Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 June 1945 — Page 6

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The Indianapolis Times

PAGE 6 Saturday, June 9, 1945 a

ROY w. HOWARD WALTER LECKRONE HENRY W. MANZ President Editor Business Manager : (A SCRIPPS-HOWARD NEWSPAPER)

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Give Light and the People Will Find Their Own Way

THAT GOLDEN GATE “VICTORY” USSIA’S belated agreement that no big power should J. have a veto over security council “discussions” in the | new league is welcome, because it allows the San Francisco | conference to go on. Americans should be thankful for anything which advances even a weak charter for inter-. national organizat ion. For chances of Moscow the other nations to set up a strong league are nil. Apart from clearing the way for the stalled eevee] the “discussion” agreement in itself if not very important. | The issue was half-phony to begin with, and the result is being inflated to propaganda proportions. To describe it as a Russian “retreat” and an American “victory” sounds well. Certainly Russia needs to some co-operation, and the United States to have evidence | of some achievement for democracy at this conference. ; j o = 5 ! o s 5 | THERE IS a vastly important. issue at stake in the | right of genuine discussion by the council of disputes | threatening the peace. And that right, obv iously, would be destroved by giving any one nation the power: to veto it. But discussion to be of value must be responsible, a search for facts. That is not the kind of discussion pro- | vided in.this new agreement. On the contrary, Russia already had won from the | other big powers the privilege of vetoing any investigation, | without which there can be no intelligent or: constructive | discussion when facts are in dispute. There are never |

RILEY 5551

allowing |

show |

¢

| classrooms. IN

| Situation Is Univeral

| and tole | pet racial or religious prejudices, because the situation | 1s so universal and at | of one of the things that alls the world today.

REFLECTIONS—

Laboratory { By Peter Edson

SAN FRANCISCO, June 9.—All the problems of the United Nations Conference, reduced .to their simplest terms and to situations which anyoné can understand, are to be found in San Francisco's Raphael Weill public sehool. Here, under Principal Ellie Fifer, are progeny of from, four ‘of the five races. There are no American Indians, But sitting side by side in the same classtooms are youngsters of every complexion and many nationalities: tow-headed Nordic whites and swarthy Latin whites, Mexicans, Filipinos and Chinese. There used to be Japanese, before they were all moved into relocation centers after Pearl Harbor, American Negroes from the South and Southwest moved in where the Japs moved out, but soon some of the Japanese families may be. coming back. he question posed by this minute cross-section of humanity i why the people of the world—keeping | their respectful distances from ane another—can't get along with or without trusteeship systems, mandates and voting formulas if the children of the Raphael Weill school can absorb their three R's in the same

C )

IT 1S POSSIBLE to tal k about the Raphael Weill school and its problems with considerable detachment

erance, and without upsetting any individual's the same time so representative vThe first Chinese, a man and his wife, came into

California less than 100 years 420 Then ship captains brought increasing numbers to supply the demand for

cheap labor, and to build the first trans scontinerital , 2

railroad. When they became too numerous, the Exclusion Act was passed in 1882. During the next 25 years the Japanese came to supply farm labor. World War I brought a wave of Mexicans and Filipinog, again to meet a labor shortage. World War II has brought the Negroes—perhaps 150,000 of them as against the 130,000 Japanese, who were moved out. Negroes like it here. There are no Jim Crow laws. They want to stay. But that gives California a new racial problem which broad gauge people hope can be solved, without ny of the lynchings and riots that characterized reactions against successive waves of - Chinese, Japanese, Mexicans and Filipinos’ when they becatiie S0cial and economic competition. In recent months there. have been several moves made to meet this new

