Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 April 1945 — Page 10

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PAGE 10 “Monday, April April 2, 1945

"ROY W. HOWARD . WALTER LECKRONE HENRY W. MANZ | President ~ Editor Business Manager

(A SCRIPPS-HOWARD NEWSPAPER)

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Give Light and the People Will Find Their Own Way

BIG THREE VOTING POWER JUST because the Big Three's’ secret deal for multiple | votes in the proposed league assembly has shaken con- | fidence in the San Francisco conference, friends of inter- | national organization should keep their shirts on. All is not lost by any means. "The shock to the smaller nations can be absorbed with less damage now than if this secret diplomacy had sud.denly exploded at San Francisco. The present bitter reaction of the allies, and of such American delegates as Senator Vandenberg, may clear the air and serve as an effective warning to the Big Three. Maybe in the end this ill wind from Yalta will have blown more good. However destructive the secret method, the result is a useful reminder to all that the Dumbarton Oaks draft was only a tentative plan for revision by all the united nations. Now the Big Three themselves have scrapped the Dumbarton provision for equal voting rights | in the assembly, and have recognized in the Yalta secret | pact the authority of the San Francisco conference to decide. So it will be easier for the conference to challenge the | closely related voting rights in the'league council also. Big | Three control and one-power veto in the council is a basic issue because it, rather than the assembly, has practically all of the authority. » - o » = » _ THERE IS ALSO much to be gained by forcing advance public discussion of this representation question, | which was one reason the United States refused to- join | the old League of Nations. Russia's refusal to accept one vote in the assembly as against Britain's six—one each | for the United Kingdom, the four dominions and India—is | matched by similar objections in our senate today. Though | Britain can make a good case for separate votes for the | four free dominions, India's foreign policy is controlled by | London. So Churchill at Yalta had to agree to give Russia and the United States each three assembly votes. But it is not that simple. Under such an apportionment, France, Holland, Belgium and other colonial powers ! will demand multiple votes. Non-colonial powers object | that this system puts a premium upon imperialism, which the league is supposed to restrain. And 20 hemisphere na- | tions in the new inter-American pact have just reasserted H the equal voting rights of all sovereign nations regardless | of size—which is the traditional United States policy. ~ = n #® » » LIKE OTHER problems of international” organization, - this is not an easy one. But it is. fax easier than having | - anathex Jwonld war. And that is what all of us must, remember i in the midst of these shocks from secret diplomacy) and big power manipulation. The united nations must | stick together and work out machinery for world co-opera- | tion. That is the price of security and peace. As for ourselves, despite Yalta political deals, we have | as ‘much faith as ever in the united nations’ ability to agree i ona just Golden Gate charter—if the Bis Thrge allow the Ee ~Sosfarence: to function democratically... ... * x

THEY WILL SERVE E AND SERVE AND... AVE a look at Charles T. Lucey’s dispatch today telling how the fellows running the war agencies in Washington are digging in for peacetime government jobs. Have a look—and wonder when, if ever, your taxes will be reduced. Mr. Lucey tells of a town full of bosses and servants of the people in wartime thinking up ways to keep on being bosses and serving the people in peacetime. Bureaus expand, multiply, merge and reorganize—but | never die. There's always another emergency to attend to, | just around the corner. We may demobilize the military | when the war ends more or less automatically, but there will be nothing automatic about demobilization of the civilian payroll. Years ago, when Calvin Coolidge was President and the ! Democrats were raising a fuss about the extravagance of govefnment, the venerable Republican Senator Smoot of | Utah arose on the floor of the senate and drily remarked: “The cost of government tends to rise year after year, no! matter what party is in power.” That sage observation | has come to be known as Smoot’s law of government, ‘and | has taken a place alongside Newton's law .of gravity.

