Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 November 1951 — Page 12
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: Indianapolis Times
"A SURIPPS-HOWARD NEWSPAPER
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"FORCING A SHOWDOWN . . . By Clyde ‘Farnsworth
‘Will Egypt Be Able To Line Up Arab
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League On Suez Issue?
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Akher Lahza's, was the first break in the
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- a : : wait; ROY W HOWARD WALTER LECKRONE HENRY ‘W. MAN3 CAIRO, Nov. 5—Having rejected the féur- "The league. members must likewise spurn El Din Pasha, probably were lectured’ along « 5 ne President Editor Business Manager power Mideast defense partnership and de- defense arrangements with Turkey and the these lines. Later the press predicted the league solid press support which the government re- - nounced agreements with Britain on Suez and © Western Allies on the ground that these are political committee would be summoned for a ceived as a result of its treaty-breaking. The PAGE 12 Monday, Nov. 5, 1951 the Sudan, without consulting other members = disguised imperialism-—and that Rusgia would critical meeting. , publisher said the government had fought the ; dSS : BINNS : of the League of Arab States, Egypt is now regard such arrangements. as a hostile act. ov 8 British with communiques and statements while . : 1s Nimes iuntsn, LTYINE to line them up —or split the league. yl the British fought the Egyptians with rifles. OO Ad Maryland Bt Postal Zone § Member of Judged from Cairo’s excitable press and " THE ARAB states must accept these articles THE four-power declaration that Mideast de- “The British succeeded in concentrating
nited Press
Price in Marion County » cents tor Sunday. delfve ‘sd by carries week daily only
wmly $500; all other states
Scripps-Howaid Newspaper ice and Andit Bureau af Circulation
3 0 8 fexico. ‘daily. $1 10 = manth ; Sunday
a cupy lor dau Sund
dally and
y ang 10¢ ay 3Se¢
Alliance NEA Serv-
28¢, Sunday only 10c Mail rates in indians dally and Sunday $1000 a vear daily $500 a vear Sunday ons Canads and copy
occasional inklings of government intent, the Egyptian idea seems to be.to force a showdown in the political committee of the Arab League which is likely to divide its loosely bound membership of seven Mideast nations.
of faith in Egypt as a leader of the Arab League or there will be no Arab League. This is indicated in a kind of ultimatum laid down by an editorial in Al Misri, the organ of Egypt's presently ruling Wafdist Party.
fense arrangements are going forward whether Egypt pdrticipates or not have churned up a froth of anti-Western editorials here,
The French language Bourse KEgyptienne, which prints a summary of Cairo's Arabic
against Egypt the combined forces of America, France and Turkey while Egypt, Instead of securing moral support from the Arab- states, finds that every one of them is thinking of abandoning Egypt to join the four-power defense pact.” :
Resc Heav
municative.
In Alaska, two bull
tide of shifting beliefs and balances.
~ ClO Smartens Up
cent over 1947, gave aid to friendly nation€ but not permission for President to send troops without consent of the Senate, refused to in-
AFL quit the Defense Labor Policy Committee) the PAC report castigates using ‘purge lists" personal publicity seeking and bragging about “non-existent muiti-million dollar war chests.” Like the AFL, it concludes that the best deal
caterpillars, foresees a long, cold winter, with plenty of the beautiful white snow and a good deal of skidding on the ice.
rigors. The moss along the edges of our creek.never has been so thick. The mud is gooler than before, while up and down the pike are traveling
The battery on my tractor gave up the ghost; the filling station man claims he’s running short of anti-freeze. My bride says she needs a new,
as predicting now what kind of winter we'll have in January. I wish the bureaucrats with the barometers wouldn't be so dogmatic, Farmers like me have been writing almanacs
age of juvenile delinquency and dope addiction without newspapers printing articles and plctures such as this.
