Sullivan Daily Times, Volume 49, Number 171, Sullivan, Sullivan County, 27 August 1947 — Page 2

PAGE TWO

BULL! PAN DAILY TIMES -WEDNESDAY, Aug. 27, 1947

SULLIVAN, INDIANA

A Borne Owned Dcmocratio Newspaper ; Sullivan Daily Times, founded 1905, as the daily edition of the Sullivan Democrat, founded 1854 PAUL P0TNTER Publisher ELEANOR fOYNTER JAMISON Manager and Assistant ifiditor HOMER H. MURRAY Editor Entered as second-class matter at the FostoXfloe. Sullivan, Indiana - Publlabed dally except Saturday and Sunday at iXS West Jackson St. EoUlvan. Indiana ' Telephone U

United Press Wire Service National Representative: Taeb and Simpson, New Terk

BCBSCKIPf ION EATBi By Carrier, per week ............. 15c By Mall Elsewhere In Aetata Cookie. v Tb 8tetM! r i. m year

Six Months' ".'.V.'.'.V.'.'.'.'.'.".'.'.".- h'.25 Six Months 2''5 One Mouth 40 One Month' .W f All Mail Subscriptions Strictly In Advance, How Extensive Is War Guilt?

Political Comment

Red-faced U. S. Senators Ferguson and Brewster, "evidently have 'run 'to their holes after the

failure of their "smear Roosevelt" instigation of wartime contracts awarded Howard Hughes, airplane manufacturer. . Public reaction to the politically-inspired probe was bad, so far as the Republican Senators was concerned.

In addition, Hughts

their party will have to carry

when it enters the 1948 general

election campaign.

SHELBURN

Mrs. .Raymond German ' and son of Terre Haute, spent Thursdoy here with relatives.

. The public in general, it was soon evident, was sympathetic to the witnesses called in the inquisition and even blustering

LRrpwstpr soon realized he had

cooked up a stew which was not morning tor Indianapolis wnere to his liking. j they will attend the three-day 'convention of the Daughters of TVinsp who have been sickened 1

- A A1 11 V. J. ALU.

Mrs. Len Taylor and daughter are " spending a few days in Pontiac, Michigan with relatives. Mrs. Lois Richmond and Mrs. Emmaline Miller left Monday

by such tactics should remember

one other thing.

with the answers and put Sena

tor Brewster in the peculiar

fij-W ' position of attempting to defend

tj?e very charges he was hurling at Hughes.

Mr. and Mrs. Hosea Hill of Carlisle visited relatives here

This last Republican-controlled Sunday afternoon. thorized fortv Other' Mrs. , Fannie McKinney' spent

investigations, most of which are the week-end with her son and came up nnt frnr,t..nfi!?e news, but yet will family near Shelburn. .

cost the taxpayers some $2,000,-

000.

It was the evident purpose of

I the" Republican Senators to use

In the past, legal responsibility for war crimes rested 'their power ..and authority as a Upon militarists and their political overlords. Now a signifi- subcommittee to start an investicant attemptvis under way to prove that war guilt is shared eation they hoped would be df Jby industrialists who help make aggression possible. 8 Pol"ical significance m the . The arraignment last week of 20-odd I. ,G. Farben ot-.S;. " ficials and the arrest of Krupp munitions executives are his-! tory-making steps, regardless of how the trials end. Punish- The fercicgi investigation has rripnt. of l.hpse individuals wnlilH not he the onlv result, fif great political siHnificance but

tlmi nn.,;nt!r, o'c TT.-fWo nr Ufvo T3,r i 0ui .-oV, vA the fact that it virtually blew up

"cv c.-irKiKf,, ;f tv.;-v,- Vvhi wQOfi,r f,.Qcfnii oaccinn in their faces makes it a ioaa

