Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 June 1945 — Page 8
4
a
The Indiana poli
z Meniber of United Press,
fanatical troops.
let down now.
35 MILLION
‘Monday, June 4, 1945 : | ROY W. HOWARD © WALTER LECKRONE = HENRY'W MANZ
President Editor Business Manager (A SCRIPPS-HOWARD NEWSPAPER)
PAGE 8°
Price ih Marion County, 5 cents a copy: delivered by carrier, 20 cents a week. :
Owned and published daily (except Sunday) by Indianapolis Times Publishing Co., 214 W. Mary-
land st. Postal Zone 9° Mail rates in Indiana,
U. 8. possessions, Canada and Mexico, 87 cents a month. -
Gia o RILEY 5551
Scripps-Howard Newspaper Alliance, NEA Serv« ice, and Audit Bureau of Circulations.
Give Light and the People Will Find Theit Own Way
THE PRESIDENTS WARNING. | A LETDOWN in American war effort, now that Ger‘many is defeated and some industrial reconversion is beginning, 1s the fear of our government and the lope of | Japan. That is the reason for the President's effective message to congress Friday. His warning was needed. Not that there 1s the slightest public desire to quit the Pacific war short of victory. The feeling here is even stronger against Japan than Germany—inevitably se, because of Pearl Harbor, Bataan and all the atrocities. So there is no fear of a letdown in our will to fight.
>” a. 8
" 5 " - THE DANGER, rather, is of a very human misunder- I standing as to the size of the job. Sigce we have been in'a. two front war and won on one front, it seems logical to some people that only half as much effort is required now. This erroneous idea is further stimulated by misunderstanding of such facts as partial reconversion, demobilization of elder men, spectacular victories in the Pacific, and reports of enemy peace feelers. But there is no longer any excuse for confusion'in the public mind. For the President has spelled out in detail why we dare not relax, why harder fighting and longer casualty lists are ahead, why only supreme effort can speed victory. Sure, Germany has been eliminated. But, as the President said, we have not yet net the main’ Jap army of ¢ 4,000,000 nen (not counting the millions of reserves), which is much larger than Germany ever mustered on the Western front. Yes, we have knocked out many Jap planes; but she still has 3000, and produces almost 1500.a month. | Certainly, about 2,000,000. U. S. soldiers wilt be de- |. mobilized this year. But the draft call on younger men must remain high to provide ai army of 7,900,000. 5 » " = #" “
OF COURSE, there is a cut-back in some supplies and
reconversion of some factories because of V-E. But, as| father did. He was a prosperous dray-driver on | mittee issued a report calling for |
he explained”there are more critical shortages than ever | in many lines, including naval repairs, aircraft bombs, .| atabrine, steel barges;-eotton uniforms, boots, raincoats, railway and motor equipment, radio, amphibious trucks, etc., ete. : Sure, the Japs “are depending on America tiring of this war” and hoping this “will force us to settle for some | compromise.” Bul, as the President added, we must snow them the only alternative to unconditional surrender is complete destruction. - : Finally, it is true that our combined forces have won great victories and made long advances across the Pacific. But, as our leader warned us, “no matter how hard we hit | the enemy from the air or from the sea, the foot soldier |
still will have to advance against strongly entrenched and | however, that the blue-painted gate worked as well | in Indianapolis as it did in Germany.
There is no easy way to win.” That is the answer to those of us who are tempted to |
i
| a peerly white again.
TOO MUCH
HE proposed budget of the cffice of war information |
for the next fiscal year has been cat from 42 million to | 85 million dollars by the house appropriations committee. | We think the committee is much too generous—that | instead of a mere seven-million-dollar saving it should have | recommended just enough money for OW1 to demobilize its
9000 or so employees and liquidate itself. -Here, in our opinion, is a war agency that has outlived whatever usefulness it ever had. . The committee apparently made little effort tp be gcientific or selective in operating on OWI. It heard testimony from various OWI officials who, as might be expected, made the best case-they could for a large appropriation.
Then it trimmed the proposed budget by precisely one-!
sixth, most of the reduction being in the agency's foreign operations, although any real independent investigation would have turned up plentiful evidence of waste and extravagance mm the domestic branch.
u a » " =u a THE TROUBLE is that the appropriations committees of congress are not equipped to make real independent investigations of spending proposals. - They hear from the budget bureau and from the experts of the agencies that
want to spend. But. congress does not
experts of its own; to-check and double-check the spending | experts and their plans and mdke certain that their de- |
mands for money are reasonable and justified.
