Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 June 1945 — Page 1

‘4

§ } -

By \ AL PPS = HOWARD §

a

he Indianapolis

FORECAST: Partly cloudy and not so cool today; fan and cool again tonight; tomorrow, increasing cloudiness and rising temperature.

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VOLUME: 56—N UMBER 3

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Entered as Second-Class Matter at Postoffice Indianapolis 8, Ind. Issued daily excépt Sunday

MONDAY, JUNE 4, 1945

FINAL HOME

ois FIVE CENTS

Cotmuisisric Ideas On Work Run Rough- Shod Over Viennese Dignity

By JACK BELL Times Foreign Service

VIENNA, June 4.—Tales from the Viena Woods : Russian soldiers—busy clearing shell-torn Vienna streets—caused amusement and no little consternatien

by the application of true task.

Communistic doctrines to_the

Two dignified members of the provisional Austrian government cabinet were walking past a street-cleaning

IDUTCH STARVING— Hunger Still Death Blight For Holland

By NAT BARROWS Times Foreign Correspondent HE HAGUE, June 4.—Like a delayed-action booby trap, starvation' weakness lurks behind the Dutch : liberation from Nazis. Walk down any street here— . past the acres of crumpled, bomb - wrecked homes — walk past the scorched, shattered ruins where V-2 rockets started for England but fell back upon The Hague. Everywhere you see the pathetic masks of- hunger. Faces are gaunt and yellowed; eyes deep set and listless. Most - of The Hague's 27,000 starvation cases are hospitalized. Or they are getting home treatment from specialized teams, which search from house to house. Yet everysday scores collapse on the streets—a few die. " » 5 FIVE YEARS of German restriction were climaxed by terrible weeks of eating tulip bulbs, potato peelings and even dogs and cats— just before liberation last month, They were too much for old people. Loi In the confusing job of trying to restore Holland, food has No. 1 priority. Undernourishment, has irreparably stunted children’s growth. It has undermined adult working capacity in the three Dutch

Mr. Barrows

“hunger provinces '—North Hol- |

land, Utrecht and South Holland. LJ ” 5 THE MARK of the beast will remain stamped upon the people of these provinces long after the allied governments have finished reconstruction. Industrial workers will be-un-able to turn out normal strength for months. But this is balanced by the satisfaction of allied relief units because of the lives they: have been able » save since liberation. First, it was a ddsherils rush to

get food—food of any kind—into !

the hunger provinces. The allied-German truce enabled Plying Fortresses and Liberators to pass over Nazi guns and drop food bundles, » » » THE ARRIVAL of the Canadlans—following the. liberation of occupied Holland — revealed a food problem even greater than feared. . In Amsterdam, starving people were dying on the streets by the hundreds. Fully 50,000 malnutrition cases needed immediate attention, there alone. Food from the United Stales, Canada, Britain ‘and Sweden poured in. In-less—than four weeks, the average diet has been raised from 400 to 1800 calories daily, That isn't exactly a dinner at the Ritz—2,800 daily calories are necessary for normal living,” But the Dutch are so hungry that they eat as if they were receiving Thanksgiving “dinners — which they are.

» n ” RIGHT NOW the average Dutchman in the three hunger provinces is getting weekly ra tions as follows: ‘Nearly nine pounds of potatoes, slightly over one pound of meat, 1% pounds of white bread and about two pounds of biscuit, also half-a-pound of fat; mostly lard, less than half-a-pound of sugar, 4 bar of chocolate, At ledst two quarts of milk are provided, That Is a long way from the pre-war diet. of 5700 calories daily, But for a country where 1000. persons a week have been dying from starvation it means life,

” » » THIS LOW caloric level will have to suffice until the autumn harvests and possibly through the winter. Never again can I complain about missing a meal or two after what I have seen here,

Copyright, 1945, by The Indianapolis Times

and The Chicago Dally News, Ine,

the |

‘GAY NINETIES" | RULE AGAIN AT ENGLISH HOTEL

New Operator to ‘Restore’ | Old-Fashioned Flavor On the Circle. By ROGER BUDROW

Times Business Editor

Like the Old Gray "Mare,

our |

job—just- when more workmen were needed. ’ The Russian strawbosses ordered them protested. They produce official papers; but

couldn't read.

