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Show 1 DODO OPA- Prosecutor, Judge ahd Jiicy v Charges that OPA Is attempting WiUUdbd IlitUVlt V . emergency price control act bycon Egress to protect citizens against bu-reaucratic bu-reaucratic domination have been lend before the United, States Supreme Su-preme Court in an appeal by Safeway Safe-way Stores, v Inc. ' The appeal for relief is based upon the ; grocery concern's .charge that, the price ddminisircrtor's actions in ignoring legally presented protest to certain oppressive regulations "were arbitrary and capricious" and constitute g denial of the relief provided pro-vided by Congress In the price control con-trol law. Cause of this newest attack agednst OPA's arbitrary administration admin-istration of the price control act was . Serf eway's original protests filed .last summeragainst sections of certain cer-tain regulations governing food distribution. dis-tribution. The food company claimed claim-ed that the regulations were discriminatory, dis-criminatory, unworkable and not in conformity with the intent q Congress Con-gress to protect historical business practices. The protests were filed within the sixty day period required by law. Thirty days were allowed OPA to deny or allow the protests. No action was taken by the price ad-ministrcrtion ad-ministrcrtion office. The food company com-pany then filed appeal to the Emerg-, ency Court of Appeal a relief also provided by the Congressional law of January, 1942. -; Basis for the present controversy o o I A wnicn is resulting in me appeal xo the highest court in the country was OPA's contention that their not having hav-ing made any decision, there was nothing for the food company to appeal. ap-peal. The Emergency Court of Appeal Ap-peal concurred in this motion and referred the complaining company, back to OPA: v-.. ;The situation was termed, "ridiculous "ridicu-lous and an attempt by tjie Pfice Administrator Ad-ministrator to set crsilthe 'precise requirements of the 'Price Control Act' by attorneys for Safeway.. "This means that OPA by simply sitting with folded hands can continue to claim that the Emergency Court of Appeals has no jurisdiction because OPA has neither denied or affirmed a legal protest of responsible business busi-ness concerns." Safeway's appeals from certain phases of OPA regulations have been watched with interest by many , business concerns. The arbitrary attitude at-titude assumed by OPA which places their lack of decision as superior su-perior to the intent of Congress has f i r..xu.. J l in Congress to curb administrative assumption of power by the pricina bureau. Co-Belligerent Prisoners The situation of Italian prisoners in the United States has remained unchanged since Italy's surrender and subsequent elevation to the status .of co-belligerent. Ttyis situation, situa-tion, though anomalous and perhaps per-haps embarrassing, is understandable understand-able in the light of more urgent problems confronting the Army. Yet it seems that, knowing the temper and sympathy of most of these prisoners, pris-oners, they might be given a greater opportunity than they now have to do their part as co-jbelligerents by helping to relieve our manpower shortage. A representative of the Bowling Proprietor'- Association recently went to Washington to ask that war prisoners be allowed to work in bowling alleys as pin setters. It seems a perfectly reasonable request. re-quest. And there must be other jobs that they could do without submitting submit-ting Americans - to any danger. Obviously Ob-viously this body of prisoners represents repre-sents a variety of skills. The barrier of language should not ikeep these en from doina d satisfactory iob in rtnvkinds of manual .work for mple, v the less technical tasks connected , with' farming, lumbering "and constniction, as well as other 'work which is not strictly "essential" but whici needs domg, neverthe- less. PRO V0r UTAH Desk Ghat Under th head "THE NAZIS HAVE 30 WORDS FOR IT tout No Hatter How Thin You Slice It They All Mean the Boys Are . Tak ing it - on the Lam," Yank, the army weekly says: 0 , ; Like the woman Dorothy Park er used to tell about who spoke 13 languages and; couldn't say "No' in any of hem, the Germans nave at' least30 ways of announcing that their army has ad its brains knocked but again without resort ing to tne use of such , horrid words as "defeat" or "surrender." Anyway,' the script. writers In the Goebbels of ftce had turned out Number 30, according to a con' servative count by the Office of war ' information scorekeepers, Just before, we went to-press.. This latest little gem of careful under statement referred to the nlnninr back of the German ears at Smolensk Smo-lensk by the Russians. It described the lost town as "evacuated . . without Interference by the