POLITICAL SCENE— ~

Clay Foot

By Thomas L. Stokes

WASHINGTON, hive 9.—Thisris largely & philosophical piece, full of . wishful thinking. No harm is intended; the wood is mellow, It comes under the head of that license which also includes letting off a gripe now and then because, the world is not perfect, because publi¢ figures who so oftem approach statesmanship occasionally display a clay foot Any number of such figures come to mind, | But, just now, there's one who has chdsen to stick his foot out, a familiar figure admired and liked by those of us who spend a good deal of our time about the Capitol, watching congress day after ‘day and year after year. : O'Mahoney Has Gone Wyoming Again TO BE. EXPLICIT, Senator Joe O'Mahoney has suddenly gone Wyoming again, as he does every two or three years when tliere comes before the senate the question of renewal of the authority of the state department to negotiate with’ other countries for reduction ‘of tariffs—the reciprocal tariff program. Between times, the senator pursues a fighting progressive course, with a broad national and international viewpoint. He has put in some healthy blows at monopoly, both as it exists in this country ahd in those international monopolies known as cartels, thuse following the best tradition of the Democratic party to which he belongs. When others hesitated he stepped out, singlehanded, to lead the fight in the senate to check the insurance industry when it tried to exempt itself from the anti-trust laws. He has been a strong right arm to protect:the anti-trust laws, He is progressive on domestic economic and social legislation, He has a broad-minded attitude on international co-operation. But ‘he goes wyoming on the tariff.

Cattle Industry Is Powerful THE TARIFF leads back to the beef cattle industry in Wyoming, his home state, and the beef: cattle Andustry is fearful that somehow the state department might do something to hurt it. It ight, for example, let in some of that Argentine beef which has been kept out by using the hoof-and-mouth disease excuse, : ® The beef cattle industry is power ful politically.

The senator does not oppose the reciprocal tariff —-

"SATURT

, Insic I JUST C that F, N. Ds Indianapolis I was cast info - Daniel, came

+ He thinks the

trees are part Some years ag trees bloom e are destroyed have a distinc neighborhood. , tional advertis The Times’ Le the new Far ] Another case

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SOME WE by Bob Osler Service from wished to con order to imp another letter Senor Mario ¢ the response t letter: “To b - Indiana. 1 jt since the writ favorite dish, My wife is tak soon replied t women's linge two husky sol get on. “Whe sure were on

Gen

MANILA;

“1 wholly disagree with what you say, but will defend to the degth your right to say it."

| “WHY NOT TRY \TITO AND DE GAULLE?” | By M. R. M., Indianapolis Since the war in Europe 1s supposed to be over and the German

program outright. His weapon is that congress should approve every agreement with other=nations. This, of course, would mean throwing the tariff right back into congress. We might have something approaching those long-winded, log-rolling farces that have lasted as long as two years. - One of them, in the end, gave the country the Smoot-Hawley act of 1930. Democrats have been complaining ever since about the monopoly wrapped up in that document. The

at least five m and forth like

more than a 1 his shoulder a

charges without denials and counter-charges in any inter- | crisis before it happens. national dispute. And so long as the council can be blocked | Sane Approach Makes lssus Edsiar even from seeking the truth it is not only helpless but blind. AT THE Boker T. Wastiington Center. Aes 88 Since any one of the Big Five is to have a veto over | Raphael Wells Stool. Where Negro children receive council action, it is all the more important that the right | | additional ‘training for citizenship. there was a conferof discussion based on objective investigation be absolutely | *nc® at which Negro leaders discussed their rights

Forum

(Times readers are invited to express .their views in these columns, religious con-

Hoos “NO WONDER ~- . THERE ARE ACCIDENTS” i By C. M. T., Oaklandon I wonder how many drivers have! noticed the painted lines on down-

until one young man got, up and said, “We're doing a of the volume received, let-

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the arrest of six people, including a navy lieutenant and

unhindered. Otherwise there will be a premium upon | official and public partisanship, uninformed emotionalism. | That causes wars instead of preventing them. The fight for real freedom of council discussion has not yet been made at the San Francisco conference, much less | won.

ABOUT “TOP SECRETS” BOUT a year ago, under circumstances never satisfactorily explained, the navy dismantled its Communist. investigation desk. Officer-experts, who had learned to spot the difference between a Communist, whose allegiance lies outside the United States, and, say, an honest Socialist, were dispersed to new assignments. It was part of the Communist-coddling policy in vogue in Washington at the time, and safeguards were eased in other branches of the federal service as well. Now it looks as if some chickens are coming home to roost. Reporter Frederick Woltman's story this Vesk, revealing that government documents of “top-secret” portance passed into the hands of a leader of the The Communist movement, should prompt congress to reexamine the lax methods of screening personnel for confidential jobs in the government's war agencies. - The FBI did quick and efficient work in bringing about

two state department officials, on charges of conspiracy to violate the espionage laws. But a better time for vigilance is before “top secrets” disappgar from government files. |

