Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 September 1949 — Page 10

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ang employers... One is for retirement pension systems and

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pleted our objectives for a number of the 69 |

materials on ‘the critical list, and certain others

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, dustry and every Yeiaeny of of Marion County.

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! ion Lucas | Fy le x | D MR EY Wel K The Indianapolis Times ~™ wo ig Fler Erp anation epartment ~~ Hoosier Forum : sO ying b "RSA SCRIFPS-HOWARD "NEWSPAPER Ta | PP -SCARING i % do not gros with 8 word thet you say, but) | 0SSes | § ROY W. HOWARD WALTER LECKRONE a MANZ | To Aid Britain , wil defend to the death you right to sey I. i President Manager : : | , - v Kd 5 ; P AGE 10 Saturday, Sept. 24, 1949 | Defense Unit Will Not Use Community Co-operation’ 2g To Be§ oe Stockpile Dollars on Recovery | By Ralph G. Hesler. rt g y hed 4 oy na . .- | off SAL ial Fon ber of WASHINGTON, £ept. 24—The Department "Quietly and with little fanfare, something Two S ho od Press, in SRurean Gedy ianapar Af Filet WA of Defense will tight Ty move to ry stoek- significant is happening in Indianapolis. It is in P Jhguncies, oat 2 fonts a comr tor aay pile dollars to help solve England's financial | the field of coinmunity human relations, ari ver ny carrier w A » problems. Freq there are disturling stories of su ia av A a o year antiy La * vear un Under the law, the Munitions Board is re- euily 40 Pet. all” of en struggle between organized labor and industry, Sion daily 3 oth or states J 8. P0jssons sponsible for the $3.7 billion stockpile. This ° t turmoil SPENCERY) . but beneath that surface of apparen : (UP)—The los: RI a year's amendments to the unification law plage Telephone RI ley | it directly under_the Secretary of Defense. are many mauiivatations of good will and ‘ separate swind Give LAoht and the People Will Find Their Own Wow | Its Shairiat ¢ ig ~ tor the secretary, 0 vi 1 JabofmAnggemel Sone if weekly meet Jaki to oy — > heavily in tin and rubber for our stockpiles. > Ings between representatives ot labor and man< After t 0 Sir Stafford Cripps urged during recent dollar agement. in scores- of Indianapolis Industries, 9 the records © The Problem of Age talks here that this would enable his country hese meetings do not always make the head. Merchants Sta - k ' . { to buy more manufactured products from us. eral A EDICAL science is making it possible for people to live | Part of Britain's troubles, he said stem from | work iat comm brojcis has oan » a ond sate longer and longer. But our society is giving older per- | Our failure Wo keep up heavy stockpile buying | cently been brought to light. Leaders of organ- nearly c . A a of commodities which England wants to sell ized labor and representatives of management | value of b: sons less and less opportunity to earn their livings. We agreed only to review the stockpile pro- | believe that a valuable service can be fendered More than iw * This paradox is at the root of a problem which calls | gram. That review now is under way. the community by sponsoring educational tours was attributed urgently for the wisest thinking America can bring to bear | Tail Must Not Wag Dog of the Ret Yenther 2 Agencies of the Indianap- | discrepancies | | THE board has told the State Department, o cashier Clyde upen it. | | it is learned, that it is willing to buy some tin FLOOD The Kingan' Packing oa i Sogo who was arr = Men and women at or past age 65 made up four per | and rubber. But it doesn't want to take more Of RUMORS with UPWA-CIO Local 11 Ps a Sponge : charges of em t of this country’s population in 1900. They are more | of any item than is called for in the long-range a tour of the Community agen * lumbus, O., yes cen stockpiling program. In substance, Defense over 40 employees visited several of the agenthan seven per cent of the total today. They may be as | Secretary: Louls Johnson has taken this postion: . ‘ cles. . with he Has O mich as. 17 per cent by the year 2000. It has been our policy—and one we intend | usa io 8 B MR peri So-operating with . Sra ‘Their numbers, having grown from about three million | 17, 5M SRG G18 RICH ide ob \' | ‘18548 sent employees to some of the health and © session when wien the century began to 11 million now, may reach 13 jectives. We are stockpiling for security. If | E weliare ni -Coming Co., joined with’ pected to sho million five years hence and almost 20 million at the cen- | our program proves helpful for other purposes, | USA Local 1148 in a similar project. Hers $140,000, accor EC 4 | such as British recovery, that is tine. But the -UPSETTING Charles Lukenbill, personnel director -and Lu- when the aud HPS end. Ian Tuk wot Wag the | TAE FINANCIAL ther Cooper, President of USA-CIO Local 1148 about two weel In 1900 gearly two-thirds of the men aged 65 or more On the other hand, if, as a matter of policy, APPLE C ly led the employee tour of the agencies. John Ane In addition, were reported in the “labor force” —that is, they were we intend to buy minerals and metals for some ART » | derson, plant manager, took a personal interest ¢ was h half purposee other than national security, thst | in making the tour possible. to used car dea working or expected to find jobs. Now much less than should be‘a separate program. | Ir TE eSY unions ~ showing - - Jr. 26, Harlan of "them are so reported, and their proportion is falling | pat the nL of June, the Sockphe mained | interest in this educational idea. The Diamand Rectenwall, ¢ .. De- e . rapidly. Many of the more than half who are not in the | FREE Foot oO 050, will bring it up to Chain Co, Aaistant perce direct ? Bas ahs hafitsome emp “labor force” today would be willing to work, but have n8-{=515 billion: Another half billion dollars worth DO aucted tour. 2 FBI after he Bote of finding jobs. is on order for delivery after June, 1950. That | Une cordiahty evident ‘on these occasions when federal 2 would give us approximately two-thirds. An- | between labor union members and representa aminers began . = =» . & =» other $1.7 billion would then be needed to com- | tives of management speaks well for labor. the bank's ledg Z MEANWHILE, there is a growing tendency among | Plete the program. stockpilers say. management. co-operation In Indlantpolie, -. “We keep fin aA '-] [ employers to set age limits for employment at 45. Yet Some Easy fo Get Moiiiiions Board 5 att DROWNING rd ont Ag gh built up over the past seve’ 28 more Sapo pl L 8, the unitions . ard “1s no 1 le rg persons from age 45 to age 65 make up pearly one fifth of satisfied, It is particularly worried about bal- | gd ve ALL IN A SEA eral years these events point to a Community * bank’s,” Fran ' the country’ 8 population. ance, Some materials have been easier to buy | a—— — OF ECONOMIC Fund drive this fall which can be made a coms Hapa Dank al * So there are two mounting pressures upon government | than others. As a resull, we now have com- | “APPLESAUCE! mon field of community endeavor for labor, ine Supe: visor Fla

