Newspapers / Beasley’s Farm and Home … / April 26, 1945, edition 1 / Page 2
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sre Two 1 Beaslev's Farm and Home Weekly. Charlotte, N. C, April 26, 1945. Page Two a' 4 V c i BSASLETS -FARM tad HOME WEEKLY Published each Thurtdaj in Ow lottt kj The Weekly Publishing Companr, $- T. Beaaley, President. Entered In the post office as mail f the second cUst, on Oct. S, 1928. Offloe 819 Lew Buildir EaTt Trade Street. Prone 6204 Subscription. Prioe, (1.00 pr year. The Weekly foea wo press on Than day and la .delirered in the Charlotte poet office Thursday ai Unoon. Adrtitieements t be in serted ia ewrettt Issue should be received not later than Wednesday Devoted t tie upbuilding of the farm and kernes oi Mecklenburg and contiguous counties, of which Charlotte ia the natural center. It believes this is to be accomplished through the ancient American vir tue of honesty, thrift, imagination, and independence, and by growing euWi, bogs, poultry and the feed stuffs te be marketed throug them. THE VACANT QHAIR AT SAN FRANCISCO STARTS ON PAGE ONE He labored to create the spirit of absolute confidence and res pect and desire for a world sys tem of security among the great nations upon which success de pends, ffis spirit may hover over the San Francisco confer ence but his practiced hand will not be there to guide and un tangle. "The San Francisco Confer ence," Says Anne O'Hara Mc cormick, "is the unfinished bus iness of the Roosevelt Adminrs tratien. It is also the unfinish ed business of the life of Frank lin Roosevelt. It was clear in that ' final interview that this was the thing he was straining his strength to accomplish. It was the objective of the hard, perhaps fatal, trip to Yalta. As his first term was devoted to the battle for recovery and reform on the home fcpnt, the second to charting and directing the sin T nous and difficult passage from -peace to war, the third to the prosecution! j&a. two-f ront bat- tie against the most powerful military conspiracy in history, 1 , ft j the fourth Was to nave been a ,' . peace. 1941 oh, when the President re fused to think of anything but winning the war. At the begin ning of his third administration long before we were attacked he told this reporter that he had no thoughts beyond the im mediate present and the instant problem. 1 can't see more than six inches .beyond my nose,' he ' said. But at the end he was back where !his imagination dwelt in the early years of hi: Presidency, looking beyond t he present scene of destruct ion and ehaos to the fnture, sepinrr himself as chief architect of a , new structure rising out of the wreckage. "He talked like a man in a surmise that he had a prenomi tion that his time was short. But he gave no such impression at the time. On the contrary, "though he appeared shockingly gray-faced, gaunt and tired to a visitor who had not seen him for many months, he seemed ex hausted rather than sick, and no doubt he counted on a few weeks' ret at Warm Springs to restore the resilient energy that had never failed to respond to the monstrous demands he made upon it in recent years. Although he was grave, subdued by a weight of responsibility he car ried lightly in former years, the old flashes of gaiety colored his talk, and his manner was as cheerful and assured as ever. "Certainly he gave no sign of worry over hw health. He fully intended to go to San Francisco for the opening of the- confer ence. He referred several times to the speech he was going to deliver on the occasion, and said he thought of keying it to the struggle for the American Un ien, not only because of the ap plication to the present under taking but -because it would di rect the attention of the assem bled delgates to a chapter of history most of them knew noth ing about. "The reaaon he was in a hurry was that he believed the time was sort for translating the Dumbarton Oaks proposals into reslitv.- He admitted that the - ' otfiet two great sponsoring pow-.i rs did not feel the same sense 5 of urgency. ' . ;A "Asked if the enterprlae might .