Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 May 1945 — Page 16
REFLECTIONS-—
a
| ultimate fruits of the glories of Hitlerism. He vil see the .. marks of ruin left by the might of a united
fury. In Britain, as in the United States, neither major party has a patéfit on patriotism. . While there is a contrast of diplomatic emphasis between the socialistic Labor party | For when, in the “Note,” a “private first-class in and the imperialistic Tory party, there is apt to be much | = nny iy We ou A nya iw less difference in practical application of foreign policy than : ;
who had been anywhere near the front lines ought campaign utterances indicate. to know the answer to that—if he's wandering » ana.
we're for them,
around asking such a question of casual strangers, he- hasn't earned his chevron the hard way. And certainly he deserves a more heroic role than an interlocutor to a radio scriptman, oz There are passages that read, and listen, well, and the thought, of course, is noble. We may well hope that Mr. Corwin is right when ‘he says, “We've learned that freedom isn't something “to be won and then forgotten. It must be renewed, like soil after yielding good crops; must be rewound like a faithful clock; exercised liké a healthy muscle; “There “15 truth there, truth to be remembered. =
5 »” NO LABOR prime minister could go much farther in trying to buy Russian co-operation than did the Tory Churchill, when a year ago he gave Stalin a virtual blank ‘check in Poland and Eastern Europe. At the San rrancisco conference the Labor party leader and deputy prime minister, Mr. Attlee, was neither more nor less imperialistic on India than Tory Foreign Minister Eden; neither more nor less: pro-Russian or pro-American. Both were for the | 3 on British empire first and last. Just One Listener's Opinion ooh : IT MAY be that this commentary But the fact that no change of government in Londun eritiosi of Mr. is likely to cause a basic change in foreign policy, does not just one humble listener's opinion—and when we prevent party strife there from weakening British influence Ieciate ype ie Teasiive See St or Stipend abroad and jeopardizing needed foreign. settlements. It re ee Be a re en. will interfere with a Churchill-Stalin-Truman meeting, | many cemmercials to be entirely fair to radio which, make the San Francisco charter more flabby, distract ste 8, goes. i Sang eamipigiely of ise! Britain from the Pacific war effort, and leave Russia freer When 3t sschps io. ‘to control Europe. And it must be admitted that not all critics Only if the British parties have their fight chiefly on | Share these acid exceptions to Corwin’s claim to domestic issues and admit agreement on basic foreign policy where that exists—as even partisan Americans did last November—can the bad effects be curbed.
is over-
greatness. One of them evaluates his cufrent work thus: “If a finer, more moving tribute to the years just past and prayer for the years to come is written, probably Norman Corwin will write it.” So it's one man’s meat, at least: That same reviewer also says-of “On a Note of Triumph” that it ‘contains more poetry than
UNCLE SAM—THE OLD MAESTRO | Trample shat 3 sain L OU taxpayers probably haven't realized it, but part | Movi so, but. if this is poetry, I'll take sarsa of your millions spent by the office of war information Parra, supports a music sectioh. Those millions number 58 this ‘year, will be 42 next year, if OWI gets the proposed appropriation. A letter to many newspapers from Dr. Roy Harris, chief of the music section, promises a monthly supply of material “to inform your readers of the outstanding musical activities” of OWI. With so much other important war news to print, we can’t guarantee our readers that monthly treat, but | we gladly give Dx. Harris a single shot. © (See Daniel M. Kidney’s story from Washington on Page 15.) Dr. Harris defines his particular weapon in. OWT's vital question of veto is well nigh inevitable before
armament as “informing the people of Europe on the | the conference adjourns. Simultaneously there may i Russia will walk urrent musical world.” be a threat, open or implied, that Supe | out unless her vetp is permitted to stand. In" fact, . . » » » ”
there is already such a report. AMONG OTHER things, he says, the OWI music section I wish to repeat that that is the darker side. 1 o | ‘would put my money on the charter. I would do broadcasts music by short wave to Europe 24 hours each day; sends music for live performances to “outposts” in | the calamity of a Soviet break. So determined are
2 WORLD AFFAIRS—
By Wm.. Philip Simms
SAN FRANCISCO, May 24.— The end here is in sight. The odds are about four .to one that some-
league of nations. That is the good news.
