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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (March 29, 1948)
IV u M uuvu WEATHER Mtt. (Mir. lit M Mill. 11 rrttplU(litt UH II html .,. ou RKHm ir U t SI I.Ml Mr S.lB Nrmil . rriailt far llr rloudf IL..AaT.i.Jl. I....;' - .'. ...... . ...,:. .....x u,... .,j,r Pltlt'K KIVK CKNTI I n J lus KLAMATH FALLS, OKKOON, MONO A V, . - VWH. ......... , ,,.. L-f. r .. 1 ZD, J 1118 Telephone XII r No. 1.102 By r'KANK JKNKINH rllKIIK are llloro lrawi In Ulc wind loilay. Moscow li iimkliiK llucalciilin (mrg Hi Swcilrn mid Norway. Kid Htnr mid Hcd Met I iltusilau unity mid limy nciuirii charge Unit :hr cuiiiumnilrr ul the Bwedlnh winy l planning to build buses lor U. H planes mid paratrooper In his couu liy. .The Soviet government newspaper ' IJvrnllB lay Ilia Nurwcglau govern L inriu l planning to lease army bancs lo th United NltM mid III Hum. lull AT duc Ihul mean? " Wrll. It could be thr old trl:k of rlimmnii mi opponent will) pliiiinlng lo do iimielhlitg nirmi mid ornery mid then using the rlinmo ml ex cuse lo DO IT TO HIM r'UMT. TIIK Fimu mid the Ruulmii me mill negotiating tin Moscow) on ItUftjtm't deinmid lor mi nil-out mil itary treaty. Mololov lia liutued In vitation for a reception tomorrow lillilil (or Hie KlnnUIi nrgutiatura. "Inlormed observers" In Moscow think tint U a sign Hint the deal l about concluded and that ltula I going to gel what she want. IKTH lurk back line lor a moment to the Moscow new paer talk about Sweden arid Nor way. We don I pay much aliemlon to newspaper "talk" In Una country, lfa )ut somebody's opinion. We mustn't forget thai In Kwuila the newspaper are a pari of the GOV KltNMKNT. and are used to put out whatever the government want pul out. TN Korea, a resiKtiulblc American correspondent reports, the Rus alann are building a fortified line between Kuiuiian North Korea and American Houth Korea. Maybe, the correspondent iAP'i Koy Kobertai iayi, they're doing It to prove to the North Korean that the Americana III Houth Korea are gel ting ready to attack. Thai, you aee. could be the lame principle they may be following in Sweden and Norway that la, charg ing u Willi planning lo do llirm dm end then using tlm charge tan excuse to do It to un flrL Jt ' ' JN Washington Bernard Buiuch iwhoae advice ha been right much ofteuer than It ha.i been wrong) ask congress for "action now" approving universal military training and a temorary draft. lie iay: "The time for iludy li over." UE then often a itatemrnt that all reasonably well-informed persons: know to be true. He says: "So terrible are the destructive potentialities of modern Instrumen talities of war Uiat It Is no longer good enough to punish an aggressor ArTKtl he ha begun a war. Pre venting war mow ) requires buttress ing our national security before the crisis li UHin us. Never Again do we dare permit our own Inck of pre puretlness to encourage any poten tial aggressor Into attacking this country or Into over-running other peaceful nations." THAT Is to lay. the WAy to keep out of WAr Is to make ourselves so slicing that It won't be safe for ANYBODY lo tackle us. Unruoh thinks we can do that. He ays: "Although the liue for decision has come, there Is no reason for panic or even fright . . . The rc aources, economic, military and ' aplrltuol. which the free peoples of ,the world hold, arc vastly superior to those which the totalitarian can command." , , He adds: "We hAve but lo mobilize enough of these resources and to Apply them Intelligently, vigorously And PHOMPTLY to achieve the stability irnlinnA n ls IS, ('Altitun At To M POO JOfll . , Violent' Storm Lowers Indiana Town A Irw hadly damaged brick and atone bulldlnga are all that remain of the business district of the small town nf nalrivlllr. Intl.. after a lornarin ripped through, killing at least 13 persons. New storms throughout the Midwest during violent ti hours raised the nation's loaa to 5 dead and missing and more than 400 Injured. NEA telepholo i Members To Get Credit To Account WAMH1NGTON, March it lP President Truman signed today a bill under which each member or the Klamath Indian tribe of Oregon will receive $.100, or a total of over (800.000. The act authorized the distribu tion from the tribe's capital reserve fund. Kach tribesman will have (500 credited to his account, subject to it Being spent for specified purpose. : In addition, a cash payment of (200 ' . we to each war veteran Mr. Truman said. In a letter to Secretary of the Interior J. A. Krug, that "as a general rule I question the soundness of distributing Indian capital fund In per capita pay ments." He said he signed the bill because of two "exceptional lac- Young Frenchman Enjoys U. S. ssaaassiatsAWasisssisiiai V ,. -v. '? -Bg JSli Pan-American Confab Opens BOOOTA. Colombia. Murch 29 '1 The top-ranking dlplomata of 2! nations Aa.