Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 September 1944 — Page 11

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EVERETT BEARD, 5837 Haverford ave, is a pretty fice sort of fellow to have in a neighborhood. Each year, he throws a party for the folks In the immediate neighborhood. Last year, it was a barbecued ham Affair. Sunday, .he had a couple dozen of the neigh-

America Flies TWO SMALL hinged strips of metal fastened to the underside of a P-38 Lightning's wings bave

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can out-dive any fighter it meets in the its pilot retains full control at speeds which the pursued, or pursuing, ship into thrash. ing “disintegration.” : : ‘an airplane speed approaches the speed it effects the air like snow is affected in

tumor and gossip, I would like to mention one per-

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By Max B. Cook

piling up in front of a plow and breaking loose in ¢hunks. The P-38 with its tremendous speed was the first fighter to encounter this “compressibility” in high-speed dives. ;

‘Air Masses Pile Up

“MASSES OF air pile up In front of the wing during sharp dives,” Johnson “These masses break off in ‘chunks’ roll back and strike the ‘tail surfaces so hard that the turbulence causes

two extremes is a broad belt where the air cannot make up its mind. “Within this compressibility . belt the air's be-

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|. Hitler Imit

- CHAPTER Il . By SIGRID SCHULTZ ' IF WE are to protect ourselves from Hitler's system we must thoroughly know

-

f

must learn the manipof the ciphers, how they

varieties of

ail

exploited to political advanthe lowest to the finbe brought into play. s = =» HITLER worked tirelessly, adhering strictly to the counsel of the German scientists who were coaching him and his friends for Job designed by the secret general staff. . The Nasi cells in every factory, in every office, in every school, reported regularly to their party

;

political leaders, for subleaders,

‘réts, press and propaganda services, all spread the Nazi creed of of humanity and of Nazis to the

same pat-

the intrigue and calumny,

timidation-—every step accompanied by scientifically and climaxed by the coup of a

HUMAN INTEREST— Chicken Mascot Rides With Yanks ‘On Sherman Tank

Ralph T. Campbell of Wheelersburg, O, who picked her up north of St. lo. ;

Ei s CAMEL KICK WORTH $30? -

PITTSBURGH, Sept. 26 (U. P.). -~If a citizen is kicked by a

; "= NO SIREN, LATE TO FIRE NEW YORK, Sept. 26 (U, P.). —Volunteer firemen. in suburban Byossett were an hour late reach-

~ SECOND SECTION |

GERMANY WILL TRY IT AGAIN—No. 2

is method seems almost a fool-

situations, to dif“hi hn io oe a py i i an re eo could

TRAINING courses for future.

German superiority to, the rest

WITH AMERICAN ARMOR ON

camel, must city council “kick in”

BL

technique—Always to spread the Nazi creed of G Here Hitler is speaking at the Berlin Sports Palace.

compact, carefully co-ordinated body of trained men. .. wt -~Phat “was thé system through which the Nazis came to domi-

nate Germany—the Hitler system.’

: . =» HOW WAS the Hitler system

applied in foreign countries? Through many channels, There

© were: : ONE: Germans or hyphenated .

Germans living in other countries who could be coerced into working for the Nazis, TWO: Groups won fo Naz thinking by anti-Semitism. . THREE: Groups which fell for the Nazi claim that naziism was a protection against communism. FOUR: Groups believing they could gain bigger profits by cooperating with the Germans, FIVE: Occupational groups hoping for success through nazi-

‘ piece in each group’ complained

about the way the government sabotaged their professional interests. If they would. co-operate with some (camouflaged) Nazi group, it would find means of

compelling the local state to favor -

them. SIX: The world war I veterans, themselves, in all countries of the world. > 8 a .» «in THE VETERANS wanted no more wars; they wanted a lasting peace. Af their conventions in the important European cities,

one.. they fraternized, and they re-

joiced when friendly Germans assured them that Hitler's monumental architectural projects would take several ‘generations fo complete, : 5 : If one went to the trouble of pointing out indications of immi-

ators Will R

SPE

3

correspondent in ‘Berlin from 1919 to 1841, Sigrid Schultz saw the behind-the-scenes preparation for the coming “war-in-peace” that she warns may culminate in world war IIL This is the story of Germany's plans to win the peace, plans into effect.

4

nent Nazi aggressions, many of

them would burst out, "But the’

Nazis all say they love peace.”

THE BULKY files of inside in-

formation procured by Nazi agents cannot all be destroyed by British; American and Russian bombs. The agents can’t all be killed in action. § Hitler surely has more than one

set of files and one set of spies.

Once you start with agents and agitators, you have to have others to check on them, and ultimately

. a whole network of secret serv

ices. : ‘ The Nazi plan has been carried out or furthered abroad by: ONE: Organizations of Germans living abroad and affiliated

local German clubs; colonial as--

_ sociations. . TWO: Official German diplomatic ' representatives, consuls, military, air and naval attaches. THREE: Nazi party representatives among the diplomats. FOUR: . Gestapo agents masquerading as factory, foremen, machinists, bridgé-tenders, postmen, air-raid wardens, and the like. FIVE: The local equivalents of the former National Socialist clubs, under. various ‘aliases. SIX: The German military espionage service under Col. Nicolai. SEVEN: The commercial espionage service of German ‘ big

Up Front With Mauldin

yy *ramnce

“Pm @ most valooble man in @ third wave. Ever'body give me thelr cigarets t' carry in me shirt pocket”

had to be summoned individually by telephone. : :

