Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 July 1945 — Page 16

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The Indianapolis Times

« PAGE 16 Thursday, July 12,1945

ROY W. HOWARD WALTER LECKRONE , -~ HENRY W MAN2Z President Editor Business Manager

(A SCRIPr'S-HOWARD NEWSPAPER)

Owned and "published daly (except Sunday) by I'imés Publishing Co., 314 W. Maryland st. Postal Zone:9.

Shameless

ry Burton Rascoe

NEW YORK, July 12~I ave “just finished reading ‘one of the most fascinating and yet one of the Price tr Marion Coun- | ‘most. appalling biographies I ever gntountered-*Mo-ty, 5 cents a copy; deliv- | man Pruiett: Crifhingl Lawyer.’ erdd by carrier, 20 cents . The value of this book, it-seems to me, is far beA week. :

Mail rates in Indiana, $5 a year; all other states, 0. 8. pussessions, Canada and Mexico, 87 cents a month. 3

scalawag—a scalawag who insists that he is one and who never. lets you forget it, It.is more than the story of a man who carried on, for 50 years, “a fan- | tastic vendetta against society and who became .a legend thereby. The book is also a priceless contribution to the | history of the Southwest, an invaluable source book for students of American folkways, eystoms, beliefs, superstitions and idioms, and (indirectly) one of the | most ghastly indictments of democracy and the jury | system that has ever been offered ‘in print. To those of us of the Southwest, Moman Pruiett has been a potent name since the days of Oklahoma's fight for.statehood. And today, in Texas and Okla-

Member of United Press, ~ Beripps-Howara Newspa~ per Alliance, NEA ServPe and Audit Bureau of E 2 Circulations. 1 oe a

er Give Light and the People Wili Fina Their Own Way

"A REAL ANTI-LABOR BILL

BILL that is really anti-labor is before congress with a favorable report from the house veterans committee, | headed by Rep. John Rankin of Mississippi. it would specially exempt war veterans from closed- | gathering o old- fuer Io Vip out eyswilsiegd? . : . = | agcounts of how oman out-foxed a prosecuting atshop union contracts. If it becomes law, veterans could torney, made a dupe of the judge and hypnotized a work in closed shops without joining unions or paying | jury, thus saving from the gallows some varmint who initiation fees and dues, | was guilty as all get-out. We think it is. a mischievous proposal, designed to| Already a Legend : appeal to prejudice and to make trouble between veterans ygs MOMAN PRUIETT is already a legend, aland home-front workers. | though he is sll in% years old, yetireds Siooped, 1 OX < . i 1 3 . lv | | crippled and hal mn ut sti ull o re and meanThere might be some excuse for it if unions generall) i re Ii be, threatened to use closed-shop contracts to bar veterans with ris collaborators, Howard Berry and Howard from jobs. Unions could do that by refusing to admit | Parker, have resolved to come clean and tell all. The

veterans to membership or by demanding unreasonable | result is @ irankness, so honest and so shameless as

RILEY 5551

| vond its superficial vaiue as a:well-docimented and | | incredibly #andid stord«of a brilliant and successful |

} noma one needs only to mention him among any |

se . . to be almost hair-raising. initiation fees. But unions generally don’t seem to threaten Moman was the lawyer for the defense in | i . as n which men and women were charged with anything of the sort. | cases in Ww <r . ; £3, vs ; murder in the first degree. - He won 303 outright | Many unions, in fact, have kept their members who BE Eat oy Win sentendty. ranzioe went to war in good standing and offer to admit veterans | from 20 vears to life: and one of them, sentenced to S ley on Moman’s ars without initiation fees. | hang, was saved by President McKin as new Meine .: it : Fn =» plea for clemency—a plea which Moman himself ad-

mits was false and hypocritical. Pruiett's clients IF ANY closed-shop unions do bar veterans from mem- | were by his own statements in this book, invariably

