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Star-Phoenix from Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada • 5

Publication:
Star-Phoenixi
Location:
Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada
Issue Date:
Page:
5
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

SASKATOON STAR-PHOENIX. MONDAY. JILY 1913 PAGE rivi Two Courses Open to Big Three in Rule of Germany hoard. One of the members of the crew of the missing Canso was Fit. Ltd.

George (Buff) Ramsay of Toronto, whose wife. Marjorie TORONTO, July 9 (CP). E. B.ithe barracks room of an American Ramaay, refused to give up hope Jolliffe, C.C.F. leader in Ontario.

Women Army Corps member Frt-her husband was still alive. West-voted here today In the Britishjday night and attempted to molestiern Air Command confirmed Satur-election and sent the ballot by airlher. American soldiers overpowered jday that there were no survivors mail to Britain. Mr. Jolliffe, a one-1 and disarmed the intruder and'of the crash, time Rhodes scholar, is a graduate turned him over to the Soviet auth ices, but life In the British sone 1 like living in barracks for the Germans as well as the British in the terribly unsmiling business of teaching the Germans one damned severe lesson even if it takes years.

The American Idea Is based broadly on the same principles, though It seems leas severe with there are no clear signs on such. he emphasis on modern mass uniformity in actual practice. psychology, directing people's Or they may split Germany Into min(js j0 WRys of thinking on over-emphasized fraternization business but at the present time Arrest Thousands In Great Manhunt EERLIN, July 9 (Reuters). One of the greatest manhunts In Germanys history is in progress in the heart of Berlin ss fovlet-eon-t rolled police authorities, still operating with jurisdiction over the of Christ Church College, Oxford University, and as such eligible to vote for the university's two members in the British House of Commons. oritieL He apparently had been drinking, the report said.

Under Soviet military law, such an offender would be liable to a five-year prison term. SIMLA, India, July I Reuters). Mohammed Alt Jinnay. Moslem League president, conferred for 90 British and American-held sectors, minutes Sunday with the viceroy, round up the men who are the Viscount Wavell meeting x-ror of Hitler's political, social and. pected since the Moslem leader organizations.

MARLBOROUGH, July 9, sought further details on Saturday! Arrests run into tens of thou- By J. A. M. COOK Star-Phoenix Correspondent BERLIN. July 9 (Special Cable).

her is a choice of two couises icing the Big Three in plans for jle of New Germany and it is a unfully severe test of Allied atesmanship. They may pursue the idea of joint Hied council in Berlin working osely in cahoot9 or they may each i their own way in a great four ay experiment with what's left of is German race. They may try working jointly om Berlin and try for closely lentical treatment of all Germany 1th accord at least In principle In ich matters as food rations, labor sage, re-education of the race, egree of political freedom; even on the proposed new executivejganda The number in custody far council on which all poets butexceeda anything yet seen in a viceroy and eommsnder-ln-chief area of Germany under would be held by Indians. the control of the western Allies. Well-informed political observers In tha Britiah-held district of regard the meeting a a a crucial Chariot tenburg, there have been point in the conference of pollticaiil.OOO political arrests in tha last leader on the council proposals, five weeks.

LONDON. July 7 (CP). Senator W. Rupert Davies, publisher of the Kingston, Whig-Standard and Peterborough Examiner and Roy H. Thomson, publisher of the Timmins, Daily Press, have arrived in Britain from Canada.

Senator Davies, who has been invited by King George to become high sheriff of Montgomeryshire, North Wales, for the year beginning March 1, 1947, will leave for Wales today. Senator Davies, chairman of tha Canadian section of the Empire Press Union, will also confer in London on preparations for the E.P.U. conference here next summer. ATHENS. July (Reuters).

