Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 September 1946 — Page 13
ay
"Tuesday, Sept, 24, 1946 | 3D WALTER LECKRONE HENRY W. MANZ rR er i Business Manager SORIPPS-HOWARD NEWSPAPER Owned and published daily (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
Cigculations. . Price in Marion County, 5 cents a copy; deliv.
ered by carrier, 20 cents a week. Mail rates in Indiana, $5 a year; all other states, U. S. possessions, Canada and Mexico, 87 cents &
month. EP RI-5551.
Give Light and the People Will Find Their Own Way
R AR AND PEACE WW: AVERILL HARRIMAN, in his first formal statement
*V following his designation by President Truman as secretary of commerce to succeed Henry A. Wallace, fully indorsed the Truman-Byrnes foreign policy as the “road to ce.” : Although Mr. Harriman has an intimate knowledge of Britain and Russia through his service as ambassador to those two countries, we feel confident this will be perhaps his last public utterance on foreign policy. His job is to run the commerce department, not the department of state. However, his experience should prove valuable in the cabinet when foreign policy is discussed. He believes in a firm
policy toward Russia. " : . wa
” » OT SO his predecessor. In bidding for Russian co-opera- ~ tion, Mr. Wallace proposed that we reduce military appropriations, stop building long-range bombers, turn our Pacific bases over to United Nations, drop any claim to a voice in the affairs of eastern Europe, abandon our “safetyfirst” policy on the atomic bomb, and offer the Soviets a loan with no strings attached. Admittedly, this would top all previous bids for Russian favor. But would it buy peace? 2 And what if it failed to buy peace? Having tied our own hands and turned the other cheek, we would be sitting ducks for an attack and have little left to resist or repel it. Our experience has been that agreements with the Soviet Union are worth little when they stand in the way of Russia's ever-expanding program of aggression and aggrandisement. Too late we found that the concessions we made to so-called Russian “security” at Tehran, Yalta and Potsdam bought little in return, and that an inch we had conceded in any direction could be expanded into a mile by Russian interpretation at any time the Soviets coveted more territory, more spoils and firmer, more lasting controls. Appeasement has never pacified a dictatorship with aspirations for world conquest, and international Communism has’ confessed such ambitions on countless occasions.
Hy
» ” . » . - HE peace-loving nations looked the other way when Japan invaded Manchuria in 1931, hoping that that vast territory would satisfy the Jap urge for expansion. The ~ payoff came 10.years later when the Japs hit us below the
is Times |
AT , =
say, but |
Hoosier Forum
"| do not agree with a word that you |
your right to say it." — Voltaire.
will defend to the death
"OPA Is Keeping Available Homes Off Market Because of Rent Rules"
By Just Another G. I, Indianapolis I am an overseas veteran, home six months and have a job with a loan company and get around all over the city. I know where there is a nice three-room apartment,.vacant, private shower, sink in kitchen, constant. hot water, ample closet’ space, stoker steam heat, gas and lights, garbage and trash disposal and janitor service, furnished cute as a button. All of that for only $48 pér mouth. Worth all of that or more of any man's money. Unrented, because the OPA says.$24 per month.” We all know places lke that can not be rented for that price with the present rate of taxes, coal, decorations, etc. Buddy, this is our greatest reason for no place to live. Does the OPA consist of such dumb, unedu-| 2 8 8 : cated humans, or has local politics) “COMMUNISTS SHOULD NOT entered into our government. ‘We HAVE PLACE ON BALLOT” all know where they get their sal- By Mrs. Daisydean Deeds, 2353 N. Talbot |
y s an investigation by| 2% the FBI Ds one — is | We who are not Communists are |
belt at Pearl Harbor. ; The Jap adventure encouraged Mussolini to overrun | Ethiopia in 1935, and again the law-abiding nations of the world stood by and let might prevail over right. Then the totalitarian march was on. Hitler sent his armies into the Rhineland in 1936, and in 1938 he invaded Austria. Britain and France bowed to the Nazi dictator's will at Munich, and Czechoslovakia was gobbled up. Instead of “peace in our time,” this continuing appeasement policy bought war, with Germany, Italy and Japan joining hands . against the free world. We do not intend to attack Russia, and Russia is not a real threat to our security unless we make her one, by weakening ourselves and building her up. We learned long ago that sinking our own battleships was not the road to world disarmament. We still need a police department to maintain law and order, in this city, in our own nation, and in the world. Understanding with Russia can be achieved, if we are patient, but it will not come until Russia finds that we do not intend to be pushed around. Until that day, we must keep our powder dry.