bership and jobs, there is a much better remedy than this | anti-social, criminally minded; vicious persons, guilty Rankin bill. It is in the Hatch-Burton-Ball bill for a new | 85 Ylalsed aud Seserving Io i Sreferven federal industrial relations act. It would require closed- | where the defendant had indulged in what is techshop unions to admit-job-seekers-to membership on fair | nically.called justifiable homicide. ‘ terms. That would protect all workers, veterans and | : Jor, wheh FE Was Shp Fease digs Myvi: youre -civilians alike, against abuse of closed-shop power. We | carried out his revenge, With astonishing success en , » g vi rge on ca ITS A 10 0 PHL ld 10 he penis Arana Te i the ‘favorable” report on this Rankin bill is | 4 doe x he A rue phony. It was adopted at a meeting attended by barely | ing: the difference between the raised and the true more than half of the committee's 21 members. Eleven | 2mounts of the bills, . of those members—an actual majority—have now signed | Vowed He'd Have Vengeance

a “minority” report criticizing the bill. They say that] WHEN HE WAS 18, he was seutenced to five years the need for it hasn't been proved; that it hasn’t been

drunk.

‘Hoosier Forum

“THANKFUL RUSSIANS ARE OUR ALLIES”

By H. H. Cade, Muncie

Three cheers for the lady from |

lin the peiiitentiary of Texas Ior roboerys" rolling” | Columbus, Ind., Helen H. Long, who Prujett says he never stole the man's | steps right up and takes a good

shown to be for the best interest of veterans; that it hasn't | money and that he was arrested and convicted only | crack at The Watchman:

| because the prosecution made much’ of his previous conviction. .Then and there he shook his the jury and vowed: “You'll iegret this, damned gne of you! thieves and murderers loose on you—and in a per- { fectly legal way.” And ne did—300-odd of them, matricides, patyi-. cides, ax-murderers, dope-heads, prostitutes, ‘and

been given adequate study. They say also that representatives of labor, industry, | government and veterans are trying to work out veterans’ | | re-employment problems in friendly conferences, with good | prospects of success. And that this is no time for congress | to rush in with half-baked legislation, : We heartily agree. =

cidal tendencies and tempers as quick as they were.

on the draw. The record of many of the trials, which | {the horror presented the utmost ingenuity and oratory of Pr uiett | would rather take my chances with | to obtain acquittals, is in this book, documented by Russia than Germany.

IS GERMANY DEFEATED?

Ww HEN the Big Three meet at Potsdam next week they | should take a look at the senate’s Kilgore committee report. That investigation shows it will be just as hard | to make victory stick as it was to lick Germany. on the battlefield—in many ways harder. Of course the Big Three fready have most of the facts contained in the Kilgore | document, but probably the evidence has not before been | brought together and added up to such a devastating total.

court records and contemporary newspaper reports. | Szcuring acquittals was a malign | Pruiett.

vented prejuaice—joining the Ku Klux Klan (though he loathed it) hecause it’ was expedient, at the time, to do so; and above all, hé put up what moronic judges considered a good show—always expensively spectacularly tailored, ranting, sawing the air with | {| his hands;

fist at | your editorial staff. every | not intelligent enough for that, but I'll empty your )ails ‘and turn | when you publish two of them.inj

quoting Scripture, jerking tears about | | expressed 80

I never thought he was | one of His letters are |

one issue it is enough to arouse

| one's suspicions. |

Russia is not perfect by any!

{means and we don't want or need | criminally insane and just plain citizens with homi- | her type of government here, but

| after seeing pictures and reading of | camps .of Germany, I

Evidently, |The Watchman thinks we would

game With | i fare better if Germany had won. I he bribed jurors; he committed. torgery and fam thankful the Russians are our perjury; he coached witnesses in utter lies; he in- |gjjjes, “evidence”; he played upon every conceivable |

2 8 8

| “BETTER STOP AND

DO SOME THINKING”

and IL C. Stevens, Rushville I, too, dissent from the opinion 88itating against Russia at this time the had better

frequently in

Certainly the American “public needs to know these | the sacredness of womanhood, the home and the |Forum by The Watchman. On July