- not get on to a joetwr start u ' r'more time had been allowed jfot- ; preparation, for ironing eut flit- f erences, he answered thatjhere . rrettttd - that the" conference ' could not - have 'beeaheld'in March, as he wished, beau. e a shorter interval betweeri Yalta and San Francisco might have prevented many misunderstand ings. Dalay, he added, was the dangerous element in enterpri ses that were launched at the mOm'ent of high utile, in the af fairs (if men or were n'! launch- eu ai an. l am not ami i i i Do ing too early for the reiiriezcus,' he smile ! I am afaid that the appointed moment will roll by and we shall he too late. "There were two mam feasors for the President's urgency. The first was the necessity t.) insure the supiiri of the Soviet Union for the world organization. The attack by Germany drew Rus sia into the military coalition, and ever sine; American entry into the war the Administration has made a consistent effort to overcome the Soviet govern ment's deep-seated suspicions and draw it into full political partnership. "This explains Mr. Roosevelt's persistent efforts to get into personal touch with Stalin. To this end he was ready to make all the advances, to ignore re buffs, to take long journeys, to offer concessions and accept compromises, tie acknowledg ed that he did not like those compromises, but he weighed them against the alternative. Since without Russian coopera tion there could be no interna tional security, he argued, every lesser consideration had to be subordinated to that essential aim. "Until the President died Stalin manifested a half-hearted interest in San Francisco. He was in no hurry to invite the lesser powers into council and acceded to a conference at this time mostly out of deference to Roosevelt's wishes. The key to Stalin's policy is determination to insure Russian security first by his own means. The key to Roosevelt's was determination to win Russian confidence in, the general security system by ev ery means possible, and the So viet decision to send Foreign Minister Molotoff to the confer ence is a sign of American suc cess, ine Kussians-evioenuy ex pected Roosevelt to : wry the meeting by his own.ppwer;' in his absence they show them selves sufficiently .inteirested, in thfc fate of ,Jhe enterprise to give it oacKing ana prestige; oy rais ing the rank of their delega tion." Old Colored Man Was Wiped Out By New Yorkers STKAi'S ON PAGE ONE must have picked up the wrong one, and, quick as a wink, he grabbed the bag, stepped to an adjoining room, and returned in a second, with the key in the hole, and turning it. 'Suie," said he," that was not the light key, but now it is all right." That said he pulled the key out. threw it through a window into a hody of water that swept the side of tho building. 'It is better just to dispose of that key, and no one can get it away from you,," said the trader. "When you get home take your knife and slit the hag." That achieved, the man look John to his train, bought him a ticket, and sent him on his way, with the bag. The Negro was pleased with the treatment; he had a grand time, and was a rich man. But, when he open ed the bag, he found it stuffed with old paper. In the key shuffle the No,w Y in ker had swapped bags of identical design and make. John hrd been swindled out of his money He got together enough to take him back to New York but when he reached there he could not locate the man who traded with hun or the hotel where be lodged. He even hunted for the horses that drew him about the town but could not fir.d them. iMsheartened he returned home. sold his butcher business, em? toyed a lawyer, and made further elfort to overtake the crooks wno had &o e'ev erly won his confidence, ami gvt. t.ia cash. No trace was ever found of the guiltv person or irsm3. With snd heart Job'; went to work for other people. He had been watt ing at that hotel for nfcuiy years when I saw him. "Why, John," I asked, "did you not go back m business and make more money . "What for. Mister, just to have some other man come nlong and take it?" he inquired. "I was through. I make h living and that is all 1 need. News and Interviews STARTS ON PAGE ONE armv barracks. Soon none will be left here except those with eommuiu- eable disease too 111 to mow Eventually, says this officer, the only concpirabte disposition of this Naai monument will be destruction by lie There were 2,000 women in three compounds in this esmrp ami nearly yiMOO men in two et.ler cwrpmmos kla. adjacent 'brtfiuf a one comer I . MAM. f the Vast cimp ro,uw more pristmert Wf'trt, MM mtflt r Horror Oewp wt tfce medi Ml af Mil M. J ' m Aftet k mrWfct stt &w cmp 'Sg guards etider the ;mnttun of tnerr comfif &r 'frerf -itUl shodtli : prtw unera who were tr t -x'-fal m lAtoea. The SS hau ailed to abide by the surrender term; to turn in tht'ir arms because ih-.. f aitd the vt-; pea rice of the emaciated victims cf their inhumanity. TKe SS mn wtie piimoiiy d; ai mwl wfien di.f overd rt'.d re t'b asMtfiiert to I'len..;:: up the ram a slight measure of retribution Ho a many dird her e there nu way of knownig I :.dt-f l r.itf fp r!"P ay .1 j.tHM died in the in -1 lew month-; In the nnddie of the uit thei a nu.und "f HU yeard v yirrU n? naked trodie.s f wufuen iU-d tMllt While tht- mitcal offut - wis ir;spevtinr the camp. tuir L'irls rurty aruither rirfe fiom tht h. it ami add it to 'he feaiful Ufk iif dfiiih. w hit h w a :n jilain view uf the- ihiMten's c 1 1 1 p l: i I . A "inan laid th! txidy of ht-i own rHM nr. the heap. Had Men Killed To Get the Skin ..... li.r Souvenirs T- . ,. MAhI ON PAt.h O.Nfc, The Herman visitors wire to see them, too and much more nut at this m iioent they were merely seeing "Kxhiint A" ami fi'inting. Some Uimans weie skeptical at first as if this show had been stag ed for their hem fit. hut they were soon convinced. h)ven as they milled along from one puce to another, their own countrymen, who had Seen prisoners there, told them the .story. Men went white and women turned away. It was too much tor them, dernvan Science' Exhibited These persons, who had been f "d on Nazi propaganda since H'-'H. w-ere beginning to s, e the light. They we-e seeing with their own eyes what no quantity of American propaganda couhl convince them of. Here was what their own Government had per pet rated. But tley hadn't seen anything yet In a barracks building in front of them was a sc:ent!iic lebratory where captured scientists worked with material supplied by their over lords. There were shelves of bottles filled with various organs of the hu man liody. In one was half a human head. It had been cut longitudinally to show all its component twrts. This head once belonged to a prisoner, as did all the other human parts so dis played. In another room were a dozen death masks, skulls and shrunken huuman heads. A Czechoslovak sur geon aJid scientist who worked in the laboratory told us the history of wh part, each head, each mask because he had known the human beings to which they belonged. Some had been his own-countrymen. The-German visitors saw this, too. And then thev were taken to an other laboratory, where victims had been Infected -with -tophus- tw that Germany eeuld hove typnus -sertrm There et still a score-of "tyatients ho im -ati" alive thowgh-tb Polish (deeter . left- behind, who i ha been iereed to rgire these injections even to his own people, said ttie deatn iftejd toR;1g,pexUsat.,. . CkiWren Hoiseaed, Too This sight was too much for many German housewives, especially a lit tle farther on, where only the hil- dren were kept. One 9-y earmold boy, who had had only the lirst tew in jectionS, seemed quite chipper. He was Ahdor Gutman, a Hungarian Jew of Budapest. He had been in the camp three years. When asked where hie parents were, he replied, without any emotion: "My father was k lied and my mother v,,s burned to death." As one watched the Germans fil ing out of this building there wa: hardly a dry eye, although some tried to maintain their composure. There was real horror ahead, but some of them just couldn't go on. e rom there thev were taken to the living ouarters. The stench, filth and misery here defied description. Those human wrecks standing in the corridor were beyond the stage where any amount of hospitalization could restore them to normal, while othtrs peering helplessly from their bunks would be fortunate when they died. There was a still lower grade in another barracks, where the prisoners were alive but could not rouse them selves. They were living skeletons This was Barracks 58, and it was from here they were taken to the crematory. This was the end of the roan, and for them it was probably a godsend. The Germans saw this, too and there was more to come. The nent exhibit Was the most ghastly of all. although it wa-. mere ly the disposal of the dead Well-Appointed Crematory In a little ono-stnrv i-M brick building, with a red tile roof, whs a crematory with the most modern ovens that science can provide. But before you enter, you sec a trailer stacked high with withered, starved ihkihj nontes. rt tew momeiii ago you saw the same thing, but those still had life in them. On top of the pile was a big robust body, fully clothed. This one had been murdered brutally. Next to him was the body of an S3 guard who had hanged himself on the day of our arrival. Fo-mer pris oners who had felt the lash of his whip cheerfully pointed out his hody, and it was easy to identify because it had one stump leg. In the crematory itsell were two batteries of three ovens, each prom inently marked with the maker s name J. A. lopt & Sonne, rc-riurt. This concern customarily manufac tured baking ovens. These ovens were of extremely modern design and heated by