TIME FOR DECISION "HEARINGS on the Indianapolis Railways fare case are going into their fourth year before the public service commission. Either the company is entitled to a fare increase or it is not. If it is entitled to some increase, then the question is— « how much? The public service commission has stalled this case long enough. It's time the commission gave its decision. ®
FUGITIVE FROM SECURITY Dr. Vladimir Macek, former vice-premier of Yugoslavia, now visiting in this country, the difference between Naziism and Communism has been the difference between Tweedledum and Tweedledee. He was imprisoned in a concentration camp when Hitler overran Yugoslavia. Then he had to flee for his life when Tito’s Reds took over. : It was Dr. Macek’s crime, in the eyes of both totalitarian dictatorships, that he had identified himself as a democrat. For under a dictatorial government, he remarks, “one fights for democracy with one ear cocked for the steps of the police,” Dr. Macek, the little Croatian, is one of several hundred thousand men and women who lost home and country as the price of so-called Russian “security” when appeasement ~ politics made Germany's captive states unwilling satellites of the Soviet Union. - _ These were the forgotten people at Tehran, Yalta and Potsdam, when Big Three unity was giving lip-service to the four freédoms and the Atlantic charter while small nations were pushed into the grasping paws of the big bear like nickles into a slot-machine.
A GENERAL
IS OFF-SIDE
, dogs back with them. : :
ualified. to know and has the pow- | hot only awed at the discovered = 10 do something Communists abounding in the rul-
Can't we veterans get Yogether ing departments of our state univer- | with administration and take this| sities and state teachers college, but| lin our own hands? I don't blame we don't know what next to expect | anv landlord or property owner for concerning our state, county and} feeling he is imposed on when he city executives who would be so bold gets a raw deal like the above, |and careless as to give their assent Please leave my name off on ac-|to the board of election commis-
’ “SEE OWN HANDS CLEAN BEFORE ATTACK OTHERS” By Hub Owens, 534 Somerset 1 would like to express my feelings as a result of reading-the socalled “free press,” The Indianap-
olis Times, these past few months. Being a veteran, I am given to understand that America is again threatened with destruction. This was actually the case in the last war. German fascism lad a policy | of world dominatich. Is such the] case today? A study of the facts in! relation to world events show that! such is not the case. ; The Red scare headlines and ar-| ticles published in your newspaper |
{are for the’ purpose of laying the!
proper basé for a war against our! former ally, the Soviet Union. One would think that the Red army was advancing on the city of Chi-! cago. Your attacks and slanders against the Soviet Union are de-| signed to cower;up our, connection with the imperialist policy of Britain. Your paper is’ constantly ham-
| it can still make noises, but not with elections.
i's OUR BUSINESS . . . By Donald D. Fogler =. Candidates Are ‘Mum on Many Issues
THE GENERAL ELECTION will be held six weeks ° from today ... and there are many basic points on which many candidates haven't yet taken any stand. There seems to be little interest in this year's election . . . many voters have not bothered to register. And Oct. 7 is the last date for registering or transferring registration, ~ Failure to register and to vote is dodging a share of the responsibility of citizenship.
How About La Follette-Monroney Bill? GRANTED THAT PRINCIPAL RACES this fall are not spectacular, with exception of the juvenile court and prosecutor contests, still the men elected will run the townships, county and most branches of state government. Too, a United States senator arfd a congressman will be elected, along with members of the state legislature. Many voters will make their decision on the senatorial race on the basis of the Democratic party's
diluted New Dealism versus the Republican conserva- '
tism, The choice in the congressional race is more difficult sincé neither candidate is outstanding. The veteran Louis Ludlow, Democratic incumbent who gets to town.nbw and then, is old and ill. A former newspaperman, he writes skillfully of the need of economy in government and all the other old bromides .. . and then votes for the appropriations. Mr. Ludlow's greatest quality is his kindhearted running of all sorts of errands for both Democrats and Republicans. He looks conservative .. . So he gets many Republican votes. His opponent, young Albert J. Beveridge, is’ the son of one of the country's great statesmen . . . but so far signs of greatness have not been evident to the public in the son. Perhaps I am biased by an admiration gained as a political] writer accompanying Senator Beveridge on his last campaign, when Samuel M. Ralston defeated him for a senatorship from this state.
ci
‘Sp far as I know, neither of these candidates has said what he would do about one of the most important questions before congress . , . following.out the provisions of the La Follette-Monroney stream-. lining @neasure which modernizes house and senate. The last congress passed the bill , . . which also provides for salary increases and pensions . ., but left up to the next one the question of putting intq effect the reduction of committees and other im provements which rob some congressmen of authority. Each congress writes its own rules . . . so that in which either Mr. Ludlow or Mr. Beveridge sits will - decide whether to streamline congress as provided in the bill . . , or whether to keep their prerogatives as well as accept the greater pay. The same question has been ignored by the senatorial aspirants
How Do Candidates Stand?
