Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 April 1945 — Page 8
. 3 ia PARIS, April 30.—The old ordér changeth. saw it) to the rights of others. The new leader—
‘The Old Order mye say "The Indianapolis Times
. Plums Baron Kurt ven Benr and his wife sat in their Hitler—talked of a Germany destined to rule. all - ; . bedroom at the meéditval Lichtenfels castle at Bam- peoples. He had fire, imagination,’ magnetic power| SECOND SECTION MONDAY, APRIL 30, 1945 * PAGE 9 quid lime * berg. On the table was a battle of champagne—1918 to sway the masses. Alfred Rosenberg's keen a : = Vintage—-one of the few.products from contemptuous, formulated and developed the plan’ for the master’s | § . . democratic France which had won genius to use in welding a cohesive Europe subject’ A FACTUAL REPORT ON AN ISSUE THAT HAS. STIRRED MUCH DISCUSSION~— Labor thé waughty baron's approval, JN the=Germans. : : The baron filled his wife's. glas$ SR amas hi " Urge Truman then his own. They sat quietly Rosenberg Ss Closest Disc tp € : re - eo oO In risoners Oo Val r? 3 sipping the sparkling wine, talking THE BARON ‘had been Rosenberg’s closest disciple. . , wa ©] @ little When the glasses were '_ THE BARC) I , ratched fe Se { be To Settle on 3 p empty, the. baton refilled them Together they had watched the successes o f a Serie prem dise that any civilian store would | . 2 Wa (First of a s) y L h P boii sa with solemn ceremony. Then into ideology; the systematic subjection of beaten peoples, A. envy.’ apor ro Icy each glass he poured poison, For «fhe cold and ruthless use of terror and murder as | By S. BURTON HEATH There were a few packs of cigathe moment they sat watching the , yeang of creafing respect-through-fear among the FT. DEVENS, Mass, April 30.— rets of a brand in low popular de- | By, FRED W. PERKINS Dh JA ear MI, es conquered; the development of future leaders trained | In vivid contrast with stories i ANY atone ihe Snorage od te Seripps-Howard Staff Writer n i qeir gasses, : ; shelves. > sone t, | TASHIN » - quid time 1 ley : . in the ideology by means of the Hitler Youth's now coming out of prisoner-of-war shelve e prisoner WASHINGTON, April 30—Im 8T lead touched them lightly and drained ; : ~and Col. Harvey G, Storke, com-| oo) end of the war in Ger 16 T hy . them. They sat again talking, for suength-through-joy movement, | camps Jn conquered Germany, the« Hmahding officer of the vamp, ex-| \ Fie - “only & moment--and were still. Outside the castle Rosenberg, the baron had revealed. used (he castle 3548 Nazi captives here are living plained that this was for display MAasY is being cited to President
the noises of the restless American Army disturbed them not at all.
» 2) superfine ’ 8
as a hideout. As "his mad dreams crumbled under | the weight, of the allied guns and Nazi horror camps | were unearthed one by one, the philosopher took a
{the life of Riley. They are wellhoused, well-clothed, well-fed and well=treated.
only.
“woman be. some of his advisers Each ° \ :
prisoner is ‘as a reason for quick -edcardina«
co-operative
: w ; sold three packs a week, of a brand, tion of thé domestic labor front. sulphur, Untouched by K ipdness hasty runout powder. Where he is, we don't know— If Ft. Devens is typical of all of not among the leading six in pop- The need | arsenate; i ; ; yet. > 460 base and branch camps in ularity, through his company. Un- , ted FAR BELQW in the huge stéel vault lay written ft he a Ys n} was pointed up hydrated ; oe ; But the stern old baron and his equally stern which 311,630 German prisoners, co-operative prisoners, of whom today by a war records of the idealogy of Alfred Rosenberg—he who (iro (hore was something magnificent, a touch of | 50 549 Italians and 3,258 Japanese othe record shows few here, must production ans superfin , With his crafty brain, untouched by human kindness. ‘the old feudalistic' splendor that is no more. No| ire being held in this country, then roll their own, I was told in Wash- neuncement of a had mapped the tenets of Nazi life, running and hiding like rats for them, no cringing] | the terms of the Geneva Conven- ington. its plans for : : The documents and their teathings had swept In ger Hib P12 Iir ob their feet. a dinth rabile] [tion are being complied with fully, i — ete ££. a n consultation p ; ; ‘ 1 thelr wo ly eir 1eel, a ae é i i s in letter, "3 THE GENEVA convention - rit . : e : Wael - in spirit as in c ention per with labor them on from the old lustful swaggering of the kai in its throat, Baron Kurt von Behr lifted his glass, | { yr 8 mits us 10 Yeiulre privates to werk Es feo ger's era, Hough chaos oe Nritesiainiy Joie AN powed to his wife and (let us so believe) said, “To| JIN THE past, it appears that we at anything for which they are aspects of re Ye droater Pp A hy Ee old oid too YOUr health, my dear. have gone substantially beyond the physically fitted and which is not conversion gi . thou h little oth A as other people Copyright. 