Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 March 1945 — Page 18
» od , 5h = Brice in Marion Coun-
_ such plans for 10 years or more. One company makes soap, ~~one makes shoes, the other packs meat.
* slack other months.
_Indianapolis-Times! ERY ©
PAGE 18 Friday, March 23, 1945
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EP RILEY 5551
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THE RHINELAND FALLS
HE American victory in the Saar-Palatinate battle is one of the quickest and biggest of the war. It should hasten Germany's final defeat. German casualties in the fast-closing trap of Gen. Patton and Gen. Patch are estimated at upward of 100,000. Even though all were not crack units, Germany cannot now afford to lose any troops. These particular ones were needed immediately for defense on the now-threatened east bank of the Rhine. Enemy losses.in equipment appear to have been unprecedented. In addition to the destruction of Nazi guns, tanks, trucks, ammunitions and other supplies, vast quantities were left behind intact by the fleeing “supermen.” Part of this was due to the enemy’s ominous shortage of gasoline, which is beginning to show on other fronts also. » » » HERE THEN is a victory in which Eisenhower has achieved both purposes of destroying large German forces and of taking strategic territory. From every angle the Saar-Palatinate area is important. Industrially it ranks next to the now burning Ruhr and Russian-captured Silesia, and it leads us to the Ludwigshafen-Mannheim war plants. Strategically, it is essential to us. As long as Von Rundstedt had large forces west of the Rhine on the allied right flank, Eisenhower could hardly risk a major allied drive through center or around left end. Not only the Remagen bridgehead in the center, but also ‘Montgomery's freedom in the north, was restricted by the enemy’s flanking position. So Eisenhower—like the Russian command, with its similar problem on the east frent—turned to straighten the right side of his line first. Now that his forces are at the Rhine at virtually all points, he is at last in perfect _ position for the big campaign—crossing the river elsewhere and pushing into the heart of Germany. ” 2 Ld ALREADY THE battle of the Ruhr is beginning. The " aerial blows of the last 48 hours apparently are breaking all records, larger even than the 13,000 D-day sorties. The Remagen bridgehead has been pushed northward to within 10 miles of the Ruhr area; while on the other side of the Ruhr, across the Rhine, Monigomery’s three armies are ready to strike. And all of this is timed with the Rusilsn pincers, closing in from the east.
D.FQR_EVERYRODY ~~
ODAY we print, on Page 17, the last of five artic by Allan L. Swim about plans that guarantee wage earners steady jobs and steady pay. We hope that a great many people—employers and workers, both—have read these articles, for we think their subject is important. Mr. Swim visited three large companies that have had
Their plant operations used to.be highly seasonal—rushifig some months; But each of them worked out a way to protect its regular workers against layoffs and loss of income, even during the depression. What these big companies, and many smaller ones, .have done, others can do. And should do, we believe. Philip Mtrray of the C. I. O. is right when he says “it takes an annual wage to make a sufficient wage.” Eric Johnston
By Harry Hansen
+ BUILDING BASE HOSPITALS in South Sea jungles and looking after the health of natives as well as members of the armed forces is one of the jobs the navy does. Capt. Robert P, Parsons of the medical corps, U. S. N,, was ordered in 1942"to one of the Polynesian islands and there erected, equipped ,ahd managed the ‘hospital he describes in “MOB 3; A Naval Hospital in a South Sea Jungle.” . It describes an important seg-
(Bobbs Merrill, $3.50.) The names, vegetation and customs of this Polynesian isle, which Capt. Parsons calls Elysia, recalls that wave of interest in the South Seas that swept this country in the 1920s after Frederick O'Brien's “White Shadows in the South Seas” and W. Somerset Maugham's novel, “The Moon and Sixpence,” created a vogue for books about them. Capt. Parsons presents some similar characters but in spite of the name he gives the island life there was not ideal. Elephantiasis, hookworm, the yaws and infections from insect
full. had to put on an anti-rat campaign.
and the hospital had all the necessary equipment to perform operations, sterilize instruments and linen, run an air-conditioning plant, and devote separate buildings to specialized medical work. Wourided marines from the Solomons were the first to arrive. The seabees were turned loose on new material and | built warehouses and depots.
