Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 April 1945 — Page 6
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»The Indianapolis Times
PAGE 6 ‘ROY W. HOWARD WALTER LECKRONE President
Owned
Member of United Press, Scripps-Howard Newspa--per. Alliance, NEA" Sérvice, and Audit Bureau of
Circulations. Give L
(A SCRIPPS-HOWARD NEWSPAPER)
and published daily (except Sunday) by St( Indianapolis Times Publishing Co., 214 W. Mary- ; lana st. Postal Zone 9.
: =
Saturday, April 28, 1945
oy
HENRY W. MANZ
Editor Business Manager
Price in Marion County, 5 cents a copy; delivered by carrier, 20 cents a week. Mail rates in Indiana, | $5 a yedr;%all other states,
‘month. >
« RILEY 5551 |
ight and the People Will Find Their On Way
WILL RUSSIA LEARN? N the preliminary tests of strength at San Francisco yesterday, Russia took one round by default and lost She won her three-vote demand, but lost on Poland
two, and organizati
Actually, these results tell little—except that there is
a Big Three d side with the questions.
she lost face.
ference could not even do a routine three-hour organizing job without three days of futile Russian wrangling.
*,
NOT THAT there is any gloating over Russia's failure. v, there is regret that she has been put even more on the defensive. picion-complex, this meeting or the proposed league can succeed. The public might suppose that Russia is on top and satisfied, because she got her three assembly votes. is not the case.
On the contrar
Francisco.
This was the high price the United States and Britain paid for Russia's consent to a United Nations conference It was automatically confirmed by the conference yesterday because the bargain had to be kept—or else.
But it has won no friends for Russia among the free
at all.
small nations.
On the organization matter Russia never had a chance. She should have known it. chairmen—instead of accepting the host as chairman as
customary— the plenary §
of the powerful steering and executive committees. to take a “compromise,” chairman title and gave Stettinius the actual jobs—that,
at least, is the »
LIKEWIS
seat for the puppet Polish regime.
That is important but not new.
What Russia expected to. gain by her inept tactics, of forcing a fight before the conference got under way, is not altogether clear. But she gained nothing. Definitely
»
on.
isagreement, and that most smaller nations Anglo-American group on these particular
Other delegations resent that a unity con-
» » » Ml
This bad start may feed her suswhich somehow must be overcome before
That She won those at Yalta—not at San
It may boomerang in the end. In demanding four rotating olotov of course was less concerned with ession spotlight than with possible control He had |
which gave him an empty co-
agreement.
squat, arrogant old capital. U. S. possessions, Canada | Sian parade of retributive destruction down once and Mexico, 87 cents a | | famed Unter den Linden.
| confuse peace-loving peoples
= td » ~ »
E, MOLOTOV had no chance of chiseling a The United States and |
Britain, having kept their part of the Yalta bargain by |
getting Russia
to keep his part of the bargain for a free and representative Polish government. deevly on this. But the conference prospects may not be as gloomy
as. this initial
indicate. Probably the division will shift on other issues, and often the United States and Russia may yet be together on the majority side. oo "While-there is danger that Russia's self-imposed un_popularity. at the start will make her even less co- -operativ e, “she may be “astute Though 1G) fC Tzarn Toa EY Defitgee. reverse
three assembly votes, are waiting for Stalin
Naturally, the free small nations feel
division ef Russia versus the others would
{
“her tactics and wind” P ‘as’ fH here of a 'successfuld
conference.
REFLECTIONS—
By the Way
By Joe Williams
NEW YORK, April 28.—There were flags all over Berlin during the 1836 Olympiés—but no Russian flags. There were parades and parades too—but no Russians. Things have changed slightly. Cables felirof the hammer and sickle flying over. what is left of the And they tell of a Rus-
Hitler used the Olympic games to gain time. and It was his last rendezvous with decency and, characteristically, it was based on a colossal, shameless deceit. Russia was the only important nation not represented at the games. Apparently they just werent interested. That would have been all right with Hitler, anyway; even then he was stirring up native hatred for the “dirty Bolsheviks.” But Hitler couldn't have kept the Russians out if they cared tg compete. The Olympiad is an independent entity and does not concern itself with diplomatic fever blisters. Perhaps the patient Stalin wanted to wait until he was .ready to stage his own private games, using practically all of Germany as the arena.
