Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 May 1945 — Page 13

2, 1945 -BERLIN J. P.)~Col. COW. News fall of Bers eat of Ger-'y

Recipe

ymatic

Ernie’ S Biography

MANILA (By Wireless), —Before 1 get on with writing about the war out here, I thought I might have a little more about Ernie Pyle. As a matter of fact I said long ago that if Ernie ever Bok killeq I'd go home at: once ‘and try . to write a biography of him. It

bught to be done. But it .Jooks

as if Til have to stay overseas-

a while. Maybe Lt. Cmdr. Max Miller, author of “I Cover the . Waterfront” and many other “books, would do a biography of Ernie. Max loved him, and Max was” with him. for weeks in the Pacific. But nobody "Gught “to ‘write - a book about Ernie without Jerry's ‘help. Jerry is Ernie's wife—“That Girl” he used to mention in his column, “It Jerry were in better health she ought to write & book herself. She knew Ernie far better than anybody ever did. She writes beautifully.

‘The Whole Story

BUT JERRY hasn't been wéll these “past few years, and now that the thing has happened that she dreaded during those lonely days and years in Albuquerque—well, -I guess it's out of the question. If- Max or somebody does write a book about

THE STATEHOUSE dome was getting a lot of attention from rubber-necked spectators yesterday as painters applied glittering silver and gold paint on the whatchamacallit that sits atop the dome and holds the flag pole. With the new paint, it looks like a million dollars, it’ would look .even better with a brand spanking new flag waving from the flagstaff. But, unfortunately, it takes nearly an hour a day for a janitor to go up to the dome and raise and lower the flag, .and- the maintenance staff over there can't spare the time from other work. Personally, I'd rather see Old. Glory flying from the peak of the dome, even if some of the offices had to miss being dustéd occasionally, 1 wonder if there's another statehouse in. the country where the dome is bare of a flag? ., . Ernest Tappy, navy specialist 1-c, is the victim of a discriminating: thief. Tappy is going on leave Sunday so he had his: Sunday uniform ¢the navy furnishes only two uniforms) cleaned and pressed. He picked Monday evening and put it in a friend's car, parked back of the English hotel building: Returning later, he "found the sack containing the uniform missing. The thief had. ignored a guitar and three cartons ot cigarels, Chances are that the thief, finding the package contained a navy uniform instead of civvies, will toss it away in an alley. If so, Tappy would be happy to have it back. His home phone number is WA. 1418,

Space for Gardeners HERE'S GOOD NEWS for a few would- be gardeners out around Irvington. A. -E. Sigler (CH. 2958-R) owns about 5 acres on E. 16th st., a block and a half east of Arlington which he's willing to parcel out to gardeners. The whole tract will be plowed with the gardeners sharing the cost proportionately. There will be no one at home after 6:30 tonight, but Sigler will be glad to receive applications tomorrow. . . . Sign reported on a window at Indiana and Capitol aves.:" Guaranteed or your money

v

World of Science

IT IS FORTUNATE for the United States that iron: ore is among those mineral resources of the nation whose reserves are expected to last more than a century at the prewar rate of consumption,

Elmer W. Pehrson, chief of the economics and statistics branch of the U. 8. bureau of mines, estimates the iron ore reserves to be good for 111 years. The United States is now producing steel at the rate of 96,000,000 tons a year, an all-time high in the history of the world. But the figure is certain to decline somewhat with the end of the war, However, it is important to note that no metallurgical development of the war gives any promise of displacing steel from its position as the physical backbone of modern civilization. Important as are the developments in aluminum, magnesium, plastics, etc. none of them age expected to lessen the .demand $ for steel in the post-war world. In fact, many engineers think that with an increase in the peacetime use of light metals will come an increased demand for steel.

Many Changes Ahead IT IS WELL to realize, however, that many changes in the iron ore picturé are ahead. Today, the great bulk of our iron ore comes from the Lake Superior region. As I have said before, the real axis in this war has been the line of ore carriers moving down the Great Lakes. The Berlin-Rome axis could not stand against it,

