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OCR Page 1 of 2Newspaper Clippings - Subject File
Box 160
1939-1943
Box 160
31-181
PSF
Tilpersonal ST. LOUIS COUNTY LEADE
Southerner's Review of 'Gone With the Wind'
"There was a land of cottonfields and cavaliers
called the Old South. A land of lords and their
ladies, of masters and slaves. Look not for them
hereabouts for they are no longer to be found. Male
and female, black and white, youth and aged, they
r
are all down to the picture show seeing 'Gone With
E
The Wind.'
"Katherine Scarlett O'Hara was our heorine.
A wihsome wench with a figger like a marble statue
and a head as hard. Gerald O'Hara was her Pa. By
2
nature, he was almost animal-like. Proud as a pea-
eock, he roared like a lion and rode like a dog and
pony show. After Sherman eame, he was crazy as
a bedbug.
"Anyhow, Scarlett was in love with Ashley
Wilkes, who was in love with his cousin Melanie,
who was in love with Ashley, and so they were mar-
ricd. (Ashley and Melanie, in case you're getting
confused.) This irritated Searlett no end, and so, in
rapid suecession she married, for spite and cash,
respectively, a couple of fellers whose names we
didn't get. But then, neither did Scarlett for long.
"The other major characters were Rhett Butler,
Belle Watling, and a colored lady exacty like the
one on the flapjack box. Rhett, who somehow was
strangely reminiseent of Clark Gable, was a eross
between Jesse James and Little Boy Blue. Uncle
Lum considered playing Rhett but turned it down
when he found out there wsna't anything but mint
in the mint juleps.
"If Rhett had joined the Lost Cause in the sec-
ond reel instead of after intermission, the Confed-
cracy would have won the war. And Belle-you'd
have loved Belle. Everybody did.
"During the siege of Atlanta, only three things
were running. Belle's place, Prissy's nose and the
laundry that kept Rhett's white suits snow-white.
Melanie's baby arrived about the same time Sherman
did. Both were equally welcome to Scarlett. It was,
so far as our painstaking research revealed, the first
baby ever born in technicolor.
"Anyway, the South lost the war again in the
8
f
picture, (What could you expect with a lot of Yan-
h
kee producers!) and Scarlett married Rhett to get
even with him. Their married life was just like
setting in hell's fire and listening to the heavenly
V
choir.
0
"Finally, after Melanie died (the doctor's al-
n
ways right) Scarlett realized that she didn't love
Ashley but Rhett. Scarlett was as changeable as a
a baby's underwear. However, Bhett had had enough
y of her foolishness and when she told him, be said,
'Frankly, my dear, I don't giye a damn,' Neither
a by this time did the audience They were glad to
r
see the end, their own having become more than
a
semewhat númb from seats harder than & lady-
lady's ."-Tombs County, Ga., Democrat.
Where is the shipping to carry these men to come from,
and to keep them supplied on thirty or more fronts? The
expedition to North Africa is believed to have involved an
initial force of not more than 140,000 soldiers. To take it
to destination, 500 merchánt ships and 350 fighting ships
were used, in a convoy operation described as the biggest
in all world history.
If it takes all that shipping and effort to move a force
UCCESS in war depends upon men,
of some ten divisions, comprising only 140,000 men, how
long will it take us to move 7,500,000 men into theaters
not money.
of active war? And is there any point in doing so, con-
DOUGLAS MacARTHUR:
sidering that victories in this war to date, except on the
Russian front, have been won by relatively small, highly
trained, fast moving units of experts in the operation of
Postwar Insurance
tanks, planes and fighting ships?
When Congress passed the teen-age draft bill, it added
an amendment forbidding induction of men who had
Well, we're learning the hard way how to fight this
reached their forty-fifth birthday before-being called. It
war. We didn't really begin to get ready for it until after
is now reported that Congress may build on this founda-
the fall of France, in June of 1940. Our preparations up
to Pearl Harbor were pretty halfhearted,
tion by enacting a law permitting
Let's Stay with the President assuring us from time to
any soldier of 45 or over to get a
discharge from the Army on re-
Prepared
time that business need not be discomboom-
erated while we built a first-class defense
quest.
machine.
Such à provision seems to be
What we hope most earnestly is that when our next
needed, in view of the numerous
war comes along we shan't have to start all over again and
statements by Chief of Staff Mar-
learn the hard way, with enormous wastes in money, mis-
shall and others that men of 40 and
placed manpower, and lost motion.
up, no matter how patriotic, do not
While we are talking about the brave new world to
make the best possible soldiers. Un-
follow this war, with Uncle Sami feeding the world while
less they have been active soldiers
his own people grow more prosperous each golden day,
for years, their muscles and their
let's also do some planning for a genuine system of na-
minds are no longer limber enough
tional defense in that brave riew world.
Gen. George C.
Marshall, Chief
to be geared into the strenuous rou-
We should have compulsory military training, every
of Staff
tines of modern warfare.
able-bodied young man at age 18 or 19 to be subject
Nor are these relaxations the only ones we need, by all
thereto for a year. We should have a standing Army of
the evidence we've seen.
around 1,500,000 men, the rank and file trained to the
Some 6,000 soldiers who were expert copper miners in
skill of noncoms, and the officers' and noncoms' pay and
civil life have been furloughed to go back and dig copper,
living conditions attractive enough to induce them to
It having- developed that not every Tom, Dick or Harry
make Army life their careers.
can practice that trade without previous training.
We should have an air force big enough and good
There is more and more talk about the need for fur-
enough for the defense of this continent, or, preferably,
loughing a lot of soldiers who were expert farmers in civil
of this hemisphere; and a Navy of such size as the final
life to go back to the farms and grow food for the armed
lessons of this war may indicate we need to armorplate
this continent by sea.
forces, the civil population and our lend-lease clients to
Adopt a sane system of preparedness after this war,
eat. This talk had better crystallize into action pretty
and stick by it, regardless of the almost inevitable post-
soon, or we may have serious food shortages next year.
war upsurge of pacifism, and we can save ourselves a
There is further talk, apparently backed up by facts,
world of blood, sweat, toil and tears when our next war
that we are building too big an Army for this war any-
comes.
how. In the year lacking a few days since Pearl Harbor,
(Copyright, 1942, News Syndicate Co., Inc.)
we have shipped overseas a reported 800,000-odd fighting
Now and then somebody asks why the publish the editorials of
men. The figure is expected to reach 1,000,000 by the
the New York Daily News in this column. Answer:
end of 1942. Yet we are still building an Army of 7,500,-
Because they are always interesting, well written and express a
thought with which we agree. The owner and publisher of the
000.
Washington Times-Herald La also a part owner of the News.
THE EVENING STAR,
The Political Mill
The former President also
Hoover Presents Program That Merits
urges the utmost and enthusias-
Fair Consideration for Conduct of War
tic co-operation of civilians with
the Government "with the least
By GOULD LINCOLN.
There was a War Council or War
bureaucracy and force." The
Almost on the eve of the gath-
Cabinet in every principal nation
Cites Soldier Figures.
Government today is & mass of
in the last war. There is one in
He reminded the country that
ering of the Republican National
bureaucratic agencies-and all
Committee in St. Louis to elect
every principal nation in this
17 months after the onscription
signs point to an increase in bu-
a new chairman and to deal,
war except the United States."
Act was passed in the last war,
reaucracy. No less a person than
possibly, with
Is there any good reason why
4,400,000 men were in arms,
Leon, Henderson, head of the
there should not be such a. war
largely trained and equipped, and
policies. in
OPA, has warned the people
council here? The answer is
2,000,000 of them had been car-
the light of
within the last few days they
"no." Already there has been
ried overseas. It is now 27 months
the war, the
must expect more and more of
lack of proper co-ordination and
since the present draft law was
this.
party and
the country-
co-operation in the absence, of
passedd, and about 6,000,000 men.
Mr. Hoover's final principle
such & council.
are under arms, though less than
has received
calls for the organization of all
It has been responsible for, too
a million are overseas.
sound advice
civilian activities for war "so as-
many conflicting statements,
Mr. Hoover's first principle was
from the only
to assure the return to economic
living former
emanating from too many agen-
important. It is, he said, that
and personal liberty the moment
cies of Government with over-
all civilian activities should be
President
the war is over." Too many per-
lapping authority over ifportant
directed by civilians within limi-
Herbert Hoo-
sons fear today that this is not
ver, food ad-
civilian activities. And, indeed,
tations laid down by the legisla-
the policy of the New Dealers
ministrator
there have been conflicts within
tive body "Otherwise," he said,
who have been seeking to extend
the individual agencies of Gov-
"we shall be a military dictator-
Government control over civilian
during the
Gould Lineoln.
ernment, due to the fact that the
ship with all its implications."
last
activities-not just during the
war.
single administrator, with defi-
Whether or not he had in
Making full use of one of the
war, but long before the war be-
nite powers, has not been the
mind a controversy which has
gan.
clearest and most analytical
minds in the country, Mr. Hoover
order of the day.
existed over the handling of
Program Suggested.
manpower during the war, this
laid down a dozen principles
Would Avoid Regulation.
Representative Bender of Ohio,
principle certainly applies. The
president of the National Feder-
which should govern civilian
Mr. Hoover's "eighth principle"
American peóple would resent
ation of Republican Clubs and
economic organization for the to-
bears repeating, for the failure
turning this power over to the
publisher of the National Re-
tal war in which the United
to live up to it already has the
military.
States is now engaged. He has
country by the ears. It is: "The
publican, has made public a
Mr. Hoover laid stress on the
done so in simple terms, logi-
eighth principle is to do no more
statement of policy for the guid-
need of single-headed adminis-
cally supported, which any one
regulating than is necessary to
ance of the Republican party
trators for each of the civilian
may understand.
attain the major objectives. Fix-
during the next two years; and
activities; dealing with the war.
has submitted it. to the national
Mr. Hoover's recommendations
ing of prices is necessary only on
These administrators must be
-as they may be considered-
things the Government uses or
committee for its consideration.
given full authority to act within
were given in an address to the
that comprise the essentials of
It deals with the war front,
the scope of their pecullar fields
the domestic front and with the
National Association of Manu-
the cost of living. To the great
of activity.
peace that must be made after
facturers in New York. He made
mass of the people, 95 per cent
It would be as unwise, he point-
this country has won the war.
no attempt. to criticize the pres-
of the cost of living lies in less
ed out, to have more than one
ent civilian organizations for
than 40 staple raw materials, and
He favors, among other things,
commanding officer in a given
war-except by contrast which
with price control starting near
the creation of & joint congres-
civilian field of activity as it
sional committee on the war ef-
his own "principles" make mani-
the source avoids a host of price
would be to have more than one
fort.
fest-with one exception. That
fixing and policing of non-essen-
commanding general in & mill-
Important particularly is a de-
was in regard to the tremendous
tials."
tary field of operation.
civilian set-up, with its 2,500,000
mand that the Republican party
As War. Council.
civil employes of the Govern-
"continue its opposition to any
As Mr. Hoover visualizes the
negotiated peace with the dicta-
ment-2,000,000 more than were
proper organization of civilian
tors and a pledge that the Re-
required to do the job in the last
organization for wat, the head
publican party will support the
war.
administrators of all such major
participation of the United States
groups should constitute a war
in a post-war peace program de-
council, sitting directly with the
signed to assure economic and
President.
political freedom to all the na-
"Here alone," Mr. Hoover said,
tions of the world."
"the general economic and civil-
Obviously If the Republican
lan policies should be determined,
party will support such a post-
the conflicts and overlaps planned
war program, isolationism is
out with the President as umpire.
dead,
9
President's Authority
By Mark Sullivan
Montgomery Ward Case
SOME WEEKS ago ACIO.
not for the country-but for Citl-
union made certain demanda on
zen B. The employer company is
& well-known mail-order house,
ordered to sign a contract enor-
Montgomery Ward & Co., The
mously to the benefit of the labor
dispute went
leaders. Doubtless Mr. Roosevelt
before, the War
and the Labor Board would My:
Labor Board at
Washington. The
In fact they do say is a bene-
Labor, Board
St.to the country, a help in fight-
handed down &
ing the war, to make the labor
decision; any or
leaders and unions happy. to give
denix The order
required Mont
them mainténance of union
gomery, Ward. to
membership But. a Tot: of our
signs contract
citizens; quite certainly's majoidE
with the union
ty/don't think that way at ou
provisions of the
SULLIVAN
contract!!
et
Moteover, it is material to this
dictatede by them Labory Board:
labor leaders hapi
Asi the board putrits The
penë to be political allies of
tionaló War Labor Boards directs
President:
their parties( toil incorporate the
might, have Abeen Just
following provisions
162 Montgomery and
tive bargaining greement
(complying with that orderá
This contract Montgomery
soft promptly hadi referred 152 to
Ward rejected-they declined to
the courts; and to-publie opinion,
comply with thealabor: Board
for.judgment When any citizen
orderzi Their principal reason,
is put under compulsion by govv
the one they emphasized; was a
ecument? be has a duty to him
provision for a. kind of modified
selfirand to their country, tor ink
closed shop, called "maintenance
quire into the validity of the
of union membership. This
compeller's authority
provision, whilen did not re
NJ
quire- the company to employ
union. members exclusively,
SUPPOSE Montgomery Ward
nevertheless required them to
had done this, had respectfully
fire any worker? who, having
asked the President to excuse
joined & union, dropped out of
them à from obeying the War
It-ceased to pay dues or what
Labor Board's order.: What
not.
would the President have done?
Upon the company's refusal to
In similar cases, involving face
sign: the Labor Board thundered
tories doing war work, the Presi-
rumbling threats. member
dentibas sent the Army or Navy
Mr.-Wayne L. Morse at a public
to @take over the plant.: But.
hearing, declared the board
Montgomery Ward do not do war
would use "whatever forces of
work, certainly not to any ma-
Government? aces necessary to
terial extent-everybody knows
compel, compliance
what: Montgomery ards% bust-
ness 1a
For its "force, of Government
Nevertheless, either, the Presi-
the Labor enlisted the
dent would have been obligedito
highest The board referred the
rescind his order, or send in the
case: to- the President of the
Armyn In that event, the coun-
United States.
try might have enjoyed an amus-
President Roosevelt November
Ing. experience.) might have
ISA issued an order/to Montgom
seens literal-minded rural cusit
ery Ward.: He said. he was speaks
tomers of Montgomery Ward die
ing "as commander in chief in
recting their orders thus: "Gen.
time of war." Peremptorily the
George C.A Marshall, Chief of
President orderedrifI direct:
Staff United States Army. Dear
Montgomery Ward & Co. to com-
Sirb Please send me: two milk
ply without further delay.
pails." and six/rolls of barbed
At once Montgomery Ward re-
wire
plied; and complied. In 13 terse
That would be funny. But It
words the president of the com-
would not be winning the war.
pany wrote: "Your order of No-
vember 18 has been received and
will be promptly obeyed."
ena
THAT IS the story. It raises
some questions. One is about
the President's authority for re-
quirteg Montgomery Ward to
sign. He said be acted as "com-,
mander in chief in time of war.
Few will quibble over the fact
that the Constitution makes the
President merely commander in
chief of the Army and the Navy.
Almost any civillan will obey an
order of the President In time of
war
That is, if the order is to do
something for thelwar, for their
us
country Citizen A will obey an
order for the benefit of the coun-
try.19 So will Citizen B, and Clu-
zen C, and D, and X'and Y.
this case differs. In this
izen A la ordered to do
** for ther war and
OVERSEAS CAPS
THE world-wide and stupidity of such episodes in a war to Impose
freedom of expression "everywhere in the world and
in our lifetime," could not happen If Byron Price or some of his
assistants in Washington were able to pass on every piece of copy
and use their common horse sense and newspaper experience to
determine if a story gave military Information to the forces of the
enemy:
But that's physically impossible,
Hence the "directives" and broad policy-making orders which go
out to Individual censors who, in the case of press dispatches to
foreign papers are Navy officers,
The thought behind these broad orders and directives comes
from on high.
CAPITOL STUFF
F.D.R., M every White House correspondent knows, thinks in his
heart, and has often bluntly suggested, that be would have been a
great managing editor or newspaper aditor if he hadn't decided to
be a politician.
By JOHN O'DONNELL
Price. like Elmer Davis in OWI, is taking the rap for the political
of the Office of Censorship Byron Price has ruled that
censorship of Ideas.
correspondents of foreign newspapers may send any report
As Price correctly points out, be is responsible for all censorship
orders and directives.
back home to-their-readers which is factual and does not disclose
But none of the associates of the newspapermen who shouldered
military information but that editorial comments printed here
the thoroughly disagreeable but necessary chore of censorship place
which tend to emphasize disunity in this country Instead of stat-
on his doorstep the responsibility for probibiting the British and
ing the facts as they are" shall'be censored
other correspondents from writing what In their trained opinion is
an honest and fair report of public opinion in the United States.
The attitude of the foreign correspondenta is that responsible
That is exactly what is happening here "In our lifetime."
editorial comment by important American newspapers is factual
And responsibility resta directly on the doorstep of 1600 Penn-
news and that the Washington correspondent: for a London news-
sylvania Avenue, residence of the President and Mrs. Roosevelt
paper, for example, assigned to
and Mr. and Mrs. Harry Hopkins:
Interpret. American public opin
fon to^his readers in England
A
MERICAN censorship of political Ideas and public opinion as
now imposed on visiting observers by: our, yar. administration
should be permitted to send ID
amacks of course of the dictatorship gagging of news writers. There
to his paper.
are many in the White House clique who whole-heartedly approve
Prices doesn' agree, And so.
of this To them, the fact that you're fighting the devil is the best
editorial comment. clipped from
excuse in the world for taking up a permanent residence in hell
the celumns of American papers
with such widely different view
W
ASHINGTON correspondents who have worked in dictatorship
polats as the New: York Daily
lands agree with the comment of Alex H. Faulkner, correspond.
News and the New York Post,
ent In- the United States for the London Telegraph and Morning
the Chicago Tribune and: New
Post
York Times, have been sup-
"If we were reporting from Axis countries, this kind of thing
and things infinitely worse would not surprise us," Faulkner writes
pressed in the reports which
In a round-up of the view of foreign correspondents on American
BYRON PRICE
foreign correspondents have
censorship made by Editor and Publisher. He follows with the
attempted to send, from this country to their papers abroad
polite comment:
Columnista Ray Clapper and Ernest Lindley reflect or influence &
"If we did not all have such great pride in the traditions of
freedom of speech and freedom of press which is common to the
respectable section of public optnion in the United States. Yet a
United States and Great Britain we would probably be less shocked
British reporter tells me that when he recently incorporated quota
than we are when we feel that these freedoms are being abridged
tions from their columns in his piece for British readers the Ameri-
more than the necessity of war demands."
can censors- in' New York prevented him from putting it on the
F. G. Alletson Cook points out that
cable.
"unhappily, all too often, bound by rules
It seems. that the paragraphs written that day by Roosevelt
and have not been able to take the line which occasionally they
biographer Lindley and by Clapper, sincere supporter of the New
have clearly thought was intelligent.
Deal foreigni policy. struck the: American censor as dangerous
Cook further points out that when "attacks have been made
thoughts that must be kept from British eyes on the grounds that
against Britain by responsible American writers we have not been
they tendedt to emphasize; disunity" among the citizens of this
allowed to transmit their views to London, so that (A) British
republie,
readers might know what was
being said in America and (B)
The chore tax giving foreign readers an intelligent picture of what
fight in the Senate was all about was a tough one
appropriate steps might be taken
for the newswriters from abroad. They had been firmly instructed
to remove false impressions."
by the Price organization that nothing would be permitted to leave
"I do not believe the American
the borders of the United States by cable, radio or mail which in
people to be immature children
any way suggested that such & thing as & race problem could
and I feel that is how In some
possibly exist in this land of New Deal freedom.
ways the censorship has been
With this in mind, the reporters from abroad sat down and
regarding them." Cook adds.
aweated over their job of writing a poll-tax story for foreign,
Chief of the British United
enlightenment without suggesting that the reason for all the sound
Press here, H. Hutchinson pays
and fury in the Senate was the cold fact that a majority of Senators
his respect to American censor-
from Southern States are opposed to giving their colored populations
ship with the challenge:
the same political power enjoyed by the whites.
"When censorshir is used as a
One British reporter wrote the factual and innocuous observation
screen to prevent free and re-
ELMER DAVIS
in his story that "Imposition of the poil tax has kept many persons
sponsible criticism of political policy any correspondent who believes
in the lower economic scale from voting, both colored and white."
in a free press must object, and as loudly as possible."
The censor reached for his blue pencil and struck out the final
After looking over what the American censors did in New York
phrase "both colored and white."
to his pleces for the London Sketch, Hessell Tiltman utters the
"I thought-you were told that any suggestions that there is a
restrained and conservative Judgment:
racial problem in the United States will be censored," the American
"It is not unreasonable to assert shat Britain is not getting a
tensor told the reporter from overseas.
complete picture of the trend of American opinion.
And Robert Walthman of the London News Chronicle declares that
there is & point in censorship where "you ought to make & stand--
and that point is reached when the interpretation of what will
help the enemy becomes so wide that the free exchange of ideas
between close allies is Interrupted."
Any Stick to Beat a Dog
Still speaking of news. and how it is handled, too many
of our newspapers have red faces today-or ought to have.
They joined in with gleeful yelps to help Senators Byrd and
Vandenberg make Old Deal hay with the slogan: "1-1071-
PLOF-5-NOBU-SOS-WPB."
That was just an example of "bureaucratic red tape"
that was strangling the war effort, they said.
Then along came Leon Henderson, head of OPA, who
was the target of this particular nonesuch and pointed out
that the mystic symbols on one of his forms had nothing
whatever to do with the contents of the form-that they
were merely a printer's code.
Mr. Henderson blew up the story in time for the morn-
ing papers of Thursday, and the Herald Tribune, at least,
printed the explanation-well back on page 14.
Mr. Henderson's simple explanation did not deter the
World-Telegram from leading its editorial page all day Thurs-
day with an editorial titled with the same symbols and be-
ginning, "Yes, we have no idea what that means
Mr. Henderson is a durable fellow and we doubt that
he will lose any sleep because the newspapers gave him all
the worst of it again. But we are in the newspaper busi-
ness and we are troubled by such displays of unfairness,
and irresponsibility. It doesn't do our business any good.
18
l'dRather Be Right
By Samuel Grafton
NEW YORK POST, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 5, 1942
I have the odd feeling that Sir William Beveridge's report on
social security to the House of Commons will arouse more an-
guished outcries here in America than In England.
Latest dispatches, by cable and carrier pigeon, reveal that, so
far, not a single English editor has burst a blood vessel.
No has leered, scolded, or made bad jokes
about college professors.
So, the first point to be made about the Beveridge report is
on the difference between England and America, as regards the tone
of public controversy.
Had such a state paper been Issued here, proposing, In sub-
stance; that a. floor be placed under our economy, that no citizen
ever be-allowed#to-have less than a certain named income, or:
ever be permitted to go without medical care, or ever have to
wonder how to pay for a baby, a great many feverish Irrelevancies
would have been brought into the argument at once.
We can easily Imagine that rumbling protest against the
brain trust' which would have swelled from the hoarse organ of
American public comment.
It Follows From Dunkerque
It is also a curious circumstance that America, which has
a liberal administration, has had no Important social proposal
offered to It for several years, while Britain, which has a conserva-
five government, has just got Itself Involved in a major one.
Why the difference? One of the reasons is Dunkerque. Eng-
land has had its Dunkerque. We have not.
I don't want a Dunkerque. But it was immediately after
Dunkerque that social proposals began to flare up in England.
A period of Intense self-examination began, to find the reasons for
that huge military disaster.
(At that very moment, America, remote from the war, was
completing the bipartisan Congressional coalition against reform.)
The English press began to question the English educational
system, to wonder whether it allowed natural ability to rise to the
top. The sober and extremely careful London Economist proposed,
in 1940, an "economic bill of rights," adding the right to a secure
life to the older right of free speech.
Shortly after Dunkerque Sir William was commissioned, by
the House of Commons, to make his survey of social security.
But, begun on the Impetus of Dunkerque, the report is finally
published during a period of military success.
It is released at a moment when the English are feeling much
better, much cockier, much stronger, when Mr. Churchill drops tart
little comments about holding the empire which he would have
preferred to swallow a year ago.
They're Feeling Better Now
So, here, in a- sense, is a United Nations test; whether, when
we feel good, we can do the things we clearly saw to be necessary
when we felt bad..
Now, a third point on the Beverldge report: It seems to me
completely acceptable both by those who want fundamental social
reform- to come out of the war and those who want nothing of
the kind.
Its most Important feature is unemployment Insurance, un-
limited as to time during which benefits are paid, and without the
requirement of a pauper's oath.
Now, if we can end unemployment after the war, this feature
of the plan will be self-canceling. If there is no unemployment,
there will be no need for Insurance against unemployment, just
as there is no need nowadays for insurance against dragons or were-
wolves, though an enterprising fellow could have made a snappy
living for himself selling such policies just a few hundred years
ago, when dragons and werewolves were unavoidable dangers, as
all sensible men knew.
A Wager That We Mean It
For that reason, If no other, one would like to see variants of
the Beveridge plan adopted by all the United Nations. That would
be a guarantee, by the whole community, of the seriousness of cur-
rent promises to rout unemployment out of the world after the war.
If the promise is kept, the Beveridge plan will largely cancel Itself
out and cost nothing. If the promise is not kept, the cost of unem-
ployment will then be carried by the community, as was the cost
of the war, and not by individuals.
The Beveridge plan backs up, with a money forfeit, all current
speeches about ending want. That is its fundamental Importance.
It makes our oratory good.
So much for the courtesy part. Now for the calmness
PSF
which we hope the great majority of us will preserve while
extending all the courtesy. We should be under no illusions
newspaper
as to the real purpose of the Royal visit.