| 1 | |
| that because terrific forces are at work to prevent Europe, Africa, China, Turkey, India, etc.; has fathered | the United States and Great Britain that the Big the folk music of many national groups, including race melodies of Thailand, Japan, Persia and Arabia: details | co-operation. “special consultants” to locate the best singers and players | Any Agreement: |s' Better ‘Than None of rare music “wherever we can find them in America” and | make recordings. To give Europeans the truest possible picture of Amer- | ican musical tastes, the output 1s divided: 25 -per cent | of the delegates. with whom I have talked say they symphonic and chamber music; 25 per cent folk music; | Wil 8a along, if necessary, rather than risk wrecking 50 per cent popular (including “hot” and “sweet” | h Show. Jazz, Latin American, ‘dance tunes and songs.) OWI's “oltposts” report on the reception. ‘For | none. The alternative, they confess, is too terrible . Bite of . om a | to contemplate, : example: “We learn from oul Luxembourg outpost, | This situation, in turn, obviously has serious disthat the German people simply do not like ‘hot’ jazz but | advantages. It gives each of the Big Three the power are much more partial to our ‘sweet’ jazz.” of life or death over the conference. Like a lone man IT: i : . a With a sputtering bomb in his hand, any one of In short, OWI; combing the world for music old and | yen could dominate by threatening to toss it or else, new, seems to omit only one activity: It broadcasts no | Such a position is occupied by ‘Russia. To what singing commercials across the Pacific to drive the Japs | extent’ she uses .it, I have no way of knowing. But nuts. , P. §.—We are surer than ever that congresg ought to save 42 million dollars by abolishing OWI, music section and all,
Three shall continue side by side, they are prepared {to go to almost any length to retain Russia's
same #ay. And while the middle and small nations
not ratify the charter if denied the veto.
"Within Limitations, It Will Be Workable’ AS OF TODAY, therefore, here ig how the new world security organization looks, three-quarters finished and surrounded by scaffolding though it is: Within limitations, it“will-be-workable; "Its hands will often be fied, by the Big Five, and the Little
—————
RETURN OF THE NATIVE
FRITZ KUHN, former fuehrer of the German-American
a: J ; e revolt over ‘their helplessness. a... bund, is being sent back to his native land to view the
Like other adjuncts of the new league, the Pan-
: country whose unity he did his best to destroy. me It seems a pity that Fritz couldn't have been on hand to | witness the fireworks that marked the Third Reich's closing * He always was a great one for spectacles, But at ‘way. We hope that he has a long and thor-
- 4
at the peace table. But others. will demand their quid pro quo. . y i
As the Big Four (Britain, France, Italy and Japan) did the old.
5
variations on thé. theme, and whatever they are, ¥to do with facts and truth is ver-
Corwin and his medium, but it's |
time around June 6 the conference | wil] produce a charter for a new |
The bad news is that a serious crisis over the |
THE OTHER two members of the Big Five— | « | Prance and China—are known to feel much the
feel very keenly on the veto and other subjects, most |
The attitude of almost everybody here seems to | popular | be that practically any agreement is better than |
there is talk among the delegatiohs that she ‘will |
Forty-Five will be almost constantly in a state of :
Ameffean security pact will function when the mem- | bers of the Big Five have no objections. The United States will win control of the Jap mandatéd islands
And in it, she will make much hay, assuming the role of champiori of all the freedoms, While needling’ the’ western democracies as. reaction-
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 responsibility for the return of manu. scripts and cannot enter correspondence regarding them.)
