vote is really going to stop ‘a big aggressor. A vote of 45 to! i1 will be as effective as a vote of | 145 fo 0,in" a case-like that. And 'T'm afraid that’s not very effective.
states are helpless to raise sufficient funds to render anything like justice to our men. The only taxing power and credit requirement this is big' enough td doa decent job is the power of the federal government. . , ©. -
- .
Not as a war memorial, but as an
history and | { ; ‘ lclosed doors. Maybe that is why; Thomson is interesting.
a feeling for more representation | for more people, and a feeling that | the senate does not represent the people. s i: 2 Ba We have iso 2 Bart against | <1 OF HISTORY too much publicity while important o pn. or decisions are being threshed out.|1S INTERESTING
Well have to sell the big nations on the idea that aggression doesn't ipay.- Boas
We want, when we dicker, to get| By Bev. Frank 8..C. Wicks, Indianapolis the best we can possibly get for| In view of the discussions as to
ourselves—and you can’t do that if what will be the treatment of Geryou tell in advance what you Will| ony after the war, this bit from
take if you have to! Anyway, the Congtitution was written behing [te autobiography of Sir Basil
it has lasted so. long! If you read | He was visiting Prince Max who Madison's Journal, you will realize told him that ome of his cousins how much those men said of what|was a member of the German delethey really thought, and then ad-!gation which came to Marshal Foch mitted they would not have dared to ask for the armistice terms. Foch say it if the metting hadn't been read what purported to be the pledged to secrecy! |terms. When they were read to What I think we all need to re- them the German officers could member is that we are one nation scarcely believe their ears and were out of 46 who must be con- covered with dismay. Their leader sidered. And the enemy nations stammered, “But there must be should be planned for as future members. And most of the other ized nation could impose on anpeoples do not have the religion | other.” “I a glad to hear you say we have, many of them do not haveiso,* replied Foch gravely.. “No, genthe poljtieal theories: we have, and tlemen, there are not our terms. a few Yo not have the economic | You have been listennig to a caresystem we\have. {ful translation of the terms ime as it seems to us, the | posed upon us by the German comMohammedans.and Buddists are not manders when the city of Lille was sold on our relipion, the one-party| surrendered. Here are my terms.” governments are not impressed by | Prince Max said his cousin felt bitour confusing free-for-all (more or|ter shame for his country.
Side Glances=—By Galbraith
some mistake. These terms no civil |
{the world’s best gift to mankind,
unfinished job, Indiana _should complete what has been started. God knows that war does hot have to be .memorialized. “The great trouble is that it cannot be for{gotten. In many of its aspects the after its guns were silenced. " Personally I do not like the name of “war memorial,” but as a. native of Indianapolis I would like to see |it expanded as a monument-to an intelligent and cultured community that finished its jobs once they were started. Why cannot men think of an expanded civilization instead of always harping on the dividing of a shrinking one? ” “IT WORKS BOTH WAYS” By E. M. 8, Lawrence . Do the many. people who think
ithe bus drivers of today should be ashamed to know that courtesy is
which is not used enough? Don't they realize it works both ways? When*the drivers ask the passengers to move to the rear of the bus it’s not for the driver's convenience but for the convenience of the pas-
sengers. Some people think and say the drivers work on a commission and deliberately pack the busses. We work for a salary and try to be courteous and render good service, but we also get aggravated. A lot of passengers will ring the bell to get off, and if it’ happens to be a skip stop, they get peeved and hang onto the bell cord with both hands. As for asking people to get off the .bus, many a driver has driven his bus against company rules during rush hours when it had a mechanical defect rather than_.unload his passengers and have them wait. 30 minutes or more trying to put them on’ another crowded bus. When rear doors get out of order, which may happen any time, just listen to the majority of the passengers awl out the driver. Why don’t the shoppers and people with children refrain from rid-| ing during rush hours so people
could be pleasant after a day when he is bawled out and complained to three or four times an hour. Why not a cheery word instead of a grumble? :
Civil war is still with us 80 years -
that work all day can get home.) 11 would like to see any person who
group. ( | of “Pop” and it stuck. In the first
world war he
as stopping one of the .big nations | tional taxing requirements that the| wo. the youngest officer in his outfit. In civil life
| he is in the foundry business in St. Louis. It is men | like Col. Bliss who make up this democratic army | of ours, on the field and in the supply service.
