Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 16 June 1945 — Page 7
rill. offend Announces y Senator
SATURDAY, JUNE 16; 1045
Inside Indianapolis By Lowcll Nusstoum)
THE SUDDEN shower along about 7 Thursday evening left a nice looking. young woman in a most embarrassing situation. She was wearing one of those knitted dresses that shrink when wet. And that's just what happened when she got caught in the rain. With her dress up above her knees and clinging to her, she made a dash”“for the Claypool ladies’ rest room. There, someone came to her assistance and sent for one of the waitresses, hoping
went to the police radio station for assistance Thursday when three other boys ganged up and beat him, ‘The lad was bleeding from cuts and bruises, so Capt.. Robert Batts and Operator Julian Fryback gave him first aid. Capt. Baits then gave the boy a couple of small cakes of soap—hotel size—and sent him home. Yesterday morning, bright and early, the boy was back. He had a dime which he wanted to give .Capt. Batts to pay for the first aid. The captaih explained he didn’t have to pay for such services and sent the lad on his way. His father’s in the navy. ... Mrs.
6G. I. Widow, 8 Children in |
New Hovse
BLYTHEVILLE, Ark, June 16 (U. P).—~Today was moving day
fof Mrs. J. C. Privett, attractive | young widow of an infantryman . |
. THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES we IA MOVING 'STORY—
| mander of the 10th army,
i
"ONLY: MOP-UP JOB LEFT" — BUCKNER _
~ Okinawa Japs Erred By 1 Day
a By E, &. VALENS United Press Staff Correspondent
OKINAWA, June 16.—Lt. ‘Gen. {
Simon Bolivar Buckner, comsaid today that the téining point on
Okinawa came when his troops °
“We are now down lo & cut and Fo
dried job of killing them off,” | ~Buckner said. , u a8, ed BUCKNER explained that an- | other landing on the south coast, | after the north and central parts |
[C. 1.0. Stand |. On Annual Pay] ‘| Is Clarified
By ALLAN L. SWIM Secipps-Howard Staff Writer
‘WASHINGTON, June 16.—Many: business and industrial leaders believed the C. I. O. would seek
’ of. the island had been taken | ithere might be a spare uniform William J. Davidson, who admits her memory isn’t killed in Europe: | broke through the Shuri line. oo. ctr te 2 oy _available. There wasn't. Finally, what it used to be, needs help. Some time around She ‘took her brood.of wou ave } aranteed ae a e-of mind- someone hit on the bright idea of last Christmas she took a yellow gold tie pin to 8 the sw: 10-700 home 2 sign tat Bis He sald the deciding action was ~—probably worse. ee IAL Wage through legislation oives making a skirt. out of newspapers. jewelry shop to have the diamond reset. Now: she pathy built. ¥ | the capture of Conical hill, be- ‘ He said the few thotisand Jap : Some individual Unionists Thus attired the young woman can't remember where she left it - Back in January or " | tween Shuri and Yonabaru, by the . t | that y political hurried through the lobby and . They didn't have much to | anese still on Okinawa “migh the idea
February the jewelry shop phoned and said the pin
worry about except moving them-
| 383d regiment commanded by Col.
