Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 April 1945 — Page 11

KED!

SES

Affe!

Kay WhitWw... just ve in WasYou'll see zines. All 1l inside as ’ the styles prints and S. :

20 4

er

Hoosier Vagabond

In additipn to the Ernie Pyle column which app ust received from Okinawa. We believe Ernie would agio ‘death. ©

.. QKINAWA, April 25°' (By Navy Radio). —One of ese days Mrs. Leland Taylor of Jackson, Mich, is boing to be the envy of all “her friends. For she is \bout to come into possession of four pairs of the

post beautiful Japanese pajamas you ever saw. ’ These are daytime pajamas or drawing room pajamas—the kind that some American hostesses . wear at cozy cocktail parties. Mrs. Taylor's husband, who is a marine corporal and known as “Pop,” found these pajamas in a wicker. basket hidden in a cave. They are thrilling to look at and soft to the touch. Pop carries the basket around on his arm from place to place until he can get a chance to ship them home, One morning I wandered down to our mortar plaon and ran into a young fellow with whom I have areat deal mm common, We .are both from Albubuerque and we both have mosquito trouble. This New Mexico lad was Pfc. Dick Trauth. Both is eyes were swollen almost shut from mosquito bites. At least one of mine is swollen shut every morning. We both look very funny. Dfek still is just a boy. He's seen 19 months in he marines and a year overseas... He's a veteran of ombat and still he’s only 17 years old. He has one rother in the marines and another in the army in iermany.

%

Writes to Movie Stars DICK WRITES letters to movie stars and not ong ago he pot hack a. picture of Shirley Terps; utographed to his company just as he had asked er to do. Dick is*very shy and quiet and I had feeling he must be terribly lonesome. But the”

bther boys say he isn't and that he gets along fine. One of the marines who drives me around in a eep whenever I have to go anywhere is Pfc. Buzz itere of (2403 Hoffman st ) The Bronx, New York.

nside Indianapolis By

MRS. HERBERT JOHNSON, 1138 E. Ohio st, ound a roll of undeveloped films in the 1000 block, E. bhio st., a couple of weeks ago. Her hushand had the films developed, but was unablé to find anyone in the heighborhood who recognized the attractive young woman and small boy shown in them. She thinks the‘ pictures may have been intended for a serviceman. . , . During the Will Hays meeting Sunday night at the Columbia club, a group of school folks, including Mr. and Mrs. Bill Evans and Col. Will H. Brown, stood talking to Governor Gates. Wilbur Barnhart, vice principal of ‘Manual, walked up, and not noticing the governor, who had his back turned, face- — tiously “ remarked to his schoo} riends: “Gee, this is a tough looking crowd.” Bill vans quickly said: “Governor, I'd like to present r. Barnhart.” The governor smiled and Wilbur blushed and blushed. . . . Maxwell V. Bailey, the chool board secrétary, had a birthday Monday. His ellow workers gave him numerous birthday presents bf a practical nature, some of which were slightly nmentionable. . . . Those first two new busses reeived by Indianapolis Railways have been placed in bperation, Three guesses as to which- line—Central, bf course. That's Old Inside's line. Now, maybe I an get a seat. {e's an Earlybird DICK BUTTERS, 4707 Indianola, is an earlybird. e ate radishes grown in his own garden last Sunday nd will have leaf laftuce in a few days. He's taking pgriculture under Arthur Hoffman at Tech. . . . Well, ere’s the complete dope on the Brush-Off club sought by the Lafayette G. I. Half a dozen readers sent in opies of Liberty Magazine for March 17. Among hem were Mrs. George Unger, 1414 S, Edst st, and’ 0. Martin, Woodruff Place. Liberfy says ihe club