Fighting Tropical Disease PIONEERING in medical science is a paying ad- | venture. Capt. Parsons saw the need for plenty of it and one of his mest profitable chapters describes how Robert Huntington, “pure scientist,” worked to get at the secret of filariasis, a tropical disease that | attacks arms and legs, causing large red swellings by inflaming the lymphatic vessels and nodes. The natives called this disease mumu, meaning red. Hunt- | ington, a bacteriologist, began investigating evidence of the disease in blood under the microscope. It is transmitted by a tropical mosquito.
and the word filariasis was not to .be mentioned. When asked what possible term could be. used the colonel thought “lymphangitis” . permissable. Capt. Parsons never learned the reason for this peculiar order. Huntington continued his work and eventually became ill from one of the tropical diseases; which made it necessary for him to return to the States. { He is continuing his studies. Capt. Parsons reports that Americans and Poly- | nesians get along splendidly. “The more our boys |
ship. Only a rare sailor or officer in the MOB failed to appreciate the finer qualities of this remote people ilving in a world that is in great contrast to what | we have known.”
‘A Trifle on the Prudish Side’
THERE WERE frequent dances attended by the native girls, with their mothers.. Many of the natives of this island were Mormons, especially the girls
that they dressed modestly, avoided jitterbug dancing | and watched their deportment. At one folk-dance exhibition girls from Nuuuli appeared unclothed above the waist. The Mapusaga girls were scandal- | ized and disgusted. Sunday school.” -The marines and the movies have changed life | to some extent for. the Polynesians. Capt. Parsons -comments on the impact of these men on the social life and behavior of the Polynesian girls thus: “If anyone thinks’ that flirtation. all the rest of 3% has changed, except on the surface, in any land in.any century since the garden . of | Eden incident, he is thinking nonsense. The Polynesians are no different, no better, no worse, except that some. individuals observe the proprieties and moral tenets to a greater extent than others, just as | there is a certain amount of individual variation in all nations. On the whole the Polynesian. girls according to American standards were a trifle on the prudish side of the line.”
“WORLD AFFAIRS=
J Finnish Test
Ag . By Wm. Philip Simms
ment of the far-flung activities of the United States. y
bites abounded and the medical staff had its hands | Rats were so plentiful that the health officers |
The Quonset buildings were. erected in short order |
Before he had gone far the colonel in charge | sent an order that the subject was not to be discussed |
-saw of the Elysians and learned about them the | MORE BEAUTIFUL? higher they esteemed them and valued their friend- { By Pfc. Victor W. McGinnis, Camp Atter-
| America
from a village called Mapusaga. Capt. Parsons relates | the production of high tone dra-
“Their life was a perpetual loa the front page.
|
|
|
romance and. SILUST ASK A y
APM ra of SN A RIG aie i
LA LAY RT —
Forum
(Times readers are invited to - express their views in these columns, religious cons troversies excluded. Because of the volume received, letters should be limited to 250 words, Letters must be signed. - Opinions set forth here are those of the writers, and publication in no way implies agreement: with those opinions by The Times. The Times assumes no responsi bility for the return of manuscripts and cannot enter correspondence regarding them.)
Hoosier
“SHE IS FAR
death
bury. The other day we are inspecting | The Times and discover joyfully | where Ingrid Bergman, dur candidate for the prettiest woman in (excluding our Cousin
has copped the coveted issued in Hollywood for
Kate), “Oscar”
' matics and picturesque pleasantries on the screen. There is a nice picture of, Bingus | Cros, Ingrid and Barry Fitzgerald Here, too, it is easily seen that Ingrid is indeed in a class by herself. She is far more beautiful than either Cros or Fitzgerald.
magnanimously sign over
money, in order to have “a civic
2 un s
boys.”
