Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 October 1944 — Page 6

(Continued From Page One)

‘§!for themselves the dictatorship

% The ALPS SHOE REBUILDERS 10 N. Delaware St, O50,

Browder Urged Revolution |

Then he urged that “for the workers to win a real democracy they must organize of the proletariat|

i advanced one anywhere,

rection were taken.” ; To Browder then there was no

presidential candidate, Foster, let the cat out of the bag less than a year ago. In the Nov, 9, 1943, Daily Worker (Earl Browder, Foster revealed the Communists’ true opinion of America. He'said: “The U. 8. 8. R. . ,., has always been a democracy, the most The sothe Soviet an altogether of any cap-~

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is claiming the respectful attention of America’s voters on the grounds the Communists have always been in the forefront of the resistance to fascism. They hide the fact that in Europe, while the Fascists were pushing into “power, the Communists haggled over questions of party regularity while, at the same time, resisting co-operation with sincerely pro - democratic and anti - Fascist parties, lest their own pristine red garments be soiled. In Italy, as Mussolini neared premiership, the fourth Moscow Congress of the Communist International in Dec. 1922, spoke ap“provingly of the split which divided the Italian Communist from the democratic parties and helped bewilder the Italian people: “The split . . . was an absolute necessity. . . . We do not regret the split . . . because the young, weak Communist party of Italy has, nevertheless, saved the honor of the revolutionary class.” Their honor untarnished, Mussolini marched to power.

Disregarded Hitler In Germany, with the experience of Italy behind them, the Communists showed even less concern over the threat of Hitler and the { rising Nazi party. They regarded the anti-Nazi Social Democrats as

Comintern, general headof world communism disas “clap-trap” the demands a united front with the Social | Democrats, then the strongest antiHitler party in Germany.

Se

“The task of the Communist of Germany,” it ordered on . 1, 1932 (less than 60 days be-

! ag before—to direct the chief blow, !-.

| i | at the present stage, against social

At the same time, in his book,

hypocritical democratic pretenses.” Change Their Tune

After the Berlin-Rome-Tokyo axis became a threat to Russia in 1936, the Communist parties began to talk about “preserving the democracies.” No one screamed louder for their country to stand up against Germany than the French Communists. . They supported the general mobilization as war threatened and among those called up was Maurice Thorez, general secretary of the Communist party and the Earl Browder of Frante. Appearing in | uniform before the chamber of ‘deputies, he backed France's first War moves. | ‘Thereafter, Russia’s non-aggres-sion pact with Germany became public. The Communists everywhere turned anti-war. Thores deserted. His party demanded that France accept Hitler's terms. Thorez fled to Moscow. Last month Gen. De Gaulle refused him

iq

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WILL In 1936, Now Supports FDR

N

"FINAL TRI

Services Marked by Simplicity. (Continued From Page One) *

hovered about their radios listening to the galleries chant, “We want Willkie.” i : no Perhaps they recalled the tumult and the exaltation when the impossible happened, and reluctant politicians bowed to the will of the

people. They were thinking of Wendell Willkie’s return to their quiet community, still the same genuine unaffected man they knew, yet somehow touched with They were thinking of the fever and excitement of the campaign when all over the world people opened their newspapers to read the stories datelined “Rushville, Ind.” They thought of other visits when exhausted by his labors and his battles, Mr. Willkie, the citizen of the world, returned “to touch earth” at Rushville and to do little, wellremembered deeds of Kkindliness and thoughtfulness for his neighbors. ‘Hope of His Country’ They were thinking of the man who was “the hope of his country” and became, to an even greater degree, the hope of the world; the man. who was fearless and forthright and d#idependent and never compromised his great vision.- And they were thinking of the man who was their friend. They gave this man the kind of a funeral he would have liked, quiet, sincere and unostentatious. Along with his friends from other cities and other states, his boyhood friends and his business associates,

|

Burial at Rushville Follows|

Services for Clifford G. Askin, member .of the firm of Royster & Askin funeral directors, \and founder of the Indiana College of Mortuary Science, will be held at 2 po m. tomorrow at the Royster & Askin funeral home, 1902 N. Meridian st., with burial in Crown Hill, Mr. Askin died Sunday at Methodist hospital.