THERE ARE A NUMBER OF important issues affecting the state legislature, too, on which too many candidates are silent.. ; Most important of these include reapportionment of representation to‘give Marion county its fair share of membership in the general assembly . . , which both parties have avoided despite constitutional re quirement it be done periodically; making certain that the county gets its proportion of the gasoline tax, which it does not receive now; appropriation of money to revise Indiana's archaic system of caring for the mentally ill, and adoption of a real merit system. . Two other basic questions are return to the direct primary for. selection of all state candidates and U. 8. senatorial nominees, and non-partisan selection of judges. The Democratic platform favors both, as do many individual Republicans. The voters, however, are entitled to a specific statement fram each candidate on*how he stands on these questions,
POLITICAL REPORT . .. By Thomas L. Stokes
Wallace Quster Marks an Era’s End
WASHINGTON, Sept. 24.—The yipping chorus of glee {rom southern Democrats and Republicans that
| greeted ouster of Henry Wallace from the Truman
cabinet tells accurately what has hdppened to the once dynamic party of Franklin D. Roosevelt. For a long time, even before Mr. Roosevelt passed on, the conservatives had the whip hand in congress through the coalition of southern Democrats and Republicans that blocked his domestic program in his later years. The coalition continued to operate even more effectively when Harry Truman espoused the Roosevelt program. : Democrats Sit and Stew CIRCUMSTANCES HAVE ELIMINATED all vestiges of effective New Deal influence in the top bowers of power around the President. The purging process has been going on. a long time. Henry Wallace's departure puts a period to the shaking-out, and, also, to an era. - The party is sliding back to the state of courteous and comfortable conservatism, so far as its ruling elements go, to which it has returned so often after making itself for a brief time the vehicle of revolt among the plain people. Back to the state where Back to the state where it plays its Tweedledee to the Republican Tweedledum as Mr. Roosevelt once put it so aptly. The Democratic party does not win elections as the party of conservatism. If the country wants conservatism it goes Republican to be certain about it. It is not possible to suggest an analysis, of what is going on in the country without a first-hand inquiry, which this writer is planning to make soon on a tour of the country. The public mind is confused, and naturally after a great war. Problems of peace are many. People are tired of government restrictions. They can’t buy what they want, and the’ price of what they can get
count of my working being men-
tioned. ” on »
| sioners to put the Communist party mering away about. the iron curtain back on our state election ballot, | \1 Russia. How dbout the ironf after its non-appearance on the Circle that is being forged around
IVE G. 1's who returned from Europe for discharge are ~ © are under arrest at Camp Kilmer, N. J, awaiting courtmartial, Their heinous crime was that they brought their
| The commanding general at the port explains that al y regulation bars animals from a passenger ship “for gp sense rules of sanitation.” The regulation is , but why wasn’t it enforced on the other side | intic? The damage, if any, has been done. ‘now make a spectacle of itself over a half’
! and remember you were a boy book now, you will punish ‘kids who slipped by a| «
“NOT SAFE FOR GIRLS T0 GO OUT AT NIGHT” following from Governor Gates,| By Mrs. D. Cook, Indianapolis. {which I quote of this action: “I Well, sir, I'm not much at fancy | notice that you criticize me, as
words, but I'm writing this letter=in | chairman of the board of election
. commissioners, for allowing the ; p t ; lis | es 5 plain words to tell the Indianapo is| 6 munistic ticket to appear on our
public just what I. think about |gtate ballot this fall. Our entire things in this town. Now we have board of election commissioners felt capital punishment in this state, but that the Communistic party had what's the use of this if it's never | complied with the law by filing in Ss {the neighborhood of eleven thouused. If a fellow is willing to take sang petitioners asking that it be a human life, well I say let him or|included, together with the affidavits her give his life in return, and most | which the law requires, signed by of this meanness will cease... And|the officials of that organization in the courts—do they justify? I say Indiana.” Lo in most cases, . « ®| What is a Communist? Well, folks I have two girls and they are a Communist is a person who is still getting along at an age where they a supporter of the Paris Commune want to go some, but it's not safe to| —an insurrectionary government let your child out inthe day, let|that functioned in Paris, France, {alone after dark. If an offender is! from 1792 to 1794, which was estabarrested, . what do they get as| lished for the purpose of usurpation
state ballot since 1939. I have the|‘he Soviet Union by Britain and |
e U. 8? Your paper is silent on this question. I am for the protection of my country. I carry scars of battle on my body as proof. However, your paper has failed to show how American troops can defend our borders by being stationed on the Asiatic mainland to the Azores, from the North Arctic to Iceland, from Newfoundland to the Straits of Magellan and from Iwo Jima to Saudi Arabia. : Before we begin to attack others we should see that our hands are clean. Otherwise irresponsible state{ments and acts will involve our ination and the world ii another destructive war, n » ” “NO IMPROVEMENT IN CAR COMPANY'S ACTION, TACTICS”
By Bryce Ham, 1507 Broadway.
