Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 March 1946 — Page 10
Zone 6. i of United Press, Scripps-Howard News- , NEA Service, and Audit Bureau of
“Price in Marion County, cents a eopy; delive Pigs In EB Cn oe ; Tales in Indiana, 35 a yeaf: oll other States possessions, Cangda 87 cents a . month: - a =~ RI~B861,
Goon Ligh and the People Will Find Their Own Way
LL PUTS IT UP TO RUSSIA VW/INSTON CHURCHILL in New York turned his debate with Stalin to a very practical point, With obvious reference to his Fulton, Mo., challenge of Soviet aggression, he said the Russians could “brush aside any speeches which hey dislike” i to their treaties, : ussia is derhanding a Soviet fortress inside ‘Dardanelles to dominate Constantinople an e jneie the She has eR ly rejected an Anglo-American offer, agreeable to Turkey, to guarantee complete freedom
passage through the straits in peace and war, J " Churchill demanded that Stalin permit the United
Nations to settle this issue, as well as Russia's illegal military oceupation of
8 ..» " STALIN cannot answer Churchill with more name calling, however hard he may try.
As long as Soviet troops. remain in Iran, as long as Soviet looting of Manchuria continues, as long as eastern Europe is held in subjection by Red armies and Moscow's puppet regimes,
.
5 »
as long as Russia expands at the expense of her weaker neighbors and preys upon the western democracies with spies, the world
will distrust her. ; It is not enough for the Russians to say—as Churchill
agrees—that they do not want war. Of course they do
h
n
t
not. But wars do not come by wishing. They are caused by lawlessness, by the unwillingness of nations to submit their disputes and conflicts to fair and peaceful settlement. Nor is it sufficient to ery that war js not inevitable or imminent—Churchill agrees that it is not. But if the
Hoosier
say, but | your right
Forum
"| do not agree with a word that yeu
will defend to the death to say it." == Voltaire.
great powers cannot remain in co-operation for one short year after their common sacrifice in a victorious war for survival, if they cannot keep their pledges to an international organization which is still borning, then certainly the chances of a just and lasting peace are slight. ® . ¥ * "= THE United States and Britain have made many sweeping concessions to Russian expansion and domination in the hope of maintaining Big Three unity as the basis of an effective world organization. This is the proof of their sincerity, of their desire to combine with Russia and not against her, The tragedy is that Russia is rejecting that friendship and unity. If only the United States and Britain are left standing together, it will be because Russia has walked out on them. But let Stalin make no mistake. However the United States and Britain may differ on some things, and whatever their lesser conflicts, these democracies will stand together on the overriding issue of an international order of peace and secuirty. Churchill is quite right in saying that no treaty of military alliance is necessary to assure that. The test of Russia's good faith—as of ours and of Britain's and of others—is in living up to the United Nation's commitments, Russia is not doing so, But there is still time if she will act quickly.
COST OF INCREASING TEACHER PAY
HE National Education Association paints a picture of a crisis in edueation caused by the exodus from the’ teaching profession. In Indiana, a teachers shortage is looming because salaries are so low that few potential teachers are being attracted to the profession, Indianapolis is particularly handicapped, even among the cities of this state, by the low starting salary of $1700, and thus fails to get its share of available teachers, * This condition should be remedied immediately, by .increasing the starting salary to a minimum of $2000. At the same time, inequities in the local pay system which result in teachers being trained in our schools only to leave for better salaries elsewhere, should be corrected, The plain truth of the matter is the teachers here and, according to the state organization of educators, elsewhere in Indiana, are underpaid. We strongly favor an upward revision of the Indianapolis schedule. The board of school commissioners naturally'will be forced to seek a higher tax levy for school purposes to accomplish that remedial measure, Such an increased tax levy should win- wide support, and,in our opinion, will be approved by the public.
- HONORING TOM MARSHALL
T WAS a pleasant Hoosier gesture, that memorial dinner for Thomas R. Marshall at his home town of Columbia City, also the residence of Governor Ralph Gates, toastmaster for the affair. Tom Marshall was one of Indiana's contributions to the national political scene, along with President Benjamin - Harrison and Vice Presidents Thomas A. Hendricks and Charles W. Fairbanks. He also served ably as governor. of the state. . Principal speaker at the dinner was Mark Thistlethwaite, Washington correspondent of The Indianapolis News and secretary to Mr. Marshall both in the statehouse and while he was in Washington. Mr. Thistlethwaite is a distinguished citizen of the state in his own right, as well. We welcome him back to Indiana, and regret his stay was not long enough to permit more of his old friends to see him.