facts. For we are likely to be the victims of our own lop- I sided logic. For months we have read stories and SED |" audlin pathos. pictures of the apparent utter destruction of certain enemy | A Perveried idealism industrial areas. It is'a matter of record that Germany's WHER 1 FUT the book down; with sometiitig of military defeat is the most complete ever suffered by ai, shudder, my thought was this: modern power. From which we easily conclude that Ger- | brilliant gifts ant energy! many can’t come back as a military threat in our time. And that is where we are 100 per cent.wrong. » . ® . . " HERE 18 what the Kilgore committee learned from allied official sources and from investigations inside Germany: Today Germany is in better shape to plot aggressio than after World War 1. - She still has the world’s third | pt Sor tie supatw. largest industrial system, and tremendous recuperative ~ capacity. NS Her iron-steel industry, second only to the United | So Oklahoma City, States, can be put into operation with only minor repairs. | Her explosives industries—chemicals and coal-tar—are | still at approximately pre-war levels, Her current synthetic | rubber capacity- exceeds 100,000 tons per year. She was within six months of getting her great syn-| thetic oil industry underground, and of striking New York | with V-2 bombs. She still has four million tons of machine | tools, and vast, undamaged capacity for producing more. + All of this is backed by “a world-wide network of Y economic and ‘political reserves and a system of comméreial - inter-rglationships penetrating- the economies of other nations.” Through their hookup with world cartels, and hidden financial resources in many countries including the United States, Gérmany’s big industrialists plan to regain their domination. after shouldering war guilt on their

military and Nazi partners in crime. ~ ~ » 5 u o

| been different; Hitter or a Ghengis Kahn, Without any schooling, he not only

homah Prufett: Criminal Lawyer”

Okla.

FOREIGN AFFAIRS—

Farben Files - By Marshall McNeil

WASHINGTON, July 12. — A : secret list of the world-wide interests of the great German chemi ical trust, I, G. Farben, is being studied by experts of our treasury department.

It contains the -names of more than 700 firms

other countries in which Farben held a stake:

files captured at Frankfurt by our troops, and it was

funds control in the treasury.

: NINA IQTD PQ Lor vic The present study of the list may reveal more GERMAN INDUSTRIALISTS and militarists {ope to German money hidden around the world in What

persuade us that they can never be a threat again, that | the Nazis-thought were havens, The Nazis had hoped our real danger is from our allies. Having failed to divide | to reclaim these funds to pay the cost of making the allies in war, they intend to split us in peace—and there. | G¢rman indystry great again. by win in the end. So the Kilgore report should carry a double ‘warning to the Big Three meeting; Germany's war-making capacity, industrial as well as military, must be destroyed 'permanently. This cannot be done unless the allies stick together,

First Homage to Trust MR, SCHMIDT believes I. G. Farben was prac tically a state, with representatives all .over the world who pald first homage to the trust and owed it primary loyalty: He has a staff of about 50 persons in Germany combing through the captured files, and soon will return there himself, Be fore long, agents of our government will start scouring the records of other German trusts, and of German banks, Incidentally,c our forces there have commandeered the services of several German women who can speak English to serve as stenographers, They had attended a Nazi military government school at Dusseldort, set up to prepare for the German occupation of England.

Planned to Cheat Partners RECORDS DISCOVERED by Mr. Schmidt show

NO DOUBT ABOUT IT

UR G. Ls are playing baseball in Germany and on beaches in the Pacific; our guys are playing chess (by radio) with the Rjssians; they are hunting wild boar in German forests, in. rip-roaring American fashion, with bullets instead of traditional spears; they are teaching * English girls to cook like Mom spd they are admonishing French’ girls fo wear less makeup. No doubt about it, the ‘world is getting better. Our G. Ls are seeing to that.

LIVING QUARTERS, BUT QUICK

Russians have prepared “25 large buildings” n Potsdam near Berlin to house the delegations of | sident Truman; Prime Minister Churchill and Marshal n at ir- forthcoming conference. Sounds like A lot | results of all Farben work. ail ‘on short notice - for three delegations. Maybe we | But if Farben wére split up; "i one part con- |

Russians, over. here some afternoon tracted with an outside company, that cdmpany | housing shortage.

would ‘receive only ‘information - from the single | “Farben. ou with Which iy had sonivented, .

studying proposals for splitting the trisst into three OF four parts.

was to cheat partners ‘outside. of Germany, - Mr. “Schmidt indicated.

| Wad

rights. of man, and drawing upon an extravagant |5 he wants the senate to delay its! | vocabulary “that was as rich in homely invective as approval of the United Nations| “AGHAST AT DRIFT To me it is the only hope TOWARD BRUTALITY”

charter. we have for preventing future world wars, so why delay? : He also asks, “Wouldn't signing of

of evil Prujett had in him, if his civeumstances had |death blow to freedom, democracy he might have béen an American and independence to those nations?”

| tor Poland? Perhaps they:

with Russia to decide whether “the | foreign?

single nation in the world could hope fo conquer Russia.

tried it, didn’t he? And Hitler,

going to conquer Russia about three weeks, wasn't he?