My Day

WASHINGTON, Tuesday.—I know others must feel, as I do, the tenseness of waiting for some further news of the final end of the war in Europe. That brief moment when we thought that the Nazis had actually surrendered made me realize what a relief it will pe when we can feel that only the ordinary aceidents of life surround our men in the European theater, As more and more people are liberated from prison and concentration camps, I keep wondering if their return will not mean a great awakening among us to the realization of the full horror of war, Who could make it more clear than a boy who had been in one of these camps and in contact : with the German people? I hope We are not going to be too easy with ourselves: It would be pleasant to close our eyes and ears now and say: “These things could never be. Human beings could not do such things, and therefore we will not believe them or listen to them.” That would be an easy way out because we would not have to decide how we could prevent any recur= rence in the future, in any part of the world, of the fascism which brought these things about. We have been much more concerned in this

pe

Of course, -

His Fun Is Over

it up downtown

gen, while water breaks up into hydrogen and oxy-

Ernie, it-"ought to be the whole story, not just a gilded “success story” .or a Parson Weems fable. Maybe - John: Steinbeck would do - it, or—Ernie's old friend. Paige Cavanaugh, or Milton Magkaye or Dorothy Disney. or any one of -many writing people who were Ernie's close friends. But let them picture ‘the whole man. Ernie was no- cardboard saint. He used-bad words-sometimes. He :drank sometimes. It’ was fun for him to relax with friends over a few highballs, ——

‘Should Go to I ndiana’

ANY BIOGRAPHER of Ernie should go to wndiaha and talk to Ernie's father and’ his Aunt Mary, and to his schoolmates at Indiana university. "He ought to talk to people who worked with him in the old days in Washington when we were yourg and carefree and ‘Ernie met Jerry. And with some of the old aviation crowd* who used to gather at|D Ernie's and Jerry's place at#56 N st: N. W., ir Washington—I think that was the number—and talk shop or sweat out the disappearance of a mail pilot. He ought to comb through Ernie’s letters to his friends-—there is a bale -ef thém at my office, and Jerry and Cavanaugh and Roz Goodman and lots of other people must have many letters tucked away. It ought to be & careful job, not a slapdash thing to “catch the market.” I don't think Ernie is going to be forgotten in a hurry. “. . -

e

back—Bedbugs, cockroaches, ants. I'd rather have my money back. . Tommy Hendricks, executive Secretary to the Indiana State Medical association, returned over the week-end from Portland, Ore, with some ‘stories that left his fishermen friends gasping with envy, Tommy. went to Portland on business for the American Medical association. The day a meeting was scheduled, the chairman announced there'd be no session as the smelt run. was the biggest in years. Tom went along down to the Sandy river, and just stood: there, amazed. He says the water was black with the fish for a'mile and a half. People were catching them with seines, hats, baskets and what have you. Next day, he saw smelt on the hotel menu and ordered them. He got four of the little] fish and paid a dollar for them. Personally, he thought that smelt, .

ALL DOGS are smart, but Shorty, a little shortleggéd mutt—mostly beagle and a little police—is one of the smartest. Just to prove it, when he was homeéless last winter, Shorty looked the situation over on the north side, then “moved in” on the Hirst Dog Food Shop at 5613 N. Illinois. Not so dumb, eh? The

By Lee G. Miller|

SECOND SECTION.

(One of a Series)

By 8S. BURTON HEATH i NEA Staft Writer ASHINGTON, May 2.—Provost. Marshal General Archer

vinced that our treatment of German prisoners of war—which has been criticized so much that the house military affairs committee now © is -investigating—caused the Nazis to treat American prisoners

otherwise might have shown. International Red Cross exports and those of the Swiss. show, ac-

fcording to Gen. Lerch, that up to

Dec. 1 Germany was complying gen-

"|erally to -the best of her ability,

Inside Indianapolis By Lowell Rudi

with her obligations under the Geneva convention, so far as American ‘and British - prisoners were concerned. Individual . camp ° commanders and guards undoubtedly were *vio= lating orders and indulging their hatred and sadism against our men. ” » n PRISONERS of other nationalities were subjected-to the unspeakable atrocities’ now being told by war correspondents, as were Jews and German political prisoners” But Gen, Lerch is convinced that in general, and subject to war handicaps, the Nazi- government was trying - to treat Americans - with strict, if not generous legality. Red Cross reports always, lag somewhat; of course, and Since Dec, 1, in particular, all Germany has been tern wide open by our bombers and ‘ground troops. » 2's