KNOCKING IS CIVIC DUTY, TOO SHOULD citizens refrain from opposing a fellow-towns-man who is up for a public position, even though they do Bot believe him qualified for it? : leading St. Louisans think not. § Louis Star-Times: ae Ye
for granted that Missouri is just as proud of his Missouri
~ “The rest of the country sometimes seems to take it |
"England Is Luring Us Rapidly Into an Early War With Russia"
By A.J. 8, Indianapolis The advocates of the British loan are drifting into an unsound position.
Do not misunderstand. This
Roosevelt's lend-lease, ete, prior to our entrance into world war IJ, being suspicious that anyone advocating neutrality was either proGermen or unconsciously supporting the German cause. I thought we should have “entered the war” against Hitler in 1938. Then fit could have been won with a squad of marines. the evil day, and the longer we put it off, the more evil it becomes when it dawns.
If we had followed Clemenceau instead of Wilson in 1918 and given France the Ruhr and the Saar Valleys and evacuated completely the German population therefrom, there would have been no World War II Further if we had not *“consolidated” Russia by invading her territory in 1919 together with the British and Japanese, so-called Communism might likely have collapsed in its inception. Now we are doing worse, I have no dealings with Communism. But, England, not much larger than Indiana, with some forty-odd million inhabitants, is luring us rapidly, in England's interests, not ours, toward a not far distant war with Russia, if we don't watch our step. England with so many inhabitants in so tiny an area must control the world commerce, must preserve cartels in foreign places, must in one way or another subjugate millions to her own advantage and to their disadvantages, in order to live. Either that or her people migrate, as our ancestors did. Let us give money and more, if need be; but, since she will not repay it, purchase something and arbitrarily require, not necessarily the liquidation of the British empire, but its international re-or-ganization upon a basis where advantage can not be taken by the British of everybody everywhere worldwide. At the present, under her empire control, labor at a slave pittance in distant lands produces that which her merchant marine manned by seamen at almost nothing a month, keeps England alive and runs American shipping off the surface of the sea. What about a loan to Russia? She is the only other world power beside ourselves. T believe her unpleasant position toward us is inspired largely by her certainty of our diplomatic unreliability. American state department is a house divided into so many conflicting parts that our foreign policy resembles a kaleidoscope,
The |
writer, a Republican, supported
We always put off
s 8 “USE HUMANITARIANISM
AS BASIS FOR HONORS” By L. A. Jackson, Vermen A new national holiday in honor of Franklin D. Roosevelt has been proposed. Herbert Hoover and Mr. Roosevelt each has beer called a great “humanitarian.” Both have done things that cause people to think they are humanitarians, A person always does that which ‘he thinks is to his own interest, In other words, every voluntary act of man is a selfish act. But there are two kinds of selfishness—egolstic and altruistic, When a person does something that benefits his fellowmen, in most cases, no doubt, the act is motivated partly by altruistic, and partly by pgoistic selfishness. No one, hardly the doer himself, knows the relative strength of these two kinds of selfishness. But if Mr, Hoover or Mr. Roosevelt were motivated to any cone siderable extent by egoistie selfish~ ness, they do not deserve to be called humanitartans. But if they were motivated chiefly by sympathy for their fellowmen—altruistic selftshness—then they do deserve to be called “humanitarians. My personal opinion is that Hoover deserves this honor more than does Roosevelt, But if any exPresident is to be honored in this manner, it should be Woodrow Wil« son. However, there are several scientists, each of whom has contrib uted a great deal more to human happiness than has any president, or anyone else who ever lived on this little planet. » n ~ “IF HOSE WERE RATIONED WE ALL WOULD GET SHARE” Mrs. M. H. §,, West Indianapolis This is my first experience in writing to the Forum, although I read it every day and enjoy it very much. Perhaps the subject I write about may not seem important to some, but believe me, it is to me and several other women I know, I
Side Glances—By Galbraith
appointees as is Harry Truman. Well, most of us are proud enough of some of them. But there are exceptions. ‘We hope that our fellow-Americans—and especially members of the senate banking subcommitee—will the alacrity ‘with which half-a-dozen St. Louis turned thumbs down when asked
"
picked him,
ed ! do about James K, | : qualifications to serve as director of the is not big enough to fill thel He does not
"| hate these galdshes—I hou ia 52 }. oi a
a HEY) ee
Ne
catch cold any more and got a fow ys off" asi
Lis 2 i : 7 ii bh A ra 2 i 400 lin ¢ %
!| thing?