; ould out the door, startling passersby was ready. But when Mrs. Davidson went to the ; . make banzai charges. or’ they | congress w ersey Is & no end. . .. Wilbur Negley has left shop on Massachusetts where she thought she had selves and their personal belong: | Edwin T. May. That persuaded : ‘might gradually fall back, pos- be SSRed ‘the Star's editorial staff to handle the public library's left it, they'd never heard of it. If any of you| NSS: the Japanese to shift their re- : sibly surrendering or eventually pass Re would - public relations full time. . .. A note the other day readers. work in jewelry shops, how ‘about looking | Mrs: Privett locked the door on serves from the west coast, weak- jumping off seaside cliffs.” program suggesting that someone give or lend a small radio through your records? Mrs. Davidson, who i& kept the four-rovin bungalow where | ening their defenses : north. of, He recalled that.the 10th army | sds. to an infantile paralysis victim flown from the busy caring for her two motherless grandchildren, ney hing heen ting oh hides Yonabar on the So coast. was organized about a year ago Arie 2 Cenal zone to Billings hospital, met with a generous lives at 3623 E. Washington. re ig aun Be os Hot | an ii Biokner al spe bie sap for’ the specific job of capturing |
response. Mrs. W, D. Keenan of ‘the local chapter
. v : inawa. Its two objectives were | the house of the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis Free Advice Dept. ; contributions from all over the | day too long to withdraw from . Dkitla®s. the (sland oo) build a eplions, received 18 or 19, phone calls from citizens eager to ~~ MAYOR TYNDALL'S “Know-Your-Mayor” broad-| World, was waiting for them— | Shuri, which gave the doughboys 14 Gen Buckner base for future assaults on Japan. | and an. help. The radio accepted was one in perfect condi» -cast series is all right, but if His Honor is that| furnishings and all. | a chance to crack the line south DAT 50 Tast ‘the Japs couldn't be | Buckver Said the rhission was of L. president, ) Per ceng tion, lent by R. T. Walker of Radiomatic of America, interested uf good public relations, he's missing out UNG “ | of Yonaban, pulled back into the peninsula if A completed except for the final Widle 2 Jaga. went hime Inc, 141 W. Maryland. In view of the shortage of On a good bet. He doesn't need a radio quiz program| THE YOU oo Ee 2¢ uo | they had wanted to.” destruction of the enemy. =ne article in which he ssid the tailed his radios, the response was most gratifying. Thanks to 8s much as he needs to talk to newspaper reporters) POVS and four girls, all under 13, | popu the Lord decided it | The marine lst division on the | 2 * un " guaranteed annual wage should be -searching all of you, says the stricken soldier, Cpl. Charles G. covering the city hall and get his story across. Re- didn't need much herding. would rain,” he said. ‘But the west coast pushed south so fast | AND what next? established on “a Sola, not peech was Moeller. . . . You never know what's going to happen porters wishing to see the mayor are left to cool their | They had poet Yisially burst-. Tth division, experienced with the | they cut off the confused Japancees | “There would’ be’ no greater compul€ory basis.” vincing on when you put a classified ad.in the swap column. heels in his outer office Yor an hofir or two—if they | ine the Walls 0 b e Dinigalow mud of Leyte and pretty web- | reserves on the Oroku peninsula. | privilege than that of leading | As much attention was given ta ) Mrs. Don Demaree, wife of the east side druggist, haven't given up before then. Sometimes they can| ‘hey were forced to move nt a | footed, crossed the neck of the | Prom then on the campaign was | these men to Tokyo,” said Buck- | ‘he Sovernment control angle of nsiienis advertised a good gas stove for swap. ‘Among the catch him on the fly by hanging around in the hall I when their father was Chinen peninsula below “Yona- | 4 mop-up ner. the subject as to the wage plan ch were ;
lied it all
ity.” ses tion for an interview on civic matters. One reporter : - ! X88 dence. that pallid or de, _ hasn't been able to see him in his office in four vr| there—still wondering a little how RAILROAD TO MOVE NEST FROM UNDERNEATH COACH— | NOW THE C. L OQ. has clari- _ injured by mond wrist watch and ring. Mr Demaree. was quite five weeks, but once managed to get in a question or | the sympathy he felt for the | . | fled its position. Its leaders are had heard, taken with the horse offers “Just what I need to two in passing, as the mayor. left his office. Other| Privetts happened to blossom into | getting ready to start a nation-’ 1 Sections tide to the store” he sald. It's just half a block reporters have their troubles, too. The mayor's dis-| & huge modern house. complete : O eo O ave oO in’ S al 1 | wide campaign to establish guar--: hat where from “his home. P. S. Mrs. D. decided to keep the like for interviews stems from his annoyance over| With garden, play center, orchard | - . . * . : | anteed annual wages through no-. 10re easily Move some of the questions asked. The questions asked! 