coke. NaTrow-guage trucks were built into the concrete floor, and over these traveled steel con trivances resembling stretchers. Each oven had the remains of at least two bodies that bad not yet been sifted into the chamber below. On a table near by were urns for the ashes. They looked like flower pots and were packed wthin metal con tainers, which, in turn, were packed on cardboard boxes for shipment to relatives. The names on the boxes, however, indicated that only Ger mans' remains were shipped. Diminishing columns of German ervilifins also saw this. Then they were taken to the rear of the build1 trig equipped far banging five persons at a time. Jast beyond was a pile of ashes -from' the furnaces. ThnbMent f ' the building was I torWre mber, where tietinrt trere foreed to stand en low chain, plact: a rope through a ring high on the wall ami faster, the rfcXM-e around their necks. The r.ext victim got tht joh of kicking the chair fron-. under them. Tt.e ' U cxlihit was the dissectm:1 room, adjace..! to the crematory. Tbiy wa a S".al. l!-e'iu.ppe,l cuhicle with a white tile operatint' ladle unci cabinet.- filied with ul.,'nal iru,trunient. On h- were -evera! ruuber aprons, and ..i. t'rn flow pilt of prisoners . i. thing. Tin ; tin roi m where ti. rigmal owners of the parchment-- hud tje : stnpi'ed pf the.: skin. '1 l,i lirst priM.nei a M a"rn .- at this camp wore from Sachsenlmrg 1.1. . Lichten'iu: In May and June of r.i.tS, during the tieMapo wave of tenor, the deatn rate .va !U pel re-t. After von Katn mhs shot n Paris, l.ooii Jews wt'ie t ;i'ispoitel tu Hutheiiwald li Sleiitemher, I -i.it. arnv.Ji at the I i amp included ioml Jews Ironi o 1 . leople's homes in N'lenna. The f.il '"""K nn., tc. more arrived ' After the attempted assassirnitioi' if Uili.r lweI1.y.ne j,w:, weie kt.. 'le.ted arhitraniv and shot to death , A1, otnp j,.ws we,.e kep( ,n .kness for three davs without food and seeial days later the entire camp was deprived of food for five day -Auxiliary Death ( amps I ed I i A igust, li4(l, the camp received it I, rst Ivies. There were more than a thousand of them, and eleven weie shot ti.e first day. Aflei five montlis the.e were but 30U of this consign ment left All had bee. niuideied. Four hiirdred Tetherlan,.s Jew a. rived in February. I'.lll, and then were taken to Gu-sen. near -Mault-bausen. and killed. I'uring the summer of the same yeai 1' t prisoners were murdered bv njections of eviiiiiannaliium, the T liow.iig spring four groups of Jews, ninety in each, were sent to flernhurg. where all were willed and their ashi -. sent back to Unci rwald, -vh. re a pnsoner name.! Maikur put then; m UI MS. Before Buchenwani obtained it- elaborate crematories prisoners who no longei could work were sent to Auschwiz to die "r be killed :n pas chambers. Auschwitz also ban great furnaces. Reliable statements claim that fi.(KX) were disposed of there in three davs It was also at Auschwitz that Jewish women who were among the 30.000 once here at Buchenwald were sent to be exterminated after they had become pregnant "Aryan" women in this condition were sent to -Ravettshruck to have their children. Buchenwald was bombed from the air on August 24 of last year because it was the site of V-2 plant, which was just outside the main gates of the camp. It was here that many prisoners worked. The Nazis elaimed that this bombing was the excuse for the murder of the Germali Com munist party leader Ernest Thael- mann, but records show that Thael- nrenn was never in tV.e camp.. ,;i-The tamp was liberated ril 10 tan the Eightieth -Bivicfon. Tvo days later fresident ReoeeveH died.and the' liberated prisoners unfurled a large black flag over the building at the entrance way. It still fliAS m a me morial to Msaeath and te the dead within the camp. Those still living realize what he tried to do, and they doff their caps every time they see at! Aemriean uniform. Mrs. Raosevelt Waves Goodbye To Whitehouse STARTS ON PAGE ONE pital unit in the war lone. After the move, tie Seventh United States Army Field Hos pital became the mint advanced air evacuation hospital on the Continent. Within th-ee hours after the wheels of the first C-47 transport plane touched the ground, the hospital 'is ready to receive sixty-five pt bnts. The change of site! requiied the movement of H)) tons of technical, medical ml mainte nance equipment. If Adolph Hitler is f und by Amer ican troops, they will l.ing him in as a prisoner of war, uness he resists Secretary of War Hei'y L. Slimsoti sjiid. Asked at his press coherence if the American soldiers hat been "indoc trinated" as to what ley