BRADLEY—A FINE CHOICE RESIDENT TRUMAN has made a tenstrike by select- | ing Gen. Omar N. Bradley as administrator of vet-| erans’ affairs. ; That is said with no reflection on Brig. Gen. Frank T. Hines, who is retiring from the office after 22 years of work in it. The change becomes desirable, as the President | says, because the veterans of this war are entitled to have | a veteran of this war at the head of the government agency charged with looking aftet their interests. Gen. Bradley has the advantage of distinguished serv- | jee in both world wars. As commander of the 12th army | group in Europe he has shown great SNA ability | as well as inspiring military leadér ship. He is, at 52, a vigorous; hard-hitting soldier, finely equipped for Be job the President is giving him—the job of modernizing the | veterans administration so that it can carry its greatly in- | creased load of work and responsibility. The incidental fact .that Bradley born in Missouri probably did not count against him in Mr. Truman’s opinion, and does not in ours, since we're growing to believe that Missourians are pretty good folks to depend on when action is wanted.

la

Gen. was

WRONG METHOD HE house of representatives, by a 203-to-152 roll call vote which at least lets the public know who was for and who against, has decided to keep its $2500- -per- -member “expense account.” We regret the decision. Like President Truman, we. helieve that representa¢ tivs and senators should have better pay, but that the house has used a wrong method of getting better pay. Mr. Tru- | man favors a straightforward, adequate salary raise. So do we. -By employing a subterfuge, at this time, the house has added to the difficulty of holding the line against wageprice inflation. And it has invited public eriticism which could strengthen opposition even to a frank increase in congressional Salaries. Such ‘opposition would be Vetadls disarmed, we think, if congress would do what Rep. Dirksen of Illinois proposes —that is, ask the President and the chief justice to name - an independent commission, let that commission recommend a proper adjustment of congressional pay, and then follow: its advice.

-

CAMPUS MIRACLE : fw COLLEGE professor of foreign languages” writes to “one of our roe nt: consultatjon on

: selves.”

L.however,

| that cheerful line as,

shows he owns stocks valued. need advice.’

lot of talking about what we want what Ye've got to offer and how we can improve our- | This sane approach. has made the sue a lot | easier. San Fran ¢fsco civic groups have begun educational 2 campaigns—the Commu club, a newly-formed | Council of Civic Unity, and a Mayor's committee. Back of them all is the perl ion that better housing for minority groups is essential and that segregation in Chinatowns or similar racial concentrations where | there are property ownership and residence restric- | tions, merely increase the problem. A racially nrixed | Communist element, having an emotional and glandular reaction to evervthing, has been a major | disturbing factor On a state-wide basis there are two approaches, both represented in proposals for new legislation. One is for a. compulsory fair employment bill, modeled on New York's controversial measure the other is an advisory measure, calling for the creation of a commission to study and recommend. Today this latter seems the slower but perhaps the safer route. There is a long process of education before anything ‘like racial tolerance can be achieved That probably goes for the United Nations Organization, too. [

- WORLD AFFAIRS—

No Panacea | By Wm. Philip Simms

SAN FRANCISCO, June 9.—Now that one veto obstacle has been reEf moved, the delegations are again confidertt that a ratifiable ‘charter will soon be ready the - departing foreign ministers to take home Some of the most experienced diplomats are privately Hoping that the new of natisus will not be oversold as a.cure-all. From a ‘modest beginning it can, and should improve, but it would be harmful to blow it. up as a panacea . After the Atlantic charter was proclaimed, these Sayan observe, the allies began to think in terms of ideal post-war world. and public opinionegrew one by cne, came the meetings at Moscow, Tehran, Cairo, Dumbarton. Oaks, Yalta and Chapultepec, |

| made a third row of cars on one try which professed to be the right- | side of a street | ticket,

