Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 July 1945 — Page 10

oT he Indianapolis Tires |

i rT

Wednesday, July 11,.1945

WALTER LECKRONE Editor” Business Manager

ig SCRIPIS-HOWARD NEWSPAPER)

PAGE 10

ROY W. HOWARD President

“Owned - and published daily (except Sunday) by Indianapolis Iimes Pub lishing Co., 214 W. Maryland st.’ Postal Zone 9,

Price” in Marion ,County, 5 cents a copy; delivered by carrier, 20 cents a week.

Mall rates In Indiana, $5 a year, all other states,

Member of United Press, U. 8 possessions, Canada

- N - i ahd Mexico, 87 cents a ice, and Audit Bureau of month,

Circulations: a 5% o RILEY 5551

Give Light and the People Will Fina Their Own Way

ALLIED DISPUTES ANNOUNCEMENT that the United States, Russia and Great Britain have finally reached an agreement for ~inter-allied government of Berlin is good news. The unfortunate part is the fact that there was any disagreement at all. The thing that worries us is that. such disputes are getting to be the rule. In almost every situation that arises there seems to be an incapacity to act together. Misunderstandings occur on the slightest provocation. That leads to suspicion. And the vicious cycle grows. Perhaps it is not surprising that the basic difference | between western democratic standards and those of Russia should be reflected in policy and conduct. But it is surpris- | ing that allies, at this late date, have found no effective method of compromising their differences to the extent of getting on with their joint job. Regardless of the ideological chasm, which probably never will be bridged, they should be able to work together | for limited objectives necessary to both. " = ” ” n y EVEN WHEN they get a compromise agreement; it | usually collapses.under the first test. That is what happened to mest provisions of the Yala pact. And that is ‘what occurred in the Berlin occupation:— Negotiations pan for more than a year in London on this subject, and then the Big Three came to terms on it. Yet when Germany surrendered, it was as though there had, been no agreement. There was an .upset when Eisenhower and Montgomery went to Berlin, followed by almost two months of delay before British and American troops were allowed in Berlin. When they arrived, .there was no Russian recognition of their rights. Obviously this road leads to disaster for the allies, for Russia no less than for us. This issue overshadows all others at the coming Potsdam conference of the Big Three. It is not so much whether they can reach more com-

promise agreements. It is whether any bargain can be made which will be kept. « ". *

TWO-TERM AMENDMENT

EPUBLICANS in congress want to submit’ to tHe states a constitutional amendment limiting Presidents to two terms. We think Democrats ought to join in this movement. Whether it was a good thing to break the two-term tradition in Mr. Roosevelt's case probably will be debated for many years.. When he ran for a third term—then a

fourth—most votérs thought keeping him in the White |

House was more important than the tradition. And they were free to choose. It may be argued that future voters should be left similarly free to choose when and if future Presidents run for third terms, fourth terms, etc.

But,

disposed to shoot—if they can.

ability to win a third term, and a fourth, become the

accepted measure of presidential greatness and success. | For that would tempt all Presidents: to use power and | patronage for the purpose of maintaining themselves in |

office 12 years, 16 years or even longer. There is great danger in that prospect—much greater

than the danger that in the midst of some possible future _crisis some able and popular President may have to step |

out as the nation’s leader because his second term expires. Anyway, we think a two-term: amendment to the Constitution should be submitted to the states soon.

is a good time, because no President will be in position to |

run for-a third term for quite a few years to come. _Just now, the question doesn't affect the immediate. political plans of any person or either party. The people of the

states could discuss the proposed amendment with a mini-‘

mum of heat, then ratify or reject it as they see fit.

WAR AND THE BRITISH ELECTION

EOPLE of the United State§ naturally are interested intensely in the results, scheduled to be announced: July 26, of the recent British election. standingly may be inclined to wonder whether the results may affect Britain's participation in the war in the Pacific, To express one opinion, we do not believe that the election, regardless of the outcome, will have the slightest effect. We doir't believe there is any more possibility that the British will hecome laggard until Japan is finished than there was that Uncle Sam might have dropped out of the war if Governor Dewey had heen elected November, : This confidence is justified, in the first place, because the British are an honorable people. They could not, with honor, quit the struggle until the last shot is fired. secon place, they have too many selfish intérests in the

Pacific to drop out of the war before Japan is beaten. To k adopt any othér cotirse of action would finish Great Britain

as a Pacific power, Consequently, people of. this nation need have no cause for worry about the British, election results. whom the election winner may be, Britain still will be doing’| - everything in its power to insure that the Japs will be the unconditional losers.