The ministers grew indignant. did a two-hour stretch. The fate of the ministers shocked the good Viennese, But the whole tewn laughed a day later when Vienna's,

—and the ministers

Flown From

city’s historic and somewhat run- |

|down English hotel, on the Circle, | ain't what it used to be. And that's jast the trouble with

{1t, says Dr.

“People have liked it just because it © was old-fashioned,” he said,

made in| weren't |

‘modern improvements” its appearance . recently such good ideas. So he is going to turn back the clock, as far as the English is con- | cerned," and try to make ‘it look like the Gay Nineties agadn.

Adams, Inc, Gets Job

Clyde A. Sandberg of Adams, | Inc., the furniture store, has been | given the job. He has already *re-| stored” the seven-room apartment Col. English had and which Dr. | Friedland will occupy. The lobby land mezzanine are next on his_list.

When Mr. Sandberg gets through | | with the lobby, it will be a Victorian mixture ‘of brilliant emerald green, {cafe-au-lait (light brown), bright red, “shocking” pink and white. | There will even be a marble firei place, although whether it will burn {or not hasn't been looked into. The front, overlooking the Circle, | | will be a big plate glass window fes- | |tooned with drapes like grand{mother used to have in the parlor: Those “modernistic” lights of | | shining metal will be ripped out] {and baroque ones of white plaster | ‘with lots of scrolls will take their |place. Crystal prisms and ivy will | decorate the lighting fixtures on the! | white marble staircase. And Brass Spittoons

Large, ornate furniture will replace the usual lobby variety. How about rocking chairs? that's going too berserk,” replied Mr, Sandberg. “But the brass.spit- | toons are coming back, some to use, {and some with plants growing in them.” “And you know the elevator which { looks like a bird cage boxed in? Well, we'll take the box. off, paint it light like a bird cage and maybe put in a padded seat or two like an old-fashioned tram. “The idea is we're trying to take away that dingy look and recapture that nostalgia for the past. People are going for that these days.”

JURY DELIBERATES

“Well,

‘vtadding that some of the so-called | i

OVER KELLY'S FATE

Must Decide Temporary

Insanity Issue.

A criminal court jury of nine women and three men today was given the Kelly murder case for deliberation. Judge William D. Bain completed his instructions to the jury shortly before noon. The. jury will decide whether Charles E. Kelly, charged with first degree murder, is sane. A plea of temporary insanity was] filed by his attorneys. Prosecutor Sherwood Blue has insisted the defendant was sane when he allegedly shot his wife, Ruth, fatally last Sept. 21. The prosecutor demanded the death penalty in his closing argument. Two alienists appointed by Judge Bain found Kelly sane. A defense alienist testified, “however, that the 51-year-old defendant was not of sound mind when the tragedy occurred. Kelly, a suspended city fireman, was charged with slaying his wife after a two-week estrangement,

QUESTION WOMAN AFTER SLUGGING.

Mrs. Edna Plercefield, 433% °E. Washington st., Apt. 17, today was

arrested on a vagrancy charge and is being questioned. in ‘connection with the fatal slugging. of Walter!

TIMES ‘INDEX

Davis Saturday. Mrs. Piercefield, who had been ar-

Amusements. Ned Brooks. . Business .... Comics Crossword , Editorials ... Peter Edson. . Fashions ost

8 Mauldin 4 | Lee: Miller 13| Movies ......

8 Fred Perkins 8 Radio . ..... 9 Ration Dates

"8 Sports

14| Jane Jordan. 13 7/0f 439 E. Washington st. about al 14 13 Obituaries . . 14! 3 13

6 . 8 Mrs, Roosevelt 1 10 saflors iw Joe william 10 the

Friday night, was beaten and robbed | | Pridey on a parking lot in the rear

| block from the scene of the slaying. She reported at first to police that she was robbed in the Craig hotel, {but this was in error.

GERMANS SCUTTLE SUB LISBON, June 4 (U, P.). -German Wh a large U-boat off} near Leixoes, nor. of

rested on a charge of drunkenness

S. B. Friedland, the! dentist who has just leased it for | : five years, | 3

Cpl. Charles G. Moeller of Cincinnati, a victim of infantile paralysis, was flown from the Panama Canal Zone to Indianapolis today for treatment in an iron lung at Billings hospital, piloted the plane from Texas to W

90 ARRESTED, ASSAULTS 60 ON

Slugging Murder Unsolved; 13 Questioned.

