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ee ee ee eerer ** the | J oe England | and France have adopted planned national | exophy after they turned to the biggest eapitalistic country im the world to save | theat from destruction by it. | There was delightful sarcasm in the | remarks of Sconservative” Sir Oliver Lyttle ten in the House of Commons, when he told the House that the British standards of liv ing depend on financial aid from the United States, and that “you must be careful about ty things you say about private en _ one in favor of issuing renewals, and, when } the argument ended, the standing was the | kam, . points may be, is beside the point, Lt tor | i : i te z i f | ning at a meeting of city council about the renewal of liquor licenses to owners of sa- ij loons that are within the restricted limit | 483 of 300 feet of sehoolhouses or churches. “Tr ft wan, to sve this As one councilman informed The Citi- meri 4 : zen, one and one-half hours were wasted in yer —_ sorry. Brenda. I tried argument, during which there were fre. quent recriminations, because, before the argument started, the council stood four to z . ss i 5 H aj Hs ‘ fe t i £ i rf | HK ie. But the point of this editorial does not concern the merit of the question discuss- ed: it concepns the attitude in which it was arwued. A question with or without merit should be ¢ iation, for denoun¢! view ; $ 3 E f a1 i =i 32 iff Fi 3 y vf pussyfooting around this way, he's got some- j thing on his mind... . i ef j ine ft pitt. i } | Not every seeker of publicity is de- void of ability and merit. | cutee tutor Sieutenent ifs e with his cap tucked under hi He stared around the place ia his most blatant official man- ner. His face was expressioniess; his legs, encase’ in black leather puttees were spread well apart. giving him a particularly bellig- erent aif. What happens to the eeonomic struc. | ture of the United States depends largely | upon the intelligence of the people, which | means your intelligence. ; zi Bie DEPENDS ON BUYING POWER + terp that wil affront American opin. + To the civilian prodycGen @f the na- Leamznic 3 ton.” wr ybeornaee Hi toe t4 if in a h the at } $ Wh» chould.the,sogialistic regime it j gmigencies pf wa ete hace SRngiand think of turning to the United | af about @@ billion 1 sghemes? Let the ™ iberal™ par- | question w the nat revert to “ snd tax he OWN POOPIE tS pay Tory “ WA.ssaNeron | Me i Or MUGO 8. SIMS. Soocial Weshingwen Correspondent of The Cities | ALLIED NATIONS ARE States, or Great Britain, and) RPPORNTUTY The proddetton wr Tes9 >. if the “gifts” which it promises them at the | we do, we are in for a hard time. | STILL IN WAR STAGE “Russia, There weve matters toy hands of government. If socialism is su- Practically nobody expects peace ti Discussing the concern of the - arranged, of course, peg re o tree can certainly British over what they consider ¥ varying viewpoints to perior to ¢ enterprise, it can « to SSE * 944. w te ente ee a tena jected, Th cites eam Ge finance its spendings ow » What Lease, Washington makes it plain handled with good will on both Mr. deGaulle was in the United States. | optimists hope is that the new rate of peeve |that this country repeatedly sides without hostilities and He undoubtedly @sk’d for ‘Tinanc P ti prBugefon al the 1939 rate | ¥#rned other nations thet Lend- there was every evidence tea PY | Lease wes af to be continu- the alliance for war, which unit for the praffam of tional Hializ, pl@s abe if oft winerease. Tilia, | 4 any dure ed the three great powers, was} tion” of industry which'is planned for) i i ed»will give the nation a reas@n-| Certainly. tt ge Ameri also @ potent factor for peacefui) France. Why should we finance a system | able prosperity | can supporte « —— overnmen that h ny world oro | wer p ans jevertheless, the stark truth of — mt that ¢ —_ r : Production, as everybody knows, de ee gp Tn program that nations, and their leaders, peace e spent countless American | pends upon buying power. If consumefs | during px How the When they consider policies and lives and some $300,000,000,000 to help | buy industry renews its