of water in court by his current wife. Abdullah ig having his problems we glean And although there are no quick solutions At least for the moment He faces things
10e : i . > 0 “We are now facing a vital issue,” the . Telephone PL aza 855] EGYPT, which is headquarters for the newspaper said. “There will either be an Arab Press. headlined a review: “All Newspapers > *% . L4oht ana the Peonie Wii Fina Thaw Own Wey = 1cASU and has provided most for its financial League or mot, and there will either be close Tois Morning Put the Arab World on Guard AKHER LAHZA recalled the criticism of abs o EREME Give Jaght wn ’ support in return for unofficial leadership, seems = solidarity among the member states or: else a gainst Occidental Siren. rogation and said all Egyptians are determined Nov. 8 (UE to have given the wavering members no easy frank decision should be taken by all concerned Al Misti shouted: “Arabs! Your Govern- io drive the British from Egypt and are now of Inquiry - . : out from choosing sides. so Egypt may be relieved of her heavy com- ments Are Conspiring Against Arab Unity.” calling on their government to declare what tion today i Running Out of Maney They must support Egypt in her unpromising- mitments under the Arab League charter. The weekly Akher Lahza, which. came out with the next step is to be. $5 million . . : ; campaign to expel the British from the Canal “Let the Arab ‘states remember, however, the: first attack on the present Egyptian gov- If it’s to result in “another slap in the face” torship ir THERE used to be aman in Congress who kept asking, Zone and the Sudan agreement, in ner rebuff that if—God forbid—such a break comes they ernment after it broke the treaty with Britain — . by the British and the dispatching of a protest with the tr . “ is th ne comin from?" : of the British, United’ States, France and will be the losers.” criticizing the government because it didn’t to the British government, then “the people of Transport - where is the money coming ; Turkey, and in her coy flirtation with Russia Diplomatic representatives of the Arab states, make the break effective—scented a “plot $0 Egypt will have every right to ask their gov- findings w He never quite got an answer, and by now any such and the satellites. summoned this week by Foreign Minister Salah detach the Arabs from Egypt.” ernment to resign.” ‘All 312: © thought has been drowned out in this new and monstrous br oo: on | . ’ 4 assen rate of government spending. . . . * ARRAN ORRIN ERIE RRO RR RRR RRR ETRRT Reais of the Arg DEAR BOSS . . . By Dan Kidney - F rt i : et President Truman and other chiefs of government may y y 1 er SCO By Talburt : ° 3 landed her: -_ not be worried about this question, or else they are whistling Have Demos : AE i Hoosier Foru m : Joye fast vin the dark. But it is no academic query to the average 4 } "dn nat agian with 3 word that you "y i three hour - - “ 341 4 : : . . . H boats were citizen Nowadays. : : A 2 i but | will defenc 0 the ueath your right $ the sinking Ever since April, the public has been cashing in more vunne a or ° t to say it."—Voltaire. i the mouth T savings bonds than it has been buying. There WASHINGTON. N : S. Has on n EPETERNI RARER RENEE ARRAN EERIE REINER ARERR RRR RRR RNR Gales w — x . a , ov. ¢ ganized - % * ’ 8] i%" doubtless are many reasons for this. But one big reason yor ‘attempt to force a shot-gun wedding with A Few Questions South on 7 could be that people simply do not have the money. the Democrats, through political Jetion So MR. EDITOR: The two > ; . : mittees, come to the same dead-end as e ot p i #7 Price and wage controls are getting shakier and nce great anti-saloon league and WCTU3 In Somseetion with Soe, currant Mayoralty BofA wh EL, : : : : : hee : . campaign. Judge Clark is r a ingle a shakier. New taxation has just Tesuited in another Rurry Bank McRinneys am TO at various rallies that, “I pledge my adminis- search for <.-of price increases. Another round of wage boosts seems in national chairman tration to the enforcement of every law, be it Jreasure” 1} oh 3 : i i \ i i i " ost her m 3 z ; ly, i ill hike prices again. Instal- might lead to that minor or major, misdemeanor or felony. 