Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 31 December 1946 — Page 10

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NEW VISTAS FOR JAPAN EN. MacARTHUR'S headquarters has completed its ‘purges of the war-seeking elements of Japanese society and further purges are unlikely, it is reported from Tokyo. That is encouraging, as we approach the new year in the hope that it will be a year of peace and progress toward a r world. ii ; ee pattern for making over Japan into a «democratic nation, founded on Christian concepts; on the BritishAmerican model, has taken definite form. But it was expecting too much for the Japanese people to assume that .heir minds would accept a new philosophy of life until the allies themselves first had turned their backs on the past. Not all Americans have been able to rationalize the war crime trials with our principles of justice, so it is understandable if to the ordinary Japanese the trials reflected a familiar, v “gye-for-an-eye” philosophy. For centuries, the Nipponese have been taught to subordinate their minds to the will of the emperor, dominated in modern times by a ruthless military and ultra-national-istic bureaucracy. In the process of reducing the emperor to figurehead, he was supplanted in transitional Japanese thinking by Gen. MacArthur, the victorious American-com-mander. It was essential, therefore, that Gen! MacArthur associate himself as fully as possible with a complete break with the past, and with the nation's mental and moral as well as physical reconstruction. The end of the allied

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Hi SNOW Ab} <r GOTTA DO |S GET THIS ON THE - OTHER SHOULDER.

occupation’s purge phase thus represents a step of tremendous importance. If, with the passage of time, Japan emerges from her iod of tutelage as a law-abiding, co-operative member of

Hoosier Forum

"| do not

say, but | will defend to the death your right to say it." — Voltaire.

agree with a word that you

the society of nations, if will be a monument to American yision and achievement. But if our policies are such that the end of our military occupation is followed by the rise of y Japanese Hitler, our victory in the Pacific will be robbed pf much of its real meaning.

ANOTHER SOVIET RED HERRING

#* United Nations disarmament agreement, to be achieved ugh the security council, cannot be accepted in good ith—in view of Russia's record. i : The letter on the subject, addressed to the security

£ £

kin against the Baruch measure.

problem.

anything, unless it is something wholly in their interest. If the Russians sincerely want to join in any program which will contribute to world peace and security, they have yet | to demonstrate it. : 3 * 88 8.2 = |

: if the members of the United Nations cannot agree on

be |

the way of an agreement, but the same words would ust as vital in the treatment of any phase of the disarmaent problem. The provision that treaty violators shall jot be protected from punishment “by veto or otherwise” basic®in any agreement with real meaning. And Mr. ch made it clear the United States would not be a party to an agreement the Russians could treat as anpther scrap of paper. + He was speaking for the American people, as well as or his government when he told the atomic energy commission: ¢ “Let all nations that willingly set their pens to this

{f necessary, war. N ¢ “Gentlemen, it is either, or.”

Only a nation contemplating a breach of faith could |

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unjust assumption to entertain that suspicion regarding the Soviet Union, in view of Russia's flagrant violations of

aisregard of her obligations under the Kussian-Chinese treaty, so recently highlighted by the Dairen incident. ? CHIEF PARTY IS MISSING

PHILADELPHIA has been selected by Director Warren ¢ of the U. 8. conciliation service to be the guinea pig in experiment aimed at preventing strikes. If the scheme works it will be extended to other cities.

fain ‘industrial peace, 3 . here will be 24 members—10 union leaders, 10 man- ] leaders, two labor lawyers, two management law- . This assembly will meet regularly, will be on call Wer an industrial emergency develops, and when 0 action in an emergency will review the activities conciliation service. “Also, at the chairman's request,

economic welfare, scheme has one huge defect. It doesn't include any

victim of such assaults on economic life.

chief sufferer.

noring the public on bdard’s

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one.

yuncil, was drafted by Mr. Gromyko. By his absence from Vl x rand alair 58 e atomic energy commiSsion when Bernard M. Baruch our nouse.

ing against ti roval of his atomic con- mas morning to watch the children us Aghting i Sine for app open their presents. A little item | 3Me

| plan, Mr. Gromyko simply was continuing his eight-day |e ries Tor & short while that | m. precluded the possibility cof If action is what Mr. Gromyko.and the Kremlin really | that occurring. But it wasn't very.’ wat’ I would have bought”; ; . |late in the morning when I revant, he would have attended the meeting of the atomic |, =... 1 me and it was then ‘that

nergy commission, of which he is a member, and supported | 1 heard the story, told over and over|

