Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 June 1945 — Page 11

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You Inside I ndianapo lis By Lowen Nausaum : . = c i Indianapo 1S

y Dorothea Greenen, then i : = to the mayor, recalls some hectic experiences, but Snowballing each other were , gp : \ - : living at 1710 E. Ohio, and Rosemary Dugan, 124 N. . AT 7 . 1 : = ; Bone ds terrifying as that he went through Monday [INE at 17U0 E. Ohio, and Hosemary Dugai, 14 | SECOND SECTION WEDNESDAY, JUNE 13,1945 . >. _ PAGE Kl

‘afternoon. Cap was out in the ra and got soaking yard of Charles Harman, 3615 E. Washington. The

wet. In‘about an hour he was due at a radio sta- caption suggested: “Show this to your grandchildren EAST MEETS WEST: WE MEET THE MOSLEM WORLD— s i ene \We The Women ses » : tion for a rehearsal of the quiz- in 1950 to prove to them snow fell-6m- May 9.” So : fo glans the-mayor + broadcast scheduled: . there you are, Mrs. Roush. Mel Olvey, of Dun and Use Tact in : that night. There were to be 14 Bradstreet, recalled the approximate date of the - . ; - .&e > ’ people or more present at the re- story. .And Mrs. Edith Chaplin, 517 N. Oxford, re- “ie : hearsal and Cap didn't. want to called it <nowed at Kokomo on May 9, 1923, her Isl; q m.. A New | | S. Pr ro lem Reuniting Joe make a bedraggled appearance. $0, birthday. Fhanks for the help, folks. ... . The weather| . j *huntipg up a small pressing shop, being the way it has been this spring, a person hardly : And Children he retired to a glorified barrel of knows how to dress. For instance, the height of : ; --a.booth and. hid..there while his. semething-or-othetwas Teaches during the downpour TRE : “This is the third of five articles clothes were being pressed. Pretly -Saturday morning when Charlie Bretz and H. H. Whot is Russia's] by Ruth Millett, offering advice soon, the tailor handed him his Christie, light company accounting supervisors, walked v position on Iran oil | to wives who face readjustment trousers. Cap put them on. Then, into the office together. -«Charlie had on a heavy fields where U. S: problems when their GI husbands to his horror, he discovered some- overcoat, while Chris, despite the downpour, was Will Britain.and France endorse and Britain have DE inthe Wars. CS thing had happened to the zipper. wearing a sailor straw hat. They took a lot of razzing.| . Soviet pressure on Jurkey Tor huge investments’ 17 It had been damaged in the pressing, and it wouldn't . Speaking of the weather, the owner of a raincoat | Whtasy Slliancs 8d Vreedem o ~ By RUTH MILLETT rif Zounds! What to do? Cap labored feverishly certainly got his money's worth this winter. From | ex! gb Bare ratte 9 “MANY A SERVICEMAN will to repair the zipper, but couldn't budge it. “Help!” january on, raincoats have been standard apparel. ~— : : SE, WAAL _he shouted. The: tailor responded. “Take these and TEHRAN. return from war . strange fix them—quick!” Cap pleaded. The tailor and his Horse Har Snakes his own child or children.” That i assistant labored for 40 minutes before the zipper HERB SMITH, The Times country circulation] is a heart-breaking fact. responded to their efforts. Cap, who had been In a anager, was coaxing his tomato plants night before! 