. =» # WAR HERO HURT BY BUS NEWARK, N. J, Sept. 26 (U, P.).~Anthony Calco, 23, who received a medical discharge from

the army for combat fatigue ‘after coming through 35 bombing mis sions over Germany unscathed, was hospitalized with chest injuries suffered when a bus on which he was. a.passenger hit a telephone pole. ; A»

4

erman superiority to the rest of humanity.

| ___As_an American newspaper}

that even now are being put |

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 1944 --

ise Like Toadstools

Ne

industry, making’ use of their

trusts, agreements to exchange news. This service acts to restrict foreign ‘production. and create trouble. : EIGHT: So-called patriotic associaitons with pro-Nazi backers. NINE: Perverts and criminal elements which must obey the Nazis or risk exposure — the blackmail guard. “ TEN: The Kultur groups, barefoot dancers, musicians, singers, so-called discussion clubs, professors, and students who think they are being brave and unusual by espousing Nazi theories. ELEVEN: Anti-Semitic associations and their pro-Nazi, proFascist collaborators. : TWELVE: The individuals whose riches or prominence en- _ title them to special cultivation. Traveling to Germany, they received the. finest luxury suites and the best of good times at the expense of the German government. © And back in Berlin, in Stuttgart, in Hamburg, in Erfut, in Munich, in Vienna, little mouselike men and women study their reports from abroad. And as they index and cross-index them, they feel that they have their

fingers on -the pulse of the world.

8 8's

NO MATTER who is master of |

Germany after world war II, . Hitler's Nazi ideas will still live on in some greedy hearts within Germany and without. Eager carriers of the Nazi disease, of the Pan-German fever, are merely hibernating. It is up to us to .keep them impotent. For they know how the racket is worked—from the inside. they'll try it again.

TOMORROW—How Hitler organized the women. os

Branch Offices

For Registration

Of Voters Listed, §

Branch offices for the registration of voters will be open from 10 a. m. to 8 p. m. at the following places; TODAY .

No. 43 School, 150 W. 40th. y No. 18 Fire House, Tibbs and W. Wash-

fowen School, Hunter and Raymond. - Speedway Cify Hall No. 80 School, 520 E. 62d. No. 16 Fire House, 5355 N. Illinois. Neo. 23 Fire House, Rader and Udell TOMORROW AND THRUSDAY No. 8 Fire House, 626 E. 11th.

No. 28 Fire House, 512 E. Maple rd. No. 6

Main office, room '34, Court Honse, open every day from 8 a. m. to 10

p.m,

~ On to Berlin

By UNITED PRESS . The nearest distances fo Berlin from advanced allied lines today: ’ WESTERN FRONT--297 miles (from point near Nijmegen. Gain of three miles in week.)

RUSSIA—315 miles (from War-

saw, Gain of five miles in week.)

ITALY-550 miles (from point near Castel Del Rio. Gain of three miles in week.)

GIRL SERIOUSLY BURNED

_ Miss Virginia Altmeyer, 19, of 722 Elm st., was seriously burned

early today when she stood too close to an electric heater and her robe caught on fire. Daughter of Mr. and Mrs.. Ralph Altmeyer; she

{was taken to City hospital,

By Crockett Johtson

And they're | oll soluble |

i

American connections ii cartels, |

And

Housing Must

By DON E. WEAVER Editor, Ft, Worth Press

AMONG THE many groups

need for post-war housing is the

" C.1.0, which has issued a book-

Abundance seems to be the key= = note of the C.I1.0. housing plan. “It will shortly be within our power to determine for ourselves the nature of all the surroundings amid which we live,” says the booklet.

old, but has mever yet been attained. 2

Herbert Hoover had it when He dreamed of a chicken in every pot and two cars in every garage. Vice President Wallace had it when he declared it our duty to provide a quart of milk for every Hottentot. And before our time it was 40 acres and a mule, . ” » ne PLANNING IS imperative. The need for better housing for mil lions is obvious. But let's try to keep out of our minds the idea that some Great White Father or some governmental “agency can make us all secure and coms fortable, fa “People cannot live off the gov~ ernment. It is government that lives off the people. And the more government takes from them, the less they have for themselves. :

We tried pump-priming. and public works for 10 years g the depression, and we still had 10,000,000 unemployed. It was

“war that ended unemployment.

It always does, but we can’t stay perpetually on a war economy. 2 ® =» ; WE CAN AGREE with the C.1.0. that this country will need lots of new homes every year for several years. We can agree that planning for whole housing areas and for redevelopment of old areas should be started now by cities and towns. But unless industry and agriculture can furnish jobs and keep on creating wealth, new houses cannot be paid for, either by pri vate “enterprise or government, and the masses will not be able to pay to live in them, either by private payments or public taxation. ba produce wealth, but government cannot. Good shelter is desirable, but it is an advantage to be en=«

joyed after we have created the wealth to build and support

We, the Wom Hobo Heaven Has Women In the Kitchen By RUTH MILLETT MAYBE YOU get a chuckle out of reading thas Jeff Davis, king of the hoboes, says” his organization wants women to go back to their kitchens at the war's end. But even though it is the last straw for men who have

because they can’t stand the

Miss Millett any man to decide where woman's place is. "or x 2 ® 8.8 : BECAUSE the men who so loudly banish women to home life, unrelieved by the experience of out: side ‘jobs, have no more notion what such a life is like than hobo has.

The most the average man has ever hung around ‘a house is fi 1 a two-weeks’ vacation—and he is

she doesn't the great problem of unemployment is

“BUT THERE is one diff between Jeff Davis and lis h reason for deciding women's ‘is in the kitchen and the a man's deciding so. St