Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 December 1946 — Page 8

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PEARL HARBOR DAY : TODAY is the fifth anniversary of the Japanese sneak

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1 Give Light and the People Will Find Ther Own Way

attack on Pearl Harbor. It was this attack which cost us at least half of our effective naval strength, but which also unified all elements of the country in a determination that eventually won the war. We do not have that unity today. Again we are complacent—and divided. Some irresponsible elements within the ranks of union leaders are slowly strangling the economy of the country. And John L. Lewis, the most dangerous of them all, has a “public be damned” attitude just as ruthless as that of the financier to whom that quotation was originally attributed. The nation’s leaders, both at home and abroad, have shown a tragic inability to look beyond and plan beyond victory. The nation that won a great war has not shown itself alert to the responsibility of that victory. : It is a sorry picture that is created abroad, where once we were hailed as liberators, by projecting our domestic picture of life in this land of democracy. For the sake'of the dead, the wounded, the maimed and the future of our country, let's all get together and show the strength of character needed to. solve the many problems which face our country. Let's become mature in our thinking—that the sacrifices made in the name of democracy and freedom not be turned into hollow loss.

D7 RE B&F

Hoosier Forum

"Need 'Industrial-Military’ Army To Defend Country at All Times"

By L. A. Beem, 5222 N. New Jersey st.

The people of this country have never in time of peace sensibly if it benefits onesélf. We Just had evaluated the needs for proper defense. In every instance we have , meat strike, last winter we had awaited the onslaught of some grave emergency before taking ade- (he closing down of factories for quate measures for defense. more money. The only way little Defense is not limited to military operations. Through an intoler- [People have to raise their standard able strike we are now confronted with a grave problem of defense. |0f living is to strike and don’t tell Defense here at home of our entire economic and industrial structure. |me they don’t need more money,

resent laws such a situation can reoccur at any time in to buy food at these prices. Our UH Oy Ie this congressmen and legislators have

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

CPA SMALL QUITS; SMALL CP VER since he took over after V-J day, Civilian Produc- | tion Administrator John D. Small had worked hard to | work himself out of a job. He finally got President Truman’s permission Thursday to resign. Mr. Small was one government controller who considered it a victory every time he could decontrol something. The controls he couldn't persuade the administration to abandon he tried to pass on to some other government office. His was a man-bites-dog technique in Washington, where most agencies and officials were scrambling for more power. Even when there was great need for government direc-

“DID YOU EVER HEAR OF A WEALTHY COAL MINER?” By Mrs. Walter Haggerty, Indianapolis’ Strikes, which are exceedingly detrimental to social welfare, when practiced by coal miners, especially ‘in cold weather, become a privilege

: : sas : ' the future. I see no specific law proposed which could eliminate : tion in aiding conversion from war to peace production, Mr. | ganger in the future. It is not an ordinary problem of labor. It strikes & curioub power to Zk oy mise . . | 0 e eir salaries. id any Small thought if presumptuous to believe that he or any |deeper. Be a a aria hy

1 propose a large army organized | a with sufficient person- truth as it is, without fear or favor. are our representatives the same nel to function in an industrial as|You have discharged that obligation |S John L. Lewis represents the well as military capacity. There are to organized labor, though I feel MIDIS. but Lewis is not asking for certain industrial groups, the break-|sure you will be soundly exorcised | himself. He is wealthy, yes, but down of any one of which can|by the labor bosses you have put those he represents are not. Our

DECLINE OF A COMMITTEE paralyze and endanger our whole the finger on. (congressmen are nof poor, but they

VWWHILE the war was on the senate investigation cOm- |oconomic as well as social system.| It has often occurred to me that BO to bat for themselves the first

other Washington brain could always come up with the right answer.

E-THIRD OF PEOPLE

. JOHN L. LEWIS WAS A LUG when I knew him as a reporter covering the United Mine Workers headquarters in the Merchants Natiorial Bank building here . .. U. .M.W. A. had offices there from 1914 to 1934 , . . and he's a dangerous bad actor today. = Principal difference. is that the enormous power he now holds . . . and ruthlessly wields over the nation . . . seems to have unbalanced his judgment. There can be no other explanation for the almost treasonable manner in which he is acting.