Ninety suspected thugs, drunks | land petty thieves were snagged in the police dragnet, over the week- | end. But the city’s slugging wave con- | {tinued and the assault-murder of Walter Davis, 58, remained unsolved. Most of the arrested were seized, on the near east side when a] {general roundup was ordered by | Police Chief Jesse McMurtry fol{lowing the Davis slaying early Saturday. The. death climaxed .an epidemic

of violence that has. terrorized In- |

dianapolis for the past month. Detectives grilled 13 suspects Saturday and yesterday in connection: with the murder but reported that

no Sncouraging leads were Sever

oped. ‘No Concrete Evidence’ < “Absolutely no concrete or positive evidence has been obtained,” one investigator said. Davis, a migrant worker, was attacked and robbed on Court st. near the entrance to the Frederick hotel just off Washington st. Some of those quizzed, said detec{ives, were “drunks, or blowhards” who pretended to know something about the incident, but

(Continued on Page 5 Column 2)

Upper Berth for Gypsy Rose Lee

DETROIT, June 4 (U.P.).— There’s-one place -where Gypsy Rose Lee—queen of the stripteasers—refuses to disrobe—in a Pullman upper berth. : She made this known today after arriving at Michigan Cen= tral station last night with loads of baggage and hordes of admirers to claim a bedroom reservation New. York. Everything was in order, except her reservation was for tonight— not last night. , Harried trainmen

offered Miss Lee an upper berth |

and she flew into a tizay. “Certainly not,” she exclaimed. “How can one undress while lying on one's back? Definitely—no!” She finally accepted an upper berth on a later train, which she boarded with a thermos bottle full of coffee, and tearful eyes.

But she said there would be no +

disrobing en route. She would wear her clothes—-ever her shoes —and drink the coffee to remain awake so she wouldn't, roll out in the aisle.

You Don't Need Scarce Sugar to Can Fruit

HOUSEWIVES who wore out their pen points and patience filling out canning sugar applications went to a lot of unnecessary bother, rol You don't need sugar to can fruit — although you may need somé when you get ready to edt it. , Words to that effect came today from a woman who should i know, ' Miss Lois Oberhelman, Purdue university extension _hutritionist. She went on to say that sugar ‘does not act as a preservative and, that fruit will “keep just as well without sweetening. :

foremost actor, fair-skinned sophisticate, was hauled _ into a street job. He wept real tears of rage and humiliation, but he shoveled the rubble. Three wounded American fliers were in a hospital manned by Germans when the Russians came. A happy, inebriated Russian soldier came in, tlirew his arms around the American comrades .and babbled in Russian. Then he ordered the Germans to give his American

GREW FAVORS ARMY TRAINING IN PEACETINE|

State Department Gives Unqualified Approval Conscription

WASHINGTON, June 4 (U. P.— |The state department today . | dorsed universal peacetime military | training. | The department's unqualified in-| | dorsement was given by Acting Sec-

work. They e Russians

®

The Russians insisted

Panama to Iron Lung at Billings

retary of State Joseph C. Grew in|

| testimony before the house post war military policy committee. | Grew—speaking against a long personal background in Germany land Japan before the: outbreak of [two wars—was the first witness as| | the long deldyed hearings got under way. | The issue of peacetime military | training is expected to explode into| lone of the hottest fights of this session of congress.

40 Years of Experience

Grew said he believed strongly! -——————— that American youth should have

ESUURE: S MAIL military training in time of peace.

Capt. Harry A. Baker (left) | eir Cook airport. | 8 8 =» | A 3548-MILE flight ended at | Weir Cook airport today, bring- { ing Cpl. Charles*G. Moeller to his

He said his view was based on 140 years of experience in foreign |

“iron lung” home at Billings hospital. Cpl. Moeller, who lived in Cin.cinnati before joining the army, is a victim of infantile paralysis. He was flown home: from the | Panama Canal Zone in an air | evacuation plane of the air transport command's ferrying division. o ” ” THE FLIGHT, which began | | Sunday, took just 22 hours and 20 minutes.

It was flown with- |

|

"Federal

RIGHTS U UPHELD

Court Cort - Denounce: Postoffice Ruling.

