Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 October 1943 — Page 18

war casualties reaching into milions, and with the methodical destruction of one German ity after another by British and American bombers. or Certainly the enemy's waning civilian morale is sig- THEN THERE ls the “Calendar of Significah nificant as & long-term factor. But no American should Prune Nin Sos She. job Jor $10.0 . your. M: Be, : A UANERRTON Eve to te atin Nove 3-13 issued by the oven * jump to the conclusion that this means a quick and success- | "0 oi) Joealistie ir rl mas Gl Ag = ACRRIRS Sess beans of OWE, Thin § a 40-page atu wh ful revolt inside Germany. Sia : J : ily 454 £ bh DALE BAR © ; . shun th Sab Sr What's-goi'sig-bappef It is one thing for the German people to lose hope in Wages Cut Late in 1935 : FEI EA 2 Rh RA: : ay ina; 10 Nad: of Bonrente Oebl &. victory and therefore to turn their hope to early peace; | ls oot a Lk it is quite another thing for them to have the will and the of Japan. 3.9 pi CA means to revolt. If there is any relighle testimony what- Nov. 3. 10W=Pirth of VilkJalmus Sng : ever that they have such determination and weapons, we : Nov, 3 1913-Gemn fleet mutinied TE have never heard of it. On the contrary, there is plenty Nor. 4 on al Fiz endeiposh. ! a of evidence that they are too fearful and too weak ta face monopoly

The Hoosier Forum poe Te el lL i trol : hg r She gesiapo terrorists and Himmler guards who contro I wholly disagree with what you say, but will of the : completely. : defend to the death your right to say it.— Voltaire. | on. eo. » ¢ Y, the allied governments are hot depending on (Times readers are invited |ly, the conditions have "German revolt. They are counting on licking German in“ g fo express their views in |Dad that country homes are military power by continued bombing and by land invasion. s this. columma,; religious ‘con: families. So the immediate question is not so much civilian as troversies excluded. Because " military morale. Unfortunately, German military morale . = of the volume received, letis not yet cracking. That is shown by the attitude of most | act ters should be limited to 250 of the German prisoners captured by the allies. It is proved | su vilege. words, Letters must be conclusively by the fighting qualities of German troops | signed. Opinions set forth today on the Russian and Italian fronts, where they are : y here are those of the writers, fighting the most desperate delaying actions against larger aXe Qedesidu SumipaBien Settled—Loew’s for $97,500 “and publication in no way numbers—retreating but not running. implies agreement with those How long before German troops will be infected | Lavishes Praise on Browne erican opinions by The Times. The _ wholesale by the fear and hopelessness clutching their| LEVY MAY have had no inkling of the character Times assumes no responsi. families at home? Nobody knows the answer—except that | of Browne and Bloff when he first became counsel for | axe ‘wh bility for the return of manu-

it will depend chiefly on the size and speed of allied Military | he lavisbes arts or ahoron Were notorious when (ing jy scripts and cannot enter cori victories. : : " instead of fellows enjoying a smoke,| respondence regarding them.) my we would have a wonderful police

If the European war is over by January—as German force. . , civilians desire—or by July or by a year from January, it “will be because the allies have remained united against

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second time by announcing that Alaska had only game wardens and five airplanes for them to use! protecting the 20,000 moose population up there, % that one might search diligently “through mar

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; : . ‘ better life.’ Levy" ‘ {alse hopes of easy victory, against’ Nazi “peace” tricks to rab wih “thought- : By A 5 Wages. Sh dash : . divide them, and against she still forniidable German mili- . Have been in your busy city s Tew tary power. days. “Everyone seems to be happy 2 ALSO BELIEVE

C. Todd, in a minority |, . whistling | report, wrote that he could mot concur “because of |=. ‘De, humming or ut IN COURTESY, BUT..."

' . » ; ¢ ‘By Mary and Marle Smith, 810 Locke st. : .| We read the written by HOPEFUL MEETING sardlty the plain solored private on the 23d. ) ENT ROOSEVELT met a number of business and | pe his article, industry leaders, yesterday in what was said to bq the Troghle

first of a series of conferences for discussion of problems | of industrial participation in the war’ and industrial demob-

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of ndunral vation We the People

ese problems, in both categories, are many, difficult By Ruth Millett

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Call to Do or Die By William Philip Simms

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and closely related.: The war's end may still be far off, but one certain way to bring it nearer is for government,

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industry, business—and labor and agriculture—to work | £8 § to a an ms have now toward agreement on policies and measures necessary | to prevent depression and unemployment when the fighting t } x # : a 1 In this the best interests of all are identical. We will win the ‘war, but we can't win the peace if our country remains an economic battlefield on which powerful groups | struggle over the division of scarcity and seek to enlist | government as a partisan of this or that special interest. High production, high employment at good pay, under a system of free enterprise, are post-war goals that can be reached. The first requirement is that all who have sought to restrai freedom of enterprise—and that guilt is shared by business; industry, labor, agriculture and government —-act to remove the shackles before the problems of peace are upon us. If, a8 we hope, such thoughts as these were in the minds of the president and the businessmen and industrialists who met with him, their conferences can be productive of great good, i

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_ PAP FOR THE PRESS SOME changes were made in the Bankhead newspaper- | if subsidy bill before the senate banking and currency com- | apartment, or even a furnished room) and assurhes ‘mittee approved it by 11 to 5. For instance, the bill would | the whole responsibility for its health and welfare.

now require that the treasury, in spending the proposed 25 | And all the while she is still probably wobbly on

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80 millions a year on advertising, buy the same amount of | the 3 To that . ¢ in all t ‘newspapers. That would presumably pre- fo through willingly and uncomplain

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of directly, so the Chinese; “Honorable Gate" to the palace grounds (in Japan Mikado) was used instead. 3 £4 Until “recently, shopkeepers were not allowed display postcards or other portraits of the empero in their windows because passers-by could icok ¢

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the bill is basically unchanged. 1t is still a frank just as we decorate our brave young men? One out the newspapers, especially the smaller | Shows as mych devotion to duty as nother. the government's expense. ' asury doesn't want it; the treasury is getting | . bond advertising for nothing, contributed by To the Point— : and so on. A great many : fuding this one, oppose the bill—on grounds & economy. But the senate committee has

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happiness :| because the people just haven't learned how to use it, ig * » . :

- sbrate the second anniversary of the Pearl Harbor - + «| fair by wishing there never had been one. Pa Sau } 3 3 | ST

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