Er

orld of Science

NAZI FORESIGHT in crealing stockpiles of strasgic materials is the chief reason why the war in urope is still on today. Only within the last few qonths, states Ernest E. Thum, editor of Metal Progress, official journal of the American Society of Metals, has there been any evi- ;# dence in captured German material of a lack of strategic alloys or satisfactory substitutes for them. - In the early days of the war, there were frequent predictions that Nazi Germany could not hold out because of the lack of money, oil and critical alloying metals. The error in these predictions, Mr. Thum says, caine in neglect2 ing the fact that the Germans had ro accumulated stockpiles of everything the high command thought the armies would need and that later these supplies were augmented by similar generous stockpiles capRured in Czechoslovakia and France,

Armaments Reworked

THESE NATIONS. also yielded supplies of finished guns, armor and tanks which in most cases were reworked into German types of armament. In addition, the Nazis had no compunction about combing each conquered nation for every possible scrap of desirable metal, When Russia was invaded, it gave the Nazis new gources of manganese ore while chromite was obtained from conquered Greece and nervous Turkey. As a result, there was little change in the nature and treatment of the alloys going into Nazi armament

My Day

HYDE PARK, Tuesday.—Last night my feet ached, because all day long I had stood saying to people: “Yes, that trunk goes in such and such a room . . . those things go into the library oie those things

go into the dining room , , . those can stay in the hall.” » In the meantime Miss Thompson did the same thing at the cottage ‘until, she said, her ‘back

Pa

By Ernié- Pyle

ears here we will print several ‘others which we have

The Indianapolis Times

have wanted his stories to go through, despite his

SECOND SECTION.

WEDNESDAY, APRIL 25, 1945

* PAGE 11

Buzz has other accomplishments besides jeep

driving, He is known as We Bmg Oroshy of the/TIjL TRUE TRUMAN ... Our New President as His Friends and. Neighbors See Him

marines. If you shut your eyes and don't listen very | hard you can hardly tell the.difference. I first met Buzz on the transport coming up to Okinawa. He and a friend would give an impromptu and homegrown concert on, deck every afternoon, They would sit on a hatch“in the warm tropical sun ang pretty soon.there would be scores of marines and sailors packed around them, listening in appreciative silence. It made the trip to war almost like ® a Caribbean luxury cruise, ein

(Last of a Series)

: » 4 ‘ . By IRA McCARTY Of the Kansas City Star (Written for The Indianapolis Times)

A G. I. Composer RESIDENT TRUMAN

BUZZ'S PARTNER was Pfc. Johnny Marturello| ~~ COmes irom that now of Des Moines, Iowa. Johnny plays the accordion. rapidly disappearing group He is an Italian, of course, and has all an Italian's of Americans that can point § flair for the accordion. He sings too, but he says|to a home, rather than a hos- §

as a singer his name is “Frank Not-So-Hotra.” pital of cold brick and steel, Johnny plays one piece he composed himself, It ashi io oD Png. He went it wo the G. I. Publishing | 85. His birthplace. Co., or branch or whatever it is in the states, and He was born in a I feel positive if it could be“idely played it would cottage at Lamar, Mo. May 8, § become a hit. 2 | 1884. The piece is a sentimental song called “Why| Two years later his parents moved § Do I Have to Be Here Alone?” Johnny wrote it for to a farm near Independence and his girl back home, but he grins and admits they there he spent his boyhood. are “on the outs.” | He lived in town with relatives Johnny came ashore on Love day and his accor- much of the time he was attenddion followed two days later. Now in his off moments, | ing school, because of the distances he sits at the side of the road and plays for bunches | involved. of Okinawans that the marines have rounded up a .8 » . They seem to like it. HE DID. not escape a full measJohnny had a lot of trouble with his accordion ,e of farm work, however, when ‘down’ south’ in the “tropical climates. Parts—would yo was at-home... & ’ warp -and-sokand mould and, he continuously had| ge experimented ~-with other to take the thing apart and dry and Cleaf fe. == (Types of Work ANE Bb ankles: . But it was worth the trouble. It had kept Johnoy |washed bottles for a drigstore at Pe from getting too homesick. He brought it along gs a week. Another time, he worked hii with him from America just for his own morale. |in the mailing room of The Kansas He knew the accordion would probably be ruined | city Star. by the climate, but he didn’t care. Miss Caroline Stoll, now 85 years “T can always get a new accordion,” Johnny said, old, was principal of the old Co- ® “but I can’t get a new me.” lumbian ward school during the into the house one afternoon to| seven-year period when Truman {was a pupil there.