. 0 # FINE START HE highest form of efficiency,” said Woodrow W ilson, “is the voluntary co- operation of a free people.” That was most encoutaging news from Washington | telling how the leaders of A. F. of L, C. 1. 0., U. S. Chamber of Commerce and National Association of Manu- | facturers have drafted a post-war program of live and | let live, Both employers and unions have. been learning from sad experience that continuous quarreling with ®ach other | leads only to the government's assuming more and more | power over both. So the leaders of the top labor and employer organizations have worked out an understanding | that after the war they will settle their own differences and thereby free their affairs of much- government domination, Among the terms of the seven-point charter an agreement that employers will stop trying to break up | the unions, and the unions will stop trying to take over managerial functions. That should be a fine start. Most of the bitter industrial disputes of recent years have hinged on those issues. _ f Once all employers recognize that unions have come to stay and are good for business ‘as well as for workers, . and once all unions recognize that it is the responsibility of management to manage, there will be much less difficulty In reaching Agroapenis on wages, hours and working

-

a a daly NORMALCY * wl > ONE are the old—and more particularly,” the young—

- familiar faces from the big-league baseball scene. But. as ancther wartime season is about to commence, the sports’

bring us at’ least one nostalgic reminder of the good rs in each league have assured the finish :

Tines |" !

ered by carrier, 20 cents |’

| to make maple sirup this year. | busy working on ‘a neighboring farm and doing what

| other extra things to do.- We are sorry as there have

It Wasn't a 'Vacation'

| about it with a sigh.

forced to transfer their mobile reserves there.

~@n-the--morning--of Feb, 21 Hodges’ forces started.

TF: rn RE RI gee

SHE i. By Ralph Millett

MEMPHIS, Tenn, April 2.—Your is sad and nere is why: ¢ Hebron, Maine.

| t | i }

correspondent

as we are not going r boy has been toa

“We are returning your check |

he has to do for us, two helpless people, to get ready. “Wood is high and scarce to buy and there were

been very few seasons we haven't made sirup but we are getting old. “Our boy may be reclassified at any time and so we do not know whether he will have to go or not. Don't know what .we would do as there is no one to replace him although his work is so heavy on the big farm Where he works that he cannot do much here at home.’

‘Something More Important’ OF COURSE, 1 know there is a war on. Of course, I know that my Maine friend's son has something more important to do than to make ‘maple sirup for me. Every morning and night he has to milk many cows to help people get the milk, cream and butter they need and though he and thousands of others are doing this there is so little butter that millions of us are spreading margarine on our. bread. Of course, I know that in the summer he is busy cutting, making and storing hay for the winter, busy raising a part‘of what the farm family needs. Then fall comes and all of many long days have to be spent. in a race with winter—to get the sweet corn to the canning factory, to get the apples picked and the potatoes dug before frost comes— That boy does more work before breakfast—miiking and tending the dairy herd—than many of us do any day in the week. Then he does another big day's work, eats his supper and instead -of lighting a pipe and reading the evening paper or turning on the radio he goes to

the barn—and does the same work he did before the |

morning meal.

I KNOW" all about it because I used. to spend the summer on my uncle's dairy farm. Perhaps you notice I didn’t call it a “vacation.” Sometimes I wonder if we appreciate the milk, | butter, bacon, eggs and apples we eat. I think that when I eat my daily apple after

“Dear Friend: 2

SC

°

| voice,

lunch today I will try to picture the raiser as he tends his orchard, sprays tHe trees, picks and packs the apple. Perhaps‘he does it with a song; perhaps he goes

8 x =» : “WE ARE sorry, Ralph, to disappoint vou about { the sirup.” ? I understand, Will. Lots of folks down here are getting old too. We ought to do something about it. I have an idea, Willi. There is a man, a younger

{| man, up in Vermont who has a maple orchard.

I'll write him today. If he is “making” this year

Im order two cans—one for Memphis and one for

{ Hebron. It will make you feel younger, Will.