In all, the house committee trimmed about 112 million |
dollars from the budget estimates for 18 civilian war agencies, “including OWI. Perhaps, under the circumstances, that is the best it could do. But we believe that a small fraction of the money squandered by OWI, if spent
for the kind of help congress needs to do a thorough jobT
of investigating proposed appropriations, could save billions for the taxpayers without the slightest loss—with, indeed, a great gain—to good government. POSTOFFICE PAY “w 1 PT HE house of representatives has passed a hill to raise the pay of some 70,000 postoitice employees, of whom about 1500 are at work here in Indianapolis. the senate should pass this bill, too.
We believe
The base pay of the men who handle the mail is the |
same today as it was in 1925—except that today income taxes are deducted from it. as high as $3000 after 26 years’ service, all less taxes, of course. That wasn’t very high pay back in 1925, when federal workers paid no income tax. It became completely inadequate as the war forced prices up. So a temporary “cost of liivng bonus” was ordered, adding $300 a year. That expires on June 30, and unless congress acts. in the meantime postoffice wages will go back to the level of 20 years ago. s fete 0 '’ ; ~The bill passed by the house would make the $300 a year raise permanent, and.add $100 to it. This would make wages start at $2100 a year, which still isn’t very high sidering the . qualifications “these
was
Ah
s Times!
$5 a year; all other states)
| |
have qualified |
Salaries start at $1700, rise’
men must havé and
REFLECTIONS —
v -
Isolation - By Anton Scherrer |
SIXTY YEARS ago, “when F was a little boy, practically every home in Indianapolis was surrounded | with a white-picket fence. The sharper.the pickets | the better the fence, Father used to say. (Sometimes | I am almost persuaded to beliéve that Father's better | bon mots were the result of living behind a fence.) | Be that as it may, the old-fashioned picket fence | nad its good points. It kept thé family and chickens | together and put the neighbors in their proper place —to sav nothing of mad dogs. It reduced the pilfering of fruit and permitted the cultivation .of flowers. And to a somewhat less extent, it discouraged the borrowing of a cupful of sugar or whatever it was the impecunious neighbor was shoft of at the time. In spite of what anybody may say today, the practice of fencing In families did not make people unfriendly. Quite the contrary. It encouraged the
I ainenities of living. to such a degree, indeed, that it
actually. promoted the peace of the neighborhood. { Father had a reason for that, too. He said that | . the best way to tie humanity together was to keep it | apart. Father wasn't discussing the ruerit of picke fences at the time. He was fighting off Mother's suggestion to install a telephone. On that occasion Father also said that the more you improve communi= cations among people the easier you make it for them | to misunderstand one another. Which, of course | was merely a philosophical extension of the virtues | of a picket fence. i
Politics Wormed Its Way In THE PICKET FENCE went out of style sometime in the Nineties, when a lot of new-fangled ideas came in. There were signs of its failure as early as 1888, however. That was the year Benjamin Harrison ran for President; the year, too, that he lost his fence. The pickets--everyone of them-—were carried off as | souvenirs bv ardent and- possessive Republicans who came to visit him that summer The sudden disappearance of Mr. Harrison's fence gave rise to a movement to do away. with all fences. The crusaders arsued that the removal of all fences would turn Indianapolis into one big, lovely garden for evervbody to enjoy. And, right away, the word | ] made its appearance to describe those: who wanted to keep their fences. In no time at all, the word was invested with ugly implications. People |
|
‘isolatiorist’
R 3 A ]
{ Unconvimionat
dd
3% R vgn! i BLT Y 1} is Hh t is j Hi of ¢ — : -— ok 00 (ET me——
—
&
«if
who had learned to mind their own business, largely |. because of living. behind fences, were accused of. self-
| ishness, provincialism, pig-headedness and, goodness
knows, what else. ; Finally, politics wormed its way in. The Republi-
cans, mostly because of Mr. Harrison's involvement, “CARTELS .WILL BE | ENCOURAGED” fically, it was a fight between the North and South BY John Alvah Dilworth, 816': Broadway.
wanted fences removed; the Democrats, champions of fundamental rights and liberty, did not. More speci-
sides. Father, a loyal Southsider and staunch sup--|
porter of Grover Cleveland, held out as long as he | goreements with many
couid but he admitted defeat when he saw fence after’ fence come down in Indianapolis.” Il say this,
though, for Father: He didn't give in until our fence (be ‘the No. 1 post-war trouble- | : | maker.
