Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 October 1945 — Page 19
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THE LONG ARM of the church reached out to Greenland Sunday so that an entire Indianapolis {family could be taken in as menibers of the Grace §& Methodist church at the same time. Mrs. Dorothy Ramsay, ‘636 N. Oriental st, and her 9-weeks-old daughter, Dianne, joined the church here while the baby's father, Sgt. Charles LeRoy Ramsay, repeated the membership rituals in Greenland. The joint ceremonies were arranged by the Rev. E. Arnold Clegg | of the Grace church, Arrangements were begun last | July for Chaplain David R. McKechnie to officiate at the baptismal and reception ceremonies in Greenland. The Rev. Mr, Clegg had sent the Grace church rituals to the chaplain. But then Sgt. Ramsay thought he might possibly come home’ so the event was postponed. Now, however, he thinks he'll be out of the States until next month or maybe longer, +++ At the same ceremony here Mrs. Ramsay's sister, Miss Loraine Duvall, was baptized and received into the church and Mrs. Ramsuy's ‘mother, Mrs, George C. Duvall, took the membership vows. ... Right now Mrs. Ramsay is busy reading the 22 letters she received from her husband the other.day. His mail was held up since he was on duty at some outpost, : :
Now Who Can ‘Beat This Beet? F. W. BILLINGTON, 804 N, Hamilton ave, has a glant beet that tops that of Mrs. Florence Leach by a pound and a half. Mr, Billington's beet is 20 inches in circumference, 9 inches long and weighs’ 62 pounds. He raised it in his victory garden on Tacoma ave. Another giant specialty of his are his huge ‘egg plants. Some of them are as big as the beet. Mr. Billington is an instructor in the printing department at Tech high school., .. The juke box servicers in town have their hands full if they want to keep the latest records spinning. There are probably about 500 or more of the music boxes in drugstores, taverns, teen canteens and college recreation centers. The records are usually changed once a week or at least once every two weeks, There's a meter on the back of each machine to tell which record was played the most times. Right now “Till the End of Time” seems to be taking No. 1 spot. There aren't. too many novelty tunes on the record market right now but they're - usually the ones that cause the record servicers all the trouble. When one ‘record is played five or six times in a row, the proprietor or listener tires of it and wants it changed. Sometimes servicers have to make a special trip to change that one over-played tune. The record situation, we hear, has been pretty bad this year. So many of the tunes have been sent overseas that record handlers now have to take what they can get. They can’t be a bit choicy,
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Inside Indianapolis 4 Church Family
Streetcars, Dogs and Chickens
land and Alabama sts. Saturday may have be-~ longed to Mrs. Loretta Thornton, 1545 E. Kelly st. and took off since it was scared to death of the Thornton's K-9 dog. The dog chased the White Rock
the man who caught the fowl had a “very enjoyable Sunday dinner,” . . . Miss Margaret Pierson, archivist
of American Archivists meeting here Nov. 6 and T. The society helps preserve official records. few persons have used the library's newspaper files fo find records of their birth notices or of their army, navy or marine discharges. .
you'd never think Sandy's restaurant was an eating and drinking spot. A glance at the big sign in front of the building shows
health institute really is about two or three doors
2
bd
The Indianapolis ’
imes
~
SECOND SECTION
. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1945
&
Mrs. Chatles Ramsay and 9-weeks-old Dianne.... The father joined church by proxy.
THE CHICKEN that was dodging cars at MaryShe writes that her chicken got out Friday Mrs. Thornton hopes
very time he got a chance,
t the state library, is getting ready for the Society
Quite a
. « From the corner of 2d and Meridian sts. one of qur agents tells us that
“Sandy's” with American Health Institute” right under
the sign it. The
rom the restaurant.