enemy. . ' Of course the boys who .retread verbs and adjectives for the Nazi communiques have been working overtime since then to keep up, or rather to keep back, with their re treating generals, so the total will be much higher by the time you reaa uus. some of the German methods of avoiding the simple word "retreat" are really ingenious. For instance. unjb, we omciai Hitler news agency, reported the . flight from joryansK oy aectanng: Tne bulk of German troons reacnea a new line wiwout tight- "ar- Accordlng to the Germans. Bl- serte was ,"given up after the de struction of military installations"! ana "our troops fighting in Tunis occupied positions southwest of the city according to ' orders." Then in Sicily, the important stronghold of Catania was not given up but "evacuated without the enemy's following on bur neeis." Explaining the loss or Calabria and Apulia, they bit their ink-stained ink-stained finger nails for a. long while and came up with a honey: "Our weak covering forces succeeded suc-ceeded in breaking away from the enemy without interference." Other versions of the same Idea are: "We succeeded in shortening the front." . "Our troops completed a retro- cessive maneuver." ... "The enemy follows our move ments hesitatingly." "our troops withdrew to new positions outside the city according accord-ing to plan." -our rear guards are advancing in mooiie defense. "Our forces succeeded in detach tag themselves from the enemy." xne iavome way or pnrasing a retreat tor nome consumption in tne tteicn .is mat old chestnut, "according to plan What plan dya mean, bud? The ''orris Plan? IMMOBILITY I saw a sculptor Working on a Block of stone. Slowly. Blow by blow, The stone became A statue Of a man. Day by day, I paused To watch . The Sculptor's ..Progress . . . Day by day, I saw the Statue take form. At last, It was finished-Complete finished-Complete A work of art That seemed Almost a living, Breathing, Thing. Then, as I Stood before it, Noting its Immobile power, And yes, Character, I looked at The eyes and Thought: "What lesson Would you, teach me. Oh, Statue? What meaning Of life Would you impart f Then, slowly. As if the Statue spoke, Came the thought . . . 'Nothing to Life Is important enough To upset one's poise And purpose . . . Nothing is ever Accomplished By hasty action Tranquility and Fixed determination Is the greatest Lesson I 'can teach you. Somehow, This man of stone, ? . Has made an impression On my mind,. That IH never forget; For here, in symbol. Is immunity to Death And Faith, and Courage As well as . Understanding. 4 - - ''ljJ ri TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 16, J943 V 4 VWhat Time Is It,- Adolf ?" -rr: '.xriXLvs.- f - - Jsj&P' - r-Jr-f' J.- '( I I - ii" ;J7 -it ' rA-'7" r . x r i it "As 0tt REAL. PERSON BY DR. HARRY EMERQN FOSDICK Overcoming Bad Luck a Powerful . Factor in Building Personality We are not responsible for our heredity: much' of our environ ment we cannot' control: but it it is true that a third factor enters into the building of personality tne power to face Ufe with an in dividual rejoinder then we are responsible for that. When such acceptance involves self-condemn ation, an . alibi almost inevitably rushes to the rescue. A college president says that after long dealing with students, he is unsure un-sure whether the degree B. A. stands for Bachelor of Arts or for Building of Alibis. On the lowest level this desire to escape blame expresses itself in- emphasis upon luck. Fortunate people "get the breaks," men say; personal failure Is due not so much tQVtnjyBtakerias.tomischsM That luck represents a real factor in human experience Is evident, and he who does not expect ill-fortune as one of the ingredients of life is trying to live in fairyland, but nothing -finer has appeared on earth than unlucky people who are real persons. Biosraonv is Dacked with illus trations of this fact. Glenn Cunningham, Cun-ningham, who has run the fastest mile on record, in four minutes, four and four-tenths seconds, was crippled in boyhood in a school-house school-house fire. The doctors said he would never walk again. Then they said that only a miracle could enable him to walk. He was out of luck. He began walking by following a plow across the fields, leaning on it for support; and then went on to tireless experimenta- .