2 In her eagerness to have the cold sweat, gave a sigh of relief when he found him- 364 and to his horror discovered a couple of hair- Should Greece get Do- e children accept “Daddy,® war self decent once more, and he dashed for the radio ike creatures that were crawling on them. He put decanese Islands, wives should ; station. He got there in time for the rehearsal, bul them in a bottle and brought them to the office. He which she claims from be careful not in no frame of mind to make much of an impression. wanted to know what they were, so I called Frank to push or ! « a» Wallace at the state conservation department, They're hurry the chilIt Snowed on Ma Y 9, 1925 1 just “horse hair snakes,” or nematods parasitic worms, i H A dren. i HARDLY ANYTHING can cause more torment said Frank. They're harmless to plants, hafm only What will France's postwar “Give the than!a vague recollection of something you read a insects. They lay, their eggs on plants, insects eat the position be Jo reloren to her Kids time." says long jtime ago and would like to find again, but can’t. plant and eggs, and the eggs hatch inside the insect. Yio or . TiCHD. SPS countries us been Dr. Wilbur R. { Such was the case of Mrs. Walter. Roush, who was The. insect usually kicks the bucket, and the worms orocco, Agena y recognized? Miller, well- { mentioned in this column Monday. She thought she then lay some more eggs on the leaves for more in= known psy- | remembered seeing in The Times “on June 9, 1922, sects to eat. The worms, about the thickness of a ZA What will Britain's position chigtrist, “Tryor 1923” a story about it snowing that day. Some hair, sometimes grow to a length of four or five What will Britain and France be in Egypt, Trans-Jordania, ing to push ! of my readers remembered the story, too, and they inches. And, says Frank, theyre the cause of the decide about Tripolitania and Palestine and Iraq? them into a came to her rescue. Two of them even had clippings juvenile belief that a- horse hair placed in a rain- Libya, Italy's main pre-war X close relationship—that'’s ! and dug them up from their souvenirs. They were barrel will turn into a snake. . . . Incidentally, Frank GE { colonies in Africa? ship before they.come to feel fortunate in 1 Mrs. Howard Breeden; 6112 Estate ave, and Mrs. Mar- says the tomato crop is pretty badly infested with * close to a returned father will SES, plus a : garet Spratt, 2011 Wilcox st. The date wasn't June 9, «plant lice, and should be sprayed. Use Black Leaf 40, | only result in confusing the chii're as beau i Mrs. Roush; it was May 9, 1923. The photos, snapped. or any other good centact spray, he advises. . Seen and making the father feel 5 : ’ L 1Kke an outsiqger 1 >: y : Ww > : ] H w T AFRI A ? FRENCH ANGI ECTTIAN CHILDREN, o thre absence of a | Confused Peace By Jack Bell FRENCH WEST AFRICA. ~~ | rouiToRiAL father, come to décept the mothe t ' - “ © AFRICA as the answer to -all of their 4 . RC ; . . Ol] - yh v PR , y s & as a ser t ~ needs and the sole dispenser of SALZSUHG, Aina aBe non denn om 8 oon wi a > Lip A ani ow The Big Five—U. S., Britain, Russia, France and China—meeting to deal with the Syria-Lebanon dispute, would undoubtedly find themselvés | authority. They become used to ! fused peace front; : ; > , , Bi £ 1 » ensnarled in major problems involving North Africa and the’ whole Middle East. Particularly delicate, in view of possible general Arab uprising turning to her alone” when the) { A grosp o Prone Joltiere i citing Logi : en > otis or buy a good meal,” she wrote in North Africa, is the great powers’ atiitude toward the Arab League (diagonal shading). composed of Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Iraq, Trans-Jordan, are in trouble, or need help, or = ar * four years, broke 0 § aris ¢ - 10 U 1) € » 8 vole, 3a y - : tae "i i : : av { , wi avr TN $- i a nn They ee wore the filthy, striped “The only movies here are free stuff sent from| Syria, Lewanss and Yemen. Map above locates some of the painful questions for which Big Five will have to find answers, | 0 ones al of thet: prison. suits . that the Germans home. There are no restakrants, so you gotta eat = 3v EDWARD J. BYNG | Algeria borders French West |sists.of a strip of black cloth wound | iments, : used in the camps. army chow. U. S. money can't be spent Expert on Peace Problems and the Moslem World Africa. Its area ‘covers 847,000 around the head and face, leaving That becomes natural behavio The same day, smartly dressed “Otherwise, it was a good idea,” he said EW YORK, June 13.