8. fleet returned to its lost outpost Feb. 24, 1042, to bomb and shell the island.
of Kay and Stevens it left again, The two were captured March 10, 1942,
55, Cal. City, Towa. Their remarkable story continues in Kay's own words as he recorded them in his diary,
George Weller, Dally News correspondent, who found the two after their release from prison camp in southern Kyushu in Japan,
hogs, and foday day. . . . Sun’s shining, so guess we will stay in our holes for six weeks more unless the Japs smoke us out. . .
and we've nothing to wear except shirt, .shorts and pants. . . .
is coming soon—first time he’s been optimistic. . over us, catching flies. They are so tame now we have to brush them off while writing. . . «
They were not wrong, for the U. But to the bitter disappointment
» ” ” “WAKE ISLAND SCOTTY" Kay, comes from Clearlake Park, Stevens, 49, is from Bijoux
J diary was obtained by
SCOTTY wrote: Feb. 2, 1942—“We are two ground is Ground Hog
“There's a cold, northeast wind,
”
Feb, 4—"Fred has a hunch Help
. . Little lizards crawl
“There. are six on me, and I love
Logan Kay and Fred J. Stevens, two middle-aged construction! workers, eluded the Japs for 77 days on tiny Wake Island after it had been captured. 2 They recorded during the second month of their strange Robinson Crusoe existence that tension was spreading among Wake's Jap occupants.
‘Madhouse’ Antics
(Second of a Series) KARUIZAWA, Japan, Oct. 19.—A signal corps
photo unit, being composed strictly of individualists, nearly always has a certain screwball tinge to its - operations. The unit now operating in Karuizawa is a perfect example of the slightly mad genius
that makes our army what it is. The unit is commanded by 1st Lt. George Breakston, who, having come out of Hollywood, regards the international madhouse here as definitely a Grade A thriller. His sound technician is Sgt, Pete Protopappas, whose piano. playing, in off hours, has kindled the ardor of young women from New Guinea to Tokyo. Pete, known as The Greek, feels unhappy and lost on those rafe occasions when he is not in Jove. He is much unhappier when he is. The lieutenant's camera men are Sgt. Tom Gillespie, who is galled The Lip because he never opens his mouth (but. who regards the world with beaming satisfaction) and Bet. Tom MacAllen, a growing country boy known as The Stomach, because he eats from morning to night. : This quartet had gathered to its bosom, by what
i
3
+chief?” Breakston asked.
the embassy staff. My activities concerned the German colony in Japan. German counter-espionage activities here. was no connection—"
Still Hitler Follower
derstand. inger, although there were occasions when it was necessary to confer—"
principles.”
persuasion I have no idea, the politically repulsive figure of Franz Josef Spahn, Nazi gauleiter for the Yar East, and had induced him to sit for his portrait and say a few words in the microphone. Don Bell of Mutual Broadcasting and I were invited to take part in the questioning. Answers ‘Readily ALTHOUGH Herr Spahn was obviously under great nervous tension his military bearing never deserted him. He is a tall young man with deep blue eyes and blond hair. Lt. Breakston asked a few innocuous questions with disarming gentleness, Spahn without hesitation answered Inquiries relating to his early history. He
Scien THE MOST dangerous notion gaining circulation in the United States today. is that only we are rich ehough to produce an atomic bomb, This is the final phase of the argument that began with the contention that we had the “secret” of the bomb and could keep it indefinitely, That was changed to the admission that what we really possessed was the *kmow-how™ of production and that it would take other nations from two to five years to work it out for themselves. Now we are being asked to lull ourselves to sleep with' the idea that no other nation in the world is rich enough or in possession of sufficient industrial potential to make a bomb. Scientists have long memories. They develop such memories from the fact that the progress of sciehece is a continuous process, each new step based on what has gone before, As a result, it is impossible for scientists to refrain from an old habit of taking a look at what the past history of any given idea has been.
Opinion Changes Slowly
THE FIRST ITEM that comes to their minds in the present situation is the memory that when Hitler
By 'S. B. Whipple
admitted he had come to Japan by submarine in 1943 to assume the leadership of the Nazi party, and that he had spent some time in Manila on a similar mission. It was when we asked him about his connection with J. H. Meisinger, the “Butcher of Warsaw,” that he began to stiffen in his attitude and lose command of his excellent English, “Were you working with Meisinger, the Gestapo “Not especially,” he said. “I was not attached to Meisinger had charge of There
“Did you know that Meisinger was known as the ‘Butcher of Warsaw?”
“I REPEAT, you do not understand or I do not unI had no official connection with Meis-
“Do you still give your allegiance to Hitler?” “Yes, I still give my allegiance to the fuehrer.” “But the fuehrer is dead and so is your party.” “The fuehrer fell in action. I still believe in his
Spahn defiantly admitted he had visited Dachau and tried to explain that the executions in that notorious concentration camp were “for humanitarian reasons.” The Jews who were killed there, he said, were not executed merely because they were Jews, but because “they were either professional criminals or because of activities against the German government.” When we finished the interview, Spahn bowed slightly and marched stiffly away. Pete put away his sound equipment and went into the hotel dininf room. It was like a touch ef fresh air to hear him break into Gershwin's Rhapsody in Blue,
3 (Tomorrow: of the Jap navy.)