0 : ;the making Inevitah 4 lv P 3 8 ee for he This is a fine séntiment for any mayoralty five mites ~- ment buying is Increasing. . plainly indicated candidate; and we must all sincerely hope he England . Since July 1, the government has run up a deficit of that he intends to means it. But, because of the well Knows fact or = eT " . put the party on that campaign oratory trapped the late Wendel Zo Tm ~-$5%, billion. In four months, the government has spent, 2 banker-Dusiness: Wilkie, I would like to ask the mayor-to-be to derland. E -*. over and above its income, more than it cost to run the ‘man basis with no clarify just a little. drifing he! . i y y § 7 as 19 flirting with any By this statement does he mean that cer- moter In : > whole government for a Year as recently 28,1933, New Deals or Fair fain laws will be enforced on Mondays, and cer- lon Spans a r x = sr =» = Deals. tain others on Tuesdays, and maybe different wa TE == SEN. HARRY F. BYRD, chairman of the Joint Com- President Tr u- ones on other days, or weeks. .or during just oust after oe itt Reducti f Non-Essential Federal Expenditures man may continue certain months? We have all had our fill of The Mai sam . on : uc ono i di pe - to talk about such this sort of law enforcement. and it places a Atiantic. cr »: predicts the deficit for the year beginning next July 1 will matters 3g How _ very black mark against the Yeputation of this after it eo -- 2112 . . , > . += be $18 billion. course. but th city, to have the world know that we enjoy just ton Hersey =a . e i mi - %% Yet President Truman seems to think spending is the We, Murray 4 fol facts are that SUCH hit =F Mise enrol =. me > : 3 I f union men a ’ . ersey red “=answer to all problems. He scolds Congress for what he «x4 Jav0r Is uiite have drawn a ate DREOVER, thers I one “law on our 1s boy os “ : : : ” iti blank under his administration. atatuis Ks, which the current and past ad. Some of W*ealls a “tragically insufficient” appropriation for bomb Prue. the failure of the Truman domestic | ministrations, as well as other newspapers In suffered sli shelters. And for other feeble efforts to conserve tax |... o..m to get any congressional action can the city, very openly advocated wide-spread vio- and had tc money. be blamed on the Southern-GOP coalition, but lation. Yet itis a law? As a judge and mayor- vessels bou : a 1 : “ bili .: os Mr. McKinney revealed that he plans on cud- alty aspirant, what would Judge Clark promise? A few of He anticipates the already lagging “stabilization” pro- gjing up to the coalitionists on the Democratic I refer to the Standard Time Law. There is of the U. & gram won't work because Congress didn’t give hin enough side. no relationship whatever between enforcement the Here, = I > and whether or not there is any penalty of vio- Suliérec 5. spending money. : : No Taft-Hartley Repeal lators. The real relationship is one of morals Siers Sistem ; For the inflation-squeezed, tax-squeezed public, things SO IT is nerfectly safe to predict there will and Hhles and Yeapest for law. HR “are looking up—sky-high. Right up through the hole in be no Taft-Hartley repeal and President Tru- aber to em tae trengin of Shar. Capt. It Tn: : ory, ¢ ir S40 his pocketbook. IT ins dr sii il a ne fof iy on iw eal gis In reporting to the 13th annual C10 SOB. apes his Jreqicensors, we will need several, and the action 4 . vention in New York City today, President reap confusion, However May Be Contagious Philip Murray said that all branches of labor A. 4: Schneider, City, turning to were quite united on a program for the 82d . . vears in A HE ANIMAL world seems to have become suddenly congress. Then he confessed that little of it ‘Shocking Pictures’ he cre restive, moody, unpredictable. From all over the Pasged. - i: motto. sbardoe Pac. but t MR. EDITOR: ficers. Je . . sabe = e answer is pot to abando , bu : \‘ora “country come stories of mettlesome, skittish beasts which (iont narder for its program BO 5 Be ic ANI the Oct. 31 edition of The Time: sengers