Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 June 1945 — Page 10
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The Indianapolis Times
PAGE 10
ROY W. HOWARD = WALTER LECKRONE .
Wednesday, June 6; 1945
.. HENRY W. MANZ Business Manager
( CRIPPS-HOWARD NEWSPAPER)
i, President. ditor Owned d published daily (except Sunday) .by
Indianapolis Times Pub“_Mshing Co., 214 W. Maryland st. Postal Zone -9.
Member of United Press, Bcripps-Howard Newspaper Alliance, NEA Service, and Audit- Bureau of
Circulations.
Give Light and the People Will Find
a week.
and Mexico, 87
month.
Their Own Way
RUSSIA DEMANDS CONTROL
T looks as though Russia does not want a wotld security organization but a Soviet league, - That suspicion has
been growing some time. Her latest moves at the San
Francisco conference seem 10 confirm 1t.
For she has now placed the other nations in an imThey must reject her: extreme demands { league and risk her -walkout, or accept Russian dictation at San Francisco with the prob-
possible position. to control the proposed
cents
oP © RILEY 5551
Price,in Marion County, 5 cents.a copy: delivered by carrier, 20 cents |
Mail rates in Indiana, | of the ego, red tape before the eyes, and such, lies in $5 a year; all other states, | psychiatry: x . U. 8. possessions, Canada |
a
ability that the senate and other ratifying bodies: will reject |
such a charter later. ; That is a heart-breaking alternative to most of the |
delegations at the conference, who have worked so long and | so sincerely to get a world charter.
being worried by the situation, seems to relish it.
The longer she strings out the conference the less likely she will have to make real compromises, -and the larger the compromises the others must make as the price of her agreement to any charter. This is so because Stalin is not subject to popular pressure, while the other goyernments—apart from thei. genuine desire for an agreement need one anyway for face saving and domestic political
reasons.
’. s .
2 Ed MOREOVER, STAL
LING the San serves even a‘ more important Soviet purpose. Stalin more time to strengthen his military and political
= u 5
hold on Easterh and Central Europe.
In violation of the Yalta pact for joint Big Three con‘rol or those liberated areas—to protect human rights, and :0 aid representative provisional governments pending free alections—Moscow now maintains military dictatorship Stalin's tacit threat to withdraw
yver half the continent.
‘rom the security conference keeps Washington and London
But Russia, far from
Francisco sessions It gives
‘rom effectively challenging his. ‘European expansion.
Meanwhile, Stalin’s demand for sweeping veto power ~ot only screens his present European advances and underiines chances of collective security. ague to perpetuate just such war-breeding iniperialism f Russia orany other big power. That would be the oppo-
site of a league for peace and justice under law.
EYES ON THE SENATE THE United States senate will soon ‘cast a crucial vote on
world peace.
It will decide whether to extend the reciprocal trade agreements law and give President Truman the authority be asks to bargain with other countries for further tariff
reductions in certain cases.
The house, by vote of 239 to 153, has passed the bill
to do these things.
The world organization being shaped at San Francisco can provide machinery for peaceful nations to use in pre-
It would create a
i he emerged
|
serving peace. But nations are made peaceful by peaceful econemic policies. Good will grows when goods pass freely - over international boundaries—wlien trade among nations spreads prosperity around the globe. And the miasma of war is bred in pools of economic stagnation behind high tariff dams. -
We believe that the people of America, the world's most | powerful nation, are willing to co-operate with other peoples in lowering barriers to world trade: are eager to join with | other peoples in promoting peaceful economic policies: are |
“ready -to-give-more-thantip-service tothe cause of future
peace.
If the senators put partisan pc
ee and outworn
prejudices aside, and-pass the reciprocal trade agreements bill by a resounding majority, they will be doing what the American people would have them do.
STICK TO MAIL CARRYING
IT and wisdom combine in the decision, written by
Federal Judge Thurman Arnold for the District of Columbia appeals court, which upholds Esquire magazine's
right to second-class mailing privileges. From the first, we thought Postmaster General Walker
was wrong in this.«case.
He disapproved of Esquire's
Jokes and girl pictures and so tried to bar it, not from the mails, but from the cheap postal rates generally available to
magazines. and newspapers.