punishment? Nothing, let loose to!of supreme power, and composed of do the same thing over. I don't ap-| commissioners chosen by certain prove. sections. of Paris, then known to And as for slamming the states| Americans as the “Reign of Terror,” of Kentucky and Tennessee like.a|and now known to Americans as certain judge did several weeks ago| “Communists” or “Reds.” 1s not much on his part, after alll I never could understand why there is trash in every state and|some people chose to migrate to it comes out sooner or later. I've| America and then immediately set 11tved in Indianapolis 19 years and | to- work establishing some infernal believe me I've seen some sights| foreign policy that is altogether right here that don't equal anybody | foreign to America’s way of, living. that comes from Kentucky or Ten-|{ Why can't they be.quiet, peaceful nessee. They ought to be thankful|and honorable, and fall into peacethey are neighbors to the states, in-| ful America's way of being brotherstead of slamming them. I could|ly and Godly and happy and satissay lot more, but what's the use. fied, instead of the reverse?
Carnival —By Dick Turner [cose aRen™ 6 0 Tas 5 Ag ST \
rs
oP i Hin A Tog oe i Fe 4 4
@ v : i COPR. 1946 BY NEA SERVICE, INC_T..M- REC U8. PAT. OFF
7-29.
I'm sorry ygerit tell you anything about
E my grades, Pop—it's a military secret!”
With the coming of each morn | we, the “common herd” of working | class, so to speak, are prone to wonder if we can. or will, get to our post of duty whole and on time, due especially to the inadequate transportation service handed and dished out at the hand of our streetcar company of our fair city. The heads of the transportation company have so many times in the past been so free to promise and, with the .lapse of time, have failed to live up to the promise, or pledge, made to Mtr. and Mrs, John Q. Public. The company could be easily compared to a spoiled child, never satisfied with what they have {at hand, but are always asking for | something more and, with the new | demand received, are not any nearer satisfied than before received. | With the 30 years of streetcar |'service that-I have used and seen, the streetcar company has in ro {way changed its actions and tactics |in demands and promises to Mr. and Mrs, Public, to be only partly
is often beyond all reason. They look to Waskingto:\@ for solutions only to find a floundering administra« tion, unable to give positive answers. All this dis turbs them and leads them to look elsewhere for leadership. This is a natural and primary advantage to the Republicans. For campaign purposes, Republicans have dug up the old bogey of “communism.” It's a good whipping boy, particularly now .when many people have more than they ever had before. Republicans tie it up with the administration, helped along by the presence of Communists in liberal organizations, in a few ‘labor unions, and by Russia's tactics in Europe. The liberal wing of the Democratic party is in a state of shellshock over all this, and seems to lack either courage or positive program. It sits and stews. It lost its leader and now it has lost its last direct contact with the administration. There is talk of a third party, but the liberal groups seem too disorganized for any such effort. Furthermore practical men regard such a solution as a will 0’ the wisp. Leaders of both major parties have been most careful to revise state election statutes to make it difficult for a third party since the Teddy Roosevelt Bull Moose adventure in 1912 and the La Follette independent movement in 1924.
