- f.Vr We Shall Drag Down World In Flames'-Hitler's Threat of 1932: Bloody Atrocities Follow --'J;:: - M- - ijl i! Hi- J: 1 ! H ' f- - - ; i ' . - : '. : o i , in : ' i . I : .!.,...- . : ! ,. ' . : . t Lidice, Kiev, Dresden Among Towns Where Nazi Infamy Flamed By RICHARD TOMPKINS AP Features Writer i NEW YORK---We maj be de stroyed, but if; we are, we shall drag a world With us a world inflames!' " :;... So spoke Adolf Hitter in 1932 to his closest associates, accord ing to Dr. Herman Rauschrling, former president of the Danzig senate and an intimate of Hitler until he broke! with the nazis In 1935. M 'VM ."Our conversation then dealt with details of a future gas and bacterial war," Rauschning writes in prefacing the Hitler quotation. And later, as the terror of de feat gripped Hitler, the Berlin ra dlo said: j "Before the peril can reach the heart of our beloved country, we will turn this continent into a maelstrom of only one cry is: COURAGE INSPIRES i. " r . . " " : ' V of . - I NIIMOEUIR, a German lu theran pastor, preferred prison to Nazism. His courage inspired world sermons. destruction where heard the cry for blood . All, now is at stake. Was this an actual threat in an effort to soften the allies,iwith the hope of forcing a negotiated peace? Here are some of the deeds that were already done: LIDICE: On June 15, 1942, the Czecho-Slovak village was erased by the gestapo. All males over 17 a pproximately 200 were killed; all women about 200 were sent to concentration camps; all children-fa bout 120 .were placed in so-called reform schools in Germany. Every house was burned. The nazi explanation was that arms were stored in the village; an illegal radio station operated - there; that the inhabitants pro vided aid to those who made an attack oh , the nazi "protector" Heydrich. No trial was held. DISTOMO, THE GREEK LID1 ICE: On June 10, ,1944, the nazis slaughtered more than 1,000 res idents. Including babies in arms, then burned the village. V The population was herded into the village square, facing machine guns. The nazis opened fire and when all had fallen the troopers went about pistolling those still alive and stamping the life from babies whom parents sought to protect with their own.bodies. The Bed Cross, four days after the massacre, found only a handful of survivors ljk fear - crazed chil dren roaming the woods. Thus the nazis revenged the deaths of 30 German soldiers in a battle with Greek resistance groups near the village. ' . ORADOUR - SUR - GLANE, Trench Lidice by mistake! Again on June 10, 1944, Ger man SS troops slaughtered all but eight of 800 inhabitants. Women rand children were, driven into a church and locked in with a case i of explosives. An hour later the charge went offi - . The village was destroyed, the " nazis said, because its natives had ' firearms dump. Later a German official stated the village was de stroyed "in error." The atrocity " was intended for Ora-dour-sur-Vayres, a larger place, 17 miles away, where the Maquis had clashed with German, troops. ! , y KIEV: More than 195,000 Soviet . . citizens were "tortured, shot or poisoned in murder vans" during the occupation of Kiev, a commis sion investigating destruction of the ancient city reported on Feb. . 28, 1944. . BORKI, on the Warsaw-Minsk railroad: All the Inhabitants of the village were executed and the Village burned for the derailment of a train on another line, the Pol ish Telegraph Agency said - on March 18, 1944. ; ' OSWIECIM: The Polish Minis try of Information reported March 21 that more than 500,000, mostly Jews, had ' been put to death at a concentration' camp at Oswiecim, southwest of Krakow. Three crematories had been erect ed inside the camp to dispose of 10,000 bodies a day. : ROVNO: More than 102,000 d- "Vilians and prisoners of war. were murdered in the Rovno region of pre-war Poland, a soviet ex traordinary commission for in- Vestigation of German atrocities charged on May 7. Many were forced to dig their own graves. ,. - V ---- .' BUDAPEST: The Hungarian government asserts that 1000 Jews " . will be condemned to death every time the allies raid Budapest, ra dio France in Algiers said ; on May 10. -: Secretary of State Hull declared I July 14 that the number of mas . sacred Jews in Hungary was al ready great and "the entire Jew ish community in Hungary which numbered nearly 1,000,000 was threatened with extermination.' DRESDEN: Forty-seven British f and allied air officers were shot to death after a mass escape two ', months ago from a prison camp . near Dresden, Foreign Secretary i'Anthony Eden disclosed on May ' 19- . : Germany Many Times Has Been Aggressor in War (AP rMturcs) . ' Germany's invasion of Poland September 1, 1939, wasn't her first aggression against a neighbor, nor was her attack on Trance and Russia in August, 1941, nor her attack on France in 1870. German invasions, however, have many times been the other way round; Caesar's legions, Gus- tavus "Adolphus's armies and Na poleon's artillery have plowed up her soil. Since wild, fierce Teuton! in the second icentury BC invaded Italy, Germany has often deliberately chosen the sword in preference to the pen, and the savage sweep of Attila and his hordes westward in the fifth century AD provided the name by which Germans have been many times denounced: Hun. Lombard? was invaded by Ger many's Otto in 951, Henry II in 1046, Frederick Barbarossa in 1154, Frederick the Great struck the first blow in the Seven Years' war. with the invasion of Saxony in 1758. .Von Bismarck, warrior - chan cellor, overwhelmed Denmark In 1864, Austria in 1866 and France in 1870-1871. Treisui7Ccnsus of Investments Abroad Proves an Advantage AP reatereaj ! ; ! '; - A US Treasury census of what Americans own abroad proved of unexpected Itelpjiar the Allies struck into j&xis-held territory. The information supplied by , in vestors, for instance, enabled the American Military! Government to know wbre j public utilities and manufacturing plants are; lo cated and to prepare to repair them. ;--. 