said.

ts under systems already estahlish “ are ahad of schedule: Those behind are hardest E “We've also for. inerensed benefits wnder sys y Baa CURRENCY UPHEAVAL . By Marquis Childs | ‘Worms Work for Us’ ._@eposit slips + The other is for lower retirement-age levels. Unfortunately; the things Britain wants us : By Dr. C. F. Williams, 804, 108 . Washington * “and_ there -are ~ The cost of retirement pension systems must be paid to buy most heavily are those easiest to obtain. “ § Wo Da Pr “Se Street Raven's Sven lo out of wealth created by production, which means’that in- | If we increase purchases in those markets, we or ra e ar’ anger een’ When we know the value-of the lowly earth. pnd asse 3 ( ili f retired and pensioned le must be | must use money the board planned to spend for | worm, we are ready to take off our hats and” Ind. aa or créasing millions o pe peop other things. WASHINGTON, Sept. 24—Many Americans worth. Look at the British trade deals with | poy in a) humbieness to the silent worker that’ be cad supported by those who work. Board experts say a Plentiful supply of one seem to feel that devaluation of the pound is a Argentina. It hasn't” brought -intra-European makes it possible for us to live. > Eu rly a This burden, limited to providing pension systems for | item ls useless if we don’t have others. For ex- | =. 0 wo punishment visited on the British trade. Youbwho drink coffee, dump the coffee .

ample, we need manganese for steel. But if we

increase substantially our natural rubber purchases outside the stockpile. This apparently

“It's a bottomless hole—just as in China.