: If publications could be thus. t penalized for not conforming to the postmastér's idea of | 8
what's good for the public. to read, that would be a dangerous type of censorship, as the decision makes clear So we share the court's hope “that this is the last time a government agency will attempt to compel the acceptance 1 151 ry pry . ve « . { : i : of its literary or moral standards relating to material admittedly not obscene.” * And its belief” that postoffice officials should be relieved to be lin ited to the more nrosaie . : J i 1 oa but much safer function of carrving the mails and seeir o . that “neither snow nor rain nor heat nor gloom of night
Bk» 1 te wd . . = : stays these couriers from the swift complefion of their appointed. rounds.” 8
TWO INSTITUTIONS.
Two American institutions—Father Flanagan and haseball—are in the spotlight in Indianapolis today. Both ». both have contributed to
have served this country well
the making of men, So it is appropriate that fhe famous Boys Town priest should be the featured speaker at the city-wide Junior baseball rally in Cadle tabernacle tonight, Few men realize better than he the part that clean. wholesome sport plays in the development of the manhood of the nation. Certainly none can speak with more understanding to
youth.
, Indiana
Flanagan-—a priest who knows
: polis joins with the sponsors of Junior Baseball, Inc, in paying tribute to its honored guest, Father
“well as pray.
SMACK EM DOWN
>
adrift toward the
ON'T laugh at: those “grey, white or greenish-blue" _ Paper balloons the Japs set :
Uni
that boys should play, as
ted
gray
| think that Judge Frank's insistence on “government”
{ frustrated desire-to support a new power and irriga- | tion project, or was the doctor's interpretation more
4.between the smaller nations, and they would prob-
i) REFLECTIONS — a } Remedy ¥ By James Thrasher
JUDGE JEROME FRANK of the federal bénch thinks he has a remedy for most of ‘the ills that} ; bureaucratic flesh is heir to. He suggests—“not jocularly,” he assures us—that the cure for Potomac fever, sweliing
“Why should not those holdiffg' major administrative posts in government be required periodically to consult government: psychiatrists?” he asks. “The best-of men at times become creatures of inner |
drives and obsessions of which they have no aware- | -
ness. ‘An occasional.chat by an overworked official with a government psychiatrist would make government run more smoothly.” At the risk of being called reactionary, we'd like to raise a couple of doubts. In the first place, we
psychiatrists is wrong. When you put these specialists in’ the subconscious on’ the government payroll, their intrinsically intimate business would become the taxpaying public's dusiness,
'What's “the Verdict?’
A HARASSED cabinet ‘member couldn’t- sneak off to his own private adviser. No, he'd have to make his appointment with the government's cerebral sawbones in a government building on the government's time, and probably face a battery of the press as.
What's - the verdict, Mr. Secretary?” we can ‘magne a brash young reporter asking. ‘Did that dream: you had about muddy water mean you've a
Freudian and’ sinister?" And think of the opportunity for scandal. Let us suppose that Senator Blooper is having a fight with Chairman Doakes of the OPX. 2 “My neighbor's oldest son goes with the receptionist who works for Doakes's psychiatrist,” the senator is telling-a friend, “so I know what I'm talking about. Boy, what a case history that Doakes has got. Talk about psychoses! For instance, listen to this.
Art Rather Than Science
FURTHERMORE, Judge ‘Frank admits that psychiatry is an art rather than an exact science. Thus practioners are bound to disagree. And it's highly | Possible ‘that government psychiatrists, lined up as
| Old Blood and Gust
o
ithe
S ‘CRUEL SNIPER
APPROPRIATION "COMMITTEE
GOT ME!
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advisers on opposite sides ‘of an interagency feud, might start a learned professional! quarrel of their own over the proper way to exorcise a biireaucratic neurosis. . . No, we can't-dgree .with Judge Frank that. a regiment of psychiatrists would flood Washington with sweetness, light and soothing sirup. lurks in our mipd the suspicion that ‘some ‘of the | bureaucrats might drive the psychiatrists themselves a little screwy.