Brig. Preston, commanding British troops in Crete, in a speech at Canea said that Crete had been cleared of German troops except few technician remaining to clear mines and sort out war W- country looking for bits of cabbage and other vegetables. Berliners have had no clothing except for bomb victims in two years There is no coal now though people can clean up blitzed buildings for burning broken wood or by cutting down shrapnel wrecked trees in the tiergarten or other parks Ail the people between IS and 45 must woik or get along on 109 grammes of bread one week. Today saw women digging with shovels in deep craters in the street beyond the Reichstag to get more bread for that. At the same time able-bodied men are being recruited for work in Russia.

There is nothing compulsory about it but men are volunteering in Older to be sure of eating, they say. On the British side there would appear to be work for every German for years to come and only recently 300 prisoners were released to help with the harvest. On the Russian side no prisoners have been returned to their homes and men here are already being recruited to go to Russia for certainly the Russians are going ahead with plans which appear to have little resemblance to the British and you would not imagino they would do this if there were any prospect they would agree to Join the plan resembling the Brls-lsh idea when the Big Three meet. The fraternization business appears to have been over-emphasized on our side. The Russians have a simple approach in which lesser acts, if they do not affect the safety of the state and are not too conspicuous or in which no actual brutality or serious complaint from German women, seem to get by.

While on our side one half hour with a willing German fraulein is getting a soldier as much as four years. It does not appear likely that our top men would make a serious attempt to draft a uniform plan for handling Germany at this conference. The prospects of entire harmony or even entire success seems remote at this stage since they mean rather drastic concessions to 'Russian practice or British or American practice. Each power seems to be clinging rather zealously to it's own ideas but if we fall to do this then we will each go our own way and in time the barrier between us will grow and there will be four little Germanics, each an outpost of powers that cannot agree. Taste the old-time home-made flavour -due to small-batch cooking Condensed Vegetable Thert if now plentiful supply 7-.

of three Heini fvoutiteisCoit of thret Heinz favourite Con (CP). One American soldier was killed and a number of other soldiers and four civiliana were injured by an explosion and fire Saturday in a United States army ammunition dump in Savernake forest. The original blast was followed by explosions in two nearby dumps. Tha concussion jarred the countryside. VATICAN CITY, July 9 (AP).

Pope Pius granted an audience Sunday to former Governor Herbert H. Lehman of New York and staff members of Mr. Lehman's United Nations Rehabilitation and Relief Administration mission in Italy. Tha Pope, in a brief speech, praised the organization's work in countries devastated by war. TORONTO, July 9 (CP).

The Canadian League for Advancement of Colored People was organized Sunday by E. Phillip Randolph, international president of tha Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters, at a meeting here. The league will work for Federal and Provincial civil rights bill and fair employment practices in each Province. TORONTO. July 9 (CP).

Lieut. Svend Pedereon, International relations officer of the World Youjh Council, proposed Saturday as a peace formula that every German youth should be takfn oulaida that country and given the beat education that money can buy." Lieut. Pederaon. visiting Canada and the United. States in connection with the World Youth Conference which starts In London August 28, told a press conference a centuries-old poisonous mentality" exists in Germany.

VANCOUVER, July 9 (CP). Wreckage of a plane found in the Clayoquot Arm district on the west coast of Vancouver Island has been Identified ae that of a Caneo flying boat which disappeared last three or four principal zones ss if they were distinctly separate countries with different sort of people. Each occupying power governing their own slice according to their own Individual theories of how to remake Germany without much worry about what goes on elsewhere. During May there was very little relation between what went on east of the Elbe and what happened in the western two-thirds of the Reich. SOME CO-OPERATION Since the Allied control council was inaugurated In Berlin on June 5, there have been attempts at cooperation over and beyond ttie setting up of zones decided at Yalta and undoubtedly there will be further exploration of possibilities when the chief executives of the great powers meet.