have just been wondering if there are women all over Indianapolis, who feel about the stocking situation as I do. I can't seem to understand why some women seem to have an abundance of hose and others can't find one single pair. A friend of mine and I went uptown to one of the stores this week and they told us they weren't signing up any more women, because they already had more than 1500 on their list. I have heard that most of the stores see that FTheir employees have at least one pair a month. It seems to me that even though they do the kind of work that might be hard on hese, they wouldn't just have to have .that many. Then maybe some of us who can't get a decent pair fo wear to church could get just one pair, I have worn slacks so much -that I know my husband and everyone else, including myself, is siek® and tired of seeing me. Perhaps my viewpoint is wrong. If so, I stand corrected, but I am interested to know what some of the other women think about the subject. Since nearly everything else has been rationed, why can't they ration hose? Then we'll all get our share, # #" td “RADIO ADVERTISING IS SPOILING MY PLEASURE” By J. M., Indianapolis It is about time that somebody made a squawk in regards to the programs we “get from our radio stations.
Many have radios and I think that they do as I do when these commercials of unknown products are broadcast, Love songs, hashed up music, clothing, automobiles, soaps, medical preparations, acid digesting stuff! I say that anybody who pays big guoney to put their products on the air, is foolish. We listeners know this kind of advertising spoils good entertainment, They should be given at the end of the program and not three or four times. ‘There are those announcers who have a great gab-fest of ridiculous things to talk about for five or ten minutes. The drugstore cowboys have to talk too°much before they do their stuff, Now, I am asking anyone reading ‘this, are they sick of this stuff ringing in their ears day in and day out? We bought radios for entertainment and not advertisements. These crime stories are not so good for boys that are listening to a program of that sort. It gives them ideas just as a movie does. So let's get busy and clean up some of this radio stuff, ” » ” “VETERANS CANNOT MEET COMPETITION FOR HOMES”
Henry Willhoite, Ex-Veteran, 3811 Terrace ave.
I read about these high priced homes, prices ranging up to double their value, - I will agree to this, but why doesn't someone do some-
Here is an example-of the appreciation the men with money have for G. I. Joe, the ones who saved this country from ruin. I was tryinggto buy a home from a private owner. She asked $3750. I was trying to get her down on the price, when in stepped a real estate man. He gave the lady a line of stuff, chalked out $2000, bought the place and advertised it for sale the next day for $3500. He hopes to catch some Joe as a sucker. I am'a crippled veteran and not able to do much work, but just what are we going to do if some guy keeps cutting our throats? Won't someone please do something?
DAILY THOUGHT.
And the mean man. shall be brought down, and the mighty man shall ‘be hunibled, and the eyes of the lofty shall be humbled: But the Lord of hosts shall be exalted in judgment, and God that is holy shall be sanctified
in righteousness —Isalah 5:15-18. LOWLINESS-is the base of every
nessee
call of Hoosier, Indeed, he reported that he to be quite chummy with one John
origin in his surname.
Hoosier. went. on to say that he had an uncle—one ‘Samuel sier—-who was & contractor on the Louisville & Portland (Ohio Falls) canal bisck in 1826. In the course y of his work, Uncle Samuel had to employ & great
r
JOUR TOWN . .". By Anfon Scherrer vl ‘How We Got Our ‘Hoosier’ Nickname
to recomeile it with the biologieal fact that Col, Lehmanowski
SOMETIME AROUND 1900, George Van Blariéum,
an Indianspolis blacksmith, went South to spend
is vacation, He returned with the news that Tenhad & number of natives who answered to the got
insisted that the
In support of which John Hoo-
umber of diggers and finding that men from the
Indiana side of the river were more to his liking than the immigrants customarily hired for such work, he his gang was made up almost entirely of Indianians, with the result that “the Hoosier men”’ it came time for the gang to disband and return tp their homes, they carried the nickname with them, and spread it all over the map.