small frame §&

present for her. Mrs. Truman, her attention drawn

| 2 2 n_ Lowell Nussbaum “HARRY was very studious,” Miss {0 the street by the gesture of her

Stoll recalls. “He never was in- husband's hand, saw a crew of dray-|jons for coolness under fire. volved in any was started at a bomber base in India, and spread took his work seriously. His mothe: over the world. Any male jilted since he's been In was sinterested in his education uniform is eligible. Any soldier jilted in favor of 8land she visited the school severai civilian automatically becomes a vice president. AS {imes ‘to see how Harry was doing.

artillery in world war I, where he

with a grand piano. "

» Eight society. THAT GIFT

» and

~ "He Could Plow the Straightest Furrow

President and Mrs. Truman were childhood sweethearts. Their daughter Margaret its an interest in music from her father, who is an accomplished, pianist.

won the praise of all his compan- b

3

Labor 'Slight' to AFL. In Travel Brings Protest

By FRED PERKINS Scripps-Howatd Staff Writer

WASHINGTON, April 25—In international affairs, what has the

- C.1.0. got that the A. FP. of L.

+ 3 «Unified, Nations eantavence, a

(center) inher- |

THICK spectacles and all, Tru- married Bess Wallace and through announce proudly that he had a man served as a captain of field & partnership arrangement opened |

a hat shop at Twelfth st. and Bal- | timore ave. in Kansas City. The| usiness went well for several years. | Then financial reverses induced |

boyish pranks and nen struggling up the front walk| Truman is a member of both the by a depression caused the business | American Legion and the Forty and to fail.

» ” 2

her father's| He is rarely seen at functions of | TRUMAN'S political opponent: interest in music has had a pro-|those groups but whenever possible are wont to drag out this business,

for joining, well, apparently there's no membership list. Youre just automatically a member. .

to cheer up.

“A mother's interest in her chil-

. . One dren is one of the most important of those sending in the magazine story and signing things in a cghild's life, and Mrs | herself, “A Female,” wrote: “Tell the Lafayette G. I.|Martha Truman was a devoted, If she'd been what he thought she was, God-fearing mother.” |

found effect on Miss Truman, NOW he sits down with his buddies of failure and cite it to prove Tru-

2] years old. She is looking forward to a career on the concert or operatic stage. .During a recent summer vacation

the old 128th. And tHose close friends of battle never lose a chance to sing Truman’s praises. un un ”

she wouldn't have jilted him. And there sure isn't] Truman's interest in his studies she appeared in the chorus of the| any female shortage. In fact, there are too many of land his lack of interest in sports Denver summer opera. them to suit me.” On the same subject, R. R. Pittman, js still one of the vivid memories She is working to complete her| Independence AMM 2-¢, of 1501 Ewing st, writes that there’s a df his friends in Independence. variation of the “Brush-Off” organization—a -“Dear | ¥. 8 = ) John club’—and he'll be glad to give the Lafayette| ED CARNES, a reporter on th» a career as a singer. {form with weak eyes. soldier an address where he can obtain more details. | Independence Examiner, has known| Meanwhile she studies music out- | Well, that's that on the brush-off. {the President since 1908.

