Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 October 1946 — Page 8

by

Press, Scripps-Howard News-

Alliance, NEA Service, and Audit Bureau of “Price in Marion County, 5 cents & copy; delivered by carrier, 20 cents & week. $5 a year; all other states, Oanada and Mexico, 87 cents & : “ RI-5851. : ios LAaht ahd he People Will Find Thee Own Woy SCRETARY BYRNES REPORTS : HE patience of Secretary of State Byrnes was neve better highlighted than in his report to the nation last night on the Paris peace conference. ' 7 He could have come up with a blustering oration and . nailed tire Russians for all their breaches of faith and good m The American people have been ready for a showdown. We are getting tired of being shoved around ) ked at. ; ii pd Mr, Byrnes talked softly and carried no big stick. ‘He showed plaintive bewilderment, but no resentment, at some of the attitudes and actions of the Soviet delegation at Paris. He disclaimed and disproved Soviet charges that America had profited by the war and had been trying to enslave Europe under the guise of freedom, gently reminding Russia of the more than $10 billion of lerid-lease aid \we extended to her. He wished Soviet spokesmen wouldn't go around thinking war is inevitable and acqusing nations that are friendly to us of being unfriendly to her. Tan eT “on.

“ § ENRY WALLACE could hardly have made a more placating of conciliatory speech. But there's this difference: Mr. Byrnes spoke with the sureness of one who knew he was backed by a bi-partisan American foreign policy, who knew what he was talking about, who remems= beréd what the Atlantic Charter said, and who therefore could better define the limits of American patience. . We hope Mr. Byrnes’ speech will result, as he obviously intended it should, in encouraging the Russians to take more of a live-and-let-live attitude toward the rest of the world in upcoming New York sessions of the United Nations

assembly and the foreign ministers’ council.

A RAE

AA Sa I EER

/

Ty A T——

Hoosier Forum

Woman's Work

Neve

Is 43 \ és

REFUSAL TO BE

a rs

“| do not agree with a word that you say, but | will defend to the death your right to say it.".— Voltaire.

{IT'S OUR BUSINESS . .

w

A.V.C. Attacks QUICKENED INTEREST in the American Veter ans Committee can be expected in Indianapolis as the result of the visit of Gilbert A. Harrison, founder of ‘A. V. 0. and now national vide chairman. Harrison came here to attend the. Thursday evening celebration of the organization's second hday. “A. V. C. has taken the gloves off in the sompetition with the American Legion, Veterans of Foreign Wars and - Disabled American Veterans for world war II members . . . impelled, Harrison says, by “wild-eyed charges” made by the heads of ‘the other veterans organizations against the er group. = : . There certainlygis little in the record to justify any smear charges of “Communist” against A. V. C. ...and the accusation of leftist tendencies of the organization probably grows out of the enthusigstic manner in which these younger veterans embrace new ideas.

Apparent Idealism ls Marked

IF SHERE 18 ONE CHARACTERISTIC about the A. V. C. program that is outstanding above all others, it is the idealistic platform of the committee and its determination not to be absorbed or integrated into any activity that is static. Ome thing I have observed about its members is that few of them are inactive. . . . most of them are sold on it and work at expanding the membership. ' Leaders of the organization realize that it cannot become a potent force in community affairs unless it can speak with the voice of a large membership . . . national total now is 80,000 with prospects of a healthily steady growth to the point where an A. Vv. C. stand on public questions will have more weight with politicians than it now does. Toh. Stokes, commenting on this page on the A. V. C. convention at Des Moines. last June, likewise noticed that strong flavor of community responsibility and idealisni“about its program. He wished it well _.. labeled it a fine antidote to the cynicism of today. Committee literature points out that men get

r

DEAR BOSS: PROFESSIONAL LIBERALISM seems to be paying off. AccoMding to reports here Henry A. Wallace is going to get $75,000 a year as editor of The New Republic, Harold Ickes gets $25,000 as nominal head of the Arts and Sciences P. A. C. and Elliott Roose- — | velt collects a reported $40,000 off his book. Someone labeled the latter the “best fiction of the year.” I'm sorry that Mr, Wallace is laid up here and had to cancel his Indiana speeches. It would have been nice to have one of your sprightly young re-

Mr. Byrnes at least made clear that we're not afraid, and we're not running away from our obligations. ee ————

FREE ENTERPRISE ON TRIAL : HE Truman administration's retreat from price controls is being hailed as a victory for the free enterprise system. And so, we think, it is. But that system has won a battle, not the war. The war will be won only if, and when, free enterprise proves to the American people that it can and will serve them better than government planning and management of the economy. N The opportunity for proof is coming sooner and more fully than seemed possible until the last few weeks, and it had Better not be muffed. If it is lost his time, it may

not come again. » . . » .

s 3 phe next few weeks, we beliéve, enterprise will be given

.