NEEDED: SOME BRONX CHEERS .

NOTE to kid hrothers-of men flying bomber S$ OV er Japan: | Do you know what the Nips are saying? They’ re jab- |

‘bering into the radio that they are “permitting” your hroti- |

‘ers to attack their homeland. Yeah, “permitting.” . They | pretend they're so busy building an unbeatable air force “that they don't mind . your brothers’ missions at all: : Look, you go-ahead and express what. you're.thinking such boneheaded gall. The rest of us are thinking the thing. But we're ‘older and. not Hippies to make noises With or mouths,

sremmiemiepmsymen————————————— HENRY W. MAN2Z

| theorem that form follows function. | result

| to need an attic.

in breaking thé tradition, Mr. Roosevelt set a | mark at which many future Presidents will be strongly | We should regret to see!

This |

Americans under- |

President last |

.In the |

Regardless -of |

ow TOWN— Home ‘Space’ » By Anton Scherrer

PROBABLY from a reading of the. Ladies Home Journal, I have come to- regard the present var as something that is: being fought to emancipate people from the kind of .houses they are living in: today. Your present: home, it appears, Is too snug. It is full of shades and shadows. ‘It has a cellar for which there hasn't been any use since tHe abolition of pro= hibition. It has a roof, thé roots of which reach into the Dark ages. It has a fireplace, the roots of which reach even farther—possibly to the cave of the Neanderthal Man. It {8 constructed of the same materials that Nebuchadnezzar used when he built his bungalow on Sunset boulevard in Kish City (6), Babylon. It is a trivial contribution--te-an age dedicated to the efficiency~of the machine—the automobile, the airplane, the zippered Schiaparelli gown, “all of which-.are. glorious ‘examples of consistency. Compared with these, your home is an anachronistic anomaly than | which nothing cauld possibly be worse.

| No Attic, No Cellar

THE MODERN-MINDED architect has answered the stinging indictment. , The post-war houses this far published reveal ‘that he has adopted the same thesis governing the design of machines—namely, the The inevitable is that the post-war house will Have a flat roof, the bitter corollary of which is that it will have no attic. . It leaves me no alternative but to believe that the modern architect predicts that pretty ‘soon we shall all be so poor that we won't have enough left Nor a cellar, Sure, the post-war house, will be minus a ‘cellar. It will be minus interior. partitions, too. Except for

| the partitions necessary to screen bed and bathrooms | (a survival | there won't be any interior walls.

which still remains.to be answered), Which is to_say that there won't be any rooms. Instead of rooms, the post-war house will have “space.” “Space” contents of a house which,

is the modern connotation for the cubic in the pre-war period,

| embraced the living room, the dining room, the stair

hall, the pantry and the kitchen, all of which were self-contained entities. Remember? The modern architect-tumps-all-these-into-one-and-ealls-it-“space.” Right away it occurs to me that the substitution of space for rooms. will throw the daughter of the house into the street to purstie her courtships. It may work the other way, too, and drive her parents into the street which may be an even greater hardship for, in that case, there won't be any courtship to pursue. :

Remember the Gold Fish?

THE LACK of privacy evident in’ all post-war houses alarms me no end. For example, what is the big didea back of the concentrated areas of glass which, often as not, embrace an entire wall? Sure, they let in a lot of sunshine. So what? . A: place in the sun is the least thing I want. Indeed, I helong to those who want to sneak away and hide in the shade. And believe me, brother, there are millions of us. “God grant that we won't be stampeded the wav the gold fish families were a generation ago. . And what is the purpose of sliding the glass walls out of sight? Sure, it permits the garden to enter the house. So what? =I, for one, have no desire to commune with nature.except in her own habitat; at any rate not until the ‘squirrels and chipmunks evince a willingness to adopt the ways of polite society. I will not settle for anything less. This doesn’t dispose of the defects by any means. It's merely a sample “to support a suspicion that, maybe, the same, thesis doesn't govern the design of machines and houses, If the aYthitects but knew it, the two are poles apart. Indeed, I strongly suspect that we choose the houses we do because of qualities absent in machines. Which is to say that we will continue to live | in old-fashioned houses, if for no Other reason than to get away as far as possible from machines.