"He Didn't Get Even One for Christmas This Year; Claims Title"

By C. J. Smith, City

Well, the holiday season is over. I have waited this long to write| «go and so is holding out?” Probthis enlightening article because I wanted to give all my relatives, near’ and far, a more ; . | until the exchange days, were for the most part over. And still I haven't USSIA'S sudden, last-minute proposal for a general gotten one. I have waited, not necessarily with bated breath, just waited, |can come to our own conclusions. for the daily arrival of the mailman, wondering if he would bring me But he didn’t. Could it be, I wondered, that after all these years, this was to be the Christmas it was going to happen? Could this be the time I wasn't going to get ‘one of those-things?” After all this time, I am convinced

than even chance. And, in addition, I"have even waited

|I knew I wouldn't get one from | Mother. She had sent money. And

1 wasn't home Christ-{ “v oie and whited, but none not have been an adequate solution.

{| At last it has happened. The | time has finally come when I don’t i have to say: “My, isn't that pretty,

‘and then mutter under my breath, “who, in heaven's name, would | wear such an atrocious color.”

fr. Baruch’s demand for an immediate showdown on the | again for the heme) of everyone inj“. 1 ct 1 can lay just and honest

most important issue involved in the whole disarmament | po io on "Debbie got. Fire trucks. : : * |with bells, among other things. © It is evident the Soviets are much more interested in iy ther Sandy =ng Sherry el Car Brel. making headlines which will be ammunition for their propa- ; 4 it seems, a uille Doss ote

ganda mills, than they are in agreeing with anybody on other things. Brother and sister-lucaypy ON MAYOR TO GET

what the twinsd .;. to the title, “The Man Who

Didn't Get a Tie for Christmas” . + because I didn't. I didn't give anybody one either. “ ” s

in-law had their turn, too. A dress | gut THOSE OLD SNOWPLOWS”

for one, big robe for another. my wife fared quite well, too, a bowling bag and pj's (those were from me), a leather writing kit from’ sister and other things.

. h first package? ntrolling atomic energy, after the months of study and contained a grand leather iscussion devoted to that subject. Only four words stand | from my ‘three nieces and lone ; nephew. The next gaily wrapped gift?

And then it was my turn to open |

{THERE is no point in talking about general disarmament, presents sent me. : t wondered again, be the time? The

And By Mr, Civie, Indianapolis

Note to Gen, Tyfidall: Winter is upon us. There will be

Could this, I

i t - Nope. That one wpolis this year? How about pass

belt |

That was a box of handkerchiefs, | s 7 3

ers,” too.)

ter-in-law,

very pr | brother

colored ones, and sister-in-law. I have the “show'ers” and “blow’- |g, g The next?

from | “LET'S BUILD RESERVE (Now FOR OUR WAY OF LIFE"

F. W., N, Pennsylvania st, No, not in

{town streets, How about Indian-

I see by the paper that the situa- |

“LUCKY TO HAVE A GOOD GAS UTILITY; AVOID POLITICS” By M. K. 8, Kingsley ave. . Why is it we always perk up our ears the minute anyone whispers,

{ably because, as reasonable human | beings, we want the facts. Then we

The Citizens Gas and Coke Util|ity did the straight-from-the-shoul-der thing when it published its reclord for all the taxpayers to see. | To have handed the record directly 'to a handful of politicians would

What is happening now in Indianapolis brings to mind some|thing that happened in an Illinois |city where we lived a dozen years ago. We citizens were being fur{nished gas at a reasonable rate, {But politicians thought they could do better for us, and Wwe trailed] 'right along behind them. All of! lus liked the words “natural gas”; sounded sorta free-like, | Well, natural gas was piped in. Every appliance in that entire city {had to be changed. The utility

| paid the service charge, of course, | but the householders put up with a world of inconvenience. The results: First, natural gay | was not cheaper. Instead it cost {more njoney.

| m gas manufacture were

| jobs because they have the back-

|ground, the “know-how” to oper-|

ate a utility successfully. That they |do not hold their positions by po-

the taxpayers.