"Present Juvenile Court Judge Accountable to Political Group”

By Leo

Members

clear up some statements made in a which appeared in The Times of Saturday, Oct. contends that facts pertaining to the administration of the juvenile court are being perverted. Incontrovertible facts are that the court is accountable to a political organization, (that is a well-known fact among the judiciary), that the staff of the present court, some of whom are well q are not qualified to proper probation program; that ex-| isting welfare agencies have been dollar haircuts that would be a difhampered in their own work with | problem families brought into the court because of the lack of co-|su dly country butter; 98 cents| 3 operation and that according to 8}, Po Yor Rr dope, Fi about all the tax burden that quoted public statement of Judge band’s rent has been raised twice. | : Rhoads he thanks God he has-“no|He has to cut 60 men’s hair just been increased from $2.82% in 1942

Rappaport, Member of the Executive Committee, Bi-Partisan Juvenile Court Committee of the Bi-Partisan Juvenile Court Committee wish to letter from Wesley A. Stockinger, 12, in which he

of

present administration of the

ified, is overbalanced by political appointees who o the vital job of rehabilitation’ necessary in a

ferent story. 1 was in the city market Tuesday; $1.10 a pound for

“USE SUPERIOR COURTS TO SPEED CRIME CASES”

By Raymond F. Murray, 718 Fletcher Savings & Trust billg:

I do not agree With the proposal

prosecuting attorney suggesting that the 1947 general assembly create an additional criminal court in Marion county, because I am certain that the added expense of this new court can be avoided by amending the

state law so as to, give the five superior courts of Marion county criminal jurisdiction to handle any necessary ¢- overflow causes from the now established crimindl court. ’ :

the

My hus-| 4) ey can stand, the tax rate having

porters interview him in Indianapolis and ask the question: ' “How does it feel to be a liberal

Wallace Job With Leftists ACCORDING TO THE NEW REPUBLIC, Wallace is going to try and-get it circulated among “work. ers, small businessmen ‘and farmers.” A good first step would be to take it out of the class of what Westbrook Pegler as the “butch paper magazines.” Charley LaFollette, who so far seems to be an unpaid liberal, makes the point that if Wallace was sincere about trying to reach the Midwestern farmers he should have taken the editorship of Wallace's Farmer, which also was offered to him. The New Republic has a circulation of about 50,000 and for the most part is read ‘by persons already imbued

with its viewpoint. Since the well-heeled Michael Straight has taken

at such prices?”

the Republican nominee for

of criminal become more leftist than liberal in the opinion of many who think that the Communist party line is a hangman's noose for freedom. Certainly the doctrine that the U. 8. 8. R. is always right and the U. 8. A. always wrong is a difficult one for Americans to swallow.

1 am of this view, first, because taxpayers of Marion county

over this endowed family publication it has steadily

‘ By Donald D. Hoover ~~ /

ql : ish Vie RAE ge Sluggish Viewpoint what they want only when they work together . . . and at the same time emphasizes thet its approach To its social obligation is that of citizens first and veterans next. Should the future establish beyond question the sincerity of this point of view, it will have tremengous influence in making up the minds of the some 9,000,000 veterans of world war II who as yet have not joined any organization. : Indianapolis and the nation sorely need the invigorsting leadership that world war II veterans can provide if they insist on better government. and a | cynical approach to local, national and world problems. One resson this leadership ha# not developed is the need of the younger veterans to find jobs and homes . . . to fit them for a start in what to them should he their period of acquisition and expansion. As Harrison says, too little attention has been given to providing real freedom of oppértunity for

. every American, economic security, and prpvention

of another world war. A militant group of veterans could focus attention on those problems . .. and get action. i

Local Man Is State Head THE STATE COUNCIL of A. V. 0, first to be or-" ganized in the country, is headed by Martin Larner, 555 N. Capitol ave: There are four chapters in InSlankpals, and units in other principal cities and wns, The local Chapter No. 1 meets on the first Wednesday ‘evening of each’ month at the war memorial building and on third Wednesdays at the Y. M. C. A. Espy-Jarmin Chapter No. 2 meets at the ¥, M. ©, A. on first and third Thursdsys. Hast Side CNipter No, 3 meets on the first and third Friday evenings at Brookside Community house, and the newlyformed Butler Chapter No. 4 meets every other Tues. day evening in room B-20 at the universityls main building. More power to these and other world war II veterans who help prevent deterioration of the “spirit that won the war of production and of arms.