Accept People as They Are

IT'S OUR escape. We resent being bullied all day long by the overbearing behavior of high-speed elevators, revolving doorways, escalators and chatter ing. telephones; so much so that with the years we pile up a subconscious rebellion. And when it -comes time to express our resentment, we go out and buy a house in the country—

as a rule, an old and dilapidated ruin of half-a-dozen |

snug rooms including a cellar and an attic. Like as not, it will he an anachronistic anomaly built: of the same materials that Nebuchadnezzar used, the moral of which is that architects should accept people as they are, including their quaintness | and perverseness. Maybe T should have kept my mouth shut. Architecture is the subject T know ‘least about. ~q

WORLD AFFAIRS—

$4 Name

i - & By Peter Edson

WASHINGTON, July 11

| § : four-dollar name for

~— The |

allied control government now being set up over Germany is, “condomin- | ium.” - What happens in a condo- { minium is that the conquering. powers “condominate” | —you can have the verb for an extra 50 cents—the “condominia”—two bits more, please. f

too. "soe

the kind of gress and the country.

death

(Times readers are invited to express their views in these columns, religious con: troversies excluded. Because of the volume received, letters should be limited to 250 words. Letters must be signed. Opinidns set forth hese are those of the writers, and ‘publication in no way implies agreement with those opinions. by The Times. The Times assumes no responsibility for the return of manu-

Hoosier Forum

“MR. ROOSEVELT'S VISION IS PAYING DIVIDENDS” By Pvt. Richard 8. Tribbe, Briggs Field, El Paso. To the late President Franklin D. Roosevelt must go the credit for appoint{pg an American delegation to the United Nations conference in San Francisco that was non= partisan—a delegation composed of men and women who put their nation first and political affiliation next. ~ The farsightedness of Mr. Roosevelt is paying dividends. Of course, that is not. intended to take any credit from the men scripts and cannot enter ore and women of the delegation who respondence regarding them.) worked so well “together and Who name of humanity and futiire displayed keen understanding and peace—without’ thought of national intelligence. | politics. This is one- of the most But if it had not been for Mr.|encouraging developments in our Roosevelt's appointing them, they history. woud not have had an opporiuniLy| The late President Roosevelt to conduct themselves as they did.| showed his faith in mankind by Let's examine a few of the state- [appointing a non- -partisan delega-| ments ‘made by Senator Vanden-|tion. The American people and| berg, ‘Republican of Michigan, one the world will reap the benefit of of the leading members of our | that faith, delegation. At one time Senator | 8 Vandenberg was’ an. earnest apostle “IT'S ALWAYS of isolationism. Just a few days. THE OTHER GUY” ago, he fervently appealed to his | By R. H. B., Indianapolis senate colleagues for early ratifica-| First. I want to congratulate The tion of the United Nations security | Times on its exposition of the “new charter. | political party” .of Mr. Reynolds. | “We must have collective security | It would be quite American for all to stop the next war, if possible, before it starts; and to crush it swiftly if it starts in spite of our

lent schemes, political or otherwise, ! as The Times did in this case. It's organized = precautions,”~ Senator | too bad that advertising money can! Vandenberg told the senate silence truth oftentimes. “I' doubt if there could be an- | Secondly, I have an idea. Has other or a better start,” he said [the science of chemistry -ever set gravely. | about to find a substitute. for in-| The Michigan Republican said toxjcating- beverages? the new charter can be “an eman-|tyte could be devised that cipation proclamation of the world.” |and tasted like whisky,

looked rum, etc,

with hope. It deserves a faithful|jsfied and the general public trial,” he added. | wouldn't have to read about mur-| “America has everything to gainiders, auto accidents and divorces and nothing to lose by giving its being the result of drunkenness. support; everything“ to lose nothing. to gain by declining this) Then all my

| United Nations in behalf of the] {plain that they just drink

| |

|

continued fraternity with the| wouldn't have to apologetically ex-

dearest dream of human

(peace).

kind don’t get drunk. It's always the

We know. that Senator Tom Con-| talking. i nally,

"With this new “ersatz” chairman of the senate for-| liquor the embarrassment of mak-

[eign relations committee, feels the {ing clear that “we don't drink to

| member of our delegation to San|

All this $4.75. combination of polysyllabics means |

is that two or more powers jointly administer another goverment or a protectorate: Agreement on details of a plan for uniform. joint | government of .Germany is one of. the most imports | ant subjects to be discussed by the Big Three. Testimony by state, war and treasury experts hefore Senator Harley M. Kilgore's military affairs subcommittee has just revealed that German roots for | world economic domination run deeper than people had appreciated.