That fact can | be snow and ice. Other cities manage | checked in the federal power com- | 'to get their snow and ice cleaned | mission’s report. Secondly, jobs Gf! off the streets, at least the down- people employed in the manufac-| ture of gas were abolished. And, ' those people employed in by-prod-| ing the word down to your street ucts f | leaning department to get out laid off, too. hose old snow plows, salt trucks| Here in Indianapolis the utility is

and cleaning crews? ] - i Nope, not in that one either. |g;a) g crews? Thanks, Gen- operated by men who hold their

{litical pull is to the advantage of We are lucky to

17's OUR BUSINESS in By Donald D. Hoover

welaent ¥

Law Enforcement Changes Tomorrow

THE LAW ENFORCEMENT picture in Marion county changes tomorrow , . . with indications that there will bé greater-co-operation among the agencies involved. Judson L. Stark, prosecuting attorney-elect, takes over that post after service as judge of superior court. His piace there will be taken by Judge John L. Niblack. Judge Niblack moves up from municipal court, where he will be succeeded by Alex M. Clark, combat

veteran of the war who is expected to continue Judge Niblack’s drive for reforms in the lower courts.

Hoffmann Handicapped by Predecessor . JOSEPH O. HOFFMANN is to be inaugurated as judge of juvenile court despite the churlish refusal of ‘the incumbent, Mark W. Rhoads, to give up the bench because a recount petition is pending chal leriging Judge Rhoads’ repudiation by the "voters. Judge Rhoads can’t possibly win , . . he has succeeded only in handicapping Judge Hoffmann and in demonstrating the lack of co-operation with which he has been charged in the past. Judge Hoffmann, a Democrat elected with support of a bi-partisan citizens committee, starts off with the pledge of co-operation of Mr. Stark, who consulted him regarding assignment of deputies to the court, and of Willlam H. Remy, president of the board of safety, who gave him his choice of policemen for the juvenile court detail. Judge Stark and Mr. Remy, both Republicans, feel. that the juvenile court , , . vital link in fighting crime . , . has not been properly

tegrated with other law enforcement agencies in the

Sheriff Albert C. Magenheimer, interim appointee. to that post since death of Sheriff Otto Petit, officially assumes his post tomorrow also. For the first time th a number of years, all top local law enforcement agencies will be working in harmony. Judge William D, Bain, of criminal court, is among those whe have pledged themselves to the co-operative program, as has Municipal Court Joseph M. Howard, who took office the first of this year, One purpose is to make crime more expensive for the person who commits it, and thus reduce the amount of crime in Marion county. In the past, it

~ has been “cheaper” here, according to those who have

studied the statistics.

Job for Bar Association:

“MUNICIPAL COURT PRESENTS a challenge to the municipal judges and to the Indianapolis Bar Association, It conditions there as are bad as Judge Niblack reports . , . and as other observers confirm , . . . there should be an immediate cleanup in the bail bond situation. Investigation also should be made of the up-to-now unsupported charges of collusion between bondsmen and police, and between police and attorneys. ‘ 2 The attorneys who specialize in municipal cours police cases are entitled elther to being cleared of the charges , .. or of appearing before a bar associat committee. The association has a great hs and professional responsibility in.the matter.

REFLECTIONS . . . By Robert C. Ruark

Ruark Picks 1947

NEW YORK, Dec. 3I.-Judging from some of the recent efforts of my contemporaries, the guy who plays’ a typewriter for a living is duty bound to list the triumphs of the dwindled year. I woyld not have you believe for a minute that my life was not saturated with major and minor coups during 1946, so I will cloak my shyness and let you in on some of my contributions to the world during the past 12 months.

Year of Discoveries

JANUARY , . , dull month. Perfected the telephone. Became interested in thé airplane . . . & new fangled gadget. Campaigned against the bicycle, in order to make the streets safe for children. Wrote stinging indictment of those who claim motherhood is only a passing fad. Caught a bad cold. February . . . shortest month of the year. March . , . Adyised President Truman not to use the atom bomb on the state of Missouri, Discovered an actress named Helen Hayes, who will go far if produgers will only recognize her talent. Put a bug in B. Baruch's ear about how to muzzle the atom. Advised J. Lewis not to strike his miners this year— said the country would never stand for it. April . . , Picked Joe Louis to win the Kentucky Derby. Offered myself as guinea-pig for new miracle drug, streptomycin. Obviously no good. Still have sniffles. Learned how to say “no” in Russian. Revealed, for first time, that ‘a man's best friend is his mother. Or was it dog? : . . May . . . Advised Harry not to declare war on Mississippi. Told him thé country wasn't ready for another war so soon. Scooped the towngon clothes shortage. From the column, May 19—"The spinning wheel must be de-controlled if the nation is to be clothed.” June . . . Found an apartment. Picked Assault to beat Billy Conn in the big fight. Sounded deathknell of OPA. Told Harry so, but he wouldn't listen. Got wind of some big doings in the Kremlin and took it straight to Washington. Had to sit on that story, but we know now, don't we? Caught the act of a

to Win Over 1946

marvelous new tapdancer named Bill Robinson. He should go far. July ... Went to the coast. Told Zanuck to watch out for the English invasion of the movie field. He wouldn't listen. Told Perlberg he'd better take Cume