FEW QUESTIONS” ‘Whose boys? ‘By F. 1., “fodianapols. TE
‘I wish that I had the power and! work the last four years or so. |
{strength to organize a fast moving, {More shame to the men and women | { bouncing, rolling movement to | who are racking their brains for the |
squash for all time this new racket Plans. for another stone offering to| lof two floors in. height..on present
| these b just out, for the double-crossing of ese Doys:
the brave men and -women who are out there fighting in blood and sweat to keep. this country free | OTHER: THINGS? Free—that's a laugh. Free for the By A Reader, Indianapolis power-mad politicians back home to| All swindle the boys out of their hard-| ” o B Sen Eves wo the, earned state bonus some of these morler and father who received days. . | their son’s clothing. But isn’t that
Just ask a few questions, folks— | just another example of how some
££ 2 = “WHO GOT THE
on
WASHINGTON, March 23 — |
again watching Finland. The out= |
of the U. S. Chamber of Commerce is right when he says pay by the year is “good business.” ‘Good for employers, because they have to hump them- | selves to live up to the guarantee, and because their workers are more productive. Good for workers, because they have more security and peace of mind.~ Good for workers’ families, because they can buy homes and look to the future with assurance. - Good for everybody. : y 8 = : . nn 8 THE THREE PLANS described by Mr. Swim differ in many details and in the extent of their benefits. No one plan, we believe, could possibly be devised that would work in all industries, or in all companies within any industry. And no plan is a cure-all. od The best plans seem to develop when employers and workers get together, in good faith, with the idea of helping each other. It’s a matter of co-operation for mutual welfare. If the employer is seeking benefits which+ he doesn’t mean to share fairly, or if the workers think only about their own gains—good night to hopes for a successful plan. Government, of course, can encourage such plans in many ways. We don’t believe it can impose them by law. If it tried, it probably would do far more harm than good. And nobody should get the notion that dey eloping a steady jobs-steady pay plan is easy. It involves a lot of tough problems in any company, and in some companies and some industries the difficulties look discouragingly big. But the
rewards: of solving the problems and overcoming the difficuties also are great. :
1 Pravda, a Kremlin mouthpiece, declared that,
Soviet foreign policy. Finland is still under partial occupation by Red army. She is still subject to the allied control conimission headed by a Soviet -commissar. And
the circumstances, the elections in Finland cannot
be considered Finland's exclusive internal affair.” |memorial—those boys won't need | smoke or drink, Nevertheless, these elections—the first of the kind anything to make them remember amounted to quite a sum. But all Europe has seen since the war began—seem to have the awful hideousnes of war. They| those things vanished with * their
passed off entirely free from outside interference.
True, the Moscow radio and press devoted much |b time and space to the event.
the results probably were not materially changed, .- In 1939—the last year of peace—the Social Demo- | crats held 83 seats of the 200 which made up the | parliament.
Leoni Blum's Socialists in France.
New Parliament Is Considerably Changed THE AGRARIAN party, with 53 seats, was strong for national defense but favored the co-operative movement. The Swedish People's party, with 21 seats, was more conservative, as was the National Coalition, with 20 seats. The Patriotic National Movement, with 14 seats, had Fascist tendencies and | so in 1938, was ordered to disband. The remaining eight seats were divided among three small parties. . The new parliament, elected Sunday, is considerably changed, though not as much as might have | been expected. The Social Democrats still. polled | more votes than any other party but emerged with | only. 52 seats. A new group, celled the Pemocratic Peoples Union, | a popular front combination such as swept Spain and |
United’ nations observers here are | War?
the they did.
under |the bonus question again, with a He was putting all his spare money war bonds and as he didn't! it should have)
And this, of course, |t0 their same beds, same home, | Jap flag (small) and, a moldy billhad a certain psychological effect on the voters, But Same jobs with their dad’s business, | fold. Who got the ‘other things?
