Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 August 1946 — Page 8
Ev
Rei.
© “A SCRIPPS-HOWARD NEWSPAPER © Owned and published dally (except Sunday) by Indianapolis Times Publishing Co. 214'W. Maryland ‘st. Postal Zone 9. Member of United Press, Scripps-Howard Newspaper Alliance, NEA Service, and Audit Bureau of Circulations. Price in Marion County, 5 cents a oopy: ered by carrier, 20 cents a week. Mail rates in Indiana, $5 a year; all other states, U. 8. possessions, Canada and Mexico, 87 cents a | _ month, " RI-8551.
Give Light end the People Will Find Their Own Way
deliv-
BRINGING THE DEAD HOME TO REST
N connection with the state convention of the American Legion which began today, the war department announced that Indiana had 8131 soldier casualties in world war II. The quartermaster general of the army, who also is chief of the graves registration service, took this occasion to urge veterans’ organizations to help make funeral arrangements for the families of these men who lost their lives, This is a tribute the Legion had paid in many parts of the country for years. The pangs of loss have been somewhat eased in many homes by the simple ceremony with which final honor is paid to a comrade in arms. Much misconception exists regarding bringing the dead home to rest in the land they left. A letter in the Hoosier Forum today, written by the manager of an Indianapolis mortuary, clears some of the misunderstanding. In any event, the deeply personal decision of whether to bring a service man's remains back here is one that can and should be made only by the gold star families. Additional American permanent military cemeteries | are being established overseas, as after the last war. Veter-| ans’ remains either may be placed in the cemetery nearest to where they lost their lives, or returned for interment in a national or private burial ground. Each next-of-kin
mt Tam TE i mT A A
oo &
iS LAH SY ve
will be asked by the war department what he desires, and that procedure will be followed. - Of the 8131 soldiers from Indiana whose families are
‘Hoosier
Army of the Republic will be held again in Indian-
apolis fewer than fifteen civil war veterans
the membership of the executive state department of the American Legion, which is meeting today preliminary to vention next week. however, will boost the total for the encampment to
around 2000.
around the 08-year mark . . , their national commander, Hiram R, Gale of Seattle, is 100. Oldest Hoosier member is 103-year-old John R. Smith of Marion, who is not expected to attend,
Organization Session Here in '66
ment of the G. A. R. in 1866. And the national meetings were held here again in 1898, 1020 and 1031, and in 1042. By that time attendance had been reduced by death and illness to 50 . .. at Columbus, O. last year it was only 15.
is located. It is commemorated, as is a subsequent convention, by a plaque on the furniture store building.
which entertains it. This one , . . remindful of the veterans of this war who must lie flat on their back - all the time . . | veterans hospital here. veterans to read books as they lle in bed, and will be accompanied by a small library of books for use with the equipme: ?
on
IT'S OUR BUSINESS. g By Dona D. Hoover
GAR. Meeting Is
THE NATIONAL ENCAMPMENT of the Grand
a week from tomorrow , .. With present, 8 Total veteran attendance will be less than that of committee of the the Legion state con-
Members of G. A. R. auxiliaries,
The “youngsters” at the G. A. R. sessions will be f
INDIANAPOLIS WAS HOST to the first encamp-
The first encampment was held in the Morrisén house, on the southeast corner of Meridian and land st. where the Colonial Furniture Co. now
Each encampment leaves a memoripl to the city
. will present a viz-projector to the This projector will enable
nt. Indiana has contributed four national commiand-
IN WASHINGTON . . . By Daniel M. Kidney
Ludlow Waging Di
‘DEAR BOSS: TOP-BRASS OF THE C. I. O-P. A. C. meeting
here this week decided that they will hold meetings to rally workers for the fall campaign in Indianapolis,
erssin-chief of the G. A. R. They were Ivan MN, Walker, Indianapolis, one-time state tax commis~ sioner who headed the organization in A. Somers, Kokomo postmaster and a member of the legislature, 1017; William A, Ketcham, lawyer who had been state attorney Isaac W. Sharp, retired, Warsaw, is the only one of this group who survives,
were the boys in blue 80 to 86 years ago . . . their ranks are dwindling but their undimmed memories of the days when they and their comrades saved the union help keep alive a tradition of national unity at any sacrifice.