for

here, league

Conference Has Been an Eye-Opener AS A RESULT of these gatherings, Un peoples everywhere got: the impression that a peace- | ful and happy world was inevitable All the powers, big and little, were already in general accord on the shape of the peace to come, and all that remained for the grand alliance to do was to agree on a few details. And that, it appeared, would be easy San Francisco, therefore, has proved, something of an eye-opener. Things which everybody thought were settled, turned out to be not settled. The agreements of Moscow and Yalta and ‘Dumbarton Oaks have led here to long and, at times, hectic wrangling over questions. of interpretation The Russians | claimed they were following the agreed formula and that the Anglo-Americans were deviating from it while the Anglo-Americans insisted it was just the | other way round. And so on. This experience, ‘it is pointed out, can tremely helpful. It shows what not to expect— more than what we are likely to get at this time. | It- shows that if the Big Five are to continue working | together, they, must learn to be patient with one another and keep their tempers, Their co-operation is' not going to be. easy and their differences will be many. : d

ited Nations

be ex-

Peace Depends on These Three Powers AND YET if the Big Five—or, the Big Three—don't pull together, will be hopeless. Veto or no veto, the job of keeping | the peace of the world for an indefinite time to come | depends on these three powers «The big question now before the United Nations | is whether we are willing to’ accept an imperfect | world organization, and try to improve on it as time | goes by: or whether we will turn it down because of its imperfections and accept the alternative. The alternative, my more realistic diplomatic | friends warn, i nothing less than a whole world divided into balances of power just as Europe used i be, and, without fail, those balances always led to | another war. * ny For the past several days the San Francisco atmosphere has been: 56 thick with gloom that international good will visibility was practically zero, Today, as a" result of the sudden settlement of this one veto prob- | lem, . optimism is correspondingly high. Delegates who keep their feet on the ground, however, are observing a modest medium. pa

more accurately, the whole thing |

| | !

They caution that the. work at San FPranciscq |

must not. be oversold. That would lift éxpectations too high and lead to later disillusionment. . And-that | in turn might be a boomerang when it comes . time, . various ‘members of the United’ Nations to” - ratify what 15° dong here. ‘The new -leagfie will not the but if nursed

Let's. talk about {

i munist, I do, there will have to be a bettér| concrete reason for fighting Russia

town streets indicating that driv- | ers should drive their cars in but | two lanes and not in three. {I wonder that this plies not only, downtown, but In| residential sections too. No wonder there is an increase in (traffic accidents when drivers 2ig- | {zag all over the streets, across the {painted middle lines out in the residential sections as well as across the ones downtown How many times have you, Mr.| Driver, been driving in your own lane next to the- line only to have another car come looming at you, from the opposite direction and on the wrong side of the street? The curb huggers are another element that should be eliminated. -How {about it? Let's. all try to drive like gentlemen and ladies, with consideration. for others, as we should. Police Department: Is there no law which you can put into effect in making arrests for these flagrant violations and thus reduce accidents, or if not that, stitute a program to educate driv-! ers on this score? are accidents. {minute he

If a driver knew the went over the line or

that he'd get a you can bet that accidents would be reduced! 2 a n “WE CAN CERTAINLY CO-OPERATE IN PEACE”

By Pvt: Ralph M. t. Harrison

In Tuesday evening's Forum. The Watchman asks me a $64 question. He writes cording to Earl Browder 10,000 .&merican soldiers Communists, and asks, “In of war between the U. sia, who would these for?”

My

Wise, Billings Hospital, Hdosier

there are who, are the event S. and Rus10,000 fight

answer 1s that

I have yet to meet even one Combut knowing the G. Is as

than any The Watchman has yet given before any American soldier

will turn on the ally who has driven |

the overbearing keepers of horror camps from Poland, Czechoslovakia and Yugoslavia That his assertion that Russia occupying these countries, Yes, they we are “forcibly”

also answers is now forcibly.

occupying rance,

Side Glances=By Galbraith

troversies excluded. Because {

ters should be limited to 250

{war criminals are being tried and

Also, | how many drivers realize! two lane. regulation ap- |

why not in-|

that ac-|

having been in the army myself for almost four! {vears, in several. theaters of action,

are—the same way that |

| executed, why are the United Na{tions putting up such a weak argu-

{ment with Tito and De Gaulle?

