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The Boston Globe from Boston, Massachusetts • 4

Publication:
The Boston Globei
Location:
Boston, Massachusetts
Issue Date:
Page:
4
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

1.4.4,11 Four THE BOSTON DAILY GLOBEFRIDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1915 ''I War Crimes 'Judge Forte to Hear. Continued from the First Page international Rogues Gallery, 1Pair of Murder Cases I fi'' Heading the list of 24 is at Springfield Session Ileichsmarshal Hermann Wil-T'' 14 SPRINGFIELD, Oct. 18 -Judge helm Goering, the "No. 2 Nazi." 1 11' 't' a fa- 4. Felix Forte of Belmont has been as.

Hitler is not charged in the in- 'a a ,9 1 signed to preside over a special sea. dictment because of some indi- NN-, cations that he died in the ruins of the city. 1, 4 i 5, when two murder cases will be i 01V nt In seeking the death of Goer- i llr''' J''. 't Superior Court here, Nov. ing, Rudolf Hess, Foreign Min- -40xItmw Peter J.

Polchlopek. 40, of Chico. a ternational crime, and finally won ister Joachim von Ribbentrop a l'-'' 4,, A pce, will be tried on the charge of a i and the others the Allies hope ''l Na i -4 a "-r---, -) murder of his wife. Sadie. 40.

on to emblazon a new principle in I. -mtei- 4,,, Is 4,, May 16, on a lonely roal in Chlorpee 0 a future code of conduct for Falls. mankind-that conspiring to James Demas, 29, of this city will 1, wage war is a crime against ,001.977 1 7 '''7' be charged with the butcher-knife It '1, 4 nt.k.-. .4 humanity. '161k I 1 -1.

ii slaying of Renaldi Montesea 31, on a. 14 -2-- In addition to the 1,,,,, 7... ir -1'' June 26 in a downtown cafe staff and the high command the 1 other organizations named in- 1,,, 07.44 Former Dist Atty. Thomas Ir. lor 4.i.

ske iii Ddloriarty said tonight he would ap- ate it eluded the Gestapo, the SS a I a 4 s4t4 (Elite Guard) trooPs of the Nazi 500 lc I 1 40 k.k) I ear for both defendants. The cases Pwi li be prosecuted by Dist. Atty. a aa ajtet atc- all gat: eli CiE111-it4; f- Charles R. Alberti of Pittsfield.

party, the Storm Troopers, the 4- 114,0:40, .4,, 1141.0.,. '-'7tfr''' 4 SD or Secret Service Sicher- 1 heitsdienst, the German Cabi- net, and the Leadership Corps of the Nazi party. No. 2 Nazi-Head of Luftwaffe 7'. 4 1 i '1- Nazi Foreign Minister I I ----r- is- ,11 I Nazi Labor Front dictator I -I', -11- 4 4 German General who signed uncon- ditional surrender at Berlin it Dischar iet Robbed ge of $2800 at Viorcester 7, "9 I Commanders Indicted --a a 1 WORCESTER, Oct.

I8-Police are ar, ceeking a thief who stole $2800 early It 1,,,,, 4, A spokesman for the American a 44'et' a 'art- to 1 ,4, this morning from Vehe Serijanian. 1 prosecutor, Justice Robert H. Jack. 1 a. a.a, ad as as taken from a dresser draw in a discharged soldier.

The money P-, son. said that the General Staff a-. 1. his room at the Y. M.

C. A- A .4 1 ered "as one entity, with a choice and high command would be consid- a. ii A t'-'-av a a -a N' 14.1 q' 04 s'S i I. 1 i representative segment specifically a i a. a a a-, indicted." 'Volta; 41041.

'51 -if N.i. .7:, I '--t 4' Those alread named in the in- i -4 00 44. -i Ott! tt.T.111.1!),, r- -f-, 1 I Ir. .6,, .4., dictment are Alfred Jodi, Colonel- 4 1 IL 1 15, 'It 1.4te' ..4 I Ur General and chief of the Army Staff; a 'a 't. ii 2 a 'it, a- aa Wilhelm Keitel Feld Marshal and -a- q-- a a aaaa 2.Aoe,o0..,,, tA 1 chief of the High Command; Karl a A 1.

or awe; aut a 1. sN'', 41, 414. Doenitz, Grand Admiral and Corn a '--qaa JP 7. ..) i' ........7 a r- mander-in-Chief of the German ca O. A.