It represented the working class and |Tide it out together. was an adherent of the second Internationale ‘like thousands of boys coming back to spoiled by the time it got back here, {whom the state bonus will mean| but they were tgo honest to keep it
Side Glances -By Galbraith
what became of the bonus that In-| things are run? Something of value diana gave its boys from the last) Well, what did? Why those {brave boys were handed the War |
never makes it home. I had a brother in, the marines!
come of the week-end Riksdag elec- (Memorial building on a platter, for | killed at Tarawa. In the Decembef’, iso he could take care of a political tions may provide the first inklings (the state bonus. of a new, and possibly portentous; reorientation of in the Union, excepting Indiana,| account of the battle and showed | year—but no money to the home-
Didn't all states| 1943, Life Magazine, there was an
give the boys a bonus? = Of course him lying dead with the watch my All but Indiana. And, | mether had sent him—also the class now—now political history repeats i1ing which he had just received itself. Now they are going to settle and was so proud of the day Le left. nice
juicy war memorial. War in
want something to help them forget| owner. His personal belongings My three boys will come home | consisted of a Jap pipe (broken), a
God willing, and if depression|But how nice they were about re|comes again, we'll brave it to- | turning the packages of candy and {gether like we did the last one—| gum that didn’t reach him in time. But there are| Of course they knew it would be
probably the little difference be-| or give it to someone who hadn't tween life and death. And so thelreceived a package lately.
14
~—
Cts SA IIS ACRE] al
; GET GOING AND KEEP GOING
‘ conferences.
. advantage. In this case, each hopes the pressure of public “opinion and the inflexible deadline. df March 31 will cave
. “Indefinite recesses” because of no progress in the nego-
T'S little sympathy the public or the armed forces will have for either coal miners or coal operators if there is a codl strike. Yesterday the wage negotiators called an “indefinite recess,” then later Indicated they might continue the
In ordinary économic controversies we can understand how each side holds out against the other, hoping for an
in the other side.
But this is no ordinary economic comtrover sy. Miljtary victory is involved—no coal, no steel; no steel, no victory.
tiations are unthinkable. We remember some days recently | when the marines on Iwo Jima had to report “no progress,” but we don’t recall, nor. does anyone else, ever reading about an “indefinite. recess.’ of the. operators and the United Mine. Work:
“will incline even farther in the: direction of the Soviet
now i a position to do the same thing on the political | -
“France petore tht—war=came—second—with—5t—seats—
Led by the. Communists: it also had the support | of dissidents from the Social Democrats and other | parties as well as of the “sixlings,” the half dozen | deputies who were expelled from the Riksdag because of their opposition to the Finnish-Soviet war. The other: 97 seats were captured by moderates of varying shades. Thus of the 200 seats, some | three-quarters are still held by others than Communists and their supporters. ‘The democratic Finns still manifest a stubborn determinafion to retain their political independence.. |
Road Ahead Would Seem Cisse.
THEY ARE. NOT, however, anti- Soviet. Prime | Minister Juko Paasikivi has made it plain that here- | after Finland intends to co-operate locally with her | great neighbor. “The ‘Finnish people,” he has .publicly stated,
Union.” At the same time, he says, “cultural and economic collaboration with other countries of the north, especially Sweden, need not be excluded from the future picture of ‘Finnish foreign. policy *
wr Today the Soviets road ahead -would seem clear,
Russia’s magnificent army has won the admiration of the civilized world. By her policy toward her neighbors, large and small, .it is remarked, she is |
and ideological levels,
“lI wholly you say, but will defend to the
fame - seeking politicians ever so plazas; what | would be their hard come by bonus had the-opportunity to see said me-
monument to the bravery of our could havy used a $ bonus to Not theirs—or they |
ase ===, | would figure. the boys. hadgarned American Legion and want to see more than. a stone pile for their the national Legion headquarters
“Isoldier.-or the inhuman sacrifices we
disagree with what
your right to say. it.”
“ONLY INTERESTED IN THE LEGION” By L. P. D., In world war I, I, and probably more than a thousand other men and boys, citizens of Indiana, served with the 33d division in France in several battle engagements, the same as the men from Illinois. The 33d division was originally the Tigi nois national guard.