The U. S. court of appeals today | 54 upheld Esquire magazine's second- |

lass mailing privileges.

service—including 10 years in Ger- |

many before the last war and 10 in! Sepams Detos this one. ve it (military training) lis an believe it part of our share ‘in the United Nations proposals for | world security,” Grew said.

| | {

Grew said the United States must |

be prepared to contribute its share | preposterous,

ito a United Nations military pool! g N (U. P)— WASH! OTON, June tu, | —if it should be called upon to do] when other steps fail to pre- | Stripes

Gams i special article today incontribution publish: 4 Spee ge y

serve peace. He said such a

(Continued on nued on Page “$—Column 4) |

ADOPTED A AT BUTLER ‘Walker—who will be replaced July 1, said, “it will have to be provided ‘by Democratic National Chairman | by whatever peacetime military

3 (ha naval plan we decide beforeCurricula Are Revised to ‘Robert E. Hannegan—had SUS- hand to carry out. Modern armies |

pended Esquire’s second-class mail- | {and navies do not spring into being | ing privileges. [oe + terel es accep herefore, the | The postofice held What - the! sement of our highest military | magazine's Varga girl drawings | authority, and other material were morally| «ang that authority holds that | substandard, and a district cOUrt|ynjess 5 system of universal mili- | upheld its- ruling. | tary training is put into effect, we Frcedom of Press | shall not have available the reThe revised plan will be called a The appeals court, however, re- serve of trained men required to! “university college” and will become | versed this decision: It said cen- make our air and sea and land! effective with the opening of the sorship, freedom of the press, and forces adéquate to meet any posfall term in September. | freedom of competitive enterprise !sible future threats to our free- | Instead of enrolling in the col- were at stake. dom.” 3 lege of education, business adminis- | “We hope.” the ‘court said, “that | If Before Pear! Harbor tration, liberal arts and sciences Or | this is the last time a government| Grew said that diplomatic suc-| religion, students will be registered | agency will attempt to compel the cess depends upon “national deter-| in the university college for the first | acceptance of its literary or moral mination demcnstrated and backed | two years. : | standards relating to material ad- by national preparedness.” In the third and fourth. years mittedly not obscene.” . | “Without adequate. preparedness, they will choose the college offering | The court remarked on.the “men- | out diplomacy becomes weak and Studies in their field of education. tal confusion which always accom- | ineffectual,” he said. Explaining that one phase’ of the panies such consorship.” “If during those years before new plan calls for increased em- | What Is Art? {Pearl Harbor our people had been | smi able to see the handwriting on the It said three questions were In- wall, if we had been even reasonre

A -ably-preparad--at-that-time Grew 1, When is a scantily-clad woman | ssntinyed, “I don't believe for a coLD SETS RECORD | art and when is she improper? LOW FOR JUNE 4:

; { moment that Japan would have at2. Where is the dividing line be- P 8

tacked us.” tween refined humor and low comCrops Slowed as Mercury

on ENOCH ARDEN HOME: Shey gy HL’ HIS WELCOME

Gam. ...44 10a m. But That Short Greeting Tam... 4 Ham. Brings Happiness.

S$a.m..... 47. 12 (noon) p.m... CINCINNATI, June 4 (U. P.).—A modern ‘Enoch Arden” episode had ended happily today after Lt, Harold Goad and his prety wife Helen, who married another serviceman in belief that Goad was dead, met and | spent a two-day “second honeymoon” here. . : Goad, in the air service in India, was shot down and reported dead. . -— Helen, after a wait, married Ensign Iseland will leave for home within the next four or five months, the | Robirt A. MacDowell of Saugerties, Swedish newspaper Dagens report- “°° (Continued on “Page _S—Column 6) ed today. pop : » | Then she was notified her first | : {husband was -alive. Goad shortly | afterward cabled he was safe and jon his way home, She had her sec- | ond marriage annulled and prepared to meet him, | Lt. Goad’'s reunion with his wife was at the Netherland Plaza hotel here. He sat impatiently as he awaited her. And when she walked {up, she merely said, “Hi.”

Id be determined by- agree-| ourt” denounced the post-| VOU g The ¢ 5 : po to TREDts yet to be made by the seri-| fice department's “attempt |ousness of the threat to peace.

compel acceptance of its literary | Can't Build Overnight

i “If we are to have that force!

{or ‘moral standards.” i Postmaster General Frank C. ready when it is needed,” Grew

| Stress Citizenship. {

A curricula reorganization at Butler university was announced today | by President M. O. ROSS. Under the new plan all freshmen ‘and sophomores will be enrolled in| icompulsory social science courses.