stock. If consum- | question that now clates Claims, keep a close eye on the curb the crushing effeet of national social- | ers fail to buy, there is no reason to make | “*8*'y = t the war armed strength possessed by has ended those concerned. It can hardly be jem under Hitler and Mussolini j more goods for no sales. Hence, reason- It may be i, and we are disputed that the atomic bomb The seeds of national socialiam are | able prosperity in the United States de- | inclined + r je- is @ weapon without comparison well planted in our own soil, in the form | pends upon the distribution of income, so | ™°>''”* ta plete, in the world today and it is of electric power “authorities”. And Con-| that consumers will have money with which |. 2 Sig Bg as —_ —- oe Se ape gress | g asked for additional billions » purchase the products of farm and fac American men overs many of - of dollars to goupish and expand this ma- | tory. them clamoring to @ the U. S&S. SUBS ACTIVE Ea n 0 aces the eat t « lignant political growth here } lt-¢onsidering Muying power it is not = the - e b “ he ©) RERCUING FLIED Are we now ready te admit thet the | easy tasqvemigek the importance of high | pert of the war effort as the Bae che a totalitarian type of centralized government wages to laborers and profitable prices ay fs ae . Bea Japen, pesdyed 23? .4uers in jess “ — to cur owe free enterprise aud | to farmer, These classes ganstitute the jit, upon which the British and on intee months, emding Aug PrOtit sysjeni” backbone of our purchasing power. Aj a | other Allies, made their request The United States stands as the tadt | yeriéraf ‘Mile, if labor ahd agriculture have | * coPtinuation of Amenecan The underwater craft picked great exponent of private enterprise. pri- vate opportunity and the philesophy of « lowing the individual to profit (rom his own labors. Are we going to throw in with the schemes of those who cried for help from Political oppression and now seek to adopt the syster: ght to save them from? we lowa. | We fear that one result of the term ination of the war will be an outbreak of amateur poetry Wf everybody attended to work with the same enthusiasm that they take a holi- day, there ix tio teHing how/much we ould accomplish in New York last week there was a call for 50,000 workmen and many enem ployed inquired about the prospective work, | still being choosy, only 5,000 teok the jobs offered. Forty-five thousand preferred to loaf. Now President Truma Wants the unemployed to get $25 for 26 weeks, and that will simply encourage loa (. ing a* © evidenced by the above. If the Jobs were not available then help in some ferm becomes necessary and should be pro vided A chipper place name is What Cheer | | easictonce up airmen from the carriers and matey tu spend the nation does pretty wel! those from land bases. Undoybt economically speaking ATOMIC BOMB INCREASES “tly brs saved the lives of ' many of rescued a — The effort that the armed Can you think of anything more de- || The experts repert « TUDE forces made to rescue American grading than a public official who takes |" - ; : ao — * ~ 4 wi - 9 \. * oe maintenance of hij morale graf His action flouts the law and in making xpense among cirmen. Bvesy man oho sults every decent person in the commun- "ton - , . went on a plane knew that, if ty » poe ng dy: Phe met with disaster, there - —s 8 vettects ony rn ~~ , would be no limit te what would Paap gg a = 4 in the ef ue TROUBLE POSSIBLE IN JAPAN — Gres! Britain, through posession [oSome 1 lhe fers Wo re af the atomic bomb, have actual ™ * | ITISH OFFICIALS € a _ Rn @ ars, we rew “ any The Japanese, i appe ene vaas aneue GED snits of the Kwantung army from Maw , “e _ <> cana j churia to the main islands for the purpose '"s™* ° cede > a The British vernment x, a Brits ex. “f defending them against invasion. This powe t Russians presses sur be es the termine- army is well-trained and consists of many t was @ lay- tion Lend-Lease but nowhere fire-eating, younger element. Some of its see where the possibility im the ——y af Prime Minie- ‘ ; t se the fear ter Clement Attlee and and units may cause troubie. of sss