Several Versions of Origin
gave them the preference. In no time at all,
y were known, at first, as Y finally, as “Hoosiers.” When
4
ALL OF WHICH makes sense. Indeed, it im-
presses me as the most plausible of all the stories concerning the origin of our nickname. For one thing, it is less fantastic than the Lehmanowski legend and, certainly, less eryptic than the versions handed down by Governor Joseph Wright and Berry Sulgrave.
The Lehmanowski legend gets its name because
of Col. Jacob Lemanowski, a Polish officer who served under the first Bonaparte. Indians (because of war fatigue), he delivered a series of lectures, the purpose of which was to give Napoleon a clean bill of health.
When he settled in
hese talks, Lehmanowski mentioned the Hussars
and especially their unbelievable deeds of courage and endurance. word “Hussar” sounded exactly like Hoosier, and because the deeds of Napoleon's soldiers didn't sound so hot after what the Indiana pioneers had been through, they adopted the word (and its pronunciation) to glorify themselves.
The Pole’s pronunciation .of the
All of which sound pretty enough until one tries
REFLECTIONS . . . By Robert C. Ruark
NEW YORK, March 18.-—In between violent ses-
sions of weeping induced by the sad plight of Gloria Vanderbilt's. mama, Mr. Stalin's speech, and Mr, Pauley’s decision to stay out of the navy, we encount= .ered one bright note yesterday.
New taxicabs. Taxi drivers, you are about to hit the jackpot.
Practically within your grasp is a new instrument of torture. Orleans and Los Angeles and tomorrow the world, DeSoto has unleashed a new cab , . , first to reach the market since before the war.
Today, in New York, San Francisco, New
Brother, what you got is a Sherman tank with a
skylight.
The steel in the body and fenders is harder than before the war. New techniques. Means you can pile into a privately-owned job and know that his fenders will crumple, not yours, fidence you'll have when you bear down on a vintage Chevy with out-of-town plates,
Pedestrians, Beware
STRONGER AXLES, too. At 59 m. p. h, you can run smack through a four-foot hole, serene in the knowledge that the fare’s spine will snap, but not the axle. You will be able to chase pedestrians into the gutter without fear of damaging your steed, and as we understand it, the new bearings are so rugged they are indifferent to oil. All you need is a turret and a machinegun, men, and the world is yours. Herbert Charters, vice president of the firm which handles the new cabs here, says that about 100 will be turned loose in New York immediately, and some 3000 deliveries are estimated for the future. York can use some new blood in its cab lines. 9500 taxis are mangy and battered, with rear ends
Ordinary
WASHINGTON, March 18.—Here in Washington it is a lovely day, fit for a picnic, one of those fugitive spring days that pop in ahead of schedule. People are going about their various ways of making a living, The prospect is generally cheerful. Then one is caught up chort with the black pall of headlines: “Stalin Calls Churchill Warmonger”; Soviets Move on Tehran.” And the columnists ponder gloomily: “The developing crisis”"—what an ominous phrase—“The real issue in Iran" and so on. Where is Iran? Words, words, words— 1s it true, or are we all in a nightmare? For none of -these people walking along the streets, or at their desks, wants to fight anybody or threaten anybody—and this goes for the plain people of the whole world. But they have nothing to do with it.
Churchill Starts War of Words
IT ALL GOES ON above their heads, a war of words started by an ex-prime minister who has been defeated by a people who want only to forget war and try to get back to normal living; a dictator whose people have nothing to say about their government or what it does, and who also would like to get back to building up the wreckage and living normally again; congressmen and secretaries of state and foreign secretaries. But the individual today still seems to have no dignity of his own, no existence of his own, no part in the one great decision of life, that is, whether he will pick up a gun and march out, with bands playing and the politicians cheering, to kill people in some other nation who are not mad at anybody either. Certainly they are not mad at him as an individual.
TODAY IN EUROPE . . . By
NEW YORK, March 18.—Most serious threat to the British loan, when it comes to the floor of con=gress; will be from a group of Republicans, They will suggest that, instead of the loan of $3,750,000,000, congress should make an outright gift of $1,000,000,000. This move is animated by good will, but the proposal falls far short of ‘British minimum requirements. Such a gift would enable Britain to buy the food she needs for the next 18 months; but it would not be enough to restore British solvency to a point where Britain could effectively play her part under the Bretton Woods agreement. Some of the loan's features are severe. But it does hold out a very real prospect of putting Britain on her feet again as a going concern. A gift of $1,000,000,000 would merely be “relief.”