1945, by The Indianapolis Times and letter of the treaty and have inter- A Nazi prisoner stocks up on crackers and toilet articles in the directly connected with war opera- problems that much attention ( . 8 The Chicago Daily News, loc. preted its provisions with over-gel- POW canteen at Ft. Devens where smokes and soft drinks also are tions. (Commissioned and non- will arise dure ‘| erosity. Recently a more realistic gq1d. commissioned officers may volun- ing period 1,” meaning the time ’ attitude has been apparent. teer to work. Velwee as : , ) ig wo YPAE ’ ; t n the defeat of Germany ’ It was at this prisonegy-of-war| Speaking generally, the prisoners made of wood, with room at the, The day I checked the records er oo nil I ai any I * I * Ii B L i N bh camp that Germans had an Easter|here are housed, clothed and fod foot a0 for » Foo dneker and ere, all were working except those " 2.08 ! ( { | owe USS aum | Sunday dinner of ham and thus up- [in a style and manner equivalen |at the head for clothing hangers, ,, sick call, a dozen or so in dis- THE WPB conference A onf Ices beginNnS1 e n 1anapo 1S y ; . set civilians who, while their men-|to that of the garrison troops here. |the prisoners sleep on double-tiered| ciplinary detention and less than & ning tomorrow in Detroit oh folk prisoners in Germany were! That i8 required by the terms of | metal cots, and naturally have less dozen on day-off. | ng Oro. t wi | pris | | space for rsonal belongings, a top officials of the C. I. Q. United THE SERVICE CLUB is geing to have an cepting his statement seriously, thanked him and starving into human skeletons, |the Geneva convention, Pe Or pe . Bing: 8 nu Automobile Workers, will not inSt —" ay a fae . went her way. = Kiefer. Elliott, druggist at could not get ham for their own But “equivalent” should hot be .. NG 3 THERE is a “head count” at 6! clude representatives of the U. 8 & election in June, and among ..the candidates is as ly when | Easter table, istnieipretes as “identical. THE STANDARD mess hall, with | each morning, then breakfast, and 's representative; e . none other than his honor, the mayor Gen Sheridan, Ind, N58 Buse one 48) FE : | * » on an | 4 [tables arranged on either side of at the details Glatt for WOE. department of labor, normally the ; ’ ’ : : J i >hool youtr alkin on ash- . i S ain authority or i y ig mee of E11 dozen Righ school yoirhs w E yong FT. DEVENS is notable also be-| A VISITOR peg assume that a center aisle, seats a maximum of "0 oO : ,| main authority on the subject. Tyndall is a nomince - for the high office of j,.ton st. came to a cigar store and stopped. Just! 170 Americans at one time. working outside the camp they The Detroit pro includ A cipinionrd sergeant-at-arms on the “white” ticket, headed. to be devilish, they got in line, in front of the store's Cause our generosity or decency to- | the barracks used for prisoners | ; !may carry lunch or it may be sent roblem it pr Stam edi “ by John Heckel. Needless to say, door. Almost before you cculd snap your fingers,| Ward the men here resulted in a been erected for garrison troops,| By ranging tables the long Way| from the mess halls. They quit| PrODSHS of unin seniority an tl sneral w . dre tted for ‘the CAR Elliott. there was line about halt a block round robin started by the prison- | and then merely segregated by the lof the hall, up to 230 prisoners are| q¢ 5. their effect on returning war veta un hs it nye a 3 Hel or sighing their heads | rs last December before our armies barbed wire stockade. fed simultaneously in a simllar| There is a head count at 6, and ¢*2"S This is supposedly unter You'd never guess the name of the off, walked away. The cigaret seekers in the line Crossed the Rhine, in which 1391| ‘They are the same, structurally building. | then the evening is theirs for read-| Jurisdiction of the selective servalted for buver for AVres’ Ady depart likewise departed: though