' WORLD AFFAIRS—
Revolt By Wm. Philip Simms
SAN FRANCISCO, June 6.—Revolt of the small nations against big power domination through use ‘of the veto now is a very real threat to the proposed league of nations. Even if sufficient pressure is brought by the Big Five against the Little 44 to force the charter through here at San Francisco, a ‘majority of the latter may refuse ratification back home. As it now stands, the charter would not become effective until ratified by “the members of the organization having permanent seats on the security council (the Big Five) | and by a majority of the other members of the “organization.”
a
“BASIS OF PAYMENT Rather there |1S AN INJUSTICE"
posed bonus bill, we appreciate the
of payment is an injustice to the ing the war.
risked their lives deserve more conCertainly a man who has spent the war in the States deserves less than a man who has been in a forward area, and far less than a man who has bled for his countr
only have ninety days in service and a discharge other than dishonorable) are in our estimation not enough, for obviously all women are not in the same catej gory. Shall those men who were at | Guadalcanal,
So intent have been the Big Five on getting | North Africa, Anzio and Normandy
° “1 wh Hoosier Forum : j death (Twnes readers are invited to express their 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 implies agreement with those opinions by The Times. The Times assumes no responsibility for the return of manuscripts and cannot enter correspondence regarding them.)
By O. FE: Bradshaw, R. M. 1-¢, and Harris views in Kaplan R. M. 2-¢, U, 8. Navy * |
In considering the currently pro-|
sincere intentions of the originators, but we believe that the present basis
men. who have actually been fightIn our opinion the men who have
sideration than those who have not.
Certainly the requirem®hts (being
that servicemen or women
Division, USES, 87 Madison Ave., New York City.
“Dear Miss Bauman: This Is to inform you that I have been employed by the ‘E’ company of New { York City, and that I have this day
servicemen and
Tarawa, Iwo Jima,
a charter on which they could all agree, they seem |f6C€ivé no more than those who completed py, Brst day's woik.
to h&ve overlooked the fact that at least -23 others have spent all their service within Tug is with sittegte gratitude that
must 41so o. k. the new league before'it can function.
Approval May Not Be Forthcoming
THIS APPROVAL may not be forthcoming unless the Big*Five veto powers are toned down here. |
Almost all .the delegations will have to give an ac- | i counting when they return home. Ratification methods may differ with the various countries, never- | theless some sort of official approval must be given | { before the new league passes muster. And, before that happens, the charter will be given a pretty thorough going over. The United States senate has | no monopoly on the process. i It is all very well for the Big Five to Keep re=- | peating thai without them there can be no league. | That is tragically true. But it is equally true that | without a. majority of the small nations there can | be no league. And if the veto power is abused, some. of the little nations are saying, membership in the league might not bring them much material advantage. Even without a league,.it is pointed out, the Big | Five are bound to be dominaht in the post-war world. They could, and probably would, form a sort of coalition, if only temporary, to maintain their own—and by the same token—the world's security. They could, and probably would, intervene to prevent wars
ably pay scant. attention to the complaints of the little nations against the big. Given such veto powers as the Big Five now demand, that is about the way things would work out with a league.
Power Has Tended, to Broaden
THE YALTA veto ‘formula, as. the little na=.| | tions seemed to understand it until they came to | San Francisco, only gave-the Big Five-the right to | ‘veto coercive action against other nations or theme | selve Since the st of the conference, however, | the power has tended to broaden until it is virtually | | all-inclusive Po As of today it looks as if the right of full dis- | |-cussian may be the conference's Rubicon. If the Big Five take that away from the little nations, they | may walk out, or refuse to ratify after they go [home which amounts to the same thing. On the {-other hand, if the small nations insist on going | much beyond that, some of the Big Five might permit some action of hers to be discussed, but would | probably insist on the right to veto an investiga- | tion hy he le 101 I'be little nations’ delegation dare not go home empty-handed, I'he charter they carry back with |
them would not be ratified if they did. promise is sought.
S50 a come A ‘proviso automatically termine ating the Big Five veto powers at the end of five years, might do it. .Or the right of periodical revision. In any event, the small states must get | something, or else,
So They Say—
| THE SOVIET UNION {5 a great, democratic | power. capable of assuring the security not only of its owh ‘frontiers, but also of the peoplés-of-Eurepe,: and the sooner this is recognized the better it will he for humanity--Piavda, Moscow Communist Party newspaper. wk a i * * THE BIGGEST amphibious operations of the war are yet to come.” Whenever we undertake them, in whatever direction we go, we can expect the bitterest hot opposition—Gen. Alexander A. Vandegrift, com--mandant, U, 8. marine cops. a ne . . : ' WHEN A WOMAN gives a butcher ‘a big tip, the ‘poor can't match it, consequently the well-to-do’ get “what ‘meat there is.~Henry M, Brundage,” New York City markets commissioner. .:° "o.oo
»
”
3 i
the"
| cas i , | ’ en a telephone or polish= YOU:
ibe figured on a graduated scale— | {perhaps a point system similar to ithe army's
IE
nor-combat duty seems [only fair basis.