- tion to see what he could do with his legs, until he. broke all records for his race, unlucky people who face mischance with a redeeming personal response make a stimulating stimu-lating company. In our day one of the most disturbed, dis-turbed, difficult, and fateful eras in human history the massed weight of popular emphasis is nat urally given to tne environmental conditions that potently affect man's fortunes and that in particular par-ticular excuses his failures So in sistently are these dwelt upon that many , come to think of themselves as their helpless victims. It is significant that our modern novels: commonly picture men and women as the prey of fate. Human! being trapped by life, fighting a hopeless battle against the conspiracy con-spiracy of tragic mischances, and finally crushed and mangled how many novels 'are shaped to that outline! As one literary critic sums it up. the common theme of a whole school of writers is "the individual in-dividual defeated by the world. and made a sardonic Jest of." So one character exclaims, "Tricked by Gad, that's what I was tricked by life and made a fool of." There is a serious need that we restore; to its proportionate importance im-portance our power of personal response. Its universal presence is indicated by the universality of self-blame. A mechanical automaton auto-maton lacks any basis for self-condemnation. self-condemnation. It is not responsible respon-sible for anything it is pr does. All human beings, however, con front the problem of self-accusa tion conscience. But if self-blame has validity, it can only be because be-cause man possesses the power to face life with a personal re joinder for which he is respon sible. At any rate, bad luck is a poor alibi if only because good luck by Itself never yet guaranteed real personality. Prof. Henry N. Wie-man Wie-man says that a college roommate of his desire to improve his in tellectual life. "He produced a large comfortable chair that was thought to be good for study. He got study slippers and a lounging jacket. A book rest was fastened to the arm of the chair to hold the book at the right angle before his eyes. A special lamp was in stalled and eyeshade, pencils. paper, and revolving bookcase. He would com into the room after the evening meal take off his coat ana put on tne jacxet, taxe ou nis shoes and sup into tne suppers, adjust the study lamp, put his book on the book rest, recline in the comfortable chair with his e"ye- snade over his eyes, and, when everything was perfectly adjusted, ne would go to sleep. Life is like that It is not so simple that good fortune suffices for it. seeing that sleeping youth in his comfortable study chair.! one remembers that Pilgrimli Progress came from a prison, as did Don ?uixote, Tand sir Walter Raleigh's History of the World, and some of the best of O. Henry's stories. They were written by un luegky people who were, never theless, real persons. TOMORROW: Many become fatalistic to avoid responsibility, - 0 Jfte By FAITH BALDWIN COPYtiCMT. 143, NCA SKRVIC. INC. Sure the United States is a representative rep-resentative government . . . but it all depends on your definition of "representative. The Marine was slowly driving along a lonely road and as he cuddled his "companion closer to him, he said: "You look lovelier to me every minute. Do you know what that's a sign of?" She: "Sure, "you are about ' to run out of gas." j THE STOUT t Wkea Jim Tim, becomes Doctor Haifa amlat-mmt, amlat-mmt, he Jolaa ke Hall household. Kaoey Hall. apoUed and bored, M flattered hy hla attentions hat cannot fora-et Drew Warner. Mrs Hall woald like Nanejr to oaeosr KO wealthy Frank Kdfl-ak. Kdarar, twvrWt seenta more iatereated In the other aaa;hter. Kartly. m Vlaltlnar Nnrae latent on' her Job. Emily foes oat on a enae with Jim. o THE PARTY WAS DULL CHAFTFR XII ; TVANCY was out when they ' reached home. ? Jim and Emily ate in the kitchen, kitch-en, over Ellen's protest. Cold roast beef, a salad, biscuits and preserves, pre-serves, custard, iced tea.. "Them biscuits was fresh baked," said SJlen with menace, "Now they're stone coldf ."Heat 'em up," said ' iJmily cheerfully. "I'm so hungry I could eat bricks. II don't know why, I had an elegant lunch at the Lobster Lob-ster Pot." I ;WhVs that?" asked Jim. 0iv well have to lake you there some time," she 4 said, "I forgot : you didn't know1. ' I ran into Frank and he insistedU-it was lunch time, and I was weak, and went"; "V - I . .i Jim grinned at her over a large forkful. ' ' ' i "Frankr he said. "Cutting Nancy out, are you?" : i "Don't be silly." But to her annoyance, she felt the color ris jag. . He was Instantly very jcheerfuL He ragged Ellen, untied her apron strings, demanded moreftea and another custard. "What in the world demanded Mfllicent, entering the, kitchen, "is this all about?" - Irank Edgar," said Jinr solemnly. sol-emnly. "He's paying court to our Emily ., Tant be ridiculous," said Em-fly Em-fly shortly. Jf "He took her to lunch,? explained ex-plained Jim, pd she's going to W52 the Club with him tomorrow night. A little bird told me that." "Well," said Millicent, preparing prepar-ing to go upstairs, "why shouldn't she, they're old friends," She tapped Emily's cheek lightly and went on her way. Jim stared after her blankly. He said, so-beriy, so-beriy, "I put