sheepishly, instead of | {of them asked the German nation and in their provision fér health, The Geneva convention requires| ino recreation, classes, or anything | Ice system and Brig. Gen. Frank s & - § Pa PQ —E i » ment Appropriately enough she’s laughing. One more cigaret story: Herman to get out of. the. war, [sanitation, warmth and. general that food products and “ordinary | catistying: the Geneva convention I: Hines, head of the veterans Miss Katherine Sweet Yep that's (Dutch) Eggert, a veteran printer at" The Times, has | Before coming here I checked comfort, jobject” Snell be avaliable 10 Pe {requirement that intellectual diver- administration and the retraining or dormant 1 § be | 3 2 Y Se 5 ced with a. smile on his Tacs. Hers | with the office of the provost gen-| The same is true of mess halls| oners in canteens, at local market ! sions’ and sports organized by them- | and re-employment administra commended Fight. +.» + Seen on an E, Michl-_ been going around 35m : |eral in Washington, who has juris-|{and kitchens and of barracks con- | prices, and that prisoners must be |
gan streetcar: A young woman carrying a well-worn brown purse with the price tag still dangling from the handle. . . A young man phoned Inside with a sports
man, who has been rolling his own, of late, went | home the other evening and was handed a package | of cigarets by his wife. She found them in one ot | his old suits. To show you how old they were, they | were Luckies, and in the old green package, the one|
| diction over all prisoners of war | verted for special purposes—library, except those in actual theaters of | | classes, etc.
war, with the office of the quarter- | master-general, who feeds both our |
o u n
THE STANDARD barracks never
permitted to smoke. ” n ” THE: CANTEENS here provide standard - toilet articles, soft drinks,
selves shall be encouraged. ” on n | THE LIBRARY I visited has 2818 general books, 1800 of them in German, plus 640 in the class libraries.
tion. » 2 ” OTHER QUESTIONS at Detroit, the WPB announced. will be availabilify of tool makers and
! ! 5 troops and the prisoners: and with | is used fot more than. 63 of our corollas. pipe tobacco and ‘a few millwrights for restoring machine question: “How high should a that “went to war” about two years ago. They were p p pip g
ATION
During the week ended April 15,
pr . o ay Sra headquarters of the First Service| enlisted mien, unless temporarily minor items, That is about all. the prisoner librarian said he lent| t00ls to prewar ' locations, in LL MEET, buskeball basket be Jom He Da Sb Stranas & litle ary, but sHll most accepianle, reporis Duh, Command in Boson, | while a heayy troop movement Is The shelves look short and the! 1380 books to 1266 individuals. Of Which the war manpower coms | a EnuTs gepal Tew 120 Answer naa They Mean the S : # { passing through. stock looks scant to anybody who these 949 were in German .(787 fic-| mission is the authority: the outjation for Edue sway. I Bhan: Jeet tom, he oo 30 To Eppes ey Mean the dame IN THIS Yopoit from Ft. Devens| For prisoners, the standard com- has frequented our military post! tion) and 353 in English (125 fic-| look of ‘women war workers. in 1 hold its lash Pa TL in ® pov a ve THIS BUSINESS of the flag being at “half mast” |will be found sie some DRE pound; Plement is 94. ou men sleep on exchanges and seen their shelves|tion). The others were in “various | ~ Which the women’s bureau of the on at 8 p. m, with whom I was thumbing a ride stopped on 424 and “half staff” has at least one of the readers a obtained In Washmgton and Boston, | single cols, in at least some cases'Silled with a variely of merehan. languages. nboe Seferument = ast Intepe A. R. chaptes near College to leave some clothes at a dry cleaning this column puzzled. “Is it half staff for land an ested: and problems affecting un-
shop. Explailing why he chose a shop so far away _ from home, he said: “I like to patronize this shop. They never gripe about the help situation or anyi ‘thing else. They even act like they're glad to get the business.” And that’s refreshing in this day
buildings and half mast for ships, or what?” So POLISH ATHLETE A HERO
reader asks. Well, sir, it's this way: The dictionary (Webster's New International Unabridged) describes
a staff as on which a’ flag is displayed” and
fons in rehabilitation of war manufacturing plants, in which three or four or more federal agencies might be concerned.