—The explosion of political forces in Syria and square miles With a population’ of only a slit for the eves. to_ the child and the mothe: Hungarian army officers, on stun- d "8 0 the support of the Syrian cause by the Pan-Arab league at its 7,250,600. Some 850,000 of these are! = The Tuareg inhabit southern Al-| shouldn't try’ to undo it all a’ ning Arabian horses, performed Shen Realization meeting in Cairo have ‘brought the Syrian problem into the focus French The Moslems - number geria and adjacent areas of the Sa-| once. for American soldiers and civil- * ! | of world attention. Yef Syria presents only only one aspect of the! 4,500,000. hara. They are tall, well-built. peo- Rather she should gradual lans, with racing added. T HAVE a letter from Miami asking me to tele- | | much broader problem of general Moslem influence on peace and war.| The Moslems of Algeria: do mot ple with light complexions. Their draw the father into the ple The Hungarians, actually our Ht a mother in Munich and say hello. It brings a| . a erjea’s recently acquired interest in the exploitation of Arabia's enjoy French or even Algerian citi- women are famed for their ‘beauty ture, as, for instance, getting hin prisoners, received cognac as ‘sharp realization of how little Americans know of |, ii yesources, and this country’s) zenship. They are simply colonial and intelligence. : I to go up with her when she “ut prizes. what has happened here. Munich was bombed to | imperative need of a protective|an area of 1,800,000 square miles, subjects, with- the exception of al 2. 3 = | the children to bed inste 0 2 2 » rubble. There aren't any telephones there. There is| i ..teoic naval and air base at|inhabited by 15,000,000 warlike peo-|few thousand ex-officers who were] THE TUAREG trace their family announcing on his fist, Ligh ON THE NIGHT of May 8 little water or light. There are no shops except those | pyar’ have brought the United|ple. The majority of these are| given French citizenship last year. |descent in the female line and the home: “Daddy will put you t three German soldiers were killed for bread and occasionally dried meat. Most other States into close relations with the followers of Mohammed. 2 # = | community is run by wonien, who| bed tonight.” in a jam on Enns bridge as the German cities are the same. | huge Moslem community. #2 2 ON THE other hand, it would be|also own all property except the 5.» Jerry army fled before the advancing Russians so that . "x For the first time in its history, ! IN ADDITION, there Is 5 ciote unfair to France to pass aver the | men’s clothes and weapons. Public FOR THAT sudden change 1 they could surrender to the Americans. ¥ CIGARETS WERE money in concentration |the United States must deal in a interdependence between the situa- grédt cultural achieverierts of ‘and business transactions are car- routine is likely to result in child Up to midnight—the time of the official peace, camps, and on the outside as well. An American | close and permanent” relationship tions in French West Africa and |ried out solely by the women. ish antagonism or tears that wi they were permitted to cross to our side. Then the cigaret was worth 3 marks, or 30 cents in gold fillings |with the