which they have been hitherto excluded by their

Robert R. McCormick of the Chicago Tribune

When it rains, the worms come to the sur-

Rectenwall t

8! Held In persons 65 or older, will be heavy. But a lowering of retire- | 4 yi) the manganese we needed, we still would | for their sini. That note runs through much There's no use going through the China experi: EE. al ap ithe i Shahar Rectenwall 1 ment-age levels could make it absolutely unbearable. need chromium, nickel, vanadium and tungsten. | of the comment on the great currency upheaval ence again. From 1939 on we put two billions | ¢., crsunds a real colony of worms. . ¢ terday before 3 FI 8s. 0p : to form the necessary alloys, and abrasive | yp,¢ nas shaken the world. in there and then we put in $225,000,000 in ECA The worms need breakfast. What do worms = i missioner Ho T * bauxite, corundum and industrial diamonds for But actually if devaluation has the effect ~- money. It doesn’t appeal to these hard-boiled eat? Well, the bugs which later eat up the - i held in defaul SOMEHOW this country must find a way to combat | machine tools with which to work it. | sought by those who Promotey fe Ameriesy _ people out here. | vegetation, lay thetf eggs iu the Sound, supply i He waived x ; : ny fields will come nge to say, w reakf | appear this fallacy that. age is to be meqsured simply in terms of Buy More Rubber Peatioe thar It in a sharp weapon in the hands Way to Get Elected er Rr oh op the Won | lumbus Monda years, that workers become “old” and therefore “useless DURING recent dollar talks, Alwvican rep | of the British. It is a weapon which-may enable YOU CAN be cynical apd say that Mr. Dirk- | have eaten. Another tipping of the hat to Mr. ; ! authorities tha at.85. Somchow it must overcome the trend which makes resgntatives promised Sir Stafford we would | 4). to compete in American markets from sen is merely angling for the support of Col. |» Worm. {! Indiana to fac

it more and more difficult for workers to hold jobs, or find

will be done by reducing mandatory-use syn- |

high production costs.

who is the power in the party in Illinois. But,

face of the ground, boring holes for the water

| ities at Colum

new ones, or advance to better jobs, after they reach age 45. When that happens—if it happeiis- these after all, the prime necessity of a politician f8 | to reach the roots and likewise loosening up the straight to Col . Th t, in barest outline, is the proble Its solution will thetic rubber quotas by 100,000 tons. same American manufacturers are going to to win elections, and Mr, Ditksen must have . soil and allowing oxygen and Bitrogen to get to. | stayed with re a , p mp. The law requires that we consume 222,000 .| i. yelling ‘about foreign competition, subsi- concluded that this is the way to get elected to | the microbes so necessary to gro Y wasn't hi sot be easy. But delay could let it become impossible to fons » Jar But the Jaw it being Jeinserpreted dized by taxing the-American taxpayer. That the Senate. A farm hand that feeds Aer "works for “1 ame here t overnment and indust nm the Commerce JJepariment. ary © | hits, of course, at the central flaw in the Mar- The Dirksen straw could be discounted if | the good of mankind without wages is surely, settle my nervy solve., The best minds a g hi he TY | of synthetics exceeds 222,000 tons; this year we . gna) Plan approach to Europe. * there were not’ other similar signs. Senators oe of. another tip of the hat. “ they were res add 1 labor. should, be put to wor on t 18 pro em now. - will use 410,000 tons altogether. The idea nom. | It goes against the American temperament - who went back home during the brief ‘recess | After doing all this free service for you, and yet.” - * = . iN that voluntary usage. satisfies the. 222.000 | garhaps ‘against. human . nature —to pay’ out. found considerable grumbling over * foreign afd.’ | ‘me, Along comes a numbskull- and sprinkles a * Chaney, is* be . mandatory requirement. money to help foreigriers to become our ¢om- ~ ‘fhe purchase of” Canadfan wheat with PE - fA poison ‘on’ the- ground. * Poisen kills the Worms: .; eral grand jw Th N Ww Red Re ublic “High defense officials aay this is a serious | [itiiors. That is possible so Jong as the steam dollars sent to Britain Is bound to cause mot | that work for ug. " juggling bad ¢ e e Pp mistake, They want mandatory quotas to be | of idealism, engendered by a crisis psychology, complaints. | | Spencerville 2 retained. They point out that voluntary con- | remains at a high enough level. There are fo- Those who have always been isolationist and “| { banks, 10 mile Fue Eo aunist proclamation announcing establishment | sumption can drop to zero in’ a few months. | day significant signs that that level is dropping ‘eager to discredit the whole administration pro- What Others Say { ——— of a new “peoples republic of China” should be an .occa- They. believe it is essential that we maintain |\and dropping fast. gram are ready to capitalize on these feelings. | ; Ld) i ‘Woman’ a synthetic rubber industry big enough to see . They will exploit them to the utmost. This °| : sion for rejoicing in the State Department's Office of Far | us through more trouble. Most of the natural = Opposing European Aid + coming winter there will almost certainly be | PERBONNALLY L yea 1 4 agree > oii | Found to Eastern Affairs, which has been working toward that end | rubber produging ig Would be beyond reach If | OUT IN Illinois former Rep. Everett Dirksen new Communist strikes in France and they will A aT. 00000 nt upon putting it © SAN FRAN ce 1044. We SVEP 0 an Ley Re ick | announced his candidacy for the Senate in next = feed the mood of disillusion. I entirely in the hands of the President and with’ (UP)—A buxa op Whil ssful in its efforts t de the U. S we Bg A tie: |* year's election. In starting so early for the seat But it goes beyond partisan politics. The | meotion of military aid (to Nationalist rested on a fo : +E UPHCOREHIN SN Xe oo § persuage ns | what we need. Stockpilers say we need $124 | Now held by Majority Leader Scott Lucas, Mr. Hine nas tome, 3 sesina, WIA Lew $10 bold and | China)—Sen. Tom Connally (D), Texas, on aid * jailed today in