Stiffer Terms Needed

ALL ‘THESE revelations have the effect of building up, new demands for the imposition..of much stiffer

been considered necessary. tiizens as Bernard M. Baruch occupation” of Germany,

demand long-time maximum reparations, full

most |

final peace terms on Germany than at first may hate | When such responsible |

U.-8. co-operation with Soviet Russia and the building "|

up of all the other European states to higher stand-

t you know how great is the fear of a German comeback It is known definitely that the administration does | have a plan for the complete demonilizatiorc>of the | German war potential.. This U. 8, plan is émbodied in the confidential orders which have been given Gen, Dwight D. Eisenhower on how he shall govern the American zone in Germany.

No One 'Morgenthau Plan’

IT. MAY have been generally . forgotten, but last

September there was considerable to-do on this Subs,

ject when a so-called “Morgenthau plan” for dealing with Germany. leaked out after Mr, Roosevelt's second Quebec conference with Churchill. It was then re- | ported that Secretary of the Treasury Henry W. Mor- | genthau Jr, favored reducing Germany to the level of | A purely agricultural economy.

| Actually, there ‘was no. one Morgenthau plan.

ards of living than are permitted in. Germany; then {

Treasury experts from time to time have been called’

| upon ‘to Jbrepare- a number of reports on | phases of. e Johomic controls for” Germany. | these ideas ‘have been incorporated in which haVe ‘been given to Gen. Eisenhower.

various

the orders ~Publica-

{tion of these: orders, revealing the formula for deal-

ing with ‘Germany; now must await tneir approval | of their revision by the other occupying’ powers which,

through the a will rin the,

‘Many of

‘eantrol council sitting in Berlin, |, plum, Theres. het Jord: apa, ;

same way. He was a ranking|get drunk” would be eliminated.

Francisco.

"y ‘wholly disagree with what you say, but will defend to the

your. right to say it.”

“SELLING APPLES MORE HONORABLE THAN RELIEF” By Voice in the Crowd, Indianapolis Mrs, Haggerty, I did not say on June 30 that the “control of money I did say that the “control of money lies with congress and the taxing and loaning agencies set up in the government.”

lies with congress.”

It is the duty of congress to coin |

money and regulate the value thereof. Do you think they should coin more money so it will not be worth 50 much? I happen to have a very deep re-

{year should be capable men.

newspapers to attack such fraudu-|

If a substi- |

“It” is laden with promise - and| {the drinking public would be sat-|

| to count.

You say you know me. —they vow that I have not asked any|

I Fecommend it to con-|other guy who drinks to excess] never the person with whom I'm|

spect for congress and its responsi-

bilities. I fully believe that anyone | who is in the congress elected by the | people is worth $12,500 a year, and | any that are not should be replaced | by men that are. ‘Men who appropriate 100 billion dollars in a single

I believe our congress is equal to |its task. I also believe that con-! gress is the only section of govern- | ment that has prevented the executive branch from taking, and a weak

{people from yielding, all of those rights that are sovereign to the in-|

dividual. May it so continue. I believe that your statement that | “less than 6 per cent of the people | [of this country control its wealth” is more “poppycock” than that ot’ those who have claimed for the last | 50 years that 2 per cent of the people controlled 90 per cent of the) | wealth, because they evidently figured that more than 4 per cent con- | trolled the other 10 per cent. | ~The wealth of this great nation is | in its homes, its farms and stores. and factories and mines, its gheat | {office buildings and its transporta- | {tion and communications and He; [insurance companies which have stockholders beyond anyone's ability | Who is the 6 per cent |

{that controls them? Perhaps 30

and They'd-have-to-find-a-new. reason. mution-peopie-do-—Do-you-want-the friends who drink|

| politicians to control it? Do you

man for a job in 45 years, that 1

have never sold apples; that I never {got rich nor envied any man who did?- Do yeu know. that selling | apples is more honorable than relief? | Do you know that I was taught that I must work if I would live, and

Don't think it would work? Why that 1 have gone through some of | not—if no one drinks to get drunk | ieee deep valleys . without losing |

Thus we have two of the leading| the non-intoxicating stuff should | io of the sun that shines on this

men in our senate, one a Democrat | pléase one's palate just the same. and the other a Republican, es- I might even drink the darn stuff] pousing the same cause 4p the! myself. I think it's a good idea,

Side Glances — -By Galbraith ~

Isiled to enjoy its garlic-free air?

