Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 April 1945 — Page 9
TUBSDAY, APRIL 8, 1045
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By HELEN KIRKPATRICK, FRANKFURT-AM-MAIN, {of 500,000 population is in chaos.
burning fires—and thousands of slaves.
The human .beings we find in into two classes. There are the fo former ‘slaves.” The latter, of | whom there are about 20,000, look; dazed-and delighted but still Tearful lest they wake wa | up to find they FF CHS te haven't really ¥.g ; + been liberated. ! | They automatic i ally obey those of the "master race” who still dare to give orders. As for the “‘master race’ — they disclaim ever having had any Miss Kirkpatrick desire to rule the world. In fact, like all the other Germans we have seen, they “never were Nazis." No one in Germany was ever a Nazi. - They are 8ll on our side. They have been waiting for us for years, it seems, to come and! liberate them. td BUT UP here are (he tank boys— | Americans who have been fighting | | continuously through from the Nor- | | mandy beaches. They have left lots | of friends along the way—in graves. | Some of their friends were shot] |after they had been made prisoners by -the master race. These tankers have different ideas | about the Germans than lots of | | Americans. They don’t seem i think that there is much difference between a German and a Nazi. | They don’t care about wan-fra- | ternization because they don't want lta have anything to do with these] | people. # 2 8 { THEY WANT to finish this job and get home. Over in the main railroad station fires are burning with a tremendaus
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Mrs. Goldie io Hubs, 925 §, | ;8ty Terre Haute, Ind, was alse “roubled with nighteriging and backache. Tells of wonderful relief brought by Vela-Vin, famous “natural” medicine,
The finest writer on earth could not tell a story more filled with human suffering and gratitude for relief than you will: find in the following simple words of Mrs. Goldie Hubbs. She states:
“1 Gan Now Do My Work— With a Smile,” “I have a small rooming house and a family of six to care for, Before taking Vola-Vin, I suffered toptures from gas bloating, indigestion, and constipatien. Vola-Vin has brought wonderful relief from all these ills, and has also relieved me of backache and night-rising, I sleep much better, too. I ean now do all by own wark, and do it with a smile!™
“Lends Nature a Helping Hand Vola-Vin is made from the juices of 12 natural herbs. Long. famous for, their health«giving properties, these fire ingredients are now com« - bined in © remarkable effective medicine. Taken as directed, Volavin $ias brought relief to countless sufferers from bloating gas, constipation, muscular pains, upset liver,
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night-rising, low energy, and other | nen-organie, non-systemie ills where due to faulty elimination. Yet this famous medicine costs only a few cents a day!
A special Vola-Vin representa. five is now at Hook's Drug Store at Hlinois and Washington Streets, Indianapolis, Ind, Here he is introducing and explaining the properties of the “naturally made” VolaVin compound. Voala-Vin is recommended and oe leading druggists, and ind countless (det users, Help oar to
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SOLD BY ALL _ .~
March 30 (Delayed).—This ancient city
| use for residence any more, other | tanks boys are riding up and down
STATE A.-P. CHIEF
[Headdiiarters in Minteapolis;, Min. |
{gay in the D. A: R. chapter house! | Mrs. Gladys Fowler will preside. |
OF BACKACHES
EE Tr
to Rule World
Times Foreign Correspondent
It is a mass of rubble, still fiercely
these German cities can be divided rmer “master race.” There are the
oar. Outside the tankers have parked their tanks and are leaning on them, not.even glancing at the fires. No one is bothering with the fires. Up g quiet residential street that doesn't look as if it wil] he much
in a couple of civilian cars, three motorcycles and two bicycles. Ld o os “YOU'D THINK we'd had enough riding wouldn't you?” said a second lieutenant. “But, helll I've been riding up and down on a bicycle (all afternoon myself. I've had a food time.” The “master race” walks by, neither hostile nor curious. “Just a lotta sheep, now, aren't they?” said the lieutenant. “But | when they were shooting at us the | night before last out of windows, they didn't act much like sheep. I'd like. to go back to Alabama where I come from when we get | done with this mess.’ |
| Copyright, 1945, by The Indignapolis Times and The | The Chicago 0 Dally News, 1 News, Inc.