“I do not agree with a word that you say, but | will defend to the death your right to say it." —Voltaire.-
Forum
affected by this program, which is to go into effect soon, 4856 were killed in action, 660 died from wounds, 511 were declired dead and 40 are missing. There were 586 battle deaths among the ranks of the 1055 local soldier casualties, 75 men died of wounds, 90 were declared dead and and six gtill are missing. The remainder were non-battle deaths. For the families of those who were declared lost or who still are carried on the rolls as “missing,” there can be no marked resting place. The shrine of the unknown soldier in Arlington national cemetery is their memorial . . . and the peace that comes with victory.
JENNER ON ECONOMY
be permitted on or to h
"Placing Communist Party on State Ballot Was Illegal Action’
By Marguerite Dice, 3650 Washington bivd. The state election.board of Indiana, consisting of Governor Ralph F. Gates, Edwin Steers Sr., Republican, and W. E. Steckler, Democrat, have admitted the Communist party to a place on the ballot of the state of Indiana, thus plainly ignoring the statutes (Acts 1945, ch. 208, sec. 117,
p. 680),
which contains the following “No existing or newly organized
itical party, organization or group
i } WILLIAM E. JENNER, Republican nominee for U. 8.) FC C0 "any foreign gov-
senator, is on the beam when he commits himself to work for “debt reduction and economy in government.” Mr. Jenner makes that pledge in a staternent issued
the-peeaont national administration cannot be trusted with the grave problem of reducing the $271 billion debt. ; Indiana's “share” of the national debt, according to compilations by the committee's statisticians, is more than. 7 billion. The committee lends emphasis to its comparison AE SG ; Ea sor Ak-taxable BN HR aga county would yield an amount equivalent to only 71 per cent of the debt. : Deriding “balanced budget” promises made by Presi-
added to the public payroll within eight months of V-J day. It is true that the present national administration has given little evidence of good faith in its lip service to economy. The increase in number of payrollers is proof of that. The only way to economize is to spend ess money— and a good place to start would be in the executive department, where the President could make an immediate and dramatic reduction in the cost of government if he saw fit.
THE GREAT LAKES STRIKE
N less than four months, ice will close the Great Lakes to shipping and immobilize all the bulk-cargo freighters that bring iron ore down and take coal back up.
Movements of both ore and coal, so far this season, have been below prewar averages. Unless the stock piles of both are built up rapidly between now and December, they will run out long before the winter is over. That will mean serious production cuts and unemployment in Gary, Pittsburgh and other steel centers, steel shortages in many industries elsewhere, and a coal famine in the Northwest. The C. 1. O. national maritime union now steps into this picture with an attempt to halt all bulk shipping on the lakes by a strike. : The strike, in the first day, tied up only about 40 ships. —less than 10 per cent of the total number. The union, in a 16ng campaign, has established its right to represent
jouer the . amou
{ ernor made about us. Since then I
ernment , . . ;
“The election board with which
such affidavit is filed shall make, or ; h investiga- i piss 10 ‘b8 fade Such IWeRtigR- what I nik boi the sly way the and answers that are in the minds
through the Republican state committee, which asserts that |tion as it may deem necessary 10] aijways have won their battle to! ; ; determine the character and pa-l y 2. wh 0 at exery Gold Star family. Nowhere
ture of -the political doctrimes or and the expense of such investigation by the state election board shall be paid out of the general funds of the state - treasury not
os BE
shall not exceed five hundred dollars ($500); and the expense of the investigation by the county election board shal] be paid out of the
dent Truman and Secretary of the Treasury Snyder, the funds in the treasury, not other- + 80nake nominee charged bhai 162,95 be ltcrs hal MEE wise EPPO IE ve
amount of such appropriation shall not exceed three hundred dollars ($300), and if the board is of the opinion that such existing or proposed new party advocates doctrine which are in violation of this act, or that any of the statements in said affidavit are false, the board shall not permit such ticket or candidates on the ballot.” This act was sustained by the] Marion county superior court in| 1040 and it was not appealed.
vy an » “HOW DID A-BOMB GO OFF WITHOUT GOVERNOR GATES?”