The Bill
Their Majesties did not come for the
DAILY
NEWS
Clificing
Of Goods
boat ride. They came, at the instance of
Prime Minister Chamberlain, to sell the
Telephone MUrray Hill 2-1234
American peòple a bill of goods. That bill of goods consists
Published review Bonday by Ken Brodfests Ca. Too: ISS E. IN Berough of Manhattan, New
in a strengthening of American-British ties to a point where
York, N. T. Daily mail rates B. & Canada, $12.00 year. For the Daily News,
D. a., $10.50 per pear: Canada, $16,00. President.J. MJ Pattarios, IL IL MrCormick: amount via
we shall be willing to underwrite the British Empire against
president and general DADAGE, Map c. Belline; ascretary. F. H. Fires, all of = L una ISL. New York, DEL
Hitler, Mussolini and their, satellite buccaneer nations:
MEMBER OF: THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The British Empire (13,253,240 sq: mi.) is not confined to
The Associated Press is exclusively certified to the cas for repobilication of all news
19,000,000 democratic Britons and Irishmen, 10,000,000 demo-
disputches credited to IL or not other wise credi to this paper and also the local news
published herein. AU rightsof republication of spécial dispatches berein also are reserved.
eratic Canadians and 10,000,000 democratic Australians and
New Zealanders. Their Majesties also rule over 357,000,000
Hindus; 60,000,000 African colored people, 4,000,000 Malay
COURTEOUS BUT CALM
ans, 2,000,000 British West Indians, 500,000 South Sea
COURTEOUS BUT CALM
Islanders, and large delegations of foreigners in Hong Kong,
British North Borneo, Sarawak, Central America and South
The Royal pilgrimage through Canada is a huge sue-
America. Very few if any of these non-white or non-English
cess to date. King George VI and Queen Elizabeth are as
British subjects enjoy the blessings of democracy.
gracious and democratic a pair of sovereigns as could be
So let's remember, while warmly welcoming the King
imagined, and the way they
and Queen, that it is really Mr. Chamberlain who is visiting
are reselling the Empire to
us; and let's keep clearly in mind what he wants to sell us.
the Canadiana is something
to behold.
We think we should be wary, too, about the proposed-
Royalist sentiment is
also mounting by the min-
RETURN VISIT
ute in the United States, in
anticipation of Their Ma-
-of President Roosevelt to London sometime next year.
jesties arrival here early
The President, like most strong men, is not noted for ask-
next month: We know, be-
ing or taking advice. So we don't offer advice in this matter.
cause almost all our friends
We merely express the earnest hope that
and acquaintances in the
Wilson
the President won't make such a trip until after
nation are asking us please
to get them invitations to
Did It
he has ceased to be President.
There would be nothing illegal or improper
some public. party, private
King George VI Queen Elizabeth
about a return visit to the King and Queen. But the thing
binge, parade or picnie
could not be kept purely social. Inevitably, it would have
where they can see the King and Queen.
political repercussions and overtones-and these would add
All this is O.K. by us. If professedly republican Amer-
up to serving notice on the dictators that the United States
icans, like most other people, enjoy standing in awe of the
and Great Britain were now in a virtual military alliance.
divinity, that doth hedge a king, who are we to complain
We think we speak the sentiments of the great majority
We hope Their Majesties are as hospitably received here as
of Americans when we say that such an alliance is not
in Canada, and believe they should be.
wanted here, for all the blood ties and fellow feelings which
Just one suggestion. The visit is admittedly a good-
unquestionably obtain between Americans and Britons,
will visit. Well, then, why shouldn't the King and Queen
President Woodrow Wilson's postwar trip to Europe was
arrange to be seen by as many people in the United States
disastrous to Wilson, to the hopes of a just peace, and to a
as possible We mean, why not display their charming
large extent to Wilson's own country. We hope President
personalities and gracious miens in big parades (maybe up
Roosevelt will ignore the sirens² yodelings and stay home
Broadway and down Pennsylvania Ave.) and at great public
gathering places ? Why should they be confined to compara-
tively small garden parties for 1,300 carefully chosen guests,
private junkets, and so on?
A
MOXOW
E
C10/
MO,
X
$
o, CROMWELL, CROMWELL!
HAD I BUT SERVED MY
COUNTRY WITH HALF THE
ZEAL I SERVED MY KING,
"WOULD NOT IN MINE
AGE HAVE LEFT ME NAKED
TO MINE ENEMIES
HENRY VIII
ACT III
SCENE II.
Cromwell SIDNEY HILLMAN
king Henry YIII
FRANKLIN ROOSEVELT
Wolsey
HENRY WALLACE
Ann Bullen Miss FOURTH TERM.
RR
THE NEW DEAL GOES SHAKESPEARE
Times Herald 24 Julin
TOP SECRET
14
fill
THURSDAY, JULY 30, 1952
THE MILWAUKEE JOURNAL
L. W. NIEMAN, Founder, 1882
Published by The Journal Company
H. 1. GRANT. Chairman of the Board
M. H. CREAGER,
President and Editor
J. FERGUSON, Vice-President and Associate Editor
In the opening sentence of this article we
L L BOWYER,
Vice-President and Publisher
said this is founded on the good common
J. KEATING Vice-Prosident and Production Mgr.
sense of Lincoln, and it is. The whole mat-
ter was outlined in that special message to
RATES. Carrier delivered and street - daily 3 cents,
Sunday 10 cesta. State and foreign mail rales - application.
congress which President Lincoln delivered
on July 4, 1861. Lincoln had faced through
PHONE MARQUETTE 6000. Private telephone eyolem.
four perilous months the problem of dealing
Address all correspondence be specific person of department.
with a treason which was trying to disinte-
grate the Union.
Judge Duffy Sees the Way
The great humanitarian among our presi=
dents had gone to Washington to find that
Federal Judge FR Ryan Duffy, applying
the arms of the United States army had been
the good common sense of Lincoln to the war)
mysteriously shipped to southern states by
situation, refused to set. free - citizen. of
secession, minded men in the war depart-
Japanese extraction who had, left: the west
ment; that our naval vessels had been- dis
coast in- violation of a military order This
persed to all quarters of the globe so they
Japanese-American will be sent back to face
would not be at home to resist rebellion. Hel
the consequences.
found that through, 'more than 30 years" of
The order promulgated by the commander
propaganda-an insidious "drugging the
of war area No. 1 was for the protection of
public mind"-a situation had been created
the nation: It was meant to prevent spies
in which not only the south but many states
bordering on the south were full of citizens
and saboteurs from doing to the west coast,
disloyal to the core.
in case of invasion, what saboteurs and spies
Lincoln, with the problem of Fort Sumter
did to Hawaii. The army, in consultation
dumped in his lap on the very day he took.
with the FBI, which knew the great diffi-
the oath of office, moved to save the Union
culty of separating loyal from disloyal Jap-
by: making expenditures that were not au-
anese, had decided that the only way to bei
thorized, calling men to arms without au-
safe was to put all Japanese and Japanese-
thority of congress and clapping disloyalists
Americans under restraint:
in jail without benefit of habeas corpus. And
This Japanese-American, one Kanai, had
he had done,
now he was reporting to congress on what
chosen to make a test. He had left war area
No. 1 without permission, although he well
knew that provisions were set up for grant-
Lincoln. In his report posed the question
whether he should have lef America be de-
ing permission to loyal citizens who might
stroyed by observing every fine point of law
have business elsewhere. If he wanted to
and every guarantee of the Constitution. He
attend a YMCA meeting at Williams Bay,
asked if it was wrong for him to use such
he could have applied for the proper au-
thorization
limited extent" some law "made in such
means as he had by "violating to a very
The FBI arrested him at Williams Bay and
extreme tenderness of the citizen's liberty
now Judge Duffy was being asked to set
that practically it relieves more of the guilty
asidera military order in order to give this
than of the Innocent. He pointed out that
defier of our war precautions his freedom.
if he had allowed the nation to sink, there
The usual nonsense-in wartimes, nonsense
would have been no Constitution
-of such organizations as the American
Lincoln, the greatest of all our exponents
Civil Liberties union was urged in court in
of democracy, posed the question for all
his behalf. It was urged that constitutional
time, just as in his career he touched and
rights must be observed no matter what hap-
illumined all the questions this country had
pens, that these rights are in effect even
or could have, The congress of his day saw
paramount to the nation's safety.
the point and responded-just as the con-
Judge Duity rejected such specious pleas
gress of today, the citizens of today and the
and cut right to the heart of the matter in
Judges of today should respond.
this sentence:
"This coart should not set itself up M & mill-
Judge Duffy sees, too, that the nation's
tary board of strategy."
safety comes first.
In other words, if the military authorities
on the west coast believed the order was
necessary, the court would not interfere.
And the judge buttressed this by poiriting
out that "constitutional rights of the individ-
ual in wartime are not absolute, butrelative."
The judge had said at an earlier hearing of
the same case that "the rights we have in
peacetime must give way to the general
good In wartime."
file
THE NEWS AND OBSERVER,
Farmers Want No
Gold Bricks
ao not pretend to know all about
There is ground for difference of
the New Deal statutes enacted under
opinion as to the methods and de-
Roosevelt's leadership. But. one thing
tails of putting a ceiling on wages,
I do know. Whereas before those laws
profits, salaries and farm products,
got into operation, as a: farmer I was
but. there is no justification for the
losing money and disaster stared me and
attempt to prejudice) the farmers
other. farmers in' the face. Now prices
give farmers a profit, they no longer faca
against Mr. Roosevelt by the political
starvation and the probability of .losing
talk that "he is the enemy of the
their farms, and can enjoy comforts de-
1
farmer. That well-greased propa-
nied them before the New Deal. Where-
ganda is an insult to the intelligence
as 1 was then on the verge of bank-
ruptey in farming operations, now I see
of the men who till the soil. They
prosperity. Like the blind man, I may
know-better than the political
not understand the processes, but I do
propagandists-that when Roose
know how blessed are the results.
velt became- President they were
President Roosevelt expects every
broke. Their products were selling
man in city and country-on the
on the market for less than the
farm and in the factory-to make
cost of production; thousands were
sacrifices in this all-out war. It can-
seeing their farms sold at auction
not be won without full cooperation
for their debts, and agriculture was
and readiness to practice self-denial.
at the bottom of the worst depression
The farmers who recall-and they all
that had ever afflicted it. The up-
recall-the condition in 1929-32 and
turn did not happen. The change
the improvement brought about by
from starvation prices to prices of
the Roosevelt policies know that
profit came about directly from the
the propagandists, who are trying to
New Deal legislation. If Hoover or
poison their minds against the chief
some reactionary Democrat had been
executive who has done more for
elected in 1932, the better days would
agriculture than any of his predeces-
not have come.
sors, are insulting the intelligence
When Reactionaries, who did
and gratitude of the farmers of
everything they could to prevent the
America.
agricultural recovery, by Roosevelt
In this hour; all should be fed
laws, brought Senator Tydings
out of the same spoon-labor, agri-
(bringing bad tidings) to Raleigh to
culture, industry, salaried men. The
voice antagonism to the remedies
hardest task the President has is to
which lifted farmers out of the ditch,
prevent profiteering by the big con-
a reactionary Democrat asked the
cerns having war contracts. Given
late Dr. Wallace- Riddick, who was
legislation that will empower him
a farmer as well as able engineer
to deal with all, the farmer will
and college president, what. he
ind that it is used in « way that
thought of the New Deal measures
will not only continue profitable
which the Reactionists were oppos-
prices during the war but will pre-
ing. The answer was
ent the collapse which followed
Speaking as a farmer; who has been-
fter the World War.
losing money on my farm, I am like the
The farmer is no sucker. He can-
blind man who was given his vision
ot be induced to mistrust the man in
by the Saviour. Asked how he received
his sight, the blind man said that all
the White House who has been his
he knew was that whereas he did not
best friend and will continue to see
see before the miracle, that after it he
that he is saved from another de-
received his sight,
pression.
The farmers are not in the mar-
ket for gold bricks and will turn a
deaf ear to the detraction of the man
in the White House
44
ABROAD
NEWSWEEK, APPIL 10. 1944
ish Diet was summoned into a special
When Germany Falls
of its eastern provinces up to the Curzon
session.
Line, which Russia is determined to
The story seemed to be that the Rus-
Russia and Poland Stand to Gain
keep. Thus, if this was done, there would
sians had proved unexpectedly liberal
be no "Corridor" after the war and Poland
and patient in their dealings with the
by Allies' Plan for Postwar Reich
would obtain what it has long been
Finns, making concessions in their origi-
striving for: a broad waterfront on the
nal terms that made them far more aoj
The story was really broken by The
Baltic.
ceptable to Finland. It was all part of
London Observer-the details of the 00-
Moscow is known to favor some such
significant development in Soviet policy
cupation agreed upon by President
arrangement and London apparently has
by which the Kremlin appeared to
Roosevelt, Prime Minister Churchill, and
accepted the principle of it, while the
making every effort to draw such Cer-
Premier Stalin at the Teberan conference.
United States has not yet manifested its
man satellites as Finland and Rumabia
But it was not really new. It had been
intentións in the matter.
away from the Reich at the moment
known in London for some time. Pre-
when such action would injure the Nazis
sumably, it had been discussed by the
the most.
European Advisory. Commission. Ameri-
Mongolian Incident
can correspondents had cabled what they
In the wild and mountainous north-
No Poles, Please
could of it. But the newest version gave
eastern corner of Sinkiang, near the Altai
the most concrete account so far. These
Mountains, local Chinese authorities be-
The French Committee of National
were the occupation terms to be imposed
gan foreibly transferring some of the
Liberation smarted from a new, diplo-
on the Reich:
Kazak (Mongolian) settlers southward. But
matic slap last week. What hurt most
€ Russian forces are to occupy all of
a number of the settlers objected and fled
was that it came from a nation Gen.
Eastern Germany up to the Oder.
over the border into the Mongolian
Charles de Gaulle believed to be a true
€ The British are to march into North-
People's Republic. Thereupon, Chinese
friend. For while Britain and the United
western Germany.
troops chased them, broke into Mongo-
States had held back recognition of the
€ Bavaria, Saxony, and Württemberg
lian territory, and from airplanes fired on
committee as exile government of France,
will come under United States jurisdie
the refugees and Mongolian localities.
Russia had recognized its claims. Now
tion.
Mongolian troops then repulsed the in-
the Soviet treated the French to la blunt
< Only the capital, Berlin, will be jointly
vaders.
example of present-day Kremlin diplo-
occupied by troops of the three powers.
That was the story told this week by
macy. Algiers reported that Russia had
€ The question of who should garrison
the Moscow radio, in a dispatch from
refused to accept the diplomatic agent
Austria, whose independence was
Ulan Bator (Red Hero), capital of
whom the committee had chosen to rep-
pledged at the Moscow conference, had
Mongolia. The events, it said, took place
resent it in Moscow-Gaston Palewski,
not been settled, but recent discussions
at the end of 1943. But the curious thing
chief of de Gaulle's political staff.
favored a mixed occupation force (see
about the Moscow piece was not the fact
map)
that the news came out so late but, in-
Palewski: A behind-the-scenes politi-
stead, the stem warning that was tacked
cal figure in peacetime France, Palewski
Vanishing Corridor: It was further
on the end. Still quoting the Ulan Bator
belongs to an émigré Polish family. For
understood in London that Russian DO-
dispatch, the Moscow radio cited leading
eleven years he was a close associate of
eupation of Germany east of the Oder
Mongolian officials as being "firmly con-
Paul Reynaud and served as his political
would eventually lead to annexation of
vinced" that should such violations of
adviser when Reynaud headed the last
some, If not all, of these territories by a
the Mongolian territory by Sinkiang
government of the Third Republic. Rus-
Dew Poland, in compensation for the loss
troops recur, then the Soviet Govern-
sia presumably disliked de Gaulle's
choice for one main reason-he was a
Pole.
For General de Gaulle, this was just
NORTH SEA
BALTIC SEA
Königsbei
another of many disappointments that
DANZIG
EAST PRUSSIA
have marked 1944. On March 27, the
JOINT RUSSIAN-
Grodne
General lashed out at the Allies in an
AMERICAN-BRITISH
address to the Consultative Assembly in
OCCUPATION
TO BE OCCUPIED
Algiers. Referring to his committee as the
BY RUSSIANS
Bremen
"Provisional Covernment of the Repub-
BERLIN
Poznan
lic," he announced that it "does not need
GERMANY
WARSAW
any lesson from anyone but the French
P
0
L
A
N
nation that it is entrusted to lead."
TO BE OCCUPIED
BY BRITISH
On Moving In: Five days later, the
Oder
CURZON
committee's defiant attitude toward the
IDAIN
LINE
Allies was even more strongly illustrated
Frankfort
by the publication of a law it adopted last
TO BE OCCUPIED
Przemysi
Eracow
March 14 asserting its right to take over
BY AMERICANS
control of French liberated territory
whether or not the Allies like it. In es-
CZECHO
Stuttgart
DARUS
SLOVAKIA
sence, the law provided that immediately
on the liberation of territory, commission-
Ulm
River
ers appointed by the committee for each
Munich
VIENNA
PROBABLE JOINT
theater of operations would take over
RUSSIAN-AMERICAN
both the civil and mílitary administra-
(SWITZERLAND,
BRITISH OCCUPATION
tion.
AUSTRIA
This scheme was in direct conflict with
President Roosevelt's recen* reported de-
cision to leave to Gen. Dwight D. Eisen-
hower the choice of which authorities he
Moreland
would deal with in liberated France.
Sume Bue day the Allies hope to occupy Germany on these lines
or It
day
up
On the Record
wash Slar Jan 7thDorothy Thompson
cer-
A number of further observations may
And that the American Army, at this
cise unusual discipline in the forthcom-
sense.
be made concerning the statement re-
moment, should have to use the ener-
ing election campaign it will be made
amor.
garding strikes supposedly made by Gen.
gles of its members to administer the
to order for our enemies. To dare to
if it
Marshall.
railroads as well as plan a great in-
hold a presidential election at the cli-
track.
First, Gen. Mar-
vasion is scandalous.
max of a war is to court catastrophe.
none
shall's statement was
What is going on in the minds of our
Nothing could make it tolerable except
To
not made for publi-
soldiers will bear directly on their be-
the elimination of the most contro-
learest,
cation. If. he had
havior in the war, and it also will influ-
versial issues, both foreign and domestic,
that
wished: to make a
I
ence their political behavior when they
& voluntary curbing of every tongue and
soon
public statement on
get home.: Many of them are very
a
the creation of so harmonious a spirit
ED.
a matter SQ touchy;
young and the war has been the decisive
that none would greatly care: who was
he would, no doubt,
experience of, their lives, forming their
elected, and the election be essentially
have written it and
whole attitude toward American society.
but the maintenance of a tradition.
1
requested to be
Physicians tending wounded soldiers
c
quoted exactly. Since
tell' me that, reading the papers, they
uary 2,
a version was re-
are becoming bitterly antilabor, even de-
sed on
ported in the press,
nouncing their own laboring fathers.
But there are no signs of any such
by the
I have talked with
At the same time, in such hospitals as
inhibitions among opposition party
those at Atlantic City and Miami, they
leaders. Apparently we shall have poli-
F
two participants in
orig-
the conference. who
are outraged by the display of luxury
tics as usual-which is worse than busi-
it the
gave a quite differ-
amongst vacationers and infurlated by
ness as usual Instead of Democrats
eclares
ent account of what he said. This lack
the war profiteering
and Republicans meeting to bury their
o
ruling
of respect for his wishes may eventually
tomahawks, they are already manufac-
C.
neet the
turing poisoned arrows for the quad-
Si
force him to make a. public statement
the sec-
rennial battle, and exacerbating every
E
where he did not wish to do so.
The inevitable result of such revulsion
:ttacked
Mr. Rickenbacker has not improved
rift while they piously talk about the
M
must be a drift toward stern leadership
hearings
the situation by following up the inci
even of a dictatorial nature.
necessity of unity.
b
iving the
dent with the suggestion that "Gen.
Nothing is being helped, either, by a
The candidate in the Republican
on these
Marshall is the type of man who should
renewal of the prohibition campaign,
ranks who has most consplcuously be-
1:
be the next President of the United
by the same kind of bigoted minority
haved as a responsible citizen of the
:es which
States," thereby introducing politics into
who organized the movement last time
Republic, the only American civilian
hat the
the picture with a thrust at the Presi-
while millions of American men were
who is almost as familiar to the soldiers
he quali-
dent and Commander in Chief.
still mobilized.
as the President, and who has the con-
2 privi-
Then, however, prohibition could be
fidence of the governments of our Al-
Condi-
Gen. Marshall must have good reasons
described as "an experiment noble in
lies, Wendell Willkie, stands at the bot-
class
not to wish to open a raucous debate.
tom of the party's favor; not because
of
purpose." Today the word describes
ented
Among our troops anger and even fury
the era of crime. And it is a fighting
of his faults but because of his virtues.
gued
at the behavior of the civilian popula-
word for American troops, to whom the
Mr. Willkie who is for unity among
:ides.
st
tion is spreading. The effect which the
blue-noses attempting to protect their
the Allies, believes that unity begins
nent
tc
strike threats and many other things
"morals," are school marms reducing
at home. That is too much for those
LS to
M
might have on Axis strategy is negli-
to the status of childhood, youths whom
who would risk losing victory for the
st
laga-
gible compared with the direct effect
Guadalcanal, the Aleutians, North
Republic to achieve victory for Repub-
ider-
re
they have on the morale of our own
Africa and Salerno have prematurely
licanism-which without the Republic
fact
bi
troops who shortly are to be put to a
made into men.
would need another name,
al
gigantic test.
TS,
Also, unless the political parties exer-
(Released by The Bell Brndicate, Inc.)
nt.
The Great Game of Politics
It is not often that statements on In fact. these indire
'er
public affairs not attributable directly the firs
dire
ortant public figures ring the
matter
SAT
Describes Working of Law
prohib)
Under the present law, Mr. Far-
trainin
ley said, a service man or woman
over 1€
FARLEY CENSURES
must send in an application to the
Ing as
commission. who then will send
period,
ballot to the applicant. The ap- a
charged
plicant then must fill out the bal-
days at
SOLDIER VOTE LAW
is a voter before an attesting
lot and take an oath that he or ahe
and a $A.
eligible
ficer. All this, he declared, would of-
The be
who is to tell the service man that
take time, without considering
the State
Gov. Wa
he must make an application.
dered In
Dewey Program a "Deception
on Men and Women in the
that a war ballot will be sent upon
The "liberalizing interpretation"
been excil
equal sure
presentation of a letter to a. rela-
They, to
Armed Services," He Says
tive in which a service man ex-
"given an
pressed a desire to vote, he said,
perience in
will necessitate further interpreta.
The sessio
terpretation would be made If
tions. Mr. Farley saiced what In-
row.
CHANGE NOW IS DEMANDED
letter should be signed "Your low a
3 CAND
Bill: Ing son, Arthur," or "With love,
Coca-Cola
Governor Urged to Call: a
have the War Ballot Commission
The simple way would be to
Cleared
Special Session at Albany
voter of the State whose
send a. war- ballot to every. war
ATLANT
G: Candlet
to Amend Statute
home address and military address name,
founder of
was furnished by any relative, Mr.
pany, and hl
Farley. added, This, he asserted.
quitted in Fé
Characterizing the present State
War Ballot Law as a "monstroalty.
stitution and eliminate red tape
would comply with the State Con-
charges that
to defraud,
cilities. and & burden on transportation fa-
A jury, w/
a reservoir of ambiguities and a
that laundry
deception of the men and women
The second and very important
lers charged
in the armed services," James A.
unfair to the war voter is that the
count on which the Deway law is
ance but carr
ley, returned
Farley, Democratic State Chair-
man, called upon Governor Deway
war voter's ballot must be back in
er several he
last night to call & special session
H. H
election day," Mr. Farley said.
Albany by Nov. 3, four days before
the elder Cand
H. Candler, 38
of the Legislature to amend the
where
"You can readily see that it will
E. Marvin Us
law to make it workable.
be necessary for most war voters
verdict of acq)
Mr. Farley, whose speech from
WA
to make their choice of candidates
Samuel Candi
Radio Station WABC broadcast
in several weeks before election day
Federal acci
Candlers follow
over a State-wide network of the
order that their ballots
Columbia Broadcasting System.
CA
reach Albany by Nov. 3. That may pro-
court wherelf
spoke In reply to Governor Dewey.
fighting for his country.
vision penalizes a service voter for
$200,000 to sa
customers who
who & week before in a speech
that under Republican War Ballot
"Let me remind my listeners
in a fire which
over the same stations called the
dry. The claif
law "& perfectly simple solution"
Bill
laws in force during the past two
to the war-ballot problem.
Leg.
years the service men and women
ARRESTED
Mr. Farley said that almost. 20
per cent of the voting population
overseas were permitted to fill out
of New York State was serving in
their ballots right up to election
Cemetery
$
the armed forces, that they were
day, and their ballots were valid
16-Year-O
entitled to vote and that the ma-
and were counted If they reached
the War Ballot Commission by
Isadore Dia
jority of the people of the State to
Dec. 10."
TR
1029 East Tel
wanted to have opportunity.
vote in the easiest way possible
one
Hyman Blumberg, State secre-
was arreste
by N
tary of the American Labor party,
cemetery ge
"Selfishness" is. Assailed
that
announced that the party had
Queens, for
"There may be some who can
State
started distribution of 300,000
stock transe
see political advantage in making
rathe
postcard applications for war bal-
teen years.
it difficult for the armed forces
the C
lots among relatives of those in the
Diamond,
to vote," he said. "If this is so.
it is
armed services with a request that
now a. saled
those acting from such an unfair
land
they be signed. A. circular accom-
was Indicte
and un-American motive should
was
panying the cards characterized
County, up
be speedily repudiated. Partisan
ing Bay
the present State law as "a dis-
with transa
selfishness must not be permitted
Mode)
graceful partisan attempt to de-
of $5,600.
to create & roadblock against the
tiona
prive the men and women In the
Detective
will of those unselfishly giving
State
services of their right to vote."
George Bré
their all for our safety."
social
nized Diami
Mr. Farley quoted Governor
"As
Rother's Conviction Appealed
from a Fedi,
Dewey as saying that "every
coe
Notice of appeal was filed yes-
gation phot
soldier can be provided with & bai-
panta
terday afternoon at the Richmond
Diamond is
lot which will be valid under our
embre
County District Attorney's office,
Police Heade
Constitution," and asked why the
that
St. George, 8. I., from the convie-
Governor did not say:- "Every
thing
tion of Adam A. Rother, 41-year-
Elected to S
soldier will be provided with a bal-
Engli
old Coast Guard (J.g.) lieutenant,
Mrs. Walt,
lot." He asserted that the changes
nition
now serving & life sentence In Sing
Paul Pryibil
teratis
Sing Prison for second-degree mur-
of the New Yes
in the rules made during the last
Mr.
der. The notice, served by Rother's
advisory board
few days by the War Ballot Com-
legisla
mission constituted admission that
ficial
Reigi, asked for a review of the
attorneys, Nicholas and Emil J,
terday In the
Broadway. Mr
the law was faulty and that the
Jerse
"liberal interpretation" of the law
conviction by the Appellate Divi-
man of the was
the A
the organizatio
announced by William T. Simpson,
Brooklyn. sion of the Supreme Court in
the
campaigns for
chairman of the commission,
tened
and welfare sei
showed that the statute was not
clear and left the way open for
phobix
"Th
any person to protest the tallying
said,
of all goldier ballots.
ward
Mr. Farley said Mr. Simpson's
estimate that the service vote
langual
would be about 225,000 Indicated
becaus
that three out of four In the armed
differ
The
services would find it too difficult
to exercise their right to vote. He
seventy
to the
added that Mr. Simpson unwitting-
Others
ly confessed that his estimate was
teachir
too high by ordering only 200,000
in all
postcard ballot applications
chapping
Roosevelt's Pilot on 9,764-Mile Teheran Trip
was about exhausted and then re-
turned to their base.