IN WASHINGTON . .". By: Daniel M. Kidney \;° . / ‘Liberalism’ Seems

me think that maybe they are turning our wa; - what. It is about their ballgames a they een to kill the umpire and: where the hometown team beats up the visitors if the hometowners lose, The game between Borovak City and Konodrowe City reads like one between the New York Giants and the Brooklyn Dodgers. “The Konodrove team displayed roughness which merged into hooliganism,” the Russian writer reported. “As a result of malicious roughness, two of our men had to fall out. At the end of the first half, when the score was 2 to 0 in our favor, the referee was attacked and told that if we won he would not leave the field alive. “The referee was threatened again before the beginning of the second half, and the game turned into a fist fight and we therefore had to leave the field before the end.” . . The home team in this case followed the old American custom of stoning the visiting players. So here is more evidence to add to Strohm'’s stories that the Russians are okay even if we don't like their government.

Conversion of a Senator

THAT TRIP TO EUROPE sure cured Senator Willis of his old pre-war isolationism. He said t nobody could stand waiting®for a plane at the or airport and hear the calls for Cairo, Africa, Egypt and all other points on the globe without. feeling that this is indeed one-world' and we have to keep peace in it. Too bad he isn’t coming back to the senate with this new viewpoint. Maybe he can pass it along to his successor. Willis’ secretary, Bill Murray, reported this week that the venerable senator will campaign in Indiana

to Be Paying Welle

o

MR. announce zene, to rs. Fra The Meridian graduate and of D Alpha CI universit, college.

. A Sept Holgate an E. Mitchell Mrs. John Butler uni school of | fraternity, 1941 to 1944

Nov. 16 Ann Hend drickson, 8 and Mrs, ©

Failey-N¢ BEFOR flanked by Ann Noel afternoon. Joan of Al the bride's son of Mr. Miss N

a high rot @ one d a long tra period cap

bouquet of orchids.

Mrs. Ji Noel will ¢ dress fash sleves and velvet. A rece couple will the bride's The br rence colle; is a provi: Failey atte

The Bi Tea For Coup

Miss M Mahon nex tea tomorr The pa 415 N. Ban William H. Guests Lauer and mothers o

and, under auspices of the Republican national com- | mittee, will speak in Ohio, Colorado, West virginia {ff ) on, . ? Edn

and North Carolina. In the latter state he will talk

more freedom than it has had for many years. We welcome that prospect. But freedom also has a.price, and an obligation. The time is near when business no longer and so easily can blame the government when things go wrong. Increasingly from now on, if things go wrong, business will be blarhed. Since Mr. Truman ended meat controls we have talked with a good many “plain” citizens. Most approved the President's decision. The meat famine had confirmed their guspicion that OPA was doing more harm than good. They expected meat prices to rise sharply for a while, But they voiced a touching faith that forces of which they had heard or read—competition and the law of supply and demand— soon would bring them down again. We say that any businessman who knowingly does anything to- betray such faith among such people is a traitor to the free enterprise system. That goes whether he heads a great corporation, runs a neighborhood store or raises livestock. And it is truer now than ever before. For free enterprise has not won final vindication. It has only been granted a new trial. If meat prices, or any prices,, stay higher longer than they are clearly justified _in staying, the public easily and soon will forget that meat disappeared under OPA ceilings, and remember only that government tried to hold the prices down. ; Free enterprise faces its new trial under conditions [Pete Pe based their endorsestill, in many respects, adverse. Inflationary” pressures |ment of Mr. Hoffmann. remain strong. Shortages will continue to interfere with | ow ry normal operation of supply and demand, and tempt chiselers AEE PA 00 and profiteers. Future wages are an uncertain quantity. |sy a Barber's Wite, Indisnapolis And industry, business and agriculture have every right and | My husband is a barber duty to earn fair profits, if they can.

social workers on his stafl.” Mr. - Stockinger says that accomplishments of Judge Rhoads

{to pay his rent.