Veterans Hated Him Intensely SOLDIERS OVERSEAS during the war-time period he was causing the deaths of their comrades by holding up production in the United States were bitter about Lewis. \ ; Most frequent comments . . , and these are of record . . , were “He ought to be shot” and “Draft him into the army and send him into the front lines, the dirty 7 Sounds pretty intemperate, doesn't it? Yet that's how the men on the firing lines and in the far places felt about him and his type of union leader." The war has been over now for a year and a month . , . today is the fifth anniversary of Pearl Harbor Day. Perhaps sentiment‘ has changed as veterans are fighting the processes of readjustment, lack of housing and jobs that will support their families . . . jobs many of them can't get because of John L. Lewis. Let's take a look then, at the most significant statement about Lewis to come from a combat veteran. .The comment we'll examine is that of exmarine Joseph R. McCarthy, new United States sen-ator-elect from Wisconsin, when he came to Washington several days ago . . , a dimmed-out Washington remindful of war days. Bays this ex-marine . . . John L. Lewis should be drafted into the army, ordered to call the miners he

WASHINGTON, Dec. /.—This is the first winter social season since the war that the White House has had a full schedule of diplomatic receptions. But so big has the 57-nation’ Washington diplo-

matic corps become that it is now necessary to split the guest list in two, inviting one batch of diplomats one night, the others another.

Touchy on Protocol AFTER INVITATIONS WERE MAILED a few of the diplomats were insulted- because they had been invited to the second function, not the first. They considered it a slight to their country, particularly if some neighboring country’s diplomats had been invited to the first reception. ; So the White House protocol. people had to explain to one and all that the division had been made by alternate alphabetical order, Afghanistan first night, Argentina the second, Australia the first, Belgium the second, and so on. Until this was explained, some of the second night diplomats had threatened to send their regrets. and decline to attend. Now they're all coming. ! While Chairman Dave Lilienthal and his new atomic energy commission were- flying around the country, inspecting Oak Ridge, Hanford, Los Alamos and the other army Manhattan district engineer projects, they ran into some bad weather. On one flight a propeller de-icer broke down, the antenna iced up and the radio went dead. From one of the distinguished commissioners came the cry, “Better tell Harry to start warming up the second team.” Veterans’ organizations are getting primed for a big bonus drive on the new Republican congress. The Democratic majority showed what it can do for the veterans in the last congress, when over nine billion dollars was appropriated for the vets. Now it's the

ever | Republicans” turn to show How they ¢an give. If they

IT'S OUR BUSINESS . . . By Donald D. Hoover ~~~ Veteran Sentiment on John L. Lewis

dominates back to work. And if Lewis refused to obey the order, court-martial him. And there are severe penalties for refusing to ‘obey an order. Technically, the war is still on since the emergency has not been declared terminated... . That's a pretty tought proposal, but don't get the idea it, is a wild-eyed one. The millions of restless veterans haven't become vocal yet . . . but they will not stand by forever and let. a man of Lewis -stripe paralyze their country. If the rights of others mean nothing to him, they certainly do to the men and women who were in uniform. Force is not an instrument, alien to them. If that's the way the union leaders like Lewis . . . and there are many labor leaders out of sympathy with the Lewis methods . . . want to play, the veterans, too, may have recourse to the weapon they know best.

It would be regrettable, and would mean class war-

fare, but it is an issue that Lewis himself is’ drawing.

Lewis Harms Cause of Laber IT HAS BEEN WRITTEN many times that John

ganized labor . . , a cause that right-thinking men will support so long as it is a just cause. Veterans conceivably could become the instru t through which labor might be set back seriously by ’ unsound legislation in the next congress . . . if they exert their tremendous influence on their legislators (and some of the new senators and congressmen are veterans, too) to obtain a curb on Lewis and his ilk. Veterans don't like John L. Lewis . . . they know what his tactics cost the war effort. : As the American Federation of Labor sald in October, 1941 , . , and it is equally true today . . . Lewis was “gambling not only with the rights of his own miners but with freedom of the whole labor movement.” That was before Lewis hrought his union back into A. F. of L.1

IN WASHINGTON . . . By Peter Edson News Notes About Folks in Capital

give much, their big talk about economizing will go right out the window. Oklahoma Governor Robert 8. Kert’ probably ean be counted out in any political dope on naming a Democratic national committee chairman to suoceed Bob Hannegan. Kerr wants to run for U. 8. senator in 1948. If he does that, he'll probably have to stay around home and do some campaigning.. Kerr has acquired a big new residence to- move into when his term as governor expires, and his wife wants him to . stay home for a while, Watch for the issue of creating an American flag “chosen instrument” airline to be brought up again in the next congress. Maine Senator Owen Brewster favors thi® one big U. 8S. international airline, in preference to civil aeronautics board's present policy of competition and assignment of routes to several airlines.