ylvania st. vision engineeg , will speak on | Commercial
a pole
Grave of Ivanoff, Master Spy, Is Shrine
| | IN GREEK DRAMA— | |
exhibit a teloe and age. . , . Karl Wolle of the Barnes-Wolte Press a mast as a pole which holds the sails (and, of —We, the Women leaves in a few days for a month's vacation in Cali- course, flags) on a ship. Thus, technically speaking, . a Ye : soutver, . fornia. He'll spend part of the time in San Fran- it would be half mast aboard ship (and on naval BY GEORGE WELLER ave and runs for the Rubenaki st. This house belonged| Skouras was caught (arrange- Household | cisco just to be available in case the United Nations property, such as naval armories) and half staff on Times Foreign Correspondent
[to Ivanoff's brother-in-law, Demetri ments to bribe the Nazis to let him! He is up and over its 10 feet, but | Gianatos.
ine i " rev - NS, April 30.—Three scenes, [go went astray) and he died like land, including buildings. However, the American | ATHE p | nis heel is caught by a volley from|
Almost all who passed through its |Ivanoff before German rifles. Legion says the two terms have been used inter-!are almost enough to tell the story (a tommy gun. He falls into a crowd |
conferees need any advice,
0 ! CJ : Tol {doors fell eventually bef N Crises on + ) oT . ore Nazi v ny eu Wi bce Te re Jes) og 30 Aorivten of Corel Iyaneft, 3 Polis stizlete lor Greeks waiting for the bodies! firing squads, but not before exact- St ie G. x : AN ATIRAUNYS Wonian walked up to the cigar iy a Oris Ct py aa 4 il Youn — who turned himself into a master {to be brought out. ing Poland's full revenge. Ivanoff had a simple method of| ym Te 1. 8S counter at Keene's (Delaware and Ohio) Wednesday . ye vn A Bh oa 2 spy. { He runs through the streets, the 2 Y : whose 1936 model car quit dead during a sale dem- 1 V ‘ getting a German uniform when-| TH MILLETT and said: “Pardon me; I don't see a ‘no cigarets’ Blew Up Nazi Sub By BU
Nazis after him. onstration. It reminded her of a somewhat similar! SCENE I: The British submarine : A ; ever he needed it. Sign. Could T possibly get a package of Cigatela? Demetri Gianatos, too, died thus. | G. I's AT a camp in Prate
As he slips across a corner anexperience while she was trying to unload an antique Thetis breaks the surface’ of the A pretty Jewess, who worked with! h tommy gun catches him, -— ral Very seriously, the clerk responded: “Lady, about Hudson sports roadster, The roadster quit, too, and Aegean on a windy other Nazi y gun calc {But his brother—a cancer surgeon him, would walk along a street who heard a visiting gensral say operl 90 per cent of our customers come from a southern that powdered eggs, if properly
hing his leg. she and the prospect got out and hailed a taxi driver starless nigh t|smas named Constantine Gianatos>|frequented by Nazis, inviting a ? ; who looked under the hood, then suggested: “My off Laurion, near| The executioners reach him. They compared favorably state where they chew tobacco. instead of smoking. : fresh kepiical —s ; : : , skeptics And so we don't carry cigarets.” The customer, ac- With fresh spss were P
Easy to Get Uniform
iy
advice to you, lady, is to junk it.” She finally sold: Athens. it for $20. Three men are
| fo himself by pretending madbind him to a board and take him | p g pickup. She would take a German] prepared,
ness and is almost the only survivor. | officer to her flat. The German
back to the rifle range. Ivanoff liked to get waterfront would be killed and stripped, and |
rowed ashore dressed as peasants. ~ They are
{
The German officer touches the cheek of the bleeding man with his
glove, saying, “I don’t like 'to-kill
jobs from the Nazis and see what|Ivanoff would don the uniform.
he could do. At Navstathmos, the Greek naval
On one occasion, thus attired, he!
The general, however, whipped off his blouse, put
me mas: ON an apron i . and proved his point by preparing a tasty dish from the .despised powed dered eggs. ofr TN Ne This is a Ivanoft liked to Apis. He| i hint for us | was often accompanied by women, women at
: reached the room of a high Ger-| base near Salamis, he learned that| .. omcer in the Grande Bre- |-
.5,000, 000 Drachmas Reward a German submarine was being re- | tagne. He engaged the Nazi in { paired. oo ge) ”
. © | conversation,” dropped his newspa« ‘deith. ” . The body Using a .time-bomb attached to a Ppe
as a: pers on the other's file of important ibd a Pras foo) fe prippiar ios Sep dealing IRABRPAIA Ls | papers, and when he left took away a atef : werd Wi 29- Year- old up. The squad raises- its Files, firés| . Six hours later it/blew yp.