| boten nowadays, it seems a patriotic duty to try to state some things | publicly, z | Relating to prices and cost-of-(living, OPA statistical percentage figures are- humbug. Retail buy-and-sell produces the only figures of value to an honest {attempt to present public economy: {but such figures are utterly impossible“to get. This is also relatively true of wholesale buy-and-sell, {manufacturing and producing, both {in quantities and qualities, statistics {but estimates, The cost of living to ordinary people isthe basic important factor. | The following are a few of the items | that add to the cost of living, but get little or no expression nowadays fin “prices.” Quality. Scant quantity, ‘None for sale at any price, . Loss of buyers’ time, also sellers’ {time in cases. “No meat,” for ex{ample, and markets closed. An emi ployed lady in a big city, with food |that under the rules of war CAITY | for aged mother indispensable, finds [the death penalty, and are proven {the small stores and markets in Ler guilty, they will get the penalty. { vicinity. all closed, rides street cars | I think people ask this question {six miles and back, stands in line | because we all want to see the crim|twe hours at big market; all she |inals get what they deserve under gets is one pound of ground meat | the law. But we are skeptical of {alleged to be “beef.” A farmer drives any such result if .we insist on tryto town, but has to walk back to |ing them under our criminal code. tfarm-—no gas! Eating places clesed, |Our courts and juries are notorious land hotels, “no help”! Confusion in | for being soft-hearted and failing stamps and "rigamaroll, conflicting {to inflict anything like adequate governmental orders and agents | punishment for murder, even when are common andgall take up time there isn't the slightest doubt of of some value—tHat adds to cost of [their guilt. : living, In the majority of murder cases Strikes, loss of time and deliveries, | tried, when the high-powered lawan immediate addition to cost of | yers get through with the jury and living which extends to unknown |their impassioned pleadings for future. acquittal for their perfectly irinoA “can’t get at all” often adds|cent and persecuted client, the jury more to the cost, much more, than retires apd after long deliberations an almost prohibitive price does. |and wrangling, it’s safe to bet that Some estimate of the foreign ob-|they will make one of three virdicts ligations our world saving mierna: | tionalists are putting onto our babes | years. in cradles should be included in any| If we want to see the war crimihonest estimate .of current cost of | nals punished right, we had better living. None but crackpots, crooks, turn them over to England and | profiteers and political heels would | Russia according to report on crime. deny the truth of such unavoidable A few years ago 16 murders were economi¢ tragedy to adult ‘persons committed in England the year be{of today. [fore. The réport ‘stated that 15 As to what is termed “inflation,” [were arrested for the crimes, tried arid which OPA, with its huge army land convicted. Fourteen were of assistants holding down some of hanged and one was given a life the obvious prices but not the wages term. That's the way England han{that are the fundamental of all dles her criminals. So if we want |cost5—this began with creating a|the war criminals to receive Justice, {50c dollar and deliberately raising we had better let England and prices. | Russia dispose of them.
Side Glances=By Galbraith
|“WHAT ABOUT THE WAR CRIMINALS?” By Oscar Houston, Ellettsville What will be done with the war criminals? That is the question being asked by almost everyone. If they are brought to trial and
| :
. In general, Russia will dominate the new league A a fuiel, ; Lou . A gas
"Well, Colonel, still
my, delivery boy, Cyr ened no apne
tried by court martial for crimes
I am sending now a few words about the poor little victims of poisoning, the dogs. I love them, and if you can spare space for my letter, again I thank you very, very much. I will not give my name with my letter although I wish to, but I have dogs ‘and they are penned in, I watch over them with good care, still they may get around to do harm to them if I give my name. So I will say thanks to you again; and here is my letter.
ad —-While reading The Times an eveining ago, I read the letter about
little “Smokey,” a pet kitten who
only work. If we can catch the rat that is doing this dirty, rotten, lowdown poisoning of dogs and cats (and doing such is surely as low
(as anyone could ever get) I would
like to see them caught, then a public show given at the Monument Circle ‘for us dog lovers. And make the rat, or rats, take a dose of his own poison in front of everybody. What a pleasure it would be to witness just that. I think one such demonstration would end dog poisoning and save so many heartaches for children and elders. But since it is too bad we can't do that, the next best thing is to