my foot in it Why? She didnt ike that, did she? The doorbell rang. "Patient," he groaned, and rose. He looked down at Emily, drinking drink-ing the last of her tea. He said, "This has been fun, hasn't it?? But Somehow the fun was gone as bef walked back toward the office and the patient, j . his office hours were over and ne naa been . up stairs . to see David Hall, he yawned, stretched, felt suddenly tired. It would be pleasant to return re-turn to the apartment, turn on his radio, read a little while before be-fore turning it Perhaps there wouldn't be any calls. Then he remembered that he had promised Hilda OCarsten he would run out to the! hospital and see her before be-fore be went to bed. He looked at htefwatch. It was not tod late. There! hat been only. three patients pa-tients :thls evening. He'd go, he'd given liis'ford.'it wouldn't be out of order, he would not disturb the waHLf.';;:.?.! ' "'".. Emily was sitting on the front steps as h came out He said, pausing beside her, ' . "You ought to be in bed." ?It'a early. I have my half day off tomorrow," she said. "I'm going to see. Hilda Kar-sten. Kar-sten. ; Want to ride along?" he inquired, i "Of; course.' She jumped up and went outto the car with him. She said, they drove toward the hospital. "It's such a marvelous mar-velous night I was hoping you'd ask me." S After a silence, he asked cautiously, cau-tiously, ! LIQUOR SHORTAGE PROBE AUTHORIZED WASHINGTON, Nov. 16 EE The Senate Judiciary committer today voted unanimously in favor of a liquor shortage Investigation which Chairman Frederick Van Nuys, D., Ind., promised would bring "startling developments." : "Where'd Nancy go?" "Oh, out with her gang," Emily replied vaguely. "It seems to me that I heard something about a beach picnic." , He asked abruptly, "Why don't you ever go along?" "Are you being sorry for me?" she said, quickly, "you needn't be. I don't want to, really. Nancy always asks me, but well, I don't find it as amusfcig as I used to not that I don't go now and then. But I can't racket around all night and feel like work the next morn-ing." morn-ing." His call at the hospital was brief, he came smOlng to the car where Emily , waited. "Everything all right," he announced. an-nounced. WHEN they drove in Nancy " was sitting on, the steps waiting wait-ing for them, She said, as thy ctone from the garage together, "Where in time have you been?" Jim explained, and Nancy com "Doesn't sound, like much fun. Might much better have been on the picnic with US." Shelooked up at Emily who had paused on the steps beside her. "Irank told me. ho look you to, lunch," she aid. , - . "So he did, , and very good one, too," EnUiy assured ner "Unlike you, isnt it?" asked Nancy, carelessly, "mixing business busi-ness with pleasure?" Sherose before Emily could answer, ,,, yawned,; stretched her arms above her head. ."It's a marvelous mar-velous night," she said. "Jim, why can't you take us f or drive?" ."Sorry,", he said, 'there may be some calls and even doctors have to be careful of gasJV v ? "I'm off: to bed." Emily told them, "good night yon. two." She went on in the house and upstairs to see her father. But the light from the living room had given her clear view of Nancy's pretty Food Policy Of, Jones Outlined By PETER EDSON . Daily Herald -Washington Correspondent; Through the President's food message to Congress, and through various statements in appearances before Congress, the 194 program of War Food Administrator Marvin Mar-vin Jones is beginning to appear. judge Jones : nimseu;. naa maae public no complete report on the plans he has been making aincs his appointment last June, but un officially and in broad outline his poucy may.be said to shape up omewnat wee uus ; Firstestablish definitely, and men let tne fanners know wen in advance of their planting seasons, lust what both the floor prices and the ceiling prices will be on all the agricultural products needed in the war effort. Second let them know what Quantities of each of the farm pro ducts wiu De neeaea. Third! then see that the farm' era will have enough fertiliser, farm machinery and labor to han dle those crops. Judge Jones, as an ex-congress man himself, is considered one of the best operators the Department of Agriculture set-up has ever had in dealing with Congress. Price and Quantities - The major part of his attention has been given to the first part 01 nu program acwernniung uib quantities needed . and the floor, support prices tliat will be guar anteed to farmers next year. The labor, f ertoizar and machinery re quirements have not been neglect ed, but have in the main been handled by deputy administrators in tne wa. Acreages to be planted in the various crops next year have in the mam been agreed on. The last of the "teams" of agricultural experts who went out to the states to