should do if they caught Hitler Mr. Stimson first replied: ' "1 wonder if you" rofull justice to thi intelligence of Atrriran troops? You may be sure tney nil know what to do. Herr Hitler, If he oes jpot resist capture, will he mac prisoner, as have other high Naz otticiais. and will be held for noon of higher authorities." President Trurnamresented to Mrs. Franklin D. iosevelt the White House desk ; which her late husband workei throughout his twelve yeais a President. The desk, said Leoird Reinsch. V rote House sercely, in an nouncing Mr. Trumas offer and , Mrs. Roosevelt's acotance, will be placed in the rnnklin D. Roosevelt Library aflyde Park. For his own del President Truman selected on which had been used by six ther Chief Executives, Presider Therodore Roosevelt, Taft, Vvion, Hard ing, Collidge and loover. The War Departmt said that pending an investigan no further disciplinary action vild be taken against Negro offic involved in a controversy at Freen Field, near Seymour, Ind. A spokesman saidiat three Ne gro officers aecuseof jostfing a provost marshal whithey entered a white officer's cluApril B Were under arrest and 1 others were confined to quarterbecause they refused to sign an svement not to enter the club. The 101 officers been trans feree to Godman H, near Fort Knox. Ky. The club to whiUhe NegreeA sought entry had beset aside for base personnel and etructors, all white. Another elub operated for the officers in trami all Negroes in a 'bombardment stdron. The WBokesman sathat separate I clubs tor tnstructotsnd trainee were customary in ttraimng com mand whether or nosere was ' any AS OISE EDITOR SEES IT If . f. HAiLlV AN'H MY FK1 KM i. ,,le a I terary nhp up the ing (her Oa (lint is worth lecount We wee talking abo.it the tunes, pi. sent. past, ai.-l tutu re Kret- tv jo,; we found oin-el'.-s it. agree ment with that champion of pess,- nism. Kci lesiastes. who aftei survey .la; !hf w l.oh sltuatic n. de ia -: I hat theie is nothing under the -un For I'ist.ince. Mi Newell had the idea hat wne- lbs' web known traveler. , it p t Lemuel Gull.M". as Worded by I n an Swift, arrived in Japan in lTd'.i. he ii..d an extierien.e which tbnw a good ieal if light uj Japanese 1 rh.nartor A id as we were sax .ng what i-. nas been, like Kcib wastes, we thought that what we mc ,f .ap anes. C-iaracter toda mil- be what ('apt. Gulliver found it. For myself. 1 had never been aware of :ie fact 'that ('apt. Gu'hver .'ad included Ja pan !' his travels, my reading having been lin,.'cd to his exphd, in i.iliput. Hot Jake said he wen to Japan. ... where 'n the I .aw !,,.!, ling coal.l we fin I any reference to ('apt Gulli ver, so I told Jake that though the tiail was cold. I would try to follow it and see just xvnat ("apt. Gullixei hud done i: Japan. AND WHAT do you suppose it wn When he sailed for Japan he left the island of I.uggnagg where he had been very highly honored. The em peror gave him a lettei of inti duc tioii to the Empeioi of the Japanese. As he was sailing oi a Dutch slop, he pretended t.j be a Dutchman, and talk ed much with the captain and the ere xv aliout things in H-'Hand. When he got to Japan, posing as a liuti h merchant, he said that as a compli ment to the Emperor of Luggnagg, he hoped the Emperor of Japan would condescend to excuse him from per forming the ceremony imposed upon bis countrymen (Hollanders) of tram pling upon the crucifix, because he Was there by misfortune and not with the design of trading. At this the Emperor said he was a "little sur prised and said he believed I was the racial difference fatween the two groups. The "aim, he -added, is to dis courage .aeeial' contacts between in structors and trainees and prevent anv .possible favoritism toward stu dwftas i '" - IHIngui first of my countrymen who ever made ai y scruple on this point, and hat he began to d,0UDI 'hether I was . teal Hollander or no. ,d rather sus eced that 1 must be a Christian." Evn eiitly this was Swift's way of satu zir.g the Dutch, whom he ap pears not to have liked, and nothing abo l the Japs, whom ire knew noth ing aliei.; There this anout it, thowi'ver. Swift believed that the Dutch like it i charged of Europeans 1 an i A,iierian al'k-, forgot tt.e.i ci.'-ist.