Like Father, Like Son? ERNIE ADAMSON, counsel for the house committee on un-American activities, is the son of late Georgia Congressman William °C. Adamson, author of some of the most “radical” legislation of his time. He wrote the Adamson eight-hour’ law which established the eight-hour day for labor in world war I. He also sponsored the Panama canal act, which is basis for much of the government's policy in not permitting one form of transportation to control a competitor. For instance, rail lines can't own ship lines, and ship lines can't own air lines. Reporters covering C. I. O.’s recent Atlantie City convention got a big laugh out of Phil Murray. The C. I. O. president made a flery speech, blasting the newspapers becguse they didn’t print news about a recent speech of General Motors Board Chairman Alfred P. Sloan, “declaring war on labor.” Then Murray read excerpts of the speech—f{rom a newspaper clipping.

SAGA OF INDIANA . . . By William A. Marlow Improvement Bill Thrilled Hoosiers

THE STATE of Indiana, like men and nations, has had its dramatic moments. One such moment, destined to become a headache for the Hoosier state,

came on Jan. 27, 1836. This was the day that Governor Noah Noble signed the Mammoth Internal Improvement bill to provide adequate transportation for Indiana. It appropriated $13 million. This was one-sixth of the wealth of the state on that date. But no bill ever signed by a governor of Indiana meant as much to its people.

State Went Broke : AS AN AFTERMATH of this bill, Indiana went broke. It never pald the debts incurred under the provisions of the bill. And bitterest thing of-it all, the basic object of the bill, which was a great canal system for the state, withered on the vine. This is viewing this entire episode in the perspective of more than 100 years. At its opening, and to the men of its time, it was a thing splendid, rosy, hopeful, It would, men said, solve the problem of Indiana surplus farm products. The whole state lined up behind-the bill—merchants, businessmen, bankers and professional men; and above all the farmers. With the transportation provided for in the bill, the farmers would have more

mittee, under the chairmanship of Mr. Truman, per- | This proposed “industrial-military other large organizations, such as thing, double their salary and get One was to give credence only to facts that could be |erate such industrial groups as coal, never exalted any officer to the de- Hare oll "Here Molt, A second was directed toward getting results rather |der existing laws a group of men and those he chooses to destroy. | IY or home again. Many of them course to the authority of the ful organizations which have done | lost her husband and three sons responsible - government agency and demand corrective : | of not less than 18 months. I mean become so powerful even with the{ESt & Dension Jor the rest of his : ' : : | serve what th s A third policy—invoked when it became necessary to |individual is not sufficient to main- ble racketeering leaders, many of Wha! they ale asking. Whats ” ” ” ing. In times of an emergency jt| "AGREE THAT PEOPLE ARE £3 have 8% Wel] a3 curious Pov publicans, willingly signed it. There never was a minority I agree with Mrs. W. C. C. that all over the count {cannot train organizations on paper. IY poopie just its painstaking procedures. [the required number of men to at | evicted and urgently needed a house | 1¥ honest if you ean, but get it.” : : FL Bnd what to do. York, to Senator Kilgore of West Virginia. |3he. could get our '5-room house | said, “That's an awful part of town, CAN'T HAVE GOOD FOOD” DON'T NEED DICTATORS” committees in the past, with hearsay testimony, the smear | “what Unionism (well be In the street as live in a one variety of the fruits of group- | : h : prejudice. The principal purpose is right, why do people advertise for clean hands to challenge these in-| to investigate the American military government in Ger- . . ! nival —By Dick Turner charges but was not well-documented :