co at this time of year should be thinking about digging in The same view is taken by the AFL regarding right _, a ng ure, of Rose LaRose Hogs : oo . : Labor's League for Politidal Action. Both are page, ew months back, compiained for a normal winter's repose. done - supporting. Democrats who don't deliver every night I picked up my paper there was a havior. But no. In Philadelphia, a fretful deer runs slightly they declared. a half-nude picture staring me in the face. I The Mai 4 . . Here is the way the AFL le re t : icin Bj Ne my dissiproval io the Forum Hamburg samuck and is shot down in sums up what happened to tone Sorter Pa TT then, but now my dander is really up. Please and Amst a subway —shades of J. - . read the last paragraph of that article again, ‘lands. The BR oy ona program in the first session of the present ALMANAC STUFF . . . By Frederick C. Othman Mr. Editor, and see If you honestly think that for fhis po 3 Xenimore Cooper. . _ =n trash as this should be printed for all our "ie ‘Tote Lo In Boston, a curious fox a children to read” Keep it down in the red-light lnt ; Tou 8 Furious [as Plight of Labor armer . tyes the eather ssc where it beiongs. Sy “W as g NO TAFT-HARTLEY repeal, controls that . I ani not a shocked granny either, but a Side; 3 . state capitol for a week was guarantee high prices, a rich-man’s tax hill. sun- McLEAN. Va. Nov. 5- Old farmer Othman's . I laid in 1000 galions of that the other day and mother ol Ive Shires, and one who wants to i, wy ; i . sidizad high cost housing. rents increased 20 per almanac, which does not base its predictions on I didn’t notice it was gettin ; cheaper. see mine and all other children grow up clean a captured alive but uncom 8 8 De P : $= B any ©uiaper and decent. It is hard enough in this day and Norma Pa
daughter o ister of ship's bow
4 f HH : J bi gill | crease old-age pensions and passed the Jenner All. signs, except the bugs, point this way. warm codt. The leaves are especially thick ’ moose locked antlers in § ol } il publicity amendment. refused to consider ad These are fuzzy ’ underfoot. The smoke curls up Fi the chim- I don’t care whether vou print this or not, bottle of cl deadly combat’ while a plane y X fit for education and did nothing on health in- worms with 18 feet ney and quickly disappears. All these are signs but I have it off my chest now, and I am cer- wererr from the ubiquitous United S¥/ Hi surance or doctor shortage, gave back to the and stripes. Scien- of shivers on the way, tain that I am not alone in my feelings. Any q! ih : ; ; : ; mother feels the same, vy ’ : . . House Rules Committee its power to block all tists all over have Our hens have so many feathers suddenly . Yes, and any father, too, i Hog p 3: States fish and wildlife #£ f legislation, defeated attempts to cut the soil been predicting that they look like ostriches. The water pump —An Indianapolis Mother, City. aservice swooped low _over- #7 conservation program. did nothing on eivil weather by the width ‘= peginning to creak. All the apples have fallen ‘ ’ § As Re *h d d ts th nbed 7 rights or raising minimum wage from 75 cents of these decorations. off the trees. The gutter's sprung a leak. A Strong Bunch : - ead and agen um Yi { to $1 an hour. All I know is that ‘Fourteen two-legged signs of bitter cold en MR. EDITOR: i Trading a nervously through govern- 4 Labor still is for helping the - farmers, my place here in ~oute, by actual count, have tried to sell me We're heading into ¢old weath § tive at th = = ment pamphlets for guidance Yi / although the majority of farm organizations Fairfax County is term vindows. Mv buzz saw screams usually something familiar has abe! anu and ! yards thn oN TY : divorced the labor program about as soon as crawling with these loud and there's no sap left in the begonia Look in the air, put your ha oe ing | Wele ¥ 2 A 300-pound bear in ac - they got the post-depression mortgage paid. beasts and they can't plants. Skunks have built themselves a weath- You can feel ft, smell it - om Joes Xt i and "cits = Maine ran out of the woods and challenged a truck bearin The PAC committee report prepared for the make up their minds. erproof rambler under my barn. The jack rab- by the Lord H p : Rye RX, See 1, and nice 170 8 Ber, : a . 