; . 3 . “I first mel Harry when I was ternal approval. They'll Do It Every Time

going with Caroline Southern, now y 89 A CERTAIN YOUNG MAN employed at The

my wife,” he said. man’ Tist d tientl . [ f r Willi ther istened patiently Times had his most embarrassing moment the other | Her lather, liam , Southern day. He was trying to sell his 1936 model car and

Jr., publisher of our paper, had a|SDEctacled young man te ! {tennis court in his backyard and we | EDOUL his failure to pass the phys- he was tested. had a couple of prospects. Putting them in the car, used to congregate ‘there. {ical ‘examination for a navy com-| he started around the block to give ‘them a demon- “Bess Wallace (now Mrs. Truman) mission because of his eyes. 20-20 vision. stration of the car's sterling qualities. When they | ced to play tennis with us Truman handed his own thick- a 7» were half way around the block, the car's motor Quit! pr 0h oh the farm then and | lensed spectacles to the young man| “LATER, after he was serving cog No amount of Soaxing could start it. The he would hurry Wrough his chores! fr inspection and confessed he they gave him another physical soured prospects went their way—on foot. No sale! and hitch up his horse and buggy was nearly blind without them. P. S. One of the prospects returned later—after the car had been tuned up—and bought it, despite its

as soon as he got through to join! “You can make it if you try talked them into letting him sign misconduct. . . . . It seems like old home week for former Times staffers. In the office yesterday was Lt.

wno entered

“Harry had to pull a fast oné¢

to a be-

|to whisper the letters to him so he

{hard enough,” Truman counseled. a waiver.” 4. & “I did.” ! Returning from the war, Truman

, “MRS. SOUTHERN would fix us Vincent. Fowler, former copy reader for The Times | | picnic supper on the lawn. Harry

: . ® # and more recently with the light company. He's offi- | . rae op R M B B | cer in charge.of the navy's combat correspondent pro- | ang poss Note show 3 Jeary dome ussians ay e n er Hi gram in the Pacific. Also back is Lt. Bill Myers, Times | ,¢ them as antiquated. But Boss B 1 . ut Gl's on Leave Storm Paris

photographer, en route to Lincoln, Neb. for reas- | gqs lots of fun and we always liked | By JACK BELL

-signment by the air corps. Sgt. Johnny Butler, photog- |to have Harry amound because he! capher, just back from Kwajalein, also dropped in.|wa< always joking ; Times Foreign Correspondent

Just back in town is Capt. Albert J. Lynch, home | “After the picnic: he would take on 21 days leave from Italy. He, too, is a former Times Bess for a ride in his phaeton Staff member. pulled by his nice bay horse. It had| PARIS, April 25. — “The thunder room. for just two.

“That so?” they replied. “Who, us or the Russians?” “The Russians,” I replied.

4 to eaaEs “Bess was the ‘athletic type but!Beflin shook the world to HE ery san wy 4 Slimane SA : : Harry didn’t care much for. sports. | 4s x . Perhaps it's good that soldiers By David Dietz He said he_got enough exercise on | fOundatons—but the G. I. In Paris| v the farm. never batted an eye. Even: two-day : : | 3 #@ uw 8 and munitions until quite recently. In fact, guns) TRUMAN'S devotion to heavv and engines requiring hardenability contained in-many ‘reading - even after he had left] instances more molybdenum and chromium than high school, didn't allow much leis- | of the te front - American engineers would have thought necessary.!ure time after his day's work was! mightiest king-| 2h Nickel, however, was always rather short in Ger-| gone. : i dom of evil hasn't] Berlin n i many and was reserved for aircraft and other pur-| At one time he tried his hand! changed his “We're here to have two

ses of the most essential sort. ’ ay : P ; 5 * at fencing but beyond the social | tempo. {rousing days,” they say. “It'll Stockpiles Are Essential jute he allowed himself, his chief | Parisians showed | time to celebrate when our outfits JIT IS IMPOSSIBLE not to compare. the German |TS.8Xalion was Ds Defore. 4H 5 interest, but no|come out of the line.” situation with that faced by our own nation when we | : Se cally ays. eiore- ing great extilazstion, radio and, canned music,

world’s | dozens just in not one was inter-

that

(and found out about his eyes. He|

| |

|

| i

|

{

|

in |labor inefficiency, it is time for

i |

| |

member you're in the army,” he|fest of us.

| |

man’s ineptness at finance. On the other hand, Truman’s| friends see the_failure as a lesson | that has made Truman doubly cau- | tious as he approaches the usc]

EDGAR G. HINDE, postmaster at of public funds.