C : {themselves a pension. . i i " trained and the American Legion, the Chamber | ? formed fine public service. 7 a fal : I rtant at|of Commerce, the National Associa-| Coal miners have never been paid «x 1t-adhered strictly to three sound policies. any moment to take over and op-|tion of Manufacturers, etc. have | & decent wage. Tk : {hear of a wealthy coal miner? They i ; utilities and transportation. This gree that he has become their mas- | : proved. Gossip, hearsay testimony and the general smear | C0 40 ierul to a free people. ter and conscienceless dictator, | descend into the cold dark earth technique were rejected. But, are we a free people, when un- ruthless alike to his own members |NeVer knowing if they will see famths | hopeless cripples. I have known : : : : | have the power to strangle our en- Do you know why this has never |8r¢ than headlines hater inemdieney; vaste OF MISMAN- |, ooonomic life without any re- happened? All the great, success- | families, widow still living, who agement cou proved, it was Chairman Truman’s prac- X g y ’ RSE great public good, have rotated by explosions in coal mines, A coal tice first to lay the evidence before army, navy or other country | {miner should make enough money As a.mecessary corollary 1 am in their officers. By this simple pro-| “© "yn sh 35 and a If th ti t.and: effecti th favor of compulsory military service [cess a John L. Lewis could not have | : age 0 = action, e action was prompt and effective, the com- {it ; ) . ’ thant + | discriminatory legislation favoring life. John L. Lewis represents good mittee was satisfied and went on to something else. Its [service as distinguished from just on TO Rl OE Roose. | Americans, who are not afraid to : y | military training in schools, etc. Re- | '® J : ee | work for a. livi d richiv 4 object was to help win the war. member merely the training of the Veit dumped into the laps of despic-| BE aD ROY de. 1 : whom also have interesting criminal the matter, congress? Do you think “blow the lid off,” which was frequently—was to prepare a Ri an iin Swed Tope. hx records 8 vou should get it all? There is a . ust as essentia 0 ve organ -t J | curious disease which o - yironely yorled Hoth to welloctmented wn Sondlasive tional training as individual train- oh our ‘awmak at all members o e committee, Democrats an e- ’ . have a trained in-| TOO FINICKY ABOUT HOMES" |®™ Which may be diagnosed as Ses Bo sod to ve a a ha eo 2G. Bavaro Indicator {paralysis of the conscience. Now . » i vidual unless you have a traine e KR. A vens » An polis ‘don't tell me it isn't conta report from the Truman Sommittee. And when 9 o it3 {organization to put him in. You glous, for unanimous reports was published, the fur really flew— some people are very unappreciative. don't give a darn but are bent . - : | on so great was the prestige the committee had gained through ROR Mss Jove ihe nel 3p Service I read a Forum letter in your pa- getting all they can. The slogan Cc gl eas y seems to be: “Get the money, get Mr. T b ber of organizations you must have per where a’ lamily was being ye r. Truman .became vice president, then President. ’ : a i P | least partially’ meet the tables of 2% they had three children. We were| People don’t change their attiChairmanship of the committee was passed along to Senator | io a of the individ. | MOVING to a farm and before I told tude something is going to happen. Mead, and, when he resigned to run for governor of New |yual's training could properly be in My landlord, I called the woman so 1 am afraid-also, but don’t know Investigators |some organized national guard. | . { {When I told her where it was she r s s & 2 # | | “ON A than those who had helped Mr. Truman |.oruer ORGANIZATIONS yar ired. isn't it?" said “No,” and when 1 ; : ; : Thomas W. Lloyd, Route 6, Box 487, InThe committee went the way of so many congressional By A J. Schneider, 304 W. Drive, Wood. 531d We heated with a stove she was dianapoiis : ruff Place {horrified, then said, “We might as| This devastating coal strike is Really Means” | and headline hunting. Political partisanship reached the lis one of the best editorials I have place like that” so she hung up. ism. As serious ag if is there is little int wher: i : ever ready in your newspaper, is) Now I spent a nickel to call her and said and little done about it. Just! ¥ he aS tors taken hs SIX Delores ine honest and forthright and without I need every nickel so Mrs. W. C. C. for the reason there is none with! ns on the question of whether | Joe ay BeVisPoper and Shectliy a house? Why don’t they say they roads on public welfare, excepting many. Then the four Republicans, ignoring the will of the | © sdilonal page= pnny iv wan 4 manson? | the Jhorganiged, The question of : ail. . “ " — | merit has no place in this controDemocratic majority, made public a- secret report of a Car | versy, for our boasted civilization committee investigator, a report that contained sensational |and intelligence precludes any warIf the old Truman committee is to serve any further useful purpose, it will have to be reorganized and purged Af politics. |

|a wage or price dispute. It is all | silly, nonsensical and un-American. | These groups are all alike, all I characterized by greed and self-in- | terest, and narrowggminded. Then | we have no ordered economy (equi-| | able exchange). Instead, we have a rigid and sensitive status quo that protests the slightest infraction of the regular order. The government stands by to buy up farm food products when they approach normal, ship it out of the country, or subsidize the producer. Result, one-third of our people can’t have wholesome food in a land of abundance. The wealthy absentee land owners, the dominant power of this country, say, “Give me free enterprise (when prices are ‘high) and a subsidy when low or else we perish” Basically our troubles are agrarian and can only end in dictatorship, fascism, or communism, any name will do—a restrictive land law to family size farms, free production, free marketing. Then a family owning 80 acres of good farm land should be the last on earth to receive financial aid.