(Continued on_Page 5—C 5—Column 1)|

ow far would the postmaster i oo go in the reforming of periodical literature if he were given a free hand? | The court didn't try to answer | questions No. 1 and 2, but it had this to say about No. 3: “We believe that the postoffice officials should experience a.feeling | of relief if they are limited to the | more prosaic function of seeing to! teen it that: An all-time low temperature for | «Neither snow nor rain nor heat June 4 was recorded by the Indi-|nor gloom of night stays these anapolis weather bureau today as couriers from the swift completion winter played a return engagement of their appointed rounds.’ ” in the Midwest. ————————————————— The_mercury read 44 here at 6 m. today. This is just one .de-|. ree colder than the record set | {June 4, 1924 Temperatures in the city, how- | ever, were expected to rise today |

52 54 54 | 55 |

| |

ICELAND YANKS TO LEAVE:

STOCKHOLM, June 4 (U. P.) — Most of the American soldiers on

What's more, added the expert, boiling water or boiling fruit juice “may be poured” over the ungwveetened fruit instead of

syrup. She didn't say whether it would help or not; just that they - may be poured over. ~~ Shar gota: little more specific, saying that fully ripe fruits are the best to preserve without sweetening. The natyral sugar in fruits, or corn’ syrup ot*honey are substitutes for that scarce white stuff. © Miss | Oberhelnan - dadd .. she hoigni she'd better add that the color and flavor of the fruit

“might be damaged” by the lack of-the sugar you really don't need to can. it with, Miss = Oberhelman’s twist to canning came on the heels of a government report. that supplies of sugar may not even be large enough to meet the already reduced third-quarter allotments, and that 1221000 tons will be used for the afmed forces and export, compared to’ 870,000 tons | They agreed to forget the ‘Enoch last year, {Arden incident. ] So in case you've got a sweet'| «we never even talked much | tooth better -hang onto. it. It [about it." Goad said. may be the only sweetening. youll Th RN Ar a WL

in shows and went dancing. Then we took a look at the future" They agreed that the army would take care of the future; that, she | would join him at camp. at’ the end of his furlough.

‘get with your fruit thig yedr, Chisrieys

| mailed the package.

| Ig tower of Pisa,

friends the best food, thre everything of the best.

“And if they don’t de it

“From then on, we were kings,”

liters of wine, cigarets and

, just let 1tie know,” he said, the Americans said,

An influential Viennese went to a Russian officer and

pleaded for 40 per cent of a hungry Viennese.

bread factory output for the

The general gave him an order, a

(Continued on Page 5 Column 4)

JAPS MASS

BIG SUICIDE

AIR

in-|

FLEET

Nips Trained to Crash on U. S.: Ships;

Tokyo Claims

Piloted Balloon

Bombs to Hit America.

By FRANK

TREMAINE

United Press Staff Correspondent

PEARL HARBOR, June

4.—With the Okinawa cams

'paign rapidly nearing an end, Japan today has converted her entire naval air force into a suicide eorps to protect the homeland from the rampaging American fleet.

Other developments in _t 1. Radio Tokyo

DANGEROUS GIFTS— G. I. Souvenirs

That Explode Clutter Mail

By LEIGH WHITE Times Foreign Correspondent ROME, June 4 American troops in Italy ‘have been sending home a fantastic collection of bulky, weighty — and even dangerous—‘souvenirs.” The army newspaper, Stars and found it nedessary to

forming G. I.s—for the nth time |

—what they may and may not send back home. ” n » OVERZEALOUS soldiers In Italy have been troubled by the news of the cigaret shortage at home. They have been trying to send their parents and sweethearts part of their smoking rations — returning a generosity which was at least partially responsible for the shortage. Had army postal inspectors not stopped such illegal shipments, many Americans today would be smoking -cigarets reached them after

expense of much invaluable wartime shipping space.

" o o SOLDIERS also have been trying to send home captured mor-

| tars, rifles, pistols, hand grenades | and live ammunition.

According to Pvt. Emory Ward, author of the article in the Stars and Stripes, the job of inspecting army mail since the-breakthrough across dhe Po has become dangerous. Postal inspectors, he said, have been thinking about asking that they be equipped with flak suits. : Recently they opened a package containing a Luger pistol. It was loaded, cocked and ready to

fire—with- its safety catch drawn

back. In fairness to the G. I. who it must be

reported that several days later

| he sent the post office a frantic

letter of warning “Don’t pull the trigger’ ter read was loaded.”