-cmbled here today fur tomorrow's ottculug of the ninth Pan - American conference. Terrl tcitat disputes threatened to Itwrn high on the program. Secretary of mate Oeorge C Mar shall is slated to arrive about noon. His plane left Washington last I .If Mt Chile. PariiKiiay and Cuba have expressed An Interest In having On confrrencit take . a stand . against crmraiinl.it eiiertorhment In the Americas but there wag no defines Indication whether the topic would be Uiken up. Many of the nations are expected In level their guns against Etiro piun colonization In the western Ivmlspher. Provisional President nomulA Betancourt. chief Venezuelan dele e.nte, said he would demand an end of inch colonialism. US Stalls On Trusteeship For Palestine Action Worthwhile Lse "Plri.1 It vllni,l., . t. . t ....,v, ,,iMti; (jiutiutra MIS I ; the funds credited to the account of each member shall be used lor i'tnllnncd en l(e IV, lilumn It LAKE SUCCKSS. March 29 i,P The United Stitter has decided not t pres.s for 'mmedlate action on l-usieeship lor Palestine, an Amer ican delegation spokesmun said to day. The spokesman suld Chief U. S Delegate Warren R. Austin had been Instructed by Washington to concentrate on efforts to get a Jew-hh-Arab truce and to cull a spe cial Palestine session of the United Minion assembly. Austin wo reported ready to sub- Meissner To Continue Trip CASCADE SUMMIT. March 29 J..ck Mrlssner Inienris to resume n.tiflc section, declared In tils 300-tnile trip over the Cascades tc Crater lake on Tuesday. March 30 if the good weather holds out. Ke would have left Friday except for a weather forecast warning of A1 Impending slorm over the Wil lamette area, which would have kept CAP plane from contacting him. Today Jack will make a scouting (ill. to Diamond peak accompanied by lloberl Pfelffer for the purpose of filming "he territory, then Pho tographer Pfelffer will return to Cuaradc ummll and Jack will con tinue toward Crater lake on Tues day morning. At this point II 1 sllll doubtful whether or not Clordnn Blssell and Don Temple will finish the trip with MelsMicr, however they may f.o along lo Diamond peak and re turn with Pfelffer. Temple nud BIs cl were with Jack when thr!' were stopped en route by tmusunl storm eruditions In Wlndlgo buttc urea. Mac Orders Strike Ban TOKYO. March 29 iTi Genera! MAcArthur Invoked a general strike bur today to halt rapidly spread h.g walkouts by Japanese govern ment workers. He specifically Instructed Japa nese officials to prevent A threaten ed strike bv an estimated 400.000 C'lmmtnilcallons employes. They sptarheaded A quit work movement by nearly 1.000.000 government I worker. ! MaJ. Oen. W. F. Marquot. chief of MacArthur's economic and scl- ' nicm- n.lt two resolution to the security council tomorrow to formalize Uiese two proposals. The American spokesman said no derision had been taken as to when the trusteeship Idea would be brought up. Some quarters believed the V. S. might wait, and lay it be frre the assembly Instead of ask li.p the security council to mAke recommendations. The new truce proposal Is design ed to carry out President Truman s declaration of last Thursday. In view of earlier big power failures rto get such a trurer'howeveT, thar wa uttie nope nere uiat Any con crte results could be expected. Introduction of the American pro-ix-snls was ."xpectrd to be the signal t: - a bitter Soviet blast against the United States. ' The big powers have clashed on almost every' other issue before the U N. but both had supported the Palestine partition plan until th United States reversed Itself ten days ago. So far, Soviet delcgAte Andrei A. Oromyko Iias remained silent on th new U. S. plan for a special session of the general assembly to consider replacing partition with I'. N. trusteeship. New York Stock And Curb Exchanges Hit By Strike NEW YOHK. March 29 il'i A strike hit the New York slock and curb exchanges heart of the finan cial center of the worldtoday, but trading continued without Se rtoli disruption, Dignified exchange members and brokers, many of them men who hadn't been seen on the floor in year, rolled up their sleeve and did their clerks' work, For the first time slnca the war women nnd glii appeared on