President Sees Pyramids.
Reveals Flight Once Missed Fighter Escort
On the approach to Cairo, the
plane flew down the Nile, Maj.
By JUSTIN D. BOWERSOCK
because the fighters couldn't stay
fighter escort would be used to pro-
Bryan making several "off course"
KANSAS CITY, Mo., Feb. 12
with us if we went on instruments.
tect the planes of the two generals.
circles to afford the President a view
(NANA) As we approached DJ1-
The field had been closed to all
of the pyramids.
djellt, Gen. Eisenhower, who was in
The flight of the President's plane
traffic, and we, had planned to taxi
the big four-engine Army transport
would take it north of Tunis and
There was some question whether
the co-pilot's seat, noticed a twin
the President could make the flight
engine airplane of apparent French
plane: out and take off as soon as
then east to the Nile River, thence
from Cairo to Teheran. He wanted
design approaching our plane from
possible.
north to Cairo. Since the arrival
to fly, but there were conflicting
2, o'clock and at approximately our
No. sooner had the President's
level.
at the Nile would be after daylight
reports on the necessary altitude at
plane taken to the air than the
"One fighter immediately went
it. was agreed a fighter escort would
which to make the flight, some esti-
fighters raced down the runway and
climbed upward, protecting the
meet the President's plane at the
mating the plane would have to
down and- warned the plane away,
most vital cargo in the air. Soon
point where it reached the Nile, near
reach a height of 18,000 feet So
but the pilot continued toward us.
the President's plane, the P-39s and
El Minya to give the necessary cover
Maj. Bryan took another plane for
"After his apparent disregard of
the warning, three P-39s immedi-
into Cairo.
a survey trip to determine the neces-
British fighters were on their way.
The weather was good that night,
sary elevation. If it should be nec-
ately peeled off in a dive toward the
The aerial convoy headed out. to
intruder. Remembering the in-
and the plane raced along at 7,000-
essary to cross the mountains at
sea. Then, in Maj. Bryan's words,
foot altitude In raGio silence. It
an extremely high altitude, the
structions given the fighter pilots
the flight was routine until they
the day before, I expected to see the
encountered the lone Frenchman,
arrived at El Minya. But where
President would be flown to Abadan
plane shot down.
were the fighters? For 15 minutes
and then go by train to Teheran.
who perhaps still wonders what it
was all about.
it circled. Then it was decided to
On the morning of November 27
"However, about the time the
go on without escort. The trouble
the plane took off for an uneventful
three fighters started their dive,
After changing the fighter escort
the pilot saw them coming and
at Djidjelli, the party again headed
was the fighter escort interpreted
trip in beautiful weather to
turned away. It was a close call
out to sea.
the meeting time at 6 o'clock in the
Teheran.
for the Frenchman."
In order to give the President a
morning, local time, which was two
"The course on this leg of the
That is part of the official report
view of the battlegrounds in the
hours earlier than Greenwich mean
journey took us over the Suez
of Maj. Otis F. Bryan of Kansas
Tunis area, Maj. Bryan made several
time. They had waited for the
Canal," Maj. Bryan related, "and
President's plane until their fuel
to make the trip a little more inter-
President Roosevelt and Maj. Otis Bryan, who flew the
President into the combat zone In North Africa.
-A. P. Photo from the Navy.
City to Maj. Gen. Haroid La. George
circles before landing, just six hours
on Maj. Bryan's second, and most
after the take off from Oran.
recent, flight with President Roose-
Night Flight Necessary.
velt as a passenger, to the historic
conference in Teheran.
In a pilot's words again, the next
TWA Official in Private Life.
leg of the flight from Tunis to Cairo
would be "routine." It had been
Sitting in the living room of his
Kansas City home, Maj. Bryan, who
originally planned to depart from
Tunis early November 21, but instead
as a vice president of Transcon-
tinental & Western Air directs the
a change was made to the evening of
the same day, making a night flight.
operations of the intercontinental
Gen. H. H. Arnold and Gen. George
division, related the incident as just
C. Marshall decided to make the
one of many experienced. during the
early take off in their transports and
52½ hours in which the President
since the President's plane would be
was flown 9,764 miles.
flying under cover of darkness the
On the last flight. he was com-
missioned & major in the Army Air
Forces Air Transport Command
Once the flight: was. over, /he was
back. in civilian clothes, but in re
serve and readys for, another flight
if the President chooses to go,
"You see there was some concern
over the security phase of the mis-
sion from Oran to Tunis, he re-
lated. "We all discussed It after
our arrival at Oran While we were
there, P-39 fighters arrived for lo-
cal coverage and to cover the flight
to Tunis.
"The plans were that P-39's would
act as cover from Oran to Tunis.
Inasmuch as Tunis was beyond the
fighter's range, we planned to
change fighter escort at Djidjelli:
Fighters Told to Shoot.
"We summoned the fighter element
leaders and instructed them that
if any aircraft came within three
miles of the President's plane, one
fighter was to warn it. away. In
the event it persisited in coming
within the three-mile limit, the
plane was to be shot down."
On. the night of November 19,
Maj. Bryan was invited to a dinner
at the headquarters of Gen. Arthur
Wilson. The other guests were Gen.
Eisenhower, Maj. Gen. Thomas B.
Larkin, Franklin D. Roosevelt, jr.,
Elliott Roosevelt and several others.
One can easily realize the respon-
sibility of a pilot when he has a
passenger list made up of President
Roosevelt, Harry Hopkins, Admiral
William D. Leahy, Gen. Elsenhower,
Maj. Gen. E. M. Watson, Rear Ad-
miral Ross McIntyre, Rear Admiral
Willson Brown, Lt. Franklin D.
Roosevelt, jr., Mike Reilly (Secret
Service man), Guy Spaman, Charles
Fredericks and Arthur Prettyman.
Maj. Bryan had his crew remain
at the field all night in preparation
for the flight the next day. The
fighter units, which had been aug-
mented by British fighters with
sufficient range for the trip to Tunis,
were checked along with the weather
and briefing.
The presidential party arrived at
the plane at 9 o'clock in the morn-
ing.
Took Mediterranean Route.
"The weather was marked by a
rather low overcast at about 2,000
feet, and there were rain showers
about half the way to Tunis," Maj.
Bryan related. "Because of such
weather conditions we had to make
our route out over the Mediter-
ranean, instead of the inland route,
esting for the President we flew over
plane, a high frequency unit to allow
and -circled Bethlehem Jerusalem
contact with the fighter planes.
THE SUNDAY STAR, Washington, D. C.
A-15
and Jericho.".
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1944.
"Since the President wanted to
Sees Turkish President.
see the North African battlefields,"
and 55 minutes later. P-38 fighters
From the day: of the arrival in
carry out the missions of the Presi-
Maj. Bryan said, the trip between
accompanied the party At Malta
Teheran, November 27, when Presi-
dent, The total flying time on the
Cairo and Tunis was made by way
the first, and only, mechanical diffi-
dent Roosevelt, Marshall Stalin and
trip was a little more than 162 hours.
of El Alamein, Tobruk and Bengasi.
culty occurred on the plane, an in-
Prime Minister Churchill went into
Since the war started Maj. Bryan
The President viewed the North
operative regulator valve on the
conference, until December 2; the
has made two dozen ocean crossings.
African scenes carefully, as the
hydraulic system. It resulted in a
(Copyrisht, 1944, by the Kansas City Star
crew was busy making preparations
events of this phase of the campaign
two-hour delay.
and North American Newspaper Alliance.)
for the return flight. They were
are still written in the desert sands.
Because of the mechanical delay,
invited to the ceremony at which
The desert was strewn with wrecked
the visit of the President at Castell-
Mr. ChurchilF presented the sword
and abendoned instruments of war.
vetrano, Sicily, was limited to an
of honor to Marshal Stalin.
Tank tracks were plainly visible,
hour, and instead of flying to Mar-
President Roosevelt had expressed
their circular sweeps telling the
rakech, the plane went direct to
a desire to fly to Turkey to visit
graphic story of flanking move-
Tunis. The following day the plane
President Inonu, but it was decided
ments."
hopped from Tunis to Dakar, with
a flight by: the President into a
The arrival at Tunis was at 2:45
fighter escort. "That was just rou-
neutral country should not be made.
o'clock, December 7.
tine." Maj. Bryan said.
When he arrived in Cairo on the
The President got his wish for the
All in all, Maj. Bryan and his
way back, he was visited by Presi-
kind of visit he wanted in Malta-
crew flew the plane 29,789 miles to
dent Inonu.
but it was no fault of his. Local
After the visit with the Turkish
theater officers had allowed so much
President and it was agreed a trip
time for the visits in Sicily and
to Naples was too risky for Presi-
Malta that an after-dark landing
dent Roosevelt. an alternate flight
would be necessary at Marrakech.
was arranged so that the President
There was concern about a night
could visit Sicily and Malta, a flight
flight in that theater.
requiring considerable fighter escort.
The departure from Tunis was at
It was necessary to have a special
7 o'clock the morning of December
radio installed in the President's
8. and arrival at Malta was an hour
New York Post
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The design of this pager la to diffuse among the people correct information on all
interesting subjects, to (nculente fust principles in religion, morals and politics, and
to cultivate e-taste for sound Iiterature.-Prospeciua of the EVENTNO POST. No. 1.
Now, 16, 1105
NEW YORK, MONDAY, DECEMBER 7, 1942.
December 7
They're Still At It
Now that we know the grim story of a year 'ago today in
But, unfortunately, these men are still with us, although
Hawaii we can see in what a real sense Pearl Harbor was our
some of them have shut up, temporarily, at least. They have
Dunkirk.
been proved foolish and wrongheaded, if nothing worse. Let's
Temporarily it crippled our fighting power. But,
remember their record when they try to influence us about
mentally, spiritually and physically, it made a man of us-a
the peace as they tried to influence us about the war.
tough, aggressive and enduring fighting man.
They are already at it. To point to the News again, as an
The test of character of a man or a nation is not how he
example: A year ago today while the bombs rained on Pearl
struts and gloats over an easy initial success. It is how he
Harbor the News ran an editorial headed "Why Should We
pulls himself up off the floor and slugs his way toward victory.
Believe Him?" ("Him" being President Roosevelt, who had
We are lucky in our allies. Britain did it. Russia did it.
been warning us of war and trying to prepare us for it.)
We have done it.
Yesterday the News had an editorial headed "The Face
of the Future," which is a warning that all of our allies are
Our victories thus far are the preliminary victories
going back to the old dog-eat-dog world of the past and we'd
which give us the initiative. But that prerequisite to com-
better not try to plan for a better world.
plete victory we have seized. Now we are on our way. Now
We believe the peoples who have come through so mag-
as never before is there unity among ourselves here at home
nificently in this last year are going to make a better world
and among all the nations marching with us.
and that the conviction that they can will lend strength to
their blows in the year ahead.
Since Last December 7
Could we have achieved this unity and have traveled so
Manpower
far along the road to complete victory and a world free of
Hitlerism if we had heeded the counsels of despair and de-
To the President's executive order putting an end to
featism that came in such volume before last December 7
disruptive recruiting by the armed forces and placing the
from phoney experts-Lindbergh, for example-and cynical
nation's manpower resources, civilian and military, under con-
and reactionary newspapers-the Daily News, for instance?
trol of a single agency headed by a civilian, we say-Good!
Listen to what these isolationists were telling us in the
We still think the President should go all the way, how-
fateful days before the Japs struck:
ever, and place all the nation's resources, including man-
"Japan does not threaten us. It is physically impossible
power, under one forceful civilian director.
for Japan to come over here.
That's from the Daily News of October 6-two months
and a day before the Japs came over. And on November 24,
two weeks before Pearl Harbor, about the time the Japs
must have been sailing out of their bases, the News ran an
eloquent editorial entitled "Come on-Let's Appease Japan."
Meanwhile Lindbergh was delivering himself of these
"expert opinions" to large audiences-including heiling
bundists-and the Senate Foreign Relations Committee:
"It is impossible to build an air strength in the small area
of the British Isles that equals German air strength.
Suppose we had an air force that we could send to Europe.
Where could it operate?
The idea that England, with our
assistance, can equal Germany's strength in the air by 1942
or 1943 is a complete fallacy.
This war was lost by Eng-
land and France even before it was declared.
It is the kind of thing people used to crowd into audito-
riums to hear. What a long way we have traveled.
These quotations, are the merest samplings from the
output of the croakers.
32
special
l'dRather Be Right
By Samuel Grafton
ISOLATION'S NEW FACES: Mr. Hoffman, of Michigan (the
NEW YORK POST, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 4, 1942
negrly automatic Congressman, because you can nearly always
predict what he is going to say), mutters about how the people of
New England may go cold and hungry this winter for the benefit
of foreigners, meaning allies.
The New York Daily News (the newspaper with the nearly auto-
matie editorial page, because you can nearly always predict what
se is going to say) chews about how we are stripping Americans to
feed the world, suckers.
So. Just about the time- the trend toward better war alms
succeeds, this other trend, toward rousing the most insular and
parochial of American sentiments, may also mature They may run
into each other, head on.
This is one of isolation's new faces. It does not, at the moment,
object to sending American boys abroad, but it is beginning, ten-
tatively, to object to sending American food.
The Beans Issue
I don't know how you care adó up a political position which
holds that It La perhaps all right to send an American soldier abroad,
but wrong to send an American can of beans.
This is one more of those mysterious, dreamy aspects, which
isolation wears during war-time. At bottom, every sincere one-
time iselationist ought to be pleased If we can win victories with
food instead of lives. But the remnants of isolation will not give
up the chance to make much of the food issue, to chivvy a little,
to stroke a few national nerves the wrong way, to build up that
legacy of resentment of which some few men expect to be the
heirs.
Another of isolation's new aspects is the look of hate it turns
upon Wendell Willkie, who has become á new "that man."
Oddly, before the war, Isolation used to make much of England's
Imperialism.
Now, when Mr. Willkie raises exactly the same Issues, isolation
is outraged. It denounces him. It doesn't want to hear about
doing anything for those colonies, of whose sufferings it once made
so much. Convinced at the outset that this war is meaningless,
It wants to make good and sure It stays meaningless;
Many Privileges
It wants the privilege of attacking England for having colonies,
and also the privilege of attacking anyone who wants to do any-
thing about colonialism. It seeks, in fact, many conflicting priv-
ileges, like the privilege of supporting the war and also the political
privilege of bemoaning its cost in food and fuel and regulation.
In this curious, and, as I- say, dreamy fashion, the remnants
of isolation are enabled to say whoopee, hit him again, when we at-
tack the enemy, and also to mutter about the darn bureaucrats when
government tries to collect the food and fuel and metal with which
to hit him again.
The Cult of the Meaningless
In other words, what is left of isolation has developed a certain
cult of meaninglessness.
Part of the credo is that government is a monkey or a cretin;
that government is the funniest thing you ever saw; that pretty
near everything government does is feeble, inept or comie. This
is the last big shell left in isolation's battery. It is a dangerous
one. For, if government attempts to do anything after the war
to make the world more stable, the isolationist argument will
not be against the plan, but against the government; if isolation
can establish that government is an Idiot It will destroy war alma
without having to discuss them. It needs a purposeless, meaning-
less world in which to do its business, and thus It enjoys getting
the discussion of government down to an Incoherently leering level,
like some of the overtones in the current wrangle about official
questionnaires.
One senses this somewhat nihilistic disbelief in purpose, when
the relicts of Isolation mock at the dream of a "quart of milk a
day" for the world's people, but, quite often, urge a national lot-
tery to solve our Ills.
When a lottery makes more sense than a quart of milk, there
is revealed a hankering for a formless, Irrelevant sort of world,
one that can stagger along, concealing its losses, masking the cost
of national existence, even pretending that there is no cost; that
life must be a gamble and that á gamble can pay for It.
So, the fight for better war alms has to be more than a yammer
at the President to make up his mind; It is going to be a com-
plicated struggle, on the home front, against all the giggling bat-
talions of obscurantism.
PAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., TUESDAY,
The opinions of the writers on this page are their own, not
The Star's. Such opinions are presented in The
Star's effort to give all sides of questions of interest to its
readers, although such opinions may be contradictory among
themselves and directly opposed to The Star's.
'I'd Rather Be Right'
exceptive
Public Issues Must Be Discussed
file
In Light of Advances in Past Two Years
By SAMUEL GRAFTON.
anything? This is a new country.
While & number of flapjaws have
at the absolute historic pesk of
been telling: us how muddled and
ta strength. and It would be just
confused ve are, we have quietly
as sensible to compare the number
become the strongest military power
of its civil servants with the number
of beans in & sack of coffee,
on earth
Few have noticed. because most
We: have whole new language
to learn Do you realize you are
mindse teres (tm) high places) are
unscientiño minds, and their atten-
Living in a country which has solved
tion is therefore arrested by except
then aluminum shortage Oh, you
tiona, by the bizarre, by the amust
didn't know that Well) was are
Ing. by their ally buts) not by the
wallowing in the stuff
The man who speaks to you about
customary. OEI the big
America problems without convey
Thus, while many-s Congressman
Ing. this sense of American enlarge
has been holding some unimportant
ment is: not arguing but sentimen-
Government questionnaire to his
talleing The man who discusses
nose, with an expression saying that
our public debt, for example. with-
nobody knows how sad it is to be
out adding that we have grown 20
a mother, we have somehow come
years in two years, contributes pre-
to outproduce the entire Axis in
cisely as much to public enlighten-
the field of munitions. By the end
ment as if he were drunkenly sing-
of next year. we shall outproduce
ting "Sweet Adeline" under a lamp
the world, and we shall have done
post.
all this while most of us have been
talking about something eise.
Big Adventure Ahead.
Every relationship throughout the
We live in a big new house, but
world has been changed by our
we still don't know our way around
progress in the last two years.
St, we don't know where the furni-
Precisely because of our enlarged
ture is. and our manners are still
production and increased weight,
deplorably inadequate.
the least remark of one of our
Every public issue must be dis-
diplomats has an explosive empha-
cussed in the light of the knowledge
ats is did not have before. (Some-
that this is an entirely different
times I feel that our State Depart-
country from the con of two years
ment has been caught short, like
ago. Is a & question: of whether
most of us, by these great changes;
we can help the rest of the world
is still hasn't lost its hat-in-hand
to stability after the war? If you
manner in dealing with the seum
are still living. mentally, in 1939;
of the earth, the lesser Fascist of
we cannot do so, because then we
Europe.)
produced about $100,000,000 of ma-
An American promise of assist-
chine tools. But if you are living,
ance to another country is now
mentally, in 1943, we can, because
consequential, as it never was
thene we shall produce- more than
before. American indifference to
$2,000,000,000 of machine tools. or
proper planning, say by neglecting
20 for
to work out & unified United Nations
New Test for Lawmskers.
approach to such problems M Dar-
And now we have & brand-new
lan; now becomes 10 times the mis-
test for judging commentatota,
take it ever was before. because of
Congressmen, etc.: Does the gen-
the increased force and weight It
tleman talk in apporximately the
carries with It.,
same terms, about the same prob-
There is almost no plan for the
lema, M he did in 19397
world's rehabilitation that we don't
Well then, he is a fool: the
have the power to carry out, The
America of 1939 is so far behind us
big adventure ahead will be for each
that he might almost M well
of us, from President to busboy, to
be talking about Plymouth Rock.
try to grow as big as his country
Every problem, from our ability to
has grown.
win the war, to our ability to feed
the world, to our ability to take
care of our own, has been pro-
D. C. Is Asked to Keep
foundly affected by our success in
crowding 20 years of normal Indus-
Alley Clear of Glass
trial expansion into two years, and
that knowledge ought to shine lout
The West End Citizens' Associa-
of everything that is said on all
tion- last night asked that the Dis-
these matters, or else! the speaker
trict government take steps to keep
the alley between Pennsylvania ave-
ought to sprinkle some lavender,
nue and H street and Seventeenth
on himself. like a porper antique,
and Eighteenth streets N.W. cleared
and put himself away in a drawer.
of broken glass, The motion WM
To capture this sense of the mo-
made by Otto Zause and was passed
ment becomes the highest duty of
unantmously
the average man.
Mr, W. F. Wasson pointed out that
He is not helped In this duty by:
la view of the rubber shortage every-
the publicist who: jumps up and
thing possible should be done to
help conserve rubber and that this
down in a temper tentrum, going
particular alley was dangerous in
because, say, we have
more civil servants: than (we had
that'respect.) William F. Brown, treasurer of the
during the last war. What does
association, reported & balance of
that comparison, haves to do with
638.52
in
the
treasury,
Today And Tomorrow
By Walter'Lippmann
The Great Adventure
Only If we allow the world to
sink into a morass of misery will
America be faced with the dilem-
MR HOOVER tells. us that at
end is to prime the pump which
ma of granting asylum or of
THE FEAR then is groundless
least 500 million people will be
will, so to speak, cause the desert
condemning human beings to in-
that the promotion of prosperity
short of food and will have to be
to bloom-to make the initial in-
calculable suffering. If, on the
in the outer: world will diminish
feds when the war ends and we
vastments in the form of materi-
our own.¹ It: will enhance It-If
other hand, we use the power
may well believe
als, and technical knowledge and
which victory) will give us to
only we do not suffer the catas-
him. For in this
promotion, which will start the
make the world safe for the
trophe of a reaction like that of
field he has been
undeveloped regionsA of the
humble and open for the enter
the Harding Administration
for a quarter of a
world a: great development
prising, we can without uncharity
which saddles us with a postwar
century the fore
In the primitive places. this
maintain the immigration laws,
Administration composed of men
who doù not- understand the dy
moste authority,
means; after political security is
and we shall find that a strong
and) today
established, communications and
tendency to emigration will in
namics of the modern socialior
derti In 1920 no one understood
the leading elder
public works and the exploration
fact set in
of their hidden resources:) In the
them and so there was some ex
ata tes m a n. to
cuse for their disastrous follies
whomi Governor
sparsely inhabited and poorer
true that in the very first
Lehman and all
countries it means the encour-
into which we landed ourselves
postwar period, which Mr. Hoover.
But since 1920 men have discov-
who organize the
agement of the simpler industries
calls the acute period," we shall
which, the natural evolution
ered the principle of prosperity
LIPPMANN operation- of re
have to share our food and cer
lief and rehabili-
of things; will becomes the foun-
This discovery is much the
tain other supplies with the war-
tation must turn for guidance
dation, of the more complex cap-
most important advance in hu
stricken peoples abroad. But this
ital? goods indistries.
man knowledge in modern times
and for help
period need not be long. Mr.
It is the discovery that govern
Naturally enough there will be
Hoover reminds us that after the
ment can by the proper use of
many- who will think that such
THIS PROSPECT is certain to
last war: it lasted from Novem
public funds create a condition
enormous misery cannot be re-
lieved. without impoverishing our
arouse the fear in many minds
ber, 1918, until after the harvest
of full employment for all its
that in promoting prosperity
of 1919 This time it may last
people. Heaven help the Ad-
own? people. In fact, there is
already an anxiety that in our de-
abroad we shall impoverish our-
through two harvests, but it need
ministration which refuses to
selves. This fear that one man's
not be longer than that-pro-
apply this knowledge in the post-
sire to relieve this misery we
shall send goods abroad that we
or one country's gain is another
vided we use the world-wide
war world. For the war has
cannot spare and that we shall
man's or another country's loss
(supply system built up for war
demonstrated conclusively that
purposes to lend them or give
unemployment is now an unnec-
open the gates to an immigra
is undoubtedly the greatest ob-
that wexcannot assimilate. The
stacle to human progress It is
them the tools and the materials
essary and therefore an intoler-
the most primitive of alB our
to become self-sustaining again.
able evil. The prime lesson of
anxiety is honest but if we pro-
The human capacity for recup-
the war in domestic affairs will
ceed wisely and act efficiently
social feelings, and the most per-
the anxiety will prove to be
sistent and obstinate prejudice
eration is greater than we think.
be that by the proper use of a
which we retain from / our! bar-
And so is the adaptability of men.
small fraction of the funds now
groundless
In London, for example, I was+
devoted to engines- of destruc-
barian ancestors, It is upon this
told on the highest authority that
tion, the country can become pro-
prejudice that civilization has
ON&THE ASSUMPTION that
foundered again and again. is
If priorities for. certain fertilizers
ductive beyond anything ever
we wins the war and succeed in
in this prejudice that all schemes
could, be obtained, the British
imagined, and on that produc
establishing a political and mili-
of conquest and exploitation are
Isles which for a century have
tiveness it can maintain R high
tary peace which gives men con-
engendered It is this prejudice
depended on imported food,
and rising level of prosperity
fidence. that theres will not be
which causes almost all mens to
could within a year. grow 90 per
another great was for:) long
think that the Golden- Rule is a
cent of the necessary food supply
IN THE freedom\ from want
time- to conte, there to no reason
counsel of perfection which can-
We have, however, a. greater
men, find freedom from' fear.
tor think that there will be any
not be followed in the world of
end to achieve than to save men
And when they cease to fear)
of peoples to
actual affairs
from dying of hunger and our
they begin to reálize their pow-
come into the United States: On
Yet the belief that our neigh-
selves from having to live in
ers and to believe, as men should
the contrary the general move-
bor's gain is our loss Is quite con-
world scourged by pestilence,
when they are) worth their salt,
mentvot peoples should be the
trary to the facts of life in the
and of being faced thereafter;
that they are only at the begin-
others way-provided we have
modern world. New York and
as Mr. Hoover says, with massès
ning and that they are not at the
the prudence to make the initial
Chicago and Detroit are richer;
of "physical degenerates and por
end of the great human adven-
Investments which can open uo
not poorer, if the people of the
tential gangsters. Our greater
ture
opportunity in the outer world.
rest of the country are prosper-
Many of the Americans who
ous, and the United States will be
are now moving out into all parts
richer, not poorer, if the rest of
of the world will find a satisfying
the world prospers. To doubt
life's work in the development of
this basic truth of human society
the vast undeveloped regions of
is to believe at bottom in the
the globe. They will open up
philosophy of the robber barons
new frontiers as their forefathers
and the Nazis-namely that a few
did, Many of those who have
can be rich by exploiting others.
found asylum here since Europe
It is to deny the elementary basis
became a prison will go back to
of our economic life, which is
their homes, or to the new lands
that where there is a seller there
which will be calling for enter-
must be a buyer, and that there
prising men with special knowl-
can be no lasting profit in the ex-
-dop
change unless the exchange is
profitable to both
CONTINUED
Report
On Midwest
Part VII
Conclusions
Hówever isolationist they once may have
been, no one need worry, about the Mid-
westerners' support of the war. They have
been supporting it, they will continue to
support it, because they are patriotic. (That
isn't the only reason, but it will suffice.)