strange, colorful and tur- neighboring Algeria. This fact bas French enterprise and ingenuity in| o.oo years ago I suggested that] mace the father feel that he i bridge was closed. extracted from the teeth of victims who went to |pulent world of Islam. a direct bearing upon the preserva- | Algeria. | sotmtry be given the status of a} deed an outsider and that th Officers and several thousand White Russians, their death in concentsation camps. There was also | ’. now (tion of world peace. | In the cultural sense the French self-governing ‘dominion on the| ynother has all of the children’ fightuig for Germany as a unit, came into the Amer- a terrific black market carried on by the S. S. guards, | THE PROBLEM of Dakar is pri-| By way of reprisal Gen. de have shown great understanding for | British model, inside a modernized| ove. fcan lines begging to surrender to us before their who divested the gas chamber victims of their cloth- | marily a Moslem problem. Dakar Gaulle’s air force was reported to| native customs -and, beliefs. “French commonwealth of nations.” Be. Nlille inte out tho. siven Red Russian foes caught up with them. ing and jewels and sold them; clothing and valuables | is the key both to our post-war air have leveled a number of villages| In their contact with some na- oy 2 a IT. viler po o i ] ». 5 =n of 170;000 persons slain at Mauthausen—not a bad | ’ ’ . “7 land to have killed several thousand | tive groups in Algeria they have| LAST MONTH the French pro-| 2 little time chil x How Vuch Food?’ financial haul, jcommerce with Europe and Afics, natives. At. the moment the situa- | also shown political wisdom and | visional government announced a Fly rn 19 thelr Sather Ay “1 AM AN Ameri an nd have {wo babies. Please 29 % | Be Of Te Anis Bon In Algerie Is 85 pave 9 InfTesiraingt 45 11 He case of tie fortron? gana 3 it as they see thei 1 AM cal) § Bye. iii 3 ) against. aggression by way Syria. { Tuare | French empire on precisely a s they get me back to America,” begged a young woman er In Bums ov igh | Atlantic. ¥ =» =» By ry | basis. P p mother turning to him, instead o¢ in Vienna. they fret be deloused. A harassed American lieuten- | Therefore, it is indispensable to} SOLIDARITY inside the moslem| THE TU AREG form one of the | Only through .a fundamental} managing everything alone as she “Where 1s your husband?” I asked. : *- ant overcame violent. protests oh the first day because |OU security that the native popu-|world is intense. Unless the situa-| world's most colorful ethnic groups. {change in Europe's traditional] did while he was away. —ainthe Austrian army,” she replied. Hs ET OY ered 15000 p EW BS 5 t~siothin and ration in and arout 1d Dakar be tion in Algeria is straightened out! They are fierce warriors. | methods in the East can the ener- _He has a word. of advice; t0c~CoMEDooting: at us Sat) Nad opt - EE Sore rT n Et wth 11 RA Stpiendly 18, Ps add. the natives-placated;-the-bitter! although they are Moslems it “is! gies of the world's 245:000,000 Mos~ for the. returning ENE The “Bhe sald JiOUAINg 16 That but-went on x was enough because man bathed for years. ih Bt-Dakar “isa. Magipm city. Itt MC Way Spread se-Prench: Westishe men who-ave: veiled.” a “thet ‘Terms - be turned inte, Sonstryctive thinks thar tiey should reais ==" Bfitish but gave up my citizenship when I married.” foll a y I d he | 1S is the capital of French West Afri | [Africa ANG DaRAT im ar ma mgt pe gr ew Cras a pro ATIe Alsat th thelr abscnce and ip ordes Said another young mother: “The Russians took More woe followe The men raced through the : our fdod and we got only what was rationed.” showers and back into their filthy clothing before |