the floor of the exchange. Emit Schram, president of the slock exchange, suld he had not been able to find any serious effect from tho walkout, "I said we would function and we are functioning," he told news men, The Btiiko commlltco of llio Financial Emplnyos union (AFM aid "Aorvlco I completely knocked out nnd can't possibly bo resumed." Apparently tho union atntcment referred to Inlernnl quotation serv ice, but members of both ox liinngc obtnlncd quotation from the floor. Outgoing quotation ticker service were operating without nn ap parent hitch. The union said It member. ship at. the slock exiiiiinge is HM) and al, the curb exchange 220. It claimed all were out. Outside tho exchanges, pickets cheered as tho Trinity church clock rang I ho 10 n in. opening hour, Tho ronr could bo heard a block away. Fifty uniformed police nnd tie tectlves were on hand. Picket leaf lets Included tho Injunction: "Re member, no drinking; no drunks on tho picket line." In addition In tho striking United Flnanclnl employes union, picket Included tho Seafnrer Interna tinnnl union and tho Sailors' Union of llio Pacific. They shouted "scab" nt. clerk nnd lunnris not on strike who Joined the brokers on the floor to keep trading open. The union suld Its pay demands Incliirio weekly lncrcncs of 9 nnd $1(1 In different wngo brackets for tho exchnngo workers, nnd "n sutls fnctory union security clause." Tho union said present wage In both exchange rnuge from 27 to (102 a week, oiandum the threatened nationwide communication strike, set for Wednesday, would hnve a "drastic ally unfavorable Impact upon the economic recovery and public wel fare" of the nation. The strike, said Mnrquat. Is sub ject to provisions of MncArthur'i Ji'iiuury 31. 1947 ban which pre vented A similar planned general strike. Mnrqunt's memorandum did not mention employes other than com munications. Ml government work ers have been demanding Increased cost of living bonuses. Officials pre dicted that If the communications walkout folded, tho others would stay on tho Job. Blaze Levels Harrison Home BLY, Ore., March 29 The new home of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Harrison was burned to the ground uboul 6:30 Sunday morning. Only recently constructed and oc cupied for nbout a month, the home Is reported to luivo had a value of (29,000. The loss wits virtually 100 per cent. Members of the family were awakened by the smoke and escaped unhurt, bul lost mast of their per sonal biiohalngii. The volunteer fire department of till Utile Eastern Kliilnnlh county community was unable to cope with tho blnzc, which had a long head slurt on tho f li o fighters, Ilnrrlson, who long operated retail businesses nt Bly nnd Bentty, con structed tho new home on ft site be side tho Klnmnth Fnlls-Lnkevlew highway Just cast of Bly. K-9's Left Off Bonus Pay List ALBANY, N. Y March 29 Ml Dogs thai served In World War II with the army's, K-9 eorp nre not eligible for nny of New York's $100, 000,000 veterans' bonus. "Tho boiiu law doesn't cover dogs," Leo V, LniinlnlSr, director of the oonti burenti, snys, Ho received nn application Satur day In behnlf of a dog with two fears' oversea service, . Sun Aids Bird Feeding Plan Wnrm sunshine Easter Sunday eased the condition slightly of starv ing wild birds in the outlying coun try around Klamath Falls, melting the snow to some extent, it was re ported today. Several call to The Herald and New for details of Dan Li.skey's ap peal to feed the birds Indicated that a number of people were com ing to the rescue. Only one car, however, slopped at the Liskey ranch In Poe valley, for the grain offered to feed the birds. Wild pheasants, qunll and other birds are finding It slim pickings with the country blanketed In snow In the Langell and Poe valleys nnd the country out that way. The offer to supply grain to those who will spread It, ts still open word from the Llskcy ranch advised this morning. Furnace Blast Injures Six SEATTLE. March 29 (PI Six men were Injured, some seriously, last night when an explosion destroyed n scrap Iron smelting furnace at. the Isaacson Iron Works plant No. 2. Battnllun Fire Chief William M. Canty snld the blast wns caused by "something foreign" Mint got Into the electric furnace. Dozens of windows were shatter ed by the force of the explosion and several spot fires broke out. He snld report of an Investiga tion will be withheld pending ap proval by the commandant of the 13th nnvnl district. CIO-PIRC To Hold Confab Here Tuesday Representatives of the Interna tional