The next question is, "What do they ex-
pect get out of the war?" And I think
to that most Midwesterners-and most Amer-
icans everywhere-would say, "A chance to
live in peace
Now that is a simple concept which em-
braces many Simple things: a job, a decent
home the right. to worship as one pleases,
protection from aggressors The Four Free-
doms If you please
The Four Freedoms, simple in concept,
nevertheless are-tremendously difficult of ao-
complishment. For in this world, which daily
becomes a closer and more integrated unit,
no man can be free-really and permanently
free-until all are freenThe last war, and the
fact that today we are fighting another, is
the best proof.
Wallace's glass of milk for every child the
world over is simple in concept, but to un-
derstand it you first must understand the
fact that there is a relationship between the
standard of living of the Chinese coolie, or
the Bulgar peasant, or the Japanese fisher-
man, and J Homer Snively of Yellow
Springs, O.
It is on this principle that the understand.
ing of the Midwesterner-and perhaps most
Americans-breaks down. And because he
does not understand, be is suspicious-of
Wallace, of Willkie, of statesmen in general,
of all the great diplomatic pressures which
must bei brought to play to achieve and to
guarantee the simple. things for the in-
dividual
I don't think it is too late to spread that
understanding. Idon't think it is too late for
labor unions and farmers' unions to begin
teaching world unity as they so often suc-
cessfully. have taught local unity. I don't
think it is too late for newspapers, regardless
of party, to teach that the things we cherish
don't depend, as we once thought, on the
state of the Nation, but on the state of the
world. It isn't too late for anyone and every-
one to talk and think in terms of peoples
rather than of boundaries.
Above all, I don't think it is too late for
one nation, somewhere, to make the dra-
matie gesture that would prove to Amer-
icans, in the Midwest and elsewbere, that
this war can be different from other wars.
I have said that the people of the Mid-
west are not much interested in India. Still,
I wonder what they would say if tomorrow a
London dispatch said that India had been
guaranteed her freedom. I think I can guess:
This im't just another war, after all'
The leaders of America-in Gov-
ernment and out-have been giv-
ing much serious thought to the
concrete problems of the peace. PM
has been interviewing many of
them who have answered frankly
many of the explosive questions
that will face the world before a
peace can be written. PM will begin
publication of their answers shortly.
July 14, 1926
THE COMMONWEAL
261
THE GREAT SIMPLICITY OF JEFFERSON
By EDYTHE H. BROWNE
"T
HE greatest truths are the simplest-and so
of the morning in his study, a silent figure in black
are the greatest men."
coat in his famous "whirligig" or swivel chair, of
If statues could become animate how
which he was the inventor. Here he read; entered
Thomas Jefferson would have turned his stony head
such commonplaces in his diary as "the first shad has
in dismay, how quickly would the honored hand that
appeared on the market,
we are out of myrtle
penned America's first liberty bond have been raised
candles," on the same page with important affairs of
in protestation, how tightly would the jaws have
state; wrote letters to English lords, French counts,
locked in fixed reserve, when his admiring country-
and German barons, all with non-essential postscripts
men celebrated the one hundredth anniversary of
as to the effects of a cold in the head, the particular
his death on July 4, 1926. For Jefferson was a plain
kind of rainbow that arches over Monticello. The
man. He could purchase Louisiana with one hand
ordinary bearings of daily life were romance to Jeffer-
and a bag of pansy seed for his garden at Monticello
son's Saxon soul. Perhaps it was during an interval of
with the other. In private life he was the bland
musing between letter-writing that he sketched the
Southern gentleman in soft shoes, making his own
plain stone obelisk that was to mark his grave, and
fire at dawn, chatting with his adoring slaves, hum-
perhaps, too, he confided his wish for unostentatious
ming a snatch of darky lullaby as he climbed the stairs
burial to an odd scrap of paper on which he wrote:
to bed. In public life as governor, minister to France,
"Choose for a burial place some unfrequented vale in
secretary, vice-president, and finally president, Jefferson
the park, where there is no sound to break the still-
was the modest diplomat to whom titles of "His Ex-
ness but a brook."
cellency" and "Honorable" were unwelcome, and
Later in the morning we see Jefferson meeting his
whose official chamber was accessible to casual callers.
world of plebian folk. Usually a silent man, he would
Jefferson would have frowned on the noisy tribute
perch on an anchor at the end of a wharf and joke
of July 4, because in life he sought no tribute but his
with shipwrights. In his whitening seventies- he would
own conscience. The one hundred and fiftieth anniver-
sit day after day on a camp-stool in the midst of má
saty of the signing of the Declaration of Independence,
sonry, suggesting plans to the workmen who were rea
Jefferson's pet brain child, gave but a sharper retort
ing his dream of higher education in enduring stone-
to the firecrackers. So this double celebration would
the University of Virginia. Thirty slaves ministered
have nettled Mr. Jefferson. In deference, therefore,
to the Jefferson household, yet they were not of Jeffer-
to his wish were he alive today, we shall not toast him
son's own purchase but "black chattels" inherited from
for historic achievement; we shall rather present him
his father. The master was a benign king among
as the plain man, the man of simplicities, profiled
them, patting the head of a pickaninny, teaching the
against private life and public life.
men carpentry, bandaging a hurt finger.
Peter Jefferson and Jane Randolph were the in-
After lunch he mounted his horse, Wildair, not with
fluencing parentheses in the boyhood of their son
a flourish of slave-curtsying and a donning of glossy
Thomas. From his father, a Goliath of the Virginia
boots and princely spurs, but quietly, with worn over-
backwoods, he inherited a stubbornly strong body
alls for toggery and a passing negro lad for servant.
which he was taught to care for by simple meals of
Wildair looked the statelier of the two. After leis-
boiled beef and lamb, simple recreations of gardening
urely cavaliering along the banks of the Rivanna
and horseback riding, and simple clothing of homespun.
River Jefferson would drop the reins for the hoe! Sun-
Although Thomas was her first son, Mrs. Jefferson
set found him working in his garden.
primed him early in the elementary art of waiting on
Dinner at Monticello was a festive affair with Jef-
himself. When he was a student at William and Mary
ferson as shy but genial host to the distinguished
College, Williamsburg, his natural simplicity once
guests who drank to his health. At table he addressed
bolted, and attired in brocaded coat and lacy garters
conversation to his next-door neighbor. Southern hos-
he attended brilliant soirées on week-end visits to rela-
pitality was not wanting in him-his kitchen gave forth
tives. When he reported his expenses to his guardian
tempting odors of roast beef and mutton, his cellar
he punished himself for the extravagant departure by
brimmed with cider and rare wines, and sometimes
charging the sum against his own share of inheritance.
fifty beds were in magic readiness for thosè who wished
The mature Jefferson in the privacy of his beloved
to stay overnight-but he was rather personally spar-
Monticello, spent his day in simple routine. We can
ing. Self was a beggar whom he never befriended.
see Ursula, one of his favorite slaves, waddling about
In the evening in family reunion about the hearth,
"Massa Jefferson" as he eats his scant breakfast of
Jefferson's candle and Bible were twin comforts. He
coffee, bread, and wafer of cold meat. He spent most
had a simple concept of religion-belief in God and
262
THE COMMONWEAL
July 14, 1926
reverence for Jesus Christ. He retired habitually at
English manner with a lengthy speech, but by jotting
nine o'clock.
down a few noble sentiments couched in household
Jefferson's public life, a thick slice of forty years off
language, and sending his message by private hand.
his eighty-three, was bleached of personal glorification.
He was also an economist of time. He could not see
He campaigned for democracy and his first act toward
the morning hours wither in the hands of the fashion-
that end was to uproot the enthroning weeds of rank
able clientele that met at the weekly levees to honor
that grew about himself as a public figure. Colonial
the President. So he abolished these breakfast mati-
Virginia was servile. Slaves cringed before their mas-
nees. Many a damsel was cheated of the opportunity
ters. The lady in crinoline dropped a curtsy and a
to parade her newest "Dolly Varden" on the Monti-
handkerchief when a dashing Continental passed her
cello lawn. Because Jefferson believed that "the rulers
gate and would be blushingly honored by his attention.
of America are but honored servants," he clipped more
Assembly members in lace cuffs greeted one another
weeds of caste from around his feet by refusing to
with cotillion bows. The newspapers were extrava-
have his birthday celebrated. A committee member
gantly salutatory. Mrs. Washington's arrival in New
asked him:
York was heralded by the following grandiloquence
"What is the date of your birth, Mr. Jefferson?"
from the Gazette: "Arrived in this city Mrs. Wash-
Of what concern is that to you?" he replied.
ington, the amiable consort of the President of the
"We wish to give it fitting celebration."
United States. At Elizabeth Point she was met by
"For that reason," answered Jefferson, "I decline
the President
and several other gentlemen of
to enlighten you.
I shall also be obliged if you
distinction. She was conducted over the bay
will omit the 'Mr.'."
rowed by thirteen eminent pilots." Jefferson called
When in January, 1785, Jefferson was elected to
this gushing punctilio a "frenzy."
succeed Franklin as Minister Plenipotentiary to France
The famous "Jefferson" of the British artist, Gil-
a friend congratulated him on replacing Franklin.
bert Stuart, tallies with our pen portrait. The Chief
Jefferson modestly replied: "I go to succeed him, for
Executive sits in a suit of black "plain cloth" on the
no one could replace him." Gilded France held no
edge of the chair rather than assume a stately posture
witchery over Jefferson. He admired her art but he
against the back. His stock is a bit awry, his hands
felt "at home" on stolen visits to French peasants,
clasp no keys of power, even the right hand resting
As welcome guest to a lilac-covered cottage he would
on a writing tablet is devoid of the simple quill. The
sit down to a meal of crackers and cheese while the
p'unting might be called "A Man in Black," so scrupu-
host and the pig-tailed children clacked in ecstatic
lously has the artist respected Jefferson's wish that
French about him.
nothing should distinguish him as President.
Jefferson's official papers are characterized by the
On inauguration day Jefferson defied convention.
same simplicity that molds the man. His masterpiece,
The buff-colored chariot with its tinselled horses and
the Declaration of Independence, is unvarnished argu-
attendants in cloth of scarlet, was to conduct the Hon-
ment proceeding from a terse statement of self-evi-
orable and Distinguished Mr. Jefferson to the Capitol
dent truths, up neat steps of fact, to a platform of
at Washington The road along which the procession
blunt conclusion. Unity of thought through a lattice
was to pass was aflutter with waving handkerchiefs.
of varying sentence structure labels this famous docu-
But instead of cheering, the crowd suddenly fell back.
ment a model of argumentative writing.
In the distance came Jefferson, seated nonchalantly on
Simplicity is the vital ingredient in nature's mix-
Wildair, unaccompanied by servants, his tri-cornered
ing of the magic potion-a great man. Thomas Jef-
hat a little askew, his riding-coat mud-spattered. He
ferson was one of her choice concoctions.
dismounted at the gate of the Capitol and hitching
the bridle to a picket fence thus unceremoniously pre-
The Invalid
sented himself at the White House.
Old ships are tired sailing into port-
For eight years Jefferson sat in a hush in the presi-
Dim, white-winged galleons weighted down with wares
dential chair. The infant republic was an anaemic
From lands away off there. Adventuring
baby, born after the blood of Revolutionary patriots
In strange sea-ways enshadows them. Who cares
was spilled. It needed vigilant nursing and this Jeffer-
That they are gale-torn by the sweep of years
son gave it, rocking its cradle quietly, and at the same
When they have seen gold dawns in Sicily-
time shielding it from alien dangers. He was accused
In far Japan young, cherry-blossomed dusks
of timidity and vacillation probably because his de-
Agleam on waves of lapis lazuli?
cisions were never explosive but budded gradually from
I have on me the weariness of ships
quiet interviews or from the seclusion of personal cor-
Long journeyed although I have never gone
Beyond these four walls where my fingertips
respondence. The word-duelling between Hamilton
Might love old things of mine about the room.
and Jefferson was a clash of personalities-the auda-
Yet I am like home-coming ships wind-blown-
cious egoist against the discreet altruist.
I dream the vagabondage they have known!
Jefferson opened Congress, not in the customary
VIRGINIA J. FOLEY.
NEW YORK, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 11, 1942.
quests
ow
join wit
of
newspa
'd:
Let's Stand Up and Be Counted
by why
people
rs
A plan to underwrite every American's freedom from
ditions
et
to
want lies on the President's desk.
tire cit)
articles
à
And look! Before any of its specific details are known
This us
cries of protest rise, led by Frederick C. Crawford, president
cannot be
closed door
di
of the National Assn. of Manufacturers.
and the I
>
Maybe-it's because there are no specific details yet that
Our As
the howls-are so prompt and anguished: The beauty of the
support
1
British Beveridge plan, the thing about it which knocked for
courageo
against
a loop the men waiting for it with knives out, was that it was
MRS. S.
full of specific detail-all set forth in shillings and pence.
Parent
So we hope that when the President does submit this
Likes Gra'
plan for public discussion it turns out to be a proposal detailed
To Post-
in dollars and cents-things which all men can translate into
Dear F
rent and meat on the table.
Samuel G
There the discussion can cut through vague géneralities
the Beverb
observation
and get down to such questions as: "Do you think $18 a week
notice, nan,
is too much unemployment insurance? Or too little? How
employmen
much do you think would be about right then? $15? $8.60?
need for In
ployment.")
None at all?
This str)
which our
Three Years of Study
war plann
This-plan, drawn up by the National Resources Planning
gun, Form
Board, is nothing whipped up to quiet a sudden demand. It is
er, thatea(
the resultiof a study. begun in 1939. If it follows hard on the
unemploy
phenomen
heels of: the Beveridge report it shows only. that two great
to be con
democracies have been thinking along the same lines, respond-
governme
discover
ing to the desires of their plain people in much the same way.
ment and
Let the Nazi radio, which has been tearing the air to
source
tatters over the Beveridge, plan; make the most of that
Says F.
a
These moves in that direction scare the Nazis infinitely
a
Place Be
more than anything we have heretofore done in the field of
Dear Ed
DO
hat
psychological and. polítical warfare. They are watching us.
a great se
The
They know that all thes plain people: of the world will be
series of
"There VI
all
watching us:
Days.
tion
We are eager for the President to present the American
Washing
plan and as dramatically and effectively as possible, with
coln, ever
be
was viciol
ish
himself giving his interpretation on a world-wide hookup
bers of C&
lm
Then we can all stand up and be counted. We shall want
Iny their
to know what many men think of it. Including-
these lines
vr
liant facté
1
most?
The New Chairman
papers of
8.
Of the G.: O. P. National Committee
ed, attack
V-
He is, of course, Harrison E. Spangler, and he starts his
course of
le
day, Line
campaign to eliminate the New Deal in 1944 with the state-
slander,
who
ment that, Those bungling New Dealers haven't awoke to
tion, vitus
seo
the fact that we have a war on our hands. They' ye been too
mors,- hab
lampoons,
gars
light
busy with regimentation and interference with private enter-
free press,
prise,
Today x
Mr: Spangler's élection to his new post has been hailed
of malign
don."
against Pr
ne to
as a victory for the liberal Willkie wing of the G. O.P. It was.
history pr
plight
But only in the forlorn sense that it meant defeat for Wérner
tonly wro
ed by
W. Schroeder, the Chicago Tribune's isolationist candidate.
they were
I. am or
¿sume
But we can't throw our hat in the air over that victory
whose fa
3 room
in with
-instead of a: minus we get a zero, not a plus
founders
We've been looking over the long and depressing record
ty under
4d him,
torian I m
worth."
of Mr. Spangler's contribution to the political history of our
cations po
6 N. Y.,
times. The most illuminating, and, we're afraid, character-
velt will
An agent
istic contribution was when he made the hopeful prediction
hearts of
20,000 for
greatest di
back in 1936 that the Republicans might name "another dark-
world Lini
singer
horse candidate, like Warren G. Harding, in 1920" to lick
FRANCI
ovie star-
LER, Auth
'inally was
Roosevelt:
Lincoln."
in unhappy
There's nothing in the record to reassure us that his
ed, "why I
dream for 1936 is not also his dream for, 1944. What does
se as 'Dese,'
Spangler. think about unemployment insurance? Does he
The
Ch
want weekly- benefits of $12:86? Or does he prefer $3.16?
Dutch sea-
We'd like to know.
As aim
y and then
ne told the
2
Van Loon
And while we're on the subject of party politics, it's
Of
was
.nd there
encouraging to see Representative Michael J. Kennedy, leader
fooli
mazing,"
of Tammany Hall, breaking with old Tammany practices. His
Are the
"By the
latest is to call all Democratic legislators from New York
loft
he life-
"and
County into consultation, and take up, among other things,
That
the question of how the delegation can best support the
large
pular
President' legislative propósals, now. that the Democratic
of
Vhen
majority in the House has been shaved dangerously thin.
97.09
polo
Mike has taken a position, and is making New York's
'oro-
Congressmen stand for something, and he deserves a bow.
Good, to see Tammany worry about something besides how
to enlarge the local machine.
New York Post
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local cawa published herein.
The design of this paper la to diguse among the people correct information on all
interestine subjects. to inculate just principles is religion, morals and politica and
to cultivate a taste for sound literature. Prospectus of the EVENING POST. No. Le
Nos, 16. 1101.
NEW YORK, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 8, 1942.
The Nazis Know
Meat on the Table
The fright of the Nazis shows they understand how
We're a little jealous of the way the Nazi radio is raving
profoundly the Beveridge plan challenges them.
against the British because of Britain's new Beveridge. plan
The Nazis "solved". the problems of individual- insecurity
for social security:
by merging the individual with the state. The Beveridge
We'd like the Nazis to hate us; too, because we Ameri-
plan would solve the problem of individual security, and
cans had also begun to promise our people a complete system
still leave the individual in control of the state. This is a
of social security.
deep challenge to Nazism, a blow struck where it hurts.
We'd like Nazis to be watching us, in ideological terror,
And we begin to see, perhaps, the face of the future.
and we'd like the plain people of the world to be watching
We think there ought to be an American Beveridge
us, too, in a new, flooding tide of hope.
plan, and that an authoritative and unbiased American
economist like Professor Paul Douglas of the University of
Funny thing. Here the world has been talking about
war aims for three years. Pretty vague stuff, mostly.
Chicago (now a captain of Marines) ought to be put. to
work to draw it up.
Kindly speeches, not very definite. Then, suddenly, a mild,
And will we offer it, when completed, to, Chinese and
elderly English economist proposes a system of social se-
Siamese, to Italians and Albanians? What about those
curity for England, not intended as war aims at all, and the
Americans who make those jokes about not wanting to fight
thing stands up and begins to walk by itself, and now it is
for a quart of milk a day for every Hottentot?
striding across the world.
It Will Be Talked About
Take the First Step
We'd say, strike out for justice and the truth, and let
We think the Beveridge plan will be talked about in
nature and bad jokes take their course.
remote huts in China before its career has ended.
Each nation will want to solve its internal problems in
We know it is being talked about on the Nazi radio,
its own way. Each has different standards. Each has a
which raves: that England is lying, that it has no intention
lot of history to live through.
of providing unlimited unemployment insurance, and ma-
But to start it, first in England, then here, to show the
ternity care, and medical insurance: For all. For every-
world it is spreading, that we can stand on our two feet,
body, workman, youth, doctor, lawyer, merchant, chief-
that we can help smaller Beveridge plans along in smaller
and housewife, too.
places-that makes a program of war aims. It. is the more
And the job that the House of Commons asked Sir
exciting precisely because it is not too pat and too nicely
William Beveridge to do for England, for England alone,
finished off, because it deals in the realities of meat on the
mind you, becomes the best statement of war aims we've
table, and is not afraid to take the first step because the road
had, a statement with enough muscle and vitamins to it to
ahead may be long and full of turns.
be able to live even away from the lecture platform.
Why? Because, perhaps, Sir William's plan meets the
needs of this age, as Woodrow Wilson's Fourteen Points met
the war-aims needs of an earlier age.
The Fourteen Points were largely concerned with prob-
lems of national sovereignty, problems hot and lively in an
age in which imperialism was still pushing out its chest.
The Beveridge plan talks to the individual about his
individual problems of want and fear and freedom, and in
an era in which mass unemployment and insecurity have
gripped the minds of men.
end
da
conscion
which is
.ngely perverted "spiritual
uman history
1100
Restraints
E/D
33
The President has asked Congress to give
hon
him plenary power to suspend, for the dura-
tactà
are
can
tion whatever tariff, immigration and espi-
satisf
deo,
as
ODAge laws impede the joint prosecution of
This
oria
the war by the United Nations. Testimony
tingula
1.00
that many of these degislative restrictions
worket
1.33
1.00
have proved. an- embarrassment to the joint
the 84
efforts has been given bys the most distin-
hearter
1.55
2.73
guished and trustworthy; of our war execu-
conduct
1.30
tives: But Congress has been coy, and perhaps
the co
stief
deservedly With: on the recent elec-
patient
use
tions IL would delegate the authority requested
the cod
à
or
withwrestrictions which) retain. the reins. in
ocal
hospital
of
the
No own one can quarrel with this objective. The
hands.
firms
red.
which
only-point at issue concerns the degree of re-
striction and its effection the prosecution of
ple
re
In vie
aly
the war. As was read the election returns
tions mf
nis
they constituted a. popular mandate that our
are
representatives la Washington concentrate on
hope the
an
the efficient prosecution of the war above any
years If
other consideration. All subsequent signs have
mand n
è
strengthened our conviction In this particular,
makers
se
and the passage of the teen-age draft law
who app
3-
without emasculating amendments appeared
1940, plai
or
y
to indicate that Congress, too, shared this un-
the tenta
et
derstanding. We, wish we could be as sure
successor
de
that in its approach to the third war powers
that the
д-
bill it was not playing politics.
having
According to reports of the latest version
psychiati
of this measure to be entertained by the Ways
run savis
no
and Means Committee of the House, the
man we
AVE
President is to have the right to suspend cer-
Ings, as
in-
tain annoying tariff regulations, but he is still
work to
(ble
to be hedged about with stingy and annoying
more he
the
dont's respecting immigration. One can easily
n &
sympathize with the fear that our barriers to
a in
indiscriminate immigration, & serious threat
The
lous
to our national unity in the last war, will be
this nei
th a
impaired by any ,concession But.a realistic
on the
this
comprehension of the situation should dispel
we are
the
the fear. The President has asked merely that
we sho
while the war lasts. he be permitted to set
vutes
aside such barriers to admit Allied nationals
name,
received
na-
on official missions, civil or military, free from
named
gen-
head taxes and other limitations of residence.
and It
Bcult
The country has nothing to loss and every-
of an El
i and
thing to gain in complying with this request.
. an-
War conditions absolutely prohibit the entry
paper
been on
all his
into this country of persons other than the
ping cer
man"
few required to promote inter-Allled co-opera-
tains at
piece
tion. And common sense demands that they
Teed is
go on
be freed of the hampering red tape.
friend
their
It is all right that Congress should be
feeble
rescue
anxious to contradict Its reputation of sub-
ably jul
1 Duce
servience to the Executive by insisting on rea-
sonable restraints. But by all means let them
pointin
acible"
such
m the
be reasonable, not obstructionist.
sagshi
scismo
Kostro
mean
Whimsy at Its Worst
May
will
If we may say so, it seems to us that Roose-
ves
veltian whimsy struck a new low for 1942, if
:-
not for all time, at the President's Tuesday
press conference.
Esca
The President was discussing the question
ether Congress would extend the $25,000
bei
willing: to coven all Income any
This will give some Idea of what is in the
minds of the 60-odd Indies and gentlemen. There
is much in this program that is desirable, the a
great deal of It is so vaguely expressed that it
is difficult to know just what is intended. It is
amusing to note that much of Hitler's propa-
ganda about the have-not nations has been swal-
lowed as gospel. In fact, of course, these nations
before this war were tree to buy -materials
almost anywhere on equal terms with everybody
else. Japan had no difficulty In accumulating
Chicago Daily Tribune
stocks of oil. cotton, scrap steel, and machine
tools, She went to war against us after monop-
THE WORLD'S GREATEST NEWSPAPER
olizing vast natural resources and markets in
Manchuria. Germany is still drawing on the
FOUNDED JUNE 10, no
stocks of rubber, oll, tin. and copper she had no
difficulty In obtaining overseas before the war.
ENTERED AS SECOND CLASS MATTER NAT 14, 1903,
ACT OF MARCH a. 1879.
AT THE POSTOFFICE AT CHICAGO, U.S. UNDER
After the last war we lent money to Germany
la amounts not likely to be exceeded this time
even If an elaborate machinery for International
All unselicited articles, manuscripts, letters and pictures
lending is created and Germany is again wel-
sent to The Tribuse are - at the owner's risk, and
TIM Tribure company expressly repudiates MY liability
comed as a borrower.
(reponsibility for their safe enstody or nim.
An underlying assumption in the memorandum
appears to be this: Prosperous nations and peo-
TUESD DECEMBER & 1942.
ples do not start wars. History will not bear out
this thesis. It is much nearer the truth to say
are the sentinels of the
that tree peoples seldom engage in ware of con-
liberties of our country,
quest. It follows that the most serviceable means
Benjamin Rush,
of preventing wars is to encourage the spread of
republican institutions and especially of the Bill
of Rights to peoples who do not now enjoy them-
A DURABLE PEACE.
In lands where there is no freedom of the press,
A memorandum to the President and congress
of speech, of assembly. and religion a people can
telling them how to go about making an endur-
easily be led Into aggression by governing offi-
ciais who see their own profit in war.
Ing peace is being circulated about the country.
The American people," the memorandum says,
The declaration bears the title Program for a
recognize the need for preservation of Individ-
Union of Nations and the Adoption of Those
ust rights as the ultimate object to strive
Fundamental Economic Principles Which Are
for." but adds that such alma can only be at-
Necessary to Insure a Just and Lasting Peace."
tained If they are based on a. sound and work-
The proposal is Indorsed by about 50 men and
able economic policy which ties the nations to-
women, including a good many In the academic
gether and makes possible the Interchange of
world, some writers, some clergymen, an actress,
vital
national
resources.