By Thankful Truck Driver, Indianapolis I think we truck drivers should be
thankful for the remarks our Gov-
can sit down and read at least one
of our daily papers without his picture staring me in the face. We all know that every affair that takes place in our state is not complete without his sanction. I still can't understand how our government could dare explode the atomic bomb without his being there. So let's be forgiving until he or one of his employees raps us on our sore feet after driving about 300 miles during these summer months.
ave the names of its candidates printed on the ballot used at any election until it has filed an affidavit, by its officers, under oath, that it does not advo- » cate the overthrow of, local, state or national government, or any po-
nt of SUCH “APProprigtion wo
“FUNERAL DIRECTORS CAN AID GOLD STAR FAMILIES”
By R. L. St. Pierre, Manager, Flanner and Buchanan : . Thises addressed particularly to the anonymous “ex-soldier"® who recently mailed to us a copy of our announcement pertaining to the free information booklet, “Return of Our Gold Star Heroes.” He wrote: “As an ex-soldier, I say it's a disgrace that mortuary companies will make a fortune in two burials. Not one soldier in a hundred would want this.” As funeral directors, we want to set “Ex-Soldier” and everyone else
straight on the subject of morti-
provisions, among others: political party or organization shall
5 “STREET CAR FARE HIKE NOT JUST TO PUBLIC” By Mrs. E. L. Y,, Indianapolis As a citizen of Indiana and a| cians and repatriation. life-long resident of Indianapolis I If “ex-soldier” had procured a
would 1iké to give my opinion of|COPYy of the booklet, he would know : that it contains simply questions
- ¢ tage ] fride in their luxurious limousines | of kin-to make. every morning to the office, leisurely] Just why does “ex-soldier” think reading their papers en route, were|that “mortuary companies will forced to ride their dirty, stinking|make a fortune in two burials?” By olleys. and streetcars. hanging. on! federal law, mortuaries will receive phrolley ai and Be a Troi, the United” States governaround as though they were rag|ment for their services to returning dolls, they would no doubt feel a|Gold Star veterans. Remains will little differently. | be returned in tightly sealed seamAnd the best of all their argu-|less steel caskets that should not ments — they can't afford new| even be opened and need not be re.gquipment unless they raise fares—| placed wit hg her cpakets. Theos far A REA RI Biro RET an who hencblif the the war years they crowded people remains will be acting as. represenon. far beyond the capacity of the| tative of a gold star next-of-kin, trolley, made double the profit, be- | meet the train carrying the casket, cause in good times they had more | make arrangements for final intertrolleys and people could wait for ment or cremation, direct the futhe next trolley and at least get a|neral, and be at the service of the good foothold. | family. Anyone with just a fair amount| The funeral directors of America
“ErGHeE Tt advocate repatriation.” eg
om. J 2 < 2 v r such existing or proposed isis lon If some of ‘the executives wholis strictly a decisi¥h for the next
>
of intelligence knows that the railways made plenty of money during the war years, just as all other industrial plants did that had anything to do with the war. Why they want to cram down the public's throat the fact that they lost money and are just merely paupers now begging for a few pennies from the poor working class of people I'll never understand. And all the big talk about all the new busses they were going to get —the only ones I really saw, were labeled “North Meridian to take care of the rich, who had ample means of driving their cars downtown. The poor routes never got a break —nNno0 new cars were seen on their routes, only the same old dirty ones that we rode all during the war. The last feeder bus I rode must not have been swept out for a week from the dirty papers and other things all over the floor and seats,
did not at any time “lobby” or| otHerwise seek passage of this bill. Government officials called them in as representatives of the field of funeral service and as men outstanding in their profession, to help make the complicated technical plans for :repatriation. We do not know if “‘ex-soldier” is {correct in his statement that “not one soldier in a hundred would want this.” Each next-of-kin can decide if he ar she wishes the remains returned for final interment, Among funeral directors, you will find probably as many personally opposed to repatriation as favorable (to it. . ’ » ” » “TRAFFIC ARRESTS WORK HARDSHIP QN VICTIMS” By Mrs. Walter Haggerty, Indianapolis Things have come to a pretty pass when a motorist can’t drive his car on his way to work without being arrested. When a motorist has
the crews of these 40 ships as collective bargaining agent.
