ljesd4yi December 21, 194i
THE REGISTER. GUARD. EUGENE, OREGON.
Page Seven
Ordinary Nazi Stuff
Killing Russian Women
rotors no: In ,ol,owin
T written exclusively lor
N?S7j Press, llya Ehrenburg,
rl-known Russian author and
ft describes lour wit-
rtrocity
C ,t the Kharkov
. fiinrwniTnn
tn for tUi Pre?
(U.PJ
. .,.. nar.is four nazis
tf. under the kleig lights of a
f" three s prisoners
Kd with their war crimes, the
Pi .. a witness.
KZt re only ordinary nazis,
LrtL standard Hitlerites. That
Ir thine. There is no-
. .-ial here,
;B. -:... nlhln natholoffi
I w four representatives tell
" k,t a state system whose
E5, jg to annihilate other na-
There are
.in Lanxhsld is a precise
Lnnan. Before the war he served
rih. cltv administration of
Lnk(ort-on-the-Main. In ap-
Lrtnce He cuum uc a eo.w.,
Uer or a trader in brassier.
thai he shows witn wnai Kina
dub ne I10SSCU me ntnucu vi
IjujIjov, he seems 10 oe yiaisuis
fLjs at the counter. He has slain
I the same precise, businesslike
tuner with which he would
Lunt sausages.
irh.n he is auestioned, he says
1,, you please." He wears three
jujils ana says ns wm
la the eastern campaign." This
ihas tortured unfortunate peo
it unspeakably; he has shot war
nsoners; he has slain peasant
He liked order in everyining.
L one occasion he was to turn
...
Lnr six women to tne command'
VP--;"
ASONOTONE
HEARING AID
the
Patiect
' lot
As. enduring gift,' the
beginning of a glorious
future.
S0HOTO11E
Hearing Center .
285 Miner Bldg.
Phone 3623
ant to be shot but he had clubbed
them and one had died.
"I turned over only five," he
testified with a cough of self-depreciation.
When a five-year-old child
clung to the body of his mother
who had been flogged to death, the
corporal could not carry the body
away.
"The corporal didn't want any
fuss so he shot the child," ex
plained the precise captain.
How many has he slain with
his own hand? He hesitates to
make a mistake, cautiously ven
tures: "Aljout 100."
Of course, he condemns Hitler
now and he wonders why nobody
is Interested in his political be
liefs, only the women he killed,
but he draws himself up stiffly
and answers the questions,
"jawohl."
S. S. Lt. Hans Ritz ia nnW "l
but he is prematurely bald. He
studied international law, but tor
tured innocent DeoDle. fahriti
false accusations and light-heart-
eoiy snot peasant women. He is a
musician and "adores pastorales."
vny am ne become a butcher?
Perhaps it was his inquisitiveness.
One day he went to see the place
near Taganrog where inhabitants
were shot He went on invitation
pf Lt. Jakoby "to prove that you
are a man and a soldier."
. He did want to prove he was a
man. He nurses his tiny mustache
as he tells that. He seized a tommy
gun ana oegan to shoot down wo
men. Hans Ritz condemns Hitler, too.
Corporal Retzlaw is doltish but
he knew how to make his career.
At the beginning of the war he
was in France, drank much wine
and toured the bawdy houses,
Then his friends began going to
the eastern front. The corporal
wanted something better so he got
himself enrolled in a battalion of
the secret field police (GFP.) As
piring executioners were lectured
on how to arrest, search, interro
gate, execute. One professor lec
tured on the necessity of exter
minating the soviet people be
cause they were hampering the
new order.
Having finished with theory,
Cpl. Retzlaw passed on to prao
tice. A superior officer showed
him several arrested men and
pointing to one said, "That one has
a fine beard." Retzlaw understood
what he was to do, but he excused
himself. "I only pulled out part of
ms beard.'
He appreciated the merits of
i 1 MTU N W,
COMPOSE R Al Dexter, composer or "Pistol racktai' Must,"
presents Miss Nlana Yeacer with an autographed recording of his
song. Mia Tester purchased the largest amount of war .bands
sold one day at a New York city theater.
MANHATTAN SHIRTS
are sure-fire gifts. A fine stock
to choose front, . 2,25 to 3.59.