IN WASHINGTON— Lift To Business By Roger W. Stuart ° WASHINGTON, April 0—Some tax relief fof business this year, but no appreciable changes in rates before the defeat of Japan, is the ASSUrance
given by leading senators and representatives.
Senator George (D. Ga.) said a ‘program will be laid before congress not later than May which will form the groundwork for an overhauling of the tax structure. The Joint congressional committee .on taxation, he said, has been at work on this for
months. . The assertion by Senator George, who is chairman
wt
of chairman of the joint committee, came in response
to a resolution by the advisory board of the office of war mobilization and reconversion.
Resolution ‘Somewhat Behind Time' THE BOARD had called on congress to recognize as of “crucial importance” the need for an early adoption of an equitable tax program for the poste war period. This, it declared, was necessary so thas business might reconvert and be able to do its full share in creating employment after the war. Senator Vandenberg of Michigan; ranking Repub Mcan member of the senate finance committee and, like Senator George, a member of the joint commit tee, agreed with his colleague that the program soon to be announced will give “a lift to business.” He added that the advisory board's resolution was usomewhat behind time.” The joint committee, he explained, went to work on the matter six months ago. It has held some 25 meetings, worked closely with treasury experts, and heard the recommenda= tions of a vast number of tax-relief advocates, he
said.
Two-Part Program Considered ALTHOUGH NEITHER senator would discuss details of the forthcoming tax program, it was understood that it would be divided into two parts, The first, designed to cover the period between the defeat of Germany and the fall of Japan, will deal chiefly with administrative changes. These are believed to include: 1. An increase in certain excess profits tax exe emptions. 2. Revision of the excess profits tax post-warp credit provisions, permitting companies to cash a | portion of their refund bonds (limited to 10 per cent of excess profits tax paid) before the end of the war,
3. Permission for companies to estimate excess profits credits and net operating losses and use these to offset current tax ents. (Under present regulations these may onlf” be carried back to offset tax payments two years ago.) . > ‘4, More liberal allowarices for denrreciation on new buildings and equipment. *
Reed Bill Goes Farther “CONGRESS APPEARS to be in a mood to ald business,” declared Rep. Woodruff (R. Mich.) of the house ways and means committee. “It is my opinion that tax relief measures will be adopted within the next “few weeks. Republican members are pledged to tax relief at the earliest posstble moment.” Going even further than the contemplated report of the joint congressional committee on internal revenue taxation 1s a bill by Rep. Daniel A. Reed (R. N. Y). This calls for cutting tax rates before
It became obvious that the Gere - mans were headed toward the supplies of Gen. Hodges’ 1st army—and it is conceded now that -
He's 52, Cul. Medaris gave him the name °
the senate fiiance committee as well as. vice:
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Mersing Ask Hi
Attorney ing, 39-ye today wer to a nighe tion Satur der. Judg tenced Mu ment, The ail: than {wo dict in thi Alfred Ar Camp Att slain Jan. at the ay Wilson, 61 With its a recomn prisonmen could have first degre The first reported murder ve all jurors after. Fo Mrs. Doro ricks place Vict Judge B if he had his lips a swer, A was on hi room. “I'm su somment. Wife of Rita M. Mass., was “The J duty,” she man who | released I .years.. He for life.” The stat the soldier the latte Wilson,
TAKES T0E
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Two Ind Weiss, 6 E. Horton Jr. been nam appointees 1945. Alternate are Donald _ Bancroft Wetzel, 92(
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where a | lived. Our and wiped ~The little " the dark a melodious times with my foot is . to go back 1 the hills—*s
A CAPT he knows want to g whose bro The officer 34 months.
rthe end of the war. It is understood to have strong
