This Is High Treason!. \ ,, ' ' By KtJRT MERTIG ;■T New York—It canpot be pointed out often enough to the average American citizen that our elected and appointed officials are farced to .think in terms of pressure groups—and not in the terms of the heed of.the whole people. ^I J The CarhAgie Foundation, the Rhodes Scholarship. Fund and the. English-Speaking Union maneuvered* us''in* the WEson’ .and the j Roosevelt wars—which - Winston, Churchill now pleases, .to* call the [most unnecessary o.f all wars—and are now relentlessly pushing .the j United1 States.intq a Thjrd World War. '' - •'■ ’ ' . - '' •j These three vast internatldnal organizations billions,, of dollars at theic- dlspdsalr-have been .engaged'ior^ wme forty years to ■ insert prorRrltish propaganda In -——’--- 'American public . school books— a'nd,. more recently,it-least one; of -them has, been stuffing these books with. Communist, Socialist * and Zionist Ideas.- In. the United^States, 'this Brlt-‘ ish propaganda is concentrated on' eastern, universities;1 and especially on Columbia University, which, under the ilfe tenancy of its for-, roer 'president,..Nicholas .Mujray Butler, ha*,.had the reputation, of .belng'the most 'pro-British instl-•tution of higher, learning in theunited States, - . : ' ■// * 4/^Although • its ■present/ b e a d, Dwight Eisenhower, is, “viewed by ..most American educators as . a .-/•djm^ligSt,” r:Qie^ American SApt •press.’plays hlni hp^as-..tiie leadV lng scholar of America’s leaping : school of .higher learniBgh as- the “white hope”' Of ail rabid inter-i nationalists In’the 1952 presiden-’ tlal election. _■ 7 ' . / v ._ Alt' American . college! . look * to the: Caitnegie '.Foundaflbn for _eh-••dbwment-- funds;.. . Consequently, kthe selecting of the colleges’.-preS'DENNOKA jenter!home at a their blithe contei the e of Mi Shieie The ning ; rey, J Joyce Karin Thbm .11 ton. DonnKqufnsan was Ricked', a “hung” jury rlggdd up. Jelix Frankfurter-, came to; testify as ^ “Character j McEn yyltness,” ,allsof .which- caused ah p]ce' uproait ■ lit- ■'Congress,, but' was'si-, lenced'byv'PreSldent Triimfcri, VWUs0 The' carrieglp Foundation Will son. J eee-tjTlt that AJgey.Hlssjwill’never sx^} be convicted, as othefwise he migjit. Mrs 3 tell the whole sordid story of 1ioW teach the Urilted' States has been ' be-. traced since 1917 and- will continue - „„esti to be betrayed until- at- the. end- -of the present coiirse the-freedoms .prvi*u „ tM -Ail^idents and faculty- is • absolutely, xoritrolied ’by' thatpowerful -or-ganization which; provides. a yeari. ly:;’ wbrkinigffund of :'Over . thirty' imillion dollars 'to-carry . cuK its wishes,- .More' than 3,(JM- American college professors -have, received, penslons out- of this' fund. \.American 'gpbli^-sfehOoMedeiiers '.dre C0isthg'under ; ‘ts'-. influence' through; a $7,700,000 /Carnegie 'Fountlon graht'. to the. T.edcjrers Insurance and^nnulty^AssoclaUon ..of America.-'whichglvesi' them-cheap life ■Insuranee;and-annuities.A $300,000--award - was -given a few- years 'ago; by' the^same- Car-we' have cherished in the past will not exist- any more. ■/ , Perhaps It would introduce a. 'note of, realism Unto the. conduct , of- American-foreigg affairs,, if Congress, before. adjourning,.,were' to pass- a special bin - granting American,, citizenship to Wlristoa Churchill, and.- the President then appoint him U.‘s..Secretary, of State. - This, would relieve our present Secretary, of State, Dfean. Achesen,of ft good deal Of running around. After allr what could-we lose, that we haven’t already, lost?■ ' .Mr.'-Churchijl ouClfned fhe Truman’ Boetftad/in his. speech . atLouis who \ day £ Roth, Rahr: Dti from wlshx birthMe:tefed and i UvlniFulton, Md.r'sortie two yegr? ago {suitesand has ..been the; architect pf, America’s foreign pesllcy,7 especially-those' aspects of/It (99:9% ■ intended to Implement the cold wa'f;: ChufchUl’s;, /terms,/‘hieod,'’sweat and ‘teafs,'”/uttered at the/height^ of the ...Rodsavplf, war^Aiaye/nqt/ changed’-andjhtay be repeated^on somg near future date to..' the -American, people, because, his,so- . .lutlon of the Eufopeah ’mess - ere-7 a'ted by. h'is and Roosevelt’s.criminal.conspiracy Is—WAR!.washChafr4-Fel|x. Frankidrtef s'ald’ a“ mouth-iiif a few monttts ;ago: “TlIE irfgALnegle' Foundation- to a group' of- ™ ,sch^l hlStory wrltera who/lssued ^^^^g^^^l'^ ARE.UN-^ S '. Widely publicized declaration • -/that /a. newage of . ctdlcQtivlsm”' the American people are-ln- a was emerging In thq United Btatds.,. -AH American larga citles^.rei xelye' Carnegie funds -for .