showed signs of rotting
Blue-Painted Gate Worked :
ONLY ONE Southsider held out longer than 1
Union st. His fence wasn't a bit prettier than ours, |t but it attracted more attention. That was because lt his pickets inclosed two lovely daughters. The sight | of those two lovely girls puttering aniong the flowers | on their side of the fence was one of the prettiest pic- |t tures in Indianapolis at the time. One of the daughters was 14; the other was ap- t proaching 18 at the time of Mr. Harrison's election. On ‘the morning of the President's inauguration, we It kids were aumfounded to find the gate in the draydriver's white picket fence painted a joyous cerulean | blue. After a good deal of probing, we learmed that lt his first-born had turned 18 over night and that this was his wav of announcing that he had a marriageable daughter |inside the house: Seems that the idea of the blue symbol was something he had brought with him from Germany, I don't want to tax your credulity on top of all your other obligatioris today. The fact remains,
tt
Bb
In less than two months, the girl had a presentable beau; 1 months later, she got married (sure, the original beau), After that, the dray-driver painted his gate
It
~ IL stayed white for four years. Then one day (right around. Grover Cleveland's inauguration) the gate was painted blue agam. This time it worked even better, Six months later the second daughter went on her honeymoon (Niagara Falls). Almost immediately after‘ the second marriage,
It
the last fences in masse, he said.
Indianapolis
- WORLD AFFAIRS—
i
4 By Wm. Philip Simms
SAN FRANCISCO, June 4.—For lack of ome clear-cut word in the chapter of. trusteeships, the United Nations have tossed away the opto enlist the support of maintenance of world
portunity
' 600.000 000 in the
COIONIAlS
security, That word is “independence t From the very outset, a determined fight was |& waged to hold out a definite promise of independence to all -subject peoples. There was no thought of course, of immediate or even early freedom. The
idea was more to offer them independence. if and when they proved themselves capable of living up
to its duties as well as its obligations. Instead of “independence” the phrase “selfgovernment” was written in It was contended that this means the same. thing. Yet our experience with | the Philippines proves that such is not the case—at | | least,. not in the minds of dependent peoples, which |
is what matters in times of crisis. The Filipinos have been- self-governing for years, but even now they are finding it hard to wait untii July 4, 1946, when they will be completely free, :
Promise Made All the Difference I IT WAS this promise of independence which made all the difference after Pear] Harbor. Because of it | the Filipinos fought like demons on Bataan, side by side with from the United States. And of |
soldiers
all subject Eastern peoples, they were the only ones | |
to make such a stand. Nor did they stop fighting |
| after defeat. They took to the'mountains and jungles | | and Kept up one of the ablest harassing Gort | campal Ms of any of our allies. That guerrilla.fighting | was a tremendous help to Gen. MacArthur when he came back
It is true-that the proposed charter section devoted to territorial trlsteeship goes one step further. It declares that one of the basic objectives of the system | | 1s to*help subject peoples “toward self-government or | independence as may be appropriate to the particular | | circumstances of each territory and its peoples and | | as may be provided in each trusteeship arrangement.” But this lacks the definite ring of an outright | promise such as that which inspired the Filipinos | to.dic opposing the Japs.
| 1 5 | Does Not Directly Include Colonies | MOREOVER, THE TRUSTEESHIP system does | not directly include colonies, It only takes the place of the old league mandates, plus such colonies as may be taken from the enemy. Allied nations with colonies . retain them as in the past unless they voluntarily
“one here ‘expects will happen. Hereafter, states administering am area under the new system can use it and its inhabitants “to carry out tite obligations undertaken by the state for the security council.” It can (1). fortify it against attack and |
for local defense.
| | { American businesses, threatens to!
{ IL.
| Business
{be continued after the war,
ju
nation.”
private interests of several coun-| lindustry and -trade.
{were deeply | American industries at the time of | world war I. There were agreements between corporations in both coun- |
|active encouragement of the «Gerthe dra re {man government. The United States | . the dray-driver gave in, too, and took down one of |knew about them beyond any reaIt had served its |gonaple doubt and, in effect, approved them indirectly by declining | to take any action against them.