FREDERICK PINTZKE Funeral services for Frederick

William Pintzke, who died yesterday at St. Vincent's hospital, will be

fete 05h : ix

P.)—Kenneth B. Elliott, industrialist, and Charles L. Egenroad, South ;

Be BURIAL TOMORROW representatives from counties would attend a public hearing by the governor's aviation commission here Oct. 27.

G82; 8 g sped j 5 3%, g

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STUDY INDIANA AVIATION SOUTH BEND, Ind, Oct. 18 (U.

20

held at 8:30 a. m. tomorrow at the residence, 5315 N. Delaware st., and at 9 a. m. at St. Joan of Arc Catholic church. Burial will be in Crown Hill Mr. Pintzke was 71 and had lived in Indianapolis all of his life. He founded the old Superior Bearing|* Co., which he later sold to the Fed-

adviser for the Mongul Corp. until a year ago, when he retired. He was-a member of St. Joan of Arc church, the Indianapolis Mannerchor and the Athenaeum. Survivors are his wife, Mrs, Eliza~ beth Heeg Pintzke; a sister, Mrs. Dorothea Domroese, Crawfordsville; a brother, Gustave, Indianapolis;

eral Mongul Corp. He served as =

. {neath the elms and the sycamores

his college chums and world war battery-mates, his loved ones and the political leaders of his state, they filed all day through the Wyatt funeral home to bow a moment before his coffin. And during the services they sat, very sober and very still, or stood outside in simple e. Ritual and Prayer

The words of the ritual and of the prayer by Dr. C. V. Reeder and | § the brief address by Dr. George Arthur Frantz sunk home, with here and there a phrase, “He that walk-|1 eth upright.” . . . “Peace .I leave unto you.” . .. “Never be afraid.” . + “An honest man telling the truth.” , . . “He pledged his heart to the people,” that seemed to tell the story of Wendell Willkie, And then the men who had worked for him in the fields carried him out to begin that last ride be-

and the maples golden in the afternoon sunshine. It was hard to believe that here was the end of what was mortal of Wendell Willkie, that the strong voice and the vibrant spirit were forever stilled. = On the west slope of a hillside in the peaceful cemetery, the final words were said, again briefly and simply. : Son in Uniform The widow, bowed by her grief, leaned forward to catch them; her strong son, wearing the uniform of the country his father loved and served, stood straight and stricken. A maple, clothed in the bright beauty of autumn made a backdrop against a sky of October blue, cloudless and clear. Against the tall linden tree and the gnarled hackberry that shaded the grave were banked a few of the bright profusion of floral tributes that had poured into Rushville from all over the world. And the friends of Wendell Willkie, businessmen, housewives, farmers who had left their flelds, |} were massed around the square roped off on the green turf. The preacher extended his arm, the flag under which the great man slept was lifted and they lowered the casket. It was all over. The career of Wendell Willkie was ended. 2 Flowers Drape Grave The family left. But still iu} people lingered, ringed around the grave, watching as the undertaker and his assistants finished lowering the casket and removed their funeral gear from the raw rectangle cut in the earth; as the grave was filled; as some of the floral tributes, the rosebud and pom pom spray from Mme. Chiang Kai-shek; the white chrysanthemums from Governor Dewey;

PER

two nieces and a nephew.

the spray from Louis Roberts, ringbearer at the Willkie wedding who is now in far-off Istanbul; the floral clock from the Elwood Elks, the floral cross from Indiana university, were grouped about and the blanket of Edith Willkie roses and orchids, sent by Mr. Willkie'’s law firm to cover the casket, was draped upon the grave. : Some left. But as they did, otters | came, not as curiosity seekers but |} as ones drawn to a friend. And as the sun sank close to the horizon, there still was a circle standing reverently on that green ‘hill. ; Indiana was loath to say goodbye to Wendell Willkie.

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