shop owners, Mr. and, Mrs. W. R. Hirst, have become | greatly attached to Shorty. Before he chose them | for his family, Shorty used to follow Mail Carrier | Harrison Myers around his route. Sometime after | he got established at- the shop, Shorty started the custom of hopping info the mail truck driven by Walter Blake, when he stopped to collect mail from a nearby box. Daily, Shorty would hop in with Mr. Blake, ride down to 52d st., hop out, and then follow Carrier Myers around. But his fun is over. The Hirsts now ‘lock him up when it's time for the mail pickup. The reason: A different driver was on the run one day several weeks ago, and he didn’t know about Shorty. The result was that the dog was let out in the wrong | part of town and was lost for a couple of weeks. His pal, Mr. Blake, kept an eye open for him and| found him one day out in Irvington. Shorty can’t understand why he now is locked up along about 8:30 every morning. But.the Hirsts hope eventually he'll] quit gadding around with mailmen and just take care | of things around the shop. |

4 By David Dietz

It has been estimated that the best of the Lake Superior ore, high-grade ore with a 50 per cent iron | content, will begin to exhaust itself in the next 15| to 25 years. It is probable that other ore fields in the United | States will come into greater prominence as it be- | comes necessary to work the low-grade deposits of the | Lake Superior region.

Farmers Will Benefit MR. PEHRSQN'S figures also give great encouragement to the chemical industries. This is because they call attention to the fact that we have the world’s largest coal reserves, a reserve good for 4300 years. Modern chemistry hes reached the point- where, if necessary, any organic chemical compound could be synthesized from the starting points of coal, oil and water. The coal would furnish carbon and smaller amounts of hydrogen and oxygen, in addition to such chemicals as exist as impurities in coal. From the air, we can get both nitrogen and oXy-

gen. Four chemical elements—carbon, nitrogen, Hy-drogen-and exygen are the foundation stones of organic chemistry. In all probability the chemical industry of the

future will make greater demands upon agriculture. |

In this war, for example, a considerable amount of | synthetic rubber is being made from alcohol. (The alcohol is first converted into butadiene and styrene) | { Agriculture will benefit in the post-war world from | the fact that nitrates can be made in unlimited quan- | tities from the nitrogen of the air and from the fact| that the nation’s phosphate rock reserves should last!

805 years, Ropording to Mr. Pehrson, i

By Eleanor Roosevelt land, Air force ground and bomber their country of Japanese so that 8ir power would be "too crippled

country about the people among us who might be] Communists, The great majority of the” Dies com- | mittee investigations were directed at what they| feared were Communist activities. | The reason, I imagine, is that the only thing| in communism that most of us know much about | has to do with the economic theories, and ‘those of us who have considerable of this world's. goods are troubled by what we think these theories signify. Gradually we will learn more about the social, political and economic practices of the U, 8. S. R,, and we will adjust ourselves to co-operating with | them while preparing our own habits and thoughts | and customs. But we should_give more thought than we have | given in. the past to the dangers of the Fascist theories, They affect ndt just our economic situation. | Judging by the results as we see them in the concentration camps in Europe, they also affect the nature and the souis of all human beings who fall | under their domination. We cannot co-operate with! sadists and with human beings who are devoid of pity. Yesterday afterr.oon Miss Thompson and I came | down to Washington. her apartment here,.and there were a' number of things that I had not managed to finish. It was a curious sensation coming into this city again, and| I think ‘if will probably take me a little while before I approach it as a casual visitor.

Communist Influence Seen in Il Duce Episode

By PAUL GHALI | Times Forelgn Correspondent

dictator after having asked consent which “it. was "vor by displaying of the Milan national liberation | the bodies of its leaders in the most|

BERN, May 2. — The shameful committee, which was in no position |ignominious fashion.

She had had no time to close

‘here as an. event of primary palitical|

+ fans in northern Italy today. re]

death of Benito Mussolini is viewed |to oppose his wishes.

importance for present-day Italy. Not only does it mark complete

rupture with the last 20 years but

it also gives glimpses of Communist influence in northern Italy. THe manner in which the former Duce was executed and the theatri-

cal publicizing of .the event was,

primarily the work of Communist Chief Cino Moscatelli, head of thé partisans’ Garibaldinl division, perhaps the most powerful of the Ttal-

™ was Moscatelli ‘who took the

It was Moscatelli, too, who with | his men brought the corpses of Mussalini and his mistress to Milan. Finally, it was the Communist chief. who personally ordered the public display of the gorpses, according to “first-hand infoimation imparted to your correspondent. With that materialism which so characterizes - them, the aims of} Italiah Communists. have been two-! fold in dealing with the matter of Mussolini, © First they ‘wished to discredit

to exeente the erstwhile

fascism once for all in the eyes of She populgtion of; the vary town In.

