Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 June 1945 — Page 2
PAGE 2 _
WASHINGTON
A Weekly Sizeup by the Washington Staff of the Scripps-Howard Newspapers
¢
(Continued From Page One)
have fewer seats for non-essential | passengers. ODT says no essential traveler thus far has been unable to reach his destination and return. ODT |
worry: Can this service be main- | tained? ” » 5 Stilwell Successor? ARMY MEN think Lt. Gen. Courtney Hodges, commander of : ‘ 1st army in Europe, may, succeed Gen. Stilwell as chief of army ground forces. Hodges once held title of chief of infantry.
5 ” First strategy of major labor "opposition to federal industrial re- | lations bill: Try to persuade Chairman Murray (D. Mont.) of senate education and labor committee not to hold hearings on it. That would keep proposal in cold storage.
» n ” | APPOINTMENT of 62-year- | old Gen. Stilwell to head 10th | army in Pacific by 65-year-old Gen. - MacArthur causes some | concern in congressional quar- | ters about fighting future= of young, successful, commanders | who operated in Europe. Surprise greeted announcement Gen. Patton and his 3d “army would be*kept in Europe as an occupation group, as will Gen. Patch’s Tth. ; Some . capitol quarters hope | outstanding officers from these and other armies that fought in Europe will get top-flight Pacific assignments. There are. reports that Patton's crack staff may be broken up, men used in higher capacities than occupation duties. : Gen. MacArthur will pick the “big brass” to serve under him in Jap campaign. That was assured when the late President Roosevelt approved Gen. MacArthur's command of ground forces in Pacific area and when | President Truman backed that assignment.
» - Jap Blockade NAVY'S TIGHT blockade of Japan will tighten even more when our planes from Okinawa strips cut communications between Jap home islands and Korea. Military then caution, however, that blockade won't make
Japs fold. But blockade will make ground work easier. o ” » Date for war's end? Some
congressional guessers say next | midsummer. Selective: service headquarters plans to begin discharge of con- | scientious objectors in August despite demands that they be held | until war is over. Veterans of Foreign Wars has protested re- | lease of C. O.'s to President Truman but selective . service says “very few” other complaints have been made. About 8300 objectors are now enrolled but none has been discharged. Releases beginning in August will be based on point system similar to army's.
Pal's Wife Bids On Pyle Script
(Continued From Page One) Jack
through Ernie's néphew, Bales, one of his buddies. “I would like to be able to buy : enough bonds to get the real
original,” the captain wrote his |
wife, “but I'm afraid we'll have to get richer than we are for that. . . “We have bought a hundred dollar bond each month Bill has been. in service,” Mrs. Gifford said. “Would our bonds count, you think?” s . =n “THE SUPERB description of his character and personality was so true, it took me days to come down to earth,” she continued. “To me, naturally, it was Ernie's masterpiece. And I believe there are others who {feel the same way, for I have received letters from all over the states “And 80 has Bill . . . in faraway Saipan.” ¥ u » THE TIMES Hoosier Vagabond whose manuscript will be given to the highest war bond bidder in the seventh war loan drive, wrote in his column about a “drawly talking southerner, lean, ‘profane and witty, and who .is the salt of the earth.” He ealled the captain “possibly the most unmilitary. man” in the outfit. . . . “He's just an old-shoe
southerner who goes around most
of the time in nothing but white under-drawers.” Ernie also reported that this B-29 pilot wanted to form a fraternity called “Fujiyama, '44" « » + “membership limited to those who had flown over Japan on missions in 1944" ” » n
“I'M SURE that there is no
one who would treasure it (the |
manuscript) as much as Bill"
Mrs. Gifford wrote, “for he and | Ernie were so close to each other. |
I wo LOVE to get it for him «s+ + If 1t is humanly possible.
, “We feel what you are doing | with this original is a wonderful |
thing. It is the way.Ernie Pyle (and Bill) would have it. “And though Ernie will not , come back to us’. . . perhaps it . .. will bring our other boys back a “little sooner.” : ai
| restal. | cerned about what Mr. Truman
{ lene,
.