What a waste of the charter before the Polish and bombed, an outcry went up all over Ani what - potentialities | Balkan problems are settled be a the Anglo- American world.

{ |

|bombed and burned as London and Since when was Poland a democ-1Coventry were, learned to racy? The fact is that before the us as something to gloat over. read and write, but learned enough law, as ‘a porter war the downtrodden peasants - of | | and bootblack, to be admitted to the bar; he pulled | Poland had one of the worst dic- over these human bonfires, adopting don Bridge among my shanks as | himself up from abject poverty to the position of | tatorships in Europe. | foremost criminal lawyer of the Southwest—and all | Russians took over the whole of Nazis, from which we were to free n | through hate for civilization, as he knew it, and con- | Poland it would be an improvement mankind? greed and petty mindedness —so0 why all of these crocodile tears!

Even if the the behavior and mentality of the

might | them alive Tt is unlikely that you can obtafn a copy of leven civilize some of those unpro- necessity, then our complacency and |WiPes his nose on my trousers orj ‘from your local | nounceable Polish names. It is issued by the Harlow Publishing what is the United States expected more be called into question, to do about it anyway-—go to war enemies win if we become like them. |

And just self-righteousness should. -all

dictators of Poland shall be local or that we are now creating contribute outcast if he indulged in the torIt seems quite apparent that no we all seek?

Napoleon | who love the justice and mercy for [been with {which America has stood, we are heard or felt, what was reputed to be the finest | aghast at the drift toward brutality was good enough for children in military machine of modern times, | that seems to be evident in our na- | grandmother's in| | tional thinking, remembering still good enough for the meat hounds

If a handful of agitators should land children of the same work us into a war with Russia, we gave us our own.

“I wholly disagree with what you say, but will defend to the death your right to say it.”

|“LET'S HAVE MORE [STORIES LIKE THAT” | By Mrs. J. J. Domasce, 625 N. Drexel ave The article on the front page of | {| The Times July 6, “Three Boys Suf- | fer Burns Producing Own Fire- | works,” was a grand lesson for boys. ! Let's have more front page stories | {like that—only put it "in plainer | words so boys of 8 and 9 and 10 years old can understand- it. My boy is 9; he coaxed for matches to make them pop on July-4 I tried to explain to him that it was! too dangerous. : =" ” “NUISANCE TO MAN'S would be just as crazy as Hitler was. OTHER FRIENDS” {We don’t have to fall in love With By Richard A. Calkins, Indianapolis the Russian form of government to get along with her as a neighbor. |She has a perfect right to choose | her own government, and we ours. Her co-operation is essential for. preventing world war III. This is! the real menace facing our nation. Therefore, the handful of people

(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.)

2%

| | |

This lively controversy about dogs will buzz on everlastingly. Far be | it from me to attempt fo wind up! such a gripping (or griping) dis-| cussion, although I speak dogmatically: I own a dog: The harboring of a dog, like parenthood (another field in which I have had some experience) entails that ugly thing known as re-| ” |sponsibility. Dogs as well as chil- | dren need to be taught good be- | (havior; yet even in these days of | {Junior's lawless supremacy, gener- | The Indianapolis Independent Meeting of Ally speaking, Young America cops a Feiends from the muts the merit badge.for on and Coventry were 'good conduct. When I visit my friends, their children do not descend on me with much ferocious yapping and snap{ping with complete disregard for {the master’s helpless mollifications. It is not little Billie who plays Lon-

stop and do some | thinking. :

» ~

When Japanese cities were

the news is given

Are we, as a nation, in rejoicing

I stride to shake my host's outstretched hand, nor who puts the imprint of his_paws on my waist coat as I am about to “have a

If bombing civilians and burning | : . : chair.” Neither is it little Bill who

is actually a military

the | |slobbers on my hands after I am] Oui | forcibly seated. i Forsooth, little Bill, privileged How can the hatred toward us though he is, would be a family

to the permanent world peace which (turing familiarities reserved for the pooch. I like dogs provided they have taught to be seen and not That station in life

As one small group of Americans |

day; surely it Is that Jaflanese babies are human lof today. A dog may be a man’s Being who | best friend, but too often he is a [nuisance to that man's other

| |

It was discovered among the piles of Farben |

brought back here by Orvis Schmidt, head of ‘foreign |

that some time ago “Farben's crack lawyers were |. .