to keep the memory of them vivic

“How much food did you have?” I asked. the crew assigned to the job got the garments de- [MEN OF THE SUBMARINES . Shaphe No. 3 of a New War Book by Robert J: Casey in the child's mind, mothers hav

built up the fathers as heroes. “Enough to last us a year, those beasts,” she cried, jose. To Be Hetienans hed > order the men back p “They took what you were hoarding and rationed ‘© another shower—a inal insult.

‘ ‘ 8 8 4 re ' . / BECAUSE of that, he thinks i ft so that all could eat,” I said. eo m ! — £o Nn utt IN Nn a is important that the fathers “g: “You're as bad as the Russians,” she said angrily. “BUT YOU'RE taking so much machinery you're 5 n = .

on being heroes” to their smal crippling our industry,” an Austrian’ protested to f WORLD-INFAMOUS Dr. Krebsburg, ‘the S. 8. Russian high officer.

: sons and daughters when the: scientist wi fected deaths by. inject b Ww taking 4 hi 13 O FAR as newspapermen : apparently didn't know where to| come home, even though they ar: 1entis ho perlecte eath by injectin enzine “We're L i i i i t into the ars at the Tate rein fram a Te. eh re ava are concerned, Chet Smith Flora is gasthor condensed chapler from the dramatic 4nd ito ts came for him to nop inclined 10 wah 0 be hese un . " . " i camp, wrote a treatise ou his experiments with the replied the Russian. Then he added: “And anyway, | has been almost a mythical colorful book, "Battle Below, the War of the Submarines," by go back to his base, he still had jo Hie OUSIde Yad 8 he shal body of a dwarf he killed for the sake of science, the United States will give you plenty of machinery.” | character, and as elusive. Robert J. Casey, famous Indianapolis Times war correspondent. | {wo torpedoes in his tubes. HUpOriadL pert Tw Dod © pag. blue | In a business where 99 per cent Mr. Casey spent considerable time with the undersea fighters So instead of heading directly for} jo in winning the war will fee: with . of the men who do the work are getting his material first-hand. home he moved up into & straj terribly let down if his father 24 s B D id * ~ (Nameless, I kept hearing of ‘him all heavily guarded but generally clut-} pecause he is a modest man fo 18. i i \ or 4 O clence y avl Dietz {the time and in places thousands . tered up with Japanese shipping. shrugs off the whole business. $5.03 { J of miles apart. tlot to do with how you feel about|was least expected, he said: ¥ 2, #8 So 10-help. J d this kid PI . . be aa oe - n : : LL : nisi ; : i« was | depth charges. “Take her up.” THE REPORT of fhat expedition So {0 help Joe and this Kids get WITHIN A SHORT TIME thousands of soldiers American troops The frst iS benign tertian malaria, Come io ayne OYE 1 us was “We'd just picked a big one out| His first look through the peri-|is just as laconic as his other nar-| off to a good start with each other Will be returning to this country from regions in which is rarely a serious disease. The second 1s ma-|the first name neal F } 1 nd the skipper had!scope showed hima new and heav-|ratives of battle when Joe finally does come home, which they have been exposed to malaria, Among lignant tertian malaria, which - without treatment, record of his early of the pile, a SIP] Scope . : J s a

them will be many who have contracted the disease. may be fatal.

patrols was the|come through just ds we thougit|ier destroyer screen riding in for-| He didn't delay long. He hadn't| remember these things: “Don’t It is extremely important, therefore, that the gen-

first to give us| he would. mation. |enough fish to fight a lone-handed hurry the children in accepting an inkling of what| “We figured that no matter what| In the shadows behind them were |war in this spot whatever the Jap- aday. the submarines! the Japs did. to. us, he'd get us out|great black masses of ships in par-|anese might offer—and besides, of - were going to do|in one piece. ..,.” |allel columns and moving slowly. |ficially, he wasn't there at all. to the Japanese y 8 x | He avoided the destrovers—a dar- So—in the cool of the. evening— supply lines in| YN THE normal course of sub-|ing tactic, but one calculated to he spotted a long tanker, closed in the next few/ marine tactics you might think|give him only a few seconds for at- on her undex the-noses of the de-

Fortunately the malignant type can be cured with | eral public and particularly the atabrine and consequently is not a problem when| families of these men, realize that properly treated. they do not constitute a menace . ‘ y to their communities and that Atabrine Suppresses

aside- from certain exceptional THE ATTACKS of malaria, which soldiers will cases, their own condition ‘is not gyuffer after return to this country will be due to be-

“Make Dad see he is a hero to the kids and must not, because of modesty, iet them down. And Keep war talk that is for the