The “accomplishments” of the court

speak for themselves, The high | cuts?

the general confusion and Jow | are not morale iri the court resulting from | pre-occupation with political inter- | How could they live? ests outside the court are the con-| with the barbers..

but simply “for the good of the his pocket and call it hi children of Marion .county.” Mr. Joseph O. Hoffmann, the can- & didate endorsed by the bi-partisan | juvenile court committee, has re- | prices they must pay today. peatedly and publicly pledged him-| I know it's hard on some 0 self to take politics out of the court; | veterans but it's also hard on lot employ a qualified staff without re-|people, myself included, to have gard to race, creed or political affiljation, and establish a probation | need. program which rehabilitates. implement this pledge Mr: Hoflmann has the plank in the platform of the Democratic county organization which states that, if elected, he will be relieved of “all political in fluence whatsoever,” in his administration of the court. It is this pledge - upon whidh the ‘itizens’

That we. can't buy butter. Not

$1.10 a pound. 1f people would stop and look

would be less of it.

rest to it and the

cut isn’t all clear profit. "11 it’s fair for everything else go up then it's fair for haircuts to

on the barbers? They have to live all the the same as anyone else, parbers were getting rich on these you won't show your ignorance.

" - un . » » » BU the trial is here, and free enterprise has asked for it. The least that any enterpriser can do safely and honorably is to seek no unfair profit, to charge no unnecessarily high price, to practice vigoroys and honest competition, to

Carnival —By Dick Turner

{ Children’s hair“the cuts are less. His laundry rate dou- | bled. His supplys went up 20 per are not to be maliciously scrapped.” | cent. Everything he buys has gone up. Then, therefore, why not hairIf someone is making their percentage of delinquency in Marion | living selling something and that ” county, the number of repeaters and | gomething cost them 50 cents they | OUT would most probably Sole going to turn around and | the cost of criminal administration, and the budget allowance of that

1 s thi fo | : Sel] same somevpng re cents court. for 1047 is $54,430. There is

| Some “people | ditions which this committee desires | must be ‘of the opinion that the| \ Pp be #rcomplished by the suggestion

to see “scrapped, not maliciously, |barber can stick the whole $1 in : « own.|that I have made. The candidates

| That's not so. By the time they|for their overhead there's very lit-| left to call their own at the]

{ these | the superior courts are not too busy

pay such high prices for things we 4 It's very hard indeed for me granted by an amendment of the To [to tell my five children when_they ask for butter that we have none.

the other fellow’s side of the question before they start griping there Ask a barber some time how much it cost for just one barber chair then add all the you'll find ‘out that the dollar you pay for s hair-

so I feel{up to allow a man to make at least 1 have first-hand information ona half-way decent living for his u..N

this $1 haircut business. Why pick family. . You people that-gare doing yelling use that gray matter

If the|God gave you called -brains and |

to the new proposed rate of $4.06 for 1947, The property owners are faced with a Republican budget of $25,000,000 now, which is $7,000,000, more than the last Democratic administration leyied. The creation of a second criminal

| nothing that could be acconfplished by such new court that could not

the superior judges on each of two major political party tickets |are good lawyers thoroughly quali|fied to handle criminal "cases and

of [tO attend to the trial of such erimto|inal cases as may be necessary in event trial jurisdiction should be

state law. It appears to me quite advisable to give most thoughtful consideration to avoiding governmental costs, where this can be accomplished, as Ye taxpayers of Marion county should have relief from the all-time high tax fate as soon as possible— and that cannot be accomplished by mounting costs on ‘costs. Furthermore, I am of the opinion

at

at

Yo g0

“JENNER RECORD SHOWS FRIENDSHIP TO LABOR”

N. Dearborn

take no selfish advantage of the withdrawal of government . controls. f Almost everywhere else in the-world the trend is still toward more and more government management of economic life. That trend carries with it a grave threat to political and all other freedoms. In America, free enterprise is getting another chance to prove its superior worth. It will be a tragedy; it may be a calamity, if through selfishness or greed or lack of vision this chance is thrown |

away.

