. . r-'ff 4 :' i - ' ycay nnio:i j ' THE OREQON STATESMAN. SALEM. OREGON pxrrp five p Oh CSss in Hands of i Few en h - j . 1 . ti-, . 1 1 1 ' - f - ' ! Destiny M ' T " . . . . ' 0 . ' , ... v . ; ;f - ' ;. ''; . ', ' i . t - -j , : - " ' -?. - . '. ''; . : ." J .. : ' - - , t I f -1 CHURCHILL was Britain's sideline propktt of ' disaster until war blazed; he emerged mi prim minister, savior. .v EISENHOWER, a Ttxas-Kan- san, txscuted somt of might itt military operations and taught the Nazis new lessons. ft i ': V a- MONTGOMERY, libit toting 'blitz-master, was the first t step the Nazis with inspired . r. kj.it. ti.:.. Jactics across North Africa. V r -si. MOLOTOV, the mild, method ical statesman, in war be came Russia's No. 2 man and ' Russia became No. 1 Euro pean power with hispid. TtTft (Jotin Brex). the myth- shrouded chief orYMSOsUnr ' f fiuerrUlas, mtrged from the Balkan confusion fo confound tht tottering Nazi uptrmen. I ;a I r & j i r -V--- i: i .) ti' Leading Nations Heads Dominate World Thought By William Glover AP Features Writer . ' v ..This has -been personalized war in Europe. " - - A Through the long years leading to the struggle and the bloody months of battle, the destiny of all creation has rested In the hands of a half dozen leaders of nations. The dominant figures Roose velt, Churchill, Stalin, Hitler and Mussolini are "men of the hour,' untouched by royal blood. And while World war II has been a struggle of entire peoples. historians ' probably will ponder the impact of the leaders' per sonalities upon events. Each leader, too, ' has displayed : to marked degree the national char acteristicj of his state or its form of government. : : The Sinister and the Rosy , First of the dictators wasstri dent, pompous, braggart Musso lini. His stature shrank as that of his pupil, sinister Adolf Hitler, increased. Thwarted, brutal, the Fuehrer played upon the in grained militarism of his people, still . stinging from defeat United Nations leadership for the European conflict was in the hands of a trio of different stamp Churchill, "the rosy little man," a master of rhetoric, looks 'like John Bull and clinched fame by carrying the torch for the British Empire through the dark days of 1940-'41. Russia's fate was -en trusted to Joseph Stalin, Inscrut able master player In the inter national poker game of diploma cy, who gained, time by siding with the Nazis at first, who let the world think Russia could not fight victoriously, and who drew Hitler onto a battlefield of death. The United States was led by Roosevelt, a phrase - maker him sen, a master or timing and a leader so popular he could ask and get for the first time in his torya third presidential term. He not only helped a peace-loving complacent country reach war tempo, but insisted on being in fact the military head of th na tion, as well as the political. The Mliht Have Been What has been the effect of these personalities on events? At Munich Hitler pulled a gun on the Allied leaders of 1938, Chamberlain and Daladier. They quailed, and Mussolini who had been called in to play the role of .interlocutor decided history by putting his chips with Hitler, Whom he had bluffed in similar fashion on the matter of Austria's freedom in 1934. Churchill would scarcely have been bluffed that way. J s Stalin, . ignored at Munich, showed his disappointment. No one trusted the USSR, he must have thought, and the deed must have played a part in the later Russian policy, shifting and enig matic as it seemed to. the outside world. II Duce, when the showdown came in September, 1939, showed his inherent weakness by pulling aside as a non-belligerent, . then found outlet for his braggadocio in May, 1940, by jumping on France when he thought the battle was over. His action resulted In Roosevelt's tide-changing "stab In the back speech one day later, The Atlantic Charter -Personalities were transcendent when in 1941 the Anglo-American leaders held the first of their get- togethers and drew up the Atlan tic Charter. With it, generalized as it was, the two astute leaders silenced many skeptics of Allied war motives. The later meetings of the lead ers prove how their dominating beliefs and characteristics belit tled the : minor currents in the stream of conflict. In the later days of the war, as the jsyches of Roosevelt, Chur chill and Stalin came into per manent dominance over the tot tering personalities of Mussolini and Hitler, individual differences again shaped events. - Hitler,' the egotist- and mystic, during the day of German vie-1 tories, sowed the dragon's teeth of suspicion and contempt among the professional Prussian mili tarists. He spumed them, recalled them, dismissed them and cajoled them until even the home front suspected the omnipotence of the Reich's man-god. Mussolini, when war over whelmed l Italy, found the years of . strutting and imperiousness could not make tip for the fact that his regime was termite-eaten. These five (for it is still: too early to judge the ultimate per sonal elements in the Pacific) were products of the times in which they came to power, but more than that the deeds which followed : .were . products of the men. , I " 4""' ' ' 4fLiiM HITLER, Nazi dictator since 1933, .released Europe's old est bates, i newest death ma chines; was himself engulfed. 4, H v MUSSOLINI,, father of Fas cism, dictated for 21 years; was first of dictators to fall ('43) as Italy was invaded. V HEYDRICH, the Nazi hang- man, topped the list of war criminals for post-war trjal. But a patriot's; bomb got him in Pragu in 1942. ! i I HESS, Hitter's! own deputy Fuehrer, flfw to England Jin 1941 to propose peace-and i sank into deep oblivion.1' - VON THYSSIN. German steel tycoon,! sponsored Hitler's rise, theft from a jail window law wef gobble up fortune." '.r...i......?;i, N. MliPIHiilD)E DRI TOED1 . , .sjssasMSSslB ! GcrlainlsTit'f time' Kvipe'd out two thirds haturalpndeilefs This Europeanictory j! How clearly ve see ':tr IJ- the'sacrifices! :Working i . i i , 1 ' ' an ; abundance 'of things been r a I -: f what "a little"; troublesome on the borne f rbnt.r far cry from the ificesaur fighting men v NowTahead Tis the finals equally tough I battle; ? to'come. You can bet your boys will be ready; if we1 are'prepared to continue backing tliem! There, must not be to Tokio ! Prove' to' your boy s'our pride- i n them I byi insuring:FlNVictoi7!Buymore 135-146 N. Commercial EL i , Salem, Ore, if J 15 t -.- ACMflEWEMERITS for smiles! Your boys have of the Axis trio J But in our has cost all of Jus a good! now how worthwhile -V . -.-J '" extra hours Jdoihg without! . - v . ;; . : : Jand sal vaging mayjhaye) heroic life anddeathwsac have made! any .'dead end on this deal i were . i but road