Army to arm the €hinese Reds during the war, this Far East-

billion worth of short-supply

items to see us |

Dirksen is taking a strong line against any fur-

imaginative thinking is called for that will put a program of European co-operation more nearly

to non-Communist China. <>

of the county j

i it i . { 2 . covered to be : erin Affairs office succeeded in ending American assistance | through a lA De Ae sal Be an “in Illinois this might be In line with the realities of the American tax- : tion h The masquer { i i } P > > ' 8, 9 i N is * . “ to the Nationalist government. billion the stockpile, $7 rion mer considered just normal if it were not for one Payer and the American producer. pois THINK Me Doma boi ingly i the : rested as “Mrs = Since then it has done everything in its power to under- | “770 ho | important Hadt in the Dirksen glory, 2 Con petal Division of West | history of the world. And what we want to Soc a niced i i " i . i { gress Mr. rksen went all out for e ruropean ! : -" oc e, . . Nationalist prestige -and morale. The white paper ! A PRAYER recovery program. He fought hard and effec- SOMETHING new—a new X factor—is need- a i 30 itapresy wpoi Bem thet Fesponsiil passed as a wi reédently published by the State Department was typical. God, give me strength today to meet: my need, tively in the 80th Congress to get the full appro- ad that will give the average American a prac- gs es 0 BUNT GONG! When the Nationalist capital was moved rom Nanking | Tou me (scar my evry (ought and dees | [TLR SoU hy the Truman adminezation {UA ake 1) EOopetn © pealon 4h SOL, | typ speniad rom how 10 onan | "Loh ANGI to_Canton, Ambassador J. Leighton Stuart was 1éft in Nan- Open my eves that's may sée a way should Thus his present isolationism, if that's the division of the West into savagely competing | the greatest area of mutual trading in the ~ Sheriff's de)

; 3 : ; y tion of a search of the king. Then he was recalled to the United States. Minister word for it. represents a complete reversal. 1 economic blocs. world and how to prevent the crea Lewis Clark followed up by closing the Canton consulate stray. , a remember ‘having a long talk with Mr. Dirksen Among those who were most dubious about barrier between the leading democratic nations Municipal Air] AWS pb sing ihe oa And when 1 near the ebbing time of life, in the fall“of 1947 in london. What he had devaluation of the pound, the fear was that the | —Clement Attlee, British Prime Minister. body of Fran

argl notifying: the Chinese foreign office that American intePests there had been transferred to the British consulate. - ”» » =» . = = THIS was the next thing to withdrawing our recognition from the Nationalists. And it is just two steps removed from formal recognition of the new Red regime. _- + The Canton consulate was the oldest U. 8. diplomatic establishment in China. Its closing was damaging to Natidnalist morale at a critical moment, as it may have been indended to be. For, on his departure, Mr. Clark explained that he had information the city would be in Communist hands within a week. That was Aug. 24, and the city hasn't “fallen yet.

But America added nothing to its reputation in |

the Par East by taking a FoRder in this manner while the |

Btitish stayed on.

+ This run-out may rise to haunt us in the days to come, fdr the East has a long. memory.

LAST year payments on these liabilities cost Britain

Clear my few moments from the sting ‘of strife. (Give me the sweet assurance I am Thine, - And then my home, home of the soul, mine —CHARLOTTE BRUNKER KINNEY, 3736 Kenwood Ave,

HIDDEN DOCUMENTS . ve . By Bevglts Larsen

Tracing Nazi Rule

WASHINGTON, Sept. 24

of the war.