GROW-A-GARDEN CLUB ORGANIZED
R. M. Conlon, 5344 Carrollton | ave. has been appointed chatrman | of the Shell Oil Co. Grow-a-Garden club for 1945.
He will be assisted by Al Cowan, | ER. R.. 11, Box 252; C. P. Price, 3537 | . Pennsylvania st, and I, shep- | A 3715 N. Temple ave. “Our gardening ° program both | nationally-*rand locally proved so | successful the past two years that | this year we Have decided to open | participation in it to wives of | Shell gardeners,” J. G. Sinclair, | division manager, said. Shell gardeners in Indianapolis were ‘part of the company's 6700 gardeners last year, A nation-wide canned goods contest in New York early in September will enable Shell wives in Indiana to compete with those in Maine. A free leaflet on planning and planting, soon will be available at Shell. service stations, Mr, Sinclair | said. |
GETS PROMOTION
Alvin E. Orton, Indiana bureau | chief of the Associated Press, 'has| been promoted te the position of |
POY AAON
He will leave Indianapolis late | this week to assume his new duties | of operating the news service: in|
Minnesota, North Dakota and South |§
Dakota. | " Chief of the A. P.'s Indiana bu-| reau since Sept. 1, 1943, Mr. Due, came to Indianapolis from Chic where he was day editor of TOUTERY. RE AIOnTes CA En Lone | after working on newspapers, iif eluding the Denver Post. E. F. (Pete) Henderson, day su-] pervising editor, will head the Ine | diana bureau until Mr, Orton’s sud~ | cessor Is named. Mrs. Orton and their two children | will remain in Indianapolis until the end of the current school term.
PIANO TEACHERS TO GIVE PROGRAM
The Indianapolis Piano Teachers’ association will meet at 10 a. m. Fri- |
The program follows:
Piano -—- Betty's Wooden Shoe Dance, | Betty's First Waltz, Betty's Twin Solos, | Waltz in B Flat, Spanish Waltz in C Minor, | Reflections, Composed and played by Mrs. | Franges McClure Light. Violin and Piano—Sonata No. 1 in a | Minor, Ser¢nade, To An Ancient Shrine lano alone], Graal, from “American ame Life," and Porrest Wake | man will be ng Sith Mrs. Albert Reep, at the piaro. | Piano — Three Preludes, Mouse Dance, | Swing Fugue, Humoritch. Composed and played by William Pelz.
LIONS TO SEE SHOW | BY 2-BOYS’ CLUBS,
As a part of National Boys’ club | week members of the English Aves nue and Lauter Boys’ clubs will Have charge of the program at the Indianapolis Lions e¢lub meeting tomarrew noon in the Claypool hotel. Entertainment will inglude a oneact radio play, singing, tumbling and pyramid building.
NAOMI O. E, 8. TO MEET
Naomi chapter, 131, O. E. S., will meet at 8 p. m. Friday in the Mas= sonic temple for an Easter grogram Mrs. Veva Rippy is Worthy matron and Gay Stammel, worthy patron. |
o 1 |
AUXILIARY TO MEET The auxiliary to Sons of Union Veterans No. 10 will meet at 7:30 p. m. today at Ft. Friendly, 612 N, Illinois st.” Pearl Shaw is president.
MANY NEVER SUSPECT CAUSE
This Oid I'reatment Often Brings Happy Relief aly uff sufferers as relicvs ¢ aaggirk sackache cause of their bon Be may be a at rn The kidneys are Nature's chief way of king the rc excess acids and waste out of fun
3 Renda “0 kidney function matter to remain in your EE eT Dasyine , theuma leg pains, Tout of vep and energy,
at
Finds: 4 Daddy |
pm
THE INDIAN
ak
Dewey E, Rightmyer and his
daughter, Linda.