That
is
stating
some business men, some lawyers, some govern-
the matter upside down. If there is to be closer
ment officials, and the usual sprinkling of pro-
coôperation among nations the first step. must
fessional doers of good. All of the signers are
be the liberation of the slave nations-Russia and
more or less prominent; the representation from
India as well as Germany and Japan.
the seaboard states appears to be disproportion.
We are frank to say we don't know how that
ately high.
can be achieved and we got no help from Mr.
The memorandum says that legal, geographic,
Roosevelt when he announced the four freedoms
ethnic, and other questions" will be presented at
as the goal of our war policy. It is hard to see
the peace conference for decision, but economic
how the Bill of Rights can be implanted by force
reorganization of the world must be attended to
of arms but perhaps It can be done. At any rate
at once. In the economic field
It
is
Im-
the American people will be more than a little
perative that the general principles laid down be
reluctant to join a union of nations, some of
Implemented now. The nations are to form a
them free and some of them enslaved. If we
world economic union to which they, will send
should ever decide to qualify our Independence
delegates, and the world union will have branch
It will surely not be to ally ourselves perma-
agencies In each country. This machinery is to
nently with nations In which the people are not
be readied for operation as spon as the war ends.
politically free, for such nations cannot be
Its general purpose would be to create equi-
trusted.
table relationships between the nations of the
world so that no nation need turn to warfare as
FOREIGN LEGIONS.
a method of attaining free access to raw ma-
terials and goods with which to support Its
Secretary Stimson's permission to Otto Haps-
population."
burg to raise a body of household troops-paid,
And so on. The world economic union is to
fed, and clothed by the United States army-has
lend money to get the Impoverished nations
naturally brought protests from spokesmen for
the different peoples who threw off Hapsburg
started again, Currencies are to be stabilized;
and In this connection kind words are uttered
tyranny after the last war.
about the gold standard. Trade barriers, Includ-
Our alliance with Otto may please the other
Ing tariffs and quotas, are to be largely elimi-
royal fugitives who frequent the White House,
nated, but something. unspecified, must be done
but It can do nothing but harm to our relations
to overcome the competition of extremely low
with the people of occupled Europe. A. joint pro-
wages prevailing In some countries, An Inter-
test against this country entering any relations
national central bank is to be established. The
with the Austro-Hungarian pretender has been
backward peoples are not to be ruled as colonies
Issued in New York by Austrian, Crecho-Slovak,
nor yet turned over to individual nations under
Hungarian, Italian, Polish, Rumanian. and Jugo-
a scheme of mandates, but this time are to be
Slav spokesmen.
governed under the protection and care of the
In Chicago the Czecho-Slovak National council
International union."
has attacked the deal, but Its secretary has stipu-
lated that the organization is not opposed to
units of freedom* loving nationals of other coun-
tries fighting as units of the United States army."
4
This raises another question.
Allens resident in this country are subject to
the draft, as they should be. If they wish to enjoy
freedom in the United States they should fight
June
Willkie Forces Keep
Schroeder From Rule
By DORIS FLEESON
St. Louis, Dec. 6.-Wendell L. Willkie tonight apparently
had won his fight against the selection of Werner Schroeder
as chairman of the Republican National Committee. Willkie
DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 7, 1942
had opposed Schroeder on the ground that the Chicagoan was
a former isolationist and his selection would represent a re-
trogression for the party.
Conferences between Willkie
spokesmen party harmonizers and
representatives of the Schroeder
group are scheduled. Harrison
Spangler, national committeeman
for Iowa, and Barak T. Mattingly
of St. Louis were possible compro-
mise selections.
Martin Pulls for Unity
The sentiment for harmony crys-
tallized late this afternoon after
spade work by retiring Chairman
Joe Martin. Among the national
committeemen who met and ar-
ranged tonight's harmony meeting
was J. Russel Sprague of New
York.
Schroeder, who had said from
the start that he felt party har-
mony was imperative, was re-
ported sending spokesmen to the
meeting with Martin.
The defeat of Schroeder repre-
sents a triumph for Willkie, who
from the start offered no candidate
Wendell L Willkie
of his own but stood on the ground
Blocks choice of Schroeder
that Schroeder would not do.
Taft Stand Boomerang.
cos feel he had run out on the
The Willkie camp avoided draw-
party by his support of the Roose-
ing any issue, but they were aided
velt foreign policy.
by Senator Robert Taft of Ohio,
The chairman will not be named
prominent pre-war isolationist, who
on arrival here announced he
until tomorrow afternoon but any
would vote for Schroeder. This, in
agreement reached tonight will
the view of the Willkieites, helped
prevail.
fasten the isolationist label on the
Chicagoan.
Wouldn't you like to give
-
Willkie's victory is the more re-
Christmas doll to a little girl who
has never had one? Then send It to
markable since most G.O.P. politi-
Sally Joy Brown.
being
Saturday, we December 5, 1942
DAILY NEWS
new
We know that anybody can scrape along on $25,000 a
Tel. MUrray Hill 2-1234
ear net. We believe, too, that the current trend in this
ountry to spread. the wealth around is a healthy trend.
York, D. R., $10.50 mais subscription reles: U.S. $8.00, Canada, $15, a year. For the Daily Manhattan, New
Published N.Y Daily palty exces Sunday be News Syndleste Ca. Inc., 209 E. 42d St., Borough of
If there were no limits to the money any-
president and per year: Canada $29.00 President, J. ML Patterion; treasurer. R. H. MeCormick; and Senday News,
general manager. Bay C. Hollise: secretary. F. M. Flyna, all of INE 1518L, New York. second N. vice T.
Evolution;
body could make and keep, we would all
Revolution
wind up eventually as slaves to the
MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
shrewdest and most acquisitive man
The dispatches Associated credited Press is exclusively endited to the Use. for republication of all
published to IL or not otherwise credited in this Daper and also news
mong us, or maybe to the shrewdest half-dozen men.
herein, All rights of republication of special disoatches herein also the are local reserved. news
And it may be that the Communists, who are bally-
$67,200 GROSS, $25,000 NET
100ing this Roosevelt fiat, are right in saying that a better
ociety can be built if the profit incentive is taken com-
The $25,000 annual wage limit, which the President
pletely away Perhaps the Soviets produced better
decreed after Congress had twice refused to enact it, has
conditions for the average citizen than the pre-war United
aroused considerable discussion.
States, but most unbiased reports are otherwise:
Roosevelt Vs.
What it comes to is this That
The spreading of the wealth, however, should be ac-1
nobody in the United States, at least
complished gradually we believe, not by a confiscatory
American Way
for the duration of the war, can keep
wrench. The former is evolution, the latter revolution.
more than $25,000 of what he earns
And the former is what has been going on up to now.
in any one year. Income taxation will cut him to $25,000
Under the new tax laws, a single man making $3,000
net if he earns $67,200; above $67,200, the plan is, in effect,
a year will lose $472 of it to the Government, or about 15%
to tax him 100%.
A $10,000 single man will pay $2,390, or almost 24%. On
Thus, by Executive fiat, the President stabs at the
$20,000-$6,816, or 34%. On $50,000-$25,811, or over
philosophy which has underlain the American system. That
50%. Make $1,000,000 in a year, and, if single, you pay
philosophy has been that if people are given leeway to make
$854,616 to the Federal Government, or if married, $854,000.
money they will compete ardently with one another. Since
Inheritance and gift taxes also prevent accumulations
most people who make money for themselves also bring
of enormous untouchable and high-powered wealth And
benefits to many other people-cheaper cars, for example,
these limits on wealth accumulation should be retained, for
or better and cheaper food, clothing, houses, train service,
the welfare of us all.
etc., etc.-the theory has been that all this competition is
for the good of society as a whole.
These arguments pro and con "conspicuous waste" and
the profit motive, however, are beside the main point in the
If the President's fiat stands, a lot of things will have
argument over the President's $25,000 wage limit fiat.
to be given up by a lot of people.
The main point is the fact that the limit
Congress was clapped into effect by that fiat.
Night clubs will fade; so will private golf clubs. So
Bypassed
Theoretically, this is a government con-
"The Theory of
will medium and high priced
sisting of three branches: the Executive,
cars, diamond necklaces, beach
Legislative and Judicial The Legislative branch-Congress
Conspicuous Waste"
and mountain vacation resorts,
-is supposed to make the laws; the Executive-the Presi>
most domestic servants, me-
dent-to carry them out; the Judicial-the courts-to in-
dium and high priced houses. Grand opera and the legiti-
terpret them.
mate theatre. Big privately endowed prep schools like
Congress twice refused to make a law limiting net
Groton, St. Paul's and Lawrenceville, colleges like Yale,
wages per year to $25,000 for the duration of the war.
Harvard and Princeton, will tend to disappear. Great char-
The President thereupon took one of the judges off the
itable and research organizations such as the Rockefeller
Supreme Court, gave him a Government job combating
Foundation will be stationary or go backwards.
inflation, and told him to make the $25,000 limit law re-
All these things have come into being because Ameri-
gardless of Congress.
cans have been free to compete with one another, and be-
There is the real danger in this business. It is another
cause when a man makes a lot of money his natural impulse
step toward dictatorship in this country.
is to advertise his success to the world by hanging diamonds
on his wife, buying a big country place, endowing a founda-
tion, or in some other way substantiating what Thorstein
Veblen called "the theory of conspicuous waste."
It so happens that Mr. Hoover has just been telling in
Collier's how big his task actually was in the years follow-
ing World War No. 1, and how much bigger the same task
is likely to be after World War No. 2.
What Hoover
In the first 12 months after the
Accomplished
November, 1918, armistice, about
27,000,000 tons of food were shipped
into the European area. More than 16,000,000 tons of it
came from the United States. The money value of our food
contribution was $3,300,000,000. About $2,400,000,000
SUNDAY NEWS
worth of this was furnished on credit (we eventually col-
unday, November 29, 1942
Tel. MU rray Hill 2-1234
lected only about 6% of the money due), about $325,000,000
worth by charitable organizations, and about $575,000,000
Published away Bunday by Nom Syndicute Co. Inc., at 120 E. 42d St., Borough of Manhattan, New York,
Y. Mail subscription rates: U. S. $2.50 Canada, $5. 00 per year. For the Sunday and Date News, U. B.,
worth was paid for in goods, gold and services.
0.50 Der year:Candda, $20.00 per year. President, J. M. Patterson; treasurer. B. EL McCormick: second vice
The work went on for more than two years. It had two
resident and general manager. Rey c. Hellins: secretary. F. M Flyer, all of 220 E. 42d Bt., New York, I.
main objects: (1) to prevent actual starvation by rushing
MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
food to hunger and famine areas; and (2) to help the war-
The Associated Press. is. exclusively entitieu to the use. too republication of all news
dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited to this paper and also the local news
weakened countries get back to producing for themselves as
published herein- All rights of republication of soncial dispatches herein also are reserved.
soon as possible, rather than put. them on a permanent
breadline supplied mainly by the United States, Canada and
FEEDING THE POSTWAR WORLD
the Argentine.
Altogether, the Hoover organization kept 28 nations-
President Roosevelt a few days ago appointed Gov.
about 375,000,000 people-from sinking into a famine-ridden,
Herbert H. Lehman of New York Director of Foreign Re-
pestilence-rotted chaos that might have compared favorably
ief and Rehabilitation.
with the times following the Thirty Years' War (1618-48),
This jawbreaking title (and you
when one-third of Europe's entire population is believed to
can search us why some of them
have died off.
can't be simpler) means Mr. Lehman
This time, what with large parts of Russia devastated
has quite a spell of work ahead of
and a good deal of China scorched by war, Mr. Hoover
him. During the war, he will direct
expects the relief job to involve 500,000,000 people, as
the sending of food relief and other
against the 375,000,000 after World War No. 1. As we've
material help to poverty-stricken or
remarked before, World War No. 2 in every way is a bigger,
Axis-leeched territories taken by our
better and therefore more glorious conflict than No. 1.
forces, such as Morocco and Algeria.
After the war, he will direct Amer-
The saving of Europe is one of the postwar jobs to
ican relief of various kinds to all
which Americans will in all likelihood dedicate themselves.
countries that need it.
Mr. Lehman is a conscientious,
We did it before, willingly and in a mood of high self-sacri-
hard working citizen who has made
fice. This time, our leaders apparently
an able Governor of New York. He
Better Help
are resolved that we shall do it whether
Herbert H. Lehman
can be counted on to do his best; and
The Farmers
most of us want to or not, and even if it
his best, within the limitations of his experience, should be
may result only in fattening Europe up
good.
for another war in another 15 or 20 years.
One would have expected Ex-President Herbert Hoo-
So it looks to us as if one of the more urgent jobs facing
ver to be given this job, had it not been for politics. Hoover
the Government at this time is the job of bringing some kind
did the same work in the previous war era as Lehman is to
of order out of the chaos that now bedevils our farmers.
do in this one, and did it in masterly style. But an Admin-
Draft boards yank farmers and their hired help into
istration which has sidetracked an Al Williams and snooted
military service regardless of what happens to the farm, in
a Lindbergh for political reasons can hardly be expected to
numerous cases. High war plant wages are pulling men off
give a Republican, no matter how able, a job involving the
the farm as if by magnetic power. Priorities are cutting
expenditure of billions of dollars.
down farm machine production. The OPA price ceilings,
according to some accounts, often counteract the high farm
prices supposedly guaranteed by the parity provisions. We
can't figure that last one out; but anyway, farm production
is going down.
If the American people themselves are short on food
after the war, we do not see how the Administration can
either kid them or force them into feeding any large part of
the rest of the world.
2
PM'S DAILY PICTURE MAGAZIN
DECEMBER 11, 1942
Pearl Buck Says Fight for Freedom Has Died Amerrage
Author Tells Fellow Nobel Winners That "Victory
save a partial thing, a secondary thing. The
Over Axis Does Not Mean Victory Over Fascism'
civilization of Europe has never been in
tegrated, ordered civilization. Because of
Pearl S. Buck, speaking before a group
there have been a man great enough at that
this Europe has been the breeding place of
of her fellow Nobel Prize winners, last night
significant moment to have declared that
wars, and will continue to be.
put into words her profoundly pessimistic
this war was a war for the freedom of all
conclusion that the war between the United
peoples, we would not have hafl to face
Roots in Asia
Nations and the Axis has ceased to be a
now, as we do face, another war of which
fight for freedom.
this one is only the beginning.
"The roots of human civilization are in
In an address which unquestionably will
"Ong can only hope at most, now, that
Asia, not in Europe. It is in Asia that people
be quoted, debated, denounced, and evoked
there will be a breathing space between
have learned the ways of living together
for months-and perhaps years-to come, the
this war and the next, One cannot guaran-
that bring peace and not continual war. It
author of The Good Earth affirmed her còn-
tee that there will be that space.
is in Asia that people believe in and prac-
tice the laws of individual and collective
viction that "the victory over the Axis does
No Man Great Enough
not mean the victory over Fascism." A sec-
freedom upon which alone peace can be
"For we had no man great enough to de-
built.
ond war must be fought, she said, for free-
dom.
clarè at the necessary moment the true
"The only war-like people there are the
méaning of this war. Let us reckon with this
Japanese whose civilization, like that of Eu
Mrs. Buck spoke at the Nobel Anniver-
fact-our leaders are men of local minds.
rope, is a derivative secondary thing.
sary Dinner given at the Waldorf-Astoria
They have not been able to think in terms
by the Common Council for American
"Let us face this moment in this year,
of the world.
therefore, and not be deceived in the na-
Unity. In her audience were such distin-
"And I nican by the world not merely the
ture of the struggle that lies chead.
guished winners of Nobel awards as Sii
geographical world in military terms, so that
Norman Angell, Sigrid Undset, Arthur H.
Pearl Buck
"I am not afraid to speak to you boldly
an army is sent here or sent there. I mean
The victory over the Axis does not mean
Compton, Harold C. Urey, and Otto Lbewi.
the world of human beings. This war has
the victory over Fascism and you and I must
Thomas Mann, unable to be present, sent a
been limited in its true aims. It has become
intact at the end of this war. One thing is
know this, wo must acknowledge it, we must
manuscript which was read by his daughter,
a military struggle. It has ceased to be n
Eríka:
true-the promise of freedom cannot be given
rockon with ft.
fight for freedom.
"We know now," Mrs. Buck said, "what
to one colonial people without giving it to
"Only by acknowledging it, and reckon-
"The times do not always produce the
we could not know a year ago, that this war
all and therefore it may be argued, pru-
ing with it, can we do our part to save civ
man. Whenethe-peoples, of Ásía and of
dently, that it is easier to make no promise
is not only between the United Nations and
ilization-not only the civilization of Europe,
Africa, yes, and when many among our own
the Axis.
of freedom. It is easier to cease talking about
of our own country, but human civilization,
peoples here and in South America, looked
"We know that the war between the
freedom at all. It is easier to say that we
for all humanity.'
and listened and heard no great voice, at
had better win the war before we discuss
United Nations and the Axis if only the be-
that moment the shadow of the long war
the postwar world. It is less-disturbing to
ginning of the real war, which remains the
ahead darkened and fell upon us. The poo-
our allios, both actual and potential, three
Sigrid Undset Cites Crimes
war between the principles; of Democracy
ples of Asia are further from us today than
of whom are empires, with vast and rich
and the principles of Fascism. We know,
they ever have been.
holdings in the East and Africa.
Against Spiritual Values
in this, the war has no geographical boun-
They are realizing soberly that they must
daries.
"So in this fashion, the danger is that this
Sigrid Undset, Norwegian Nobel Prize
find their salvation in themsolves, and not
"We have said and it may be true that
war will conso to be a war for freedom and
winner and author of Kristin Lavransdatter,
with Allies - tn certain grianded
we are fighting a war to save civilization.
boom month Is was against the Axis. All
Inst- night neged that the trimes
degree, for a moment, for a while, but they
But what we must foresce is that unless
of Asia now knows and acknowledges, and
by the Germans against spiritual values be
carinot trust us.
there is a miracle we will have to fight An-
so must we if we are honest that the prin-
added to the overwhelming horror of their
They see that while this first stage of
ciples of human equality and humán free-
physical crimes.
the
other war to save froedom.
the war must be won against the Axis, there
"When did the character of this war
dom may have nothing to dd with our vic-
The horrors of reprisals in Yugoslayia
will be another war, following hard upon
tory in this war.
and Czochoslovakia," Mrs. Undset said,
change? I think we all entered into the
this one, a greater war, the real war for
"Certainly the peoples of Asia are now
the tortures of civilians in all of the occu-
war knowing that however it might have
freedom, in which none yet secs clearly
been avoided, it had to be fought with all
coming to believe that for them our victory
pied countries, the massacres of the Jows
ofther friend or foe,
the strength of body and will, since it was
"It is not now so cortain what this first
will have nothing to do with freedom and
in Europe, are apt to give us an impression
inconceivable that our enemies should
will
equality.
that the outrages committed against spirit-
war between the princíples; of Democracy
ples of Asia are further from us today than
of whom are cimpires, with vast and nen
and the principles of Fascism. We know,
Against Spiritual values
they ever have been.
holdings in the East and Africa.
in this, the war has no geographical boun-
They are realizing soberly that they must
"So in this fashion, the danger is that this
Sigrid Undset, Norwegian Nobel Prize
daries.
find their salvation in themselves, and not
war will cease to be a war for freedom and
winner and author of Kristin Lavransdatter,
"We have said and it may, be true that
with us: Allies we are, to a certain guarded
become meroly à was against the Axis. All
last- night urged that the crimes committed
we are fighting a war to save civilization.
degree, for a moment, for a while, but they
of Asia now knows and acknowledges, and
by the Germans against spiritual values be
But what we must foresce is that unléss
carinot trust us.
so must we If we are honest that the prin-
added to the overwhelming horror of their
there is a miracle we will have to fight An-
They see that while this first stage of
ciples of human equality and human free-
physical crimes.
other war to save freedom.
the war must be won against the Axis, there
dom may have nothing to do with our vic-
The horrors of reprisals in Yugoslavia
"When did the character of this war
will be another war, following hard upon
tory in this war.
and Czochoslovakia," Mrs. Undset said,
change? I think we all entered into, the
this one, a greater war, the real war for
"the tortures of civilians in all of the occu-
war knowing that however it might have
"Cortainly the peoples of Asia are now
freedom, in which none yet sees clearly
been avoided, it had to be fought with all
coming to believe that for them our victory
pied countries, the massacres of the Jews
either friend or foe.
in Europe, are apt to give us an impression
the strength of body and will, since it was
"It is not now so certain what this first
will have nothing to do with freedom and
that the outrages committed against spirit-
equality.
inconceivable that our enemies should pre-
wat will gain us. Perhaps it will not even
ual values, against the integrity of science
vail.
"And who can give them any other hopo?
save civilization for us. For it is in wars
One hears everywhere of plans for a re-
and the freedom of men's creative spirit,
that civilizations are lost, if they go on too
were after all minor crimes.
'Fate Coming Closer'
constructed Europe, of plans for feeding Eu-
long. Good ends are too often lost in the
"The river of blood of millions, crying
"It is even möre inconceivable today that
rope's hungry millions, of health measures
meáns.
to high heaven for vengeance, has washed
our enemies, Germany and Japan, should
for Europe's sick and wounded. But who
win. But the strange thing is that the shad-
Military Gain Not Enough
away the ashes of the book-burnings. The
hears anywhere of feeding India's hungry
thought of famine and postilence stalking
ow of war docs not grow less as theso che-
The oppressed people of France, too, are
millions, hungry not only in the brief years
tire büs
Greece makes us almost forgot that Acrop-
mies grow weaker.
not ás close to us as they were. Military vic-
of this war; but always hungry?
olis now flies the Swastika.
To sal
"The heavy foreboding, which is upon
tory in Africa has not won us a victory among
"Eighty per cent of India's people do not
m/b to
"And, yet, it was exactly these crimes
the heart and mind of every thinking man
thoso in France who still love liberty.
know and never have known what it is to
against spiritual values, it was exactly the
for
and woman, is not lifted as it. should be
"Our own colored people are not closer
be fed adequately. Yet there are no plans
assassination of these convictions in the
now, at the end of this incredible year. Why
to us at the end of this year than they were
made for feeding them. Medical care is even
German people, that had to be committed
can we not take more comfort in today's
at the beginning. Military victory is not
more inadequate, in Asia alwhys has been,
8
before the full tido of fiendish cruclty and
news? It is comforting, yes. It is something
enough to lift their hearts.
but who plans for that?
of
incredible obsecenities could be let loose
to be grateful for that our military machine
"Now it is quite true that this war is more
"There are no plans, there never were
wherever the German military boots tram-
is better than the enemies' machine. Why,
than one war. There is a good deal of rea-
any plans. A medical watchguard is kept
ple.
then, are we not comforted?
son on the side of those who say let us
at the gates of the East in Egypt in the Mid-
"It is exactly for the vindication of these
"It is because we see a certain Fate com-
fight one war at a time. For example, obvi-
east and at the western ports, lest the dread
principles of the freedom of mind and the
ing closer to us, and these victories do not
ously in a purely military sense it is to our
diseases of Asia creep into our countries,
brotherhood in veneration for truth and
hold back its march. Somewhere in this year
benefit if, in need of all possible allios, we
into the beloved Europe, but who cared
da
humanity and plain common senso and the
the step might have been taken which could
can koep political France with us, even
how many of the peoples of the East suf-
creative possibilities of men and women we,
have averted this Fate. Until that moment
though the earth of France has been scized
fored and died?
the Allied Nations, fight, when we fight to
this war was being fought as h war for
by the enemy. Obviously then the sensible
"The war hás been limited still further.
tear the prey out of the Nazi paw and to
freedom.
thing is to sacrifice the faraway peoples of
It is now not even a war to save civilization.
conquer an opportunity to rebuild our old
"You remember how heartily all our al-
France's cinpiro, and say nothing at this time
It is only a war to save European civiliza-
world better still and exalt the old sacred
lies, in Asia as well as in Europe, entered
about giving the hope of freedom to colonial
tion. For we of the West never seem ablo
values even higher than before
into the war for freedom. No war that ever
peoples. Will political France fight so well
to realize that In the East there are civiliza-
has been waged was entered into with more
on pur side, when the moment comes, If she
tions far older and as great if not greater
devotion to freedom than was this war.
knows that there would be no empire at
than Europe's civilization. Shall those not
Remember Bataan
Millions of people, dark and light, rallied
the brid of this war? Would imperial Hol-
be saved?
Invest
to the cause of Democracy.
land be so enthusiastic for the allied cause
"It was out of the Mideast that Europe's
"I am not exaggerating when I say that
if her empire were no longer to exist if
civilization was once reborn. It will be out
A Dime Out of
there was a moment, almost a day, nearly
the United Nations won?
of the Far East, out of India and out of
Every Dollar in
six months ago now, when the great peo-
"There are many persons who argue that
China, that our own civilization will be re-
ples of Asía were very close to the anti-
England hersolf would be less entliusiastic
bom.
U.S. War Bonds
Axis peoples of Europe and America. Could
if her emplre were not to be restored to her
"When we talk of saving only Europe we
Entered as Second Class Matter, Post Office, N.Y., N.
Senate Votes to Investigate
Federal Forms and Quizzes
Baffling Symbols on Questionnaire
Just Printer's Notes, Smith Reveals
TIMES HERALD By LAURENCE BELL 12/4/42 p.2
New Deal masterminds who have turned the war effort
into a supercolossal quiz program, with already harassed
businessmen being forced to supply the-answers, yesterday
were slated for a little grilling
themselves.
do with the questionnaire Itself-
These boys. who toll mostly at
they are merely the printer's no-
1-1071-PLOF-5-
OPA and WPB but also buzz busily
tations." declared the budget boss,
in other bureaucratic vineyards,
who proceeded to translate M fol-
will have to answer "how come?"
NOBU-COS-WP
lows:
to the joint
"1-Printer's designation for
committee on
OPA.
Is Explained
the Reduction
"1071-Serial number of Job per-
Budget Director Harold D. Emith
of Nen-Essen-
formed for OPA.
today came to the defense of 7-1071-
tial Federal Ex-
"PLOPS-A misprint of P. 1 of
PLOF-S-NOBU-COS-WP.
penditures. The
5' meaning this is the first of
This jumble, which impeared on
Senate ap-
five pages.
one of the exhibits, fiattened the
proved unani-
'NOBU-No backup. A printing
Byrd Committee Tuesday when the
mously & Teso-
instruction.
questionnaire@probe started. It is
lution by Sena-
"COS-Collating and stapling.
only an innocent combination of
tor Arthur Van-
Likewise printing instruction.
printer's symbols, according to Mr.
denberg (R.),
"WP-Wrap. A printing instruc-
Smith.
of Michigan,
tion."