What a German admiral thought
By David Dietz
launched his attack on Russia the general opinion held by military men in this country was that Stalin would prove no match for the Nazi forces and that Russia would go down to quick defeat. This opinion changed only very slowly, and at the time of the siege of Stalingrad it was constantly said that Stalingrad would go down in four or six weeks.
Time to Face the Facts
EVENTUALLY, after the triumphant march of Russia back toward the west, the full story was told of how Russia had transported its industries out of the path of the advancing Nazi hordes to places of safety in Siberia. ’ I think the time has come to face squarely the fact that when we talk about “somebody” making an atomic bomb, the first somebody that pops into mind is Russia. . 80 in essence we are being asked to believe that the Russia which waged the magnificent war which it did against the Nazis, and which took all the amazing measures necessary to fight that war, will stop short of taking whatever measures are necessary to make an atomic bomb. A group of the brilliant scientists at the Univer sity of Chicago who did much of the basic work on the atomic bomb have organized themselves into an association which they call the “Atomic Scientists of Chicago.” In a recent statement they said:
landed, but found a good enough
first game to power, it was said in Great Britain and Frahoe that there was no need to worry about his ‘pearming Germany. These nations proved to their own satisfaction that Hitler couldn't do it because he would go broke in the process. The scientists also remember that when Hitler
My Day
NEW YORK, Thursday.~I have read Frank E. ‘Karelsen's letter of resignation as chairman of the
advisory on human relations in the New York City schools. He resigns to draw attention to eonditions
which ‘he considers need to be changed
A g
“In a few years from now there will be a sufficient number of atomic bombs on hand in several countries to cause a world catastrophe.” This seems to me to be a much more realistic view of the situation. If international relations deteriorate into a super-armament atomic bomb race, Russia will also have the bombs.
By Eleanor Roosevelt
very bad spots in the whole school system, although
we all recognize that students there are at a critical
age and need good teachers and good guidance, It is appalling to think that there are from five to 151
uncovered cases in one school. Mr, Karelsen's recom«
mendations seem fundamental to a good school sys-
tem in this great city of ours.
# Someone has pointed out that our schools seem to us less important than our airfields. If this is so, it is an attitude that can’t continue if we really de-
sire good citizens in the future,
in
We can say little about places other than New
cation generally, he has decided that it is necessary to resign in order to focus the attention of people | our New York City schools, we
them. One has a purple tail, and one little fellow is speckled and stripeless—guess he’s just a private.” » ” . FEB. 6—“The Japs are putting in crops around us as though they intend to stay. Soon they'll move in families with watch dogs. “Then we will have real trouble.” Feb. 8—"Haven't tested bread in six weeks, and won't, I guess. Read most of the day. My eyes are okay. “Lost my glasses when the Japs
pair.”
my seat from lying down so much, .. .” ; Feb. 12 “Lincoln's birthday.’
Well, Abe, we found 10 days’ supply of food this morning... . seven cans of artichokes, three cans of milk, a gallon of lima beans, and
Feb. 10—“I'm getting corns on|
are 60 days long.” Feb. 14—“Valentine greetings to
we will still think he should. . . ."|
nos 8 {
”
practice. , . going, staying hardly an hour...
guns. Will stand up and cheer, or even climb a tree. . .
Ants gave me hell all night.”
(Washington) , + Have not had
my hands from disuse, . .."” ” ” » FEB. 24 — “Shooting started all over the island at 5:30 a. m. and continued until 7 shot down two first thing. “This is the sweetest symphony I ever heard. Our shells whistle in, and seem like bursts of Roman candles. ... “Pred and I spent one-third of our time in a tree, one-third climbing up and down, and one-third in a dugout. “We'd give our left arms for a good old Bpringfield apiece, and plenty of ammunition, . “Wish my family werg here. They'd get a kick out of this. Myself, I'd not miss it for anything. “Son, better hurry and get me some grandchildren. I'm going to have some good stories to tell them. » ” » “BOY, how our big shells whistle before they land—and do our little planes sound sweet when they dive! “When the Japs dive, they shut off their motors and drift down. But our boys step on the gas and come in like wasps. “Soon they'll come in flocks. “Uncle Sam seems to have left his calling card and departed. But we expect this, as Uncle was just getting pictures.
little Jap scouts,
a gallon of ‘water... .
annual visit to the White House.
war crimes trial.