It is now clearly evident that the job of the military commanders has become secondary. The battle job Is ended. From here on It Is a task for experts with qualifications other than those required in battle. The character of the military commander centres on a direct approach so that in times of chaos he can most quickly marshal supplies but for long term planning where the main target Is definitely one of training Germany for peace, the job calls for men who can win the closest co-operation from the German people. They are and have been willing enough to bend their backs during the emergency that followed the collapse of their armies but It will become Increasingly difficult to exact the greatest effort from them purely by the exercise of law.

Some attempt appears to have been made to unify at least in part the treatment of Germans but these efforts are either inadequate or otherwise unsuccessful, for If there has been a general plan It has broken down. VARIANCE Two visiils to Berlin have been enough to convince this reporter that the approach to the problem of the people In British and Russian zones is as different as can be imagined. Certainly our approach to immediate needs is In great variance, though it is not clear what any of us plan to do with Germany in the long run. And no matter If we all used the same handbook as is the case with the British and Americans who do now, It is very doubtful If you would ever get an Identical interpretation. Current British rule appears weighted on the military aide with one well armed soldier to every hundred civilians in northern Germany.

It attempts to be scrupulously fair and allows Germans to operate most of their public serv- There are differences for Germans run their own rail lines In British teritory while American troops operate all tiaina in the south. REDS DIRECT The Russian method is the most direct of all. They simply take over everything. They are allowing the Germans somewhat less voice In affairs than the west although in freedom they are more severe on worst offenders than either the British or Americans but the idea seems to be they look the other way in the presence of petty fraternization. The thing you feel most about Germany east of the Elbe is that for tne present there is no such thing as experiment.

That for the present at least, the Russians have comprehensive plan all tied up with neat red strings and nothing is going to stop them from going through with it. What goes on In the British territory still has considerable element of experiment and it may be some time before the pattern becomes clear. We are all trying to make it Impossible for Germany to begin war again, but it is doubtful if the British will adopt Russian severity in the matter of justice or countenancing what may be termed Russian laxity in relations with common people. BETTER FED Facilities for organization of resources on the British aide are better and direction seems more effective and people all through Hanover Province of Westphalia and the Rhine countiy appear better fed and more comfortable by far than hungry specimens around Berlin and the little towns between here and the Elbe who scramble in the mud for cigarette ends and dig into garbage pails around the Canadian camp for scraps of food People in western Germany are allowed rations which are approximately half that of the British soldier, plus what they can scrounge off the countryside or what they have stored up. Here in Berlin the heavy worker gets less than a pound and a half of bread one week, whilo the man not employed In manual labor col lects about two pounds of all foods one week plus monthly ration of tea, coffee and salt from shops where Russian soldiers stand guard for they dont got into this calorie business like Americans or British, but for the ordinary women It is 300 grammes of bread, 40 meat, seven fat, 15 sugar, 30 flour and 400 potatoes for one week.

Besides there are 60 grammes of coffee, 100 ersatz, 20 tea, and 400 salt monthly, so that all Berlin is a bedraggled army of men, women and children with makeshift carts moving back and forth from the I dented Vegetable Soup Con dented Vegetable Soup Without Meat and Condensed Cream of Green Vegetable Soup. Aik your grocer for a FRtB copy of the booklet: '97 Ways To Uae Heins Condensed Soupe," TORONTO. July 9 (CP). Frederick Barnard Fetherstonhaugh, 83, head of tha firm of Fetherstonhaugh and Company, died Friday at his home at nrarhv Mimico. Estshlished by Mr.

Fetherstonhaugh in 1890, the firm of patent barristers and solicitors, engineers snd draftsmen, Toronto, hsd branch offices in Hamilton, Montreal, Ottawa, Vancouver, Winnipeg, Halifax, Saint John, N.B., and New York. STOCKHOLM, July 9 (AP). Stockholm has becoms ona of Japan's last major listening posts for information concerning the western Allies. There is unhampered telegraphic communication between Stockholm and Tokyo, and Allied quarters say that lengthy excerpts of Allied publications are cabled regularly to Japan. BERLIN, July 9 (AP).