Forrestal Secure ~ NEXT TO SECRETARY of Commerce Wallace, whose cabinet job is well secured, the department head least likely to be
| replaced is Navy Secretary For-
Senators who aren’t con-
does with the rest of the cabinet have gone to bat for the New Yorker. » . If President Truman wants Senator O'Mahoney to succeed Secretary of Interior -Ickes, the President will have to do some tal] persuading. Senator O'Mahoney likes to be his own boss, likes his present. job, fails thus far to believe cabinet rank would compensate him for what he'd
! have to give up
~ n » DETROIT auto makérs are wringing their hands over government controls issued and issuing from half dozen agencies, over
| everchanging outlook for materials
and plant capacity; over prices of materials; over redistribution of
| labor; over continued production | of war materials.
» n 5 Rep. Marcantonio (A-L. N. Y.) says he is preparing to expose an OPA situation which will be “more
| shocking than anything to date.”
3 2 Ed " 3 Furlough Bills. MILITARY HIGH command is expected to oppose Stewart-May-bank bill which weéuld give all servicemen with one year in Europe ‘a furlough in this country before being sent to Pacific. Opponents of post-war universal military training count on congressional delay to defeat the proposal. navy continue to insist military training will be essential to American defense. Wee » n HEARD FROM increasing number of parents whose G. I sons remain in Europe because of lack of transportation: “How
| can so many senators and con-
gressmen get passage in airplanes to fly all over the place?” Answer
so far: Silence.
Weaken OWI
BRITISH INDICATE they may close their ministry of war information.
for continuation of OWI service outside Pacific war zone. Mr.
Davis cited British propaganda expenditures to support his case.
# =» #
MEMBERSHIP DRIVES by’ | | veterans organizations will start |
soon. Among top items on American Legion national committee
{ program in Indianapolis June 28 |
is discussion of How to. attract world war I veterans to Legion. Relatively few veterans of current
i war show desire to join old or new
vet groups. Battle veterans may be more inclined to join than short-term soldiers. ” » n CAPITOL HILL pulse feelers say congressional recess probably will start between July 10-15, last about two months.
KE SPIKES TALK OF ‘POLITICAL JOB’
,¢ (Continued From Page One)
nothing to do with anything else. “I am in the federal service and I take my commander in chief's orders as a soldier.”
Gen. Eisenhower, for whom Abi-| | town, yesterday | staged one of the most touching|just before the vote to ask if and unique famous son celebrations| amendment
his home
ever accorded a military man, said he would go to Washington to confer with the secretary of war.
to Europe early next month.
APPOINTED TO STATE
TOLL BRIDGE BOARD Democrats succeeded in
The Indiana toll bridge commis
hp
.| President and the internal revenue
Meanwhile, army and |
| Okinawa.
That would weaken | argument of OWI Director Davis |
He | “The secretary of agriculture is will take a short leave, then return not going to run from the respon- |
(Continued From Page One)
BEING PROBED
Treastiry Also Checking on Hartford's Records.
(Continued From Page One)
| gunned suicide plane bases near Fukuoka on Kyushu in southern Japan, Tokyo said. Other war @évelopments in Japan and on her southern approaches
* “|included: n matter. Informed: today of the ONE: Radio Tokyo said the | | treasury’s order to delve further | Japanese “capital “virtually” has
linto the returns of both Roosevelt | completed preparations for its de-
tford "to de - (and Hartford to determine the exX- |e... ooainst invasion.
lact nature of the case, Paul de[clined to comment. | TWO: The Japanese war minis[try established two new army disBank Records trict commands, one on the island The congressional committees| sr ghikoku between southern Honagreed not to take further action gh. and northeast Kyushu. and the on the matter until the treasury's| ther in the Chugoku area. Japan investigation is completed. now has been divided into eight The investigation may take sev-|army districts for defense against eral months to complete, inasmuch American landings. as bank records are to be examined THREE: Two American light and all of the books of the Texas| hacal units were sunk and three rédio chain which Gen. Roosevelt | oth arg were damaged off Okinawa operated must be searched for ad- | py Japanese suicide planes. ditional , evidence, the spokesman FOUR: Japanese troops surrensald. dered by the thousands on Okinawa, Former Federal Loap Administra- | many of them with a frank admis. tor and . Secretary of Commerce qq, that Japan cannot win the war. Jesse Jones ‘was brought into the ne total number of prisoners on case earlier when a spokesman Jor | the island may reach 7000. Hartford said Jones had settled the . ‘ ss alleged $200,000 debt with a cashier’s| FIVES AR OY check for $4.000. Jones has declined already are in ‘operation on the to comment. Gen. Roosevelt, like-| island and Tokyo said “Many, many wise. has refused to discuss the| ore” were being built for attacks matter | on Japan. | Willis Asks Explanation | SIX: In the Philippines a phan-| Senator Raymond E. Willis (R tom Filipino-American army fanned | Ind.), asked the treasury to explain | ynrough the Cagayan valley to- | ‘alleged delay in disclosure of the gay in pursuit of thé last large | claimed tax exemption on’ the loan. | opemy force on Luzon after seal-' In a letter to Secretary of they. the island's final escape port. i Treasury Henry Morgenthau ib | the ‘sehator said ‘these disclosures land “the long period that elapsed”
| The ghost force, composed of 6th | jim troops and Filipino guerrillas, 3
{between the ‘transaction and #8
n, | disclosure reflected on the late | OUNtains of northwest Luzo
| crossed the Cagayan river Thurs{day night and by the next morning had captured Aparri, north Luzon port with a population of 25,000.