‘Blame the News Dispatches’ 1 TRUST this doesn’t read too much like one of those “the-last-time-I-saw,” etc., pieces. If sd blame the news dispatches. In tracing the massive actions of the Red warriors they re- -illuminate a number of lingering ‘mental pictures. The dispatches tell of fighting in and around the Plaza theater “which has frequently changed sides.” .I was lured into the Plaza one night to hear an opera. One never leaves Germany without taking in at least one opera, you know, old fellow: Unfortunatety, I am not much of an opera man. All I remember about this incident is that on the way out I met up with Max Schmeling and his seductive looking frau. He was fresh from his knock= out of Joe Louis in June and, athletically, was more important in the Nazi sports set-up than the entire German Olympic team. There has been heavy fighting in the region of the Potsdamer station. This is downtown Berlin; or maybe it's uptown. I never stopped to inquire.
'August That Year Was Beautiful’ HITLER and his gang were out to the Olympic stadium, or the Reichssportfield, every day. Count, Ciano, who married Mussolini's table-hopping -daughter and who was fated to be murdered on orders by the old buzzard himself during the closing stages of the Fascist drama, showed up regularly, too. He was a swarthy, oily looking bum, but not bad look- | ing at that, and he gave it that bow-from-the-hips and I-kiss-your-hand-madame business all over the joint. From where I sat in the press box .I couldn't have been more than 30 feet away from Hitler at any time. “There was only one thing about him that surprised me. seemed to me: August over there that year was beautiful.
I was
a journeyman hick and went in for rubber-necking |
on a large scale. I even got a belt out of the Tiergarten, which is no more than a picnic grounds with gutturals and kraut burps. It seemed there was something peaceful and placid about the grounds. You felt this way especially after a bad night at one of the local flea bags, say, like at the Haus Vaterland { or the Europahaus. I like to use the stuffy names; makes me feel very continental.
'An- Almost Impossible Assignment’
He had a red mustache, or so it |
Hoosier ome
GREAT IN EVERY
| SENSE OF THE WORD” | By Corky, Maybe by the time this is printed,
2927 N. Delaware st.
(Times readers are invited to express their views in these columns, religious controversies excluded. Because
you will say my subject is a bit of the vol ived. let stdle’ a little behind times. Maybe | ume receivec on it dnt even the right style in| Ter should be limited to 250 | writing about ‘one of America’s words. Letters must be greats. | signed. OBinions set forth |" Our history hooks undoubtedly! here are those of the writers, | will carry many pages, many chap-! and publication in no way
| ters, on the great work of President | | Roosevelt. {statesman and diplomat, [pion of the who could make his people listen, | when and Words
and | came
He was an
“little guy,” an
he feared no. man to upholding his
| American principles of life.
| could
never do
excellent | a cham- |
him justice.
implies agreement with those opinions hy The Times. The | Times assumes no responsibility for the return of manu- | scripts and cannot enter cor-
respondence regarding them.) |
orator |
it the
We the ridiculous assertions that the
BERLIN TEEMED with visitors from miany parts Can but say that Mr. Roosevelt was Atlantic and Pacific oceans are no of the world that month, and Hitler saw to it that [one of those we label as
nothing offensive met their eyes. Stories had ap- |
peared in the foreign press of Nazi persecution of the |greatness within his soul and character that channel was worth a dozen Maginot |
corroborative pictures, showing street fights and terrifying no evidence of ‘this
Jews, along with smashed store windows, posters. There was, of course, sort when the visitors arrived. For one month Hitler and his barbaric thugs carried out an almost impossible assignment; they checked their guns and acted like humans, even gentlemen.
The most modern structure in Berlin at that time was the Olympic stadium. It was built especially | for the games on the site of an old race track and nobody ever saw a better stadium or 'a more com-
T-plete-one.. a made a most inviting target from the
Sree An Shall i one net
dai
a Lida a owe is i wf 0
I was there the day it was opened.» And, do you
* Any prediction now of the ultimate ‘outcome is defi- | know how Hitler opened it? He sent thousands and nitely hazardous.
PROMOTION BY PETITION?
e know Capt. Audrey Jacobs is a good, com |
AS far as w
petent po ment, but he friends.
We refer,
lice offer with a clean record in his departcertainly appears to have some misguided
of course, to the not-so-mysterious persons
who are inducing Republican precinct bosses to sign a
petition asking that Capt.
spector. #1t is hard
Jacobs be promoted to in-
to think of anything that could do more harm
to the police department than to promote a man because a
handful of par
ty ward heelers wanted him promoted. When
they turn out to be the same precinct chairmen who
are compiaini police enforce
assumes an even more sinister aspect. the best possible reason why Capt. Jacobs should, not be |
promoted.