A United States military polica officer reported Sunday that a man wearing a Russian army officer's uniform Itotr Housewives have learned that for perfect, smooth results they can rely on BENSONS every time. SEVERAL TINS TO A CUSTOMER WHILE THEY LAST Tit fsmtritt srewrIJ Jtttrt. and carrying a pistol had entered December 2 with nine airmen on Bensons This Bummer serve sandwiches that are new and different! Plan them from this list of money savins foods and make them with Dread of fine texture and flavor. I CORN STARCH The Coseda Starch Company limited Tasty Sandwiches Popular Brands of BREAD ean alto be full, delicious meals in themselves. A filling of meat andor vegetable between slices of bread is a well-balanced plate that will satisfy tha sharpest appetite.

May wa suggest by way of an out-of-the-ordinary dish BAKIO tUNCHION SANDWICH TRY THIS Are Always Fresh Daily at Safeway McGavlns and 4X loaf r.mnrFs Crtengac l-1b, tla Jam T. PmrtrfMift. Jalll rura Plum Butter 36c Cheese 17c Honey 25c Peanut Butter 32c Rnirra Uoldm 2 tbeps. shortening 2 tbsps. all-purpose flour 1 cup mills Vt tap.

salt 2 tbspa chill sauce Tout bread. Place cheese slices on four slices of the toast and spread with mustard. Top with remaining toast and cut in halves lengthwise. Place in well-greased square baking pan (8i8z2). Make white sauce; Melt shortening, blend in flour.

Add' milk gradually, stirring constantly. Cook until thickened, about 6 minute. Add salt and chili sauce. Pour over cheese sandwiches. Bake in moderate oven (350 15 minutes.

Serve hot. MYIT1IV SANDWICH Combine 2 cups shredded cabbage -lk. tla 24C 1-lb. jar 30C Syrup Marmalade Orange ffSAPEW AYtM Tumtyif1 Use more fresh fruits and vegetables now while theyre at their beat. with 2 cupe lunchmeat cut in strips, 3 hard cooked eggs chopped, and 3 sliced pickled onions.

Season with salt ana pepper to taste; add mayon Ik. 18c Ik. 8c Celery Watermelon OSSi Cantaloupe 2 lbs. 29c Grapefruit 2 lbs. 25c Oranges ilrnrlu a 2 lbs.

27c Lettuce 21c Cabbage mn hradi 2 lbs. 15c Cucumbers "fin'd 20c Housing Is Biggest Problem in Mind 01 Brilishjoters llwi RRITISH 1NST1UTE or riBLio or i mo.n TORONTO, July 9. Indicative of tha personal problems facing many a Briton today is the fact that, in a survey conducted by the British Gallup Poll prior to last week's general elecUon, voters put housing" as the chief issue in the election, considerably ahead of the problem of full employment. Thle fact is mors striking when it is realized that, throughout the war, surveys In Britain hava shown that employment, or job security, has been at the top of tha list of postwar mattera about which Britons have been thinking. During the election campaign, it has been apparently replaced by the more immediate problem of homes, in the mind of the British voters.

In conducting Its survey, results of which havs just been forwarded to affiliated Gallup Polls in six other countries, the British Institute asked a carefully selected sample of adults: What questions do yon think will be most discussed In the general election 7 By a wide margin, housing Is the foremost question with full employment second; Housing 41 Full employment 15 Social security 7 Nationalization of industry. 6 International security 5 Demobilization 3 Food and rationing 8 Germany 3 Education 3 Miscellaneous and no answer 15 World Copyright Reserved Analysts By DEWITT MACKENZIE Press Foreign Newe Anaiyet One of the most interesting spectacles of the weeekend has been that of Japan's notorious Admiral Kichi-saburo Nomura doing a bit of vigorous fishing in the peace pool. Nomura is by way of being an expert on peace that is, on some aspects of it. He's the fellow who was in Washington as the Mikados special envoy, talking peace and expressing Nippon's deep affection for Uncle Sam, when the Japs made their treacherous attack at Pearl Harbor. His name is deeply en graved on American memory.