Navy; Erich Riteder, Grand Admiral a -1-40pli' 4 I and former commander of the Navy. aa .....3 aater -It Indictment of the individual Ger- 4 4' 'c, 7.47 1 (112- man General Staff officers as war 1, 'a', 7ga tr, 4 1 1. staPila k' i demands. Russia, Great Britain and criminals resulted from American a-tat t. '4 44 It: 'a llN4.S 't'' aitattatt -tap) i 4 6,.

i 44 ir' 6711171 France opposed the action on the 14' Ls .1......, 1 ground soldiers are responsible only 4 -4E4 It :...1,,,,, 0 FOR for carrying out orders. Mk. 1 41.171. -i; 0 I- NOR Justice Jackson insisted that ag- rtal'-- i --aa a. "Ill --Ii 4 It 4 II is 1 0 le gressive warfare constituted an in- aemt.A.....00A :,4 I .,.111, 7.F..

4.. le 101:1 Siltasi 0 sail' Ir ylk by tirtil lit erma surrender NI over two of the nations. One power, whose identity is secret, refused to agree. Court Ceremony Gn General who ditional iagtnRedeimunscon- German Navy Commander-in-Chief Former Nazi press chief and -Successor to Hitler as German bank president Government head Nazi Chancellor of Austria 11 50n Other MONARCH FOODS day. seated himself behind a long dietment on behalf of the United Ail Just As Goodi The Berlin ceremony in which' table, flanked on the right the States, France and Britain.

Gen Bormann War Crimes Head the indictment was presented to the court was simple but impressive. It Americans and on the left by the R. Rudenko, the chief Soviet pros- ecutor, then delivered the Russian 'Now Believed Dead Visits Belsen Trial NUERNBERG, Oct. 18 (AP) text. LUENEBURG.

Germany. Oct 18 000 Or NER lasted for only an hour. and took French and British. place in the ornate chamber of the Facing them were the prosecu- Nikitchenko then said: Official circles said tonight th a 6.50 hoes hi the Allied Control Building. tors.

The British wore formal court 'An indictment has now been (AP)--Lord Wright, chairman of former Berlin superior court, now Martin Bormann, -Hitler's deputy the United Nations War Crimes i Am at ec attire of striped trousers, black SPECIAL KEIII1EL FOOD Standing before the two oak lodged with the tribunal by the and only leading Nazi war crimi- Commission. attended thee Belsen hiS 1 arokir 1-tat Standing batwing collars. Committee of the Chief Prosecutors trial today, listening as one defend- al knows choose I with doors of the great white-walled setting out the charges made ant, Itilde Lobauen denied beating Incl-- clae chamber. a court attendant in black Judges' Declarations nal yet unaccounted for. is be- against the fallowing defendants lieved to be dead.

110 VI AVAILABLE coat and striped trousers intoned or drowning women prisoners. EaterYnclutl and iCtSte rtb. hatS Cl.recitn-Ectshiorled Indictments on those awaiting Lord Wright said he visited court, in English, French. Russian and The judges rose one by one and -petS0- Kerlag 0 German the word 'silence!" The made their declarations: Slowly he read the name of each trial here will be served tomor- where 45 Nazis are being tried for in Ittl' battets entire proceedings were translated "I solemnly declare that I will war crimes at the Belsen and Oswie- AT GROCERS row morning. At the same time 4 CC1 eiullY VIC-- fled bY tt'aster n't g' into the four languages.

exercise my powers and duties as of the 24 principal defendants. the Allies will serve notice ra to cim camps, ''to get the atmosphere ommomosimull 1. of the trial," and said he was "rather the discritil A design The doors opened, with Mli Gen member at the International Tri- German Reporters Present Bormann by nenspapers and dio I. T. Nikitchenko.