The mere fact that industry 'aids in war effort is not a .crime. It may, on the contrary, be considered evidence of nationalistic fervor or patriotism. The cases before the inter---national war crimes tribunal involve' motives rather than the uses made of production. - . ' . There was hutch criticism after World War I for failure of the Allies to bring the Krupps' before the bar of justice. Charges were made that . bombing of the company's war plants was deliberately avoided because financial links with the enterprise extended into Allied countries. Now it is! charged that the Krupps, with branches "dotting the globe," were contributors to Hitler's treasury, instigators of rearmamen and breakers of the Versailles treaty. The Krupp plants were not spared in World War. II. They are now in ruins. ... I. G. Farben, a huge trust whose patent agreements ; hampered American war production, covers a much broader field than munitions making. To explain the indictment of its key men all of whom pleaded innocent J. C. Oestreicher, International News Service foreign editor, lists the following facts as supported by evidence before the tribunal: "1. The Farben combine did discover TNT, and instead 1 of restricting its use to peaceful purposes set in motion a chain of reaction of dynamite that reached its apex in the 12- , ton bombs of the second world war. . . "2. Directors of the organization, by their own admisf sion and in records readily available to the prosecution, 'contributed lavishly to Adolf Hitler's. Nazi party in the early dayspvhen only such contributors were given the inside 'lay of the land' on his plans for war and conquest.

3. The huge combine made extensive and .unabashed use of slave labor, espionage, blackmail and robbery. : "4. It contravened countless international regulations .against cartels; subsidized foreign organizations and industrialists and made huge, dramatic strides in manufacture of

poison gases and other illegal instruments of warfare." The tribunal will have j;o prove that tb,ese acts constituted premeditated liid $ 'Hitter's plans for aggression. For lack of precedents, it also must determine whether these are punishable crimes. The Allied aims are justice, not vengeance, and the defendants will have fair trials. ut the trials them-' selves will go a long way toward establishing a new concept of responsibility for war guilt., ' . ,

Bill Sweet and niece, Billie Osborne, of Indianapolis, spent

the week-end with Mr. and Mrs. van park last Sunday for William Sweet. and Mrs. Lawrerice Davis.

DODD BRIDGE Sunday. School at 9:30 a. m. Prayer meeting Tuesday night. Several attended the homecoming at Mt. Tabor church last Sunday. i Mr. and Mrs. Bean of Sullivan attended the homecoming at Mt. Tabor church Sunday; Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Sinclair attended the sale of Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Davis Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. Pad Parr had as their guests over the week-end Mrs. Parr's sister, Daisy Warner. Friends and relatives attended the farewell dinner at the Sulli-

Mr.

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Mrs. Geneva Boone, Joyce Vera were supper guests of Mr and Moore and Joari Goodman were ' Mrs.' Charles Able Sunday. In Jasonville Friday. j Mr. and Mrs. H. K. Barnard of Mr. and Mrs. Penny Isbell and Dl,gger- Miss Sharon Cox of family were in Linton Friday. .Linton, and Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Mr Rnnhk RanCfnrW 9 li 1 Usrey called on Mr. and Mrs.

. ... ..,

Mrs. Cora Ellis and family visited Mrs. Jim Exline in Dugger Saturday. Miss Shirley Ann Wall of Indianapolis, is the guest of Mr. and Mrs. George Boone and family. - Mr. and Mrs. Albert Goodman "and W. J. and Gary spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Walter Cooksey.

Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs,

Bid Bedwell and family

Sink

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Fred Moore Sunday. Sue Deana

and Michael Moore were Saturday night and Sunday guests.

, Palace Falls Low BERLIN (UP) Bellevue Palace, the historic residence of the Kings of Prussia, will be converted into a boarding house to relieve the housing shortage in the British sector of Berlin. The

were leirgarteh borough assembly vot-

Miss Patty Harlow, Donald Har- ed unanimously to Convert the "low, Ronald Harlow, Mr. . and palace into two and 'three room Mrs. Lloyd Smith and Elena Rae flats.

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