* One purpose of the proposed division of the trust

Side Glances=By Galbraith

in Germany, Latin-America,” the United States ahd |

friends. » ~ ~

“FRIENDS AFRAID | TO ADMIT mr

If an outside company, for example, contracted with Farben for exchange of discoveries in-a cer- | tain chemical field, the outsider wou expect to -get

pny ped seve, we 7. M. REG. U. 8. PAT. OFF, : - "Your dad spent his'vacation listening " the radio—now | have’ to : al him-every day and tell'hjm how Cowboy Zeke, Dr. Hp :. and Nellie the Horse, are getting along!”

| By Pet Nisdbamer, Indianapolis | I have heard quite a few of my

| auction July 24.

POLITICAL SCENE—

Exploitation By po L Stokes

; WASHINGTON, “July © 12.1 not nice to think about, but’ some persons in this country would set the retwning war veteran against workers who have had to remain at home to produce the things with which to fight.’ _ The object of promoting this dangerous cleavage is to weaken labor unions, Aq It happened after the last war, “contributing to. the wave of intolerance that swept the country: in the early '20's. During this war there have been: manifest attempts here and thére to set the soldiér against the worker at home. Some attempts were made in congress, some outside. The post-war period, because of its natural cofi fusions, will offer opportunities for those who would | use the~veteran to fight uniuns.® Both the returning soldier and the worker. are suffering from war tensions. They can find sources of friction, if they. look hard, or if they are encouraged. As the nation emerges from the war, labor naturally is going to try to get more money in the pa envelope. That might as well be expected. All during the war, businessmen and farmer. have been pressing, too, to break through price sei ngs

Bill Appears Innocent ALL OF THESE conflicts will add up to. enough | troubles in the post-war period of adjustment without exploiting the tensions of war's aftermath b setting one group against anotherfor example, the | WAr veteran against the union worker. sl

Typical of the latter fechnique is ‘the’ currént ||

activity of Rep. Rankin (D. Miss). He is sponsoring 4 a bill which would provide that war veterans eannot | be required to join a labor union or pay union dues : and assessments. Innocent as it may look, this i§ :

designed to break down ‘the structure of unionism. |

Mr. Rankin's purpose is clear from his own record. It is in keeping with the philosophy he has exempli fied in recent years, It is more easily understood by

taking into account his background and his locale jn t

a poll-tax state and «a state where labor has littl influence,

Labor bills are handled in the usual course by

the house labor committee. Mr. Rankin is chairman of the house veterans committee. In a characteristic high-handed manner, he put the bill before his com: mittee, without any previous consideration or testi : mony, and without the full membership being present. | Then he called for a vote and announced it had been | approved. Thereupon he reported it to the house, |

Calls Bill Unenforceable

NOW HE IS confronted with a “minority report” signed by more than a majority of his committes 4 disapproving the bill. That is quite a rebuke to a committee chajrman. him on the voice vote in the committee, said he thought only he and the chairman and one othe 2 member voted for the bill, The measure may now be recalled, since a majority has signified its opposition. In its “minority report,” the committee mia jority pointéd out that Gen. Frank T. Hines, chairman of the war veterans placement training ‘board, has been { holding conferences with representatives of labor,

| industry, veterans and government to work out prob-

lems. incident to. the re-employment of wir veterans: and that there is every reason to believe this will bring .a solution. Gen. Hines recommended that legislation be deferred. The committee majority said the necessity for thé | Rankin bill has not. been established and “there has been no cenvicing demonstration that the proposal will be in the best interests of veterans.” It said ‘also’ | that “the effects of this measure would be so many’ | and varied as to be unenforceable: the changes in

| contracts, agreements and laws would be 50 numerous

as to be incalcuable without study.” Mr. Rankin has discredited himself, but he will

not be stopped so easily; nor will others with similar aims,

IN WASHING TON—

FSA Eviction

By Daniel M. Kidney

WASHINGTON,

July

tration has changed from the role of helpful uncle into a hard-hearted landlord driving tenants from ‘the soil is being investigated, This new picture of a harsh FSA was laid before | a house agriculture subcommittee. The'issue was the proposed liquidation of Delmo labo? homes in south- | east Missouri. This project has ‘been ‘scheduled for | Meanwhile those interested in saving # for the! present tenants are asking congress to step in. Rep. Frank Hook (D, Mich.) has introduced a bill upon which hearings are being held. His measure would permit long-term purchase of the homes, either collectively or individually, | FSA. he said, Is requiring substantia) payments | which poor tenants cannot meet, The agency also | intends to move the houses (now groupéd in tens) | and sell the land, he said, This would mean a return | to the plantation system, with its share- wy op~ ponents of the FSA plan ¢éntend.