possibilities of injury to this coun-
as events since the second war broke | lout have shown, their capacity for | harm was unabated, cartel agree-! ments between American and Ger-» man world war II. actly how close until the history of
offered them to American manufacturers at low prices. |
{against
hand them over to the trusteeship system, which no |
(2) recruit, volunteers from among the natives: |
Hoosier Forum
(Times. readers are invited to express - their views in these columns, religious controversies excluded. Because of the volume received, letters should be limited to 250 { words.- Letters must be signed. Opinions set forth here are those of the writers, and publication in no way
Nazi Germany, through its cartel : strategic |
| During the week of November 3, 1944, the Kilgore senate com- |
he elimination of all, international | rusts, or cartels, after world war | But right on top of it came | he report of the International Conference . that these |
rusts are a good thing and should but hat they should be controlled in
opinions by The Times. The Times assumes no responsibility for the return of manuscripts and cannot enter correspondence regarding them.)
o the “ public interest of any
At Rye, N. Y., in November, 1944, | "729°
he Netherlands delegation to ‘thel
{expansion of business, while the! joed by the same politicians ndian representatives bitterly de- Wash oh D 4 ‘nounced these agreements, among! ashingion. D. C. who Lave Ge-
| nounced
ries for the purpose of regulating!
the Germans interested in many
By use of cartels,
{combinations against it. ries, and they had the sanction and | [fies Which will be so eager
iple at starvation wages and
| market.
World “war I disclosed all these nterlacing arrangements, and their
the years between |
| i
“almost defeated us in We will not know ex-
firms
' In! make life in America # 2
hese eventful years i$ written.’ an effort to break up this German "
control, the United States seized all| “MIGHT BE AN x | German patents in this country and OPENING WEDGE"
By Edward W. Kellogg, Indianapolis.
“I wholly disagree with what you say, but will defend to the death your right. to say it.”
implies agreement with those
Bu‘ it fs practically eertain that {World Business Parley declared! cartels will not only persist after | problem can be found in policing! | that cartels are necessary for the! world war II, but will be encour-
in
them — in administrative jcircles those who gave the impression that it was a statement of na-| tional policy® The reason is obvious. | This country is not going to allow itself to become -the victim of trade It is not going to suffer exploitation by counfor | | trade that they will work their Peo | read it. {them heavily to subsidize g00ds {41 0 jdestined for the United States
|- The foregoing brings us to this (point: are the world business jead.|1oMS lo them iers right in their conclusion that | the cartel is not in itself an evil?| > WwW 2 try’s economy. were fully revealed My best judgment tells me that the | ne or and denounced. Yet they were tol- evil is in lack of regulation in the] ¢ erated during {world war I and world war II, and, |
interests of (a) fair wage levels, (b) fair prices and fair profits arising from fair competition. These United ! | States .will have the power in the|
A few days ago you published a
| the taxpayers’ money, and it ought {to be abolished. [I am not coming *to- the defense lof ®OWI as an organization. Per- | | haps they are not the people to| | whom European educational proj- |
|
| ects should be interested, but the! | project to broadcast good music | seems to me to be one of the most |
hopeful approaches to a very .diffi- | eas problem that I have heard] | suggested. { There seems to be a large sec- | {tion of opinion that sees red at | | the mention of a proposal to spend | a thousandth part as -much for | | promotion of good will as they readily accept as necessary for | {purposes of destruction, and others | are so afraid of softening the!
such ‘a way as “to avold their | Sider a world agreement or treaty treatment of Germans that they | se in a manner which is contrary |outlawing .these international com- are up in arms if a project seems | | bines on the grounds of restricted
{to have the least taint of Christian | | thinking. We might as well realize that no permanent solution of the German!