\ : the! Now almost forgotten is the fact | (college degree at George Washing-| army with Truman, explained re-|{hat Truman's first* political job

{ton university before e rking i y i . ) mbarking on cently how Truman got into uni ‘was as road overseer in rural Jack-

son county.

For most of his biographers.

side the university with proud pa- to do it,” Hinde said. “He knew he! Truman's public career began when | [never could pass the physical ex-/ne sought election in 1922 as a|

. {amination on account of his eyes, county judge, called in some states NOT SO many months ago, Tru- so we just got an obliging sergeant a county commissioner. |

complain could read the chart perfectly as! wpRrUMAN'S friends declare that

he sought the office with the back-|

“He passed that examination with ing of the Legion and the Masons |

His hat already was in the ring] when Boss Tom Pendergast added] his voice of approval. .. i Be that as it may, Pendergast never wavered in his support nor| Truman in his loyalty. | Pendergast later put Truman into the senate race, explaining that the | more lucrative county collectors] job he wanted had been promised | to another. = = » THE TRUMAN committee sat in Kansas City in June, 1943, to probe labor costs in the construction of | the Sunflower érdnance plant, one of the largest in. the nation. Truman and Senators Ball and |

; | “Uh, huh; well, they're welcome. prewster concluded that between | of Russian guns in the heart of It would've been oft limits to Us, 25 and 30 million dollars in wages |

were wasted. . vio Ae

A labor leader testified that less]

2 | jerase all thought of the military cxijjful workmen were given pay|

when they come to town on leave,! lassificati di to d t-| passes are hard to ge A x 3 €. | classifications according to depart-| | 1 get and the They have been under terrific strain| ment of labor regulations and there |

| mere tumbling down of the walls|and are here to forget. I talked to|was no other way for the matter 10

from a division on|pe handled.

~ " »

good news from| wusNp YET in the face of this

greatest of national emergencies

TP | vou couldn't let him down,” Senator

Truman exclaimed. “When a job of this magnitude costs the government 25 to 30 million dollars extra on account of

somebody to stand up and say something about it.” Then raising his voice and shaking his finger at the labor leader, Truman said: “You are going to have to pay the bill just like the

” ” ” MRS. MARTHA E. TRUMAN, the President's 92-year-old mother, still] is living and takes a spritely inter-| est in politics, Her greatest compliment to the son who ' followed a horse across the fertile acres of their farm until he was nearly 40 years old, is a! glowing tribute concerning his abil- | ity to plow the straightest furrow to be found in Jackson county. But of coutse, like any good farm-! er, Truman knows how to skid the |

hasn't got? The answer, actording to off-the-record rumblings, is Archibald MacLeish, assistant secretary of state for public and cultural relations.’ As a’ direct result of this friend s hip, which showed up in GC. 1. O. support when Mr. MacLeish's nominat i on was under criticism in the senate, the C. I. O. is credited with having got other things that the A. F. of L. hasn't yet got—Pullman reservations to and hotel .reservations in San Francisco for a large _ delegation im conmection with the cir le Be = i THE A. F. ‘OF L. EMITS today a two-column squawk on the subJect in its weekly news service, without mentioning Mr. MacLeish, but posing the serious Question “whether the state department can be trusted.”

Apparently this doubt revolves more around railroad and hotel accommodations than the state department's ability to conduct our foreign affairs in these’ critical days. » "n » CAPSULED. from the many details of calls and requests on Secretary of State Stettinius and his aides, the A. F. of L.'s complaint 1s that it was denied priority on , transportation to San Francisco for the 16 members of it§ executive council, in advance of the world peace parleys; but that transportation was provided for a C. I. O. party of 37. Here is the blacktype allegation of the A. F. of L. “On Thursday evening; April 19, the Liberty Limited left Washington. with two special cars attached, containing the C. I. O. officials and a group of foreign labor representatives, sponsored by P. A. C. Chairman Sidney Hillman.” = » 5

OF COURSE, THE A. F. of L. adds, it does not object to the C. I. O. vice presidents going to San Francisco, and feels that the C. I. O, “as representatives of a segment of American workers, should have full representation at San Francisco." However, it demands “at least similar consideration” for the A. . F. of L., which it says “is a much larger organization and represents far more American workers.” Nor does the A. F. of L. object, according to its statement, to the San Francisco visit of represehtatives of foreign labor movements “who are traveling rare Aer the protective wing of Mr. Sidney Hillman and are interested in creating an international political action committee.”