- mins out of the Amber role and give it to Darnell,

And would you believe it? Discovered a marvelous new juvenile named Gable, but I think his big ears will probably be a handicap. Same goes for Van Johnson's snub nose. August . . . Kept the country out of war with Guatemala. I mean, after all, what's the use of starting a war you can't win? Told Harry so. Nailed down rumors that there was lots of oil in Venezuela, Straight Commy propaganda. September . . . Got hayfever, Discovered a new crooner named Sinatra, and predicted he wouldn't go very far. Too thin. Picked Henry Wallace over Truman. Wrote a bitter piece denouncing leprosy, Revealed inside story on meat shortage. From the column: “There will be no meat in our homes until you can buy it in the stores.” Picked Joe Louis to beat Army. October . . . Liberia. November . . . Picked Davis and Blanchard for AllAmerica. Suggested Elliott Roosevelt as ambassador to Russia. Caught another cold.

Won Another Revolution DECEMBER . . . Came out in favor of Christmas. Picked Republicans over Democrats. Was a little shaken to learn the elections already over, but pleased that my judgment stood up. Won a revolution single-handed in Venezuela, where I had gone to investigate reports of oil discoveries. Kept you-know-who out of war with you-know-what. Revealed that the Santa Claus in a well-known department store was in reality a Kremlin agent. Picked 1947 over 1948. Picked my cold over me. That will give you some idea of how strenuous my year has been. Gad, the responsibilities of writing a column are simply staggering.

Kept the country out of war with

SAGA OF INDIANA . . . By William A. Marlow

First Railroad Was Started in 1834

THE RAILROAD NOSED into Indiana with a snout a mile and a half long. This was a little road with wooden rails and horse-drawn that ran from

the last corporate line of Shelbyville 1.5 miles to Lewis creek. It was opened on July 4, 1834. The stone marker on modern road 29 east of Shelbyville says this road was the first railroad west of the Allegheny mountains. But the record shows that a similar road, the Lexington and Ohio, was organized at a meeting, over which enry Clay presided, on April 16, 1831, and that the road was opened in August, 1832. This was about a month less than | two years before the Shelbyville line was opened.. | Transportation a Méjor Issue HOWEVER, THE SHELBYVILLE line was rousing- | ly celebrated on the day of its opening. There were | round trip excursions from Shelbyville, a 25-cent round trip fare, with total fares for the day $60. A barbecue at-night topped off an exciting day for these

there either, That was a box of {tion in Germany and Japan is get- pave a good utility, let's keep the enthusiastic Hoosiers back in Andrew Jackson's day. shaving things from another sis- ing around to the point that the political element out of it

© The

next I

knew [final purges, at least on a large £8. #

couldn't contain “it” for the box |scale, have been completed and the . , was much too big. No, that was | ahti-democratic boys have been got- | CHRISTIANITY'S TURN some pajamas from my wife. And ten out of the governments. That | TO AID JEWISH PEOPLE

|

Carnival —By

| |

ives of the public—the public which has been

under the tree, nicely wrapped, was |

And we hope it will work—but our fingers are crossed. | The conciliation service moved to create in Philadelphia labor-management-government assembly to help main-

| {

both those countries.

}

Dick Turner

‘participate in conciliation of disputes that threaten

|

le days of giant industrial enterprises, vital pub- | | _ d industry-wide unions, labor disputes have | private quarrels. The public has the biggest

come when management interest and subordinated to public interest, and sup- |

bu fn Jan Ry

let's

is'a good thing, because it means By Sigmund Ewen, 304 Central ave. a new hat I had bought myself [the people of those countries can | several days hefore Christmas, at! settle down to the business of refreaty realize that its wilful breach means punishment and, [el He La am OHS Sinn, Smouratls Jue ne | And so it went through the pile {of gifts under the tree. But there | wasn’t any there. : : 3 : “Well,” I ‘thought to myself, “I object to doing business on such terms. And it is not an had better wait several days be- forget that they were enerhies and | (fore making any rash statements. |give them a hand. We have disThere is a possibility that the mail- {credited their leaders. , Now {man might bring me a package 'build up a credit reserve for dethe Tehran, Yalta and Potsdam agreements, and complete | from one, of my distant relatives.” |mocracy? "

The message that the U. 8.