alone. Somehow or other, sane and! realistic ideas must be made to take the place of Nazi poison, and the United Nations will spend a good | deal of money before we get through, in the effort to re-educate! the Germans. They will not do it themselves, at least not start it. It! is one of the most difficult jobs we have faced. We can broadcast pro-| | paganda but we cannot make them! tune in and listen. We can print literature but we cannot make them But they will listen to the| {universal language and music. If! commentaries - are skillfully; handled and not too long nor “laid on too thick,” we might bring} e fact that much of their own greatest music was) composed by Jews and that other | great music was composed or played by Poles, Czechs,” Russians and others whom they have been taught | to look down on. Such an_ -ex-
for a broadening vision. ” ” »
post-war world to see that it gets «wo uLD. DESTROY its share of world trade without sac- | UNIONS ENTIRELY" rificing American standards of liv-| ing. Our world trading post with | the world is just as good as we
By Forum Fan, Indianapolis. | I should like to reply to the] letter of J.C.M. appearing in the | May 29 Forum. In as much as labor as a whole consists of millions of | workers throughout the nation, I fail to see how J.C.M. imagines he can qualify as its spokesman. | Mrs. Roosevelt in a recent article
Final success in smashing Ger-|statement by Dr. Roy Harris about | -4y ie newspaper stated the case
imany’s historical ability to muscle | the OWI music program. There in on world trade hinges largely on|also- appeared several severe criti- | plans for international agreementicisms of OWI for pushing such a international | project, saying that it was a good trusts. It might “be well to con=1{illustration of how OWI is wasting
cartels and
of the unions with fairness and intelligence, and I am no New Deal | worshipper either. As a member of an A. F. of L. union the past five years, I have
Side Glances—By Galbraith
E
enjoyed three pay raises, .shorter hours, and no increase in dues, fines or assessments of any kind as a result. Simply because J.C. M. knows or has heard that the conditions he describes exist in some unions does not prove that this is true of all of them. {| No one can deny that there are | crooked. labor leaders, but the same (charge can be made against poli- | ticians, bankers, business men, etc. | Would J. C. M. renounce his American citizenship and leave the country shecause of the proven dishonesty and cussedness of some high government official? It is possible to have faith in and uphold a union, {a nation or anything in which you tbelieve and at the same tinic admit
| its faults. { 1 do not know the facts in regard | to the Mayor Tyndall-union
squabble and if J. C. M. does, he knows more than the newspapers seem to.” To abolish the closed shop would destroy the’ unions entirely. In most cases, only non-union help would be hired. I have tried not to imply hatred in this letter. I know people who feel just as J. C. M. does and they are nice folks t00. Oné who does not share their view however is Eric Johnston, president of the U. 8. Chamber of Com‘ferce. . iv : :
v2
DAILY THOUGHT _ When ye go, ye shall confe unto a people secure, and to a large land: for God hath given it unto your hands! a place where there is no want of any th
POLITICAL SCENE—
| bigger things of life the office ot
H-
perience might be an opening wedge |
that is ir
o
> Er et
Big Problems By Peter Edson a
SACRAMENTO, Cal, June 4.— In a state which ‘goes in. for the
California's © Republican. Governor Earl Warren is typically tremendous. The governor himself is big with a big smile and big blue eyes and he sits behind one of the biggest desks ever built. To his right are big windows letting in the California mo-adjeclive sunshine. Behind him is a huge mural map of the world. Facing him‘is a large-scale map of California, ‘and to his “left hanging high to overlook this lush office landscape is a painting—big as life and twice as natural as he used to look 30 years ago—ot Hiram Warren Johnson. That portrait is significant.’ The term of U. 8. Senator Hiram Johnson, now 79 years old, expires in January, 1947, and there is a mad scramble on for the senatorial seat he has held lo these last 29 years. Governor Warren “rose in politics through the Johnson machine, and is almost reverent in his
| praise for the record Hi Johnson made from 1910 to
1916 as ‘one of the most progressive reform gOov=
| ernors any state ever had.
Reconversion Will Be Difficult TODAY GOVERNOR WARREN faces problems that would probably baffle Hi Johnson at his prime, Accurately speaking they are not so much the problems of reform as they are the problems of a poste war reconversion amounting almost to revolution. And Earl Warren, whose present term in office will
likewise expire in January, 1947, would obviously like to be remembered as a great governor in this dificult period. California will have to continue in the war effort until Japan *falls—possibly two years or mniore. In spite of this continued all-out war production Gove ernor Warren believes California industry should be permitted to make partial reconversion beginning right now so that the industrial East does not gain an unfair advantage. The governor points to “the case of Detroit. De-~ troit made autos before the war and will return to this manufacture after the war, No great problem there, says Governor Warren, in comparison to finding what California's war industries can produce in peace times. : The answer -to that one the governor says honestly he does not know. Can the West produce steel as cheap as it can be produced in the East? If it can, then there may be a big future for West coast
| manufacture of civilian goods which can be sold to | old and new customers.
Population Has: Increased THE STATE NOW has an 8,500,000 population as against. 6,000,000 before the war. About one-third of the war veterans discharged in California were born in other states but want to settle here if they can find jobs :
Governor Warren's Democratic opposition in the state legislature has introduced a full employment
| bill modeled on the Murray bill introduced in the | U. 8. senate. :
Cagily. the governor has not committed himself on this highly revolutionary piece of state legislation. But he points out that all debate so far has been on minor detail. Entirely neglected has been the key question of, “How can any state guarantee full employment to its citizens under any and all periods of reconversion?” sh A West coast textile industry based on California's new produetion. of long staple cotton is a’ hopeful but uncertain possibility for future employment. ' California’s big new magnesium industry, as represented by Kaiser's Permanent’ E metals development, offers more hope but uncertainty,-as does the plastics industry. “= : Governor Warren faces squarely ‘what too many of the ballyhoo boys have been inclined to gloss over—that California is primarily an arid state which won't have enough water to go around, or to irrigate additional acreage unless it saves every drop that falls from the skies. California should have a single water “authority” of its own, says the governor flatly.