of the Soviet bunal honorably, impartially and anxious to see how they were get- a taste mows he cc14, hat- oi fine lelt cinc'. Union, and his alternate, T. A. r-nscientiously." ting along here." a i. (-100 Kr'w German reporters representing all that he is on the list of cle- the German newspapers in Berlin fendants.

you; can enjoy thisicomplete forcl -1C1 rrict -3 ra-0-0--- Bolchkov, leading the delegation of As they finished Nikitchenko sat at press tables with Allied The Lobauer woman denied testi-I Mony of previous witnesses that she IsNow i saewytn-rcienday with fresh meat baked Innutritious, judges. said, "I hereby announce the meet- CL 5--- had drowned women at Oswiecim TIT Eree.r11 FOOD OF with They were followed by the ing of the International Tribunal correspondents. One artist from the sketched the proceedings. Not more which included violations of the b. Tem into dditch, declar; W'rOn French judge, Henry Donnedieu 'is open." German newspaper Der Morgen braced in the doctrine of total war and his alternate.

Robert Falco; the Sir Hartley Shawcross, the Brit- mg ditch was no eep enough this food called -Ken-L-Biskit" has been used American Francis Biddle and his ish prosecutor then explained that than 150 persons were able to find laws and customs of war such as gn 000to k.000eep ITS KIND IN atiMtIRICA TODAY. For years seats in the chamber. Among them -deliberate and systematic ge no- (to reporter): young KENNEDygs alternate, Judge John Parker; the the prosecution was unanimously was a sprinkling of German ci- cide" (the extermination of racial CentenariaZ British Lord Justice Lawrence and presenting the indictment. vilians. and national groups).

The indict- man, you can include in your story pounds have been fed! Now made available to his altrnate, Justice Norman Bilkett Francis Shea, chief assistant to Jackson declared the German ment alleged mass murder by cities Nikitchenko, presiding for the Justice Jackson, handed up the in- that the secret of my living to be Pc'u at grocers, teed stores. etc- General Staff had no fixed member- and districts in Russia, Poland and a hundred is that I've always eaten Ken-L-Biskit COMM crumbled pieces, ship such as the SS or the Gestapo, the Balkans which totalled 9.465,000 a great deal of garlic easily mixed with botlingwater. Provides your i Where do you get ihe idea it's vai and did not constitute an entity an more than did a graduating class of wherein 'thousands" died by gun- 3' and mentioned numerous other cases a a secret?" gasped the vitamin your dog needs known perfeentllamtlillt.lry st the United States Military Academy fire and torture. Heavy stress is clipping. Ken-L-Biskit today! Now at your grocer at at West Point.

laid on the system of hostage mur- An American spokesman said that der employed to keep populations other members of the General Staff in check. ":a.s6. 14k) I would be "reached" in subsequent COUNT FOUR-Crimes against i humanity in which all the defend- 4 4 iaasi st. haant du? tni me aAt eml ye imc aonr viewpoint ha ants are accused of participating in a the General Staff would Germany, in those countries oceu ata-a- 1 be tried. pied by the German armed forces Give your home the lAlkii members of after the beginning' of the Emopean 1 i War on Sept.

1. 1939, in Austria and Arraigned on 4 Counts it 1 Czecho-Slovakia and Italy and on same lasting beauty ii, mor2A. The text of the 24.000-word in- lir, ---------a- a 1 I the high seas. The crimes involved, a 1 I. li-- tu dictment, issued simultaneously in among other things, the murder and so famous for cars! 4 persecution of any person even sus- i London oNna Nazis and pected of being hostile to the Nazi, 1 -----t- ciNnaulgostnoctsonv: Party of its plan of European ex- in this manner: pansion documents the charges -g- 1 1 COUNT ONE-The common plan I i 1 ''A Ji, 1 ,1 I 4 or conspiracy to overthrow the 1 4 i i Ft 5 -4 Treaty of Versailles, rearm Ger- Lavin Awarded $2500 c7 If .:1:, I 4 many, acquire "Lebensraum" for the Reich at the expense of her in Hired Boat Suit rir neighbors and do this by any 07tr; 11( L.7 i means including "force and aggres- WORCESTER, Oct.