For Capt.
with this &ch knowledge th
ng because Mayor Tyndall insists that the |,
the laws against gambling, the whole thing Such a petition is
fay sake we hope he had no connection enfe to substitute politics for merit and no at it was being done. For the city’s
we trust Mayor Tyndall and the Board of Safety will treat this political high pressure with the contempt it
deserves.
RELAXING NCE more, unequivocally {o take off every control over materials |
CONTROLS
as V-E day approaches, Canada has promised
and services the moment the scarcity that made it necessary
ends.
No system of post-war priorities will be retained.
The
normal peacetime {reedom of action will prevail.
It is to be hoped that Washington will do likewise for | the United States.
It may well prove necessary,
scramble for goods and services, that price controls should
be retained for a time.
lifted at once
‘But all other restrictions should he so that our free economy may once more be-
gin to function.
SICK EUROPE ~ JCOMPLETE information from Europe, analyzed hy Met-
: ~ ropolitan Life Hfsurance Co. ‘among that continents’s worst post-war problems will be
experts, indicates that
the rehabilitation of public health.
Tuberculosis is rampant.
a third, in Paris and Brussels about a half, in the Nethers - lands even“more, and in Rome tuberculosis deaths last vear
were over twice those of 1940.
4n ‘Greece.
~ “I'yphus, cerebro-spinal meningitis and scarlef fev er are high in Germany: perhaps 70 per cent of the Greeks have malaria; diph
The disease is. epidemic | o
iy
theria in ‘Germany is up about 50 pér cent Europe it is at Jesh te Jewels, :
|
thousands of doves—little birds of peace—Huttering: against the sky. I wish I had thought to look at the filthy monster during the ritual. If he found
| it tough trying to act like a human, for only 30 days,
| mockery?-
| declared.
can you imagine what a strain it must have been to keep from laughing boisterously at this horrible By the way, how are you boys doing with your home work out there in San Francisco?
WORLD AFFAIRS—
| Farm Stake By Daniel M. Kidney!
WASHINGTON, April 28—Unless the reciprocal trade agreements are renewed for post-war business, domestic prices on farm products may suffer and a new farm depression result, Secretary of "Agriculture Claude Wickard
The Indiana farmer was one of the principal means committee. The committee now Is considering renewal of the trade agreements, combined with power granting the President to cut tariffs another
sake |
in the
In Germany it is up at least
| 50 per cent.
“The trade agreements have been of great value to our agriculture, particularly in the immediate pre-
war years,” Secretary Wickard asserted. “I believe
administration witnesses before the house ways ‘and. |
in every
sense of
being something
no man could kill
the word;
“great” | protection for this nation, is the the | height of abysmal ignorance. born| England's 22 miles of English|
or Seigfried lines. Three thousand!
Bow will his death effect our miles of water is better than a {lives? What will happen to Dum-|scrap of paper.” There are only barton Oaks, at that San Prancisco|nations - capable of - transporting
conference, wherein lies the future] enough men and material actoss the |
| of every person on earth? humanitarian policiss for prevent- | Jor war,
will the Atlantic and Pacific to wage a ma-
| is the United | ¢")ivine conditions.
and that
ing an éven greater world .war III States of America and England. So’
be carried through?
Can our new the way to provide security
President; the former Vice President | | keep control of the sea and air.
Harry S. Truman, uphold the’ stand- | HALAS of Roosevelt?
Mr, Into of the world, a future Franklin D. Roosevelt started load for any man have done as but
soldi and nea
5 Roosevelt? Few of us really ‘expected
his hands falls the
That is / man. good? guess about
| We ean guess and pray.
| bombs supposedly being launched!
that they will be of still greater value in the years |
following the war “During the war our farmers have increased production far beyond all previous records due to increased consumption in this country and increased shipments . abroad appreciably, farmers will be forced to make adjust- | "ments they do not like. “However, if there is a continuation. of high domes-
1f these demands are curtailed |
| | | tic purchasing power and good export demand, farm-
| ers can sell’all they can produce at a fair, price We cannot have either of these situations unis we have
an expanding world trade.”