“will dust off the furniture and
air the spare bedroom. . . . we can get the corns off our knees is almost here. .
| starting another.”
FEB. 16—“The Japs seems to be i < with envy the Jap building going getting ready. Much machine-gun, within sight of our dugout, with “ eight American carpenters working | a) 3 Cen feel excitement in | ,n jt, I may slip them a note if e wind. Planes are coming and |y got a chance. . |
“We're all set to have the ‘Star- put still I think, we'll string out Spangled Banner’ played on 14-inch | our Juck as long as it lasts.”
hot food or a fire for 77 days. The stepped on bottoms of my feet are as soft as some of the terror I felt of them compelled to give a cross-bow exhibition, shooting rats, to prove it! wasn't a secret weapon.
|
|
., . . Our planes
% J : progressing fine, 200 feet from us, Feb, 20—"1 keep planning things and we know several of the workI'll do at the ranch when I return.|men well. . . . Fred wants to join|
| them now . Feb. 22—"Happy birthday, George!
{I get home:
DIARY OF 2 YANK CRUSOES ON WAKE ISLAND—No. 2
Tired, Hungry Trio Surrend
“Trees are getting flowers. Spring
Hope |
land elbows and walk upright again] soon.”
» 28-—“Breakers are dashing °*
FEB.
storm is delaying the attack... | “Am putting this book away and | in
March 3—“Went and watched!
“They all look good, and well-fed, |
March 4 — “The building is th
th
" 4 ¥ 12
kd »
MARCH
us again, I've lost!
ab first. . . “Very weak and growing more so each day. Am not sick, but
Burbank, Wash, a carpenter-pris- | oner. |
Hensel, who was
Lcamps in Japan. said the Japs were} treating prisoners well, and urged | the two to surrender. The hungry scarecrows held aj war council and agreed to give| themselves up. {
erant enough, but an official in-| terpreter named Katsumal insisted |
ers
I
u " o
THAT WAS Scotty's last entry. Feb, 25—"The Japanese are work- The same afternoon, bearded, dirty |ing straight ahead, as though noth-! and ragged, he walked almost into “The corns on my ‘seat are get- ing: would happen, but we know the arms of Ted F. Hensel, 67, of ting larger, and my whiskers now |better ..."
ec long ‘distance telephone stoppage of Oct. 5 were laid well in adaccording to documents which came to light here today.
‘You can't he living men,” Hen-|
my wife and pal. Fred and I have over the brush on the northern | sel e¢ried. “You're already identified] it all fixed for Uncle to be here |shore of the island. We wonder if as dead and buried.” tomorrow, and if he doesn't come, |
to die himselt |
1943 in one of the most horrible
Ld a u |
JAP NAVAL officers were tol-
ey were American spies and!
threatened’ them with death unless
ey produced their radio, They were held separately in cells r five days and then were in-|
| formed the execution had been 6— “The Japs almost| postponed, |
{
Among other things Scotty was
On his wife's birthday, March
legs are very thin and arms are sg geotty succeeded in slipping only half the normal size, and my sway Jong enough to rescue his
knees won't control, « “I just stumble around . . March 7=“I'm thinking of all the food I'm going to have when:
”
key, duck. I'll build a new can- yw
ning house on the ranch in the Hofmeister,
precious diaries from the hollow | tree in which. they were hidden.
# nn THEY HAD a chance to see what |
Chicken, rabbit, tur- they had missed two months later
hen the Japs helsaied Julius! San neisco, for
| &
vance,
shade under the trees, . | stealing liquor and being a “trouMarch 8 — “Helped our vegetable plemaker.” diet by eating two raw seed pota-| Hofmeister was compelled to! toes planted by the Japs in their kneel by a shallow grave. A Jap garden. officer severed the prisoner's head, “We're going to catch booby swinging his sword “like a golf club.” birds tonight, and cook only the Pa breast, liver, heart and fat.” IN SEPTEMBER, 1042, Scotty and Fred were moved to Japan and| endured 18 months of beatings,
” ” td MARCH 9-—"Ate three hoobhy birds’ |
Supreme Court Members Visit President
entrails, for breakfast—our first hot starvation and hard labor on the
Found our first! ai ; | Sasebo dam during which one man egg last night, but Fred broke It.|.¢ ovory five among the 265 Ameri-
can prisoners died.
food in 77 days.