18-A i A .9. .7 j.1,-.10,.. 1 sive war." or Court jury today awarded Wal- COUNT TWO-Crimes against ter Larin of Auburn '2500 for in- l- '17('''' I. peace, in which "All the defendants juries and personal loss when he Your Furniture with divers other persons" partici- was thrown into Lake Champlain II i i 101- pated in planning and then waging in July, 1941, because his hired i and Woodriorli :1 A- wars against Poland, Britain, boat sunk. a' '1' I i France, Denmark, Norway, Belgium, Defendants were Mrs.

Merle Holland, Luxembourg, Yugoslavia, Blakelock of Belmont, operator, and 4 a I ,1, lia-, 1 i a 1 a a COUNT Greece, Russia and the United John McGrath of Somerville, owner States. of a camp which rented the boat f' ..4,1 4 i ITREE-War crimes, em- to the plaintiff. I -q 4 .0: -sr i i 1.4) f04. i 1 I VI i z-- a-4 sd- .1 '1. S.

l'? i 4 I i Can you tie 2 IsHave a Coca Cola 7- b. I 4 i i. 11 ,4 11, k6I'Vt-A a -mos-. I I I 4, it. At.

1 11 1,,,,,11111, I Con 1 r' iiii i 'Cr 711. leel dord24 1 1 I :,4 1 COL' 4 i', -4 1 t. trot 4 -4 '41 7' 1 1447 4 4 4 r''''': 'j' 11 A 1 41 -At' 0. 't; 400 1 6' 10 I 4., IF in i'l, Pt .1, lc-- a sit L-i I Jli fv at, 't '-i .4." 4 :3, A i' 4 44' 'r m. 1..,4 I -e A', tb, ip st, 'a 4.0 IL -sN li, '1- :e.4....:.::,:1.71':..

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441; Alf 31 A 1 'AV 1 ''J' 0 i 44 I .1) il. 'A 'AI 1 41 't 1 11 .11 N. 71ili Slitl 1 1 443 ,1 fA'. -00-ft- k- a -i iA1111M )' I i 0 VirIlLN il, -4 i 4t 'i i I l- ttl 1 :1 IP jilik))111ti 6,.1,, 1114 P1' "'elti 1' (r, -P 4-- ClUCI lit? an a 1 4 -----'-----7-- i' 1 e-r-vr Ult. iCt vrhat -A-- (,,,..., z-- 1' ,1 I Alooses a I all bi.S 5 1 1 it, I '4, fl'fi'14 Ifr I); 1 AS a 111 hooses pular 1 4.

1, be po 7 (- e' 1 At I at -c ,1 i i4 2,0 I 0. VI' tP.4 i a 'al', 1 1 1(e1TWT ktISUI 'll. JZ if 1P71 i A i 't 11 1: i the s- is vIllY 14otice vhe hectvl, Al no! 11, i 1,,,,, ill 4. A 9 0111 'i nt ..1. A f' '1 Tnell.

built c'tch lane qui ikt i il i 1 4 4t 01614W, 1 a 4 Callr1 ell liAr 1 tS laschoolor topcoat r'( it---t' lia, the ectli, .1 so th 100L sole thClt Como leather or a 'Kell- back again to an old family custom iii brown' toe i a eal lion into SteP Beautifully tailored wool fleece --the ITI a -CUAL Intotti, ant toot with cotton knit back Nifty He knows he's back at home base when Mom brings in the Coca-Cola belc)w COMPI' slash-. pocketslarge lapels. i.d. gather 'rod an from family I. All hands th the reunion 'ir A- anal re ngera or.

v.rottn Just one of a -long line-up of 4. i 4 S. 1- $8. gray. 50 fleeces and tweeds.

Brown, blue, mint green, winter wine, starts off with refreshment. The words Have a Coke always strike the enough Astbo ,0 old ark of familiar friendliness. Be sure there's Coke on hand ookout Sizes 9 15 at a opt. li '25 at your house. Get a supply of Coca-Cola today.