| bureau. . He asked Morgenthau why the bureau waited until recently to be-
|gin investigating the deduction of| : : |such a large amount. The treasury SEVEN: Tokyo said American
| refused to allow the deduction. jand Chinese forces in China have | Willis asked whether Hartford's|begun a new development of air
ltax return was filed in early 1943 | groups and armies in apparent
|when Democratic National Chaire Preparation for an offensive if and when American invasion forces
{man Robert E. Hannegan was collector of internal revenue.
What Excuse” An unidentified commentator on “Did you ever talk to Mr. Hanne-|the Tokyo radio said it was highly {gan about this particular return, possible that Hirohito may invoke land if so, what was his excuse for pis “imperial supreme authority” in not making the necessary investiga- the event that the crisis facing tion at that time »” Willis asked. | Japan becomes more serious. He also wanted to know whether {Elliot Roosevelt's tax returns showed the ultimate disposition of “the!
Such a move would go even be-|
|Hartford” and whether he negoti- | the Suzuki cabinet by the imperial
‘ated other loans from other promi- diet last week. These Powers, Sh nent men “as has been rumored.” abling the cabinet to rule by decree, ———— | went. into effect today.
| The Tokyo commentator said that DEMOCRATS T0 FIGHT exe emperor's supreme authority | would override all existing laws and { {likened it to “parental authority, CUT IN 0PA POWER :» which parents do anything they
|deem absolutely necessary for their {children’s welfare, even by disre-
(Continued From Page One) |
| were frankly jolted by yesterday's |G. O. P. victory. The amendment is subject to a roll call vote on final passage. Whether the extension would be voted upon today depended upon the Democratic turnout. istration forces were certain to try| to stall off a vote until they had | sufficient strength to assure pas-| Civilian Force move to-cut the OPA extension to| In reporting that Tokyo “virtusix months. However, the “Hoover” | ally” was prepared to repel an amendment caught them without! American invasion, the Japanese |
| “Personal government by the] |emperor, based on the tradition and {sentiment of the Japanese nation,”| the commentator said, “is more |
| | Admin- | AV and can more successfully meet
the situation.”
tide. Rep. Clinton P. Anderson (D. city’s 35 wards, augmented by 1580 N. M.), who becomes secretary of | co-operating units, agriculture July 1, sald later in an| japanese suicide planes sank two interview that the “Hoover” amend-|jjoht American naval units during! ment appeared to “put OPA in a 3p separate attacks on the Ameriparadise and me in the hottest spot an, fleet off Okinawa Thursday | imaginable. : night through Friday noon, Pacific He said he believed President geey headquarters announced. Truman wished ‘to leave me the AD A i ili it w authority to a decent job, but not | , D ri Sat A ary ya Was as much authority as contained in a ys iin oe nh that amendment.” > were damaged slightly.
Hoover Plan American combat patrols = shot Anderson appeared on the floor
“LET PEOPLE IN ON - OFFER'--CAPEHART
included a shift pricing authority.