{take a good look over your yard {before turning your pet out, then {watch very closely with a shotgun. | Maybe the rat will be around. See? ® x = {“SHOULD HAVE BEEN PUT IN JAIL” | By Mrs. C., Indianapolis
I would like to know how other people feel about the way war criminals are being treated. When I read in last evening's paper that Hermann Goering was treated like a guest instead of the war criminal he really is, it made me. feel very
—acquittal, hung jury or two to 14 castle he should have been put in
jail with no luxury privileges. I think all the war criminals should be brought to justice and no coddling. . This includes the ones that run the horror camps, If that
{1s done, it would go farther toward
insuring the peace than all the peace conferences we can hold. In future years if a man knew he would be punished for his crimes, he might think the second time before he committed them. . » » “I DON'T KNOW WHAT HE MEANS”
By Alvalr J. Rucker, Indianapolis
A Mr. J. 8. stated in your column last Friday that the mayor “is inefficient when it comes to labor. although he does have the help of
am referred to I don't know what the devil he means. I do not have and have never had any “labor” or any other kind of talk or connection with Mr. 1'ynidall as mayor, the present city administration or Mr, Remy as a member thereof. In fact, as I recollect, I haven't seen these gentlemen for the past two years, even on the street. * I haven't “helped” and nobody has ever asked me to. »
. “INTERESTING. AND AMUSING” By Ivan C. Clearwater, Indianapolis Although I'm° running an hour late for breakfast, I'm still going to take time to write a little note of “orchids” to Lowell Nussbaum who writes the Inside Indianapolis column for your paper. I like the column; it is interesting and amusing. I really get a “kick”
lot of the column, devoid of ra-
tional #nd international politics. It Just gives us a glimpse of Inside Indianapolis,
DAILY THOUGHT Having confidence in thy obedience I wrote unto , thee, knowing that thou wilt also do .more than I say.~Philemon 21
GREAT souls by Instifict to each
| was the victim of poison. I thought of "a very good idea, if it would]
1 di: olis Ti; 4 os | POLITICAL SCENE— THUY PAGE 16 Thursday, May 24,1955 | Radiode vom Pressure Ly i : ’ ¢ A RE : ! . : . : 3 oy fat / 2 : U S ROY W. HOWARD WALTER LECKRONE HENRY W: MANZ 4 ‘ . + Ly ; : . HOt How WALTES I By John W. Hillman 7 By Thomas L. Stokes elk i (A SCRIPPS-HOWARD NEWSPAPER) RADIO PRIDES ITSELF on WASHINGTON, May 24~Pity ; being up to the minute, so perhaps the poor congressman! ! J ovied aud Published Price in Marion Coun- | it is inevitable that, in its scramble He's got all kinds of people or WASHI daily (except Sunday) by ty, 5 cents a copy; deliv- | to be first, it should even get the | his ‘neck now. And he's ‘going to wh tu Indianapolis Times Pub- ered by carrier, 20 cents - jump on history. have a lot more. : ray ai lishing Co., 214 W, Mary- a week. That, at least, is what Norman Corwin, the The U. 8. Chamber of ‘Commerce. #hich has i . an waa land st. Postal Zone 9 ; literary “darling of the airwaves, has done in his tional head i * were : Mail rates in Indiana, | .op 5 Note of Triumph” (Simon & Schuster: $1.50) yout stir Juarters in w big marble building herd right to | : $5 a year; all other states, | ., Blain. “ Is out stirring up local businessmen in their 2004 them for , ) which, he explains, is not a poem but his “first anizati \ Sh m | Member of United Press, U. 8. possessions, Canada | oyna 3 organizations all over the country to start bombarding carl earn \ > : periment with the translation of va radio work essmen- ] Scripps-Howard Newspa- and Mexico, 87 cents a |, "oo expressly intended for the eye” pk en with their jdeas about what congres; _ governme per Alliance, NEA Serv- month. The peem, or radiode or kilocital, or whatever The Dicicat aaa training. : , or A , t 1s the creatfin of what are=KRow: that ice, and Audit Bureau of , | it is, was written in advance to hail the forth fhe projec : w on that s BL RILEY 5551 | it is, was written in ce orthcoming N >. a : | Circulations. . ASCRISAS = NOWARD | 2 victory in Europe. Literature, thus, no longer 1s 2 isto) Alans S rigs In etch i Q—My Give Light and the People Will Find Their Own Way “emotion recollected in trahquillity.” Rather it has ring. The P. A. © alg, oc. Eanes 7 grocery _S : become frenzy before the fact—one of the new effective politically in the wih Jihich was the navy. i synthetics. and th on his leg BRITISH PARTY STRIFE 2 Radio has never learned the virtues of restraint. effort as ticker, Jima. H 2 . oalition | The news oracle pours the same ecstasy into his : * cha - go back RITISH party Stee and the Probes $e 9 time, | exhortation to use Zilch's hair tonic that he does "This Scheme Is a. Bit Different’ work? D government there comes a e--WOrs.