You doctors ought to take your own medicine,

WORLD AFFAIRS—

Fon 8

i

= By Henry J. Taylor

ON THE RHINE, April 2.—With “the crossing of the Rhine an ac- |

ribed to me at various 2 Rive hescquariers ‘during its ex-| ecution. The Germans’ surprise Ardennes in December nipped in the bud an offensive by Gen. | Patton who was poised practically at the jumpoff |

{ poin

In fact, one reason we were -thin in the line | through which the Germans broke was that the | troops there had been transposed into offensive | position for Patton's push. The sudden German rush broke up this plan and Ire wt When we regained the initiative after the Germans were stopped, the first objective was to seize two immense water. reservoirs, regulating ‘the water in the frrigation network and canal system throughout the-Roer river basin. By a quick thrust, Patton seized these preliminary objectives. One reservoir was destroyed by the | Germans and minor flooding occurred; but the larger of the two was intact and therefore the

{ particular terrain ahead of us was protected.

| Montgomery Draws Germans North

THE FIRST STEP was an attack by Gen. Motit-, gomery in the north, using the Canadian 1st’army. The purpose was to amass so much force in Belgium and create such a furore that the Germans would be Montgomery’'s attack succeeded in drawing the Germans

| northward. Gen. Hodges, in the middle of the line, |

was to make the first real thrust across the Rhine.

This operation was expected to take longer than it did and it was originally arranged that the forces of Gens. Hodges, Patton and Patch would assault the

| Rhine at approximately the same time, about the | end of March.

However, the Remagen bridge was an unexpected break, so Hodges went over first and then waited. This created a. quick change in our plans because it changed German defense strategy. Instead of continuing to move their forces north against Montgomery and leave the way open in the south, the | Germans were compelled to stay in the center, near

| Remagen to hold Hodges.

Patton speeded up his schedule and started for-

| ward at 3 a. m. on March 13, two days earlier than |

planned.

Patton's Boldness Paid Off

PATTON WAS CONVINCED that once he broke through, the Germans had nothing in‘ front of him he could not encircle. started Patton told me he would run free throughout the whole area within 48 hours. He was right. During the second day I was rolling with his

| tanks, under a news blackout, for 10 and 15 mile | stretches without contacting the enemy, and the

corridor “of encircled Germans stood on both sides.

20 miles deep

' Patton 'was positive this thrusting column would |

not be cut off. This boldness let Patton take tlie most prisoners, cover the most ground, and still reach and cross the Rhine in time to pin down stili more German reserves.

With Montgomery now standing quiet in the |

north and Hodges’ position temporarily changed into a defensive stand at Remagen, the Germans decided

they had made a mistake in believing Montgomery's |

thrust was ‘the main one.” They decided Patton's attack was our main effort. Then when Patch’s Tth army went into action, March 15, {ime ran-out for German's final decision.

Kesselring Casts; the Die =. _ THE GERMANS’ dilemma was complete. If they

protected the plains In the north from Montgomery, |.

Patton and Patch would be virtually unopposed in the south and Hodges might join the southern

“attack. If they shifted their mobile forces south,

Montgomery would-be" unopposed and Hodges might join the northern attack. Nazi Field Marshal Kesselring cast the die. ' His, order relieving Field Marshal von Rundstedt, diag-

| nosed the main effort as to come .from Patton and

Patch, so he shifted southward. the reserves lately

| placed opposite Montgomery. That was the moment | Gen, Eisenhower ‘was waiting for. His earlier thrust |

could become the real thing. Eisenhower gave Mont gomery ‘the word to attack. At the same time ‘Eisenhower alerted Gen.

Brereton’s alrire army for |

offensive |

‘night, is dangerous and destructive

On the morning his attack |

. Hoosier

“WHY SUCH

LAWS NOW?” |

By Charles Ginsberg, Indianapolis It seems as though a “Soldier 8| Wife,” in ‘her letter of March 2v, does not understand what the “labor | {draft” really means. It was December 18, 1865, after) tire Civil War, which threatened for a while to divide this country into! two hostile nations, that the XIII! Amendment of the United States] | Constitution was made part of these| | basic laws of the land. This article! forbids “involuntary servitude, ex-| cept as a punishment for crime. "| Now, what crime has the working class of this country committed? |

In 1929, production amounting to should have a roval welcome home themgelves.