2nd chicken coop—with chickens. | s Sea gotiation between employers and sdure than . : $n the “Know-Your-Mayor” broadcast are submitted ! 2 = =» CHICAGO, June 16 (U., P.).=— motherhood, can properly incu- “IT IS unfortunate the press ! employees. ~ : Reward for Police n writing and gone over carefully to avoid annoying NABERS found Widow Privett | The two blue robin's eggs that bate her brood. | of wartime transportation re- | They say there never was any “TEN-YEAR-OLD Robert Gardner, 207 S. Detroit, subjects. and her children jammed into | have been commuting 71 miles x x = quires that we keep in service ail | intention of seeking legislation dh the tiny bungalow last February |’ dally between suburban Barving- THE LOYAL mother bird made = OW available equipment,” he said. { to impose the plan on business anally” he i * —one. month after Privett, 37. | . | a valiant effort to keep the eggs Otherwise, we might have been and industry. They add this et, i t] B ith Bell was killed in Luxembourg. He ton and Chicago on the under- ; °°" able to leave the car undisturbed poo ‘ Will have e aug 1 er y | suggested a community fund to | carriage of a railroad coach may Warm but she was afraid to stick | at Harrington until the robin had | Editorial, Page Six) ame away > | buy them a larger home. | end their travels today. to her job while the train was settled its domestic problems. ven to the LINZ, Germany, June 16.—Adolf Hitler, after three hailed fame, and his first sleeper ride to boot. | The army newspaper, Stars and | RL Wiliams t loving | moving. “In instances like this, however, | should have been. made clear by ies and to years in school here, left at 15 not voted the student In April 1938 came a telegram that set Linz| Stripes, heard about it. That's | yc iams, RALUre-QVINE | Tetween trips she sat on her I think we all agree that even | ap article C. I. O. President Philip” most likely to succeed. In fact, so far as Prot. agog: Der PFuehrer, had invited his former teacher when things began to happen. president of the Chicago and brood. But when the train pulled , the birds must make wartime { Murray wrote when United SteelEdouard Huemer was concerned after flunking him to Berlin. | Nabers' plan for a modest cot- | Northwestern railway, has prom- | ut she fluttered to the nearest sacrifices.” : | workers were seeking wage guarer,” but he in French—others had flunked him in math and ~- “He told me there would be no war as far as Ger=] tage, just a little roomier than | ised that trainmen will perform | telephone pole to await the return oN antees. : \nd he was > science—he was a stubborn, many was concerned, Huemer said. “He said he had| the bungalow, swelled into the | the delicate operation of moving | of her traveling nursery. : AS A substitute measure, Wil- | Much of the wartime excess - ction could surly brat gnd- pretty much an worked hard smoothing out difficulties with neighbor- |
agreements
offers she received were “the most ‘beautiful radio
all-round dope.
outside his office, but that's not a satisfactory situa-
ing states, righting the injustices of the Versailles |
Jodie Nabers, the grocer, was
10-room structure. s
| eggs and nest today. The nest will be transported to
This has been going. on for more
liams promised to instruct train
itself.
than.two weeks. Bird lovers de- | men at the Barrington station to
profit taxes paid by industry are
| . : : ® refundable,” the article said. sional log= “So, you can imagine my sur- treaty. He had made a new naval treaty with Eng-| CONTRIBUTIONS poured In a permanent resting place on a | cided it was time to put a stop | transfer the nest. “The steel industry, for i sosopers prise 20 years later, Huemer land. Jance oud ot declare ar because rer | from all over the world as serv- | tree branch. There Mrs. Robin, | to Mrs. Robin's domestic difficul- | Miss Gertrude Charney, presi- ale a ed ref OE 2 w - said, “when a woman came to the many not want Alsace and Lorraine. Russia was jcomen added their money to the |. w tri ilr i | ties. They went to Williams. | dent of the Friends of Birds, Inc., | : . aa He sees the door with greetings from Adolf busy rebuilding after the last war. He had a pact Jan Spe | Mo bus ley io vailsoed. 100 | y 3 lam eioigh of Ns wane
y organizaw rocal tariff, the leader«
Hitler. I asked.
‘And who is Adolf Hitler?’
with Italy. “‘But can you trust Italy?’ I asked. ‘He said he understood why I, an” Austrian, mis-
contributions of neighbors and !
pennies donated by school children. Merchants contributed
| said she would supervise the move. |
Their Diplomas Safe, Girl ‘that the little birds ‘get.a fight-
“All bird-lovers want to see |
taxes to assure it—for any two years—net profits as high as, of
“The lady was his stepsister. furnishings. Plumbers and car- pr CM higher than. it made in peaceof a great Hitler's lawyer had sent for in- trusted i and added that under Benito Mussolini it penters worked for nothing. [8 shance d > 2 bi! Ty i time ; J i lor America formation as to his conduct in Was a different Italy, Gifts totaled $7000 in cash and | v . #8 8 *
{lity for the
1924.
school. He was in jail, following the Munich beerhall putsch of I wrote the truth, and it wasn't flattering.