Secondly, they have shown their

distrust of the present Bonomi gov- : ernment and perhaps of the allied

high cgmmand as well by taking matters into their own hands. The , 32-year-old, tall, thin, alert Moscatelli, who sealed Mussolini's doom, is a locksmith from Beilla near Novare. - At 25 he had to flee Fascist “justice” ‘and took refuge first in Switzerland; then in Moscow. «He returned to Italy in 1940 and since then has been active in or{ganizing groups. ol \

Ce Te pa, by The ADL Ey

clandestine = Communist |

, COMMUNICATION has; been dis- | rupted so that even first priority front-line material cannot be moved. Advancing Russians from the east have caused the Nazis to move

ie Indianapolis

WEDNESDAY, MAY 2,-1945

L. Lerch and his staff are. con-...

with much more decency than they :

ARE WE CODDLING PRISONERS OF WAR? . . . By S. Burton Heath

Abuse of Yank POW's Reflects Reich Peril |

“omy three allies—Great Britain, Russia’ and the United States—hold |

many German prisoners in position]

fo retaliate for atrocities. Russia is not party to the Geneva convention. | Gen. Lerch feels that7if"is sig-! nificant that Anglo - American! prisoners, whose governments treat German prisoners scrupulously, | should until ~recently have been! treated far better than any others | held by the Nazis. 1 . » ! WHILE Pons of other na- | tionalities were hunting rats for} food to exist, the Red Cross reported | that Americans were getting from| Germany the 1800 to 2000 calories | a day allowed for German civilians| and base camp troops. Except for isolated instances,| Red Cross packages were getting]

‘through, bringing the menu .of our|

Upper picture shows living conditions of allied prisoners at stalag

XXII-A, a Nazi prison camp now. in. American hands.

The roof

leaked and half ihe windows were out. Prisoners’ bedding consisted

of the straw-covered floor and was unheated. Below is a view of

one blanket, though the building German prisoners’ barracks at Ft.

Devens, Mass.—warm, clean, and” comfortable,

prisoners westward in a hurry, only = § to start them back eastward as Gen. .

Eisenhower's forces the Reich. : Under these conditions; even to the extent that Germany had food for prisoners, there was no transportation with which to handle either it or Red Cross packages. |

a Ud =

overran

And the central government, re{sponsible for over-all policy, has

fbeen so cracked by disaster that|Germany rather than to any de-|gress.

men up to the 350 calories that] most American civilians get, = The food given our men was less desirable than what - we. give to German prisoners, and less abundant—but German civilians had less food than Americans, ang. poorer. | : & &% ©» THE ARMY is convinced by 1ln-| telligence reports that word of how| well we treat prisoners has reached]

" German troops generally enough tol

“no other option.

. by an American president, ratified

treaty, and- we should denounce

and s pictures _are)

| Pegent stories this breakup of

attributable to

THE ' PRISONERS moved back|local commanders have been pretty liberate flouting of Berlin's treaty

from threatened fronts have had to be housed in makeshift quarters that were utterly inadequate.

By THOMAS M. JOHNSON NEA Staff Writer ASHINGTON, May 2.—While| the world gazes in fascina-| tion toward Europe and the great-| est victory in military annals, allied |

| commanders are quietly solving al | vast ‘problem in logistics-—transpor- |

{tation and supply—which is the | ©

| buildup for D-day in Asia.

From six continents and seven

seas we are assembling, mostiy

around a few islands, what will be the most powerful triphibious forces ever deployed.

By air, sea and land they are| assuming position to crush Japan as| Germany was crushed.

» » » THE PRESSURE will come partly from British, Indians, Anzacs, French, Dutch, Chinese, and probably Russians, But the direction comes largely from our joint chiefs of staff in | Washington, ' the execution from | American admirals and generals— and from American - forces which. {will be perhaps twice our present | Pacific strength of around 2,500,000. Army alone may send 2,000,000 from here and ‘Europe, using im- | proved shipping methods. ” ” ”

ALREADY Pacific bases are being |

{prepared 'by “engineers--newly arrived with materials from Eng-

crews are also leaving there. Bombers, free (debacle, will be following soon. Astronomical quantities of bombs |’

{already are going.

Next will come armored. divisions, {which the Japs have never faced. s n

much on their. own of late.