But the union's president, Joseph M. Curran, says the strike |
will continue until all traffic is stopped. He says this will be accomplished by calling seamen off some 340 other ships, for whose crews the N. M. U. has not established bargaining rights, and by enlisting the support of other C. 1. O. unions .in lake ports..
Bo This seems, then, to be decidedly a minority strike,
‘called primarily for organizational purposes, and we do not believe it justifies the attempt to paralyze an entire vital industry. On the other hand, the employers seem to us to '. have been too tough ‘in refusing concessions on issues of wages and hours, regardless of the justice of any demands. »
L n OLUTION? As in other strikes affecting basic industries Ai and services, it's easy to conclude: This can’t go on. _ It must be settled. Unquestionably, unions and employers
| chinery for fair and peaceful settlement.
r and management,
ph
should not be allowed to fight such battles at the expense ‘of millions of innocent bystanders. There should be ma-
But congress and the administration, between them, have failed to establish such. machinery. They have, in : fact, failed to establigh a policy which they could make prevail with any reasonable assurance of acceptance by both
However, we believe this is certain: If we have another | 3 of basic industry, if paralysis compounds wer | gres ‘will be elected that will pass compulsive ‘maybe bad ones. Regardless of rights and wrongs, will not go on forever at the mercy of industrial
in i
Carnival —=By Dick T
urner
| |
°
| COPA. Yoo 1 mer SERVICE. mc. T. W. REO. U. 8. PAT. OFF,
driven for 25 years without an accident this should be a pretty good record, but no, he is stopped, when a motorcycle cop crawls out of the weeds somewhere around the out-
| | skirts of the city and tells him he
| was either speeding or failed to obiserve a stop. sign, when the sign, {cop and all is safely hidden from view by weeds. Compared to these | doings, I respect the gestapo. Although one couldn't swear the cop | was hidden, where did he come | from then? He didn't descend from 'a cloud or arise from beneath the | ground! One is arrested, his work Inter rupted, to be called into coyrt, pays a fine according to the seriousness of the crime and his wife and chil-
taken from the breadwinner. Hundreds every day are taken in, the money is paid in and nothing more is heard until another arrest a few weeks later. Petty stuff, isn't it? If these lazy cops were given a scythe and made to mow the weeds while waiting for their prey they would render a greater service. I am still wondering where all that money goes to. In a crawdad hole?
DAILY THOUGHT Thus saith the Lord of host: Behold, I will break the bow of Elam, the chief of their might.— Jeremiah 49:35.
”
8-17
Now then, girls “= read 3 v
fs
fg
me YOUR. version of the letter | just dictated!"
pass by.
dren suffer because of the monew
Pride in thelr port, defiance in their
eye, see the lords of humankind
Ft. Wayne and Gary. Powers Hapgood and Walter Frisbee were present from . Indianapolis and James McEwan from South Bend. Under ‘the master plan developed at this national headquarters meeting the crack-down will be on those who fought in congress against OPA. . That includes all Republicans’ from' Indiana who are up for re-election. --A list of campaign material approved deals with such issues as inflation, housing, antidiscrimination, security and foreign policy.