Our Illinois comrades received the maximum bonus: given by their state of $300, while we from Indiana received the right .to view a really fine memorial building and
Indianapolis be
S6me of these veterans have not 'morial, and I am sure that many
| good advantage. Although I am ative’ in: the
Stay in Indianapolis, I do not think {it proper to build three new buildlings for them alone. An .extensiof
|building and another, similar would be ample. Then build a larger building at the south center of the plaza for such organizations as the _i{Disabled American Veterans, Purple Heart, Veterans of Foreign Wars, ete. Governor Gates. a former state Legion commander, it seems, is lonly interested in the Legion. Gov{ernot Gates also saw that a new | circuit court bench was established {in Dubois county, over protest of {citizens and the Dubois Bar association, who claimed it unnecessary,
{adherent to the extent of $6000 a
coming veterans. ” n n “WHO CAN SAY WHO SHALL BE FIRST?” By Frances Scott, 1822 N. Delaware “Who can say who shall be first?” I would be the last person to belittle the-heartache and super-human efforts of those “who only stand and wait.” . I have seen too many ‘of my courageous young friends leave their homes to follow over the nation the boy who is a part of their heart—seeking not adventure (as I've heard some say) but seeking only to share any chance moments of companionship-—-knowing that they may not have many to
share. - I have seen them take small babies to be near their fathers because of the comfort it might bring to him, even though it meant terrible hardship for themselves to care for these infants in distant, overcrowded and even unfriendly communities.. I. give all due credit to any man or ‘woman who does his utmost on the home front in whatever way he is able, but to compare it to the bleakness of life for the camp
doen. 104s BY NEA SERVICE, INC. T. M. REG. U. 8 PAT. OFF. ¥-23
Jim says he wants us to spond part of his home allotment to buy
|so I, too, am being “impersonal.”
demand of our combat soldier is just impossible! To try to compare it shows a woeful lack of understanding. You don’t have to have merited a D. F. C. or egngressional medal to be a “hero”—just being willing to live and do your assigned part in this awful conflict is heroic. We cannot give these men’ a few bright ribbons and dismiss them from our minds—God, give us un‘derstanding. I have neither son, brother, father nor husband in the armed forces,
+. DAILY THOUGHTS
And a great angel took up a stone like a great millstone and cast it into the sea, saying, Thus sf with violence shall that great city Babylon, be thrown down, and shall be found no ore at all. —Revelation 18:21,
THE divine with Js is slow indeed]
a
| REPORT. FROM. EUROPE—
Barometer By Thomas L. Stokes
DEAUVILLE, France, March 23. —Maj. Gen, Henry S. Aurand, who commands the Normandy base sec- § tion comprising the now busy ports of Cherbourg, Le Havre and Rouen, puts very aptly the problem of supply for the vora= cious armies on the German front, as it applies to the ports. “We can tell here, without reading the newspapers
: or listening to the radio what is happening up front,
he said. The demands for supplies, both in amount and in kind, reveal what is going on. It is like a barometer, This requires that the stuff be on hand here. The line stretches back to the production schedules at home and to its delivery In ports over here. It requires also that supplies be unloaded quickly from the ships, so they can go back to get more, that there be adequate storage nearby for what is not needed immediately, and that transportation be available to move supplies, for distribution to the advance supply section, known as ADSEC, which keeps just back of the armies.
Like Stock Room in a Store
THIS NORMANDY BASE ‘SECTION is but one unit in what might be compared to the stock room of a store; There is also the Delta section in the south, centered about Marseilles, and in the north the Chane nel Base section, formerly centered about Le Havre, ‘which includes Northern France and Belgium. The Channel Base section draws chiefly upon Antwerp, the largest freight port in Europe, and other -smaller ports now in operation in that area. - Then there are the intermediate areas which might be compared to the shelves in a store, the so= called Oise section with headquarters now at Reims, and the Seine section comprising the Paris area, From these shelves the supplies are moved, as needed, over the counter, the advance section or ADSEC, to the ultimate consumer, the armies. All this requires a vast organization in Europe which is directed from Paris headquarters by Lt. Gen, John C. H. Lee, commanding general of what is called the communications zone. It uses three-quarters of a million men of all kinds of talents, assigned to all types of duties connected with feeding, clothing and arming the soldier up front, with moving him back and forth, with resting him when necessary, with caring for him when wounded, and if he is killed, burying him and putting one of these white crosses over his grave, now familiar sights in the cemeteries in the Normandy peninsula.