= fie and all. lagain. ¢ His swimming prowess’ cost he i Nazis several patrol b ats, too Five minutes are counted off os pavo. hos and sometimes dressed as one. _home that in,
the Nazi officer's wristwatch, ‘Death Dust’ in Planes At Patras -- accompanied by a “thie future our
Then the board, with its pinioned| 1... 06s title in the British serv-|girl patriot—he sauntered into a | solemn ver-
rags of bloody flesh, is propped up lice" was “general agent for the Bal- | dock, where 30 drums of oil and| dicts, about what can and what again. The rifles are raised. can't be done in running a house,
just taken off from the hydroplane| “Fire!” And for a third time, as ans. " He. Saw that his "death dust? as Rt] are likely to meet with some chalbase at Phaleron, are. circling for | the code of the Reich demands, was poured into many Nazi planes. light. Ivanoff—as the Italian ex} lenges from men who know what height in formation, with hundreds Giorek Ivanoff is executed. . | When Mussolini visited Athens, | tended his cigarette—knocked him|' they are talking about, Mr. Pehrson is talking about the | coal as a source of other products as well as a fuel in ©f Greeks watching them. i Only oes in Hird Yoney. Was Ivanoff laid plans with a waiter at out,- took his grenades and threw | It certainly won't be safe to say rate of consumption from 1935 to! its elf, Each of the planes, within a mat- |it possible for the gestapo to wr {the Hotel Grande Bretagne— (the | them, among the drums. to 2 G. I. husband who complains 1939-and not the accelerated rate Nazi Germany had to employ the hydrogenation |ter of seconds, puffs into flame and of the way his bed is made, “Well,
“executed” across’ the hundreds of | waiter is still alive today)—to have : : of coal to augment it | trol " y . . . . that has obtained during world f could to me $s small supply of petroleum in | | explodes into fragments. The:-smok I'd like to see you do a -better
wall bills that plaster! Greece with |the duce assassinatéd by five men war II the present war and it is entirely possible that we|ing particles fill the air, falling. Ivanoff's face and the temptation: | with grenades when he came out| Another time, attired as a girl,| job.” He probably can and will— The study was undertaken by to prove his point.
may ‘eventually convert much of our coal into liquid Gaping = Greeks and incredulous |" 3.000,000 grachinias Yewary” jot. the Italian Ea. The Balan he went walking with his brother- : . 4 fuel. | Germans .watch the sight secret police spoiled the plan by The wail that this or th: : si roy : | . > ! A r that can i of Ui fee as, Rowse} RICH £5 becsiise We shall also turn increasingly to coal for those| sopNE III: The Nazis are having GIOREK IVANOFF was one of | changing the duce’s itinerary. be Gone because the proper dl ® ING lai Whe lime 1Ad tome 10. 8cqUaith ducts obtained in the production of coke, thel i d Poland's champion swimmers. He! once Ivanoff arranged to blow! y : the American public with the necessity of giving care- Soiat i ts , “or “°F another execution at the rifle range |had taken degrees at Louvain and |yp the Grande Bretagne when a hold- equipment is lacking isn't ful thought to the situation and of taking appropri- «ooo on -tar products which.go into drugs, dyes, penind- Kaisariani, the workers'| 1 i ti tural | $ : on likely to impress the serviceman, : explosives, etc. a [Salonika universities in agricultural | meeting of 400 German aviators for » : . 1. < on tic yr’ furan ate action, “as settlement. This time it is not an | d : | girl,” he told his brother-in-law.! who has made satisfactory furniFifth on the list is phosphate rock. Our reserve execution of hostages, but authentic | engineering and spent 10 years in the Libya campaign was scheduled. | ; I ture out of crates 18 estimated Uo be enough for sed Years ab the tors Sima Stages, Salonika. He spoke Greek perfect-| However, German reprisals aganist| Tie ave obey a ad a wat a rate 6f consumption. Most of it occur: th bo : ly, as well as five other languages.| hostages were at this time very| dered the other girl to the Italians. | P SO Hv oeeurs In the form ‘I Don’t Like to Kill You’ 8 | When the three drew off, Ivanoff| THE anhouncement that “well {and his’ brother-in-law took the| a'¢ 10 eat dinner ogf, as the