There are some important gaps, however. The Russians hold many of the official files and documents. These records have been moved out of Germany and what they contain and how complete

of the agreement between Hitler and Stalin at the start of the’

One of the important and. un--heralded jobs being done most efficiently by Allied occupation | authorities-in Europe is a careful writing of the history of the | Nazi rule in Germany and of the Axis’ side of the war. Fortunately the Western counties captured most’ "official Nazi records and documents. By pooling what each one collected, American, English and French experts have been éble to piece together a pretty detailed and intelligent rec ord of everything that went into the growth of naziism -and the prosécution

seen in Europe had convinced him that the United States would have to take the lead in helping to save Europe from communism. “It was a good gamble for the first year” he says now.

first year We haven't gotten our money's

of the

“But look at the report for that

| SIDE GLANCES -

principal result of devaluation might be to drive |

American exporters out of present foreign markets while British producers would fail to make any real dent on the American dollir market.

In other words, the prescription might accel- .

erate the very-disease it was nieant 5 cure.

Sicily and have a poll. If the people condemn

me, I promise that I will resign. But if the people want me, I want to follow my destiny

"Salvatore Giuliano, aotorjond) Sicilian bandit,

im epega

By Galbraith | FARM PRODUCTION ‘io By Earl Richert

Create a

‘Food Surplus Plan.

WASHINGTON, | tention to a brand-new multi-billion dollar plan for moving food, “ | {

Sept. 24 Officials here are giving full ate

su rpluses from the producing countries to needy ones. Offered by Directer-General Norris E. Dodd of the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization, it would:

public corporation known as the Internationat’

" Commodity Clearing House to buy and sell farm surpluses among nations. It wauld have a capital equivalent to $5 billion egntribe “uted by the 58 member nations in their national currencies. ! Twenty per cent ($1 billion) would be put up initially, with

The plan is to be submitted to the Food and Agriculture Ors.

Le & 9 wy LET us give the judgment to the people of

Mickey Cohen keys were four yesterday.

LEGAI

-

- . will hold an exa

- » ° ~~ 3 Q 223 B ao » »

| BF I wean Thu

the U. 8. share—based on national income—being $400 million rd ool Britain’ S War Debt they are. nobody but the Russians know. They have flatly re- | The remainder would be callable by the board ing $400 3) be oqlogk 2 . fused to discuss the matter with the Allied scholars ject to consent of the country concerned. The U. 8. share of $5 do vuubler A HILE devaluation of the pound should give Britain a | | *M Billion total would be $2 billion. $3 0300 Steel =" shot in the arm through a flash sale of cut-rate goods | Many Papers Destroyed { | The Clearing House would purchase and sell surplus coms: otfice h the Bou: inthe American market, (he biggest drain on British econ: IN the last month of the war many important and incrimi- | modities in two ways: , cept of elect any nating papers were destroyed by. high Nazi officials. But their | . 4 corse 4 omy remains unchecked. system of record keeping was so effi@ent tf ended up outsimarting | Full Market Price , + This is the cost of servicing Britain’ Ss war debt to India | them. In a great many Sasol eaiions ane Copies of Jestroyey [he { ONE: The U. 8.. for example, would sell wheat to the Cleare-: » Beptembar 342004 x ‘I originals have been located in different places ut it is still. |. ing House at the fuil market price. T = OIL ANC and the countries of the Middle East, it for the experts to determine just what gaps exist be- { ne for the wheat in its iA EE odo > ron _: This debt amounts to slightly less than $10 billion, on | cause of papers being destroyed or which are due to the papers | loss by devaluation.-The Clearing House would then held this ment of Conger the new valuation of the pound. But the total may in fact being in Rawenn hands, records and technical data on vAROHE "| currency to thé Sredit of the U. 8. until enlarged trade or restored Seiahar 1. iodh, erman foreign office cords and tec ( i i » hel greater than that, since the debt was contracted in 4 PR Revelophents. unfortunately, have the biggest gaps. If '| | or ey Solver Hl UitY Dettnittedl sleuring the aocoumt:, a surplus’ py no tO sterling, and part of it at a guaranteed rate. is believed likely that the Russians grabbed more foreign office | digsuch as dried eggs to the Clearing House at a price. far below: ons allen . ‘ records than the Americans or British. They may have concen | | cost, The purchasing country would pay in dollars the amount’, tons in ana. : CI CER trated on this on purpose, tobe able to hide forever-the details - | paid by the Clearing House. > i ne “halos ation"