United. States ' (in countless]
doing such “essential” work | I am. reporting this good news to
It appears to be a good job, interesting and’ reasonably. remuInerative. For a man, who has | found most co of industry tightly
itably performed
ing a staff car)?
We. recommend that the bonus
{shut, you have
a miracle. system for discharge. | Aira
A bonus bill based on length of| * “I have not forgotten the tireless months of search and appeal you made in my behalf. I have not forgotten your persistent tramping and trudging through snow and mire to personally seek out a job for me.
service, time overseas, combat and | to us the
We fully appreciate. and sinc erely | thank those responsible for the laws |
already enacted for the —benefit|1 Nave not. forgotten how you per-
of service personnel. We feel that Sonally gave of your time and er-
our friends, the representatives in| office and the Amferican people as| De concern now employing me. I a whole ‘will now as in the past | Dave not forgotten the patient hours stand solidly behind their fighting|YOU SPent taking me from bench to men. : ? | bench in an effort to convince the The ideas expressed above are owners of my potentialities, I shall those of the majority of our-ship- never forget you. You are truly a mates and we feel they express the credit wo your department and to views of all fighting men on all your country. fronts. “I promise to do my best in this new job, so that I may bring you due credit, and so enable you to carry on this splendid work you are doing. “I cannot find words adequate enough. to express my thanks, But suffice it to say that you have left an indelible feeling of gratitude. in my heart, and have struck a new cord of hope for my future. You
® 85 = “INDELIBLE FEELING OF' GRATITUDE” By Frank Grannan, United States Employment Service, Indianapolis In reply to your recent editorial regarding the United States Employment Service, I would like to call attention to the attached letter, which appeared in the. May . publication of the War Manpower are truly my" best friend. Commission, : “Yours sincerely, (signed) Arthur “Miss Hannah Bauman, Handicap | Nydeil.” =”
Side Glances—By Galbraith
fort to guide me to the offices of |
olly disagree with what y, but will defend to the your: right to say it.”
| “WE MUST.TALK {AND THINK PEACE” | By C. M, D, Indianapolis | A professor of a university dis-| cussed “What About Russia” at a! recent meeting of the Citizen's Dis- | cussion Group. He spoke of the distortion of Russian policies and the danger behind that-kind of thinking and talking. 1 He told us fhat Stalin had said that tlie sixteen Poles who were put to death were saboteurs and had committed sabotage behind Russian lines. This resulted in the death of thousands of Russian boys. Ldid not see anything about this in the newspapers. If this is authentic information, I personally believe that the public should be informed. The! public as a whole. would then have a more charitable attitude toward Russia. We know -so little about Russia and its form of government. We may not agree, but we do want to {live with them peaceably. Our | Protestant, Catholic and Jewish | {churches differ, yet in time of crisis | |they have proven that they are not !divided but are one great body. I am a strong believer in the (power of thought. The newspapers | land radio can do much to change | ithe public's -way of thinking. | uth Hi - “WHY FEEL SORRY FOR THE GERMANS?” By I F. D,, Indianapolis . | | . It is too bad D. W. B. and thou- | sands like him couldn't live in Ger- | {many. Why feel so sorry for the Germans? They started it and| asked for everything they got, only | {what they got wasn't bad enough
£ than TrorT-theht: oR
It is true the Italians in some re- | spects are equally as bad, only they aren't quite as bullheaded, hateful and despicable as the Germans; you [can at least reason with them. Also | remember another thing that I am {not an Italian, but am from GerIman descent but what I hold in my heart ‘for them is everything but | love. | If and whenever the United | States gets so narrow-minded and {so weak-kneed as to lét any one | party, or person inflict on them what the Nazis or Fascists did on the Germans or Italians, then I say we deserve what we get. But remember ohe thing—as long {as there are Democrats and Repub- | licans doing the voting, and as long |as there is more than one political | party, the good old U. 8. A. will never be servants to naziism, fascism or communism.