.4., 11, qi.1. SOTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA COLA COLIPANY SY 4 it HI-TEEN SHOP-THIRD FLOOR KENNEDyss I Toca-Cola" and its abbreviatioa KENNEDY'S Coca-cola Bottling Company of Boston i 7 Coke ars the registered trade. a i 1 marks which distinguish the prod- SUMMER and HAWLEY STREETS sumMER and HAW LEY, STREETS Hear Morton Downey, Pa Kb Itr uct of The Coca-Cola Company. 0 1945 The C-C Cla il i 1 pot rt ZitiowOAIrt IS THE IN was, ItcyiNvi tivvtil gs $6.50 EVery mon knows Coose his bat echoes his -persorvolity and toste. your hat carefully.

Kertworth hats ore triode -with the discriminating a man in fcishioned of fine felt and sdesig ne by master hatters --a triton of good taste Imows he can' go wrong with a. s-ra-o-o-t-b. Kenworth bat. KENNEDY'S '7! 1 STEPUP YOUR TIECONV ERSION-ST EP INTO IYINAN 011111 AO 6 'As a man chooses a suit io clucaity and. coratortso he chooses his shoes.

'that is hy g.enworth shoes are popular among men. I4otice the sturdy leather sole the well-built arch the heavy, brown leather that really holds its shine --the me orth dallion toe tor a smooth loolic below le pont-cuti. Step into a 1Cen- shoe tor complete toot coratott. $850 SUMMER and HAWLEY STREETS FEZ War Crimes Continued from the First Page Heading the list of 24 is Reichsmarshal Hermann Wilhelm Goering, the "No. 2 Nazi." Hitler is not charged in the indictment because of some indications that he died in the ruins of the city.

In seeking the death of Goering, Rudolf Hess, Foreign Minister Joachim von Ribbentrop and the others the Allies hope to emblazon a new principle in a future code of conduct for mankindthat conspiring to wage war is a crime against humanity. In addition to the general staff and the high command the other organizations named included the Gestapo, the SS (Elite Guard) troops of the Nazi party, the Storm Troopers, the SD or Secret Service Sicherheitsdienst, the German Cabinet, and the Leadership Corps of the Nazi party. Commanders Indicted A spokesman for the American prosecutor, Justice Robert H. Jack. son.

said that the General Staff and high command would be considered "as one entity, with a choice representative segment specifically indicted." Those already named in the indictment are Alfred Jodi, Colonel-General and chief of the Army Staff; Wilhelm Keitel, Feld Marshal and chief of the High Command; Karl Doenitz, Grand Admiral and Commander-in-Chief of the German Navy; Erich Raeder, Grand Admiral and former commander of the Navy. Indictment of the individual German General Staff officers as war criminals resulted from American demands. Russia, Great Britain and France opposed the action on the ground soldiers are responsible only for carrying out orders. Justice Jackson insisted that aggressive warfare constituted an international crime, and finally won over two of the nations. One power, whose identity is secret, refused to agree.

Court Ceremony I day. seated himself behind a long The Berlin ceremony In which' table, flanked on the right by the the indictment was presented to the court was simple but impressive. It Americans and on the left by the lasted for only an hour. and took French and British. place in the ornate chamber of the Facing them were the prosecuformer Berlin superior court, now tors.

The British wore formal court the Allied Control Building. attire of striped trousers, black Standing before the two oak doors of the great white-walled 'coats, batwing collars. chamber. a court attendant in black Judges Declarations coat and striped trousers intoned in English, French. Russian and The judges rose one by one and German the word "silence!" The made their declarations: entire proceedings were translated "I solemnly declare that I will into the four languages.

exercise my powers and duties as The doors opened, with 114.1 Gen member of the International Tri I. T. Nikitchenko. of the Soviet bunal honorably, impartially and Union, and his alternate, T. A.

r-nscientiously." Bolchkov, leading the delegation of As they finished Nikitehenko judges. said, "I hereby announce the meetw They were followed by the 1 ing of the International Tribunal French judge, Henry Donnedieu I is open." and his alternate. Robert Falco; the Sir Hartley Shawcross, the Brit-American Francis Biddle and his ish prosecutor, then explained that alternate, Judge John Parker; the the prosecution was unanimously British Lord Justice Lawrence and presenting the indictment. his altrnate. Justice Norman Bilkett Francis Shea, chief assistant to a Nikitchenko, presiding for the Justice Jackson, handed up the in Beautifully tailored wool fleece with cotton knit back.