{93 billion dollars was considered the { highest in history. ‘about two million were reported unemployed. Production in 1944

remy forces. “And yet “you say [epitome work”

{has produced all the munitions, | foods and necessities of all kinds, used in the war, which netted mil-, lions in profits—for who? The | workers of this country have out- | produced the workers of ali other countries in spite of the millions |

in the armed forces. a-~Brosdseale- ~réshuftling - into: es rasioived

What wil ~the boys think after destroying “involuntary servitude’

(turn to find it here? The war is | near the end. Why such laws now? [ With a forced labor law, what would {the unscrupulous employer pay in wages? ” » » | “THE OFFICER ' PERFORMED HIS DUTY” By A. T. B., Indianapolis | I should, like to say a word in defense of Patrolman Eulliss who | made the arrest of the bridal party | that violated the eity noise ordin|ance. The officer performed his | duty which is to protect’ the citi] | zens of this city. Auto horn blowing by a parade | of cars on the city streets, day or

nuisance, It is a hazardous traffic offense and it harmful, not only to pedestrians, but to business and business people. The heart of the city is not the place for a demonstration of this kind, and should rightly be stopped by those in authority. . I. have a business office | on the Circle, and I know the dam{age imposed generally on business | and the public by such unnecessary horn blowing. I believe the returning soldier

to the service.

YOU sa death

Forum

[Times readers are invited to express their views in these columns, religious controversies 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 responsibility for the return of manuscripts and cannot enter correspondence regarding them.)

and every friendly consideration. and done a great job. He should | have helpful council and construc- | tive advice. He should have voca-! | tional guidance aid the right ‘place | of employment. He should - not,

Wha fave! however; be pampered ‘and cocileg! ti6D. they been doing all this time? Who to the point where he feels free to money matters of this state should

break a city ordinance or the laws of the country, he does not wagt.such treatment, and he himself knows it. a son-in-law in the navy business associate, and his sons in the army. : : " o » “BOOBY BLOW TO AN:

and a three

|OLD-LINE DE! AT” | (slavery) in Germany only -to re-| INE DEMOCRAT

BY Bert. Wilhelm, 2106 §. Emerson ave. An announcement of the date sellected for the Jefferson Day dinner | was indeed a body blow to an old}

{line Democrat.

I have always had my chest swelled with pride when I told those | kind enough to listen about being

“I wholly disagree with what

For his own goed

I have

y, but will defend to the your right to say it.” (“THE BEST ISN'T | TOO GOOD FOR THEM” By T. A. Casey, 2832 E. New York st. Just a few lines on the subject of | war memorials and monuments. | would like to say here and now I| feel the same as do many of our, soldiers about this matter, even! {though I'm not a member of the armed forces. If this state has that kind of

money to throw away, let me suggest | a much more appropriate way of | disposing of the taxpayers’ money, and I honestly believe there would | {be no squawk from the taxpayers Why not pool all this] money, then divide it equally among]

At that. time|He has made a personal sacrifice our soldiers, sailors and marines—|

not forgetting our merchant marines, who are doing such a 7 splendid job of seeing that these! war munitions get to their proper | destination. Yes, and on schedule, * Now Hf they wie ‘coriteai the

get big-hearted for her soldiers, let this money not be as a-bonus, but given as a gift. Yes, the writer understands very well it's the taxpayer who pays. Yes, he pays all the state's bulls, | {so you politicians be calm—it’s_not out of your pockets. Our fighting men have earned it the hard way. There are those who would not believe in or go: along with a program of this kind. | You may - ask why. Because it's! Justice where it belongs. Instead of war memorials and {monuments te beautify this or any {other city, it's only fitting that our fighting men come first, instead of {stone and marble to have them to

the son of a Democratic father and remember their dead buddies. The

grandfather and father of Demo cratic sons and daughter, but I am! filled with a deep sorrow and my

chest contracts below normal when | Se~ |

men who should know better lected Friday the 13th for the $10-a-plate Jefferson ‘Day dinner, ” n »

“WON'T SOMEONE RENT US A HOUSE?”

By. Mrs... Charles Earl, 2115 Guilford ave.