“Fred is impatient, and lefthanded. . . . : “I have no fear of the Japs even if they catch us now, seeing how the other boys Rave been treated. “Last night was so weak and tired I could hardly get back to camp. Now hear voices, and must hug the ground, . , March 10—~"“Ten more days until your birthday, Pritzi, dear (Scotty's wife). . , . Booby birds are starting to lay eggs around us.
n
moved to Camp No. 23 in Kyushu, where them. ence, it was a happy ending. Both
homes.
in 1941 stretched into four years,
STRIKE ENDS AS
In the spring of 1044 they were
Weller eventually found | Harrowing as was their experiow are on their way to their
The construction jobs they. took
THE END
. Seldom photographed as a group, members of the U. 8.
supreme court are pictured as they pay their In front row, left to right, are Chief Justice Harlan F. Stone, the President, Justices Hugo Black and Felix Frankfurter; middle row, Justices Stanley F. Reed, Harold H. Barton, Wiley B. Rutledge and Frank Murphy; in back row are Justice William 0. Douglas, Clerk Charles Elmore Cropley, Solicitor General J. Howard McGrath, Marshal Thomas E. Waggaman and Attorney General Tom Clark. Justice Robert H. Jackson is in Europe, to serve as U, B. prosecutor at the Nuernberg
PERON RETURNS
Opponents Scatter,
BUENOS AIRES, Oet. 19 (U. P.). == A paralyzing general strike in celebration of Col, Juan D. Peron’s return to power ended today with his men in firm control of the government and his opponents scattered. The first tram cars to run since Wednesday midnight began to move along the wide avenue Corrientes at 1 a. m. Subways were] to resume at 5 a. m. Shops and] businesses were scheduled to re-| open during the day. Eight Persons Killed Eight persons were reported killed and 70 wounded yesterday as Peron’s supporters enforced his call for a 24-hour “victory” strike. Peron himself has left the city|
on vacation, apparently satisfied | that the situation is well under control.
He was not expected to return to the government, from which he was ousted as vice president, war| minister and labor minister only| last week, Instead, it appeared he would be | content to be the power behind the {government while conducting a | { campaign for the presidency in the | general elections next April Peronists Take Jobs
J
R. I. RED HENS TOPS ~ BONANZA, Mo. (U. P.)~Farmer Will Gray's flock of Rhode Island Red hens made the highest production records in Missouri and among the highest in the eountry for the last quarter of 1044,
World Looks to U. S. Glass For Bomb - Shattered Panes
Gen, Eduardo Avalos and Vice Adm. Hector Vernengo Lima, lead(ers of the coup which removed
Peron from power temporarily while | they reigned as a virtual two-man government, faded from the pic ture.
the lush twenties saw a demand Peronists rapidly were taking over
: NEW YORK, Oct, 19~Glass—
the situation is truthfully re.
the simple, ordinary window pane that most Americans take for granted, is one of the scarcest and most desired commodities in the European and Asiatic countries
that amount,
for 600,000,000 pounds, as against | 811 key government posts, depression needs for less than half | Humberto Sosamolina was sworn in
Now, with new home construftion and factory re-building under
Gen.
{as war minister, Juan I. Cooke to { his former post as foreign minister, Rear Adm. Abelardo Pantin as navy |
Gen. Juan
ripped by war,
In Berlin evén the hospitals face a winter tn which the windows will be unprotected by glass. Fuel-short
way, all but one per cent of the] nation’s glass capacity has already been filled. To meet foreign demands production must be stepped up to an even greater extent than
minister, Pistarini, acting interior minister, and Col. Amado Avalos, agriculture minister,
millions face bitter cold and the dangers of pneumonia because they cannot protect their homes against] the ravages of wind and snow, “Only eight countries produced window glass in pre-war years. Of these, only the United States has
been able to continue production at ulone.