Woodworkers of America (CIO) and Pine Industrial Rela tions committee, employers' group, are scheduled to meet tomorrow at the PIRC office for further efforts to rearh-s wage Hettlemenffor CIO lumber and sawmill workers here. The union's latest proposal was for a 25-cent hourly pay Increase for all CIO lumber workers, six paid holidays yearly and study of health and welfare set-ups by a Joint union-management committee. PIROJias offered a 7'j-cent wage increase. Results of a strike vote taken throughout the Northwest with the exception of IWA-CIO's Inland Em pire district around Spokane were to be tallied in Portland today, but the IWA office there reported that not all ballots were In and the count moy take several days. IWA-CIO membership was asked to vote whether to allow its North west regional negotiating committee authority to strike. Present work contracts with the larger mills here come up for re newal April 1. but contain a self renewal clause which would pre vent a work stoppage. RC First Aid Course Slated A Red Cross first nld instructor's course, taught at Klamath Union high school th.ough last week, has been completed by eight Klamath people. Dick Evans, Red Cross area first aid field representative, directed classes which were held for three hours nightly each day last week. The course was a refresher for in structors. Completing the course were Mona Dixon, Clarence Groves, Ella Red key, Lillian Rcdkey, Max Ruge, Frelda Ustick and Charles Wam stcad of Klamath Falls and George Fullerton of Bly. Fullerton nnd Ruge will tench first aid classes be ginning in early April at Weyer haeuser camps 6 and 4, respectively. Church Proves Wrong Choice BERKELEY, Calif., March 29 t.P) ! said. Tho congregntlon at the Portuguese Assembly of God church convinced two strangers that an Easter service was no place for a holdup. Two men wnlked Into tho church last night nnd announced, "Don't nobody move. This Is a atlckup." The Rev, Manuel Camera nnd his parishioners began moving lownrd I ho men. The pnlr fled. US Consul Fired Upon WINDSOR. Out., March 29 t.4V Ontario provincial police sought clues today to the stealthy assail ant who fired gunshots Inst night at John Bankhead, American con sul here. Bankhead said the shots, appar ently fired from behind n tree, struck the rear door of his car as he drove up to his Riverside drive home. He was alone In the cnr. Police found footprints between a post nnd tree at the driveway entrance. It wns the third attempt on his ! life In recent weeks, Bankhead He reported Uiat poisoned liquor and enndy had been sent to hi home. On another occasion his car had been tampered with, he said. The American consul has come to attention for his tight border restriction policy. He hns attrib uted this to an effort to keep com munists from entering the United States by way of Detroit. Raymond Vereecke. youni Parisian who la In the V. S. A. as a student under sponsorship of Or. F. C. Adam of Klamath Falls, here ha a look at the control console of radio station KFLW. Gordon Lee, technician. I explaining thing to him. Raymond Vereecke, Protege Of Dr. Adams, Finds The US And Oregon Fascinating A young man with a purpose is Raymond Vereecke. 24 - year - old Parisian who has Just arrived 'n this country for three years of study as a protege of Dr. F. Cecil Adam of Klamath Falls. Vereecke visited over the past week-end In Klamath Falls as a guest of the Adams family, coming here from Forest Grove where he Is attending Pacific university. After a year at Pacific, he intend? to attend Oregon State or some other school where he can continue his specialty agriculture, and the coming summer he expects to get some practical experience In that line working for the Adamsdale drtiry operations here. Ultimately, he Intends to return to Prance. There, he. says, if you make a start on small scale farm ing. It takes about three genera tions to "get some place." and "that doesn't do you any good." So. he srys. he intends to go into business for a few years so he will have the nionev to make a large-scale start, and then he will be a gentleman farmer. Vereerke's good fortune in ful filling his imbition to come to the V. S. to study reads like a story book. Last summer, he attended the w orld Jamboree of Boy Scouts near Psrls. There he met Dr. Adams, who was attending with his son. Barton. Dr. Adams asked the young Parisian to conduct a group of Scouts on a tour of Paris. Further association with Vereecke convinc ed Dr. Adams rf the youth's worth iress. and when the boy said he