1 1 i- r;.:- Peace Plans At Hand for Qose Study (AP Features) The men who determine rops's pattern for tomorrow have at hand today the readymade blueprints of the many peace ro- feu- grams evolved by statesmen during years-! - .," ij -I t The number of das, declarations i and plans that i it. j .til. j a; croppea up m ui auiea nauons was legion, but the ones outlined below: seemed to receive the wid the long war i. f J v.- HI outlines, agen- est attention! Some evoked ad- verse criticism, r P . I; ! une of tne ixrsv and most i au thoritative was the Atlantic char' ter drawn upj by President Roose velt and Prune Minister Church ill In 1941 and later backed bf the United Nations; It called fori the cooperation of all peoples to pre serve; peace, the right of small nations to freedom from aggres sion and governments of their own choice, the abandonment of force, the access to all the raw materials. Other plana supported the prin cipie or. cooperation, auierea on methods.' j ' f ;- M " s ' j The formation of a four-power organization 1 1 to 'keep the peace was proposed November 1, J943, in Moscow 'at the conference of the United States' Great Britain, Russia and Chiha, i Vice President Wallace Urged forcible and permanent disarma ment of aggressors. I ' K Wendell Willkie called for or deny . abolition of t colonial sys tems and the abolition of injus tice. 1 -Si , - I' 1 H Former President Herbert Hoo ver asked at world insutution to keep peace,! urged a coolihg-off period after the armistice to pre vent unjust peace terms. -4-t ENEMY'S LEADER f ROMMEL wen a place in hii- : tory as the foe's most brilliant r tacticianii Not a heel-popping. Junker, he came up hard way. Germany's Debt 7ent To Total Estimated at Over 50 Billion Dollars AP Features The Reparations commission af ter World War I fixed Germany's debt to the allied nations at 122,- OOO.OOO.OOOgoId marks (about $52,- 000,000,000 ; at normal exchange rates). At the end of five years (1924) when the Dawes plan for stabilizing ;Germanya currency went into effect the Reich bad paid 8,405,000,000 i marks in gold and products. The Young Plan in 1929 ad justed ! the debt into . 59 annual payments, running! to 1899, and totalling 36,998,000,000 marks. WSTOmfJOtii We've got the pelts jbf Mussolini ; and fitterf let's Keep the Axis trio together! Force the Japanese (nob to join their companions! The only way is to pull to' gether harder than ever ... to keep our brave boy supplied for Victory! Comply with every wartime regulation cheerfully! and buy War Bonds with ft engeance! Radio USUI Station Salem's Own Station" I IK y if . Iv&ii i i . ' - iv - - - i - At v.. ' ' .J4:i I -,;n . S) 1 ! II nPrnrM Aav hm r i ii it lulls nil iLiui 'i w W II - rp . n "i n, II ' : ' ! .1 i--: ' . 'Hi ; -rt r :? 1 -:V -' tm M: ' ' " j Wm ,: jfEirapt r IV I " . r: i ik. I mm ' f si - ; s: i ; ssi . - ' i j- ' I I - i i 1 i X 'rTie;" honor roh. 4-jgjTjiyt ?.)( : The forrtersfnnn LcM )Mm fe -' felT: j v.i "iss-' .. 1 1 rrll J1 III " 1 Has Boon Laid ; fflQgs9&$ ' lSS -f'5 KCfef-v V nZ, ; i rw3? w II iT 7 r- - i CUT Ji . I I ii k i , r uir I i i i L Z7S I ImA fl'iA.JW. -vm Iirf' III II U V JV' 2-ZT- -XJ-- I i - . ; , III - , F'bi those who fell . J . WE PRAY, I M". -HOMAGE, bdcousel of -their1 vie- 1 r-f:'-4 ; M - .; j : ! . ."o,,,WEELEBRATEl.j-; i-, . -f!l-:-'?" ,.' M' iioi7isrS:iiSLP Fiinsn toe job! ! ':!'; "SKi --- Ui-m:M mi:: I'm : yi;i m' UJ U yjLI VlMsltO-lLlllL VJ LC. I - , : M:1' -riM j -.- 'M '' ' -f-1- M.3.lsMlT-f- xx"?X"Xx;x-xxW B ' -M - .. ;M-y- - .-mc MMv Mm M: MiMM' ' .MM :::Hlfr::M;JMvn1 -M-M-MVjM-r-r; In7 the hand of Liberty, the flags of the United1! Nations are a flaming banner of freedom for the1.! libferatei peoples of Europe, too. long burdened' j by the yoke of Nazi oppression. AW glory tcfj the fighting forces whose unfailing courage has: brought into being the Victory which now thrills i lovers of democracy around trie globe I All glory to their leadership, governmental and pilitary. which" conceived and executed the strategy of Victory. All glory to the peoples of the United Nations who found no sacrifice too great for the final defeat of Nazism.' For! 44 We Americans" there is still a final battle to be won : a final enemy) to render impotentJapan. Let us not diminish our efforts and sacrifices, so that Liberty's torch! may forever brightly burn -4 never agaiif to bii threatened by forccJ Ror Mil ScZaa :.;m " '" "V.! ,.: M - v - . . M - ' ; M-- j r;':;-;": m; . , , i 'M' ' " -' , M - ... . ii.-