Republicans Face Challenge - : DANGER OUT OF THE present confusion is that old guard Republicans will hear from .it a call to them, and ‘act accordingly. That is certainly a delusion. ~The times demand continued progressivism, and the people still want to move forward. This is an opportunity for solid, continuing progressivism, Some Republican leaders sense that. There is a historical precedent for such leadership in Teddy Roosevelt. It will be too bad if Republicans don't recognize their responsibility along with their opportunity. They have a splendid chance—if they will take it. »
SAGA OF INDIANA . . . By Wiliam A. Marlow
Burr Conspirators Landed in Indiana
IN THE FIRST DECADE of the 18th centyry, a whiff of treason skirted Indiana. It was concocted of malice, ambition and guile—the malace. bitter, the ambition high, and the guile that has defied complete analysis by the keenest minds that have attempted it. The brew was the the masterpiece of one Aaron Burr. g Burr was born in Newark, N. J, Feb. 6, 1756. He was the son of Aaron Burr, the second president of Princeton university, and the grandson of Johnathan Edwards. two renowned American preachers. He was the third vice president of the United States. He missed the presidency by a tie vote with Thomas Jefferson, 13 te 73 in the electoral college, which he lost when it was untied constitutionally by the ouse of representatives on Feb. 17, 1801. From this
h | came the first cupful of Burr's treasonable brew.
Looked Like Treason to Hoosiers ALL THIS SPILLED OVER into Indiana when Burr. eased out of Jeffersonville over Indiana's protest with two boat loads of his followers on Dec. 16, 1806. Just what sent Burr and these men ‘down the Ohio river that day baffled, and still - eludes complete analysis by the keenest historical minds of America. This is true because the technique that Burr used in carrying out his plans defies a complete analysis. This is so because he cloaked them always with the skill of a master under palpably worthy objectives. There were at least four of these. ONE: To Herman Blennerhassett, -a wealthy eccentric Irishman who lived on an island in the Ohio river near Marietta, 0., his enterprise was a trading venture covering the Ohio and Mississippi section- of America. TWO: Around Jeffersonville, it was a canal project to by-pass the falls of the Ohio, plausibly pictured as needed, sound, and profitable, THREE: As a colonization development on the
| fulfilled. And they will so continue | {in the same rut unless and until {the “common herd” of public wakes {up and sees to it that their rights!
{and demands are met, and carried | movies take a kicking from everybody. jou to the letter by the streetcar | company. l
Wake up, ve public, lethargy has gone far enough-—it never has worked and will not get you anywhere now with the streetcar com- | pany. » » LJ “NEED LAW PROTECTING POOR, ASSURING FAIRNESS” {By W. C. Oliver, 4946 W. 13th st, People have to eat to live. Why {can’t we have a law to protect the | oor people and at the same time {have just as good government as {you would have with your law to | protect wealthy people from gambling? : |
DAILY THOUGHT
For the day of the Lord of hosts shall be upon 'every one that is proud and lofty, and upon every one that is lifted up; and he shall be brought low.—Isaiah 2:12..
Let pride ‘go afore, shame will follow. —Ge¢rge Chapman.
NEW YORK, Sept. 24.—There must be something seriously wrong with radio—something not afflict the daily press or the magazine the movies, and Lord knows the
deeply and which does business or even
1 write this sorrowfully, because there fare some weird, unseen business which are at
| this facets. of uiis trip to Philadelphia.
least ‘as beneficiah as a bus
Self-Ridicule Steady Feature WHAT PUZZLES ME is that much of the best entertainment in radio is built around a sarcastic treatment of the things radio holds most dear—and certainly the things from which the industry derives its wealth. And the better radio columnists have built their prestige by the steady application of the hammer. Knock, knock, who's there? ” These vipers in the bosom of the audible hucksters almost daily’ bite their victim. They sneer at a lot of it, condemn most of it, laugh at the rest. When they are occasionally in the mood for a tiny piece of praish, they reveal an. expression of startled surprise, like a man looking at an income tax refund. For my money, the most listenable programs on
by a wild and ribald wit named Henry Morgan. ‘A ! practicing iconoclast, Mr. Morgan devastates sponsors, soap operas, news conimentators, political | pundits, give-away refrigerator-and-mink-coat shows. ponderous public service shows, mood music=he tears
them to bits and leaves them naked and bleeding.
So, less cruelly, does Allen, a man with a sharp eve for the unprotected vitals in his harum-scarum racket
T . .
the air are Fred Allen's and a recent thing confected,..