Admits His Error
THE OLD PROFESSOR now admits his error. He
$2000 in materials and labor. The neighbors didn't even stop
‘Graduates Dunk Teacher
MAYVILLE, Wis.,
on the train, the little robins will die.” » 2»
“CONGRESS HAS guaranteed to. farmers—for two years after
; . her and tossed her the war minimum of 90 : : ; . , there. They planted a victor Jutie 16 (U. | they rushed VESTS y - | Ho pee: m * © Years later, after much anxiety for fear-it had made hed favored whe STexgIon i Ausuia 0 GETANY,} orien and es in some chick P.).—Four Wisconsin girl grad. | into the river. . i BE ESTS of of 85have been ne cent. of parity. r he tariff is { him angry, I realized what a great man Hitler was. a with other intellectuals. Now he feels ens, layers and fryers both. Then | uates grinned sheepishly today at - Miss Drefka, who landed on her A ‘here was no Teason why “All the union is asking with surgent. ‘ne { He became a close friend, and I am sure it was be- He always looked on Jew baiting with disfavor,| 'D€Y built a run for the chickens | the recollection of a. prank that | feet in shallow water, was’ Juno] | is request for an annual guaran-
in the best
cause I had spoken the truth. Hitler loved the truth; it is too bad he was so misguided.”
“but T didn’t know it was so bad until late years.”
so the victory garden would sur- |
many student$ have contemplated
this operation should be unsuc-
harmed by the “ordeal.” : bl cessful... t
rps do Saint
tee is that the steel corporations, :
’ ror which have their guarantee, make .: Republican i E On the table was a German paper with pictures Yive, THN JY have vere din high “I've done it myself many | a firm commitment to their em74 + ent of the unburied dead at Mauthausen. tosseg it id | : : 3. pe y | $ eman ‘ from His Gogo Moment ng 1 tosseg MRS. PRI ETT, her brood | school band instructor, Miss Phyl- Hs, ay ou Jave = | ployees.” 5 wyer, intere ~ PROF, MUEMER 1s 77 now, a typical teacher who “I know,” he said sadly. “I know now. But I did| Clustered around her, had tears in | lis Drefka of Beaver Dam, into th They will iy | ihe C. L O. it is feit here, I! didn’t get far and will go to his grave cherishing one ’ ve » her eyes as the Rev. P. H. Jerni- | the Rock river. father sees you. v WI TW | strengthened its pesition considA Princeton | great moment: That day in Berlin when Hitler said [00 know. 1f I had I would have written Hitler tell-| 0 ‘0 0 ot 5 h ring 1 after you as you carry the nest | orably by elarifying its polic : | to him “Come and see my friends,” and they walked Ing him such things were happening and asking “The Privett Mi od ed Pe x { Tey go i! Payne a > 1b 4 sale place; ang de 1 se a apparentl 4 for interna Hon to the balcony of his chancell ’ on the Wilhelm- him to stop them. I am old and today I must change e gmail. “w concert. And, as it was the day curely.” : C L 0. leaders y are not go the / strasse and iy down on 50.000 adoring Nazis. my opinions of a lifetime." d bis Yao ett, he? f ie 1 ji Eroijustion ey Sects ! >. 8 3 Rita. yang tise es : H ren, her neighbors and the fam- ere would be no repercussions Lay © An employér-employee-govern~ ts. Bait R Pate had singled him out late in life to achieve left CopyTieDt, 1042, 2% The Tudianapois Times and lly pastor all bowed their heads | they yielded to the temptation. | i MISS OAs ney Fefefence to the | ment study of the a ane: on 0 jary in prayer for Pvt. Privett, who It wasn't so funny yesterday, ather ir won hie | nual wage—a fact- -finding study—
perhaps it Maybe i$
ne directory, Republican
lest possible
tion was ree tly was that turned from aximum war
America Flies
NEW YORK, June 16.—A new, powerful and fast li observation scout plane that also can drop bombs, | fight and rescue personnel, has just been announced
in action by the navy. It is the new Curtiss-Wright Seahawk SC-1, a single place, single float, low-wing seaplane. And it has nearly three times the horsepower of the Chance Vought Kingfisher O82U which has turned in such a fine rescue record during the war. The new Seahawk is designed to fly from battleship and cruiser catapults and its added horsepower will “enable it to carry an extra man, in a bunk that can be arranged back of the pilot, or bombs and depth charges. The main float is designed to include bomb bay doors, controllable from the pilot's cockpit with room fhside for a good supply of bombs or auxiliary fuel
tanks for added range.