C. 1. O.P. A. C. to Support Him
THEY EXPECT TO DISTRIBUTE 25,000,000 leaflets dealing with these subjects throughout the congressional districts from coast to coast. The inflation leaflet (8,000,000 ordered) will spell out how congress butchered effective price control in the opinjon of the C. I. O.-P. A. C. National radio programs and also local ones are being made ready, with special records made by Hollywood stars. A P. A. C. song album was approved. 8o the outfit is all set now to test its strength minus the admittedly effective aid of the late President Roosevelt.” Some observers here think that F. D. R. helped P. A. C. more than P. A. C, helped him. Now that they are put to the tést in 4 ‘solo flight, they are very anxious to.make good, the meeting here proved. nT apolis Democratic congressman, Reb. . likely will have P. A. C. support. It looks now as though he will not be doing much campaigning himself. He is still hospitalized and has been for the past 13 weeks. er So his office has enlisted the aid of at least two governmental departments to help his re-election build-up... They are agriculture—~which provides pamphlets.of interest to city folks 85 well as fariners —and the postoffice—which delivers them to every
"i
APEC HA TSI i
Land Speculati
ONCE UPON A TIME, what is now modern Indiana sat on the side linés and watched the world go by. As a Hoosier looks the tangled skein of this stretch over, he hesitates whether to cuss, cry or say amen. The stretch covers the quarter of a century that followed the end of the Prench and Indian war on Feb. 10, 1763, under the Treaty of Paris. Its 25 drifting years in Indiana are like the time taken to change horses at a stagecoach stop, or the engine at a railroad terminal. The first 20 of these years were under the loose rein of King. George III of England, and the last five under nominal control of the colony of Virginia. :
Touched on Indiana
IN THE LONG VIEW of nearly two centuries, land speculation was the dynamic and dominant force in the territory that is now Indiana between 1763 and 1788. Indian affairs over the period were tangled, nasty, and in spots bloody, but increasingly minor. : The reason for this is human and economic. in that it follows the urge of the white man to migrate round the world going west from the valleys of the Nile and the Euphrates in a 6000 year trek to the Atlantic seaboard in America. Economic, in that by 1788 he was poised on its narrow slab at its edge like a small boy who needs long pants. You could no more stop a man like that on the eastern edge of the Atlantic seaboard than you could keep a small boy in boys' pants till he becomes a young lawyer. Men in America like George Washington, Benjamin Franklin,_the big merchants of Philadelphia, the farseeing meri of New England all clearly saw this. Before 1788, they merely dabbled around the edge of
A-Bombs Carry
IN PARIS a lot of international statesmen sit in an Old World palace and the bitter words they speak fill front pages. “Vetoes,” they cry, thumping the rostrum, “twothirds votes . . . majority votes.” The voices are strident, In the Pacific this summier, I saw two atom bombs explode in Bikini lagoon. There were no little words there, no bickering. The atom bombs spoke sharply and with a great finality.
Don't Bother With Ideologies
IN. LUXEMBOURG PALACE, the men of many nations who are charged with building peace, wrangle, and the basis of the wrangling is conflicting ideologies. “I challende you,” they shout in each other's faces, while the treaties they came to examine gather dust in the corner. At Bikini, I watched two atom bombs named
bothered by ideologies.
bs
down on a guinea-pig navy. They did not have to shout a challenge.
the windows of the peace palace in far-off Paris
—Goldsmith.