Informed that it did, he said:
ELLIOTT'S TAKES Hirolito May Take Over Jap GREW SEES USE Rule for Invasion Defense FOR |, S, POWER
{Okinawa by enemy aircraft.
suddenly swooped down from the |
down or repulsed most of the at-| tacking enemy planes, but the toll of enemy aircraft was not available, Tells Students It Must Be immediately. -
The ‘attacks brought to 10 tne Shown, Not Hoarded. |
passion armen
number of American naval units sunk and 52 the total damaged off | : the U, S. were to hoard its power a Jalement ssi by Se Mar 1ike money in an old sock.” ur's headquarters in Manila] pa} $80 that tho Japanese had kilied),i "Should tot be afraid to (sie all their wounded, who didn't die|00Ut OUR BOWE: a8 A I nut we from their injuries in the Philip-| TEiETAR diploma} ‘ssserted, "Put we ; ; : “| should take care neither to whisper Pines fighting. {nor to shout about -it, neither to The statement said that 82012! poast nor to apologize. g Japanese were wounded in the cam-| “Our power is a fact. It must be paign, and those who survived their| recognized by ourselves as it is wounds were put to death by thelr|yecognized by the rest of the world.” Som Fades or forced to commit Grew sald this country’s friends 5 e abroad “fear, not that we will It was a different story on OKi-|yecognize the fact, but that we shall nawa today, where the Japanese|fsi] to recognize it.” were surrendering by the thousands! rt would be “not dnly untrue but for the first time in the war. It | mischievous,” he said, to suggest was estimated the total number of| that American military power ever prisoners on the island might reach | will be used to threaten the peace of 7000 when they're all counted. | the world. The Okinawa invasion already In Two World Wars was paying off large dividends. Al ye hall use it as we have used search plane from the island sank; ;, tw, world wars—in the service a large enemy schooner In the|.s jou and justice and human freeYellow ‘sea yesterday, bringing 04,1, we are about to enter into a 123 the number of vessels destroyed | .ompact with the other peace-loving or damaged since the Okinawa air-| nations to make sure that military fields were put into use. | power—ours and theirs—will be used A Manila dispatch sald Gen. and used only for that high purJoseph W. Stilwell was en route pose.” to Okinawa to take over his new| He emphasized that this country’s post of commander of the 10th|might and war production potential army. . would be thrown only at “violators of international peace and justice.”
(Continued From Page One)
BRITISH WELCOME { pointed out, Is “the product of grim
necessity” but American economic
POLISH UNITY PLAN over “provides us with a. glorious h opportunity.” . .
OTR
“Showing by Example
(Continued From Page One) . “We know the extent of our eco-
| Yalta pact was “welcome and satis-] {and must be used to strengthen the
| factory.” | The. spokesman indicated that, ace of the world. In the hands
United States reaction tallied with] {that of Britain—a “very satistac- | °F the Ametigan peokle it must be {tory solution” of the problem. Rec- | Used in the oS ng i tl Taise lognition by both of the western | O%% OV an srg o Iv ng. and |members of the Big Three is ex-|°* °"" evel of employment. [pected to follow establishment of |
|the government in Warsaw and its| have domestic depressions which
O'Flahert
win, |
Of a United
: (Continued From Page One)
5% king and Yenan together. Gen. Joseph W, Stilwell, appointed this week to command the 10th army at Okinawa, tried desperately to bring about ‘a union of the Chinese forces while he was in command or army operations as military adviser to Chiang Kai-shek. His insistence upon a coalition government resulted in -his recall to Washington. . ” Following Stilwell, Gen. Patrick Hurley tried his hand at bringing
‘the - Chinese factions into agree-
ment. He also failed but remains in Chungking as American ambassador. The United States continues to look to him to finish this job before our armed forces land on the China coast. A Fog of Mystery A fog of mystery and intrigue shrouds . the whole of interior China. Diplomats and agents who have visited Yenan return with most favorable reports of the character and spirit of the Communist group. : They are genuinely devoted to the allied cause. They want to inflict an overwhelming defeat on Japan. They are willing to make a monumental effort in the approaching fight. This: gigantic pool of manpower
leaders.
cannot he used effectively unless Chiang Kai-shek includes in his government some of the Communist Proposals of this nature ‘American military prowess, Grew | have been made but turned down. It would ‘be a curious turn of affairs if Gen: Stilwell, who broke with - Chiang Kai-shek and: who knows and likes the Communist
China to Win"
A statement of United States Far East policy is overdue. We canno$ continue supplying one faction with the munitions of war without aske ing them to settle internal disputes and-give the allied cause the une divided strength of all China.
Our people will not accept passives
landing in China: with a civil war
our sacrifices.