Agreements in Force With 26 Countries
CITING THE EXPANSION of exports during the | trade agreement years of 1934 through 1941, Secretary Wickard pointed out that such agreements now are in force with 26 countries. : “Of these,” he continued, “15 have granted duty reductions or larger quotas on pork and pork products and three others. have agreed not to increase their duties. . Dairy products have received concessions from 11 countries, leaf tobacco from 11, fresh, dried
thereof 20, wheat flour 12, rice and. rice flour 10. “Ifteall the concessions on farm products now in effect had been in effect in 1937 they would have applied to 48 per cent of the total value of our exports of agricultural products in that year. These do not inc¢lude the concessions on industrial products which use farm products as raw material. “Even in those-years in which te had the greatest imports of farm products counted as competitive, such imports never ‘supplied mbre than 10. or 11 per eent of the domesfic’ market. : “These were the years of prosperity for the far mer.
per cent of 4 12- billion-dollar market than he was in on depression” years when he hae 53 Jer bent of a
‘6-billion-d ¢ masks
‘ J
and canned fruit 26; vegetables and préparations |
cee
In the years of the depression’ the share of imports’. |. fell to 7 per cent. Of course the farmer was much | - better: off in the years: of prosperity when he Had 90:
By
Now we can but pray to God to {lead President
Truman nope a
to
peace and
ual’s life
un 5
‘ ” “THERE IS A DISQUIETING The Watchman, There is the flood of
ANGLE"
Indianapolis
ganization end of the corner. Also, torials about rohot bombs [out whole American cities,
ww, as offered,
Will his rela-|San’ Francisco,
| Britain, Francerand China should og
Aliag vawers oy
as “rant “With results ‘equal | those of Mr. questions could go on and on.
Truman become our President.
Would another We can those things now
few more eyes {are open to the all over importance {of American politics in the individ-
a disquieting angle to prepaganda that we have got to start the security or-
civilization is just around the jittery edi-
If Russia the United States, | 0 PASARRIM i 2 er mam : peace and mutual ‘protection against wanton aggression by first defining | aggression; second, signing a pledge ‘to renounce aggression, and third,
dom Beat
NE to see
future halt aggression by any nation, anywhere. Third, the United Nations should be open for membership to those who accept all of the rules and laws adopted by the majority, without reservations of any kind. A fitting preamble to the world] Constitution: We the United Nations of yhe world, in order to promote peace,-establish security, pro-|
a - big
world
vide for our common defense against |at the President's background and | not giving their thoughts to what |
wanton aggression, and to insure liberty, freedom and justice among nations, do hereby solemnly pledge our respective nations to’ refrain from acts of aggression, to keep the peace, to settle all disputes by conciliation and mediation, to work for harmony and friendly commerce among ourselves and with all nations, and, with the help of Almighty God, live at peace and friendship with each other. Any nation which would reject
or the
wiping such
from Europe or Asia, is pure un-| those sentiments is not a “peace-
| adulterated scare-mongering.
And | loving nation.”
Side Glances=By Galbraith
com. 148 oy A emir INC. TM. ae. U8 PAT OFF.
ey
cette
"My. contract comes up for renewal next ea snd do | wish |
“hadn' won’ nal. that money from the boss, faking his befs “on when the wer ¥ vould endl’ = an
“I wholly disagree with avhat you say, but will defend to the death your
| honesty and dependability,
is to |
“won't” co-operate” at |
forming a united military pact © NOTHING x
right to say it.” “TEACHERS ARE NOT A GROUP APART”
By the Teachers of the William Watson Woollen School, Indianapolis
Thank you for your fair and un-/ derstanding editorial regarding | jleachers salaries in Friday's issue lof The Times. i Much of a teacher's reward for |
{his work comes from seeing the im-
provement of mind and character of | his students. Such qualities as Jeader- | ship and initiative are the intangibilities which cannot be measured by money, but which are the im-|
| mediate results of good teaching
| Long years of study, experience and sympathetic dealing with children produce the good teacher in whom parents should and do impose con- |
(fidence, and to whom they entrust
their children. The great majority of Indianapo{lis teachers have remained in their | chosen profession because they
two | really like ‘heir work and wish
|eontinue in it. Teachers are not |
{a group apart, but are naturally af-|
fected by the everyday #luctuations| The business | {and industrial world quickly rec- | ognize and seek out persons of abil- | ity and experience To these they {pay salaries commensurate with service rendered. It is a heartening thing for. {each‘ers to KTiow, the Sympatneiic: tude of your*paper and we take this| means of e¥pressing our appre-| ciation. .. = TO BE ASHAMED OF” By An Army Wife, Indianapolis It seems to me that the American people are getting a little out jof line. The main topic seems to be today of Truman's background. | [It has always been said that any-
one can be President, rich or poor Too many people are poking fun |
he is doing ndw and will do before the war is won. There's nothing | to be ashamed of—if you've been
“DON'T LET DOWN OUR ARMED FORCES” {By Robert Brown, Indianapolis I wonder if the people know, or don’t they? When our government opens a new bond drive, it expects its citizens to buy more bonds and keep them. But how about these women who storm the banks to cash all these | {bonds I have seen them turning | lin, just to put on a big front, sur{rendering their bonds to buy over | |again ‘in the new drive? If they | don’t intend to hold onto them un[til they really do need the cash, why put the banks and government to all this clerical work? It is just like. borrowing money when you don't even need it. Money talks and it keeps on say=ing, “use me for a just cause only don't cause me to let down our armed forces.” ’ » » “PLEASE LEAVE ONE SMALL CHOP” By Ruth V. Taggart, Indiknapolis Dear Santa—I am sending you a letter ahead of time for a good reason, to ask you if by Christmas all the German war prisoners have tired of pork chops, please, Santa, leave one small chop in my stocks ing. And don’t worry about getting
. | black coming down. the chimney.