Isn't there someone who will.rent us a house to live in? Our house has been sold and we have to vacate by ‘April 15. I have A-1 references and surely there must be some wher€ for us to live. We have given our three sons and two sons-in-law There are three adults and my - 3-year-old granddaughter, whose father is over there fighting for you. So won't someone

rent us a house until our boys come

back? -

Side Glances=By G

albraith

Ie

| hor they may. gang “a kennin | transcends

{best isn't too good for them, \gardless of what it maybe.’ » » » “THE GOLD BADGE OF COURAGE" By A Friend Indeed, Indianapolis One of the stories which crops up most frequently these days in all sections of the country. is that of the young man in civilfan-clothes-who offers a woman his seat on a | crowded bus. She rudely refuses | to take his seat, saying he ought | to be fighting with her sons in France. “When you write them, madam,” he retorts, “ask them to look for the arm I left over there.” This typifies the embarrassment | to which hundreds of our returning veterans are being subjected daily— and almost always unnecessarily. For, upon receiving his final | honorable discharge, every veteran | is awarded the special gold lapel | (button. This badge of honor 1s i recognized by all too few of us. | One young veteran of 18 months | of mud and blood in ‘the European | theater continued" to wear his uni-| form for two months after his dis-| charge even though he knew it was, illegal to do so. “I don't want to be called a slacker just because people | don’t know what a discharge button | looks like,” he said. Since the beginning of the war, over one million officers and enlisted | men have been honorably discharged | from the army alone—and thou-! sands more are returning to civilian | life each month. These men de-| serve recognition for what they have done. It is not easy for them to readjust themselves to civilian life. We can help them by recognizing the honorable discharge button when we see it. Remember—any man who wears this button has offered his life for his country.

re-|

DAILY THOUGHTS

But the stranger that dwelléth with you shall be unto you as one born among you, and thou shalt love him as thyself; for ye were strangers in the land of | _ Egypt: I'am the Lord your God. ~Leviticus 19: .

THEN gently “sean your — man, Still gentler sister woman;

! landing craft for vehicles and personnel.

+ first. they later niade it.right. bot’

by army air force

‘BEHIND THE FRONT—

By Thomas L. Stoker

ALONG THE RHINE, April 2. It ‘was quiet here on the ‘road in the woods, and damp from a heavy fog that hung low about the trees. Down the hill at the end 6f the

road, not more than a mile, though the fog blotted

it out from where I stood, wis the little town of

Boppard. America® forces were preparing to cross

the Rhine there, another of that series of crossings

J which now has taken the armies across the water barrier -and far beyond. :

This operation had begun in the middle of the night. It's a strange feeling you get, even when safe from any sort of danger, a feeling which. has a kinship with the chill and the damp and the fog, a nervous uncertainty clutching at you inside, bedause you are close to the scene of action where men are trying to kill: each other, thougn the woods look peaceful.

‘It's All Very Unreal’

THEN YOU ask yourself why you are here. here you are. .You think very much about your own skin. It's all very unreal. It's hard to believe. It's hard because here, close to it, you still don’ believe it could go on. Youn don't want to believe that it goes on. It's like something in a dream. But still’ thére is the intermittent dialogue of the artillery, like. the’ occasional monosyllabic remarks of two women, understanding old friends, as they sit at their sewing. This sound of artillery, too, seemed unreal, some= thing you couldn't believe for what it really was. A gun near us, in the woods off from the road, barked every so often, a minor sort of pop, muffled by the fog. There was no reverberation along the river as might be expectéd, behind us on our side of the river, far off, there was a bigger gun, with a more mature and from across the river there came ‘the occasional sound of the German artillery. It seemed a long-way off. They were playing a game with each other, not really very serious yet.