family within the family circle.” particularly grave 1 months Captain Smith would have avoided | tack. stroyers and patrol boats and fired | e : . nign tertian malaria, Gen. Kirk says. : : | further action, Once in position, he fired three|two torpedoes. res ibe oy Bn necessary Atabrine does not cure this type of malaria but it|# y as in That was probably what the Jap- |torpedoes—not fanwise but each to-| Both Hit and the ship took fire | FAIR TREATMENT OF ce . , . : vs BA - . , - arms. « part of returned soldiers and preven ye go mn ony ue ; M © : this. One is tiat|anese Oy Wie ne Se ward its own target and went under by He stern, NAZIS SPED VICTORY t soldiers ‘ s sease. Mr. Casey ing | Stroyers were still lo or him 2 a2 8 : Iv ili od ‘ : : ’ st ips v ’ \ their families can do more harm Soldiers infected: with this type of malaria can con- sunk was the on a LL his the sound man reported the rumble] HE GOT three hits. Not only that,| THE NAVY CROSS was waiting NasHINOTON June 33 (U. PJ than . malaria self, Maj. Gen. tinue to carry on all the arduous tasks of combat duty | S40 veey. Short. time of low-speed SCrews. but in the confusion that resulted |for him when he returned to his|—The house m tary a Talis som: floras TY Kifk, Surgeon general gs long as they take small doses of- atabrine. When ye is that he was one of the| The convoy, or another one like| when three ships simultaneously base, and the admiral suggested | ittee Sopenal ouay WL he 1€ army warns. ¥ . — : w ble to. stay up|that he and his men might be in “The soldier who, through ignorance, worries about es Yang ae. he. I ie few submazine skippers Who staried Bk TY fare SD Slew he butch hem. stay or need of a rest. : 8 |the Geneva convention on the treatMalaria and chances of relapses will suffer more ill In the majority of cases the disease runs its course [01s War With a reputation. over his head as if certain that he the bottom. He accepted the cross with pleased | ment of prisoners of wag, sped vicconsequences than the man who understands that after the man has suffered a few relapses and no 3 12 ~ .|had been sunk or atleast disposed| The “workover” that followed has|dignity, but he asked to be excused |tory in Europe. od with proper care this disease is not of serious import permanent damage has been done. HIS SHIP—the building of which |of for the night: {been reported as desultory. The|from the vacation. Making its second report on from the standpoint of the patient's general health,” |

The surgeon general says that qut of 1000 cases,|he had observed personally—had

SO, at & moment when the order'amazed Japanese destroyer skippers| “We don't need any rest, sir,” he|treatment of war prisoners, the Gen. Kirk says. “This very knowledge will contribute anout one third will have only one attack of chills|{the top listing‘ for gunnery and > —3 | said. “Not yet awhile, The ship is| committee said that fair treatment Ww omen considerably to the individuals well-being and fitness.” and fever. Most will have a few relapses. About 40|torpedo fire in “the Pacific fleet. WEATIN' IT ouT B M Idi in good condition and the crew are | Of Nazi prisoners in United States Two Principal Types out of the 1000 will suffer as many as 10 relapses|And in the submarines when you S fo =-DYy Mauldin . {on their toes. So if you'll just give|CAMPS was "a great factor in

while about one out of the 1000 will suffer 20 relapses.|say the ship has an excellent rec- us some more torpedoes we'll be breaking down the morale of GerTHE GENERAL says that the returned soldier in- Relapses become less acute with the passage of [ord you are talking about the |:

4 getting back.” {man troops and making them will+ fected with malaria is not-a menace to his family or tinie and, as indicated, finally disappear captain. I : So he went out on another trip. |ing, even eager, to surrender. the community providing that he is either. taking Gen. Kirk points out that with proper care each| He began this war work by bor-| “In Japanese waters,” one gathers treatment or promptly obtains medical care when relapse cah be suppressed within 48 hours and without |ing into a big, well-protected con- from his second citation. He sank | symptoms occur. permanent damage to the body. Wht is needed is|voy. The first torpedo he ever fired

another list of ships. * HANNAH ¢ While there are a number of types of malaria there prompt and proper treatment by a competent medical |in battle was a hit on a big supply ”

*Typeweiers WiLL 8% COVERT D WHEN 0

» u : IN USE, : LY thr vs. Pranciec) are only two, according to Gen. Kirk, which concern man. ship, Wo ohoan LARGELY ihioush Mrs Franc: HUMOROUS . He lingered momentarily to esti-| P. Sayres, wife of the former gov- | ernor of the Philippines, one learns ww) REDUCED

of his definite connection with the fighting about Luzon. | For she identifies him as the cap- | v0 tain who evacuated President Quezon and returned to Corregidor to

mate the damage, diving on a splitsecond safety margin as destroyers My Day By . Eleanor Roosevelt swung out of line to ram him. As he had calculated, he slid out : of the way of the depth charges, HYDE PARK, Tuesday.—Yesterday afternoon a