‘JAP FANATICISM
(Continued From Page One)
committing suicide.
had been taught to-do.
imal.
| guessed.
showdown comes. : May Crack Under Strain
Yenan - forces.
| ernment. Disturbing Possibilities
other disturbing factors.
leaders, should take his armies to
| sibility, but he does not want to be a policeman as well.” sage with a minimum of restricting ister Churchill in England. amendments. him that you can’t sacrifice a| sus- | principle and live (discussing Po{land) and he said ‘that is 100
| (Continued From Page One)
pending debate late yesterday. after
tentative passage of the “Hoover Pe¥ cent correct—at least you can't |
sion had two new members today, nian” to transfer control of all food [live well”
Herman Folke of Evansville and! g.tivities,
Car! Knapp of Cannelton. Governor Gates appointed Mr Folke, a
lican, of Bloomington, who resigned
publican, to replace Preston Minor + Democrat, whose term expired
* HANNAH « " [WANKERCHIEF SALE
\
Republican, to succeed agriculture Blaine W. Bradfute, also a Repub-
The governor named Knapp, a Re- FULLER IS FREED IN
except rationing, from| Senator Capehart’s trip was made OPA and the office of economic|t® investigate communication facilstabilization to the department of |ities in Europe. | He left May 14 in a C-54 and was accompanied by Maj. Gen. Frank | Stoner, head of army communications; Adm. Joseph Redmond, head
.' BLOOMINGTON TRIAL of navy communications; Paul
BLOOMINGTON. Ind. June 23 Porter, chairman of the {federal
I told
$196,000 - he finagled from John Yond the sweeping powers granted
{garding the opinion of others.” = | x
|deeply rooted than government by| j
what is occasioned by the gravity of |
: | communications commission, and (U. P)—William Fuller, 20, Bed-|genatars Burton Wheeler, Montana; ford, was a free man today because | 41rradq Hawkes, New Jersey, and a jury decided, in effect, that the | p....4 McParland. ASOD. Lawrence county coroner's ruling of ty visi : N ) suicide in the death of Margaret pas Jur Y sits Nowidindiand | Harbin was right. | Austria, Italy, Malta, Greece, Pales- | Charged with the shooting of | tine Egypt, Tripoli, Algiers, French Miss Harbin, 26, in a Bedford hotel | prov no” Casablanca, Azores and in February, 1044, Fuller heard ®| Bermuda. - ? | jury return a verdict of not guilty | A bill is pending in congress to
g 92 - last night after 20 minutes delibera- |, .i¢y 211 American companies deal-
tions.
| U.S. STATEMENT |
WASHINGTON, J 23 (U. P).—Gov- | HIT BY CAR AT CURB WwW ! N, June 23 ve ernment expenses and receipts for the | Struck by an automobile as she current Ascal year through June 21, com- stepped from the curb at Morris and PRICE with a hs Year {Harding sts, at 1:30 o'clock today, Expenses .. $97,203 341,17 Virginia Denning, 10, of 1414 Lee w di 87,601,040,715 " Y hy spending st. was taken to City hospital and reported in “fair condition.”
Last Year $00,082,408,123 84,709,552,732 41,882,799,347 49,000,661,125 0,306,484, 748 8,633,647,281 190,520,212,274 21,200,674,142
Receipts .... 44,314,358,430 | Net deficit... 52,078,991,837 Cash balance 20,318,503 156 | Working bal.. 19,555,637,000 | Publis debt... 253,180,427753 Gold reserve 20,624,521,307
| INDIANAPOLIS CLEARING HOUSE CLEANING & RESTYLING
Clearings ....... Jodey ! coo 8 5,062,000 Phone MA. S717 ehits ‘on "il ra ‘ 18,594,908 BISHOP FURS, Inc. CBENED os. ivdireiriviings $43,265,000 2ND FLOOR KAHN BLDG. Debits radar ‘e 129,686,000 Y city-wine) NOW. POWDER
1 BRANCHES
Fletcher Trust Co, Addresses in Telephone Diectory Gamba Sst re Son
CHAFED SKIN, BABY, TIRED FEETI ore's 8 Talcum wniike any other
\l-Pu
“FUR STORAGE
| | |
|ing in international communica-|
AMAZINGLY SUCCESSFUL FOR BATH,
land on the China coast. opposite commitment to unfettered elections cause untol lin Poland Moscow announced early today that a Polish unity conference had|try’s past record has made Ameri- | ended successfully. The make-up of can economic power “distrusted and |sians to recognize the Communists (thing of the kind can happen in {of China as a separate government | Japan—especially when the war is America must dispel those fears and support them in opposition to only beginning to be carried to the | |Chiank Kai-shek, leaving the United homeland. But if Japanese leads ide with the U. S. ership cracks under the strain, if
the broadened government includ-|even feared abroad.” ing Polish elements outside country will be reported within a/“not by statements of good intenRule by Decree {few Saye an official Moscow state-|tions but by concrete examples of | Staates on one § ment said.