Washita river in Louisiana, which especially appegied to the venturesome and enterprising. FOUR: The invasion of Mexico. This was Burr's special bait for James Wilkinson, his Revolutionary war buddy, now in command of the United States army in the Mississippi valley, Burr drew the picture of a new empire; combined from Mexico and a. slice of the adjoining United States, as something that would stir Wilkinson's ambitions, as it did. In all this, Burr, with shrewdness that was deep and elusive, avoided the step just over the border between enterprise and crime. To no one did he ever confide his plans completely. He gambled on the discontent in Louisiana, the Federalist talk of withdrawing from New England; the possibility of inducing western settlers in the United States to withdraw from the Union. At the end of his trail, Burr was arrested near the boundary of Spanish Florida. He was taken to Richmond, Va., and tried for treason. Chief Justice John Marshall presided at the trial. Because it could not be proved that Burr committed an overt act of war, Judge Marshall ruled that he could not be convicted of treason.
No Support Here BURR WAS DISCHARGED, and lived in relative obsecurity till he died, at 80, at Port Richmond, Stater Island, on Sept. 14, 1836. Indiana’s reaction to Byr's conspiracy was in character. Maj. Davis Floyd, who helped Burr at Jeffersonviile, was convicted of treason, and imprisoned. Joseph Bowers and his wife and two children deserted Burr at Louisville, and became good Hoosiers. They settled on Oil Creek in Perry county. ‘Governor Harrison assured Indiana that Burr's threat to the state had passed. The citizens of Vincennes, in a public meeting on Jan. 4, 1808, adopted a resolution disavowing Burr. : To Indiana's great credit, it was immune W-Aaron Burr's conspiracy. .
REFLECTIONS . . 2 By Robert C. Ruark Why Is Radio Running ltself Down?
of peddling corn flakes and liver pills. Never, in the history of humorous entertainment, has such a great boon to the comedian come about. The serious, every-day mechanics of radio, from the rhymed jingle to the awful importance of the Hooper rating, are funnier than the prattfall, more ludicrous than a blow on the skull’ with a bladder. Nearly everything in it is either corny, strident, boresome,
florid, iname—repetitive, irritating, offensive, moronic,-
adolescent or nauseating—and, in the case of the transcribed commercial, generally a combination of all those faults. i Walk up to the average man ay, and mention singing commercial, soap opera, .or the average advertising * plug, and he will make signs of acute, nausea. . Listen to the quiz shows and the cheap and sordid impositions on ignorance, like that Anthony program, and you will feel a pressing need for fresh air. :
What's the Matter? STONE-CHUCKING at. other people's -panes is a fascinating pastime these days, and practically everything from religion to stamp collecting comes in for
its share of censure, But somewhere, somehow, there |
18 something grievously wrong with a business whose outstanding ‘successes are most appealing when they are knocking their profession on the Head. ~~. The success of radio would evidently mean that either we are a race of artistic Cretins with a foudness for the singing commercial; or that radio has . become a habit, like biting your nails, which does not constitute an endorsement of its value in our daily lives . i
“
+
£ { ] {
—— os —
| just
~
TUES
| BU
. Camp (
|»
ta
DENV This be taken b Superf
" containing
changes m Canned bread—ins censor) . bi: Larger v Addition A 30-da on troops 38th infal at Camp |
Satisf Represel master co geon gene the concl satisfactor yet develo
There a the new C-ration, fact that away item they didn’ is likely t eaten out The new 1 oneand one-h Officers not yet s white bre that rese: that will meat com and veget frankfurte hamburge: The canne prises apr and fruit
Troo]
Althougl] continue 1 clusions h: Weight in in physica in all gro The nev be monotc out, howe not design in and we 15 days in Althoug! been und ing in mot mountain not consid test of tl conditions
* yet been
parachute In gene
jl tives of
believe th tage of th nated ma
LOCAL
DENVE
A numbe members tional sorc ver, Colo., attend the vention, Ox Miss GI Beta Jota delegate, ¢ by Mrs. R sponsor, ar and Miss 1] Members: ter who Evelyn Jo; Tau Phi I VanBrunt, and Mrs. 1 ter sponsor The sor held in cor institute Woodmen Denver Se will open w ing of Oct will be ins highlights a trip th tains and Phi Lamb Gene Lilli!
“mer Indiar
tiring nati
HEAD
SAN FF P.) —Amer Corwin a1
"take off |
sponsored casting co
Wal His |
T DES M¢ Wallace m payroll b worry, His pri than that United St. Here in home stat opinion 0 of the go Russia. E Mr. Wallac siderable 1 He was once-ridict mercially inbred str: Today t dustry is Mr. Wal income of ear from
« from the I
The comp: tensive bu which in corn in b