Loan Not Explained to Public MAIN MOTIVE behind this Republican proposal
lending Britain money at a lower rate of interest than it lends it to veterans for business purposes or for buying homes. "It Wis therefore likely to be proposed that, in addition to the billion-dollar gift, which would be “without strings,” there should be a loan made at a higher rate of interest. The U. 8. government is bound to resist the Republican proposal since it would destroy the ‘whole concept of the loan, which is to make it possible for
ie i 3 FA as mtd wy ’
virtue, and he who goes the lowest
thi i ma AS he
Britain to ‘participate in the Bretton Wood
Ait Rory es i
{ir a
A
didn’t arrive in Indiana until 1840, a whole decade after the. word “Hoosier” was in general circulation—not only by way of mouth, but
also by way of the printing press. As early as 1830, « °
for instance, a Wayne county editor (and poet, begad) by the name of John Finley published a New Year's address in the course of which he found at least a dozen words to rhyme ‘with ‘Hoosier.” Indeed, he even used the word “Hoosieroons” (to rhyme with “spoons”), ‘The less said about the latter, the better,
Toughest Tale of All : AS FOR THE Governor Wright version, legend
has it that he once told a foreign visitor that the
word “Hoosier” originated in a habit of travelers calling out “Who's there?” when they reached a cabin and asked to be put up for the night. Some« how, Governor Wright's version leaves me kind of cold, too. Berry Sulgrove had it figured out that the word “Hoosier” got its start at the time of the building of the Ohio Falls canal thus confirming, in part, the news brought back by Van Blaricum. On that occasion, said Mr. Sulgrove, an Indiana-bred Irishe man by the name of Short was set upon by a gang of Kentucky toughs. Shorty cleaned up the whole bunch single-handed, dusted his hands, and said hi 2 husher,” meaning (t's a wild guess on my part) that he had quieted and silenced the opposi= tion. Pretty as it is, this version has altogether too much of the mysticism inherent in Gaelic poetry to suit me, Next to the forthright version brought home by Mr. Van Blaricum, I like best the w
y thought A
FEMA
is fear of the criticism that the United States is,
$ plan.
IN WASHINGTON . . . By Thomas L. Stokes
waste places?
There Are Targets Here , SPLENDID TARGETS ere left, of course—New York, Chicago, Philadelphia, Washington, Detroit, Pittsburgh,” San Francisco, Los Angeles, and so on} | and, on the other side of the world, tie cities of Russia which escaped the last German holocaust, They would crumple mighty quick under an atomie bomb, or their people would die like flies from the germs of the new biological warfare yet unused. There is the desperate little group of men, the scientists, who made the atomic bomb. ‘Nobody will listen to them. They want to keep science free so | that atomic energy can be developed for the benefit of mankind, But they are put to work in individual cells like | prisoners. They can't talk to each other. Their | phones are tapped. The lie detector is used on them, They want éivilian control of atomic energy, but they fight in vain against the army oligarchy, which wants to keep its hands on it so it can scare the rest of the world to death. Are we headed back to the dark ages?
Randolph Churchill
Gift Aspect Is British Loan Threat
And it is most unlikely that the British government could agree to a higher rate of interest. There seems little doubt that the British loan will ultimately be approved by congress in its present form. The most frequently-voiced criticism in | Washington today is that neither the British govern= ' ment nor the U. 8. government, who are both coma mitted to thesloan, have really explained the need for it to the American public. ] What convinces me that the loan will go through | is that Americans of all classes and political beliefs seem so anxious to do the right thing. Even though many of them are confused as to how it should. be done, there is a real desire on all sides to be helpful,
Disaster If Loan Isn't Made DURING THE WAR, Canada gave Britain am outright gift of $1,000,000,000.
4 4
4
than half.
ratifies the- American loan, Canada has agreed to lend Britain another $1,250,000,000. ] Part of the confusion about the loan has une doubtedly been due to the fact that the majority of
the conservative party in England abstained from votes * ing when the loan came before the British parliament, This has been to some extent put right by Winston | Churchill's recent declaration that, though there |
were some aspects of the loan he did not like, he. * would regard & as a disaster if it did not go through.