®
SERVING with the Seabees, Dewey E. Rightmyer, son of Mr. and Mrs, Park ave. recently got acquainted with his daughter, Linda. In service at Guadalcanal nearly two years, he had not seen her since she was four months
old. cently and. is now stationed at Camp Parks, Cal.
Ray Rightmyer, 833
He came home on leave re-
(APOLIS. TIME
SR
By JACK FLEISCHER United Press Staff Correspondent FRANKFORT - ON -THE-MAIN, April 3—Germany Has had it. Nobody who hasn't seen the devastated villages, towns and cities and the wretched Germans remaining among the rubble of American | occupied territory “can fathom the condition of Germany.
Realizing full well how Germany rebounded after the last war to threaten the entire world's security 21 years later, and recognizing the Germans’ traditional industry, still am willing to predict that Germany is finished as a nation for {decades to come. When I saw Aachen and sur|rounding places last winter {thought maybe that was ‘an ex{treme and exceptional picture of (destruction. But now I've seen |Germany from Trier through the | Moselle valley and the Saar basin, and ‘across the Rhine through {Darmstadt and Frankfurt. Germany is a complete wreck {from bombing—even without the | devastation that goes with the bat[tle for r big cities.
id Has. Had. li—A
still would have “had thousands of | relatively unscathed smal] towns! and villages. . But with Hitler's completely mad ' policy of continuing the war when every German knows the game is up, it means even the picturesque] non-industrial and militarily-unim- | t places are being smashed as the allies drive relentlessly on. It's difficult to be objective about Germany and the Germans when | you're an American and when you daily are with American soldiers
ae
I! fighting to smash the enemy, but! viewing the present condition of Germany objectively any abserver|
must be appalled by the indescribable destruction.
Before and even during the war, it was a big story in America when | the Mississippi floods or the eastern | seaboard tornadoes wrought several | million dollars in damage. |
But no one but an astronomer | | and a slide rule expert could calcu- | late the millions of dollars of dam- | age done to Germany, |
An American might get an idea
of conditions in Germany if he
of Germany, meaning the villages,
. PAGE" 9
ER Der ate
Devadaled Wreck Fo pag
A REE Rh |could visualize PRE Ta »| of a under-nourished Milwaukee ard hundreds of ‘other weaklings. Don't write them off as
{industrial cities, plus New York and lacking virile young men, And
| Washington, in ruins. |don’t write them off as a bunch of If he added to this fantastic im<| innocent people who neither knew |aginary picture the destruction and better nor could behave hetter. {complete chaos of virtually every But also don't picture them as | railroad in the United States; with any kind of supermen. They are normal motor transport reduced to| essentially unhealthy people phys(about one-tenth; no water, elec-| |ically and above all mentally and tricity,” gas, streetcar or bus service; | spiritually. the food rations reduced to about! They are unwell as a result of one-tenth, he might hdve an idea | years-long restricted wartime diets. of what Germany is like these days. Mentally and. spiritually they are The German civilians cannot be sick people—and this is far more written off as impotent but in the serious than the physical health. modern world it's going to take a| Consciously or unconsciously, lot more than the traditional Ger- willingly or unwillingly, they are man thrift and industry to bring permeated with’ the Nazi philosophy back this shattered country. This and if it is ever possible, it will is especially true in view of the|take a complete new generation to fact that no Germany will exist as| give Germans any other concept of a unified nation for an indefinite life. period as a result of the allied pro-|. As soon as these Germans’ homes gram to divide the country. | come under allied occupation they Aside from the physical condition | are docile, fawning hypocrites. They | want to make friends. towns, cities and even farmlands, But underneath it all they are {there is the factor of the German | the same essentially brutal une people. democratic people they were before Don't write them off as a bunch | the allies arrived.
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