” ” ANOTHER sol#fier mailed ha wife a’tive German hand grenad to which was attached the — lowing little note: “Darling—Doii't.‘remove the pin from this thing until I home.” Some of the things soldiers— and officers—try to send back home are just plain silly One man, for example. mailed his mother a replica of the leanintricately constructed out of cheese

Copyright. 1945, by The In IAD and The Chi ago Da ™ ‘Ne w

CONGRESSMEN PLAN EISENHOWER HONOR

WASHINGTON, June 4 (U.P). — Congressional leaders today discussed ~ with Pregident Truman plans for a joint "session of the {House and Senate to pay tribute to Genu. Dwight D. Eisenhower when he visits Washington néxt week. Senate Majority Leader Alben W | Barkley (D.-Ky.), said Eisenhower

* the let“That pistol I mai led

“For two days,"jhe said, “we took | would be invited to appear before park ave.

a Joint session in a ceremony of] welcome and reception similar to) the congressional recognition given Gen. John J. Pershing aftér the; last, war.

AS STENT AUR ike ROCHESTER, Ind, June 4 (U.! P).~Mrs. Benjamin Mullican, 58, an aunt of the Lane sisters of radio. and movie tame, ‘died dash night at her home.

which had traveling all | the way to Italy and back—at the |

Timgs

he Pacific war include:

said - Japan intends to attack the

United States with piloted,

bomb-carrying stratosphere balloons in the “near future.” 2. American troops fanned ous along the south coast of Okinawa after sealing off thousands of the {enemy on the Chinen peninsula, | Tekyo quoted an unconfirmed report that American units had landed behind Japanese positions on Chinen peninsula from the sea, Try Sea Escape Japanese soldiers attempted une successfully to escape from the die {or-surrender trap by putting to sea {In small boats. Small groups of enemy soldiers, some of them {naked and carrying only hand (grenades, were captured by Amerie

[can patrol craft off the southern tip of the island. 3. The American 37th division drove along Luzen's Cagayan valley against light resistance. Japanese casualties in the Philippines reached 385,480. 4 Units of the American Mars task force were revealed to be operating in China after helping to reopen the Burma road. Burma Towns Seized 5. Chinese troops re-captured Chienkiang, 90 miles northeast of { Nanning, and pursued the Japanese | toward Liuchow. 6. British troops seized two towns on the East coast of Burma. 1. Radio Tokyo admitted tha | American, and allied spies were bee Sorin increasingly active in Js» an, 8. The Japanese radio reported allied ground and sea units wers participating in an assault on Sandakan, capital of British north Borneo in the East Indies. Thers was no confirmation of the report from allied sources. More Balloon Bombs A Japanese spokesman—Lt. Col, Shozo Nakajima—said the present atlacks on the United States with pilotless * balloons were only the forerunner of larger-scale raids “with _ death=defving” Japanese airs men manning the balloons.” The spokesman complained that the United States had not divulged the extent of damage caused by pilotless balloons, but surmised they

(Continued on Page 5~Column 3)

Hoosier Heroes—

LOCAL PRIVATE DIES, SERGEANT WOUNDED

Seven Mes Are Freed From German Prisons.

A private first land May Germany, geant

come

class died in Enge 3 of wounds received in and a local infantry sere was ‘wounded Mav 6 on Luzon Seven other Indianapolis men have been liberated trom Gere man prison camps KILLED Pfc. Rudolph T. Webb, 3141 Northe western’ ave, in Germany WOUNDED Sgt. Lewis E. Hauser, 22 N. De. Quincy st., on Luzon. LIBERATED. *° Pvt: James A. Enzor, 39359 Care roliton dave. in Germany. T. 4th. Gr. Clarence H:™ Arnold, R. R: 9, Box.390,'in Germany. | 8. Sgt. Leonard E Fix, 1023 N, in, Germany. 8. Sgt. Charles :R. Harris, 26 8, Harris st. in Germany. 8. Sgt. Samuel A. Harbert, R R, 3. Greenwood, in Germany. T. Sgt. Cole Sage, 620 N, New Jers. sey st., in Germany. |. Pfc. James A. Newman, 1931 N | Bancroft ave, from Stalag 7-B. f (Details, Page 8

3 —

Morris

Fan h

Date of With