of a mineral known as apatite, which is calcium | When British Foreign Secretary heavy and his confederates perphosphate. | They are led out, one by one, Anthony Eden came to Greece in|suyaded him to abandon the plan butcher forgot to send the roast.” About 80 per cent of the phosphate rock mined! The first man, tied to his stake, |1941—according to Ivanoff's Greek after he had smuggled two drums | Italians bY Suprise Stripped test) will probably just send a returned weapons and money, and ¥ Just Agriculture, therefore, need have falls. {of dynamite jte the Basemeni, ber i erviceman to the pantry and
goes into fertilizer, chronicler, George Nasos of “Assyrno worries, since an adequate supply of th phos-| At that moment Ivanoff whirls matos’—he stopped for consulta- ke t } oa: “Ar q pply both phos pl | Archbishop Damaskinos, the re- back with the challenge: “Why | IVANOFF worked not only with gent of Greece, has been com-| YOU'Ve got enough stuff out there
phates and nitrates is assured. lon the Nazi who is covering him, [tion with a Polish general | "» The other four minerals whose reserves are good smashes down his handcuffs on the!cabinet minister in a house at 40 the British in Cairo, but also with | mended Wy the Bolithigovermmont army. the chief of Athens police, Angelos|(o; his efforts to save Ivanoff’s life. |
for more than a century are molybdenum, 422 years; . » Up Front With Mauldin Evert, Who, is Still 1 shay post Ivanoff's grave at New Kokkinia
anthracite, 195 years; potash, 117 years, and iron ore | They co-operated with another| pas pecome a kind of shrine. Periko-Skouras
111 years. The discussion of these must be post- | branch of British sabotage, the | righ, 1945, by The Indianapolis Times { > | My Day By Eleanor Roosevelt
two Greek army a mar like you.” officers, Mago-~-poulos and Kon-}’ OpOULOs-=-S00n tol fe: as a
cla W orld.af, Science ONT: NEE ofthe mn AEs Peta on 2 Industrial ‘might of the United States are present in sufficient reserves within the nation to last more than 100 years at ‘pre-war rate of consumption. This is the sober fact pointed out hy Elmer W.
“The squad- fires.
Magnem is Satovereds fag mineral 66 Osits: cr iis brine wells in addition to coming .from the ocean. Salt is likewise mined in many localities, But the oceans supply is inexhatstible. ” . ] J "Fourth on our list of minerals comes bituminous! Ivanoff. has their money, three coal and lignite. Mr. Pehrson estimates that our American $1000 bills, placed inside reserves are good for 4300 years. sliced chocolate bars by ' British military intelligence .at' Cairo. SCENE II: Three Nazi seaplanes,
and ‘a dayk- haired, Pole, Ivanoff.
Pegoor chief of the economics and statistics hranch of the U. 8S. bureau ‘of mines. . He bases “his « opinion upon a study just com- ; i pleted by the bureau and the , MF ame. FU. S. geological survey, } , EE ~ ‘I is important to note that {i
World's Greatest Supply Gs THIS IS highly important because it means that
ghe United States has the world's greatest supply of { al. As time goes on, we shall turn increasingly to
Grave Becomes Shrine
in-law and another girl near the | | Acropglis. Two Italian officers ap-| proached. “Say 4hat I am your wife, | and for them to take the other
Nitrogen, Magnesium, Salt AT THE head of Mr. Pehrson’s list are nitrogen, magnesium and salt. He considers our reserve of these three as inexhaustible for all practical purposes. This is because we have now learned how to extract nitrogen from the air, while both magnesium and salt can be obtained from the ocean. Without the process of “fixing” atmospheric nitrogen, we could not have fought world war II, for we could not have met the required volume of explosives from nitrate deposits.