Then follows a thought apparently for the benefit of the Russian participants in the effort to form a new world labor body in collaboration with the C. I. O.: “No harm can come from these (foreign) representatives traveling 3000 -miles fhrough a really democratic country in which there are free trade unions, freedom of worship, freedom of speech and many other things to which workers all over the world should be entitled.”

nearly | Lightens Tension entered the war by reason of our failure to accumu- | : : , Newspapers sold | A d { : late stockpiles. The situation with respect to rubber | VEY home, no matter how hum- fast, were read | n orger oo. 4 lieutenant and tin is too well known to need another recirali Pit! ad 8 piano. To Jhis es quickly and tossed | charge of a flock of frontline troops here. : J ¢ aside. There was/is typical. They arrived Sunday The shortage of alloying metals necessitated the He plays vl w his sy ' My per. 10 demonstration, noon and he herded them into a development of the so-called National Emergency RADIO listeners whe heard True . no gathering #11 sum: or NE steels, low alloy steels in which small percent- | : oH groups to chatter, no over indulages of a larger number of alloying elements ve-|DANs fist broadcast as vice presi..." o' vin “rouge. Paris went] 'Now, 1 wani you guys io re. placed the large amounts of one or two alloying ele- | ident-elect on the night of Novem. | £7 h all that Een liberated merits previously used. Ber 17, 1944, caught the strains of LIOUSR | sand is thinking of an. | 581d. “We must: maintain rigid disMetal engineers are determined that plans for the Paderewski’s minuet flowing from ¢ er “celebration hen € 2000000 | CiPline while here.” future security of the-nation-must include the build- | he piano of the Hotel Mughle- | hch war prisoners get pack. | Faces were gloomy, until the ing of stockpiles of strategic materials and the main- Pach’s penthouse as the radiof net. "not A of Nazi hatred, |licutenant, with never a break in tenance of at least 50 per cent of our present ca-| WOTks turned on the microphones)“ Ee ' [his voice, concluded: pacity for the production of synthetic rubber. (for Truman's radio appearance. But the G. I didn’t even sWOp| «r want every man to report here It is a fact, of course, that a policy of national| Truman was playing. to discuss the news. at one o'clock sharp Wednesday.” security could be carried to a point where it would| Three weeks after his daughter, “Berlin is falling,” I said to three| There was a wild yell as the become a barrier. to international trade and in itself Margaret, was born, Truman rushed |soldiers on the street. doughs broke down the door getthe cause of a future war, ting onto the streets. What cared No one wants that to happen. But all scientists . di they, after months in the snow and and engineers who have it thought to the Up Front With Maul in mud and shelling, what the Rusquestion are united in their belief that national se- : — . sians were doing? curity demands careful attention to the problem of making certain that the nation can never again be cut off from critical strategic materials.

By Eleanor Roosevelt |

problems one at a time. Early meetings of the leaders of the great nations laid a greater stress on plans for winning the war, but lately they have begun to envision the broad lines of peace on which all the nations might work together. 1 Now, at last, we come to.the San Francisco meeting, the purpose of which is not to write in’ detail | all the plans for the future. Rather, it is merely to set up an ‘organization before which, at a later time, these probiems of peace will come up for dis-

There is no question the news from doomed Berlin’ lightened tension tremendously. Even cold-blooded observers, who real-

{plow over an outcropping of rock. |

THE END

ize that the war cannot end until |

the whole of Germany is occupied | or Hitler falls, admit that the news|

> HANNAH ¢

of the Russians in Berlin will hit | the heart of every German. There is hope that it will hasten | the end, but military leaders expected it and plans go on -with deadly seriousness.