There may not be much coal smoke, if any. Now if you can find a pork chop left, or any piece between the tail and ears, just bring that, and thanks Santa,
DAILY THOUGHT
Out of the spoils won in battles did - they dedicate - to maintain the house of the Lord. —1 Chrom cles 2 7. : wis
3 , \
Spi +X HE vie did well in war ust earns the right
; To eels doing well in peace. ~ =Robert
| four weeks from now.
iw
4 |
{a farmer. Come on, let's be good Americans and give the man a chance. » » »
POLITICAL SCENE—
Urgency
By Thomas L.. Stokes
SAN FRANCISCO, April 28.— The United Nations conference is § virtually in a race to wind up its work before the end ofthe war in Europe, The cry for haste is coming from the top leaders which gives it. the force of a determined course, Four weeks from now is the apparent goal, though earlier it had been Sstimated that the. conference might last deven or eight The reasons for avowed. This conference, as is so often emphasized, is not a. peace conference, but a conference with one purpose—to create an international security organization. This: is stressed over and over because there are those who would like to drag in—from the side and back doors if necessary—all sorts of extraneous matters belonging to a peace «conference. If such matters were brought into this conference they would only arouse passions and. jealousies and interfere with the main objective. They might ever cost the world a security organization, which would be tragic. There Is a Psychological Reason, Too
THE END of the war in Europe will push to the forefront all sorts of controversies which properly must go to the peace conference. If this conference does not get its work done before then, or shortly thereafter, the peculiar and particular situations ir various homelands pressing for solution may react upon the leaders and delegates here and handicap the creation of an international security organiza= tion. This would cause confusion. There is another’ reason. too, psychological but most natural as we learned after the last war. The coming of peace in Europe will bring a. great feeling of relief, even though there is the Japanese war to be finished, This might tend to divert at= tention, at least for the time being, from attempts to create machinery to prevent a Possible future war, It shouldn't, but that is a human reaction.
* plain and openly
Eden Appeals for Speed IT 1S GENERALLY accepted now, for example, that there was too long a gap between the armistice in the last war and the creation of the League of Nations, The fever had cooled. The fears of another war were submerged in relief. That is why this conference was called early this time. British Foreign Secretary Eden appealed for speed in his speech to the conference in its first plenary session. “World events of unprecedented magnitude both
| in_theeast and in the west crowd upon us every
hour,”, he said. “If we order our labors efficiently and work to the utmost of our strength, it should surely be possible for us to agree to our charter within We can not afford to delay.” He asked the conference not to try to attempt too much, not to try to produce “a complete scheme perfect in all its elaborate details for future ordering of the world.” The object now should be a charter | which can be filled out later in the light of exe | perience.
It Was a Necessary Decision SECRETARY OF STATE STETTINIUS spoke to the same effect in a previous speech to the cofiference, | Alluding to the decision to confine this conference to creation of a security organization, he said: “It was a necessary decision because establish ment of the world organization must be kept apart from the peace settlements if the organization is. to
| be able to deal freely and justly with future threats | to the peace that may arise from any cause, including
these settlements.