wanted to come to the U. S. to studv. the doctor said he would try to do something about it. The Klamath physician then left for the U. S. Vereecke wasn't quite sure any thing would come of the remark, but soon he heard from Klamath Fulls. Dr. Adams had arranged his visa to come to this country as a student, and brought him here un der his SDonsorshlp. The youth arrived in New York on March 5. end Dr. Adams ar ranged his trip west by airline. He er. lolled In Pacific university to get general education, before pursuing his specialty, and is teaching French there. Reddish - haired, light-complex-icned Raymond speaks English quite fluently. He studied English grammar for a while, but really picked up the language from talk Inir with American GI's. He served as an Interpreter for the Americans for obout a month. The youth is ot Flemish descent. and admits he doesn't look like a Frenchman. "I probably look like any Ameri can you see on the streets." he said, "tut In New York, people turned around and looked twice at me. That was because I had an ice cream cone In one hand and a hot doc In the other. Your milk shakes, lot cream, hot dogs, and soft drinks are wonderful!" Raymond admits a tremendous curiosity about everything Ameri can. He and Barton Adams cover ed Klamath Falls business district completely Saturday, and Raymond scent a lot of time looking over The Herald and News office and KFLW. The French youth was in an ag ricultural school when the war broke out In Europe. He remained tr.ere through most of the German. occupation. After the liberation, he entered the French army, and was assigned to a horse barn. "You'll be amused by this," he said, pulling out his discharge pa pers. On the paper his military spe cialty was noted as follows: "Speciallste des pattes arrieres des chevaux" specialist In the rear legs of horses. "You see. I did all right in taking care of the horses." he said. "You wih notice that It's the rear legs. There is more danger there. It is a more Important Job than being spe cialist in the front legs of horses." With that sense of humor. Ray mond Vereecke ts expected by his acquaintances here to get along famously In the U. S. A. ROADS NORMAL SALEM. March 29 oPt The state highway commission said today that all roads are normal except for one mile of packed snow at the summit of the Willamette highway. and four sections of one-way traf fic on the Umpqua highway. Mine Chief Hurls Charge Of Prejudice WASHINGTON. March 29 MV John L. Lewla Ignored a luhpoena to appear thla afternoon for a presi dential board hearing on the coal strike. Lewla was served with the formal , order today after refusing at board invitation to teatify voluntarily. The three-man board inquiring; Into causes of the strike went ahead without Lewis. It next step, If Lewis continues to hold out, Is expected to be a re quest for federal district court to order him to appear. The formal order was Issued Im mediately after Lewis had turned down the board's invitation to ex plain the walkout of his 400,000 soft coal miner. Subpoena Taken Earlier two United States marshals emerged grinning from United Mine Worker headquarters and the marshal' office said that Lewi had accepted the aUbpocna. This oc curred after the officers had ex perienced difficulty getting an ele vator to take them to Lewis' office. The stairs were barred. Shortly after the deputiea left, Lewis emerged with an unac customed smile. Asked by reporter if he will appear before the board. he answered "no comment" Three minutes before a 7 a. m. (PST) deadline set for his reply, the United Mine Worker' leader fired at the board a reply to its in vitatlon. setting forth his "disin clination" to testify. Lewis said he based this on (1) "law" and 2 "prejudice." He ex plained : 1. Neither he nor the I'MW have done anything falling under the Taft-Hartley law, which Presi dent Truman has Invoked fn the dispute. He called this law an 2. Two of the three board mem ben are "biased and prejudiced and in honor should not serve" He named Mark Ethridge, publisher of the Louisville, Ky, Times and Courier-Jonrna, and George W. Taylor, who was chairman of the old war labor board. Lewis added that Cyrus W. Ching, the government's top conciliator, "sees through the eyes" of United States Rubber. China formerly was employed by that corporation. About Ethridge, Lewis said: "Since Catiaad Pace 19, Calamn Election Set ALTURAS. March 29 The June I primary election will see contest for three non-partisan seats on the Modoc county hoard of supervisors, and