Copyright, 1945, by The Indianapolis Times and The Chicago Daily News, Ine.

70NE BOARD TO HEAR

We, the Wome Confidence

Is Key to G. I's Old Life

By RUTH MILLETT A MAJOR in the United States army hung onto the key to the front door of his home‘ through three years of battle. He figured some day he'd ‘come home unannounced, unlock the front doorand § surprise his family. He finally made it home, walked up to his own front door and found | it standing Cah wide open. J Perhaps that story is symbolic of the welcome waiting for most returning servicemen.

Far from home they may sometimes wondér and worry for fear their families have learned to get along without them.

" ogee =

ached. Both of us ran up and downstairs many time during the day and called each other on the telephone trying to decide where different things went. : Someone said to me the other day that in the Tomorrow ‘the Sas Francisco. past we relied so completely as a nation upon my conference will open. My husband ™ husband in international matters, that perhaps more and I had looked forward to trav- “of us would now recognize our duty to carry some eling leisurely across the country of the burden ourselves. 4 and spending that day in San Francisco. He had Instead of being satisfied just to follow, we would talked over his speech; he had even looked over a take a more active interest. : first dratt. But when I askéd him why he really I know that’ President Truman and our secretary wanted to go all that distance for one day, he said: of stite, Mr. Stettinius, ether with the other memi-| I am going to pray over the delegates.” : bers of our delegation, will ‘do all. they possibly cani- + I think that is the way we are all approaching to bring &bout a co-operative spirit among the delethis important conference, ° we J : gates and to set up a.framework within which we. For a long time we have been building points 3f can work in the future. ba : i contact where the United Nations could work on Our job is to build an atmosphere in the country|some specific thing im unison, The organization of as a whole that will reassure the other peoples of the

cussion, , . The setting up of this machinery is not an end in itself, but it is an essential step on the way. Without the machinery, future generations could never build a peaceful world. ? *

2 CHURCH PETITIONS wa x

THEY MAY even search their minds for “keys” to unlock the closely-knit family units they have had no real part in for so long. . . : They often worry about how to . get a wife, who has gone home N for the duration, to break away Sep PEN ‘from the influence of her family;. . ee cdnd how to re-establish a marriage that was barely started before the

LSAT SRR

There will be a public hearing on petitions for two new churches before the city zoning board Monday bet 3:30 p. mn. The federation of Evangelical | Lutheran ‘ churches asked permis- | sion to build a church: fashfoned | after. a Norman edifice of the Eng- | lish village type at the southeast { corner "of 25th and Boulevard pl. The building is to cost about $14,000. Part of the land on which the proposed church would stand belongs! to the city park board. Construc- | tion plans will depend on whether pp the board will sell the lot. | . The Rock of Ages Baptist church, |

09

to Be

supple you'll !

>

whom “Datidy” is only a picture on the mantle. And yet for all their searching for keys to open these doors to " ‘the lives they once led, most

ed or brown, » Riley 7411.

4 - , p— (> 0 : i ‘ Jah. . food for the world, the orgarization of rehabilitation world as to our firm intention to live in a peaceful : 1048 by Tued Fuaters w 425 7 Mawr | 2520 Columbia ave. asks that it be | servicemen will probably come ; Lol atts San and relief, world labor problems, world educational and democratic world, .Above everything else, ‘we| bi | permitted to convert a two-family | ‘home to find the doors ey ah i : y - stepping stones A i i J : n

“these have been - "should let, our delegates kiiow that we are keenly fol-| * + + + Luger, $100 . ., wide open, and the keys nt : ma lowing every move at this ‘ meeting. bona i it is good " % it needed. = aii 2

Camera, $150 , . , Tron Cross, $12 , . ."| residence into a church ghd

‘be captured by, Americans” as |