- possibic * | into an announcement of victory for the United . BUT THIS SCHEME i: a bit differer og to live © In th f European political instability Britain has | Nations. The commercials are the worst offenders, that's whet ft th a bit different. Af leas his lite? 3 LY6 Sea o1 surop po il add to the | of course, as they leap from superlatives to super- th a 1 Says de flashy handbook got up b A—By ~ provided ballast and rudder. Now she will a 0 Lie superlatives, but they are not alone in their phony re DL be ls hihi ae fesembian . ment wil uncertainty, ne. HL SXusergrice i a 0 the {ust except that the figures which jump about the oe provide Americans sympathize with the British desire for a have ne i 8S g p are of plump and vigorous businessmen, drawn in a teak bi 3 general election. Unlike the British, who postponed a : Se’ 7 oe Jaa, i Stitures asad o the mor Op Bs vine enasional vote for nine years; Americans insist-on-one-every., Writes at the Top.of His Voice rs DEMAND . § | booklet, pes pages e C. I GC Sheeler: ” i ars. ‘eover NORMAN CORWIN is a gifted writer, a skille 3 3 . “Thi > ; Ti four years regardless of emergencies oF warns Moreo “ ! phrase-maker, but he shares. this fault with his TO ABOU? the oo. 3 Hutyook on POiMen) oun 1 od Ta since we have fought a war under party governinent, We | colleagues. He writes at the top of his voice; his ow: - with election of people to office. | Germany. can hardly deplore any British desire to drop coalition. “Note of Triumph” is consistently Sorlissimomsiure Don * “This book is, however, concerned with the actionl] able to g : gird : _|are no ‘throbbing overtones, no searching minor ” 51 , ; ot cause hi Nevertheless this is a most inopportune moment. Be keys. He may have intended this work “expressly ie ere DE , congressaiel, al 4 Sa cause that is recognized in England, the parties are trying for the eye,” but it reads as though it were being thing of what makes a congressman ‘tick, and to sug pay to t to blame the bad timing on each other. Both are jockeying urated by orson Wee. Wik os auliphonst ig gest ways in which local chambers can influence na) : i : v WC e is a slave, h a—a t » for partisan advantage. ie radio, as it is of Hollywood: The formula was yuan Commerce have both Republican » » =x . # =x =» effective in the “Ballad for Americans,” RH anyone and Democrats as members, so it would hardly b . : who has listened much to the inspirational extrava- s : ; v ; continua- ida smart for them to organize to get out and ring door IT STARTED when Mr. Churchill proposed h "| ganzas of the networks: must be. getting a trifle bells and ask for thelr neighbors to vote for Bil tion of the Tory-controlled coalition until after victory | weary of hearing the rebonant Mz. Welles, = a Blotz, as the C. I O. people do. But the purpose o » 3 . -{ réasonable facsimile, tossing off a series of echoing NAC Iie ink over Japan. The Labor party made a counter-proposal for | re ; ¢ Sa0Ine . A. C. is to make a congressman so aware of th ” 4 . . Gs periods in answer to the question, “Who are you?” | Jocal busin th os - an Octcber election. Mr. Churchill came back with a threat | orice pretty. but sfier.a half dozen years it] Cao us 0 essan & at the “political” effect will b to dissolve parliament soon for a July election. He followed | gets a bit oldish. And we have yet to hear 'Busi No Le Can Sit Back’ ie : te mel : ime. mini v day. | Mr. Welles identify himself, in the manner that usiness INo Longer Can dit Bac n> by submitting Ris resignation 83 prime minster yester 2) would be most intelligible to the majority of his “CERTAIN el groups with anti-busines Already the mufual mudslinging is harnitul. Tories listeners, by replying n i best Sassen ' leanings. are stronger and flercer than ever before. ; accuse Laborites. of undermining administrative efficiency Yoiog) Swi am 1 Y % Susnper, Sort you we . “I holly di ™ OE aht The handbook sets forth, “Business can no longe 2 3 . itv.’ Laborites reply that, if a snap election cr $ hr xX: yl ¢ Y sagree wi wha sit-back snd merely hope that congress will ad C— A and national unity S Yepy y built L There. Must. Boe. Variation ooSsler oT lm you say, but will defend to the wisely and well. Everybody ust become intereste — is forced upon them, they will prove the Tories once ou ere Mus o afiations ; or ' death your. right to say. it.” in the issues and in what congress does about the ZZ ‘ : . = . : J tion-and-answer, what'’s- | : * “ itler and fascism and are now incapable of strengthen THIS DIALOGUE, or ques ay ; ; ny nin A live, smart N. A. C. will make sure this intere i up H s A . ine my-name or I'm-the-guy-that-done-it style may. be | OPA PERCENTAGE : ! (Times readers are invited |“WHAT A PLEASURE is aroused, and does not flag. Politics—which mes ing friendly Russian relations. | dictated by the limitations of a medium that reaches [FIGURES ARE HUMBUG" Yo. Gxprosi heir vi + * |IT wouLD BE” the art of government--is something for you Americans should not ‘be misled by all this sound and | only the ear—and often not that if the listener is |By B. B. Patterson, Crawfordsville p yy Yes n : worry about, .not just the other fellow” 2 5 . near enough to twirl the dial. But there must be | Though joy riders want nothing| these columns, religious con. {BY A Dog and Cat Lover, Indianapolis 2% .