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 responsi- | bility for-the return of manu- |

Why not put them down as war {criminals right now? done I doubt very much that there

{armies to settle the dispute. The way the .big leaders. “pussyscripts.and cannot enter cor-’ respondence regarding them.) Justified in believing that there is more than one potential dictator {Belgium and Holland~—because they | sitting in on the San Francisco helped to drive the “super-men” out | conference. of these countries. A hasty trial and execution of any As for the ‘wide difference in country's governing head who is form and constitution between our | guilty of trying to statt a war would two forms of government, there un- {undoubtedly be a deterring factor] douvbtedly is. However, the point in possible future conflicts. I want to make right now is that| mn regardless of that difference, if we .yoUR MONEY 1S ‘can wholeheartedly co-operate . in " war, we can certainly do so | BOY O FREEDOM By Pvt. Fred D. peace unless.the breeders of hate| in Austria and Suspicion build up such a bar- | ‘This is just a few lines in answer rier’ between the two countries that!to a letter sent in by Margaret L. “Ivan” will think the capffalists| Grimes who protests the use of beer are out to gobble up their beloved for American soldiers overseas. I

Stewart, Somewhere

No wonder there | Russia, while G. I. Joe will think would like for her to know that we |

Russia is trying to rule the world. |get very, Germany, not Russia,

t very little but what we is the coun-|do get we really enjoy very much,

ful owner of the earth, through the! payers’ circumstance of having been born foolishly. Really, Mrs. Grimes (or | | German. {1s it Miss) your money is not buying | Let's get on the ball, Watchman, | beer, it is buying freedom. Have you | jand start watching the long road we | forgotten? I. . haven't. I was | {have to go before Japan is defeated | wounded in Germany and while I.

money to be spent

before trying to convince any sol-|{was in the hospital I got a can of

dier that has fought the Germans beer-and something like that from that Russia is our enemy. home really helped me. This is the!

H 8 # first time I ever w “NO COMPROMISE ON : Tote in to the

ATLANTIC CHARTER” By F. J. M., Indianapolis An echo of the Munich and Yalta, 24.2 appeasement policy appeared in| ‘POOR ABUSED Eleanor Roosevelt's absorbing: col- | DEFENSE WORKERS” umn June 1. | By A Reader, Indianapolis She suggests a compromise with; I would like to give you my verRussia on the Polish problem. I. sion on Monday fight closing in redon't recall the word “compromise” ply to Mr. Rusher’s article which! in the Atlantic charter subscribed appeared in the Saturday's edition to by the United Nations. | of your paper. In fact this word is coming into] As a candidate in the last election | disrepute. It's a weasel way of stat- said, and I quote: “He asked for it ing that the party of the second so here it is.” part is about to get the “business.” We store employees feel very sorry | 11, to our everlasting shame, cou- that you poor abused defense workrageous Poland, a fighting and loyal ers won't have any place to go now | ally, is sacrificed on the block of on Monday nights, We realize that |expediency, or national acquisitive-|you defense workers stood gallantly ness, then the ‘pseudo-statesmen at at your posts and perhaps you did {San Francisco might just as well raise a sweat once in a while. You have .saved their wind, time and were even forced to put signs in | traveling expenses. (your windows to keep us whitecollared workers from disturbing your sleep, Of course it was all right for you

have been mad.

|

war workers to wake us up all hours | of the night by honking your horns with your share-the-ride plan. We | were considering holding the stores | open 24 hours on Monday in order | that you might shop after being out all night, Yes, you made more money than we. did, but we still bought an equal amount of war bonds and paid the high cost of living as you did. Mister, you said a mouthful when you said, and I quote: “W¢ gripe,” and believe me you guys do plenty of jt.

white collared people are doing. our part in this war the same as you, and we need a little rest also? Try staying at home on Monday nights and saving some of that mbneéy you slaved so hard to get, and then we taxpayers won't have to support another WPA when this war is over. : 4 8&8 =n “WARMAKERS SHOULD BE PROSECUTED” + By 8, H., Indianapolis All nations have to be told that we are created to love and multiply instead of hating and killing. Every warmaker has to be prosecuted.”

DAILY THOUGHT

He that'loveth father or mother more than me is not worthy of JI me: and he that loveth son or daughter more than me is not Aworthy of mem Matibew. v.10

{ committee to push his 1f thay werel adopted, he said,

would be any further need for w hole |

She says it is unfair for the ax

Did it ever occur to you that we |

reciprocal tariff program was to do away with all that.