» ‘
But the diplomats, with
: Le . . a Hoi dw 3 | x ‘ x
congressman, Rep. George W. Gillle. His office ig Als bpehi a EE Gol hg % ae TE RR
SAGA OF INDIANA . ; . By William A. Marlow on In Franklin's
“Able” and “Baker” do thelr work. They were not
One sent a monstrous column of radioactive cloud many miles into the skies; the other lifted a part of the sea into the air, as if an upside-down world had sprung a great leak, and having charged this air-borne ocean with death, casually dropped it back
The shadows cast by their eruption should have darkened
their backs to the win-
Reminder of Unity
1806; Orlando
eral, 1920, snd 1045. Mr. Sharp
Opening ceremony of the G. A. R. encampment
will be a memorial service a week from SBundsy after noon in the Murat theater. That evening, the U. 8. marine corps bands from Washington will give a free public concert in the coliseum at the state
at 8 o'clock, |
airgrounds. ‘The band will be in Indianapolis
throughout the convention, and will appear. in the | downtown parade at 10 a. m. Wednesday. Claypool hotel will be convention headquarters. ‘
Auxiliaries Are Active
LITTLE BUSINESS will be transacted at the
gatherings of these veterans of the war between the states . . . there will probably be much of that same kind of réminiscing that marked the first annual reunion of the 101st airborne division of world war II here this past week.
Most of the business will be tramsacted by the
Women’s Relief Corps, the Ladies of the G. A. R, Daughters of Union Veterans, Sons of Union Veterans and the auxiliary to the latter. These organizations were busily engaged in supporting the war effort in the conflict just ended .. . through blood banks, contribution of ambulances and other vehicles, and general participation in directed activities.
Indianapolis will welcome those aged men who
rect-Mail Campaign
address in Marion county. So far, 65,000 such directe by-mail pamphlets have been sent out in Mr. Lude low's name. The total is expected to reach 175,000 according to his able and efficient secretary, Mrs, Esther. Rupple. - A speech by Chairman Clarence Cannon (D. Mo.) of the house appropriations committee, also is being sent into the eleventh district as a campaign docu ment. Mr. Ludlow is chairman of the postoffice and treasury subcommittee of the appropriations com« mittee. - Chairman Cannon paid high tribute to him from the house floor, because of his great capacity for hard work. The title of the speech. is “An Ideal Co » }
'
BE RRL
ngressman. A third tactic being taken to insure re-election- ig a direct appeal by letter to the Marion county voters for whom Mr. Ludlow has done personal favors here, They number in thousands and were never selected on the basis of political affiliations. Perhaps he has done more “leg-work” around the various departments for Republicans than Democrats. This week President Truman signed a Ludlow bitl. It establishes Nov. 19, 1946 as dedication day, This is the anniversary of Lincoln's Gettysburg ade dress. Senator Willis (R. Ind.) pushed the measure to passage in the senate. Originally it was to make this day an annual holiday. The senator blamed “Southern opposition in the house” for limiting it to this year only.
Capehart Keeps Office Open SENATOR CAPEHART (R. IND.) is keeping his office running full blast, despite the demise of the 79th congress. His secretary, Ray Donaldson, is in charge of the staff. He credits the senator With helping the veering dduifiiskation to decide to take over the ' army hospital at. Baer Field, Pt, Wayne, as a tempor- | ary VA hospital of 200 beds. : 1 _ Legislation already has been passed to build a new i VA hospital of that size at Ft. Wayne. That was pus through by the fourth district's popular Republican
—_— —..... DAN KIDNEY...
yg a
-«
the land question. Outwardly, they kept within the due bounds of England's authority until she was licked and tied by the treaty of 1783. After that they were on their own on the land question, and
a
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i
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all set to go as soon as the apron strings of England &
were cut.
But even in all the stress of uncertainty before, | during, and after the Revolutionary war, they were, } along the seaboard, in the western fringe just over
the mountains, and across Indiana to the Mississippi, men dynamic and of vision who were organizing land companies, planning land development in million acre lots, and all set to sweep civilization in a big way,
ea
over the Alleghany mountains and out into the confie =
nent’s broad stretch of rivers and valleys. Among these, touching Indiana especially, was &
rf
wide-sweeping tract of Lake Erie, and reaching down
to the Ohio and Wabash rivers. Benjamin Franklin, General Gage, and wealthy Phila« delphia merchants. Thomas Walpole also had a 2.400,000 acre holding, controlled by the Indiana Co. The Mississippi Land Co. was another, organized to develop 2,500,000 acres around the mouths of the Ohio. and Wabash rivers.