Gen. Lerch understands that

“ |some of the abuses reported in

fleets that ever sailed the seas. They include a fair share of the {navy and merchant marine tonnage, {now within hailing distance of 50 | millions. The navy alone completed nearly 138,000 ships’ this. year, including many additions to its 60,000 landing craft. For D-day In Eurbpe we moved and supplied am army across a 3000-mile ocean, using the many good" ports of oir east coast and England, for a 26-mile jump across the Channel.

2 2 n FOR D-DAY in Asia we have few west coast ports, and 7000 miles of ocean to whatever close-up base we can find. ~ Where will that base be, and where will we go from it? Will we play safe or take a chance? Will -allied forces first retake Borneo’s oil ‘and Java's rubber to ease supply for the jump-off?

the Philippines to Formosa: and thence to the Chinese mainland at Amoy and Swatow, or even direct to. Hongkong from Manila or to Shanghai from Okinawa? 1 " 5 n : THAT WOULD bring China ad- | equate food and. supplies for her | civilians and her armies. This then could help us clear

it could serve. as a vast staging

by the luftwaffe’s{area for the final blow against the|8'my, though largely concentrated

main Japanese islands. Those islands, meantime, would have been worn down by blockade and bombing. Or, leaving other operations to other nations, will. the Americans

ALL THIS strength is borne to| take a stupendous calculated risk?

the Far East by ' the mightiest!

will - they concentrate feverishly

Up Front With Mauldin

NY

EN aS

TURN NN

-

"AMERICAN : SOLDATEN!

PLEASETREAT OUR LITTLE HOME AS IFAT WERE YOUR OWN

A GEQMAN FAMILY

And will the jump-off be from

obligations to us,” aside from the! actions of Individuals and of local camp commands.

MOBILIZING FOR THE KNOCKOUT BLOW IN THE PACIFIC—

The Buildup Is on for D-Day in Asia

Japan.

lon developing Okinawa’s great

{open spacés into the biggest man|made island base in history, a base whence we can launch an attack | directly at Japan? i » » » : {- AUDACIOUS—~but Japan’s'sea and

for a real counter-attack. Her vast

|at home, : would - be disjointed by {our bombers from several island [pass s and the myriad carriers of he American-British fleets. Even: the battieship’s guns could reach most of Japan’s industrial (cities, which already are being | burned * out. even more successfully than predicted. | u » » | SUCCESSFUL invasion of sacred | Honshu would ddom Japan. | For Japan, despite reports, cannot | long support Her armies on in-| |dustries outside the home islands. | | In Manchukuo, in China, and! forther south, the ‘limbs could be! chopped off more easily if the. ears had stopped. ‘ | « So this ‘might be the quickest, {hence the cheapest, route to victory. |

thave been mulled over by

stapes ca

SCHOOL T0 GIVE MUSIC FESTIVAL

Broad Ripple high school willl present its seventh annual spring | | music festival at 8:15 p. m. Pridsy in the school auditorium. The Golden Singers, chorus et choir directed by Roger Riley, will}’

will play under the direction of

History's mightiest fleets are pouring men and supplies into Pacific. island ports such as this one for the final crushing blow agains

| Mars.

Both plans and several variants the! +

sing and the band and orchestra |

overcome propaganda and - cause! thousands of wehrmacht troops to surrender, when they might have killed Americans and further delayed our victory by a last-ditch] stand. And as a final argument for its current treatment of prisoners, ¢n a .more realistic but strictly ‘legal basis, the army says that it has

The Geneva convention was signed

by the senate and officially proclaimed. Under the Constitution it is part of the supreme law of the land. A ' IF THE ARMY is wrong and Germany has deliberately viplated. that

it for-that reason and retaliate on the prisoners we hold for what is being done in Germany, that is a decision for the President and con-

So long as_the treaty is in force, Gen. Lerch sees no possible question as to: his ecurse. He must follow its express provisions.

joint. ahd combined chiefs of staff in their Washington headquarters. They have also consulted the Russians who, in military matters, hardheadedly ask “Why?” but, once convinced, are terriftic. » = ~ THE JAPS know that. And they are concentrating so strongly in Manchukuo that international law would call it a provocation justifying Russia In taking steps. And it appears that she will take them, once she has cleaned up Berlin and reversed the powerful

juggernaut that has been headed

eastward. By then we should have achieved our logistic miracle and built up troops and supplies for D-day in the Pacific, Then the world will be set for the greatest last act ever staged by