“intep-national alcoves” in-/ their public libraries/'/whereas -'Carnegie .£i--braries are found all ’over the countryside's of 'the JJnited States'• Andrew Carn'egte- 'came to. ,ttie -United, States as a .poor,-Scottish immigrant, neVer cared to become--an American -citizen, but amassed | here one of- the greatest fortunes Qn history .which he/loft: Tn/an reducayonal foundation /’financed f by the, U. S. Steel, Cprpo’ratlon,; j That fund Isk now' estimated at ■ over half a billion dollars; - .•Carnegie became-one-of . the most grandtloquent. British propagandists. One' Of his' books, ./’Trium-.. phant Democracy,” tells -fee plan the Carnegie' millions are financing: ■ -. ' ' -.u . ; . / ... .!f - “A.. Britlsh-American- ■ ■ reunion ^brings free xntry-lnto the United •States of all-British:prdaucts.;'Wefight, to preserve^what happiness , ghd well-being they.-; stMl- have.) Anjr true American - patriot’dught iff stride to:, increase' ouriatoek fof* these- thlngs as time goes oit/'/ /■ The deficit fInancing;.of federal, programs.fn- time. of peace Is piling up a - federal/debt t-o' proportions' In which the liberties of free ‘enterprise cannot --survive. This-disastrous course has been foretold, in the' Proiocois'the*. ECarijed Elders of-Zionl -•It ris high. Ume/-for ..the American people1 to-rear- up on thetr hind dCgs and'cut dowa our-present tax-eating admta.istraifibn - aii'd. VOTE;/ATdERJp'AN Jfp'rn new on. it Is later; thari' you' think..RBITheROOSEyELT PERSONAL PAPERScan thus open the richest marketIn a move “unprecedented in our’ history’.’-the gpvernmenf has announced -that the contents, nf approximately 4,000,OOfh hitherto confidential, papers of the'-'latein -the world to’-' the' BritishTxy-'a' Aere. stroke of the pen. **“Coal,. Iron, steel -and-air Rinds-of British'merchandise can reaph Amerlcah' Atlantic -’and ■ Pacific Jloast ports more ■ cheaply thari American manufacturers can pro-, duce thertf within- hundreds - of jnlleS of these, ports. r__[“In the event of such reunldri/.. American - . manufacturers wpuld supply the interior'of the United States, But the-great centers' of population on the Atlantic • and ..Pacific Coasts would receive their manufactured goods from Britain.“There woufd, of course, be some' “opposition from American manu-. factufers, b'utthat should not be allowed to obstructAuch a devout-/ ly wished consummation of the reuniting America and- Britain.’’James Bfyaht Conant of Harvard University, a Carnegie trustee, was host, to .Winston/Church-*U1, when'he driwered'his recent '“comm on .citizenship”' speech.It was from Harvard, University ! (F. D, Roosevelt’s -alma: mater) that Felix Frankfurter syphoned thousands of his former pupils, Including Alger Hiss, Into influenv tlal posltlons’in‘the U. S.- government services. '. ’'.It was this same Alger Hiss who sat at Roosevelt’s-side' at that drunken orgy - of the Yalta Conference, where half-of the world was sold out .to Stalin- It is this same Alger ^Hiss (until recently president of the Carnegie Foundation), for whose espionage trial in New . York the Jewish JudgePresident /Franklin - D.'-Roos^veltwill b'e/disclosed to the public’next ibiarch.' The papers/aboHt/85 per .cent sf /a total ,ot« approximately 5,p0Qv06J) covering ’the. period 1,910-. 4d,- will be opened -to researchers on- March* .17. ' The other 15 ' per cent..which -will remain restricted, will -be re-examined periodically.Forest Theatre^FOREST, OHIO PHONE NO. 1Last ghoxving Saturday, Dec. 17 ' Matinee at 2:00 p/'A. •“SUNDAY-MONDAY-TUESDAY Dec. 18-19-20 .Continuous Show frpm 3:00 p. m. on Sunday . . tinoi leg • cwftis reta • tiwu tfjai’jiiliHoliday.on Skis - Color CartoonWED., THBRS. AND SAT.’ Dec. 21-22-24 Theatre Closed, on Fridays Matinee Saturday at .2:00. p. m'.Secret gardenNovelty - Color Car Aon