To form a “live, smart N. A, C,” according the book, you get a live-wire chairman who know something about national affairs, and also “a lo about. the psychology of humans in public office and about public life in general.” Then, you get son men and women who “know the score” on’ nation issues to make up the committee, hae A Then you start getting after your congressman 20 tips are listed—and you start holding local meet ings. ] ‘Look to Your Laurels, PAC’
FROM THE ADVICE to the local N. A. C. of which, incidentally, & total of 1,330 already have beer organized with 20 more coming in every day, thd congressmen might as well begin to look for— Requests for the Congressional Record. . Letters of appreciation for their “good vote.” “Fine large pictures of native scenery, or agri}l cultural and industrial assets, for their offices. Also “some local food product which™ they can hav!’ served to their colleagues in house and senat restaurants. lied i Lots of letters from local businessmen, for ‘each individual member of the whole chamber must be | spurred to exert his own ounces of separate influence on each national affair to make your total weigh count in the congressional balance.” “Sterotyped form letters won't give a senatof! courage, or information, or insight—or even thd willies. But 1000 individual Jetters, written fron information provided by the N. A. C. can head ing! smoke out, or buck up any man who votes on Capitol Hill! Look to your laurels, P. A. O. Look out, congressmen.
IN WASHINGTON—
Spare Parts
bad. Instead of being taken to al:
Mr. Remy and Mr. Rucker.” If Il:
| By John W. Love
WASHINGTON, May 24. — Restrictions on manufacture "of spare parts for automobiles are being lifted, and this move on the part of the war production board means f more to most of us than preparation to bring out new | models can possibly mean under two or three years Herman H. Lind of Cleveland, president of thy “American Institute of Nut and Rivet Manufacturers has been arguing for weeks in favor of a broad prod gram in production of repair parts for all kipds o consumers’ equipment—automobiles, washing maj chines, refrigerators, vacuum cleaners and varieug | electrical devices—as well as parts for motor truck: farm machipery and retailers’ equipment,
Advantages Are Numerous MR. LIND has been carrying around a lst off arguments in favor of starting the reconversion ir§ | many industries on the replacement-parts end if preference to new models. He has been showing if here and elsewhere. i The advantages, according to Mr. Lind, are mord | numerous than most of us would think: A good supply of spare parts would bring piece of home and transportation and other equipment bac into use faster than new models could be supplie for some time. { It would help to avert the transportation break down which is still a possibility for autumn, { It would give men in the prime producing plants immediate jobs. " Parts production could readily be fitted flow of war work. i Small manufacturers and subcontractors could use | | parts work to help them get back into their regular lines of business, 5
Would Reduce Pressure of Inflation | A FLOW of spare parts would re-activate distribu tion and service channels, distributors, jobbers and retallers, repair shops and service stations. They would start rounding up their old staffs and hire returning soldiers, : " Workmen temporarily out of jobs would be able to. repair their own equipment. A flow of replacement parts would reduce the i pressure of inflation. i It would improve the public's morale. People would i feel that their individual and, to them, important & needs were being recognized in a significant way, 80 much for the Lind argument. To his last point it might be added that a supply of parts would H
| into thd
us get over the feeling that the old models; of cars a least, were more durable than those we bought | the late 1930s and after, i A : " The rural expert who makes a business of taking apart two harrows to make one, two mowing machines to make one, etc, could return to more constructive ‘activity,
To The Poink—...
FINANOIAL ASSETS of Nazi leaders have been frozen, with only $30 a month allowed for living expenses.. How long wilt they need living expenses?
»