The admiral casting a long line in the hope of hooking a bit of in formation eays the Allies policy of unconditional surrender is only costing them higher casualties. He admits theres no sign that they are suffering from war-wearinese, but declared: As long as the enemy asks for Japan's unconditional surrender she will have to shed blood proportionate to the time and Intensity of each battle. Nomura haa been about a bit and Isnt silly enough to think that any such statement would affect the Allied war program. Undoubtedly he is trying to draw from the Allies some further, more concrete, declaration as to what unconditional surrender" entails. Why? Well, because Japan knows that she la beaten and she is looking about to sea what can ba salvaged from the wreckage.

Things must Indeed look black to Tokyo. The homeland is virtually isolated by Allied naval and air blockade. Japan cannot feed herself, and already is faced with a food crisis. We are just hitting our stride in the aerial bombardment which will be more terrible than anything the world has seen. naise or salad dressing to moisten.

Spread between thinly sliced buttered bread. Makes 10 to 12 sandwiches. NOTE: A delicioua double decker can be made with this combination by using a slice of American cheese for the top deck with a garrnih of sliced tomatoes. AMD DIAN SANDWICH Use J4 cup heated baked beans to spread between each two slices rye bread. Top each aandwicb cup cole elaw.

Safeway Homemakers' Bureau JULIA LEg WRIGHT. Dirartof Its tiard work to love a grouch 1 SAEEWAYjftffiftg Miscellaneous Needs Peas Gardenside, 20 oz ..,.2 tins 25c Herrings Great Northern, 7 oz 2 tins 23c Molasses Domolco, 2s tin 27c Grape Juice Aylmer, 13 oz. bottle 19c Tomato Juice Aylmer. 20 oz. tin 1 1c Vegetable Juice Aylmer, 20 oz.

17c Women lore to plan surprises for pleasant, appreciative men in fact, they are the men who seem to get all the good things in love and in business. If you want to be happy (and beloved), one thing you certainly must avoid is that jumpy, irritable, depressed feeling which so often accompanies constipation. There Is a simple, pleasant precaution you can take. Eat Kelloggs A U-Bran every day. Nearly one out of every two Canadian families now serve All-Bran.

64 of them have been using it for over five years. Vo wonder we believe you will benefit from All-Bran, too. That is why we now make you this extraordinary guarantee: ib. 32c 2 lbs. 27c 30c Gem Jars Medium Doz.

$1.12 ftOWBtl y00g M0NIy BAcx lEts uarantce ass; as Pee that to eonUn Pcl Jou do I lied Special and Blue Commercial Beef Short Ribs For Bolling or Braising lb. 13c Sirloin Steaks Extra Tender and Juicy lb. 39c Rump Roasts Round or Square End Ground Beef Ideal for Hamburger Prime Rib Roast Bone In Round Bone Roast Shoulder lb. 22c SPRING LAMB Legs 45c Lein Chops Stewing 5 17c CHOICE VEAL Loin Chops 37c Blade Roast ALII -S' RATION TIME TABLE Week Beginning MONDAY, JULY 9, 1945 BUTTER (Purple) Coupon Nos. 90 to 113 Inclusive now valid.

Coupon No. 114 become valid Thursday, July 12. SUGAR (Red) Coupon Noa. 46 to 80 inclusive now valid. PRESERVES Coupon Noa.

33 to 57 and PI lncluaiva now valid. NOTE; Your extra PRESERVES coupon are your Canning Sugar Ration. Watch their expenditure. A SAVE THIS fuaraatae ft remind ft ft fuclm etf KftUorta Afl-Araa today. Your trocar hm It Ift oooTenietrt at mb.

KeOorc Com pony Canada. London Ontario..

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Pages Available:
1,255,247
Years Available:
1902-2024