-ini.y when they went to trade will the islanders. And this, wc -. po-e. is what was meant by the i r.ag j inarv custom of trampling upon the i i unfix. w K TAKE PLEASURE in stating, the atiihoiiiy of the Atlanta Join .a! that .''resident Truman is the son oi a Confederate soldier. The Journal explains that -Missouri was ont th'' border states that split up be' ween federal unci Confederates and in which the worst kind of civil war was carried on. Both armies had men from these border states, and the Jouii'a: says that t .e President's fa ther joined the I lonfederate side ami fought in the army. Partly f n this reas n, the Journal says. Pros, dent Truman ii herded the Democratic and Southern Tradition. He speak? like a good Southerner, anyway. If h. is the son of a Confederate soldier ne is thi fnM one o! these lo tcat,'a s1 high a place I Of USE there would he i, ar- ln-i lar virtue in the fact that a roan was the son of a Confederate soldier in itself. But inoe vre cannot have in one generation ty.o men with the catholicity of Mr. Roosevelt, i i matter whence they cinie, it is good to th.nk that a trace of Southern lib erality exists once more in lgh places. W,. are not the stiokler on these mat ters that the old Georgian tofti about hy O'Henry was. The old fcontleman was editing a publication dev ted te the Lost Cause and the Souther i tra ditions. When Theodore Rooswvelt made his first inaugural address the old man was greatly puzzled. He could not li.ink of admitting to his columns anything written or said by a Republican. Yet the circumstance,,., were peculiar. This particular Repub- f amor. V usii ffofd ?nfiaratoBJt:dlrCt0f VV V Mm. Lninie Service is flu the Way War requirements cotne first and we are not permitted at this time to add greatly to our existing-network of 12,000 miles of rural lines throughout this section. You may be sure, however, that we are look ing ahead to the time when we can serve you. Our engineers have already planned the extension of Duke Power service to hundreds of new farm customers. Meanwhile, our Rural Service and Home Service workers are devoting their time and efforts to food and feed, dairy and poultry production and to the war conservation goals set for the Carolinas. anlke 6weii Coon 1 lean was a mem' er of the Bulloch family of Georgia and as such must be considered. So the old gentleman puhSshed the address as an article h a descendant of the .listing u sh' d Buliorh family of Geoig a on. mng the fact that the author nappci ed u, I president of the I'mted tlltes M HI'ltKE DAVIS ih. ve bill n , ,ing man who does a treat .vie k "ii the staff of tret hai -,w-. Aent to Washington to I i residit t Trunian's first press after Yi-, ,.n,1 wrote an r.teresting uui.t of r The n xt day he inter .ved Driw Pearson, Maiquis Cfulds : i . r tantine Drown, all syndic. wrileis w hosy matter spp ars n le, a gieat n any newspapers. Mr Dh vis a 1 he ginned from them the definite .inpri .- m,,i. that the New Deal died wi'h R.'.isevelt. We would ad vise Mr. i'a.is not to set too great stoii by w.nat these gentlemen say ui thirk about ,t. They probably con -nler the cw Deal a l.ttle temporary flour.h i,, American p,,'.tics which came mi is a whim of Mi. Koos"xelt and will pass o it with the whims of new a'tors upon the Washington stage If the New Deal is the ins and ,,ui of figures in Washington w'nose actions these gentlemen play up and dow n clay ox nay I mm ine inside, from the outside and from no -ide at all, 'hen it b probably over. But if i he New Deal was but the lioosevi!: manifestation in the long pro, e-sioi of evolution in American and woild polit cs that we know n t, hi. then it will not die xvith Roose velt The New Deal began with , cf forson and its supreme idea was that 'he I usiness of governm nt was not oi !y to protect the xveak by restrain ing the strong, hut ' : ee that the hem fits of human p' ogress be ex tendi d to the masses of mankind and not monopolized by the special priv ileges of the few choser ones. The xvhole snuggle in American politics bus centered around this idea Jef ferson rave it the philosophical im pulse, Jackson gave it practical ac tion, Theodore Roosevelt thundered, if somewhat irf bewilderment, in its support; Woodrow Wilson revived it as the New Freedom, and F'ranklin D. Roosevelt sent it on its way by leaps and bounds. In its course it has destroyed the monarchies of Eu rope and given to America the lead ing place in world politics by pre cept and example. The Old Deal was for privilege at the table" and crumbi for the masses. The New Deal is for the universal welfare and cannot die f-1, in'ntr s thara ia .,-., w.n,... :n ti "fO ...... ..j piugicfia 111 VIV1I- T 5 1r" J ', t- ;. t - ,7 fx, A, v , 7" , h 7 c,4) i f " ..... t r . - ' l-'-i ;-rX.-i,..4 '4tt '.- PSwln
Beasley’s Farm and Home Weekly (Charlotte, N.C.)
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April 26, 1945, edition 1
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