Simultariedusly, in divulging the secret of the
By Max B. Cook |
gunfire both in sea actions and during fleet support | of landing operations and to act as a search-rescue plane. @ Added firepower, in case it is attacked, fast ir and maneuverability, with greatly .increased .speed, navy says, make it a dangerous plane for the Japs to tangle with. Even in climb, it is said, the SC-1| will be able to hold its own with the best the Japs] have. This is remarkable performance for a float- | supported, observation-scout plane, Floats are standard equipment, but wheels may be used for ferrying or other purposes.
Lands Easily
WHILE MAKING its takeoffs from catapults the! SC-1 lands in the water alongside the battleship or! cruiser. The latter executes skidding turns to windward, thus giving the Seahawk a smooth water surface | on which to land. Full span automatic wing slots and specially con- | structed flaps cut down the Seahawk’s speed to a point | where landings are not difficult.
in the outer sections of the wings helps increase|
went away to war the day his youngest child was born, a ‘year ago.
RELIEF CORPS PLANS MEETING TUESDAY
Maj. Robert Anderson, Woman’s!
Relief Corps, auxiliary 44, Grand Army of the Republic, will meet at | 1'p. m. Tuesday in Ft. Friendly and the corps’ Past Presidents club will hold a luncheon there Wednesday noon, Mrs, Bertha Barber will preside at the meeting. Mrs. Bertha An-
| derson is chairman of the luncheon
committee assisted by Mrs. Evelyn Kosaceach, Mrs. Cora Anderson,
Mrs. Lillian Stephens, Mrs. Louise |
Burk and Mrs. Etna Hodson.
OBSERVE ANNIVERSARY
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Barker ob- | Marked dihedral| Served their 37th wedding anniver-|
{ fined
however, when the girls
p amused. The girls, who pleaded guilty to charges of assault and battery, were Marcella
and Marian Mueller, Ridge. Miss Drefka, principal figure in the dunking episode, filed suit in the hope that it would discourage other pupils from subjecting more teachers to involuntary baths. She told District Attorney Clarence G. Traeger that the incident occurred after the girls had ob-
17, Iron
jected strenuously to taking roles |
in a concert at a school. picnic
| the day after graduation. The teacher thought she had" made it clear, she said, that the |
sary with a dinner Sunday at their | program would be presented as |
were | $15 and assessed cost of | | $11.30 each for the dunk. Their | arents definitely were {ot
Fischer, 18, and | Dorothy Gindt, 18, both of Mayville; Laverne. Zangl, 17, Knowles,
question. Robin has been coping with her | domestic dilemma single-wing-edly. Where the father is, no one | knows, Railroadmen said he | | probably was riding the rods | ones Those eggs, they
concluded, probably are a chip off the old flock.
‘COUNTY RESIDENTIAL BUILDERS TO DINE
should be made as soon as possible. A full explanation’ of wage. guarantees should be provided individual union members and the general public. Pamphlets, = newspaper advertising and radio programs will be used for this purpose. After the program is under-: stood, unions and management i should enter into negotiations in" an effort to Work out annual wage plans.
| | “Marion County Residential Build{ers will hold a dinner meeting at 6:30 p. m. Monday in the Athenaeum, A. H. Graves, president an- { nounced today. J ! Chester Blome, assistant direc-| tor of the Purdue Housing Research department will show a_movie and speak on “Condensation Problems.” | | Robert L. Mason, ‘treasurer of the | | builders’ organization is program !