collect data on what could be grown next year, returned to Washington about the first of November, No-vember, and by Nov. 15 the totals should be ready for presentation to congressional committees.. B. Hutson, president of the Commodity Com-modity Credit Corporation, whose subsidizing future hangs in the congressional balance, may make the presentations to Congress in his dual role of director of the Food Production Administration, in order to give Congress wtl mates of what win be needed by CCC to establish and maintain the support prices needed to get the production. Judge Jones himself has .made the estimate that his program would require 500 million for subsidies in the next 18 months, on top of - the subsidy appropria tions already made by congress and the . money that will be re ceived from the sale of crops al ready purchased and held by the government i The 1943 subsidies are costing some SSOO million. Cross Purposes- While the War Food Administration Adminis-tration is working to have Its, program pro-gram accepted by Congress, WFA itself is being, worked on three ways by Congress, by the farm organisations . and by industrial labor pressure groups all at somewhat cross purposes and for different motives. Sen. Harry F. Byrd has openly attacked the whole subsidy idea aa "bypassing" Congress. Sen Carl Hatch, apparently believing it will be Impossible to get approval ap-proval for further subsidies, has had a group of congressmen meet with Judge Jones in an effort to find other means of meeting the same end, which is to keep con trol over tne cost of living. This ultimate objective is as much part of the Jones program as are his proposals to accomplish it The farm organization leaders keep up their needling of the War Food Administration, but largely on current problems. They op posed the recently . estaousneo ceiling on soft wheat They are against establishing ceilings on citrus fruits, now under considers' tion. They are particularly op posed to any price rouoacks. Labor groups, on the other hand, keep up their pressure campaign for rollbacks on the cost of living. It is against all these confused and conflicting forces that the War Food Administrator must work for the acceptance of. his program which since the 10,000-word 10,000-word food message to Congress has now become the Presidents oroaram. Maybe Judge Jones can put it over. not, waicn- xor-a lot of midnight oil burning around WFA. TIE WAfSmiGTOHC 11-1911 A Daily Picture of What's Going on In National Affairs Q's and A's Q What size bomb is best suit' ed to the skip-bombing technique? At About '750 pounds. Those weighing 2000 . pounds are too heavy; bombs lighter than 600 pounds bounce. - Q From how great a height can tire tracks in the earth be photographed.! A The mints have been re corded from an altitude of 30,000 feet Q What fruit spreads can .be purchased without . surrender of ration points? -A Citrus marmalades, such as orange and y grapefruit manna' ladeav. ' .r... "' v Q Who Is the youngest T&..8.I major general 7 , - A. Mai. Gen. Alfred L 3ruen- turned to Jim. Hcp lightvoice , Clark, H. 1. 44. y iSfS1, SwoA Q-How many years of service MVI?ij2E JStlL?! came NavyaxS represented by a : '-p" Prty was dull, so I camejhwh fcgoak .tripe) on a ( .IWMVBBHBBWy ; l FOWV -!- Draw roarm (Major Sooort a. ansa on WASHINGTON There may be a lot more than meets the eye behind the $30,000 fee paid to Frank J. Comfort, exDemocra(io National Na-tional Ccmmittee man from Iowa and close political .associate of ex-Senator. Clyde Herring, . in return tvs getting tax legislation introduced which benefited the airplane manufacturing companies. The big unanswered question is: XXd Comfort pass part of the money on to someone else ? .. It ha been ascertained that Comfort cashed cash-ed a check for $10,000 shortly after he received ' his first payment from the airplane companies. He rot this $10,000, In cash. What , did he. do with it?1 When asked about it he said "he didn't remember. .... Then, after a second Installment was paid by the airplane companies, Comfort and his brother drew out $11,400, also, in cash. Again, they don't remember what happened to this money. Here is the story of this unusual transaction: transac-tion: The Brewster .Aeronautical Corporation, now ' being investigated by the hard-hitting House Naval Affairs Committee, discovered that the tax bill of 1940 would not permit advance ad-vance payments by foreign governments' to be . classified as borrowed invested capital. This made a difference ofthousanda, perhaps millions ' in taxes to certain airplane companies. Hence, Brewster lobbyists attempted to get .Senator Wagner of New York to introduce an amendment amend-ment favoring their tax situation. He would have none of it Then they tried Senator Herring of Iowa. He also refused. Then the