Nifty slash-, pocketslarge lapels. Just one of a -long line-up of fleeces and tweeds. Brown, blue, mint green, winter wine, gray. Sizes 9 to 15. HI-TEEN SHOP-THIRD FLOOR KENNEDY'S SUMMER and HAWLEY STREETS THE BOSTON DAILY GLOBE No.

2 NaziHead of Luftwaffe German General who signed uncon- ditional surrender at Reims day. seated himself behind a long table, flanked on the right by the Americans and on the left by the French and British. Facing them were the prosecutors. The British wore formal court attire of striped trousers, black coats, batwing collars. Judges Declarations The judges rose one by one and made their declarations: "I solemnly declare that I will exercise my powers and duties as member of the International Tribunal honorably, impartially and c-nscientiously." As they finished Nikitchenko said, "I hereby announce the meet Sir Hartley Shawcross, the British prosecutor, then explained that the prosecution was unanimously presenting the indictment.

Francis Shea, chief assistant to Justice Jackson, handed up the in FRIDAY, OCTOBER 19, Nazi Foreign Minister I rk A I German Navy Commander-in-Chief Successor to Hitler as German Government head dictment on behalf of the 'United States, France and Britain. Gen R. Rudenko, the chief Soviet prosecutor, then delivered the Russian text. Nikitchenko then said: "An indictment has now been lodged with the tribunal by the Committee of the Chief Prosecutors setting out the charges made against the following defendants Slowly he read the name of each of the 24 principal defendants. 'German Reporters Present German reporters representing all the German newspapers in Berlin sat at press tables with Allied correspondents.

One artist from the German newspaper Der Morgen sketched the proceedings. Not more than 150 persons were able to find seats in the chamber. Among them was a sprinkling of German civilians. Jackson declared the German General Staff had no fixed membership such as the SS or the Gestapo, and did not constitute an entity any more than did a graduating class of the 'United States Military Academy at West Point. An American spokesman said that other members of the General Staff would be "reached" In subsequent trials, and one American viewpoint was that ultimately more than 100 members of the General Staff would be tried.

Arraigned on 4 Counts The text of the 24.000-word indictment, issued simultaneously in Moscow, Paris, London and Washington, arraigns the Nazis on four counts and documents the charges in this manner: COUNT ONEThe common plan or conspiracy to overthrow the Treaty of Versailles. rearm Germany, acquire "Lebensraum" for the Reich at the expense of her neighbors and do this by any means including "force and aggressive war." COUNT TWOCrimes against peace, in which "All the defendants with divers other persons" participated in planning and then waging wars against Poland, Britain, France. Denmark, Norway. Belgium, Holland, Luxembourg, Yugoslavia. Greece, Russia and the United States.

COUNT THREEWar crimes, em. He knows he's back at home base when Mom brings in the Coca-Cola from the family refrigerator. All hands gather 'round and the reunion starts off with refreshment. The words Have a Coke always strike the old spark of familiar friendliness. Be sure there's enough Coke on hand at your house.

Get a supply of Coca-Cola today. SOTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCACOLA CORPANY If Coca-cola Bottling Company of Boston Hear Morton Downey, P. M. 1915 Nazi Labor Front dictator NUERNBERG, Oct. 18 (Al') Official circles said tonight that Martin Bormann, IIitter's deputy and only leading Nazi war criminal yet unaccounted for.

is be lieved to be dead. Indictments on those awaiting trial here will be served tomorrow morning. At the same time the Allies will serve notice to I3ormann by newspapers and radio that he is on the list of defendants. braced in the doctrine of total war which included violations of the laws and customs of war such as "deliberate and systematic genocide" (the extermination of racial and national groups). The indictment alleged mass murder by cities and districts in Russia, Poland and the Balkans which totalled 9.465.000 and mentioned numerous other cases wherein 'thousands" died by gunfire and torture.