FUGITIVES FROM FEAR ' THE FAMILIAR Communist claim that genuine racial ¥ tolerance exists only under their particular brand of totalitarianism is not supported by Poland's performance 5 that country became a Soviet satellite, under a Madedictatorship. , the Kielce pogrom of some months ago, which in some 40 murders, 50,000 Polish Jews have fled try. They did not seek a haven in Russia, motherCommunist totalitarianism, even though many of | lived there as refugees after Hitler overran ‘went. to the American zone in Germany. ing to arrive there at the rate of 10,000 a

Vous ’

from. fear ‘hope eventually to ny want to come to the United

ot William E. Jenner,

| having ‘that bill made a law.

| “elect their friends and defeat thei enemies.” Certainly, better method of repudiating an ad

courage, who has proven he is

< most High.—Psalms 02:1.

————

‘Let the Creator's praise. arise:

that speedy justice would be aided by the suggestion that I make in granting the superior courts, or one or more of these courts, criminal jurisdiction in minor criminal cases.

By J. H. Drill, N. Y. O. Conductor, 1401

For the purpose of refreshing your recollection, I wish to call to. your attention, Mr. Railroader, the 1ecord when he

served as state senator in 1037. At that fime every railroader and member of his. family was concerned sbout the “full crew” or safety law and urged that it be replaced upon the state statute, for the purpose of | protecting not only the lives of the | railroad workers but the traveling | public’ as well., It was William E. Jenner, who ,was instrumental in

| It is a policy of all raliroad | brotherfioods at election time to

ministration, who has deliberately embarrassed the railroad brotherhcods, than by electing as U. B. senator, a young man of vision and

friend of the railroad group. I urge you and your families to vote for william E. Jenner for-¥: 8. senator. ~ Fam a member of the Order of Railroad Conductots No. 103; also Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen

From all-who dweil below the skies

Your John Strohm pieces from behind the iron curtain certainly showed that the Russian people are pretty hard pressed and don’t want any war with us. I have just read a story from Moscow which makes

DENVER, Pct. 19.—It requires no expert diagnosis to see that the once-militant Democratic party is confused, befuddled and ineffectual, like a man with a hangover. It lost its national leader and its over-all progresgive leadership thereby. It now has no real national leadership. It has been weakened also by the general economic prosperity that has sapped the energy of what Tom Paine once called “summer soldiers and sunshine patriots.” And it is jittery with an infusion from the extreme left, including some few Communists. ~ :

Seek State Victory \

THIS INFUSION GIVES IT a sort of hectic flush —not to be mistaken for vote-getting health—for these people are ardent and active. But at the same time, this has opened the whole party to attacks on the ground of “Communism,” & distinctly phony charge, but harmful. It is interesting, therefore, to find an aggressive, enthusiastic, progressive local Democratic organization carrying on in the old fighting Roosevelt tradition. This is not so important for what may be accomplished now, for the Democratic party seems surely on its way out nationally. It’ls important to show what a progressive organization, working locally, can do. For that is the way the party can build itself up again. ‘ Activating spirit here is a live-Wwire state chairman, Eugene Cervi, former political reporter now in public relations. AS far ‘as the hational campaign is concerned, Mr. Cervi does not have much to work with. Oolorddo has four Republican house members. Thiee are safe,

JOHN GIBSON was a first rate second rate man. He and his kind are the backlog of American democ-

ments and human civilization reach the heights. To illustrate: No great mountain in the world rises directly from a great plain. Such mountains ‘emerge only from a great mountain mass rising from & wide level stretch of earth. \

tere ae | Clark “Aid at Vincennes

«|. BASICALLY, human society runs in much the

same groove. this as you watch the story of John Gibson unfold. It runs like this: he was born in Lancaster, Pa. of Scotch-Irish and French-Hugenot parents on May a|23, 1740. ik parents were substantial folks. His brother George fought in Lord Denmore's war, the Revolutionary war, and was with gt. Clair's army that was licked on the headwaters 0 the Wabash river by Little Turtle's army in 1794. Gibson himself, when about 18, after a brush with war under Forbes, became an Indian fur trader in

No. 699. :| Pittsburgh, Pa, Early in Pontiac's war in 1763 he was DATSY THOUGHT |cobured by the Mat Kanawha river. BT add Sou A Dae nt-Doae TH as sing praises unto Thy name, 0 agaaw, probably the sister of Logan, the great Mingo

In the Revolutionary war, Gibson was second in command when George Rogers Clark captured Vincennes in. 1770. «At the close of the war, he became

other parts of the world. But . A11e Bnes oh pleas court at Pitts desir ; Lb co YM ATO. 9. 8 PAY, OF | Let the Redeemer's name be sung. { Judge e. common - ugh et live. longer 3NY- | Te— Ea ry War == ! Through every land, by every Appointed by President Jefferson, Gibson Wab set his 2 Bn Re ln "Would a small depgsit hold this for me until the fire sale starts?’ “tongue. ~Isadc Watts. retary of Indiana Territory for 16 years, beginning in : Tp a ki el . | a.

in five towns.

powered personage.

racy, They form the basis from which human achieve- -

You may catch a revealing glimpse of

If he can elect a Republican down there the Hoosier G. O. P. sure will be losing 8 highDAN KIDNEY.