DeNeffe's
1022
Willamette
-?,! . i j ' ,'v. r"-' 'I' "1
the situation and Heinisch testi- i huts where the doomed are killed
tied that both Adolf Hitler and ' bv uses and of the latest tech
nical marvel, a furnace in which
asphyxiated. 'The civilian popu
latlon had to be liquidated . , .
Wholesale shootings would have Heinrich Himmler of the gestapo
He is a German and adores ; Heinisch spoke with admiration i -n
"Ordnung." The gas cars sa-ed i of the mUroer cars and special 1 simultaneously.
On some of the Pacific Islands,
garrisoned by American troops.
Army Engineers have had to drill
down as far as 1800 feet to reach
good drinking water, since none
was available on the surface.- ;
MONT90MUY WAte
NOW MORE THAN IYER...1TS Sf.URrTO GIVE
ifts for the home
mi
TOYS FOR ENCLAND Fenr-year-aU Cheery Wheeler
Inspects soma of the toys at the London depot of the British War
Belief Society of America. The society announced that 115.H
'British children will receive a toy and candy from America. ,
"gas wagons" and bundled doom
ed people into them. Like the rest,
he condemns Hitler. "I .am a non
party man," he explains.
The fourth German speaks with
authority. George Heinisch was a
major general and commissar of
the Melitopol district. He Is squat,
thickset. He thinks like the tueh
rcr and even talks like him in I
dull, spasmodic bark.
Heinisch explained the signifi
cance of the gas wagon where
people crammed into them were
OPEN EVENINGS 'TILL 8:00 UNTIL CHRISTMAS
as
nnn
em
(g5M5o))l(ift(i
SEOP JIT
5 -10 - 25 STORE
rS 1 While The lost! In Colorful Pafftrngf
m&rS$?WM 9 n Kxamma RU0S
-5ySi t. AvSJ 01 Ma-right Axmlnilaril The dap of
1 JjTl'"- meir weave gives you clear dUHndiva da- A) I
I rT sWOi ,,gBI 10 ,,rikin colo,, And inp r,,i,
I rr -v ; - vt-fe pile it toft and springy under foot. ,
.., , M,i iir Ij'-Ttii.w 'kivSif-if'vT 9x12 3601. Rug Cuehlon , I.7S .
ijn-- S" C I : .
36-0UNCE WAFFLE-STYLE
9 AND 12 FT. RUG CUSHION
y.. 56c
ALL WOOL DEEP-PILE
AXMINSTER BR0ADL00M
3.89
q. yL
Available by the yard for "room-sized" or "wall-lo-wall"
Broadloomv Special waffle construction adds extra thick
ness, comfort and wear to help you conserve your pres
ent rugs that may have to last you Indefinitely. You
should give them the best of care and what will help
to keep them new-looking but a rug cushion of this type?
COTTON SHAOOY
1ATK MAT SIT
I l ii ii 11 I ''
For wall-lo-wall or rcom-slze rugs, you limply cannot
eel the value In Wards Axminster Broadloom. You'll like
their clear pattern detail and rich, glowing colors. 9 and
12-foot widths. Come In today I Select Just the pattern you
need to go with Hie room style In your home. Ask about
Wards Payment Plan,
FAITH COTTON
SCATTISt RUGS
3.79
A n.at gift Ideal 21x36-lnh
mat and lid cover In an onort
ment of freih, clean colon. Deep,
toft pile. Washable, ef course.
At this price, you'll wont sevaml
setil Get them nowl
MIRRORS ... For An
Impressive Gift
6.59 to 23.95
Choose from the best selec
tion In town. Gracefully or
nate or frameless modern
mirrors ... a flattering high
light for any room. Yet priced
for Christmas budgets.
- - 1
. i no ' "" ' j
L v J
6.45
Thei. mali. fin. gifts for living
room, bedroom, or hallwayl
Deep toft texture, composed ef
xtra h.avy twisted loops of .toft
cotton yarns. Assorted pastels,
washable
ATTRACTIVELY
phajaxd nauxxs
Only
1.49
Colorful subects that g!v.
"lift" to bare wallsl YouH '
to use In pairs.. . or In groups of
4 above a sofa. Big vori..
Com. early . . i and take your
pkkl
Us. your er.dlt to buy anything earrl.d" In our iter, stocks or pktur.d In our eatotoos
Montgomery Ward