seemingly foomer Prime Minister Winston The eecupatior of Japan required our ‘strange cconvr system, was Churchii do we fimd any army to enter irio a land guarded by an | Widespread phrases to justify the protest that undefeat x . On he XE m f the tw PANY Rewspapenrs report ut efeated army of close to 8,500,000 _. . n nm with the Mr Attlee deserribed the dif troops.’and take it over. Friction is quite jen truction at ‘- Gewlties facing the British gov- likely but organized resistance is not ex- lowed : ob- ernments which he said, epuid pected. Nevertheless, et oi v moc- only demobilize and reconivert a tt <2 ae w CB- | esies tand gradually, edmitted that he had recalcitrant militarists come in p to D Sta a ell him not anticipeted Lend-Lease would contact with soldiers of the octeupation jto jump inte » lake. While this continue for any length of time forces jmay not necessary the idea after the defeat of Japan and that it is p t ut gre hoped that the Ubited States Generally, however, it is the belief of matings! peril, * - rts the seg- w those who should know that the Japanese !ment thet suffered fom Red- leaders, taking their cue from the em- Phot Peror, are trying te complete the surren- | der according to terms uli agree thet shipping and fod end amy other suppiees still) equired by our forces overseas nd by the American forces over-| seas can continue to be furnished i for a limited period under Lend-! the ‘ at fi nevitable between nh U ‘thelr men are not being sent to Fea ti y Hy if if i fi [i he ene, where be bed be. Swe turned about headed in the ri | | gif if i i itil | ei i i fr H TF 7E i i i z ae Eatate of 4 MUBRT W ALBURY. alee Keown | Albury. a i? MAY ¢ ¥ «iver final a? TO ALL Notice bs ou “d Melvin EB Russell, dent of public instruetion in Mon- roe county, returned this morn- —— CHICAGO.—Aroused in early hours by the prolonged Mr. and Mrs. Charles Peres end aie Sian honk. ef an automobile born, ‘hidren, who had been knows toh Willard | Alleagy, on David Walanka complained to the ‘"elatives in Tampa, returned this| com=nt.or (his 60h day of eae police. They investigated, found ™erning. 1! s (a) MARY EA & short-cireuited horn buttan im! ae Ch “aghast ite a car perked ne Walanka’s, Today The Citizen says im an house and discorinected it Wal-ledttorial paragraph: anka's face was really red, wo,| “Almost anvbedy whem you when, after police investigated! _ the license sumber, they found it to be Walanka’s own car ert 4 Witlard Albury. deceased, 4 WM. ROGER WATKING q for inietratrix Atty septl- 14-28-98 2068 Lease and reciprocal gid agree- ment. | The British leader thought reasomable to regard such sup- plies and services arising out of the war as belonging to the com-! mon war effort. He made the point that British overseas ex penditures, on the eve of the de- feat of Japan, were at the rate of 2000 million pounds a year and that the government had te meet these expenses with 350 million pounds of export and temporary war receipts of around 499 miilion pounds. This left an initial deficit, called immense, as we start the task of reestablish ing our own economy and of con wacting overseas commit ments a our Presidemt Truman has tecom- mended that the dreft continue to meet future of the) Army and Navy and that men between the ages of eighteen and | twenty-five be taken for service to be limited to two years. i It is the opi af most mili. | tery experts that the nation can- not depend upen any volunteer aystem to provide necessaryr re- placements for men now in the service. Failure to continue the Graft will extend the service of ' the men now overseas and make it umpossible give veteran} fighters an carty discharge We do not think that any reas enable citizen can complain of the decision announced by President. Parents needs the od can be thankful thet the front lines and thet eccudents, will -eturn unharmed Witheyt ettempting te sseert thet every ung man should be competied t) erve in the ‘ere and naval forceps of the sation we believe im the select lee primaple and that the needs of the armed « may te. ong wen & selected ecourding to es! rules for service tomes na wt wid te sheet