Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 November 1944 — Page 11
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oF RIDAY, NOV. 3, 1941 "Editor Says Cinods Seeks Trade Co-Operation
' Pointing out: that few Canadians have any illusion that their coun“a world in which|t,o is 4 big power, Mr. Moore ‘said the great. nations will co-operate to] that there was no conflict between creaté bigger mmrkets rathef than|the Canadian empire trade aspirato quarrel among ‘themselves over tions and ‘their hopes for -closer dealings with the United States.
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ever-contracting markets.”
(Continsed From Page One) explained,
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“The developthent and, prosperity] of every nation (in. the world, the] establishment of world security, the preservation. of world peace inevitably must depend upon the type of economic world that will be shaped when the - peace makers meet,” he said.
Moore asserted, will depend” nibre ‘upon the leadership of the Englishspeaking nations than upon. any other thing, As far as Canada’s post-war plans go, he said that. the country already had set up rehabilitation measures, such as aid for returned veterans,-and university training for soldiers.
“Job Prospects Good”
“Job prospects are very good,” he said, “and there will be no great difficulty in the immediate. postwar world because of the consumer demand. “We are producing more than we ever have produced in. history but how we are going to sell everything that ‘is made or grown is the big problem.” Canada considers the common-
- What the policies will be, Mr.}|
TD DENIES | HE'S AXIS ALLY].
‘Spain Not Fascist,’ He Says In Bid for Collaboration With United Nations.
(Continued From Page One)
When the Spanish government learned that the presence of these volunteers might affect our relations with the allied countries with which we maintained friendly relations it took the necessary steps to order those volunteers to return to Spain.” eu Franco received this correspondent and Ralph Forte, United Press staff correspondent in Madrid, in historic Pardo. palace. wearing his full military uniform. Spain, he said, has now entered a period of pacification and hundreds of thousands of Spanish exiles already have returned home. ‘“A civil war,” he said, “is dif-
weath air training plan its greatest contribution to victory, the maga: zine editor said. The country has four French-Canadian regiments
| overseas plus the Alouette air squad- |
{ron in the R. C. A. F. and 9100 men ™ the navy.
{
ed out that although the objective of | the Co-Operative Commonwealth
[not believe that the country will turn to absolutism,: to regimentation or totalitarianism. “The survival of any system of democratic government, any system of trade, hinges upon whether or not the post-war world spawns new forms of economic nationalism or gives breath to a more even distribution of its goods and services,” he explained.
MORE AIRBORNE ROCKETS
WASHINGTON, Nov,3 (U, P).— The war department is planning { increased use of airborne rockets | a8 a result of their effectiveness | against transport, buildings, ship-
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Referring to the Canadian government of today, Mr. Moore point- |
| party is state socialism, ‘he can- |
| ping and gun positions, it was dis- |
ficult to settle. It inevitably leaves in its wake, among other evils, the | existence of emigre groups in other | countries, The unhappy lot of those who, are forced to abandon their homes always.moves, the sympathies of those who harbor them.
Doubts Word of Exiles
“On the other hand it is impossible in a majority of cases to take these exiles at their word. . , . “It is dangerous, therefore, to believe what such exiles say when (they speak of those‘who govern in [the country wherein the fortunes of politics have prevented them from living.
A. L. Bradford, director —of United Press foreign services, has_obtained an exclusive interview with Gen. Francisco Franco of Spain—the first interview Franco has granted since he took over the government in 1939. The interview presents an authorized statement of Franco's views on Spain's - domestic and international position. Bradford, a Toreign correspondent of wide ex~ perience, ' formerly was manager of the United Press Paris bureau and subsequently general mane ager for South America.
“Forgetting the bitterness of the struggle we often have extended an invitation to return home to those desiring to live here and I repeat that those who have accepted our invitation are innumerable. , . . “Naturally professional and permanent agitators who defy the au{thority of the state and seek : by {violence to undermine that author|ity—these—so long as they do not | mend their ways will not be allowed {to return.”