8 CIO convention recognizes the plight of labor Some have wide bits are especially frisky. you eould h n Heaven, if it were quiet enough ! %0 "0 3=seven men. In the ensuing fight, Amos Wilson, 32, ducked in politics today and advises: stripes and some The strawberry plants upon which I lavisied i *. ; ; round 200 S-several haymakers and dispatched the bear with an ax. “The CIO-PAC is unshaken in the belief narrow, such care have disappeared. The field mice are engineer in I ont Soke. We have a smoke : Hil 3a re In Ark : that its work of political education and activity I have examined ganging up on my cat. 1 wouldn't be surprised it. Must be wh r Ho ut nobody would know £ 160 to 400 = In Arkansas, two leopards, two black bears, one polar constitutes an outstanding contribution to the them - carefully” and if_this isn't the coldest winter-since 1396 50 FFoha. kK Susiers in Indianapolis are + F9-t0-300_p ==bear and six rhesus monkeys escaping from a circus truck 4emocratic life of our nation.” all 1 got for. my efforts was an itch; they seemed : 4 A a ay Hat ean breathe feat aly | al lo ==lent frightful authenticity to Hallow ; to shed some of their fur when touched. Other Laced With Blizzards 9" be song : Y. two = ghtiu! authenticity to Halloween. Doesn't Fear Taft . indications are better: HE —Smoked Out, City i a = . a lite 3 : : To ; suc 'RE'S A halo around the on. ; i at 335.50 Human irritability is a baneful thing, and there is so IT GOES on to say it isn't afraid of either ap ny. on orgs; Js growing insole Sieh back .door squeaks. It's raining BE FOSTER'S FOLLIES : 1 much of it in the world of people today that animals can Ben Tan Bor Staiim, Wituou! MeHoNINg How also producing his own ear muffs, while his feels like snow. Coal oil's 20 cents a gallon. HOUSTON, Tex Sheppard (Abdullah a 439 to scacely be blamed if they are caught up in th y the former beat them in Ohio in 1950. appetite grows better and better so he'll have The Weather Bureau claims I'm talking King, wh AR 3 uliah) : wer: wiley ; ug p in the same woeful Pointing out how well labor is united (the plenty of inner heat to withstand the coming through my fur cap. Says there's no such thing i ao Tarey Egyptian anger, : v ao
; , salesmen peddling snow-grip tires. These gents now for 200 years and we've never been mis. clean rn : SOME of the most damaging and unnecessary labor strikes fr labor is to suppor friends on either ticket, lox cold already. taken yet; at least, you won't get one of us t> Beirig helped by unwanted ab G L in this country have been the result of jurisdictional . eans fiehing Demotrats who talk and The grass long since has stopped growing admit it. Not in 1951 you won't when the corn But Abs not washed u he allot fons. etal 8 Ot J 1ctiona never deliver. while top quality hay is selling for $45 a ton is studded with red kernels, the potatoes in the on : P. he'd still like to move MEMPHSE
disputes—fights between unions.
Under the present two-party setup. about
the only answer one gets to labor's lamentations
I have proven to my own satisfaction that the higher the price of hay, the colder the weather
cellar aren't even beginning to sprout, and a long, hard winter, plentifully laced with bliz-
To the land of the Nile and the cams!
vear-old Dx glance at t
The AFL has been a special offender. But the CIO is “Who cares”” And that's why he sighs in a voice w : Bie liad Hts shore of thie 2 SE is 0 cares will be. The same goes for the cost of fuel oil: zards, obviously is on the way. “I'd walk many a mile or re Co gone: cried; Mo Hair-splitting squabbles over which union would’ do . che = what minor jobs often have tied up big projects or plants SIDE GLANCES By Galbraith NEWS NOTEBOOK . . . By Peter Edson Official for weeks and even months. ; ; UNITED Sunrise
Union members themselves have lost heavily in wages and public prestige as a result of these disputes. Employers In most cases, all
«+ have suffered. The public has suffered.