IN WASHINGTON—
Lend-Lease By Ned Brooks
WASHINGTON, June 4.—Legise lation applving the lend-lease principle to veterans benefits has been blocked in the house veterans coms= oe mittee pending a closer- examination . of its reciprocal features. The senate-approved bill, sponsored by the state department and the veterans
| administration, would make discharged servicemen of
the United Nations eligible for hospitalization and other services in this country. paid by the foreign government. = Chairman John Rankin (D. Miss) of the house cominittee, has held up the measure at the request of veterans’ organizations which are insisting on safeguards for the rights of United States veterans in instances where hospital or other facilities may be limited. - - Omar B. Ketchum, national legislative representative of the Veterans of Foreign Wars, said his organization also had asked the conifmittee to include specific provisions for reciprocal benefits by other United Nations.
No Formal Provision for Reciprocity THE BILL as passed by the senate made no pro= vision for reciprocity, although Veterans Adminisf¥ator Frank T. Hines told the senate finance committee that such agreements were contemplated under the powers given his agency to prescribe regulations and establish cost rates. Senator Joseph C. O'Mahoney (D. Wyo.) described the bill as an ‘extraordinary” grant of power to the veterans administration. Canada already has asked formally for a reciprocal agreement. - The bill would permit the veterans administrator “in his discretion” to grant medical, surgical and dental treatment, hospital care, transportation and traveling expenses, prosthetic appliances, education, training and “other similar benefit” and to make medical and social investigations for foreign ex-servicemen. The house committee, it was understood, is considering the elimination of some of the services on the theory that some facilities for caring for American veterans already are overtaxed. , Similar reciprocal agreements were made for world war I veterans but the economy act of 1933 eliminated many of the services available to foreign nationals. .
Approved Without Hearings : THE V. FP. W.'s INTERVENTION with the house committee is in line with efforts being made by service organizations to insure the presence of ‘hale ‘representtives when measures affecting . veterans affairs are considered. The contested bill, it waa pointed out, was approved by the senate finance committee’ without hearings.” Another bill, handled similarly by the senate military affairs committee, re-establishes enlistment and re-enlistment procedure voided by the opertation of selective service, The V. F. W. had asked y public hearings March 23. but was notified April 18 that the bill had been approved at closed hearings
' | at which only a war department witness testified.
‘The V. F. W. is now portesting that the bill con~ tains no_provision for re-enlistment bonuses or protection of the servicemen's rank. i Enlisted men’s period, of service was ( “to duration of the “six months thereafter
4
Expenses would be ~
for
THE H( SMITH was for the wed Lt. Hugh Pi The Re ceremony be
‘groom-is the
and the late
The bride were white orc! sister's only at
Maj. Henry J. (
of the couple v y /eceded the cc Out-qf-town Helen Josephin Shelby, O,; Mr. ‘Wilmington, O. J. Mudge, Miss Timothy Heinle The bride
< necticut Colleg
=
Junior league. where he was a u MR. AND M dinner for their Thursday evens ceremony ‘in th Among the Mrs. Eugene W William Palme Flushing, N. Y Walter Milliker
Alumnae Gr
MEMBERS Gamma. sorori Saturday after activities for ti A “white eleph Federation of equipment for The assisti Nathan T. Was G. Morgan Jr. H. Thompson | Margaret, Ensle n Mrs. C. Ra Jota Latreian ard Mills and
Art School TWELVE graduated yest Moellman; — La Trissei and’ Mi; awarded Rober LeVier, Indiar mean, Findley, | Deputy, and P; Miss Hosac Tent during awards were J Phyllis Heister Wilbur Pea which will con the services, t Julian Bohbs | and Mésuames Brucker and 1 Landers and E and Russell J.
” Miss Mart of New August guest. The gi college in Colt
(
Hoosier Touris Fatout, 3101 | party. Stout Field W Wed. Indiar Luncheon; c: MISCI U.S. A. ch Mothers. 1: Food Craft show; book 1 OReer Broadca: Fri. Ayres t Mothers’ Club | nue Kinderg: Kindergarten. National Wom
H
An’ un when her fin: we suc
Unexce