war. The U. 8 has made public some of the details which it had | ganizatio f 1 in N be A the’ garth | i " . 8. has : ] f nization’s conference here in November, $14 million, a sum not much smaller than the net amount of this agreement several years ago. But the experts agree much U. 8. participation will be subject to approval by Congress, : he ne received under the Marshall Plan. Liquidation of this debt of the information einai Hidden, i ih Even If It 18 decided that only a presidential order is necessary, - ownship I » ie "wWige > ime | Included in the batch of missing records are many of t e | Congress will have to approve or reject it in voting the mon . said petition i J by. exports, which othe! Wise sould be used to pay for m details of the German attempts to get: co-operation during the | Big news for American farmers in the if rp : serve vatio a. 140 § N.§ ports, helps to explain Britain's dollar shortage. Expansion | war with Latin American countries, Knowing how successful or an Vo | through and works, is that they will be permitted far gréater on, L of: British exports since the war has been so much toward | unsuccessful such attempts were would be of extreme importance I've already got a home library—over 700 comic books!" | production. Production cutbacks are in effect now on peanuts and - r. the sterling area and so little, in comparison, toward the | to the State Department and military expe¥ts for future defense " a | tobacco and will be used next year on wheat, cotton and corn. Not IL, ANT { planning. Involved in the problem, of course, is the question of how |' . : 1. Gas Division dollar pel; Decuae of these demands. | Broke Even on Records and when all of this material will be made public. The great bulk | Foreign Currencies - Rp : me Chntral. Sta + The t tates learned through our World W 1: if : of it Is still classified and confidential information. Most..of it, HE b i kL : ul : : 8 ar ' AS FAR as the German scientific records go, it is believed | however, only has historical interest. 1 a i§ Juestion mark in the plan concerns the Payment of A i

rience that war debt were not collectible, This led to ption of the lénd-lease policy in financing .our Allies in the second war. When the account with Britain was bal- ~ anced at the end of World War II, we charged off an indebtedness of approximately $25 billion, + Britain's ereditors who hold wartime sterling balances | may have to do the same thing. When Marshall Plan pay- - ments end n 1952. the phiigation | is $ likely to- become un-

e 7 foreign currencies for our surpluses. Unless currencies become

It is expected that many of the original documents of interest t to the Germans will be returned to them and microfilm records | -. kept for U. 8. purposes, The German archivists with whom Dr. Posner discussed the !- problem ‘were astonished to hear about the process of microfiiming and the other advances which have been made in the handling 4 of official records. Dr. Posner urged them to try to make the © science of keeping-archives more alive than has been their habit. When he explained to them what the U. 8, had dore with. he

that America and England broke about even with the Russians. |. In this. field the grab went beyond records, to the technicians and scientists, The Russians probably got more information about the developments of German submarines, and more sub experts. : But the Americans got more records and personnel in. connection © with German developments of guided missiles. Now that the examination and use of the Naz records is well under way-and some phases almost finished, the Army has begun to Worry about what to do with them for- permanent keeping. To look into this proplem the Army sent one of the Freedom Train in the way of making vital historical ‘gountry’'s outstanding experts on records and archives manage- = available to all of the peaple In the country, hey were impressed.

needed food resul payment ~ | ment; Dr, Ernst M. Posner, to Europe this summer, | They | ot Interested, in some such Peojeet | for Serny, Rs in. is af Vioguction 484 age

. teonsale ua of and to tive FOF Self wutiigney, St was sal. is wv ‘ . ; fe ; ~ t i, ».

a Tat } Fa - 2 vw A SIE + ‘ Saini ala . ; { : - : PI peg gy ES ables lh 5 Koa . ih . . ie Sh A ji i is siden

freely usable throughout the world; the U. 8~'may be required: to have a bank account in tne Clearing House bulging with TU, pees, etc. which it will have troubie working off for surpluses of .: Bie foreign countries involved. Few other nations have food surs'; pluses ‘Argument of the plan's adnate is that production resteic’ tions such as are used in the U. 8. are costly—that it not only means less income for U. 8. farmers but unemp t of - ‘warehotising, railroad, shipping, processing other unt $ | In the importing countries, their inability to pay dollars for

. - ne

ol py ay . i ie