oil Ei
We, the W
Men Needn't Get 'Het' Up Over Cigarets
. By RUTH MILLETT
; | home, 2848 McPherson st. Their scheduled. But the girls had | chairman. Other officers are Norris| ~~ “WOMEN BUYING 60 Per Cent that 8C-1's added power, the Wright Aeronautical -cor- lateral stability. | children and grandchildren were| Other ideas. The moment the |P. Shelby, vice president, and| of Nation's Civilian Cigarets,” " decided tha poration announced development of a new model The first paper proposals for the Seahawk were | guests teacher got up to lead .the band | Walter L. Barrett, secretary. | says a headline, a a Cyclone 9 engine which generates more power per submitted to the navy by Curtiss-Wright less than AD lest ma be are q jes - pound than any other aircraft engine in the world. two years ago. High-speed and high-pressure design- : Bu . uick ning the ene It -powers the new Seahawk. ing resulted in development and production of the MEN OF THE SUBMARINES . Chapter No. 6 of a New War Book by Robert J; Casey { = to blame all of the world's ills on
ouse tional meete nd the ques » uncertainty
Light and Powerful
THE NEW ENGINE generates considerably more an twice the power of the 525 horsepower of the first Cyclone produced more than 17 years ago. It veighs Jess than half as much as the average auto
fengine and has the power of more than 25 automo-
first models in record time. In experimental flight testing, following production at the Columbus plant, seven airplanes were used instead of one. Two experimental models were produced and then five more planes were ordered. Bruce Eaton, 35-year-old aeronautical engineer from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology was
Hard Luck
THEY didn’t always come back.
Boat—One
That Didn't Come Back
|the coral and were leaking like!
two-dollar Yaingodis,
wom en—quickly assume th#t. women are smoking more than their share of the country's ciga-
n is expected il th t heavy-duty tugboats. ch io design the SC-I' P gee : Here is another condensed chapter from the dramatic and or rets, we pad biles—more power than mos - chosen esign the reviously he had de- i FERRY " Sa better paint some of the four-bladed Curtiss hollow steel propeller is used. signed and developed a modern system of automatic As this is written the colorful book, "Battle Below, the War of the Submarines, by WE BAILED al she ay bs De out’ that: to bring up It will be recalled that it was a Kingfisher OS2U, wind tunnel balances at the Buffalo plant, He first| Navy department has an-| | Robert J. Casey, famous Indianapolis Times war correspondént. fe hy the boats up onto the| Many a sweet hip, Others piloted by Cmdr. W. F. Eadie that fescind Set. Bidie worked on the Seagull series, the earlier Curtiss\ nounced the loss of six sub-| | Mr. Casey spent considerable time with the undersea fighters | | javits, They tinkered with them ali 0d lady who : fRickenbacker and two companions from the far Pa- scout-observation planes and helped develop the . : . 0 | never bought ign would be ific. Limited horsepower, however, forced taxiing 40 SOC's—SOC-1 to SOC-4, called “Socks” by navy men. marines in battle areas, two getting his material first-hand. |night, and in the meantime there
opinion, the
| opinions on g. Governor cted in town
iles in fairly rough seas as the load was too much Hor its 450 horsepower. The. new Seahawk, “with its increased power, can carry that kind of a load, take off from the surface and fly. The Seahawk’s Job is not to fight, except in self-
Later he worked. on the newest Seagull plane, the X803C-1. The first XSC-1 (preSent Seahawk) made its first flight on Feb. 16, 1944, and the first production model rolled off the line in July, 1944.
known to have been sunk,!
two presumed sunk and two
smashed up in accidents. The two that figured in the ac-
{was no way to send word to the|
over, He found himself a lot of hard luck right away. oti
fellows left on the beach. “We: got aboard about 7 p. m.| “The rest of the guys stayed on| the reef while the tide came up.
what clothes we stood up in, most | of us in tropical shorts. ! “The captain had a lot of new linen stuff in his locker, and he
cigarets in her life is standing in cigaret 3 lines today to buy a pack for * A son or favorite nephew. a And many a working girl chp
~ “SO ON this night I'm telling you about we surfaced and we were jamming air and charging batterfes and going ahead. . . , That's/to. I got myself a pair of pants.
several other Jones, there, slept in water up Ww, rren of Calis scheduled, and
tion of state
cidents were “S” boats, and you
wows might wonder just what sort of
defense, It is to scout for enemy fleet units, spot
My Day
The Japs have something more coming their way. around on her lunch heur trying
| “to find cigarets for a hushand | whose job isn't quite so handy to. .
told us we could help ourselves | his hips.” to a change of clothes if we wanted | | ils ede
“IT WAS wet,” Jones remembered.