Everybody Works Seven Days a Week THE BAROMETER at the ports tells of the fever up front. It is apparent in the moving of more supply troops. to ADSEC for the final push, draining the ports. You can hear the same complaints about lack of manpower in the port areas as you hear at home, Every man has got more to do and everybody here works seven days every week, There recently was criticism at home.about cone gestion at the ports. Gen, Aurand says that ships are now on less than a week turn-around at the ports in this area. He claims the trouble is not at the ports, but in inadequate transportation facilities away from the ports, ‘due to shortages of personnel and rolling stock. The visiting reporter comes away after a necessar-
| ily quick look with the general impression that:a good
job is being done, under handicaps. It is a vast and complex operation, fascinating to observe. The order and organization here came out of much travail, beginning with capture of the ports by the armies, and followed by the difficult job of rehabilitation, removing obstructions from the harbors left by the Germans—a gigantic task—the repair of facilities, and the Installation of new ones. Ingenuity and an army of men were necessary, and so was 8 work schedule of 24 hours a day. When you sée all the mountains of things needed for the armies here, and realize that this war still requires s0- mul andi know that the war in the ‘Pacific requires so-mpuch and. mit rom. ee SIA it for many, many months, then you begin Fs get an idea of the tremendous job still’ necessary on the home [ront—necessary for everybody, We all might as well recognize it.
IN WASHING TON—
Aie-Tricks.]
By Peter Edson-
WASHINGTON, March 23. — Every trade has its tricks, and in gaining supremacy over the” much vaunted German luftwaffe, U. 8. army air force pilots have thought up ‘numerous shifts and razzle-dazzie formations which are now in use east of the Rhine, A few of these tactics on which army censors will now permit disclosure, are these: Recently, Germans got hold of a Flying Fortress which landed safely in their territory without pilot or sign of life. The plane, was, however, loaded with bombs and explosives, By some miracle it had nos biown itself up on hitting the ground as was intended, That crash landing lifted the veil of secrecy on one of the most novel employments of “war weary” planes vet to be devised. Instead of being scrapped, these veterans of many raids are filled with explosives, taken aloft by their crews, who set the automatic pilots to fly the planes against German targets, and then bail out, The big Fortresses, like work horses headed for the barn, do the rest themselves, guided only by the robo brain in the automatic pilot.
Just Like Sitting Ducks
ONE OF the tactical tricks used by U. 8. air forces in knocking out the German Iluftwaffe has been achieved through sending along more fighters than are actually needed to protect bombing missions, It 500 planes are needed to protect the bombers, 600 are sent. The extra 100 stay upstairs or lag behind until the German interceptor planes make their passes at the bombers. Then the extra 100 follow the Germans back to. their home bases, catch them as they slowly land, or while they are on the ground being refueled, and destroy them by the thousand, .
» » » IN FIGHTER PLANE raids on railroads and highe ways, similar mass destruction tactics are employed, Instead of concentrating on strafing individual trucks and locomotives, allied fighters hold their fire till they create blocks. Knocking out a truck at a culvers causes the next truck to slow up for detouring. Catche ‘Ing that one and the next one creates a, traffic jam, -and after that every truck that comes , slong can be picked off.
o GOING AFTER rales, fighter-bombers drop bombs every--half mile along 100-mile stretches of track. That creates real traffic -tie-ups which can easily be knocked out, When work crews come ous to repair the mainlines, the fighters strafe the work crews. They cause a lot of absenteeism that way, Only German defense for such tactics is to move up all supplies at night. To date, no effective means of night low-altitude bombing and strafing has been worked out.
Tanks, Planes Co-Operate CLOSE CO-OPERATION between air. forces and army ground forces in-Europe, for securing close air support on the battlefield, has been achieved by creating “fighter-tank teams.” The commanding officer’ of the fighter planes, instead of riding high in' a fast pursuit Ship, rides in a tank along With ‘the armored forces commander. The command pilot is in radio communication with his planes, and calls in his boys to drop out of the sky and attack where uf will do | the most, good,
TO PREVENT Hei fons commanders fom
a large pity bed with three mattresses!” :
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