'hope, without the ever-present fear lft to the pagan murderers of milthat the M. P's or the local cops|lions of will be around to get them. We're

competing with other ideologies in|gninion a slap in the face to all deIt's time to|

innocent Genghis Khan style)

people

cent Americans. f

| | pardons 800,000 Nazis—a Christmas

Wouldn't it be more timely an an-| nouncement on Christmas eve that| lhe company was am 2s birthday gift to Christ and “His| pecple the U. 8S. government (as co-| signer of the Balfour declaration]

tnt Palestine be made a Jewish

homeland) ordered it's navy to bring 500,000 displaced and povertyerricken Jews from Europe to Palestine? Or that the U. 8. government lis ready to give Palestine the status

| |

{of a Hebrew democratic republic?

| onets,

|

appreciated.

DAILY THOUGHT

THus saith the Lord; Cursed be be the man that trusteth in man, and maketh flesh his arm, and whose heart departeth from the Lord.—Jeremiah 17:5. 3 ” ” .

wise have cried, -

that's cast!”

INC. YM. RE= «PAT AFF;

A oo i *That Dinwiddie always was a rotten loser!”

»

before the blast!

terrified?—R. W. Glider.

Christianity owes it to Him, their | Savior to help rebuild Israel and for

the remnant of the persecuted Jews, I'd say Christianity it's your turn.| “concessions” near the end of the United Nations

Your moral help will be very much |

WE LEAN on Faith; and some less “Behold the butterfly, the seed Vain hopes that fall like flowers

What man can look on Death un-

| -But this little sailroad had a very practical side. It proved, for example, that a horse could draw 40 or 50 people at a rate of 19 miles per hour on wooden { ‘rails; on a road that had one cut of five feet; one | embankment of five feet, and one of 10 feet; two | curves and two bridges. . This road was in reality a seribs of experiments in railroad building. It was built by Judge William J. | Peasley, a Connecticut Yankee out west to stay, and a

| railroad enthusiast who in his spare time whittled out

(the| yitt1e cars, trucks and engines, and talked railroads at is in my every opportunity.

The Lawrenceburg and Indianapolis railroad owned | this road. The 15-mile experiment at Shelbyville was made primarily to gather data for future roads, which bitiously planning to build.

Greater Red Inf

dominate the international scene during 1947 even

1 am sure this would much more] , ast. | please Christ for His birthday than more completely than in the pi anything else. I am also sure if He| were living at the present time He | would identify Himself with His | persecuted brethren whose blood | flowed in His veins, whose language | He spoke and whose principles He ht. Ma He would be a starvEe D. P. concentration | atomic ‘control, peace with Germany, peace in the cafhp in Europe, Palestine or Cy-| Pacific and Far East and fate of China, India, Korea, prus, under the pagan English bay-, Turkey, Greece and other vital areas are in the

Some of the most crucial problems of all time will come to a head in the next 12 months, and Russia's stand largely will decide whether there is to be a lasting peace or just another truce.

Yield Only Temporarily FUTURE OF -UNITED NATIONS, disarmament,

balance. That is why diplomats are still seeking to evaluate Russian actions of 1948 at London, Paris and New York. Many are convinced that the so-called Soviet

meetings were more apparent tham real. Ever since Brest-Litoysk, Russian diplomacy has followed a pattern. Whenever it found itself up against what, for the moment, seemed immovable, it appeared to yield, or make “concessions.” Jujitsu is the Japanese art of yielding only to throw one’s opponent off balance. The Kremlin, more than any other foreign office, makes use of this principle in diplomacy. : It was at the peace conference of Brest-Litovak, in’ 1017, that the Russians first applied it to the Germans. Moscow wanted the Germans to get out of the little countries around her borders and leave them “gutonomous”~that is to say, within Moscow's orbit, Berlin wanted it the other way.