[please don't tell me that selling | {apples is the only opportunity in a| [nation that is ready to rebuild itself |

| them of wrongdoings, there wouldn't

" think Dorothy has fallen in love with fiat: marinomdt Ee, Jin) 4 be:able to save trough points for a Seek gery. Toon!" :

{land of opportunity. nor have 1} Do you know that I detest any attack on our form of government, our system of enterprise and our living |. as individuals? . Kick that around as you will, but |

{ when it is certain that individualism | | will command respect and reasonable reward. "8 8 » "MONT TAEK » DO SOMETHING”

By ‘M. E. B.," Indianapolis I am a cab driver's wife. I've been married seven years. My Husband was a cab driver five years before I met him. > If people would look into the cab drivers’ background before accusing |

be so much talk. ... What is the matter with people anyway? A lot of you depend on taxis to get to work, trains, hospitals and other essential places. What would the public do? ... I'm afraid there is nothing a cab driver can do but take beatings from all sides. If the American Legion would get behind the drivers they would probably get some place. So, to the public I say, “Don’t talk about drivers — do something ‘about drivers.” .

DAILY THOUGHT And he said: “Draw not nigh’ “hither; put oft thy -shoes from “thy feet, for the’ place whereon. | thou standest is holy BION Exodus, 3:5. .

p WHERE'ER we we tread is haunted, Moy BYI. ;

{ for the A. F. of L., | Workers apparently think the smart poliey is silence, | That was the position taken by R. J. Thomas, presi= | dent of the C. I. O. United Automobile Workers.

Tdebate.

POLITICAL SCENE—

Final Act By Thomas L. Stokes

‘WASHINGTON, July 11.—In the huge and airy caucus room of the senate office building, where so much of our recent history has been reflected, there now is being written the final act that will change the whole course of our foreign policy. : There the senate foreign relations committee is holding public hearings on the S8an Francisco Charter, Its approval by the committee is assured. So is its ratification by ths senate after some debate. ‘What is most impressive about this occasion is the revelation of the terrific impact, finally, of American public opinion. You can almost feel the pulsations beat upon the group of men seated about the table there, It shows again that American public opinion is a living, vital force which men in office cannot deny. You come to see, as you listen © the proceedings there, that these men are not gathered here to make a decision. are gathered merely to confirm a decision already made by the people,

nation, and from the people, too, of other war-weary nations, who are literally shouting: “It must not happen again!”

| Every Seat Was Taken

THIS OCCASION, like others held in this room reserved for major issues, has drawn a good crowd, Every seat was taken when the hearing opened. Some stood outside. But this was a placid audience, come to satisfy itself with the sight of a desired deed being done, There were no tensions here, as there have been in this room on other occasions. No nervous sitting on the edge of chairs, ready to condemn raucously or derisively, or to approve with vicious applause that is meant to irritate an opponent at the same time it cheers a friend. There is good will here, The drama is in the lack of drama. That is ite real meaning. There was a time, not so many months ago, when venom permeated this high-ceilinged room in a clash of personalities symbolizing the two sides of a cone troversial domestic issue. The chandeliers literally were set to tinkling with

the furious applause of fur-coated, bejeweled women

for Jesse Jones, the practical banker and businesses

plause of representatives of labor organizations for Henry Wallace, sometimes described as a dreamer, There is still bitterness over domestic issues.

There once was bitterness over the issue of inter

national co-operation, now so generally accepted, This shows how far we have come. What a transe formation there has been through the shedding of blood. This shows what a re-awakening of political leaders has occurred at the call of millions of small voices, They were voices of parents whose young men offered their lives and voices of young men who laid down their lives,

Weary Footsteps Echo IT WAS NOT five years ago that this same caucus room was saturated with bitterness over the lends lease bill, that first step in co-operation with those who eventually became our allies. There was tension when the late Wendell L. Wille kie walked into this room, hardly able to thread his way through the tightly packed throng, to take his stand alongside President Roosevelt and Secretary of State Hull, and thereby to win the enmity of Rew publican party leaders. Such Republicans as were present had only friend« ly smiles. for former Secretary of State Stettinius when he sat down before them to testify .about the San Francisco charter, and there were no tensions in the atmosphere. The weary footsteps of Salerno and Anzio beach and Cassino and the Normandy beaches and Guadal=

| canal and Iwo Jima and Okinawa echo now on the | | nals floors of the senate caucus room.