Little Early Effect Here
IN ALL THIS WELTER of war, change in govern« &
ments, speculation in land, and basic economic change on a wide scale, on Feb. 24, 1779, George Rogers Clark captured Vincennes. It was Indiana's one flash of glory in a 25 year blackout.
It was backed by
H
=]
Of all this turbulent era it could be said that for
Indiana it was a washout. was to the state like the eager, breathless preparation for a wedding that eases into a long and happy mars riage; or like a mother's preparation for a birth that brings her a son destined to be famous and great,
REFLECTIONS . .. By S. Burton Heath
a Real Veto Power
dows, have not seen the shadow. Perhaps the list of peace representatives should include a handful of delegates-at-large. Could the statesmen bar the doors of their palace to “Bomb Baker” or “Bomb Able,” which represented the world at Bikini; to the bomb that was a dele= gate at Hiroshima; to the atom that had its own conference at Nagasaki? If the men gathered in Paris would turn around, they would see the windows of their peace palace still dark with the shadows of the unseén delegates who were created, like genii, by man's experiments with substances dug out of thé earth. Their shadows make the peace palace dark enough for the statesmen to sit and watch talking movies of what these atomic delegates did at their own peace parleys at Hiroshima, Nagasaki and Bikini. ) These atomic delegates could show not the horrifig but deliberately censored pigtures that appear 18 the motion picture theaters, but “the intimate, unexpurgated films that the United States will not, for “security reasons,” permit the public to see.
It Can’ Happen Here, Too THE SOUND TRACK does not cary “vetoes,” nor “power politics.’ '
New York and Pittsburgh, Stalihgrad and Moscow, London and Edinburgh, Paris and "Marseilles, Rome and Melbourne, in the background “instead of Nagasaki, Hiroshima and Bikini,
\
fn yy
But in the long view it *
a
TEE
MR ERA
It speaks by implication, so that you begin to see J
Before Catholic ch McManis. Comer ave. inois st. 4
&
PALMS gladioli and marriage o Coerper Va Advent Epi will read th Miss Ri Ray Robert Mrs. Roy C. Mrs. Quen over-taffeta d sleeves and fu matching mitt will be dressec The bride bateau necklir bouffant skirt her two-tiered topped with satin ribbons. Mr. VanHor best man. Us ander Pollock, the = bridegroo: ‘Roberts, broth “A deeptibn lodge of the follow the ce couple will les trip to northe
| Out-of-Tow
the wedding. w Mrs. Pollock and Mrs. R.
their i McDowell of C Henry J. Coer] kee, Dr. and MN of Lafayette, binger of New Vicki Schmid
Courtr
Rite
Vows were Mary Helen Courtney at 8t. Thomas church, The the Rev. Fr. ciated. The bride is and Mrs. Mic 36th st, an mother is Mr 1737 N. Merid The bride gown made Ww line, long sle long train, 1} fastened to cl soms, and she * Miss Mar jor . of honor, ar Misses Doroth Katherine Cali fant frooks of John Courtne: ushers were I Kenneth New:
Rev. N To Re
Vows unitir Kleinschmidt Etherington v Rev. Theodore p. m. today in Lutheran chur Parents of tl Mrs. George | E. Minnesota | T. L. Ethringt The bride white nylon, f: bodice. long s line and full a long train. tiered {illusion
carry an o book. Mrs. Louis C
of honor, and Misses Ann Et ert and Harr will be in wh embroidered 1) Etherington w Marshall Et his brother, Theodore Et Kleinschmidt liams. - After a rec home, the co short trip. T with the bri