” ” » “THREE CHEERS I'OR JOE” By A. F. Ferguson, Indianapolis
In regards to a letter sent in By Mrs. A. A., Indianapolis, about Joe McGee—well, Mrs. A. A, I can't say how much I agree with you. Three cheers for Joe. I only wish I could have been with -you and given those Germans a few Kicks myself. I have never heard nf anything so outrageous in all this war, unless it would be some of the cruel, almost unbelievable things the Germans did to our prisoners; or have {those who condemned Pvt. Joe forgotten so quickly. Believe me, if they had had a brother (an only brother) in one of those dirty, filthy, diseased prison camps, they would not forget so quickly. Joe McGee; as Mrs, A. A. stated, you are surely a true American—more power to you. wv . | I work in a war plant, one of the largest in our city. I only wish you could have heard what the employees were saying about this matter. .They think it's outrageous. Who with any sense doesn't? We had better do something with tiose Germans and do it quick. They're
build Germany and declare another Hitler so my son and lots more can
4
25 years. © \
DAILY THOUGHT Fear, and the pit, and the snare,
Training
aviation machinist's mate in the navy, is in Wash= . ington after two years in the Pacific on a carrier, |
| law to parfion him,” Chairman Woodrum declared
only waiting for that chance to re-
go to war again in maybe 20 or]
POLITICAL SCENE—
By Daniel M. Kidney
WASHINGTON, June 6. — A wounded infantryman writing from a hospital at Liege, Belgium, and .a white-haired mother with six sons and two sons-in-law in : 4 the service are-on record today as favoring Post-war universal military training. Their testimony was taken when hearings opened before the house committee on post-war military policy. Chairman Woodrum (D. Va.) read the sol dier's letter urging training, and Mrs. Barbara Skau, New York City housewife and domestic nurse, appeared in person to plead in the name of her sons. Undersecretary of State Joseph Grew asked adop= tion of universal training. There were other witnesses and statements from leaders of the Citizens Committee for Military Training of Young Men, Inc. Then Mrs. Skau took the stand,’ :
'Six Sons and Two Sons-in-Law'
“I HAVE six sons and two sons-in-law in the armed forces of the United States,” she told the committeemen, : “My son George is a paratrooper lieutenant in the Philippines. William is an air corps lieutenant at San Antonio after 51 missions in Europe. Edward, an
Sgt. Robert, a veteran of Iwo Jima, still is fighting in the Pacific. Fred is a master sergeant in England,
and Henry a private first class in Belgium. §
“I said goodby to all of them at my kitchen door so as to make it easy for them.” (At that point her
voice quavered. and Mrs. Ernesta Barlaw, New York § City, vice president of the Citizens Committee, came §
and sat by her side.) But Mrs. Skau came back strong ‘with her recoms= mendations. She said f of her boys had been in the 'ilst N. Y. national guard regiment ,and that training had been helpful.
‘Better Prepared for Service’
“THEY WERE better prepared for service by their pre-war training,” she said. “That is why I am in -
favor of military “training because it makes better
citizens. If the young men of America ever have to fight again, they will'make better soldiers if they are trained in advance. . x pont “There is no use training after the damage is done. I'certainly feel that military training is necessary and essential.” Ske said her sons had benefited from military service. oT “If trouble comes to America again, I want my grandsons to be prépared and ready to serve,” she concluded. : Pvt, John D. Scarlett, who wrote from his hospital cot, enclosed a clipping from ‘Stars and Stripes,” the army newspaper, saying 6000 protests had been received by the committee against universal training. “I am not a Gen. Eisenhower or a Gen. Marshall,® Scarlett said. “Neither am I another Pvt. ‘Sad Sack. I am just another infantryman, with the same thoughts, ideas and fdeals as most doughfeet. . . .- I spent eight nionths on the front lines with an infantry division before I finally landed in the hose pital.
'Certainly Are Not in the Service’
“HAVE YOU geritlemen stopped to think of the caliber of the ‘6000 letters and petitions urging the defeat of any such legislation?’ ‘They certainly are not in the service, or they would represent the servjceman’s feelings. Neither is it at all probable that they are employed in defense work or on farms. They are not’parents with sons and daughters in the army, or they would welcome a peacetime draft as a means of returning their loved ones to their sides earlier than would otherwise be possible. “These people, then, are in all probability sitting back waiting: for the rest of the country to win the war. Their interest ean be nothing but selfish. If it were otherwise, they would be engaged in something more constructive than writing petitions to their con= gressmen. : ; S “Among the servicemen overseas whom I talked with, at least 85 per cent have favored a peacetime draft with certain reservations. Among combat troops the percentage would be closer to 95.” Rep. Leo E. Allen (R. TIL), whose questions indicated he opposes the training plan, inquired about the rights of a soldier fo send such a letter to the house eommittee. “If he is court-martialed for that we will pass a
sharply.