in the Industry's best years, This data, outlined in a United States Tariff commission report, coupled with the information that approximately 100 million square feet of glass has been used during each year of the war for mirrors
TELEVISION STATION PREVIEW PLANNED
A preview of the first Indianapolis television station, WIXMT, sponsored by P. R. Mallory, will be
1s
full capacity. maintaining
turing industry.
world’s export markets. American
is far from prohibitive, since than 800
plants, make up the entire American sheet glass manufac
Before the war, they exported one per cent of their total output. Now the United States will be called upon to supply a large part of the
window glass exports are expected to total more than 50,000,000 square feet annually for several years to come. This amount win-
Pinball ‘machines, too, have heen {important users of window glass. Now that automobile production is beginning again, each new car will require from 40 to 50 feet of glass. Anfl car production is expected to rin between five and six million
given by J. D, Smith, television engineer next Thursday at 4 p. m. The demonstration will be given at the annual conference of the Indiana Association for Education by Radio at the Claypool hotel.
new automobiles. Large quantities of glass will be needed, too, for re|placement of broken windows in {used cars. More than the total European output of window glass, however, will be needed for the next few years to repair the devastation in-
Not only must
Dr, Harry J. Bkornia will give an | llustrated lecture on “F. M. broad- | casting—~What It Means ' to Edu- | cators,” after which an ¥. M. broadcast from Arsenal Technical high school department of productions
Steward and Mrs. Ressie Fix.
will be made. Directors are C, 8. "Miss Blanche
PAGE 19 ~——Labo Orders Reveal Discipline in Phone Union
By FRED W. PERKINS WASHINGTON, Oct, 19--8Se« ret plans for the “spontaneous”
The plans were contained in a thick fold« er of !instruc=tions issued to all affiliates of the National Federation of Telephone Workers by J. A. Beirne, president of the . federation, from offices in Baltimore. “These instructions are not for 2 general publication,” gaid a warn« ing. - “They are confidential and should be so treated by persons of trust. I hope it is not neces= sary for me to remind you that the contents herein should not ‘leak’ back to management.” The various tracts were dated Aug. 27 and earlier. They reveal the high degree of discipline in the federation, since the plans were followed in detail. The plans contained the full text of a “canned” speech for radio presentation by local union officers. The talk was called “Ex~ hibit D.”
ya EXHIBIT D contained the declaration, in behalf of the
union, that “democracy and the implements thereto spring from the people and cannot be planted on them from without.” However, the instructions said also: : “No statement should go to the press other than the radio speech which is exhibit D.” There was also a prepared letter to congressmen, many of whom received a copy of it. But they didn’t know then that it was a form ‘letter, they said. They considered it a carefully thought-out message from a constituent. The letter was devoted largely to charges that the national labor relations board has been made a “tool” of the C. I O.. United Elec- « trical Radio.and Machine Work« ers.
—-
" ¥ =
THE examiner, Charles W. Whittemore, held that the em ployees’ association was “come pany dominated,” and therefore illegal under the Wagner act. More than a month before the Whittemore recommendation, Mr. Beirne instructed: : “If the hearing officer dismisses the company domination charge we need only peacefully press the board for a decision upholding the hearing officer. or a “HM the hearing officer redommends the upholding of. the company domination charge we have to fight viciously. “There will be a four-hour demonstration. by the membership of all member organizations. This demonstration is not a strike, It will be a membership meeting of all N. F. T. W. members through= out the country , , . naturally, telephone service will be interrupted. Remember, however, that all members must attend these meetings.”
~——We, the Women Royalty Lives Same as Any Other Family
By RUTH MILLETT
LIFE in a royal family isn’t so different from family life anve where else—when you get right down to fundamentals. The Duke of Windsor—after visiting his family in England while his wife waited for him in France — is reported to have said he would bring his wife with him the next time he returned to the country that kicked him out after his mare riage. s = SO IT looks as though Enge land’s royal family is finally goe ing to have to accept the one= time king's choice of a bride— just as any. other family has to accept ‘a daughter-in-law or son= in-law, whether they like the selection or not.
Like the British royal family, most families who disapprove of a marriage hold out for a time against the newcomer.
For a while they let the son or daughter who margied against thelr wishes go his her own way--often probably hoping the marriage won't last, ” » » BUT WHEN it does, the family has to back down as full; as possible and accept the uns wanted member into the-fold. They have to do it or lose fore of the