resumed their march eastward. Whereupon Premier Lenin intervened. Said he: Ly i “ “Our (present) position is hopeless. This peace

ch ai OT aE ol a wid

WASHINGTON, Dec. 31.—Moscow is expected to

After hanging fire for months, the parley broke off and the Germans

This was done at a time when Indiana was in a red-hot discussion over transportation, which was a top matter all over the United States. The dilemma was the choice to bé made as to turnpikes, canals and railroads. The cost of construction, the upkeep, cone venience, and efficiency of service—all these and other phases of transportation problems were argued to and fro in the state in heated chatter and endless discus~ sion. The whole matter boiled down into a transportation log-rolling spree in the state legislature. Out of all this, Madison finally emerged with the first commer« cially operating railroad in Indiana. It opened for trafic from Madison to Graham creek on April 29, 1839. It was the third railroad in the United States opened for the traffic west of the Allegheny moune tains. The Lexington and Ohio, from Lexington, Ky., to the Ohio river at Louisville, opened in 1832, and another road running from Toledo, O. to Adrian, Mich., opened in 1836. The Madison and Indianapolis railroad was opened for business only 14 years behind the oldest railroad in the world. This was a 32-mile horse-drawn line from Stockton to Darlington in northern England, which opened in 1825. It was only nine years behind the Baltimore and Ohio railroad, the oldest railroad in the United States, opened in 1830.

Tempo of Machine Age THUS THE RAILROAD nosed into Indiana, inte the nation, and into the world. From it the state caught the spirit and the swift moving tempo of the machine age and its modern world. Prediction aside, when the world moves from the machine age, Indiana will nose forward with it in the spirit of that high adventure that thrilled her when her railroad nosed in at Madison on April 29, 1839,

WORLD AFFAIRS . . . By William Philip Simms

uence in Next Year

must be accepted as a respite enabling us to prepare a decisive resistance to the bourgeoisie and imperiale ists, The proletariat of the world will come ‘to our aid. Then we shall renew the fight.” Diplomats with.long experience at grappling with Moscow's spokesmen before the United Nations and elsewhere have learned that the Russians always make the most extravagant claims at the outset, Then, toward the end, they suddenly “yield” Not that it isn't their just due, but for the sake of unity, they will make a “concession.” They will drop all claims to the moon. #In 1946, it is pointed out, Russia never, at any time—whether at London, Paris or New York— yielded on « single fundamental point. Near the end she sometimes accepted in “principle” certain are rangements against which she had fought for weeks like the “no veto” on arms inspection, for instance —only to make it plain later on that the “concession” was meaningless; that the test was yet to come.

New Attitude Not Dependable RUSSIA STILL HOLDS on to the three Baltie states, half of Poland, part of Germany, the Balkans] annexations in Asia and other war gains, Greece, Turkey, Iran, Korea and China are still under press sure from her direction, the peace treaties with Italy, Bulgaria, Hungary, Romania and Finland are almost entirely as she drafted them originally and, once the British and Americans have pulled up stakes, Trieste will be at Tito's mercy.

During 1947, therefore, it would be foolish to #

count too heavily on Russia’s much=touted “new mood.” As at Brest-Litovsk, she may be expected

enabling (her) to prepare a decisive resistance” at a

more auspicious time and place. The Japs Are not :

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the only ones who can play at jlulitsu. Y

ig

Boga inp ARs

accept “in principle,” whatever she must “as a respite *

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TEs 50

MAN New Year apolis Atl members The } ing serve will be a fl any r of 12 will be Moreland, (

host to a pi friends.

Parties dorff, Charl Will Rossite a group of | E. 8. Ri groups of e John H. Re dricks, R. Harry D. Lt Others Don Ball, ( Ralph Iula,

Blue, Silv

A COLA at the Mer and sprayec will play fo Mr. anc in. charge o James L. E Wallace an Reserva F. Holton, | Irving M. 1 are Messrs, Harold J. £ Gordon ane Others Jr., Dr. anc Guy, Norb | J. Floyd Ki Reserve George * B. Beebe and

Columbi:

THE Ci 8 p. m. toc Party reser ville, Dr, a Mesdames

Th forest” for to 10:30 ot Malcolm G Party club presid Hickman, I C. N. Ang: Jr., Henry G. Consodi

Other dames Cou Louis E. R Mrs. Franc A. Kemper D. William Also p Frank A. | John Hen Lewis, Pre and Dr. J.

Breakfas

ANDY tonight at p. m., and morning. Leasure, C Hickam. S Frank A. -

A brea the Hillcre ginning at Mrs. R. F. Also p M. B. John Robert E. |

The T in the Ind for the ev Boozer and

Nupt Will

The Rev. F St. Anthony read the von Jean Cunni King at 8 o' The cerem of the bride’ William R. Warman avi the son of

B. King, Te

The bride wool suit wit a corsage of unattended. A receptic follow the w will leave or burg, Fla, in Erie, Pa, The bride Academy of King attend South Caroli Sigma Nu fi

Plan Te

Mrs. Edwa daughter. M both of 440 will entertair p. m. tomo mother-in-la Roanoke, Va

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