DAILY THOUGHT

And Satan answered the Lord, and sald, Skin for skin, yea, all that a man hath will he give for |, his life.—Job. 2:4. 7

» » » MAN makes a death which Nalure

N37 ~~) as

GOOD NEIGHBOR

D*® LEO S. ROWE was born in Iowa but Nicaragua put _ his portrait on one of its postage stamps. It was only one of the many international honors that have been paid to the elderly director of the Pan-American union who met an untimely death in a Washington automobile accident. . The Pan-American union has been acclaimed as one of the most successful of the world’s regional organizations— a union founded to promote the interest, good-will and solidarity of the 21 American republics. Dr. Rowe had been its director for 40 years. A diplomat of extraordinary ability, he was chiefly responsible for building and maintain- | ing. that confederation which could well be an example to the United Nations itself. ‘

AMEN TO THAT | | : can be wisdom in labor leadership. Daniel J. n, president of the A. F. of L. Teamsters’ Union, ram ordering members of that union to withdraw he general strike at Oakland, Cal, said this: ll strike has ever yet brought success to the t. On the contrary, the only result of a persecute and inconvenience the public ‘the thousands of fair employers with

ner

COPR. 1946 BY NEA SERVICE. IWC. T. M. REQ. U,

AT. OFF,

- "Oh, come now, Baxter! Aren't you even going to try for the

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: check? never made. ~Edward Young, A v o : . ’ 4. : a : : : any : ‘ ’ pay hi ow a i : 3 i

money to spend. The towns as well as the farms would increase in population. Prosperity would be passed around like maple sugar at stirring-off time. The farmers were especially enthusiastic about the canals. A canal is in reality just a big ditch, and any farmer knows a good deal about a ditch. So the

| farmers of the canal era were certain that their sur-

plus crops could float to market in any big, wellwatered ditch that would be dug under the Mammoth

Internal Improvement bill, which might become continental in scope. The Wabash and Erie canal was indeed continental in its reach. Its link over the six-mile portage at Pt. Wayne, since the Erie canal in New York was then in operation, would connect New York and New Orleans from sea to gulf, running through Indiana from its northeast corner to its southwest corner. To the Indiana of 1836, this was an exciting prospect, even though we smile at it 110 years later.

Provisions of Bill UNDER THE Mammoth Internsé Improvement bill, provision was also made for: ONE: The Whitewater canal, to run from Nettle creek near Cambridge City down the Whitewater river to the Ohio river at Lawrenceburg. In the early days of canal enthusiasm, James Shriver made surveys in the Whitewater section for a canal to run from Lawrenceburg to Ft. Wayne.

TWO: The Central canal from a suitable point °

on the Wabash river between Ft. Wayne and Logans-

port down to Indianapolis via Muncie, ‘and on down °

the west ford of White river; thence to Evansville by the best route. THREE: An extension of the Wabash and Erie

canal from the Tippecanoe river down to Terre Haute, :

thence via Eel river to the Central canal. Phineas Taylor Barnum would have billed the Mammoth Internal Improvement bill's canal dream as a thing colossal. Under the most favorable conditions, it was a great venture. For the Indiana of 1836, it was impossible. Yet Indiana richly deserves praise for it as long as there is an Indiana.

3 iis an fo bene duorder or mane \WORLD AFFAIRS . . . By Ludwell Denny

"Russ Zone Benefits on U.S. Dollars

LONDON, Dec. 7.—After looting the Soviet German zorié of its factories, scientists and technicians, livestock and machinery, Moscow is getting ready to let the western powers carry the ability by its belated acceptance of German economic unity under the Potsdam pact. : : This is the interpretation here of Russia's latest moves, including apparent withdrawal of excess Red troops from the zone,