the federal By Eleanor Roosevelt go ould what were doing when we struck [I thought they'd do better than|“And I kept wondering how long | drug stmes. Li. ; are No. 1 one of these De “After a while the captain saw shorts for the long haul. We inflated it would be before I'd have a shark THEN THERE are the houseHYDE PARK, Friday.—On the othéy side of the more secure if our young men have a full year of so that the crew |e Weren't going to be able to dojour rubber boat. * in bed with me. wives with a good standing at , urn (opposed argument for compulsory military training as a means compulsory military’ service under the army. couldn't fix it up|much the way we were. So we| “There weren't enough rubber life] “We took pretty good care off 4. favorite grocery: store who he war mane of security, there is of course the fact that our rapidly I am not really afraid that our young people will| _ threw all our chow over and fired Jackets to go around, so some of ourselves. We weren't so badly off as
have better luck getting an un-der-the-counter pack of cigarets with each grocery order than their husbands have at their fa-o vorite hangouts And there are the hoslesses
trained armies have proved, in the end, a fair match for the armies of nations that constantly put their : major effort on preparation for war, Many of us, watching Germany in the last years, knew very
all our fish to lighten her. us broke out momsen lungs. “Then we blew everything. But #4 » ane Suile oe. : guess LE “WHEN WE got to a place on the m was of holes e jus a . shook ‘and turned broadside to the reef where we could put our feet reef. under us,
lots of guys who had to sail around the Pacific in rubber boats and catch fish by hand to keep alive. “I guess if we hadnt been spotted | by the planes we might have been in we made a count nda bad position. But we weren't wor-
rashington by their leadr-s he Wisconan , and Stephen nemployment in the Inters .
become militaristic in the same sense that the young Germans” became ardent and “fanatical Nazis. We|% Americans are bored by military routine, But I dog." want to get the very best training for our young people and the greatest measure of security for the coun~ try as a whole. | ©
| " h n Ms, Casey men Richard Ahr
J. who shep areund for cigarets be- * ty Agencies, well that at the time when we It seems to me the security rests on the best Jones, who had iy Bong Yack 5. "a # found out that we were all right. ried-about it much. We'd just come fore a party 3 for is so were putting our greatest effort scientific research in every field that can be found New London from the-Southwest| WE THREW our ammunition] “Our grub was:in boxes when | through a submarine crackup with- | pleasant to hear guests exclaim, into bringing back prosperity to anywhere in the world; on the most skilled people Pacific. They were very frank about|0Verboard, and some of it ‘blew "up we, tossed it overboard. It rode in out losing & man and felt pretty “you don’t mean you're passing declared thas our people, the Germans had full ‘with the most original minds: on the healthiest peo-|j - alongside—and that didn't do us/on the surf, and ig boxes Eanes] 05d’ in ia | cigarets around!” employment because the govern- ple, mentally and physically, that we can produce; it , a any good either. A wind was com- up on the coral. We salvaged quite { There are also the mothers; . than the fede ment was preparing for war. We and on the’ best citizenry at home to back what we “Vou: a Ahress 4 ous ing up and she was listing badly.|a lot of it that day, and we had| THEY BROKE up the submarine. 0 "ony" sweethearts whe buy n re-employe were devoting ourselves to the re- do both in the political field and the economic field he ole San Be stay there 1De Skipper was afraid she'd go|pretty good chow. It was a sort of |in deans: Jones told about that. .. . eis to stick in overseas packoyment come vival of business and farm pros- and, if need be, in the military field. I think we need | c* Clg oe ~ rr = over on her side. We didn't think surprise party.- sate none of Ue Zen along with candy and t hi rm ak- almost —and . - |she’d have far to go. ir . might expect among ng employers Bert , / while gu ny vas In aks ost continuous training for all men of fighting cret how we got there. They didn't 80. “The labels had washed off all the shipwrecked satlors on such an oc- cookies.
“While we were lying there, four American bombers passed over. Nobody saw them on account of the haze, but they saw us. They turned
cans, and when you opened one up you never knew whether you were going to get corned-beef hash
or pineapple, » . » . : “It wasn't his fault we went “THEN the corvette came in about i. They that ak- the investigation, and he's got another “1 guess he'll get along all right now that the jinx is ot” -
: (NEXT—Cried Burlingame, and life in Japan as seen (hrowgh
age, but I do not think it needs to be completel : we vai been A since ‘the war started ¥|tell us about that. But anyway, there NOT THAT women aren't
military. ” Romogiti ve well one lady who returned f a and praised both the Taian and the German uf) THE WAY 1 happened Was this; overnments for the full employment she found there, “We'd dumped our executive officer in port where there was a I hospital because he had something wrong with his insides that the pharmacist's mate couldn't fix—in-|
casion. “She was a hard-luck boat,” he
sald, “The skipper was a good guy and he deserved better,
having these