Navy Helps With Crossing OUR JEEP was in a line of vehicles moving down the hill toward the Rhine. We were passing along the main highway headed elsewhere when we decided

we might as well turn into the road for a look. We had not gone far when the procession was halted up .ahead. The captain accompaiggng me got out and so did I. We walked down the road a little way to see what had happened. We never did find out, because we began to talk to men along the way, It was comforting to me to talk with others. Just. ahead was a truck equipped with a crane. This was one of the cogs in the great service of supply that keeps the armies in all those things they must have to exist and move and fight. Its forces get mixed up in battles, too. - We talked to the two young soldiers who were in charge of the truck—Duane P. Ploog of McCausland, Ia, and Steven A. Smith Jr. of Grindstone, Pa, Both were crane operators. This was routine work for them. They had brought the crane here to lift some navy LCVP boats, which means Ahead of us, in line, were six of these boats on trucks. The | navy had a number of these boats in the vicinity, They have helped with various crossings of the Rhine,

‘Close Enough to the War'

PRESENTLY SMALLER VEHICLES were pers mitted to move, though the larger ones were held back. So we drove on down the hill, with the town i and the river still hidden behind the wall of - fog. The artillery continued its broken conversation. We came out of the mist and into &i%e town. For several -blocks we rode through. it.

But

‘a’ doorway of “& building for “the call “They nad not been needed so far.

In the center of the town we stopped and talked.

with an MP who said the Germans had thrown a few shells intosthe town the night before. and now their guns were dropping a random shell here and there in the river, with no damage reported yet. We decided we had come close enough to the war, | and we went back up the hill and on our way. Though’ the. Germans showed little opposition at ~But: the crossing was made successfully, and another American force was on its way to Berlin. ¢

"IN WASHINGTON—

Psychology

By Peter Edson

ao WASHINGTON, Apri 2-— Translations of office of war informatioh’s Japanese language leaflets dropped over Japanese lines in southeast Asia on Japan proper bombers and carrier-borne naval aircraft give a good idea of the psychological warfare now being waged against the Japanese. First approach is through a newspaper, or rather, a_news sheet, a single, magazine-sized page giving all

{ the hot war news denied the Japanese people by -

their own government's censorship. Typical of the stories played up are these: Japs attacked in rear on Philippines. With maps to show where Jap convoys have been sunk and what the losses were B-29's raid . Manchuria. - With quotations from Tokyo radio to lend credibility to the claims of dame age inflicted. Hundred thousand tons of bombs dropped on Germany. Pointing out that 50,000 airmen took part in round-the-clock raids 6n “Japan's last ally” and letting the idea sink in that such things might be in store for Japan.

Invitations to Surrender “SURRENDER PASSES” printed in three gaudy colors have been dropped over the Jap lines in quantity in the China and Burma theaters, They have the word “Surrender” printed in big type in English, Chinese and Japanese, with instructions to Chinese and American troops that the bearer of the pass is surrendering, should be treated courteously

and taken to headquarters. The "surrender passes haven't been very effective,

| one handicap being that the allied troops in the field

dbn't seem to like the Jap soldiers well enough to let them be captured alive. But the need. for taking Jap prisoners for questioning, and the need for breaking down the Jap idea that to surrender is disgraceful | are both important. This latter idea-is encouraged by dropping leaflety which show pictures of Japanese solalers wing have surrendered, enjoying life as prisoners of war.

Offered Food, Sweets, Cigarets

SURRENDERING JAPS are offered plentitul food, clothing, sweets and cigarets with full protection of their identity. To build up the good-treatment idea, one leaflet shows a sketch of a smiling army medical officer, a captain, below whichis a sketch of a Jap

soldier,” his. wounds baridaged, sitting on ‘a bed and

writing a letter! ~The caption of the leaflet is, “My new feeling towards Americans,” with the explana

tion that these are the words written by one of

“your” (Japanese) comrades, now Tecuperating in an allied hospital. . “Until, the recenf disgraceful event (of my Cape

| ture)” reads the soldier's letter, “I had been taught

to picture Americans as devils wearing masks of gold,

‘8ince then, however, I have had to drive that feeling ‘about Americans out of ‘my heart. | ing Capt, Paul XXX, the American army doctor who

. It was meete

looks after our ward. that made me change my feel He treats Us ' With a DumARiy whith all of nationality ¢

We stopped. and. spake to a group of thedical troops waiting in. 3

. Leis g. I Some slig two-of-a-12.95 to 1! now ..

18.50 to 2’ now ..

LEATHER 5.00, now

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