"The symbols had nothing what-
a
ever to do with those who were asked
probe of the
"No Esoleric Code"
to answer the questionnaire, nor
Government
In effect, said Smith, the fright-
with the tssuing agency. They are
question naire
Benater
ened industrialists can come out
merely the printer's notations for
and
paper
form
Vandenberg
of their hideaways and tend to
his own convenience,". he said.
situation.
their own affairs, The symbols are
Mr. Smith interpreted the hiero-
Explains "Mystery"
just guides for the printers and
glyphics as follows:
are by no means an esoteric code
1-Printer's designation for OPA.
Meanwhile, In & move to take
New Dealers use to keep unbellev-
1071-Serial number of job per-
some of the heat off the New Deal
ers from knowing what they are
formed for OPA.
quiz kids Budget Director Harold
up to,
PLOP-5-Misprint of PL OF -
D. Smith came up yesterday with
Nevertheless, the economy com
meaning that this is the first page
mittee continued with the hear-
of five pages.
the key to the mystery of what
NOBU-No Backup, Printing in-
1071 PLOP-5-NOBU-COSWP"
ings which already have brought
struction.
means.
out that composing lengthy and
COS Collating and stapling.
When this perplexing array of
puzzling questionnaires - one of
Printing instruction.
figures and letters appeared as
which was & full four feet long
WP-Wrap Printing instruction.
the title of an OPA questionnaire,
-has become a major Government
Mr. Smith described* the furore
unenlightened persons figured It
enterprise. One witness averred
caused by the quéstignnaire with
either was shorthand or -double-
Wednesday that small, grocers in
the overweighted -destignation as
talk. An outraged toothpaste ty-
California are spending more time
"another example of the tendency
coon waved the form at the econo-
filling out OPA questionnaires
to leap at conclusions when Govern-
my committee on Tuesday, de
than they are putting to selling
sagencies are under attack,"
manding to know what the sym-
their rapidly dwindling stocks of
boin meant, Senator Kenneth D.
merchandise.
STAR
12/3/42
McKellar (D.) of Tennessee said
The witness, Fred A. Baughan,
not only that be didn't know, but
general manager of the California
Front page
that "It would take a hundred
Retail Food Dealers Association,
experts to figure it out."
asserted that "tons and tons and
Smith pooh-poohed such talk,
tons" of these forms are now piled
saying that the whole furore over
up in garages, never indexed and
1-1071-PLOF-5-NOBU-COS-WP was
apparently forgotten by the bu-
just "another example of the ten-
reaucrats who devised them.
dency to leap at conclusions when
Government agencies are under
162 Periodical Reports
attack.
Another witness, George B. Ros-
"The symbols have nothing to
coe, of the National Association of
Manufacturers, testified that the
Eastman Kodak Company. alone
had filed 262 periodical reports
related directly to the war effort
and 147 "special forms" during
the three-month period ending
in June.
The man-hours involved In an
awering the questions contained
in this mass of paper, Roscoe de-
clared, total enough to have built
three Flying Portresses.
EXECUTIVE OFFICE OF THE PRESIDENT
BUREAU OF THE BUDGET
WASHINGTON, D. C.
December 4, 1942
MEMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT:
the
I would like especially to call
your attention to the attached clippings.
I think you will enjoy the story. This
is fast stuff and had to be done on the
spot. It is a good counterirritant,
however, and represents one way of get-
ting space for answers to some of the
criticism which you mentioned today.
HDS
H. D. S.
A-8
THE EVENING STAR, WASH
The Thening Star
military output and are urging that
in the not-too-distant past. But It
every effort be made to increase 11.
cannot be argued that they- are
With Bunday Marning Million,
For the full board to ratify the
popular in Germany, Italy or Japan
THEODORE W. NOYES, Editor.
principle involved would be to put the
today. Indeed, 11 is evident that
fostering of unionism ahead of our
they could not be offered unspolled
WASHINGTON, D. c.
military necessities. This war will
under any dictatorship. They are a
WEDNESDAY
September 16, 1M1
not be won that way.
product of the greatest mind of the
The Evening Star Newspaper Company.
Anglo-Baxon race, and that mind
Main Office: 11th BL and Pronertrania Ave.
New York Office: 110 East find BL
Dangerous Illusions
is unchained in the nations arrayed
Chicago Office: 435 North Michigan Ave.
In his recent address stressing the
against the aggressor powers. Curl-
Delivered by Carrier-Metropelltan Area.
Importance of recognizing the fact
ously, perhaps, the poet-anticipated
Collections made at the end of each month or
each WHIL Orders may be sent by mail or Mid-
that this war is the "real thing,
the prevailing erisis, Let any skeptic
shone National 5000
Eventing and Bunday Recular The Edition, per me. or 18c INT week
played for keeps," Ambassador Grew
read "Macbeth" in the light of the
TM Evening Blar. 45s per as. or 10e per work
was urging the people and the Gov-
fires 1St by Hitler and he will be
The
Bunday
Blar
0c per 4007
Mubi Final Edities.
ernment of this country to rid their
convinced. Also It is "Hamlet," born
Nicht Final and Sunday Biar
85c per month
Final Biar
600 MI mosta
minds of the Illusions which are
again, who symbolizes most per-
threatening us with military defeat.
fectly the aptrit of determination
Outside of Metropolitan Area.
Carrier or Earal Tabe Delivert.
Just how we have been, and are
to set the world right.
The Invoice and Bunday Blaz $1 no NT month
The Evening Bar
são per month
being, handicapped by muddy think-
The Bunday Birth
10c per copy
Ing can best be illustrated by looking
Injurious and Pointless
Rates by Mall-Payable in Advance,
back over the past year or two and
Cavalrymen used to say that each
Anzwhere la United Blates,
Delivared
appraising the things we believed in
trooper thought his own mount the
Bundar
Evening.
Bundar,
year
$12.00
$8.00
85,00
then when measured against the war
best in the regiment. The idea WM
months
$4.00
84,00
$2.50
month
$1.00
The
50e
picture as we see It today. This is
never discouraged/b the officers. It
Intered M second matter port after
not merely * matter of second
helped morale. It was a psychological
Washington, D. c.
guessing must recognise these
offset to actual defects in horseflesh.
Member of the Associated Press.
past mistakes to measure the cor-
Some of our Congressment seem to
The Associated Press se exclusively entitled to
the use for republication of all sews disputches
rectness of our present attitude, the
be taking the opposite course in their
creditas to . or not otherwise credited in this
mar and also the loss) news published herein.
It was not so long before Pearl
criticism of American airplanes. Os-
All Fights of publication et special direction
Harbor that we were. told we could
berein also are reserved.
tenalbly hitting at the "brass hats"-
have guns and butter, too. The
a generic term applied in derogation
people believed 11. They believed
Getting in the Scrap
of military leadership-what they
that our social gains could be pre-
actually are accomplishing is to tear
As the President said yesterday, the
served, because every one said. so.
down civilian morale and the morale
Government yet may be forced to
We were going to supertmpose our
of the pllots. At least the pilots who
confiscate metal in order to get the
military program on our normal In-
are yet- to fly in combat and
ecrap It needs for manufacture of
dustrial-establfshment so that there
when they do, will take off handi-
steel. But there is still a vast and
would be plenty of everything-mu-
capped at the very outset by the feel-
virtually untouched reservoir of val-
nitions as well as washing machines.
ing that they are armed with inferior
uable scrap metal in homes and on
And all of this was going to be done
weapons. That, in itself, is & dan-
farms, readily available and cheer-
in a forty-hour week, because ex-
gerous handicap.
fully surrendered if means are fur-
perience had shown, it was said, that
We cannot hope, nor would it be
nished to haul it away.
men could not work longer hours
destrable, to stifie criticism of the
A major difficulty in Washington's
and retain their efficiency.
war effort in Congress. But It would
past scrap campaign has been that
We have gotten over most of those
be E. far less dangerous sort of crit-
normal collection agencies, over-
illusions by now, but we believed
leism If It were made specific and if
whelmed as they are by the demand,
them at the time. And, that being
generalities, in relation to leadership
have been unable to make individual
the case, It is not surprising that
and equipment, were abandoned en-
trips to homes unless the metal to be
our enemies believed them, too-and
tirely.
collected was valuable enough to pay
jumped to the conclusion that we
There is a tendency in Congress to
for the trip. This difficulty will be
would never be ready to fight,
speak of airplanes indiscriminately.
eliminated under plans announced
This obviously was the background
Comparisons of this nature are ut-
by the Commissioners' committee.
that Ambassador Grew had in mind
terly without meaning. You cannot
Next Sunday all residents living in
when he said that we have been
say, and be accurate or informative,
the area east of North and South
challenged by a people (the Japa-
that British airplanes are better than
Capitol streets and of the Ana-
nese) who have been hypnotized into
American airplanes, or that German
costia River are requested to place
believing that democracy weakens
airplanes are better than British
their metal scrap at the curb by 8
those who possess: It, that high
standard of living weakens those who
planes. You cannot my that the
q'clock in the morning. During the
enjoy 1t, that peace and the,love of
Japanese Zero fighter is a. better ship
day trucks will call for it and trans-
than American fighter. Such
port It to designated depota, where It
peace weaken those who >cherish
comparisons are irrelevant-as If the
will be assorted and hauled away to
them." Were our enemies wrong in
the processors for loading on railroad
holding these beliefs? Mr." Grew
comparison were between the effi-
ears. On the following Sunday resi-
Implies his conviction that they were,
clency of a plough horse and & race
dents in the areas west of North and
but the military record should give
horse, without specifying the field in
us some pause on this score.
which the efficiency were to be ap-
South Capitol streets will do the same
thing.
The, Japanese have not enjoyed
plied.
Following this quick collection ef-
democracy, a high living standard,
Rapid specialization in aircraft, de-
fort, the machinery set up by the Dis-
nor even entertained a love of peace.
signed for particular areas of combat
But, with greatly inferior resources,
and the performance of definite
trict Salvage Committee will resume
they have gained more by conquest
tasks, no longer permits of general-
its functioning, with school children
and others "mopping up" the terri-
in less time than any other modern
ized comparisons of merit. Planes
tories and collecting what has been
nation. They may lose it all in the
superior in one respect are inferior
left over. In this respect, the Presi-
end, but It is foolish to ignore or to
in others. The Japanese Zero has
minimise what they have been able
gained speed and maneuverability
dent recalled yesterday that the first
search of the White House yielded
to accomplish.
and altitude at the sacrifice of arma-
One of our most popular present-
ment. Which 1a, in the long run,
enough scrap to all three trucks But
day convictions is that somehow
preferable-these qualities or arma-
later on & second search revealed
enough left-over materials to fill still
"free" men will always outfight and
ment and armor? The British Spit-
another truck, Private homeowners
outproduce those who have no Indi-
fire was designed and developed to
vidual freedom. But this dangerous
fight the Battle of Britain In some
will find themselves repeating the
just to take this for granted and to
respects supetion on this battle front,
President's experience on a smaller
assume, because we are free, that
It is definitely inferior on others.
scale. For there is a valuable assort-
ment of usable scrap in almost every
ultimate victory is inevitable. France
As everybody knows, military avia-
home, if only the search for it will be
was a free nation. The British are
tion in this country was disgracefully
made.
free, too, but after four years of
starved until just before we entered
Here is a splendid opportunity for
preparation for war their record as
this war. We have had to design
every one to make a valuable contri-
a whole is not impressive. On the
planes without knowing where they
bution of material vitally needed in
other hand, the Russians were not
were to fight. We have had to stand-
fighting the war.
free, but we hall them today as the
ardise to get rapid production. We
one United Nation which has been
doubtless have emphasized qualities
A Strange Doctrine
able to meet the full force of Ger-
which, under important conditions,
man military might and still survive.
are less valuable than others. Cer-
A recent report from a War Labor
Board panel recommends that an
In this country, after nine months
tainly we will not gain air superiority
of adverse fighting, It is doubtful
overnight. Yet actual battle reports
employer with plants in Chicago and
that we have yet looked the facts in
indicate the high quality of our
Elizabeth, N. J., be ordered to sign a
the face. Mr. Grew urges us to "stop
planes and of our pllots.
union shop contract despite the fact
groping." Our production leaders
What purpose, then, is being served
that he has been operating on an
plead with men to stop strikes, to
by generalized, loose talk in Con-
open shop basis since May, 1941.
work harder, to give up Monday lay-
gress, based on second-hand infor-
Apparently this panel recom-
offs and week-end holidays. There
mation anonymously supplied, the
mendation poses a difficult question
are no strikes and no lay-offs in the
purport of which is that we are
for the full board, which, in promul-
enemy countries; they are not trying
manufacturing inferior, second-rate
gating its so-called union security
to maintain the living standards of
airplanes? Is this criticism helpful
formula, has taken the position, by
the pressure groups; they are not
to the war effort? If it is not, there
implication if not in express terms,
waiting until after an election to
should be an end to it.
that it would not order the union
draft the young men and the men
shop. The union security clause is
with dependents. They are fighting
intended to enable unions to main-
the war, in deadly earnest, with
tain their membership to the extent
everything that they have, and they
that workers desire to retain their
are winning dt. We will not begin
union status, but the board has rec-
to defeat them in any important
ognized that it ought not to use its
sense, until we discard the laist of our
authority to compel all employes to
illusions and make up our minds to
join a union, which is the case under
fight harder than they are fighting,
a union shop agreement. In these
both on the battlefronts and at home.
circumstances, it is difficult to see
We are not going to win just because
how the board could require an em-
we are free men, who believe in
ployer to restore a union shop agree-
democracy and the ways of peace.
ment which expired sixteen months
ago without going dangerously far
Freedom's Bard
añeld from the principles it has laid
The annual Shakespeare festival
down under the maintenance of
at Stratford-on-Avon, where the
membership formula
poet was born on St. George's Day,
There is another aspect of the
1564, has survived three years of
panel's ruling, however, which seems
war, thanks to "the enthusiasm of
strangely out of line with the reall-
the people." Air raids, gasoline ra-
ties of our military requirements, and
tioning, constant interference with
which should interest the board
ordinary train schedules, many other
members and the American people
difficulties are necessarily admitted
as a whole. One of the reasons cited
by the Memorial Theater manage-
by the employer in explanation of
ment, but there have been audi-
the refusal to-extend the union shop
ences for nine different produc-
agreement was the inability of the
tions this season "Midsummer
union (CIO) to provide a necessary
Night's Dream," As You Like It,"
supply of skilled craftsmen. To meet
"The Winter's Tale," The Tem-
this difficulty, the panel, with the
pest,' The Taming of the Shrew,"
Mndustry member dissenting, pro-
"The Merchant of Venice," "Mac-
posed that the company be permitted
beth," "Hamlet and Sheridan's
to hire AFL members, who would be
The School for Scandal." Each of
exempt from the union shop, when
the works presented- has its -own
the CIO group could not supply
distinct claim upon the British na-
tion and the world at large.
skilled help, or when it was impos-
sible to find non-union men who
Shakespeare, as It happens, stands
very close to the Bible and to the
would agree to join the CIO union.
basic charters upon which life in
Thus, the panel apparently is of
the United States was established-
the opinion that a. half-union loaf is
the Mayflower Compact, the Dec-
better than none, and that non-
laration of Independence, the Con-
union men should not be permitted
stitution. Take away his book and
to work in these plants even when
what remains is only a fragment.
the union in question is unable to
He is as much American as he is
supply necessary help from among
British. And all the vast body of
its own members. This is a very
literature accumulated since he died
strange doctrine for a panel of the
in 1616 is the common possession
War Labor Board to be preaching at
of the English-speaking community
a time when the President and Don-
wherever It may dwell.
ald Nelson, war production chief, are
Of course, Shakespeare's plays have
deploring the inadequacy of our
been presented in the Axis countries
THE NEW YORK TIMES, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1942.
FULL WAR SUPPORT
national basis, Mr. Witherow
warned, "It may benefit those in
Swedish Bishops Protest
tion Board, and expressed the hope
the war on a scale greater than
that the problem would be solved
that of the automobile industry.
foreign lands, but only by the im-
Norse Jews' Persecution
under new regulations and the re-
Yesterday's congress program
poverishment of the American peo-
PLEDGED BY N. A. M.
ple," for "government has no
cently announced controlled ma-
included also three panels, dealing
By Telephone to THE New YORK TIMES.
with economic stabilization, rene-
source of capital except by taking
terials plans.
STOCKHOLM, Sweden, Dec. 2
gotiation of contracts and civilian
the Income of its citizens."
"The American people-will shoul-
-A flaming protest against per-
Railroad Record Reviewed
industry. Participating in the dis-
der crushing tax burdens cheer-
secution of Norwegian Jews has
Ernest E. Norris, president of
cussions were government officials
But Speakers Denounce Use
fully during the war, but I ques-
been issued and signed tonight
the Southern Railway System, told
and representatives of industry.
tion whether they will encourage
by all Swedish Bishops, headed
the Congress that 85 per cent of
of Emergency as Springboard
their government to raise the tax
by Archbishop Eidem.
Soviet Spy in Sweden Sentenced
the increase of the nation's total
"Let us pray for our brothers
STOCKHOLM, Sweden, Dec. 2
burden even higher when peace
for Revolutionary Experiments
comes," Mr. Witherow said.
of the tribe of Israel," says the
freight traffic since Pearl Harbor
(Reuter)-Vasillo Sidorenko, di-
The task of economic reconstruc-
protest, which scores in particu-
has been handled by the railroads.
rector of the Soviet Travel Bureau
tion after the war in the United
larly severe terms introduction
He paid tribute to Joseph B.
in Stockholm, was sentenced today
into the Scandinavian peninsula
Eastman, director of the Office of
WAR CABINET ADVOCATED
States must be that of private en-
of the inhuman methods alien to
Transportation, saying "he has the
to ten years' penal servitude on a
terprise, he maintained. Private
sincere respect and confidence of
charge of espionage. A Swedish
capital "can and will do the job,"
the sense of justice and compas-
he added, If the government would
sion of the peoples up here.
every railroad officer."
woman and her 17-year-old daug?
"The resulting teamwork of the
ter were sentenced to lesser pri-
W.P. Witherow Opposes Plans
declare that "private capital will
ODT and the railroads has been a
terms for participation.
be encouraged to provide the mo-
for Radical Readjustment of
aim seems to be not winning the
major factor in the latter's contri-
tive power for post war recon-
war. but the substitution of politi-
bution to the war effort," he
struction."
Economic Structure
cal domination for industrial self-
added.
To promote more efficient con-
government," Mr. Pew charged.
Mr. Norris warned, however,
duct of the war and reduce "red
"The industry of this country can-
that unless the railroads could get
tape," Mr. Witherow urged the
not be run from Washington. This
the cars, locomotives, rails and
Pledging their full continued
setting up, of a war cabinet com-
war cannot be won in Washington.
mantenance material they need,"
support to the war production pro-
prised of the administrative head
But it can, be lost there."
we may encounter difficulties in
gram and acceptance of any BAC-
of each important division of the
This is no time for "business re-
moving all of next year's traffic
rifices that may be necessary to
war machinery.
form," Mr. Pew insisted, saying
efficiently and promptly."
achieve victory, leaders of Ameri-
"One of the significant members
that "unfortunately the socialistic
of that war Cabinet," he empha-
planners of the New Deal are re-
Aircraft Leader Speaks
can industry In addresses before
sized, "should be the one man who
celving encouragement from many
Eugene E. Wilson, president of
the War Congress sponsored by
has full authority over the produc-
men whose faith in the worth of
United Aircraft Corporation, said
the National Association of Manu-
tion of war material. I cannot
the American system is beyond
that the aircraft Industry has been
facturers demanded yesterday that
come down too hard or with too
challenge."
justly characterized as "America's
the system of free enterprise be
much emphasis on that word 'one.'
Manpower Draft Opposed
No. 1 industrial glant." He point-
preserved after the war and
Manpower problems, war financ-
ed out that recently Donald Nel-
warnd against utilizing the war
Ing and other major undertakings
Mr. Pew declared that the pro-
son, War Production Board chief,
emergency as a springboard for
also should have single-headed rep-
posed drafting of manpower for In-
had estimated its peak at 30 to 40
revolutionary experimentation.
resentation on the war Cabinet."
dustry arose from a "bureaucratic
billion dollars, or ten times the
Thousands of industrialista from
desire for a short-cut through co-
peak of automotive production.
all parts of the nation, assembled
Would Limit Labor's Role
erción that in the end will be
"Loyal initiative is our secret
at the Waldorf-Astoria, heard de-
Mr. Witherow contended also
proven going the long way around."
weapon," Mr. Wilson said. "Against
mands for more efficient organiza-
that management-labor cooperation
"Compelling men to work where
It no aggressor can prevail. The
tion of production, curtailment of
is "a worthy and easential goal,"
they do not desire would strip the
cost of victory will depend upon
bureaucracy and "no surrender"
but that It "should not be trans-
worker of his dignity as an Indivi-
how we utilize it. American Indus-
to those "who desire to change our
lated into that dangerous substitute
dual and reduce his to the status
try has 80 far wielded It quite well
form of society and government."
-Jonit management-labor respon-
of A serf," Mr. Pew said in oppos-
indeed."
Leading In these demands was
sibility."
ing the proposal for the freezing of
Henry J. Kaiser, Pacific Const
W. P. Witherow, president of the
"Labor's more definite responsi-
labor. "The surest way for us to
shipbuilder, disclosed in an inter-
National Association of Manufac-
bility in the war management pic-
lose this war is to ape Hitler. The
view that In about two months he
turers, who declared that while the
ture should be in the field of its
surest and quickest way to win
would be able to define publicly
government must participate in in-
specialized ability," he said. "La-
this war is to place our faith in
his plans for the giant cargo planes
ternational affairs after the war,
gor leaders should be put In an of-
American initiative.
to be built by his organization and
It should not attempt to "dominate
ficial position to keep their no-
"Cut away the ropes of bureau-
Howard Hughes.
$2750
the economic foundation of the
strike pledge, to hold down the
cratic red tape now hamatringing
Mr. Kalser, who will address the
peacetime world."
alarming growth of absenteeism,
Industry. Give management and
congress at the closing session to-
Wallace Program Assalled
put an end to the production de-
labor a chance to exercise initiative
morrow evening, said the ships
Without mentioning his name,
lays of jurisdictional strikes."
by reopening the door of oppor-
"will certainly be able to fly over
Mr. Witherew assailed also the
tunity. Do these things and the
the ocean, land cargo and fly back
without refueling."
achieve victory, leaders of Ameri-
of that war Cabinet," he empira-
planners of the New Deal are re-
sized, "should be the one man who
celving encouragement from many
Eugene E. Wilson, president of
can industry in addresses before
the War Congress sponsored by
has full authority over the produc-
men whose faith in the worth of
United Aircraft Corporation, said
tion of war material. I cannot
the American system is beyond
that the aircraft industry has been
the National Association of Manu-
facturers demanded yesterday that
come down too hard or with too
challenge."
justly characterized as "America's
No, 1 industrial giant." He point-
the system of free enterprise be
much emphasis on that word 'one.'
Manpower Draft Opposed
ed out that recently Donald Nel-
preserved after the war and
Manpower problems, war financ-
Mr. Pew declared that the pro-
son, War Production Board chief,
warnd against utilizing the war
Ing and other major undertakings
emergency as a springboard for
also should have single-headed rep-
posed drafting of manpower for in-
had estimated its peak at 30 to 40
revolutionary experimentation.
dustry arose from & "bureaucratic
billion dollars, or ten times the
resentation on the war Cabinet."
Thousands of industrialists from
desire for a short-cut through CO+
peak of automotive production.
all parts of the nation, assembled
Would Limit Labor's Role
erçión that In the end will be
Loyal initiative is our secret
at the Waldorf-Astoria, heard de-
proven going the long way around,"
weapon," Mr. Wilson said. "Against
Mr. Witherow contended also
that management-labor cooperation
"Compelling men to work where
It no aggressor can prevail. The
mands for more efficient organiza-
is "a worthy and essential goal,"
they do not desire would strip the
cost of victory will depend upon
tion of production, curtailment of
worker of his dignity as an Indivi-
how we utilize it. American indus-
bureaucracy and "no surrender"
but that it "should not be trans-
to those "who desire to change our
dual and reduce his to the status
try has so far wielded It quite well
lated into that dangerous substitute
form of society and government."
of a serf," Mr. Pew said in oppos-
Indeed.'
-jonit management-labor respon-
ing the proposal for the freezing of
Henry J. Kaiser, Pacific Coast
Leading in these demands was
sibility
W. P. Witherow, president of the
labor. "The surest way for us to
shipbuilder, disclosed in an inter-
"Labor's more definite responsl-
National Association of Manufac-
bility in the war management ple-
lose this war is to ape Hitler. The
view that in about two months he
surest and quickest way to win
would be able to define publicly
turera, who declared that while the
ture should be in the field of its
this war is to place our faith in
his plans for the giant cargo planes
government must participate in in-
specialized ability," he said. "La-
American initiative,
to be built by his organization and
ternational affairs after the war,
gor leaders should be put in an of-
$2750
it should not attempt to "dominate
"Cut away the ropes of bureau-
Howard Hughes.
ficial position to keep their no-
the economic foundation of the
cratic red tape now hamatringing
Mr. Kajser, who will address the
strike pledge, to hold down the
peacetime world."
Industry. Give management and
congress at the closing session to-
alarming growth of absenteeism,
labor a chance to exercise Initiative
morrow evening, said the ships
Wallace Program Assalled
put an end to the production de-
by reopening the door of oppor-
"will certainly be able to fly over
Without mentioning his name,
lays of jurisdictional strikes."
tunity. Do these things and the
the ocean, land cargo and fly back
Mr. Witherow assalled also the
Mr. Witherow assailed the pro-
output of war materials will soar
without refueling."
gram expounded by Vice President
$25,000 limitation on salaries, say-
to heights that even today would
AS & result, they must be able
Henry A. Wallace for a "people's
ing this would not help win the
be called fantastic. Fail to do them,
to carry the greatest possible load
revolution" as the objective of the
war or facilitate its financing, nor
on the lowest possible consumption
Store Hours 9:30
and we lose initiative, lose produc-
war on the basis of a radical re-
stop Inflation.
tion, lose the war, lose our free-
of gasoline," he explained.
Thursdays until
adjustment of the economic struc-
"This lead was unblushingly bor-
dom, and become German and
Mr. Kaiser foresaw the develop-
rowed from the public platform of
ture.