IN WASHINGTON—

Smart Policy? ‘By Fred W. Perkins

WASHINGTON, Julx 11.—Neither William Green nor Philip Murray nor John L. Lewis ‘has accepted a week-old challenge from Donald Richberg to public debate on whether we need a pew labor law, The three top spokesmen the C. I. O. and the United Mine

Mr. Thomas first challenged Mr. Richberg to a When Mr. Richberg accepted, Mr. Thomas | withdrew, explaining that the union's local advisers had disapproved. Meanwhile, however, the house, organs of the big labor organizations are heaping criticism on the proposed federal industrial relations act, sponsored by | Senators Hatch, Ball and Burton. Robert J. Watt, international representative ot [tHe A. FP. of L., will take the union side in a radio 1 debate next week-end with: Senator Ball. ©. The dis« .,cussion will be on the Columbia network's “People’s Platform” Saturday at 5:15 p. m. (Indianapolis Time),

Offer Still Holds Good

MR. RICHBERG was chairman of the, Citizens®

committee to promote industrial peace, which spent

| nearly two years drafting the bill which the -three senators revised and introduced. He said today he hadn't heard from the threa labor chieftains td0 whom he addressed his challenge July 2, But, said Mr, Richberg, his offer still stands: | He will post a forfeit of $1000, to go to the American

{Red Cross. if he does not prove to impartial judges. in | a debate with Mr. Green, Mr. Lewis or Mr. Murray,

or lawyers named by the three or any one of them, that their attacks on the proposed law are “unfair, [inaccurate and misleading.” The Richberg challenge contained the statement | that “the labor peace plan can harm no one except

| those labor leaders .who can only hold their jobs by

maintaining a state of continuing warfare between employers and employees.”

Peace “Begins at Home

SENATOR HATCH said he expected “plenty of constructive discussion” when the proposal reaches

hearings before—the-senate-committee—on--education. He thought that would be in September:

and labor. or October. “Industrial peace in this country is necessary if we are to lead the world toward international peace,” Senator Hatch said. “Peace, like charity, begins at home.” Regarding the strike of truck drivers now tying up most of the New York newspapers, Senator Hatch said: “If the mediation and conciliatio» .aachinery we propose had been set up, this strike never would have occurred.” The three senators have emphasized that their alm was to revamp existing labor law to prevent ine dustrial disturbances in the reconversion period,

»

So They Say— IF CHRIST came to earth today he wouldn't give the parable of the tares and wheat, but a parable of 4 ‘man who threw a spanner (monkey. wrench) inte the works.—Dr. Christopher, bishop of Rochester of .| the Church of England,

. . xr

OUR FOREIGN coins ‘beyond relief must

not be allowed ‘to disrupt our economy to such-an

extent that we are unable to feed adequately our own

_people.—Paul 8. Willis, president, Grocery Minutace

turers of’ America, Inc. .

UNTIL donmentic, stevie is treated like a skied

It already has been made for them, They |

They are obeying the mighty | | desire rising from the people all over a war-weary

Atty. G gracious sm U. 8S. court on his bacl rama

Hoos

M

DEAD—

Capt. Rob of Dr. Leon: N. Meridian 20, 1944, wh down over had been Ii that date, He was a high school, emy and the Capt. Ensr School of E at Harvard 1 called to ac

—member-of

A member ment squad entered the and went ov

~when his en

land. He fifth missior

SAFE— Pvt. John Nora Farrar Kent, 648 8S. 22 from a G had been a 1044. A paratro captured at

“Billings Gen

rison. Pvt. Ben Davis h

_. ployed by Is

he entered 1943. He w ber, 1943. Pvt, Fan Thomas, 3, Pfc. Samue Germany.

HONORI Cpl. Willi of Mr. and 8d ave, Grove awarded bronze star for meri service wit medical d ment of th Engineer Oct. 10, 19 administere aid to 13 we men and pert tre was credit lives. He Germany. O—————