Offers Evidence
| | | | In evidence of his statement that | Spain was not allied with axis powJers, Franca said: - [ “When in July, 1940, the German | armies occupied France and reached [the ‘Spanish border and France was {totaly disarmed, instead of seizing {upon these circumstances to attack | France from behind, which our tra- | ditional chivalry would never have permitted, Spain, on the contrary, {adopted a friendly attitude toward ba neighbor.” :
, Racketeers:Hare.. is
RB “Prey on Soldiers
(Continued From Page One)
On delivery, the price has greatly increased because the picture is in a frame. Protesting does no good, "The salesman claims the order was given and there will be no delive | ery unless the full price is: paid. Often ihe original photograph, from which the enlargement was copied, is withheld until payment. v
» ” . OTHER RACKETS revived or born include such as “clipping services.” ‘The family of a serve ‘ice’ man whose name has appeared in ‘print is contacted, the writers declaring they have an interesting item about him, The fee is paid and the eclipping’ delivered. Then the family | realizes the game. It will be the | same article théy already have cut from their daily newspaper, one they themselves very likely gave the newspaper. Birth certificates often are | necessary for service men and war | workers. Unaware of the simple | methods for getting certificates, | they hire a sharper. The cost will run up to $10 when they could have written the county seat of their birthplace and secured what they wanted for $1. n ” » STILL OTHER rackets attempt to sell information, picked up from short-wave 'broadcasts by enemy nations, to the families of | missing goldiers “and sailors or | prisoners of war, This has. been curbed somewhat by the government, which
passes on, without charge, any | information - about the individual | in question.
"THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES Former Lower Here Has Part i in Trial of German Civilians
He was|’
monitors foreign broadcasts and |
< v ‘ PRAT 5 ; ;
(Continued From Page One)
for their lives at Verviers, Belglum, for concealing German soldiers. The proceedings are being ‘car-’ ried out in impressive’ style, Mr. Stoneman says, before a battery of legal gentlemen in American uniforms, 16 bored war correspondents, two photographers and a-great- collection of soldiers and officers looking for something interesting. . The Indianapolis man, an Ine diana university graduate, has been in the service since before Pearl Harbor. His mother said he has not been here on a leave for two-and-a-half years. ® a = THE OFFICER, 38 years old, who ‘attended the general staff
séhont at Leavenworth, Kas. be fore being sent overseas, also attended a school at the University of Virginia for military personnel, A member of Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Col. Wilson also is ‘a member of the Second Presbyterian church, the Scottish Rite, Shrine | and Commandery, ) Two sisters live here, Mrs. Ione Patterson and Miss Helen Wilson, employed with the state welfare department, Thé story of the trial, Mr. Stoneman continues, seemed to be that an allied“sdldier, Henry A. Chapman, Tremont, Pa.; was with his. unit “near Horbach when somebody told him that a German officer was hiding in a nearby farmhouse, - He and another sol« dier went to the farmhouse and found the two defendants there,
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PN FIRST questioned, ac cordirig to Chapman, they denied knowledge of ‘the matter, But, when Chapman grew tough, they led him to the German officer, Later, a Dutch boy told” him that more Germans’ were hiding in the neighborhood and the same thing happened again. Five Ger~ mans in civilian Gtlothes were caught as a result, Presiding o¥er the military court with Col. Wilson is Col. Hurley E. Fuller, San Antonio, Tex.; Maj. Charles P. Sisson, Providence, R. IL; Capt. Alfred A. Henderson, Dedham, Mass., and 1st Lt, Robert G, Wilkens, Glencove, L, I, t J ” »
THE CHIEF prosecutor is Capt.
Stanley H. Gaines, Brookline, Mass, with - Capt. Harold F. Strohson, Merrick, L. I, as his assistant.
Defending the’ Phones,” and doing it -in very vigorous fashion, Mr, Stoneman says, is Capt. Rob ert J. McKeever, ‘Port. Chester, : N.Y. Assisting him is Capt. Herman A. Schupp, ‘Port Chester. _The proceedings were arranged by Lt. Col. Eberhard P. Deutsch, New Orleans, La. Pfc. Henry H. Wieser, New Hyde Park, N. ¥., interprets. all the proceedings into German for the . enefit of the defendants,
EMPLOYMENT SERVICE PERSONNEL TO MEET
The annual. meeting of ‘the Ine diana chapter of the International Association of Public Employment Service Personnel will be held at noon tomorrow in-the Washington hotel,
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