the lack of actual time and help, there is a shortage {and confessed to his executive that very triumphant secretary came to me and announced’ ‘of ‘paper! I would like to give you some examples | he considered the whole perform-

pick up the governor's party. of that at last, after all these weeks, we had succeeded of the kind of letters people have written, but there, ance unsatisfactory, - Every now and then you con- i in opening the last piece of mail which has come to is little space .and it would be hard to choose among nae '» tinue to hear of Lt. Cmdr. Chester Ls ‘this address between the date of my husband's death .so many messages. “WE BLEW a hole in him all Smith, a ship here, a ship there. x and the present. One of my boys, writing from the Pacific, said

And it becomes apparent that whatever he had in the beginning is still with him,

It will, of course, be completely he had been deeply touched by the efforts of the [Sh Je Salt: Bur, en bs: impossible to answer these ‘thou- men under his command to express, often very shyly, gether. It will take another-fish to sands of letters, some of which in- their own sense of loss, He added that one of the! finish him off. Take her up to . cluded poems and pieces of music things he felt to be most outstanding about his father | | periscope depth!” : NN NSN and money for various purposes in was the ability which had been granted him to make

® 8 I ASKED a lot of his associates about him, and from Lt. Cmdr. Hi-

x

rm > BAIA

: : bl; tin 7. hims which ‘the Senger felt tie Presi- people who had never seen him feel that they knew So, with tie cunks sti as § ) fam Cassedy, himself an ace, 1 got a ” about him, he camé up. a fairly comprehensible answer. dent was intereste ; him personally and that they could get confidence 1 \ “ry ’ ; Here in my col i however, I themselves from his strength. Fie two! be said. “That does \ Its JO8 iat hes good. he q - ’ ’ ' " wl “ ’ want to say again a word of The. radio, of course, has become a great instru- | Take her down... . \ said. “He's the best of them all. He

thanks. I want to tell you how ment for bringing people together, Millions of people st bg og Le 3 apatiese much it has meant tofecl that 0 who have heard only voices on the radio have come °°

many people not only have felt & to attach to’ those voices personalities and qualities I WO: seemed squarely on top of

has a knack of judging speed and distance such as I've never seen in

a ite 2

‘Anybody else. : 3 |) » % : personal loss, but have appreci- of character; In many of my letters there is a sense them 3s they dived “In addition to that he has guts HGR) 2 4 ated 1 my husband's leadership during the past 12 years. of loss because my husband's voice will no longer 4 4 and cali judgment, and he can REDUCED 3 yan d al ® «+ «A few people, of course, went even further back come into a living room or-a kitchen in some remote THE DESTROYERS continued outthink any Jap who ever sailed 8 : than that, back to the early days of service in the corner of the United States. to look for him all day in the a ship. 0 | ‘ A " in these pigskin legislature, the navy department or as governor of To those who have written in such numbers, since fashion; of destroyers, and the crew th ren) Wy Soe i a E i nd—major impor. - the state of New York. Some remembered primarily I cannot say any individual words of thinks, I would got their first experience with the y Bh J il H : . the early days in Warm Springs when my husband like th send a thought: Out of sorrow and loss must nervous torture of the = depth their Suits. ft wie ait k Prey’ ; : - : hin often friend and doctor and pljlosopher, before - come renewed strength, and I know that my hus- charges: ; : (NEXT: Sets ng. typ gr yl | - ba rgb p came to take over their respective jobs. =~ band's hope weuld be that every citizen of this soun- “But it wasn't as bad as we'd eX 1, hee kno A il oa . Jt | Cot my ba % we had the ability to’ answer at, least some try. wil work a lle harder than ever before i the pected.’ on Sd them said ain] *y he: |fer,_bet known ji) No 4 — of the, letters which have come in, but aside {rom business of being a citizen. : Wald Yue sate 86 wisiglias % PTY i i bs h ai any yi Sir . N SET Gr Li 5.