5 3. Lt
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Ground Rules Prevail in Berlin Cold War
over ‘pieyaunish arguments dreamed u bv small-time BERLIN, Nov, 5-The cold oners as they would be fed and the old lines of communica- hours to imaginations. ) Pp 1 war in Berlin is fought under cared for in American prisons. tions. ~ bottle of nougs 30 buy a Now ‘ x : curious ground rules. The Rus- Then the Russians take over . ” "zone worker has to work 20 ow the’leaders of 46 CIO unions have agreed among - and starve the prisoners. The ONE OF THE most eager hours to earn eno i th selv bv si : sians constantly keep the heat French feed them a little bet- student bodies in the world 1s : nough for the emselves, by signed contract, to outlaw such strikes. on, annoying the Western pow- ter, and the British a little bet- said to be on the campus of Me rchaye. A Western. a If organized labor wants to deserve public ¢onfidence, ers every place they can. And ter than the French. Which the Berlin Free University, tn to earn the Prarke Jou Hours + this is one important wav to earn it the Western zones ke=p bom- leaves it up to the Americans the Western Zone. The city, beef, while an east 2 of = AFL unions please - : . barding the Eastern zone with to put the prisoners back In gives students who can't pay work’ i2 hours To Ret nus! To 8 please copy. anti - Communist propaganda, condition to face another month a $20-a-month equivalent as price of a ack of py Sar the ud \ through newspapers and radio. of Russian starvation, living allowance. Meals are quires one Tn gar Te ¢ y Each side would like to get the ? rN priced at one mark apiece and west, th . : phn, Btanciaco “Don t Count on It other out. But without any for- RUSSIANS are now com- are always the same bread, are A aur i the ean, Washington, | u ITH WHA k mal agreement, neither side pleting a new stretch of canal sliced - sausage and potato da » T seems to be an excessive amount o monkeys with the water sup- and a railroad spur which will salad. The student body num- WHEN the Russia : flourish and fanf ply and sewage systems. To do ke their t rtati bers 12,000, and about 40 ini ns brought . ourish an anfare, the bookmakers and . make their transpo on _gys- , 000), per A million and a half German an : 2 gamblers so would inconvenience their te cent of th x ; : p . m completely free from em come from the youths into Berlin, America of the country generally have announced they are shutting own forces as much as their American, British or French Fast Zone. Ford Foundation residents did get a little 2 “up shop. They cannot do business, they say, with the opponents. countpr-measures. Formerly, in has just given the university nervous. They feared a mass ' | new federal tax on gamblers and bli Sia Only four-power co-operation Moving barges from the Oder 2 million-dollar grant. movement from the Russian . : gambling. remaining in effect is the Air River on the east of Berlin 2 8 8 East zone to the Western zone : Anyone bet-happy enough to wager that they'll stay Safety Center, where all forces 10 the Elbe on the west, the THIS is the current compari- with some incidents and may4 + out of business had better hedge his gamble The bookies are supposed to file flight plans, Russians had to use carals - $98 o living standards in the be a little rioting. So details : may lie low,\for the moment—and not much lon til to prevent crashes. Only the FLOR THrcugh in me a a en oF American \oops weve seat. : 3 me ger—unti ’ n. . ns ered around“the city, an re : they see how the wind blows Russians don't Rie any plan And when they wanted to claim their East German mark billeted with Ameri 4 Were ; . B for theif new twin-sngined jets. move rail freight from eastern i= at par with the West German Hes t tect . gill + ay : . . : » n 0 protect wives - E Eo. But they won't quit business. It's too hard to make Also, tngres he Shaudeu Dt Fall. terminals to the © mark. Actually, the West-Ger- * area,” © ang em : a living by werking. : PE OR K ne Bin 0 Morin Russian-zone area west of Ber- man mark i= 3.8 to the dollar, The trouble was, that these : Sen. Kefauv th whi : : vit Beger, £ : lin, they had to use tracks that while the east mark is 68 or troops had to bh Party COV : . auver, the erstwhile crime proper, probably Finance Minister Walter Funk co 404 the American sector more to the dollar. The West families they wer jo > ihe “lover * : ’ § . . . : : y 3 ® protec . comes hearer the real answer. He predicted the gamblers ff and her fopvisted vs Sar But now, If the Russians German wage rate averages a After a couple of iy ne ting g $ simply will “go underground.” In which 3 ~ criminals are kept. e four want to impose another block- west mark and a half an hour the housewiv / gr ch case it becomes powers operate this prison a e8 protested. Bo + the duty of the abo in : : - ‘aor. 1900 #v Wx Bewnce wa. pet ade of the Western zones of for a 48-hour week while the the troops were sent bac : uty of the about-to-be-streamlined Internal Re 2 Sor. a1. 8 : month at a time, in rotation. ". k to 2 a : 4 venue "She bought bal hile | ina. this is siosk ’ Berlin, they won't be subject Russian-zone rate is.one and a barracks. Feeding soldiers was * Bu ureau to dig them out, Sw a oney while | was buying big expensive ste x When the Americans oper- to counter-blockades imposed third east marks-an hour. ' more trouble than fighting pos- ; : : : | » you wants nll they ve got a new car, and we ve got a T-bone! ate Spandau, they feed the pris- by ‘the Western powers over A Western worker labors two sible Commie agitators, il ou mi ay elie of i, a . Lia ve: La : aie : : rn vg RE Rade 3 2a ; Loa 7