Protested Almost Too Much ~

SENATOR OMAHONEY protested almost ®o much when he appeared before the senate finance proposal. If it were not then congress would take “a long and -dangerous step toward totalitarianism” in the post-war world. Now senator! It was as long ago as 1887 that congress delegated

foot” around, one would almost be, powers over railroad rate-making to the interstate

commerce | commission, It has been delegating its owers to other such agencies ever since, always with the right to step in, Totalitarianism has never seemed to worry the senator there. Now to get philosophical. Senator O’'Mahoney’s problem here is like that of other members from time to time. Some go “native’ on almost every issue, their minds always back home. Senator O'Mahoney does it only rarely. Of course, if he didn’t go native occasionally, then he might not get re-elected to the senate, where he is very useful. Some fellow back home rises up every so often to knock off the old-timers by playing a local issue to.the skies. So perhaps it is best to be charitable.

IN WASHINGTON—

Favored Buyers = By Douglas Smith

WASHINGTON, June 5—In meat-hungry Washton one group of residents—numbering up to 80,000— is eating steaks and chops almost as frequently as before the war, and not from the black market, either. They are the families of the some 21,000 army personnel stationed ‘here. They buy meat, all of it high . quality, at army commissaries. They have to pay ration points but prices are a little lower than

Forum--but this is the first time I! those at grocery stores, and the supply is regular,

The meat comes from the army's share—24 per cent—of the nation's meat supply. A specific portion is allotted to commissaries, which has resulted in a steady supply to them while civilian meat counters have grown barer. (A government survey of Washington stores recently disclosed 90 per cent had no beef, veal, lamb or pork). Army officials defend the commissary system by | saying it is an old policy.. Five army commissaries | are operating in the Washington district. There is criticism of the system from families of soldiers fighting overseas, who argue that a privilege extended to some army families should be extended to all. The army's answer is that opening commissaries to families of the 100,000 men in service from Washington would be physically impossible.

Customers Must Present Cards

THE COMMISSARIES now are open only to dependent§ of army personnel stationed in Washington, mostly at the Pentagon building and to dependents of some 800 men formerly stationed here, Allotments to commissaries is on a basis of about two and a quarter pounds of rationed meat per person per week, but local army officials say commis saries seldom receive the full amount they requisition. Eligible. customers are issued commissary cards, which they must present with each purchase. Commissaries almost always have a good variety. One Jad steak, bacon, pork chops and chuck “occas sionally” and always had meat of some kind. _ Chicken is available for all customers about three times a month, the officer said. The army system has resulted in leaks; some serv ice wives have shared their meat with civilian neigh« bors, © A big leak, just disclosed, was the diversion by a.civilian employe of almost a ton of commissary meat from Ft. Myer. Va., to the Washington black market. The clerk has been arrested and charged with conspiracy to violate OPA regulations.

To The Point—

THOUSANDS of “tons of fire bombs have Deen dropped on Japanese cities. Our house shortage fades into insignificance ‘compared to that of the Japs ’ . . . IF ALL Americans are as interested in the outcome of the 7th war loan drive as-the Japs must be it will -.go over the top without any trouble. ¥ » » » . 2

THE UNCONDITIONAL surrender of Japan is dependent on the surrender of all the funds we can spare tor the 7th war loan bonds. - * . . . MAYBE LITTLE Johnny is-doing Mom and Dad ‘a favor when he acts up just before dinner and spoils iii appetites, is ' » » LJ v THE OPA has allotted more movie film for entertainment pictures. Can we depend on that “entertamment? .

SHORTAGES AND raining have caused AE : some

all support of As the plan he visualizes it anese, half in to the other 8

Staff Is Im

HIS STANI brochure, illus diagrams, punc so detailed ths and ‘supply ve plan as a who This is whe MacArthur's pl

Ame

RECENT N to American diving planes tions. Our defense

strain of main at top efficienc energy. The ¢ of every carrie nent “battle-st carrier anti-ai personnel, mus with only a erash-diver bef

Always Ai

IT'S THE always shootin easiest way to most significan it is always air have been laun we can expect target will con chance to mak target. Time and 1 half a dozen b of 20 to 40 dest

My

WASHINGT actions of An have added fu a8 an internat Earl Browde

The next ste ascism, 1s to t he world the holds. - That is have had to f bruel war, It frightens proposing to there possible. plves. Ti the Amer of worle