Groups Support Movement DELMO LABOR homes project was [founded in 1939 to give share-croppers a chance to have a few acres of their own, it was explained to the committee, One of the leaders in demanding that the tenants

13.~— ' Whether the farm security adminis- > i {

= ROP RTT Ea

One member, who voted os

stay and become owners of the property is the Rev. | |

David 8. Burgess, a Congregationalist from the district,

friends say that the picture, “G. I.| 1Joe™, was a disappointment and a| | failure as good entertainment. Having read the glowing reviews of the picture, I wondered at this [and so decided to find out exactly what was wrong with the picture. It turned out that nothing is wrong with the picture, but something is surely wrong with my “friends.” Shall I excuse them and say that perhaps they are being cautious or [that they are simply trying to put {out of their minds the fact that war is death, not glamour and glory, but sickening death. In “G. 1, Joe”.one gets a picture of true war—mud, bullets, deathly silence, deadly loudnesses, strong men suddenly growing weak-—that {is what war is, It is only after unnumbered men have been slaughtered that the glory comes, and then that can only be a. humble glory. Parades and triumphant marches, that's (what, people want to believe war is, ‘| But it is not. “3. 1 Joe” shows that and people, my “friends,” are afraid to admit it,

+ DAILY THOUGHT - And it repented the Lord that He had made man on the earth, and it grieved Him at His heart. mess 6 8

a ra

g

Qo;

| wt mar ink met a

He told the committee that plans to save the | |

project (some 500 homes) is backed by the home mis

sions board of his church: Msgr. John G'Cirgdy of the

| National Catholic Rural Life Conferenge, the National

Farmers Union, the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People and the Southern Tenant Farmers Union. Three of the 10 housing units, with 50 to 8 dwell~ ings each, are for Negroes, the Rev. Mr, Burgess said. Paul Bifton, director of the Washington bureau of the Union for Democratic Action was another witness for the Hook bill, ; “The picture of a hard. hearted landlord turning poor tenants out into the streets is repugnant to most of us,” Mr, Hook told tif® committee.

Goer

Calls Eviction Inhuman “BUT THE procedure under which’ FSA proposes

to sell the homes of these poor Missouri farm people |

is no less harsh or inhuman, Where these people are to go, whether they sleep in the flelds or trek down the roads with their belengings on their backs is no concern of FSA. Its job is to sell the homes, to get the project off its hands. Maybe that's true. Maybe, | FSA can’t, under the law, afford to ‘be concerned with the human rights of these people. Well, I for one, don’t feel the fact of their poverty remdves them

“I'from decent consideration.”

Mr. Sifton assailed FSA Administrator Hancock and his staff for the. auction sale plan. . “I understand that when Rep. Orville Zimmerman

SR ON .

pp

pin a

(D. Mo.), in whose distriet these homes are located, proposed postponing liquidation--until January, 1946— either to give time for congres: and Mr. Hancock to adopt other policies and ethods or to give the resi-~ dents more time t6 find other quarters—G. Stott Noble, who is Mr. Hancock's chief liquidator, ne better to

| out that it would be. or

‘thew

thousands of fered unspes horrors du the war, hor orphans now a night's sl and a few m fuls of food. come at wil draggled a gaunt, and o two nights disa into the vol is Berlin — searching fo to escape fro Oldtime p fled” by the half-bujlding American bo March 286. Detectiv One grizzl ally’ burst i he told this rible things do behind th “My blood how anti-Na Poles and J he recalled. with the br and the 88. ° even worse trained men

Chan

By WILL Times F GUAM, least one Jag ancestors w Guam enlist: navy. On a visit

P.A C. I ON TE!

WASHING -President the qualified erful C. I. O mittee. The P. A. to Mr. Trun jectives of Roosevelt. its future based “upon not upon ps C.LO.M said after a last night | “will act as partisan pol as an adju party.”

giv sof

lore