Alturas city election for coun ciimen is called tor April 13. Supervisor candidates Include: First district Harvey Darst, In cumbent; and Paul Robinson. Third district George Perkins, incumbent; Harry Grlval, Laurence Smith and W. R. Thompson. Fourth district Dr. E. F. Auble, incumbent; Charles Fttzpatrkk and John Cummings. Peter J. Laxague of Ccdarville, incumbent supervisor of the sec ond district. Is running for U. 8. congress. The city election will be to choose tlnee Alturas councilmen. Candi dates are Leo Gloster and Phillip Goulden, both present supervisor, and Harry Pinneo and Joe Surmeir. CRATER LAKE LODGE SOLD After 27 rear of operating the rim lodge at Crater Lake national park, R. . Trice ti selling out at his doctor's orders. The head of thu Crater Lake national park disclosed on a visit here today that the new purchasers are Mr. and Mrs. Michael E. Lee and son. Kenneth, of Oakland, Calif. The Lees arrived at the lodge last summer without reservations and found there were no vacancies. "Guess I'll have to buy the lodge to get In," said Lee. Price told him he could do that and negotiations proceeded from that time. Lee reminded Price that they had met 42 years ago. On January 10. 1948. all preliminary business matters were concluded anrl nnnrnvM) hv th narlr mpvIp nrt tks T. trill ttilret niror nnnrollnn of the lodge this summer with Kenneth Lee In charge. Letters requesting reservations at the lodge on the rim of famous Crater lake are already coming in for the ensuing season and the Klamath County chamber of commerce is also receiving numerous requests for Information at this early date. Baruch Asks Congress For "Action Now" Approving UMT-Temporary Draft Revival WASHINGTON, March 29 tPt Bernard M. Bnruch today asked congress for "action now" approv ing universal military training and a temporary draft. He said "the time for study Is over." The white-haired adviser to pres idents also urged a hold-in-reserve law permitting revival of wage and price controls if needed. He told' the senate armed serv ices committee the proposed pro gram to make America strong mili tarily would have a "tremendous Impact" on the nation's economy. He Raid It would "upset prices and living conditions." But the United States, Baruch declared, must make itself strong to bring about "the stability in the world which lasting peace rc rcuutrcs:" If it fnlls to muster nil Its resources for peace, there will be "no alternative but to mobilize for war; In the future." Senator Morse (R-Ore.) asked Baruch how much this country could spend on military prepared tie "and still have a stable econ omy." Morse estimated the program ptobably will cost S,000,000,000. "I think we have about reached the limit," Baruch replied. He said congress ought to set up a "watchdog" committee to keep an eye on spending and Its effect on price and living costs. Baruch also urged that congress pas a law now setting up the ma chinery for Industrial mobilization. That la for ise of factories and plant In time of emergency. "If you wait, everybody hurries, the crisis is upon us and you get a pieoemeal 10b," Baruch said. Before Baruch spoke. Chairman Gurney (R-S. D.) declared that his armed service committee must conclude hearings on the military phase of President Truman's stop Kussla program by the end of the week. "We simply can't take any more time," Gurney said. "By this week end, we will have the complete story and all shades of opinion." Gurney' committee is consider ing (1) temporary revival of the war-time draft, 13) a permanent program of universal military train ing and t3) immediate expansion of the peacetime strength of the aimed forces at a cost of $3,448, oor.000. Baruch told the committee; "So terrible are the detructlvi potentialities o' modern Instrumen talities of war, it la no longer good enough to punish an agrressor aftet he haa begun a war. Preventing wat require buttressing our nation al security before the crisis la upon us. Never again do we dare permit out own lack of preparedness t encourage -ny potential aggresnot Into attacking this country or InU overrunning other peaceful na tions." He said that "in whatever we un dertake, we must be guided by tin netesslty of not wrecking ourselves for that would defeat all we at tempt." Baruch said that although "Ihl lime for decision has come, then i no reason for panle or eve fright, xxx the resource, eco nomic, military and spiritual, whlel the free peoples of the world hold are vastly auperlor to those whlel thit tntalitarlana can command."