POLITICAL REPORT . . . By Thomas L. Stokes

Colorado ‘Democratic Hopes Reviving

put here in Denver,” which still has a Democratic city administration, there is a good chance for unseating the conservative Republican businessman, Rep. Dean M. Gillespie. Democratic candidate is the vigorous John A. Carroll, veteran of .two world wars, formerly district attorney of Denver. Carroll is in the best progressive Democratic tradition and has demonstrat~d ability as an organizer and campaigner. The Democratic organization here is operating on a shoestring. ’ Success with which the campaign is being conducted is revealed not only in the hard fight that Mr. Carroll is giving Rep. Gillespie for congress—the race is regarded as nip and tuck—but in the admittedly good chance to elect a Democratic governor and. recapture the state administration after a long time, The Republican regime under Governor John ©. Vivian is vulnerable because of the rundown condi-,

- tion of state institutions, health facilities, schools and

highways. Democratic candidate for governor is Supreme Court Justice W. Lee Knous, former state leg-

{slator: Republican, Leoh E. Lavington, banker and state auditor:

Western Vitality Needed

THE DEMOCRATIC ORGANIZATION here draws

its sustenance and strength from realization that the party must be a progressive party. Its objective in this campaign, win or lose, is to build a progressive organization for the future, in which the welcome will be out to progressive Republicans. Gene Cervi regards a progressive western ‘Democratic party as essential to perpetuation of the party as a whole.

SAGA /OF INDIANA . . . By Wiliam A. Marlow John Gibson Was Typical Hoosier

1800. He served as governor of the Territory for the last three years of this period. Out of this picture, John Gibson emerges so: famfiy~of middle class Americans of his day. He served the state a little less than one-fifth of a long life of 82 years. ‘ ? - In this service he was methodical, faithful, always there. He tactfully avoided the political feuds of Territorial Indiana. He nursed no ambition to rule the state. He stuck faithfully to the job of being 8 good secretary of the Territory. A man like that, multiplied thousands of times, becomes the ance wheel of his nation. Indiana drew even mdre than her full share of such men in her critically formative days. Her centralized position in the Northwest Territory; the emigrant ‘ways that funneled new settlers her way preponderantly; the folks who came for her wide-open chance for them to move up A notch in the world—all this lured to Indiana a preponderant number of men of the John Gibson breed. ; ;

Was a Good Hoosier

IN THE FINAL sum-up, all these are the men that make Indiana the outstandingly typical American state. Its political flair is an example of this. in the 33 presidential elections, since Indiana became a state in 1816, its majority vote went to the winner 26 times, to the loser. five times. The house of representatives was elected in 1825. An electoral commission settled a disputed election in 1876. i John Gibson's significance in Indiana is this: he typifies the state's canny middle _class—in politics; in pusthess: in literature and arf, in all ways and essential

ag

V. H. Gort O'Neal, Be: John Malo Nelson, B. Ratz, Misse Feeney, .E Sellmeyer, Pat Jarvis. Mrs. T. Obergfell e cently at a Miss Lauer home of 1! Raymond s Mrs. Ob O'Brien an attendants

Miss Elk chosen Mrs only attend next Satur man. Hira best man, Parents Elizabeth F and Mr. ar Bainbridge. The brid ored at mis recently b; 1450 Richl Frank Butc he former’ ss Anna and Miss M recently at Kappes st. Speal On “We are tion in the frdest, it sh to say we because we G. Campaig _ seventh dis of Clubs in terday. Mr. Cam the editori: apolis Star Freedom I: “America of losing tl much it is Quoting statesman, “The peopl liberties bu The word delusion, he Those wi ism is an who say it turn us to | munism, he Mr, Cam of all the c« 3 all the nited Sta paying the the most pc for. justice.

rs. W The Alpt nae club wi Monday at B, Wilson, + tertainment active ~ mer

university

"1 »