to feed an So wives of men, who have made out under all kinds of chalIenging circumstances, will have to be sure of their ground before they set themselves up as the final authority on what“can and can't be done around a house, If they arent, they are likely to come in for a few lessons in how to rise to an emergency and
poned until tomorrow,
group. Skouras | was Thanos Skouras, a member of | the well-known family of American jm magnates,
and The Chicago Daily News, Inc
> HANNAH «
PURPLE HEART GROUP
New officers are Lorenz Rose- Re rswroma: Quill, James OM, think of this bill as being of value tunities and environment, have not progressed as| | meyer, commander; George Schei- \y, Warren Holland, Eugene Higgins, Lr Serial minority Broups. far as other people in what we call civilization. | ble; senior vice commander; Otto {joseph Rn ne chasl en 3 important fdr the That does not mean, however, that they will for-| | Ferger, junior vicé commander; | Zimmer, Robert Wagner, George Thumann, ntic public in general to understand ayer be inferior in otir type of civilization. Given the | Fred Breil, finance officer; Orville Sn Aaa RB Hn clearly that the bilk. while it may same kind of opportunities, they may do better than | Perguson, chaplain; Fred Myles, Joseph Lauber. Richard Eisenhut, George be of value to these groups, iS we have done. | | Americanism officer; Ralph Tracey, {Raulel I a ames Catton. John equally vital to each and every Looking at the war-torn world of today, we can~ | welfare officer; Harold Perkins, his- Clark, Donald Carr and John Bradshaw. one of us who are citizens ot the not say that our civilization has been perfect. We | torian; Don | Morris, sergeant-at- i a a T—United States. If we do-not see can only say that we have created A material | arms, and Hermah: Higgs, Mr. Fer- § PLAN CARD PARTY that equal opportunity, equal justice and equaltreat- comfort for human beings and that we are struggling ger and Mr. Breil, trustees. | | Goldmound council 445, Degree of ment are nieted out to every citizen, the very basis 5 find a way of living together peacefully and co- . | Pocahontas, will have a card party ig, on which this country can hope to survive with lib- operatively in the future. MANS OKINAWA GUN | at the Red Men's wigivam, 137 W. ‘erty and justice forall will-be wiped away. That is a great step forward, and we. are taking . Marine PfcfHarley W. Mayo, son | | North st, tonight. iS. . Bess Are we learning nothing from the horrible pic- it internationally; but we must also take it within} of Mus, Clara, M. Mayo, 327 Hanson | | Smith, ways and means chairman, tures of the goncentration camps which have been our own borders. : ave. and William R. Mayo. of, South- | 1s in charge, : . appearing in our papers day after day? Are our We cannot complain that the Gepmans starved port, is a member of a leatherneck,| - memories so short that we donot recall how in Ger- and a len, if ‘we at hor do not take gun crew on Okinawa. MANPOWER-LOSS TOTALED pw ¥ many this imparalleled barbarism started by dis- every step—both through our government and as a i ' WASHINGTON, April 30 (U. Py, . crimination directed against the gewish beople? ° ' individuals—to see not only that fairness exists in SCHEDULE MEETING | Strikes in March cost the nation + It has ended in brutality and cruelty meted out to &ll employment practices, but that throughout our Brookside chapter’ No. 481, 0: E, 1860000 man-days, or eleven ones. all people, ‘even ‘to our own boys who have, been taken. . nation all people are equal citizens: 8. will meet at 8 p. m. tomorrow. hundredths of ne per cent of the ‘ . ner. ; . Where the theory of a master race Is accepted, | Mrs. Sylvia P. Jones is matron, “Tavallabel working timé, according : | "This 8 basviality coud not exist if the eras had :
NEW YORK, Sunday—Representative Mary Nor-
; ton of New Jersey is making a magnificent fight for
the passage of the fair employment practices bill. This bill would give us a permanent group in the government whose. function «it would be to see that, as far as employment goes throughout this country, there is complete equality of opportunity and treatment for all. Many people
have come to *
not allowed themselves to believe in a master race which could do ‘anything it wished to all other hu-| man beings not of their particular racial strain. There is nothing, given certain kinds of leadership, which could prevent our falling a prey to this same kind of insanity, much as it shocks us now. _ The idea of superiority of one race over another! must not continue within our own country, nor must | it grow up in our dealings with the rest of the world. It is self-evident that there are people in certain! parts of the world who, because of different oppor- |
there Is danger Yo ali progress in civization.,
"
gg voly
‘SEATS NEW OFFICERS
New officers of H. Weir Cook
chapter 233, Military Order of Pur-.
| ple Heart, will assume their duties at the meeting tomorrow at the] {club rooms, 14 W. Ohio st. War] | veterans who have the purple heart | are invited tq attend the meeting.
William, F'. Krueger, aptron.
now to do a job the way it should be done.
MONOGRAM WINNERS LISTED BY SCHOOL
The following Cathedral high
school pupils have earned scholas-
tic monograms:
William Wood, Donald Spfingman, Wile
A ie but dep a