“Preparation of the charter of world organization
should not, therefore, be entangled with the many | and complex political and economic issues involved in the defeat of Germany and Japan. And the | imminent collapse of organized German resistance | makes it all the more important that the world organization be established at the earliest possible moment. “To deal with other issues, there will have to be many other conferences, and many other decisions, both national and international, “We have no time to lose.”
.
IN Wasa
a WETS
“Ginpiaii ns ' By Ned Brooks
WASHINGTON, April 28.—Congress within the next few months | will be called on to extend life insurance privileges for servicemen. The legislation will offer members the chance they have been awaiting to examine the | operation of the 130-billion-dollar insurance system, No doubt exists about renewal of the coverage, but many legislators want the veterans administration to explain complaints they have been receiving about | such matters as delays in settling claims, delays in correspondence and mixups in records.
|
sale of five-year term policies. The first of the 14,000,« { 000 now “outstanding will expire after October. The | extension is necessd#®y to keep the policies in force and | continue the rights of the G. 1.'s to convert them to ordinary life coverage.
VFW Protests ‘Unnecessary Hardships’
THE VETERANS OF FOREIGN WARS has joined members of congress in protesting “unnecessary and inexcusable financial hardships” resulting from the veterans administration's tardiness in settling ine surance and death pension claims. Administrator Frank T. Hines concedes that his agency has fallen behind, but he disputed the V. F. W, claims of “red tape and creaking machinery.” He ate | tributes the delays to his inability to get personnel, | Hiehudine trained executives for top jobs... He says claims are being handled “orderly and not chaotically”
and promises an improvement when his staff can be
| brought to full strength. The V. F. W. says a survey of claims procedure by | its rehabilitation service showed an average of #ix months required after a serviceman is killed to begin insurance and pension payments. The veterans administration says the average is only four months and explains that 40 days are re= quired, for the armed services to submit death records and another $0 days are needed to establish proof of beneficiaries’ claims. Some time can be trimmed from the remaining 50 days, they concede.
Proposal Is Called 'Impractical’
VETERANS OFFICIALS say. the proposal of V. F. W for a consolidation of insurance and pendency pension adjudications is “impractical” cause beneficiaries in the two.claims often are identical. The"V. F. W. has complained that veterans’ widows, for example, must now file dpulicate records for the two awards. The dual system was established in 1921, the organization charges, to “create more veterans administration jobs.” A V. FP. W. report to Gen. Hines has called for a
the de« beé« not
tion of the work as rapidly as possible to offices in the field.” One V. F. W. reform would permit acceptance of a beneficiary's affidavit as proof of age. Citing the difficulty of obtaifiing birth records, the V. F. W. says : the veterans administration withheld benefits from an 81-year-old mother, requesting a “statement from the midwife in attendance at har birth.” ’ Because of Washington personnel shortages, the I veterans administration insurance branch was ‘moved to New York, - Correspondence, however, still is r d through Washington, adding time and my
"| the settlement of claims.
Since the government insurance system does hot permit lump sum settlements, the job of record-keepe - | ing will be an enormous one for years to come, Of« Bini expect a majokity of the 14,000,000 ‘will convert to ordinary i
—The insurance act of 1940 provided for government ¥
“complete overhauling of procedure, with decentraliza-
ers
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This sto was the vic!
V United § ON THE watched a b Ernie Pyle, b area. The Ie St the Indiana it is broken t — Maj, Geo that tragic i an abandone “Ernie Py two divisions Ernie's ho neath the m John J. Barn of the jeep with Ernie, r
‘One of t
THE BOD battle dress from the sun “He was 0 said. When thi there had be Bassett from Helena, Ark.; is from Euge lines, Suddenly The swatl
The foll
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Insi
FRANK F give.up on h seed and sow 6034 Haverfor severe case 0
in the final bulletin at tb of a suit by “We was gr At first glan a sporting ch But a hasty ¢ was granted, ders are broad Mrs. Anna C animal appe: week and loc for it. Now takes her pe scurries alon; borhood but |
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Ar A111 EVERY D words in the communicatic
and passenge If each work
AACS furnis| way markers traffic. The: fields and air to the “end the AAF rou tons of high carried in 19 Its nerve quarters in A {s ‘Brig. Gen.
On Paper IF ALL ti the radio ran stalled at equ plane ‘flying radio rang 80 miles. On paper active on a lg ponsisted of « men when {it Gander, New:
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NEW YOR now visiting riewing thing p take in. The horro
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