MONDAY
REOPEN CIVIC B
Drexel Gar Downtc
“Silliest thin . This is wha sioner William thinks of the Gardens reside: of Minnesota st He called att Federal Judge quiring count) lease this area a year. “This lease ¢ plied the comr hasn't ended lieve this lease Says Pr Thomas Wal Drexel Garden charged comm ing protests bj) seek a direct Indianapolis. At present, dents are req three to three of their way Mr. Wand | st. be reopenec
1
| | 000,00 She gave anotheg J billion for the allies, of whith Britain received more
In addition, Canada made Britain an interest-free loan: of $700,000,000. And if congress *
up by James Whitcomb Riley, especially if poetio Jj Tom Minneso content is to be a criterion. Mr, Riley's solution #[ 2'S: 2S an alt came to light the night Jacob P. Dunn, the historian, Bom! ssione was discussing the subject with & group of friends, [J ‘nat county we On that occasion, Mr. Riley opined that the stories this vicinity | told about the origin of the word “Hoosier” wers J [XINR ditches, In the course of nothing but nonsense. The real origin, he said, trying to giv is found in the pugnacious habits of the early JE “© °C settlers. They were vicious fighters with ne holds Petition S| barred. They not only gouged and scratched, bug Drexel GA frequently bit off noses and- ears. had appointed This was so ordinary an affair, said Mr, Riley, upon Govern that a settler coming into a bar rooni on the Wand asked t} morning after a fight, and seeing an ear on the yisis. floor, would merely push if aside and carelessly ask Abou; 500 of “Whose ear?” tion. and pres 2 : * sioners about : said. i “We can’t u H commissioners H C h T k T * | # action during f ere Come the Tanks, Taxi-Style! | LOC that shake like rumba dancers, serofulous paint jobs and doors that are tacked op with odd bits of string and rags. The only thing that works right is the BR] E] meter, and some of those seem to be suffering from a —— touch of hyperthyroid. Brig. Gen. B We asked Mr, Charters if, in the new taxis, 8 new jutant geners type of driver was contemplated. He said yes, that | plans for the | pre-war cabbies were coming back into business, and time national that a lot of ex-soldiers, virgin to the hack racket, * meeting of tt were applying for licenses. 3 club at the C Just in case the neophyte is inclined to smile at today. Barrett a fare, say “thank you,” for a 25 per cent tip, and ! ident of the I. refrain from burdening the customer with his pere _ duce Gen. Wa sonal domestic problems, oyr public service departe ment has a few recommendations. Here they are. rar ters achinists au How to Be a Happy Cabbie * ; sor a card pa Think of the con- wHEN A PARE hails you, always tell him that [EN Rov Faust is | you are pulling in for the evening, are nearly out of ne Bus BS gas, are going-home in the opposite direction, or are og nc on call. ‘When you succumb to his blandishments, he The Sahara will be on the defensive, and the tip will be larger, meet following out of sheer gratitude. sored by the Always go home at the first sign of fog, rain, snow tion committe or sleet. Always keep the skylight shut when it's a | day at 4107 E starry night, and leave it open when it's raining. i . Blow your horn constantly while you drive, espe= || The Women cially if the customer appears to be nervous op | Slarigpolis Tr hungover. Talk to him constantly about polities, sex, | card party at baseball and the numbers racket, looking over your jhe Wm. H. shoulder all the time. -} In charge of Always argue with the fare about the location of Jonn J. Long. his destipstion. M. Burke, M New If the fare fails to tip you more than 10 per cent, Ms LS Its call him a cheap, chiseling crumbun, and ask him MslWH why he doesn’t ride the street cars. Belly and M= : Maj. Rober 44, will meet : the Grand A . vi nois st. Mrs. Folk Not Seeking a Fight jl The visitin What will we be fighting over? hara Grotto : Iran? Oil? The sands of Arabia? Or perhaps lunch at 12: an idea—which we also like over here—that the the home of average citizen is due a share in the good things {07 E. Wash ® ee Some people of great influence still don’ An institut Are our propagandists on both sides ready to Nasnewn, spill over in a crusade about any of that? . T. U. will b Where shall we fight? the Y. W. C. Shall we rake over the ruins .of Europe and see if they can be pulverized still fliore? ‘Shall we Mrs, Gertr deprive the desolate there of their hovels and drive ment preside them somewhere else, nomads a second time in the Army of the
ored at a I Past Presiden Robert Ande .corps auxilia: day in Ft. F Mrs. Lotta committee in zie Helm is ization. The Vonne will present at 8 p. m. Park commu directed by pear under | Bug-A-Boo