/
Sometimes There's Quite a Crowd
. andthe operator says— Please limit your call
the |
bd I) i A)
34
strength to block the Republican radio said a civilian volunteer corps | 2 was functioning in. each of the J
{are felt ardund the world.”
Grew said bluntly that the coun- |jacent areas. It would be logical for the Rus-
| co-operation,” he contended. {S. R. on the other.
ly the sight of American forces
going on around them or with &n indifferent faction idly surveying
LIMITED'--KEEMLE
either by death in action or by
SATURDAY, JUNE 23, 1046
y: ‘We Need Help
Many of the surviving common soldiers took their own lives, as they Apparently as many more—confused and lo:l-— surrendered. They obeyed the instinct of self-preservation—dhe of the strongest in either man or ane
What the result will be when this system—this peculiar mental set-up —is put to the test by invasion . of the home islands can only be
Certainly the allied command is not” counting on a collapse of Japa nese morale to end the war any time soon. It nevertheless may play an important part in ending the | agony of the war when the ‘final
~ 4 It is a mistake to assume that the Japanese are either sub-human | or super-human. Despite the vast the coast of China held by the {differences in mental outlook, their | ; ; Co-operation with [basic reactions are bound to be ‘| | nomic power; we know that it can |. . Communists might be accepted {much like those of the Germans or
|as recognition of the northern gov- {any other race. 3 ? The German structure collapsed ©
precisely when the top leadership
did. ‘Fhere can be no doubt that 7 A refusal to recognize the Com-| i ;jiong of Hitler-inspired Germans | {munists and a continuation of sup- | —in the army and out—would have | “Never again can we afford to |POrt for Chiang Kai-shek holds yoy willing to fight on. g
When their leaders fled, disap-
misery at home and | Soviet Russia has a definite in- peared or committed suicide, the 3 | terest: in Manchuria, Korea and ad- end came with a suddenness which
[still leaves the allied world gasping,
| No man can predict that any~ |
can happen.
Most of the time we can handle the thousands of Long Distance calls all right, but sometimes we need a little help from you.
That's when a Long Distance line is crowded
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By MEF United Pres OLYMPIA,
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senate on Jul; This was ne : but it was an
NATION TREAT
Nearly &
By R. H United Press SAN FRAN( 50 United Nat an ambitious turning their liance into a tion to preven The new 10, be adopted fo Nations conf dispatched im throughout th
tion. ; The nearly sign the hi:
Tuesday a fen ident Truman ; ings and dec! ; adjourned. Secu The ‘tedious represents the Joving nationsin a generat] operative pea of a war-time mary objecti
peace and sec Twenty-five sailles the wre ated the Lea; the ohjective | failed because enforce its aim This time tl will ‘be equip] meet force wil to preserve the Up | But the al “teeth” will d Five—and prin hang together and to act tog of world peace. Secretary of Stettinius Jr., that the worle work effective life for all mer .He spoke at honor of the last night by republics. = . The United will end with nations—especi on the highest Big Three con; Solve The Polish | nearly settled, ing days of f severely strain tions. The big here that the table and tl problems. Despite outsi ountless other charter itself, plodded on tc clusion. * The disagree have been ove determination gates to succee world demande reate a succes: ganization; tl ere dared not The confere arked with n and ceremony a ights, Hollywc presidential vis ager celebrity. pvershadow the
OVIE P 10 AID
Seventy-six r e staged in t before next Sat mpt to boost phases in the ve. The premiere p reach $7,600 jhe $41,500,000 | D meet the sta onal ‘deadline Sales for th ank,” a musi d presented © onnel of Wak ital, and “Con eater Tuesda pday. Marion ing with $232 gainst a $33,00
EY
rges WASHINGTO Rep. Albert | d today p army to dis pur or more cl ve the servic “A man witl more ought to | his children
ope