Liability a Trading Asset

MOSCOW IS expected to try to use this liability as a trading asset to obtain other concessions from Britain and the United States which have just signed the new bi-zonal pact. Russia probably will request more goods and factories for herself {from the western zones, and American dollars for pump-priming the unified German economy for Russian benefit. Also Moscow doubtless will insist that the United States and Britain recognize the Oder-Neisse line as a permanent frontier, thus giving the rich eastern provinces of Germany to Russia's puppet, Poland. Besides the fact that Russia already has got everything possible out of her German zone, several related factors make it more profitable for Moscow to shift from the policy of open obstruction to alleged cooperation with the western powers in Germany. These include: 3 FIRST: Russia's long effort to transform the zone into a Communist country has failed. Despite the ‘terror of a police state, elimination of many democratic leaders and press, intimidation and rigged elections, the Reds are still a small minority. They remain in office only through a phony “unity party”

\ *

which disfranchises the strong Social Democratie party—a system which cannot long be maintained. SECOND: The Communists are almost lost in Berlin. They are even in a #maller minority in the American, British and French zones. So the isolated Soviet zone has become worthless as a political base

for communization of Germany at the same time

it becomes an economic liability.

THIRD: Having stripped the Soviet sone bare,"

Russia now desperately needs machinery, steel, coal, electrical equipment, et¢., from the western zones to speed her militarization program at home. She also needs consumer goods. But the U. 8. zone will not give her machinery on the reparations account until she agrees to an over-all German settlement. And the western zones cannot produce goods which she wants on the reparations account without German economic unification as provided by the Potsdam agreement, which she has blocked hitherto but which is now to her interest.

Zone a Liability FOURTH: The Soviet zone has become a Hability as a base for a huge army. Hitherto, her large occupation army served two purposes; troops could live off the land, which is less possible today, and

they could provide the iron curtain while Russia

was completing fortifications on the Oder-Neisse line farther back. Now, however, the huge army in the Soviet zone is a wasteful use of Russian manpower, FIFTH: Contact of the Red troops with the west

has been demoralizing, since they have learned how

backward Russia is. They may become a danger to the Soviét regime unless they are sent home and reindoctrinated. La

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if L. Lewis is doing great damage to the cause of or- *

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Butler university its Christmas me A reading, “Th ' be given by Mrs. & musical accom Victor T. Hertz . has charge of supper, assisted | . ert Clay, Robert ' ton A. Coxen an Toys, canned | will be collected Mrs, Coburn Sch

. Miss Mildred | New Jersey st., the Indianapolis Chi Omega soror mas meeting at ’ Mrs. Bess Wri ings and membe ords to be prese fon County Ch home. Mrs. Ro program chairme D, Fink, preside the business sess Assisting hosts William H. Roh Walker, co-chai ' dames William N Dwight Risley a Miss Margaret Janet Chapman,

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» The Indianapc ciation of Sigma meet at the hon Summers, 47 E. Wednesday. Mr will read a Chris At this time e: gives its Christm Maine Seacoast ' the hostess will Watson and Miss » Members of Z rority of Frank tained last nigt dance at the M:

Rev. W To Res

A ceremony at row will unite M and H. Eugene 1] PF. W. Wiegmann in the Downey church. Parents-of the Mrs. John B. . Hawthorne lane, Harold Bennett, | The bride ha fashi¥ned with a and a net skir fingertip veil w orange blossom carry calla lilies Church Miss Christine sister's maid of dress of blue ne and blue net wi bridesmaids. TI George Bruckma Charles Dippel, han and Miss ( The bridegroon will be best ma Mr. Dippel, Geor; .Bruckman and L of Crawfordsvill A reception in will follow the « couple will leave trip. They will | Rawls ave. Bot Butler university

Party Wil Miss Dora

Miss Dora Fr ridian st, will kt with a bridal] sl by Mrs. Fred C her daughter, M bring, in their hc Miss Frank w ' Marc B. Freema at 11:30 a. m. W chapel of the terian church.

Teen Talk

Tees

By BOBBIE THE IVORY board was fasci of 4—so0 fascina ents decided he about it. Today he is 1 keyboard from t. the very top one part of the ins move dexterous cult phrases . Tschaikowsky works. And now Eas Jr. is the winne apolis symphon strumentalist co! pear with Fabi the orchestra ne

r “I WAS SURI modestly, “and ¢ won until I saw The first audi was held Nov. 2 five judges he violinists, pianist liminary hearis Saturday brough ists before Dr, Se was chosen win “I've been we confessed, and ls three or four | priming for the He had “fidd! Tschaikowsky's |

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it for the auditic Next Saturda) o'clock he will orchestra ‘in tl