~national

PAS GE 11 Labor ie - Want Years ir in.}: War Counted On Seniority

- By FRED W. PERKINS Scripps-Howard. Staff Writer WASHINGTON, May 2.—Con=~ flict in. congress between two powerful groups was foreshadowed today when the Veterans of Foreign Wars announced it would seek a law that undoubtedly will be opposed by labor unions, The V.F. W.’s legislative commit . a tee, meeting here under chairmans Hip * of Robert. K.: Christenberr’y, president of the Hotel Astor Corp., in New York, decided to press for legisla= tion to guarantee all soldiers and sailors of this war seniority in industrial employment equal te their time in military service. The proposed seniority, accorde ing to Omar B. Ketchum, V.F. W, legislative representative, . would be for thie benefit of word war IT veterans whether or not they had permanent jobs ‘or any jobs when they were inducted or entered the armed forces in any other way. In this respect the proposal goes beyond ‘the selective service law, which has 'been ‘interpreted to mean. that a veteran who had a permanent: job is entitled to get it back when he gets an honorable discharge. = » » THIS interpretation of the selective service law has never been completely accepted by either the American Federation of Labor or the C. 1.0. The new proposal of the V. F. W. deals with a different phase of the veteran employment problem, and in a manner to which the labor unions have declared opposition. If the V. F. W. proposal finds acceptance in congress, a young man who was taken out of high school or college and never had a job, but has served three years in the army, navy, marine corps or coast guard, will have three years’ seniority in competition with civilian war workers.

Philip Murray, C. I. O. president, and other labor leaders have declared that under a supreme court decision, job seniority of civilian workers has the status of a property right, For this reason, the Vv. FW, proposal may be attacked on constitutional grounds—on .. whether congress has a right to legislate in this field. A statement by Jean A. Brune ner, of Forest Hills, N. Y., nae tional commander of the V. F. W,, was that the aim was to place servicemen on the same basis as war workers in obtaining or holds ‘ing post-war jobs. : ; a 8 HN THE V. F. W. plan sets May 1, 1940, as the date from which seniority for war veterans is to be figured. That precedes the Sept. 1, 1940, date in the selective service law, and also the Dec. 7, 1941, -attack on Pearl Harbor,

. The number of veterans evene

- tually coming oat of this war is

figured at 15,000,000, which is about equal to the number of members claimed by all Ameri-

‘can organized labor—the A. F. of ©

L, the C. I. 0, the railway brotherhoods, the United re Workers, and other independent unions. It was believed to be sure that if the proposition ever gets bee fore congress the result will be what labor unions have been trying to avert—a conflict of mterests between war veterans and * civilian war workers.

——We, the Women ——

>»HANNAH ¢

Owen Beckley,

FILM “SACRED INDIA® |

"Thé Rev. A. E. Rassman - -and| Mrs. Rassman will present the|

moving picture film, “Sacred India,” for the general public tomorraw| at 7:30 p. m. at the Missionary| Bands church, 719 E. St. Clair st.

OBSERVE! MOTHER'S DAY |

A Mother's day program wil be| given by the Acton chapter No. 173, O. E. 8. tomorrow at 8 p. m. at the Acton Masonic hall. Mrs. Margaret Hittle is worthy matron and Ralph! ‘ Broeking, worthy patren, ©

; were spending her : samp.

5 Why Don't We Bring Speech Up to Date?

By RUTH MILLETT IF WE REALLY wanted to ge$ some feeling into our speech toe day, we'd discard some of our old comparisons for new ones. me »We'd say, for instance, “He hasn't a red ration point to his name.” “He'd

his last ! And ‘how about “As wel. come as a Vletter.” Or, "About as dependable as & tire running on its third ree tread.” » » » OR EVEN, “She's the kind of woman who: feeds her kids oleo and serves ‘buttey to her impor= tant guests” “Or, “As long as a cigaret line.®

Or, “An | under-the counter

customer.”

- » 8: YOU'D GET the idea just as quickly if someone sald, “You're

© a8 welcome as a T-bime steak.”

» » Or, “As Ot as though she last shoe

Of, “She treats her husband as though she expected him to vs notice.” ~ OR, “CAREFUL as a WOMAN. putting on her last pair of ny~ lons." Or, “As unpredictable as the 2 hit ! : Just as sraphic would be “nor