JJapanese slaves."
ment of commercial aviation after
Mr. Witherow, who is also presi-
the Communist party in 1928," he
charged, "and foisted upon the
War Production Praised
dent of the Blaw-Knox Company,
demanded that the post-war read-
country over the expressed refusal
Congratulating the industrialists
justment in the United States be
of Congress to pass such & restric-
upon-"the magnificent job of pro-
founded upon the basis of encour-
tion. It constitutes open, recog-
duction" they have done so far
nizable surrender to those who de-
Hiland G. Batcheller, chief of the
agement of private capital.
"Personally, I am not interested
sire to change our form of society
iron and steel branch of the War
and government, It is a ceiling on
Production Board, declared that
In any other form of government
initiative, a damper on opportu-
the board also deserves "some
or form of economy than our own,"
nity. We seem fond of following
credits" for keeping industry sup-
be said. "I admire beyond expres-
the English pattern in most things
lied with the necessary materials.
sion the stand the Russians have
but- this: in England they knight
He cited figures showing the phe-
made. They are fighting nobly for
Russia and Soviet ideals. We're
business men for good services-
nomenal growth in steel output
over here we indict them."
under the strees of the war emer-
fighting for America and Ameri-
can ideals. I am not making guns
Pew Criticizes 'Restrictions'
gency, pointing out that 1,100,000
tons of plates were delivered in
or tanks to win & 'people's revolu-
J. Howard Pew, president of the
October, 1942, an increase of al-
tion.' I am making armament to
Sun Ojl Company, Philadelphia, de-
most 100 per cent in this critical
help our boys save America. I
clared that "government regimen-
item over the corresponding
don't want any "modified" free en-
tation and industrial cartels are
month of 1941.
terprise or ЫТ of rightiess democ-
Slamese twins of eyll, for one is
"The rate at which you can now
racy. Immediately after the war,
just as destructive of industrial
turn the steel and other raw ma-
government aid to war-torn coun-
production as the other."
terials which are furnished to you
tries is a foregone conclusion. But
Mr/ Pew said that government
into finished munitions and tools
not the rehabilitation of their eçon-
policies threatening war produc-
of war is literally incredible
omy or the reforming of their lives.
tion included renegotiation of war
in terms of & year or eighteen
I am not fighting for a. quart of
contracts, time and half pay for
months ago," Mr. Batcheller said,
milk for every Hottentot, or for
workers without similar Incen-
He added that the resultant
TVA on the Danube, or for govern-
Live for management, the $25,000
problem of continuing to provide
mental handouts of free Utopia
salary limitation, and similar 're-
raw materials to meet the expand-
f-government undertakes
&
strictions."
ed production rate is being tackled
share-the-wealth plan on an inter-
In Washington, at times, the
with energy by the War Producti
A soft answer turneth away wrath; but grievous words
etir up anger.-Proverbs, XV., 1.
(The text for today is suggested by Rev. Walter G. Brun, pastor, Lutheran Church
of Good Shepherd, Brooklyn. The next text will be suggested by Rev. Donald F. Schu-
mann, rector, St. Josephs Episcopal Church, Queens Village.)
Drip Coffee
RAT
ONING
GOOD
TO THE
LAST DROP
ONE-CUP-AURY
PLASCHCE
War News
The People Want
Unvarnished Truth
About Our Battles
There is not & truth existing which I
fear or would wish unknown to the whole
of candor toward the people by our rulers is,
in return, to inspire a lack of confidence of
world. -Thomas Jefferson in a letter, to
the people in the men conducting this war-
Henry Lee in 1826.
a grave situation fraught with peril to all
F there is an underground swell of re-
of us.
I
sentment throughout the country against
The newspapers-by emphasizing "good"
the Administration-and acute Wash-
news and minimizing "bad" news-have loy-
ally played this disreputable game of hide-
ington observers say there is-one cause of
it may be laid to the Administration treat-
and-seek with the Government up to date.
ment of the war news.
On this very subject, Mr. William Ran-
The American people do not like the
dolph Hearst recently in a vigorous editorial
truth on vital matters needlessly withheld
addressed to the whole nation said:
from them.
"I think the public likes to hear true
They do not like to be told UNTRUTHS
news.
instead of TRUTHS.
"Every once in a while an Administra-
They resent this attitude of the powers
tion official or military officer rises to
that be in Washington.
his feet and declares that we are losing the
Concretely:
war and that the people are to blame.
1. After the Doolittle raid on Tokio last
"The people are not to blame.
April, Washington told us "no losses.' Six
"They are doing everything they are
months afterward the people are reluctantly
called upon to do-everything they pos-
told planes were lost and some of Doolittle's
sibly can do,
bombers' are now prisoners in Japan.
"They are sacrificing their sons and
2. Up until almost the last moment the
their fortunes.
authorities led us to believe that we were
"If the war is being lost it is being lost
winning the battle of Bataan.
through bad leadership and possibly to a
3. The American people have never been
degree through bad journalism-journal.
told our exact losses in planes and damaged
ism which takes the easiest way and avoids
ships at Pearl Harbor.
the hard realities.
4. When the Aleutians were invaded we
"I think the newspapers should per-
were-there is no other word for it-delib-
form their functions and tell the truth-
erately LIED TO for days. They told us there
print the bad news along with the good
were no Japanese in the Aleutians." Then
news.
they dismissed the matter as "unimportant"
"If we are losing the war, as these im-
when, as & matter of fact, the invasion of
portant officials say, let as print how we
American territory by enemies is of over-
are losing it and why we are losing it."
whelming importance at ANY TIME AND
The Administration has as great a re-
IN ANY PLACE:
sponsibility as the press.
5. The Administration withheld from the
That responsibility involves the TRUTH,
American people for SIXTY-FIVE days that
the WHOLE TRUTH and NOTHING BUT
three of our cruisers had been sunk in the
THE TRUTH.
first enemy onset in Guadalcanal.
We are all the heirs of Jefferson, and as
6. The loss of the airplane carrier Wasp
he said he did not FEAR the truth, neither
was suppressed for more than a month.
do the people of America-whether it comes
The cumulative effect of this evident lack
from Valley Forge, Bull Run or Guadalcanal.
Over-Burdened
Educations in
Hospitals
Uniforms
THE Greater New York Hospital Associa
expréssed concern over the
IT IS at comforting and satisfying thing to
know that America's armed forces, man
shortage of skilled workers in its institutions.
for man, boast the highest educational level
Hospitals have lost not only their doctors,
of any in the world. Not only are they the
nurses and technicians, but such trained me-
most educated, according to a dispatch sent
chanical workers as electricians, engineers
to the New York Journal-American from its
and carpenters as well.
Washington bureau, but they are the most
The situation in now somewhat alarm-
temperate and the most music-minded!
ing." the Association frankly states. "The
Compared to World War I, in which
tremendous increase in births, added to
only 1,500,000 high school graduates were
the normal demand for the care of the
sick and injured, with the peak period of
available for the draft, today more than
sick care just abead, is & source of worry
7,000,000 men with high school diplomas or
to trustees and hospital administrators.
better are available. And through the Army
What is the solution!
Institute, a virtual service university, an en-
The Association urges fewer visits to
listed man can continue his education so that
patients for one thing. It asks the public
he becomes not only a better soldier and a
to consider the hospitals' problems and "bear
better citizen, but better fitted for the civil-
with them in these times."
ian life he resumes after the war.
MR$. WILLIAM L. GIBSON
I
11-2-42
MIAMI, FLORIDA
535 So. PALMWAY
LAKE Worth FLA.
Dear Mr. President,-
9 9 enjoyed this
cartoon so much, 9 filt you should
have some of the same chuckles
that have shaken me each time 9
have looked at it today. Thank God
for a Country when ur may enjoy things
of this nature without fear. 9am sure
Mrs. Roosevelt would enjoy it too.
Tell Ross his navy
seems to be doing all right, from
MRS. WILLIAM L. GIBSON
000 NORTH WEST 77TH STREET
MIAMI, FLORIDA
tonights Goad cast. May God and the
wisdom of the White House continue to
further our interests, on land as will
as at sea.
with Sincerely
William L Gibson
THE PALM BEACH POST
Monday Morning, November 2, 1942
Just Don't Be Surprised, That's All
MY DAY
HAS BEEN
RATHER À
BUSY ONE.
OF
8 E
The New York Times
erty-a decency that will preserve his
stree
human dignity and & liberty which
by P
Reg. U. 8. Pat. Off.
will permit him to make & living ac-
time
"AM the News Thef's FM to Prist."
cording to his abilities, without fear
ADOLPH 8. OCHS, Publisher 1896-1935.
or kowtows to self-appointed dictators.
And this resurgence of the old verities
Published Every Day In the Year by
W
for which men are fighting and dying
THE NEW YORK TIMES COMPANY.
shov
today, even more than any political
the
ARTHUR HATE SULEBERGER,
pledges, provides the guarantee against
a at
President and Publisher.
the further spread of both Fascism and
con
Julius OCHS ADLER
Communism-for France and for the
less
Vice President and General Manager.
world.
den
GODFEEY N. NELSON, Secretary.
THE 'GOOD NEIGHBOR" AGENCY
una
SUNDAY, DECEMBER 20, 1942,
stop
Herbert H. Lehman now bears the
dist
OFFICES OF THE NEW TORK TIMES
resounding title of Director of Foreign
con
New York City. Telephone LAckswanna 4-1000
Relief and Rehabilitation Operations.
Times Tower. Time Besere Time Bids., 139 W. 4dd at
car
120 Broadway
One wishes a. simpler title could have
fro
OTHER CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING BUREAUS
been found. Our Latin-American friends
134 BL
are Berwith At.
Wash, Bia At,
for
sech BL 159 E. 34/a BU
Forthers E. Fortham Bd.
ought not to mind if we call Mr. Leh-
West Bide. 2489 Broadway
Brooklys. 105 Court BL
prio
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SAILOR'S RETURN
fre
You him here and there from
has
time to time, but too often you do not
the
recognize him. He la usually of mill-
box
POST-WAR WORLD
tary age. If things have been going
a
well with him he is vigorous looking,
Les
Having hitched his own little wagon,
to Hitler's fading star, Leval now par-
often, but not always, with 4. face
To
rota Hitler's battlecry against the
tanned and toughened by weather. He
of 1
menace of Communism, which he de-
may have a tense look about the eyes.
for
You might, too, if you had been where
alw
clares is threatening France, Europe
be has been,
eve
and civilization. That was to be ex-
pected. Communism and conquest
He follows an occupation that pro-
were the two talking points which
vides for no parades. He goes about
brought Hitler to power in Germany.
his business in secret. No whisties
"D
By raising the threat of & Communist
blow for him and no flags fly when he
este
dictatorship in Germany he won the
puta to sea. His work, by long habit,
sonr
following of the German bourgeolale;
has become monotonous. Day by day
"ca
by promising conquesta he won the
the gray, the green, the blue scenery of
be
support of the military and the Ger-
the ocean follows him. His variety is
hea
man youth. And a crusade against
storm, fog and the blackness of night.
sari-
Communism is the alogan with which
There are twenty-four hours in his
oth.
day, sixty minutes in each of those
dest
Hitler to now trying to sell his dicta-
hours, sixty seconds in each of those
the
torship to, Europe and the world.
Laval is using the same slogan to sell
minutes-and for days on end any one
who
of the aeconds may be the one in which
son
France to Hitler.
But Laval dons the armor of the
the enemy strikes. This knowledge be
the
carries with him when be works, when
moi
anti-Communist crussder too late. Be-
cause of the subversive and, in the re-
be eata, when be reads, talks or plays
can
ami
sult, suicidal activities of a Communist
cards, when be smokes his pipe, when
International guided by the Trotskyist
he tries to sleep. He knows what can
and
ideology of the proletarian world revo-
be done to a man by an exploding tor-
sar
jution, Hitler could still raise an Issue
pedo, by burning eil, by rough water,
and
by cold, by hunger, by thirst.
the,
which frightened many Germans into
Yet he goes about his necessary busi-
T
his camp and won a following for simi-
ness. Escaping once, twice, three times,
hun
lar crusaders elsewhere, including the
for 1.
United States. But with the "liquida-,
perhaps tossing in a small bost for
stori
tion" of the Trotskyists in Russia, the
days, he ships again. His is the strength
that Lies our earth-wide batties to the
as P
proletarian world revolution began to
est 1
take & back seat, on which sat in the
homeland. If be were to shrink from
his task the battles would not be
good
main the Communist dupes in other
"cas
countries, whom the Moscow rulers de-
fought, the cause would be lost
who
spised as tools and liquidated first
Much is being done for the merchant
recei
wherever Moscow !tself took over, as
sallor by the United Seamen's Service.
work
in the Baltic states. The state of
There la much that be still needa, par-
impor
Stalin became more and more a
ticularly after be has suffered ship-
tional state, and the Communist Inter-
wreck. But mostly be needa to know
national became the tool of Russian
that we know that be stands in honor
power politics. And this nationaliza-
with the other brave men who are win-
Cold,
tion of the Bolshevist revolution is
ning this war. It is too bad that he
verity
now being completed and solidified in
wears no uniform, ribbon or button to
in who
the fires of the Russo-German war,
tell us what be in. But those who can
depend
Stalin himself was the first to realize
read men's faces, even when they are
readir
this. He was the first to take account
least pretentious, least conscious of
the fr
of the fact that as a crusader for Com-
their own worth, may perceive that
would
munism, fighting in foreign, even
valor in staelf a decoration.
mero
though adjacent, lands, Russia was no
here
match for Hitler, but that It developed
SAFE WINTER DRIVING
orde
an unparalleled heroism which won the
Winter motoring, always more haz-
raw
applause and the thanks of the world
ardous than that of other sessons, de-
Web
when it began to fight in defense of
mands special precautions this year.
serval
Russia's own soil. The alogans with
There is extra congestion in the neigh-
discun
which Stalin to spurring the Russian,
borhood of industrial plants, military
try main
armies to ever greater efforta today,
posts and construction projects. The
be met
are not the Marxist slogans, urging
share-your-car practice-not yet nearly
right un
the proletarians of the world to unite,
as well established it should be in
man a
but alogana about patriotism, liberty
the interest of -rubber conservation-
erage.
and the fatherland.
brings added responsibilities because of
viewpi
As regards the rest of Europe, there
heavier average loading of passenger
The
are good reasons to believe that the
cars. The dimout," both in cities and
tures
masses who have been crushed in the
rural areas, increases the danger of
front
fight between Communism and Fascism
night accidenta. They are sharply up
his de
are sick and tired of all "lama." The
in New York City this month as com-
The e
ground swell throughout the world is
pared with the same period last year.
er; tl
against fanaticism, intolerance and,
most of all, against the strutting and
The War Department and the Inter-
down
national Association of Chiefs of Police
the o.
posing conquerors. After wandering
for two decades In the wilderness of
have joined in prescribing simple but
above
purely intellectual abstractions or
often neglected rules for Winter driv-
show
clashing ideologies, which led only to
ing based upon studies made by the
a wo
National Safety Council. These in-
the }
a new world holocaust, the patient but
clude check-up of brakes, use of chains
the fs
not always articulate masses are find-
on anowy or toy roads (which cuta
under
ing their way back to the fundamen-
tals of existence, to the eternal verities
stopping distance some 50 per cent)
The
which & super-sophisticated age had
and maintenance of windshield wipers,
of tt
defrosters and headlights. But more
recor
tried to ant aside as too hackneyed for
modernity.
than any other one thing it in the at-
by If
titude of the driver and the pedestrian
The
We can believe that the world that
that counter Impatience, a careless
Com;
is being forged in the crucible of this
war is not going to be a world regi-
effort to save at most a few seconds
serva
mented in the name of any single Ide-
or minutes, may cost a life or cause a
that
crippling injury. The driver and the
abus
elogy or panacea, but a very practical
world, in which man will demand &
walker must remember that they too
simp
modicum of human decency and lib-
are at war, that their behavior on the
right
THE BOSTON HERALD, TUES
THE
MAIL BAG
French Crisis Military,
Not Political
To the Editor of The Herald:
How does a Frenchman react to
the present developments in French
North Africa? The question has
been asked me several times in the
last few days. May try to answer
It here? My feeling is & combination
of happiness, gratitude and anguish,
There is anguish at the thought of
so many new miseries and sufferings
failing anew upon France. Not to
feel this angulah would be unnatural
and inhuman. At the same time, we
all realize that this is part of the
great surgical operation undertaken
today to free the world of the
scourge of Nari domination. It has
got to be accepted, and We accept 15.
Then there is happiness, because
we are witnessing & major step
forward on the road to victory and
to the liberation of Prance as well
as to the restoration of her demo-
cratic liberty with all lta free in-
stitutions. When we heard the
message in Prench of the President
of the United States, tears came to
our eyes, and we experienced our
first moment of joy and real hope
since the-nightmare of the armistice.
Finally, there is gratitude, because
we, the men who fought on the
French front in the World War,
know that once more America is
coming to help and save us. and,
this time, to restore our indepen-
dence.
AL the present moment I refuse to
think of anything else. There is no
place for personal opinions in such
big-scale military matters, and the
present crisis La & military, not &
political one. The man of the day
is neither Darlan, por Nogues, nor
Giraud, nor even de Gaulle, nor any-
cos else: it is Eisenhower and, be-
hind and above him, the Com-
mander-in-Chief of all American
forces, President Roosevelt.
The Allied forces are achieving in
French North Africa a fest unprece-
dented in history. The command-
ers of these forces know what they
have to contend with; we dont'.
They know the capital importance
of two factors: the first one is speed,
to get to Tunis and beyond before
the enemy gains & strong foothold
there. The second is to manage
things in such a way that the Vichy
forces in North Africa will not be-
come an obstacle to be overcome by
bloodshed, and, if possible, will Join
in the fight. Whether this can be
done by using Giraud, or Darlan, or
Nogues, or whoever is usable, is a
question for Gen, Eisenhower to de-
cide, not for us. For the moment,
the political implications are negli-
gible. The day will come when they
resume their importance, and be
again open for discussion: but that
day has not come vet.
Especially since we have received
the positive information that all the
French underground movements of
resistance have recognized Gen. de
Gaulle as their leader and the
French National Committee in Lon-
don as trustee of the French demo-
cratic institutions, most of us,
Frenchmen, inside and outside
France, hope that he and the Na-
tional Committee will play & de-
claive part in the work of libera-
tion of the territory and of the Tes-
toration of democratic freedom. We
hope also that the development of
military operations and local condi-
tions in Northern Africa will make it
possible for the Pighting French
forces, now already. fighting in
Libya or on active duty in the Chad
region, to take part in the battles
fought Africa. on French territory in North
We consider It as absurd, and in
complete contradiction to the sol-
emn declarations of the President,
that any kind of government might
be organized under the auspices of
men who have been month after
month denounced as Pascista, col-
laborationista or traitors. Darlan is
one of these men: His record for
the last two years is clear, eloquent,
and repulaive. We are confident
that neither the President nor the
State Department is actually think-
ing of giving him any dignified and
honorable role, he is & despicable
opportunist, & man without con-
science or dignity, a Quisting. His
main purpose, at this moment, is to
save his skin, Nothing respectable
about it. If he can be of any use at
this moment, all right, let's use him.
Squeeze the orange, and then throw
It away, We shall never stand for
any kind of "Darlan government."
However, If Gen. Eisenhower be-
lleves he can get something out of
Darlan, let him alone. He knows.
If, within a few days, he wants to
shelve him, let him alone. If he
feels that de Gaulle or Giraud is the
best bet, again let him alone, I do
n.t know of any Frenchman or
American in a justified position to
Indulge in any back-seat driving,
when a man like Eisenhower is at
the wheel.
As a Frenchman for twenty-five
years in America, I limit my field of
speculation to three ideas: first, the
war has to be won, and it will be
won on the battlefields, and not by
Ideological discussions; second, my
country is enslaved. and therefore
my heart bursts with joy at any
news which means a new effort to
give France her freedom: third,
that freedom means not only the
liberation of her soil, but the libera-
tion of her soul; and I trust Amer-
ica, speaking through her President,
to help France to return to her tra-
dition of "liberty, equality, frater-
nity," the common heritage of our
two great democracies. Anything
else would not be a liberation.
I feel confident that this state-
ment reflects the views of most
French people in the United States.
ANDRE MORIZE,
Harvard University.
ECEMBER 27, 1942.
3
Power to Perpetuate Peace Is Regarded as World Goal
ov'a
geta
the
Many Problems Will Have to Be Faced, Including That of Policing by Allied Nations,
hout
Which Will Have to Be Fitted Into an Organization for General Welfare
and
neral
The writer of the following letter 4a
could
social alma for a democratic society.
forms flow the stream of competition,
a member of the Committee for Na-
But it could M properly have been made
ge in
political differences, social adjustment
tional Morole and e trustee of the
# been
before the war as during the war. Much
and progress. We progressively achieve
World Peace Foundation
di and
of it is concerned not primarily with
added sets of these forms; they become
Anglo-
To THE EDITOR OF THE New YORK Tume:
war alma growing out of this war, but
our temporarily "static" law-personal
How much or how little is involved
of general peacetime social alma, When
iquered
rights, the ballot, representation, civil
in the message "And on earth peace"?
of course he emphasized that this is &
safety, social security.
# been
In this war we have at times deserved
fight for victory between an arbitrary
In the world of nations today We are
the phrase "too little and too late." In
or slave world and & reasonable or free
merged
attempting to establish peace under law
llusion-
looking tow*rd the peace, we at pres-
world, and called for the overthrow of
between nations as we have between
id noth-
ent need the warning "too much and
conquering aggreasors, he expressed &
citizens, as a conditioning framework
d things
too soon." If ridding the world of
clear purpose inherent in this war and
for the struggle for progress. Without
As for
great military conquesta depends upon
the peace to come out of It:
It we can go little farther la the 40-
econcile
our setting up at one and the same
The British Beveridge report like-
deavor to bring about human welfare.
1th the
time the millennium in every other de-
wise is great social document. In
Many a German and some Japanese
on and
partment of life, we are doomed. to
only one or two connections perhaps
think, feel, aspire and act like the rest
bit their
periodic catastrophes
is it a/report on post-war policies as
of us. But from time immemorial, and
that
It would help us more clearly to see
such, related to the problem of war; in
especially latterly for more than one
That is
our alms so far as they affect war If
dealing with the shifts back to peace
generation, there have been nurtured
Sisters"
we could fix ta our minds the thought
employment of returned soldiers, It
certain litters of tiger cube to whom
to be
that there are two kinds of revolution-
does deal with a war-peace problem
milk is anathema and blood la pap. We
be with
ary movement going on in the world
and has direct bearing - problems
like to think that meeting them at least
today. One is a revolution against
growing out of the war.
halfway in a. spirit of friendliness will
war of conquest and subjugation; in
Ruthlessness Not Compatible
produce. a change; the thought gives
: rec-
this revolution through which civiliza-
This is to say that If we cannot first
great Internal comfort to some souls.
eport
tion is trying to enforce a law of peace-
concentrate on the control or elimina-
But It gives no solace to the hundreda
new
ful development among nations, Hitler
tion of the types of mind which thrive
of thousands of murdered and dying
i that
and Hirohito are on the throwback
on becoming ruthless conquerors, we
Poles, Jews, Greeks: and the rest of
e are
side-like their more remote ancestors
can have no peace,
those from whose blood the Nazi would
Chek-
they want no such regime.
It seems fairly generally admitted
purify the race of man while the Nazi
the
The other is a revolution which has
among the rich and the poor alike, in
himself pollutes the stream of the agea.
agni-
quilte incidental relation to the war, has
labor circles, in Congress, in India and
Too Much Loose Talk
vriter
been going on, and will continue, for a
possibly even in the minds of many
When we sublimate the lasue of con-
n. the
long time. This represents a. peace-
Italians, that an Axis victory would not
trol of conquest in a variety of fancied
la of
time social revolution which cuta across
be a good thing, that it at least would
the national boundaries of friend and
excuses and palliatives for it, we "but
the
be the greater of two possible evils. It
invite the indefinite postponement of
and
foe alika, Except in the form of con-
appears, however, to be an unlovely
the reign of peaceful order. There has
His-
tradictory promises, it has scarcely
tendency in human nature to attempt
been too much loose talk about the
spor-
touched Japan or Germany, though on
to bargain in the face of danger for
"mistakes of the last peace". with em-
Arror
its back Hitler at least is attempting
some advantage which has no relation
phasis on the wrong mistakes; the mis-
y be-
to ride to universal power.
to that danger nor to the successful
takes were that we did not take, and
Pesceful Revolutions
meeting of that danger.
as evidenced in the loose clauses. Fif-
se, a
It is in terms of the revolution
It is surprising how many unin-
teen and Sixteen of the Covenant-
the
against war of conquest that we should
formed cheerers apring up from out-
never really Intended to take conquest
his-
express our war alma and our post-
side at the sight of an India trying to
by the throat.
1.
If
was policies. On the other hand, it is
commit suicide before the Axis. by
The peace we want will deal with the
reeps
under the heading of the social and
waiting to bargain. That bargaining
militant mind of conquest as & prob-
look-
economic revolution that we should
may have something to do with the ulti-
lem. Whatever eise is attained, peace
ading
group and can best understand what
mate political development of India,
must be established. This involves
and
we more properly should call peace-
which obviously has been on the way
power among the peace-loving nations
volu-
time programs of reform. Like Hitler,
anyhow as fast as India can break with
to perpetuate peace. We have been too
reformers tend to setze the war as an
her own self-imposed historical limita-
with-
easily turned aside by talk about per-
1 go
occasion, when in truth their better
tions and tyrannies. But It has nothing
petuating the status quo, when In truth
world has been on the way, and in any
to do with the security of freedom
find
the quo has had very little status in the
event should be and would be reach-
throughout the world, which is the
gradual political flux toward free ex-
ere
alth
ing acceleration, war or no war.
present paramount stake.
latence. Almost any status would be
In any improved world that we are
It is these tendencies which have led
better than the status pro-Nazi. For a
likely to attain within a thousand years
the best of us, perhaps unwittingly, to
in
long time the peace police power will
the monater of ambition can still breed
offer bribes beyond our performance as
the
necessarily rest with the United States,
the monster of war. Unless, that is, we
the price for present help. It is not that
and
the British Commonwealth, Ruasia and
determine to do something about the
the substance of these bribes la bad.