airplane lobbyists -" eontnfited Hcrrinei'a loae . f ridnd and nolitlcal mentor, Frank Comfort, in Des Moines. He came to Washington, registered at the. My- sr hotel, where Herring lived, and shortly thereafter there-after Herring Introduced, the proposed tax amendment It became law and saved the airplane air-plane companies a .tremendous tax bill. WHERE DID THE MONET GO ? Meanwhile, Brewster, Lockheed, Consolidated Consoli-dated and Curtlss-Wright had raised a pool of $65,000 to. pay for lobbying for this amendment - Of this, $30,000 went to dComfort. He received his first $15,000 to mid-October, 19u. .On Oct 27, 1940, 'approximately one week later, Comfort drew a check for $10,000 on the lowa-Dtes- Moines National Bank and Trust Company, . payable to himself, and cashed the check. - j Bo far as can be ascertained, he did not deposit de-posit in any savings account Examination of hla checking account shows that checks of this size were distinctly unusual. Yet when questioned. ques-tioned. Comfort was not able to remember what he did with the cash. In December, 1940, Comfort received a second sec-ond $15,000 from the airplane companies, and on Dec 38, he signed a check to himself for $3,900 and a check to his brother, George P. Comfort, for $7,500. Both checks were cashed the same day, and examination of both Comfort's and his brother's personal accounts show that no deposits even .remotely approximating the size of these sums were made during an extended extend-ed period thereafter. Again Comfort was unable to remember what he or his brother had done with the money. Big question in Washington is: Who got the money? N , Note: In August 1942, President Roosevelt asked for an investigation of the whole matter, including other Brewster irregularities. Fifteen months have now passed with no resulting action. BULLITT REBUFFED BY FDR Several weeks before the recent Philadelphia Philadel-phia election, ex-Ambassador Bui Bullett eame down to see his old friend the president to pave the way for a place for himself in the Roosevelt Administration in case of defeat Ap-. Ap-. parently he had a premolnition that his race to twain, Mivn rf miHariolnlito .o ornt-n tr n 11 Bullitt has known the president for many years, 'has received numerous high honors from him as Ambassador to Russia and Ambassador to France. But in recent months that friendship has dulled, due to. the campaign Bullitt . waged - against . ex-Undersecretary of State Sumner . Welles. Bullitt has been suspected of seeking Welles' job, and eventually stepping up into Hull's shoes as Secretary of State. The story is that when Bullitt sounded out the president about coming back to Washington, FDR is said to have replied in words to this effect: "If I were the angel Gabriel and you and Sumner Welles should come before me seeking admission into the rates of Heaven, do von know what I'd nt X nmnM 'BUI Bullitt you have defamed the name of a man who toiled for his fellow-men, and you can go to Hell.' And that's whatr I tell you to do now.7' TWO BINDS OF REPUBLICANS A group of automobile industry spokesmen was given a telling insight into the mental makeup make-up of two types of Republicans during a dinner the ether night aV the WUlard Hotel. .? Two speakers were Senator Arthur' Van-denberg Van-denberg of Michigan and Senator Harold H. Burton of Ohio, both RepubUcans. Vandenberg spoke first deUvering a fiery tirade against "government control" of business. busi-ness. After the. war, he; said, it would be a different story. Peacetime conversion of industry in-dustry would be in the hands of a "dynamic group", of business leaden who wouldn't stand for any meddling by rbureaucrats. We must look to the captains of industry if we are to prevent another depression, Vandenberg thundered. When it came Burton's turn to speak, , the Ohioan delivered no oration. He was short and to the TJOint. Snrfnm aafri rltar Tio mnM n aIr the automobile leaders a! few questions about their post-war plana. One question was,- . "What haVe you gentlement done about con" ' . suiting organized labor about post-war industrial problems? That to me, is a very important ' question, for youj must realize that you must cooperate with labor if you expect labor to co-operate withyou." (Copyright, 1943, by 7 United Feature Syndicate, Inc.) - . If you attempt to win . the war first and the beace -afterward, you will win neither Archibald MacLelsh, librarian of Congress. - He who holds Rome holds the heart of the Italian people. British Ge. Sir Harold R. U G. Alexander. -, - V i - " - - - "--. xl ' '; . ' . " - I .f ' I do not quarrel with the few who felt it good sport to throw rocks sand make faces at the OPA because they thought it "was fashionable,;. It's a good oWAmerican custom to want to kill the ' umpire CPA - : Administrator ' Chester Bowies. |