IN WASHINGTON—
Closed Door
By Marshall McNeil
WASHINGTON, June 6.—At- i tempts to get American officials into Romania to check up-on U. 8.owned oil facilities there have been unsuccessful, although the British have beert able to send men 1n, it was learned today. Similarly, no American oil technicians have been permitted in Hungary, Czechoslovakia and Austria to survey petroleum sources and refining equipment. And none-has been allowed to go into eastern Gere= many. to study the Nazi's synthetic oil plants, or what is left of them. ‘ Russians are in. charge in most of these areas. : The importance of all petroleum resources, both natural and synthetic, and petroleum refining facil= ities, is underlined by the oil demands being made now by the military for the Pacific war.
Requirements Are Even Greater
IT WAS LEARNED at the petroleum administra= tion for war that military estimates of requirements for 1046 are greater than those for the current year, PAW will have a hard time making ends meet. Therefore, it ‘is concerned in the use of refining and proe pe facilities in the liberated areas of both Eu rope and Asia. - Why the British have been able to get. Russian approval for sending their men to Romania while our government has not is unexplained. The British holdings in Romania were about twice as great as the American before the war; but Americah owner
constituted about one-fourth of the Romanian total, It was American bombers, chiefly, that wrecked the biggest Romania refinery -and oil installation at Ploesti. ; It was learned that efforts to get American rep= resentatives into Romania started last September. In western Germany, the U. 8. has had about 27 technicians studying Nazi synthetic plants. But these plants were almost all razed by our bombers and artillery, and hence aren't particularly fruisiix for study. The belief is that the less damaged plants are in eastern Germany, and that these would re« veal miore facts about how, the Germans made their synthetic fuels, and at what cost. :
Findings Are Being Analyzed OUR TECHNICIANS’ studies of plants in western Germany have not revealed that the Germans used any revolutionary processes. But their findings are now being analyzed, with the idea of making any
and to the interior department which has just started a new experimental program of making synthetic oil: It might be that complete .surveys of synthetic plants throughout Germany would point the way ‘to easing the present tight oll situation. a Thfough lend-lease,: this government is still supplying some oil to Russia, and tn the past. has fure. nished that country. with material for construction of refineries. B isi
|
Bal I
ship, chiefly through Standard Oil Co. of New Jersey .
i t
BE
facts available both to the American ofl industry, .
MRE
. Clinic Hi
© Commi The policie social agenci regard to, er members of
discussed thi racial clinic | C. A.
“ The police
report of a community r Rev. C. W. and Joseph ( Dr. Marcu York, sociol Guardia's u metropolitain tional Confer Jews, served Inter Other cons Atwell, recr tional Recre: York, and.Ja tion special agency, Was Among scribed as 1 crimination dustries, C Youth orga House. The racial in o Indianapolis ciety has nc but certain Church
®her soc taken separ: outlined. The inter sored by th Federation
- the Federal
It opened will close of a recom presented t Huffman. Dr, Howat utive secrets eration, and of ‘New Yor the Clinic \ clinic direct of the Fede
HELD | OF HO
CHICAGO Chester Rice held for qu brutal slayi Ross, attrac Rice was nearby Han n testimor aughters; mother rej Rice's propo Rice, a s had been d time of his Police "sai knowing the was in lov: inté tears death. Rice prison for a Mrs. Ross yesterday af home, a rec neck with L. Brodie s from four d: one of whi vein.
WORLD GUEST
Miss Rut general se
day, en rou after atten conference. Miss Woc H. Woodsn Shortridge mer Indian; has been ac since 1918 : the world o She is t office in Wi re-establish quarters fi this fall. 1 returned fi of Europe.
BRAZIL ON J
RIO DE P.) .—Brazil today. The actic States to vu the Pacific It was ne zilian expe will be red but Brazil United St forces.
FREED - CALL T. Sgt. | cently was 17-B in C the Uunite mother, Mi BE. Raymor Sgt. Stal a flight ov He told h
hoped to terbury.
2 LOC OHIO Two Ind graduated sity tomor They ar Jr, mech Shirley Je -LONDOI!