China, Merely because It la power, it
pe-
primitive doctrine of subjugation itself,
Oa the contrary, these attainable
need not be any the less'a policing for
ave
the
and the warmed-over savage instinct,
visions are among the best hopes of
peace. And it none the less can be
which two together are the parents of
mankind, and our mutual assurances of
and
fitted Into the formation of post-war
and
deliberate wars of conquest. At pres-
cooperation and support in giving them
organization not only for peace but for
lan
ent our sights need to be narrowed to
actuality are not without value,
general welfare.
on,
enable us to hit anything At. all To
But we need to foresee that events
Underlying and giving reality to this
use & cruel figure, we are in danger of
may not quickly bring full fruition to
power for peace there must become
on
missing the white dove for trying at
all these future hopea. In some cir-
of
conscious of their duty and might the
the same time to get all the ducks.
cumstances it may be the people them-
apiritual forces of individuals in many
The tendency of the day to combine
selves who stand in their own way. Yet
nations who see in law a spiritual qual-
ot
together in one peace bundle many is-
If it should so turn out, we ought not
sty, and in the support of a law of
al
sues which are not necessarily related
therefore to lose the great present
peace a high and real call of man's na-
30
causatively is due to a variety of con-
prizes to be gained from victory in this
ture. We resist this call for a time and
by
flicta of motive and interest:
war-namely, another chance for free
then eventa overtake us and force us to
en
1. A natural desire completely to re-
institutions, and an unshakable deter-
be better than we Intended. In this
ov
design the future house now that the
mination to be ready to meet conquest
unexalted way exalted law may be
06
present one la burning.
la the future before It starts at any
born, as in this very hour it is gestal-
ly
2, A semi-conácious giving and tak-
point to endanger those Institutions.
ing la the war of the world.
è
Ing. of bribes for present help, the
IV would be Idle not to admit that
More Problems
event, should be and would be reach-
throughout the world, which La the
Hrs
gradual political flux Loward free
log acceleration, war or no war.
present paramount stake.
Mth
istence. Almost any status would be
In any Improved world that we are
It is Chese tendencies which have led
better than the status pro-Naxt. For a
likely to attain within & thousand years
the best of us, perhaps unwittingly, to
long time the peace police power will
the
the monster of ambition can still breed
offer bribes beyond our performance as
necessarily rest with the United States,
and
the monster of war. Unless, that is, we
the price for present help. It la not that
the British Commonwealth, Russia and
por
determine to do something about the
the substance of these bribes is bad.
China Merely because = la power, it
primitive doctrine of subjugation Itself,
On the contrary, these attainable
need not be any the less a policing for
the
and the warmed-over savage instinct,
visions are among the best hopes of
peace. And it none the less CAD be
and
which two together are the parents of
mankind, and our mutual assurances of
fitted Into the formation of post-war
and
deliberate ware of conquest. Al pres-
cooperation and support la giving them
organization not only for peace but for
ent our aights need to be narrowed to
actuality are not without value,
general welfare.
tan
enable us to hit anything at all. To
But we need to foresse that events
on,
Underlying and giving reality to this
was
use & cruel figure,in are in danger of
may not quickly bring full Treltion to
power for peace there must become
missing the white dove for trying at
all these future hopes, In some cir-
of
conscious of their duty and might the
the same time to get all the ducks.
cumstances it may be the people them-
spiritual forces of individuals in many
The tendency of the day to combine
selves who stand in their own way. Yet
nations who see in law a spiritual qual-
Got
together in one peace bundle many is-
If it should so turn out, we ought not
ity, and in the support of & law of
7
sues which are not necessarily related
therefore to lose the great present
peace & high and real call of man's na-
se
causatively is due to a variety of con-
prises to be gained from victory in this
ture. We reaist this call for a time and
(oy
flieta of motive and interest:
war-namely, another chance for free
then eventa overtake Us and force us to
en
1. A natural desire completely to re-
institutions, and an unshakable deter-
be better than we intended. In this
lov
design the future house now that the
mination to be ready to meet conquest
unexalted way exalted law may be
De
present one is burning.
in the future before it starts at any
born, as in this very hour #: La gestal-
2. A semi-conscious giving and tak-
point to endanger those Institutions.
ing in the war of the world.
ing of bribes for present help, in the
It would be idle not to admit that
More Problems
F
form of promises of future perfections,
any condition which falls short of af-
even though Axis victory in any event
fording to human beings as reasonable
There are other peace-from-war
a living as their own self-imposed limi-
problems. Upon them we should con-
would be fatal to all other parties in-
tations permit results in those human
centrate our thought: the feeding of
volved.
in
3. An inclination to supply large-
beings being susceptible to the wiles of
the post-war starving, the rehabilita-
hearted but erroneous economic ex-
demagogues. Any promise will seem
tion of the homeless, the repossession
cuses for the \periodic outbursts of
to hold out improvement,
of stolen goods, the resettling of popu-
lations, the treatment of those ob-
Mars
Germans Not Undernourished
seased with inhuman tendencies, the
4. Failure to see the relation be-
But who can possibly say that in
re-education of Name youth, the no-
tween, on the one hand, certain pro-
any true sense the ruddy-faced German
orientation of Japan, the problem of
gressively was "static" phases of law
of pre-1914, before he dug his own pit,
the German military mind, the control
,
as a framework for peaceful social evo-
represented an undernourished people?
of economic penetration as an instru-
lution and, on the other hand, the "dy-
Who can properly say that the post-
ment of war, the watch on new meth-
namie". processes by which modern so-
war German with most of his land in-
oda of rearmament, encouragement to
B
clety can within-and only within-
tact, who refurbished his cities and
liberal factors in backward administra-
that framework evolve certain social
factories with outside money, corrupt-
tions, the application to post-war in-
and economic adjustments.
ed his own currency, eut his actual
ternational problems of suitable ele-
An implied belief that since war
reparation payments to less than one-
ments of the United Nations machinery
usually is made to appear to have a
fifteenth of the fifty billion for re-
of war collaboration, international or-
basis la economic and social maladjust-
armament he then willingly assumed
ganization to give expression and ao-
ments and therefore appears to be for-
for another foray of world conquest,
tuality to these matters, and arms and
givable, we can erase war by being suf-
bears the alightest resemblance to a
an alliance for peace-a very special
ficiently kind and abnegating, especial-
noble but put-upon people? How can
kind of alliance Indeed.
ly to two men with small mustaches
St. be said that the economic machina-
The kind of peace we want, and the
east and west of Suez.
tions by which a coterie of German in-
kind of world we can get, are not nec-
6. An unconsclous and specious hope
dustrialista deliberately almed to fur-
essarily coextensive nor immediately
that for the moment we can escape
ther the political conquest of the world
coexistent. In both spheres we may
making a. predelermined stand about
by economic invasion of our industries,
well hasten our aspirations. But with-
the sharp international issue of aggres-
not for mutual service, but for the
out peace to the world man will loss
sion; this, until again we find that the
eabotage of our ability to hold our free-
not only the riches of his flesh but
conqueror is at the gates somebody
dom-bow can this be truthfully repre-
himself as well. With peace man can
in
else, while again we debate whether to
sented as the effort of a people so
begin the age of his greatest glory.
do anything about it until we wake up
impoverished that the only way out
LEONARD W. CRONKHITE.
one morning to find him at another
was wars of conquest?
ter
Cambridge, Mass., Dec. 22, 1942.
ris
gate namely, our own.
How long shall we be deluded by
Rd-
Better Houses
shoutings-not by Nazis alone-against
BOY ON THE PASTURE GATE
Improved houses often come out of
a now fading imperialism when their
far
fires. The closet that Mary found in-
alms are an enalavement imperialism
yin
Dream wisely, boy, of Chose strange
convenient can be made better in the
of the whole world? How much longer
years to come;
po
next new house the kitchen that
will our kindly people believe Junker
While you are counting time's slow
had
mother abhorred will be made right:
and Nazi alike, while he howls about
pendulum,
none of the inconveniences about which
the "inaccessibility of raw materials,"
Tether your dreams to earth, and turn
AS
materials which he says he la denied.
the head of the family used to complain
your eyes
when at the very same moment in or-
will occur in the next building. To hear
Away from distant and seductive sides,
der to build up for this war, he laid
the
the discussion, the neighbors almost
What city boy has ever felt the thrill
are led to conclude that it was the
about in every direction to buy, and
on,
freely did buy, years ahead of supply
Or hiding in long fields of grain, 80
as
flaws in the old house which caused
still
from all of us-Aritish, American and
of
the fire. When in truth, as events later
from others-at whose throate he
That tiny creatures anchored to
a
z
prove, ft was a plain case of arson.
blade
almed to stick the very bayonets he
a
And DO matter how splendid the new
forged from those self-same "inaccessi-
Inspect him curiously, yet unafraid?
house, If something is not done about
ble" materials? For these doings,
Store in your memory the brimming
=
arson as arson, quite likely the new
chapter and verse can be cited and
laugh
=
house will some time go the same way.
they are not to be gainsaid.
Of gladness at & wabbly new-born calf;
di
Some people, however, say: "Let us
It is an easy belief that social prog-
Cherish the fun of cupping in your
e
improve all houses, and presto! we will
ress comes primarily through the chal-
hand
E
have no more arson."
lenges of the violent. It has, of course,
A baby rabbit cradied in the land.
But the lack of improved houses had
more than once been true-before the
little to do with causing this war-
Dream wisely, boy, and build your
ballot and constitutional government
castles near
witness nearly any pre-1914 German
existed or when they were but & sham
home,
The rich, brown soil. Keep your heart
-that progress has been brought about
The statement by the Vice President
channels clear,
by violence. The centuries, however,
of what a free world involves, in con-
That Wisdom may, in 'aver-changing
are expected gradually to supplant vio-
cern for the general welfare, is an ad-
stream,
lence with pacific struggle. From era
mirable statement of the inherent
Replenish the sweet wonder of your
to era new legal shapes for the funnel
dream.
nature of freedom and of the proper
of progress are enacted. Through these
BLANCHE STEWART.
OUR LIFE 1943
EE GLASSER runs the hardware store in our town. Lee is
L
a girl - tall, competent, taciturn. I went in the other
Here's a forecast: Some of it bad, some
day looking for a cértain aluminum gadget, and Lee
shook her head.
good-but all of it based on the hard
"No more of those," she said.
I said was, too, bad,
facts of what we must do to win the war
"What's too bad about it? she snapped. have three
brothers in uniform and another going, and I guess they
need the aluminum worse than you do."
It shamed me. Somewhat lamely I parried, "But what's
by Don Eddy
going to happen to your business if you can't get things to
sell?"
She shook back her hair. "I'll get things to sell,", she said,
Some things they see ahead are not pretty. But when you
the age of 16, subject to conscription for wartime work. You
confidently. "I'll get along all right."
blow away the smoke, you begin to take heart. For these, I
could be drafted, just as men are drafted for military service.
Frank Barnes is a barber in an Ohio town. Stuck between
believe, are as true as any prophecies it is possible to make
Once you prove adept in a war job, you are apt to be
trains, I dropped in for a haircut. We got to talking about
for 1943:
"frozen" there for the duration Workers in
L'
EE GLASSER runs the hardware store in our town. Lee is
a girl - tall, competent, taciturn. I went in the other
day looking for a cértain aluminum gadget, and Lee
Here's a forecast: Some of it bad, some
shook her head.
"No more of those," she said.
good - but all of it based on the hard
I said it was too bad.
"What's too bad about it? she snapped. have three
facts of what we must do to win the war
brothers in uniform and another going, and I guess they
need the aluminum worse than you do."
It shamed me. Somewhat lamely I parried, "But what's
by Don Eddy
going to happen to your business if you can't gét things to
sell?"
She shook back her hair. "I'll get things to sell," she said,
Some things they see ahead are not pretty. But when you
the age of 16; subject to conscription for wartime work. You
confidently. "I'll get along all right."
blow away the smoke, you begin to take heart. For these, I
could be drafted, just as men are drafted for military service.
Frank Barnes is a barber in an Ohio town. Stuck between
believe, are as true as any prophecies it is possible to make
Once you prove adept in a war job, you are apt to be
trains, I dropped in for a haircut. We got to talking about
for 1943:
"frozen" there for the duration. Workers in many lines already
income taxes, and I said that a lot of us were going to have
No American is going to suffer from hunger or cold. We'll
are forbidden to change jobs without permission, and this
a tough time meeting the ante this next year.
have sufficient food, homes, heat and clothing.
practice will be widely extended. You may work more than
Frank just laughed. "It doesn't worry me," he said. "After
Americans won't go broke unless they refuse to work, and
40 hours a week before starting overtime, but probably not
all, I can only eat so much. I only need one roof, and one bed,
it may be hard to do even that. Severe adjustments are ahead
longer than 48.
and decent clothes. Beyond that, the gov'ment can take
for many small businessmen and employees of nonessential
If you don't go to work in war Industry, you may be
everything I've got, and welcome. The main thing is to
businesses, and for those who cannot adapt themselves to war
expected to help on a farm next summer. The shortage
win the war."
work. But for the physically and mentally fit, there will be
of farm labor In 1943 will be crucial. A land army will
That's America talking - America, 1943.
jobs, at good pay.
have to be recruited by some means, largely from
The main thing is to win the war. Let the ment'
No American is going to be taxed to death. Taxes will be
among city people.
take everything it needs to do the job. We'll get along all right.
higher, but they'll leave enough for necessities and a few
Women will have to come out of the kitchen. About 2,000,000
That's what they're saying in the grass roots, and it makes
luxuries.
are in war production now; at least 5,000,000 more will have
your insides tingle with pride. It's pretty fine, this tough,
If we drive carefully, and protect our tires, most of us will
to start work by the end of 1943.
hard, confident, new wartime America.
keep our automobiles and keep them running.
Shortage of workers is the most serious situation facing
The funny thing is, we will get along all right. It lsn't
We'll be able to travél for essential purposes but not for
America today. What's the answer? Find people who never
going to be so bad this next year. Sure, we'll sacrifice
pleasure. We'll have electricity, movies, radio and beer. We'll
worked with their hands before! Maybe that means you.
plenty - if you want to call it that. We'll sacrifice, and
even have gadgets. They'll be made of synthetics and non-
we'll win the war, and a few years from now we'll have
essential metals, but they'll work just as well.
YOUR INCOME. By and large, wages and salaries will be
to think hard to remember what it was we sacrificed.
No, it isn't going to be so bad. We'll get along all right.
fairly static during 1943. If there are changes they are more
I've been in Washington trying to get a picture of what
And now that we know the best general picture, let's
likely to be up than down.
1943 holds in store for you and me. It isn't easy. I talked with
examine the details. Let's see what things are in the minds of
What about the "freezing" of wages and salaries? Will that
such men as James F. Byrnes, director of Economic Stabiliza-
the men and women who are running the war - and us
stop you from getting a raise? Not necessarily. Increases in
tion; Donald M. Nelson, chief of the War Production Board:
pay will be granted to "correct maladjustments or inequalities,
Secretary of the Treasury Henry Morgenthau, Jr., Petroleum
YOUR JOB. It is entirely possible that you will have to
to eliminate substandards of living, to correct gross inequities,
Co-ordinator Harold L. Ickes; Secretary of Agriculture Claude
change your job. Thirteen and a half million more individuals
or to aid in the effective prosecution of the war.". Also, in-
R. Wickard: Leon Henderson, the boss rationeer; Paul V.
will have to be in essential war work by the end of 1943, and
creases can be granted for "Individual promotions or reclas-
McNutt, chairman of the War Manpower Commission:
you're apt to be one of them. You'll want to be, for nonessen-
sifications, individual merit, or increased productivity." That
Transportation Chief Joseph B. Eastman; Rubber Crar. Wil-
tial workers won't be popular.
seems to put it strictly up to you.
liam M. Jeffers; Brigadier General Lewis B. Hershey, director
Unless you make the change voluntarily, Uncle Sam may
of Selective Service, and others - scores of others. I talked
do it for you. A strong Washington faction has been trying
YOUR CHANCE OF BEING DRAFTED. If you are under
with hard-boiled, far-seeing Washington correspondents, with
since midsummer to get Congress to pass a National Service
45, single and sound, and have been passed over because you
anybody and everybody who could shed light on the future.
Act which would make everybody, male and female, above
hold a so-called "key" job, you'll probably be taking orders
THIS WEEK
Magasine Section
happen to you? Well, ask yourself whether your business is
Men will continue cuffless, and vests may be ruled out, but
a commodity or a luxury. If it is a luxury, lock it up for the
who cares? Gloves will be scarcer, but you can have your
duration. But if it is a commodity business, take heart. Help
coat pockets extra deep.
may be coming.
There's considerable fog about shoes. One group says they
Behind the scenes, Congress is trying to evolve a law intend-
be scarce and rationed; another group says it isn't so. My
ed to save the little businessmen in essential lines. Something
personal guess is that all shoes will be rationed before the
is reasonably sure to come of all the talk, possibly-by late
end of 1943. But before that happens, the thousands of present
spring,
styles will be drastically reduced. If rationing starts, you may
Meantime, there are other things you can do. One of
be required to turn in your worn-out shoes when buying a new
the best is to emphasize service. Things are going to
pair. Don't count on that; it's just a guess.
get broken, and they have to be fixed. Why not be the
Hats, socks, underwear, shirts, girdles, brassieres, slips -
fixer?
all the essential garments will be normally abundant and
You can look into the substitute products. For many items
reasonably priced. You may not get the precise material you
that have disappeared through priorities, duplicates are com-
want, but you'll get something that will fill the bill.
ing along in nonessential materials. Perhaps it will take dig-¹
By and large, you'll be able to dress just as modishly at the
ging to find them, persuasion to sell them. So what? You
end of 1943 as you do now, and at no material increase in cost.
didn't build that business by sucking your thumb, did you?
If you can't get clerks, start self-service. If you can't make
YOUR TRANSPORTATION. The belief everywhere in
deliveries, make jokes and let the customers carry their own.
Washington is that civilian automobiles must be kept run-
ning. We won't have gasoline for frivolity, but we'll have
YOUR TAXES. More than 7,000,000 people are going to
enough for the necessities of travel. Don't try to fool your
pay income taxes in 1943 for the first time. Those taxes will
ration board about necessity, though, because they smack
be higher than we ever paid before - but lower than people
you down!
are paying in most of our allied nations. Taxes will be higher
The first synthetic tires are coming out of the factories,
because this year we have spent the equivalent of $600 for
and they are good. The Army is taking them now, and it's
every man, woman and child in the United States - on the
very doubtful if you will be able. to buy these before the
war alone.
end of 1943. Meanwhile Grade III War Tires, made from
How much income tax will you have to pay? Here's the
reclaimed rubber, are now being produced. You can get those,
official dope. The first column represents net income before
if you can prove you need them. And they'll last you 5,000 to
personal exemption The second column is the tax for a single
10,000 miles if you hold your speed under 35 miles.
person with no dependents. The third column is the tax for a
There is no real shortage of gasoline; there is a severe
married person with no dependents. The fourth column is the
shortage of carriers to transport it. Ocean tankers used to
tax for a married person with two dependents. This will give
carry 95 per cent of it to the East: now, 70,000 tank cars are
you an ideá:
burning up the rails trying to do the job, and not quite accom-
$1,000
$ 89
$ 00
$ 00
plishing it. What's the answer? Pipe lines, of course. We're
2,000
273
140
13
building a 24-inch line from Texas to New York. When it is
3,000
472
324
191
finished next summer, the gasoline shortage will be materially
4,000
686
532
378
relieved.
SWING
These figures do not include the Victory Tax, which, starting
Meantime, treat gas with care - and don't step on it!
next Friday, will nip five-per cent off all salaries over $624.
Judges are going to throw the book at speeders in 1943.
from a top sergeant any moment now, Employers will find it
New tax legislation is sure in 1943. One faction is plugging
Rail transportation is apt to go on a priority basis by mid:
increasingly difficult to hold single men of military age, no
for a sales tax on everything you buy - and they may win.
year, maybe sooner. You will be asked why you want to travel:
matter how irreplaceable they may be.
Another faction wants a compulsory savings plan, with savings
you may have to fill out a form to buy a ticket. If your story
Childless married men are already being drafted in some
deducted from pay checks; they may win, too. And there is
tis good, you get the ticket; if it Isn't, you don't. Travel ration-
localities, and all others may expect to be examined early
strong pressure for a plan to deduct all income taxes from
Ing isn't definite, but it is in the wind.
in 1943. Those classed-as eligible will be inducted rapidly
pay checks. so that you will pay as you earn and not have à
-Large numbers of married men will be in the Army before
whopping tax bill staring you in the face the following March.
GENERAL FORECASTS. The draft of the teen-agers is
the year's end.
Don't be surprised if that goes through early in the year -
expected to revolutionize school curriculums. Educators are
The Selective Service System has laid down hard-and-fast
but not early enough to stave off the jolt March 15. Whatever
making plans to train youngsters for war and war work
rules. They call for inductions in this order: 1/ The teen
new, laws may be written, you'll have to pay the tax on 1942
New York City high schools switched over last fall, tossing
agers and all remaining single men. 2. Childless married men
earnings in the usual way during 1943.
fripperies out the window and concentrating on mathematics
not working in one of the 34 essential industries. 3. Childless
and manual arts. Schools elsewhere will follow suit. Many
married men working in one of the essential industries, but
YOUR FOOD: You'll have all you need - though it may
email colleges will close for the duration at the end of this
who are not completely irreplaceable. 4. Married men with
not be the kind you' been used to. For the whole dope, sce
semester; larger colleges and fancy-name preparatory schools
dependent children.
Clementine Paddleford's article, "What You'll Eat Next
will either cut out vacations and cram their courses into three
The first group will be exhausted by the middle of this
Year," in this same issue.
years, or become military-training schools exclusively.
$1,000
$ 89
$ 00
$ 00
plishing it. What's the answer? Pipé lines, of course. We're
2,000
273
140
13
building a 24-inch line from Texas to New York. When it is
3,000
472
324
191
finished next summer, the gasoline shortage will be materially
4,000
686
532
378
relieved.
These figures do not include the Victory Tax, which, starting
Meantime, treat gas with care and don't step on it!
next Friday, will nip five per cent off all salaries over $624.
Judges are going to throw the book at speeders in 1943.
from a top sergeant any moment now. Employers will find it
New tax legislation is sure in 1943. One faction is plugging
Rail transportation is apt to go on a priority basis by mid³
increasingly difficult to hold single men of military age, no
for a sales tax on everything you buy - and they may win.
year, maybe sooner. You will be asked why you want to travel;
matter how irreplaceable they may be.
Another faction wants a compulsory savings plan, with savings
you may have to fill out a form to buy a ticket. If your story
Childless married men are already being drafted in some
deducted from pay checks; they may win, too. And there is
bis good, you get the ticket; if it isn't, you don't. Travel ration-
localities, and all others may expect to be examined early
strong pressure for a plan to deduct all income taxes from
ing isn't definite, but it is in the wind.
in 1943. Those classed as eligible will be inducted rapidly
pay checks, so that you will pay as you earn and not have a
Large numbers of married men will be in the Army before
whopping tax bill staring you in the face the following March
GENERAL FORECASTS. The draft of the teen-agers is
the year's end.
Don't be surprised if that goes through early in the year -
expected to revolutionize school curriculums. Educators are
The Selective Service System has laid down hard-and-fast
but not early enough to stave off the jolt March 15. Whatever
making plans to train youngsters for war and war work
rules. They call for inductions in this order: 1. The teen-
new laws may be written, you'll have to pay the tax on 1942
New York City high schools switched over last fall, tossing
agers and all remaining single men. 2. Childless married men
earnings in the usual way during 1943.
fripperies out the window and concentrating on mathematics'
not working in one of the 34 essential industries. 3. Childless
and manual arts. Schools elsewhere will follow suit. Many
married men working in one of the essential industries, but
YOUR FOODS You'll have all you need - though it may
small colleges will close for the duration at the end of this
who are not completely irreplaceable. 4. Married men with
not be the kind you've been used to. For the whole dope, see
semester; larger colleges and fancy-name preparatory schools
dependent children.
Clementine Paddleford's article, "What You'll Eat Next
will either cut out vacations and cram their courses into three
The first group will be exhausted by the middle of this
Year," in this same issue.
years, or become military-training schools exclusively.
winter, at which time induction of the second group will begin.
Rugs will get scarcer. So will draperies, all-woolen
The third' group will be called by midsummer. Nobody in
YOUR CLOTHES. Early in the war it looked like we would
blankets, bed and table linen. New furniture, too, and
Washington, so far, expects that the fourth group will be called.
have a shortage of wool, but that was before we started
candy and cosmetics. You may not get fancy cooking
sending mammoth convoys to Australia. Now those ships go
ranges and heating stoves, but "Victory" models will
YOUR BUSINESS. You've worked hard all your life to build
down loaded with munitions and come home loaded with
be plentiful.
up a little one-horse business, and now you see it shaking like
wool. We'll have enough for everybody.
Mechanical refrigerators will go the way of typewriters,
a hula dancer. You can't get your regular merchandise. Your
True, our stocks of, cloth will have to be used wisely. Women
but the iceman will be working overtime. Production of
help is leaving. You can't make deliveries. What's going to
will find fewer styles in ready-made coats, suits and dresses.
300,000 iceboxes has been okayed. Banned for the duration
are washing machines and ironers, electrical appliances,
ranges and fans, golf clubs and balls, lawn mowers, metal
HOW THE WAR CHANGES OUR WAY OF LIFE
household furniture, musical instruments, outboard motors,
radios, toys, vacuum cleaners and juke boxes.
There will be more babies but fewer baby buggies. Also
250
250
253
fewer bicycles, coal stokers, hot-water heaters, hairpins and
bobbie pins, electric-light bulbs, jewelry, kitchen and house-
200
200
hold utensils, razors, blades, sewing machines and a number
of other items.
162
The present price-control system, with ceiling prices based
150
143
150
on March, 1942, is likely to be junked before midyear, to be
replaced with a specific dollar-and-cent ceiling for each item.
Government inspectors will be numerous, and any dealer who
100
100
100
100
100
100
100
93
100
tries to chisel will find himself behind the eight-ball. Moral:
78
Whether you're buying or selling, don't cheat.
M
II
50
50
That's the picture of what life is going to be like for all of
25
us next year. We're going to have to make sacrifices - sure.
But they're for the best cause in the world - and worth
o
0
making
1940 1943
1940 1943
1940
1943
1940
1943
1940
1943
1940 1943
As Lse Glasser told me in her hardware store, "We'll get
EMPLOYMENT
NATIONAL
FOOD PRODUCTS
CLOTHING
AUTOS, REFRIGERATORS
TAXES
along all right!"
INCOME
FOR CIVILIANS
FOR CIVILIANS
ETC., FOR CIVILIANS
PICTOGRAPH CORPORATION
The End
December 27, 1942
THIS
Magasine Section
5
Relations
belongs_to