Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 April 1941 — Page 9

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES PAGE 9

Million Greeks Reported Moved Before Hitler Attacked FACiEEns Dinu:

Times Special

TUESDAY, APRIL & 1041

STALIN, MATSUOKA, DUCE PERIL HITLER

Will Teleki Suicide Warn Scion of Japanese Samurai? Does Russia Know She Is Marked as Next Victim? Can Mussolini See Handwriting on Wall? By WILLIAM PHILIP SIMMS

Times Foreign Editor WASHINGTON, April 8. —Eventual defeat for Hitler may well turn upon three strange imponderables—namely, what is now going on in the secretmost minds of Stalin,

Mussolini and Matsuoka. Hitler's downfall may come at last through the sudden] Ir progressive disintegration of the Italian effort, through Soviet influence in the Balkans and possibly elsewhere, or

through Japan's growing dis- og inclination to take up the] DE Mi kn Se cudget for the Axis Powers. |cause. Matsuoka, the Japanese Foreign The “harakiri” of Count Teleki Minister, is now in Moscow. He is|lent an unforgettable note of cheduled to proceed to Tokyo on tragedy and gave point to the trend a Thursday. He has just visited the unmistakabiy evident to Matsuoka SE a ARR : Duce and Fueh- evervwhere mn Europe outside the Ba rer. He is know:

Svea wi & PEnNNEY'S . Ls wo Si or Je is Brow borders of the Reich. FCRMEY ‘§ is YOUTH a ERS * VOUL, TEAC CUARTERS

| That Germany really stands ab- ; siderably | solutely alone in Europe is known RY pressed by Adorable Styles! Sparkling Styles in Girls' New

) to most foreign capitals. Fear comslavia’s defiance § pels some of their smaller neighbors: of the AXis while §g " " Sunny Tucker SPRING EASTER :

(CHESS TOURNAMENT SCHEDULED TONIGHT!

The annual tournament of the! Central Indiana Chess Association will be held at 7:30 o'clock tonight at the Indianapolis Athletic Club. A committee will divide the conestants into six or eight sections and post a schedule of matches. The arrangements will be the same as last year, with play by secions until the section leaders are jetermined, the leaders competing n the finals. Champions the last

that funds raised by his committee yore 0s cabled directly to LAFAYETTE, Ind, April 8.— “We send the money and they buy Enginesare, Boietion and Na. ial , ia,” |tion efense” wi iscusse the wind out of Hitler's salis” by| “They drew a lesson from the not be in the way of bombing raids, jie Inslerials, mostly irom Russia hitio) NT iro Sissi 3 moving more than one million civil-| massacres of Poland and the|and, second, so they would not be| Russia is Greece's store-house.” Illinois Section of the Society for jans from Thrace and Macedonia, jammed roads of France just before | in the way of their own army,” Mr. | ——————— Promotion of Engineering Education where the Greeks and Nazis are it fell. They knew Hitler would|Skouras continued. DOCTORS ON PROGRAM lat Purdue University April 26. engaged in a bloody battle. | strike down the Struma River valley He said part of the evacuation, Dr. Paul Van B. Allen and Dr., Some 400 delegates are expected to Mr. Skecuras, a New York theater | leading into Thrace, thence into|was effected with British transports. Walter S. Grow, Indianapolis osteo- attend. magnate, said the Greek legation | Macedonia.” Soldiers were landed at a Greek| |paths, will address the Technique! A panel discussion will be held and the U. S. State Department had, The Army sent census-takers into| port and an equal number of | Section of the 45th annual conven- during the morning session. The three vears have been Clark B.! given him permission to reveal “the the agricultural country to Qelsr-| eivlians taken away. [tion of the American Osteopathic main business session and an elece Hicks. Charles H. Moore and C. B. greatest exodus of human beings in mine how many refugees from cities Skouras said food and med-| Association at Atlantic City, N. J. tion of officers will be followed by Collins | the world.” | could be housed on farms. ical Pp were needed so urgently | June 23 to 27. |an inspection tour of the campus.

“Five weeks ago, when the Nazis); “In five weeks; the army moved into Bulgaria, the Greek| more than one million people out of saw what was/|the cities and scattered them around the country so that, first, they would

HOLLYWOOD, April 8 (U. P.).—] Spyros Skouras, chairman of the barged Greek War Relief Commitee, said! High Command today that the Greeks had “taken coming,” he said.

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to pay lip-service to the “new he was in Berlin § order.” Thanks to Axis propaand by the defeat & ganda. however, certain world capiof the Italian tals—Ilike Tokyo—may still be somefleet by the Brit- what in the dark concerning this ish in the Ionian | state of affairs. But to a Samurai Sea. But there is like Mr, Matsuoka, the true feel-| reason to believe

ing of Germany's unwilling asso-! that what im- ciates will be better understood as pressed him more

than any of these was the dramatic suicide of the Hungarian Premier, Count Paul Teleki Teleki's death was a sort of climax to the Japanese statesman’s visit to Europe. And it was just the sort of climax most likely to linger longest in his Oriental mind. For the Hungarian Premier died in an Occidental version of the haraKirl practiced by the Samurai of

Mr. Simms

QlQ Tradition of the Samurai

Matsuoka is a descendant of the Samurai, He never ceases to preach a return to the old and simple virtues of that honorable race. He has seen Japanese Kill themselves before the gate of the Imperial Paiace out of devotion to an ideal. He was a young man when the victorious Japanese general, Count Nogi, and his wife killed themselves n a "“Junshi” or suicide pact in 1912 so thet they might accompany, In spirit, the spirit of their dead Mutsushito. He fully unands why the Samurai preerred death to the shame of sub"ing to a conqueror. More than European, therefore, he was position to understand, and impressed by. the suicide of Teleki More than any statesman he comprewas that Count

emperor

aerst

ary

“Quiet, Clarence!

a result of Count Teleki's self-im-molation. His death, many feel, may have the effect of a great battle won. Expect Russian Intrigue Stalin, it is believed here, is now definitely opposed to Hitler,

if the Nazis win, Russia will be their next victim. To make his “new order” work, Hitler needs the oil and grain of South Russia, and the only way to prevent the inclusion of that area within the Nazi | orbit is for Stalin to weaken or destroy Hitler him. Stalin probably is not thinking of fighting, but when it comes to intrigue he is a consummate master. As for Mussolini, Hitler is believed to have marked him for the slaughter. The Duce's attack on Greece, in Hitler's opinion, imperiled the whole Axis plan. Defeated in Albania, in North Africa and in the Mediterranean, Mussolini is blamed for having made the unwanted battle of the Balkans necessary and inevitable. His elimination is almost certain, therefore, if the Nazis win. After which Italv. would become a German province, That Mussolini does not this 1s unbelievable. That Italian people are already aware of it seems most likely. But that either the Duce or the Italian people can continue the war with any degree of conviction from now on would be simply incredible.

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