Heavy stress is laid on the system of hostage murder employed to keep populations in check. COUNT FOURCrimes against humanity in which all the defendants are accused of participating in Germany, in those countries occupied by the German armed forces after the beginning of the European War on Sept. 1. 1939, in Austria and Czecho-Slovakia and Italy and on the high seas. The crimes involved, among other things, the murder and persecution of any person even suspected.

of being hostile to the Nazi Party of its plan of European expansion. Lavin Awarded $2500 in Hired Boat Suit WORCESTER, Oct. 18A Superior Court jury today awarded Walter Larin of Auburn $2500 for injuries and personal loss when he was thrown into Lake Champlain in July, 1941, because his hired boat sunk. Defendants were Mrs. Merle Blake lock of Belmont, operator, and John McGrath of Somerville, owner of a camp which rented the boat to the plaintiff.

Can you tie a Coca 'German General who signed unconditional surrender at Berlin t' Nazi Chancellor of Austria UNO War Crimes Head Visits Belsen Trial LUENEBURG. Germany. Oct. 18 (AP)--Lord Wright, chairman of the United Nations War Crimes Commission. attended thee Belsen trial today, listening as one defendant, 1de Lobauer.

denied beating or drowning women prisoners. Lord Wright said he visited court, where 45 Nazis are being tried for war crimes at the Belsen and Oswiecim camps, "to get the atmosphere of the trial," and said he was "rather anxious to see how they were getting along here." The Lobauer woman denied testimony of previous witnesses that she had drowned women at Oswiecim by pushing them into a ditch, declaring the ditch was not deep enough. No Secret Centenarian (to reporter): Young man, you can include in your story that the secret of my living to be a hundred is that rye always eaten a great deal-of garlic. 6Where do you get the idea it's a secret?" gasped the reporter. Clipping.

Your Furniture and t7oodworft 1 0 1945 De C-C Co. at Springfield Session SPRINGFIELD, Oct. 18Judge Felix Forte of Belmont has been as. signed to preside over a special ses 510rt et Superior Court here, Nov. 5, when two murder cases will be tried.

Peter J. Polchlopek, 40, of Chicopee, will be tried on the charge of murder of his wife. 40. on May 16, on a lonely road in Chlorpee Falls. James Dermas.

29, of this city will be charged with the butcher-knife slaying of Renaldi Montesel. 31, on June 26, in a downtown cafe. Former Dist. Atty. Thomas F.

Moriarty said tonight he would appear for both defendants. The cases wilt be prosecuted by Dist. Atty. Charles R. Alberti of Pittsfield.

Discharged Vet Robbed of $2800 at Worcester WORCESTER, Oct. 18Police are seeking a thief who stole $2800 early this morning from Vehe Serijaniart. a discharged soldier. The money was taken from a dresser draw in his room at the Y. M.

C. A. DOG OWNERS SPECIAL KEIII1EL FOOD HOW AVAILABLE AT GROCERS Now your dog can enjoy this complete for4 every day with fresh meat baked innutratoutt, wholesome horse meat, prepared under ideal sanitary conditior. THE ONLY FOOD OF ITS KIND IN AMERICA TODAY. For years this food called -Ken-L-Biskit" has been used in America's foremost kennelshelping to keep world champions in top form.

Over 100.000.000 pounds have been fed! Now made available to you at grocers, feed atom. etc. Ken-L-Biskit comes crumbled in small pieces, easily mixed with boiling water. Provides your dog with MEAT EVERY DAY! Ken-L-Biskit is a complete foodevery known element and vitamin your dog needs for perfect health- Try Now at your grocer's( Cola Toca-Cola" and its ebbreviattoo "Coke" ere the registered trade. marks which distinguiiih the prod-tact of The Coca-Cola.

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