U.S. faces job in holding men on war work
Yet millions must shift positions
By Charles T. Lucey, Scripps-Howard staff writer
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Home front shortages to continue
Lone bright spot is gas increase
By Earl Richert, Scripps-Howard staff writer
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Yet millions must shift positions
By Charles T. Lucey, Scripps-Howard staff writer
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Lone bright spot is gas increase
By Earl Richert, Scripps-Howard staff writer
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To drag Pendergast issue into fight
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LONDON, England (UP) – Victory-happy crowds thronged central London streets today in anticipation of an announcement from Prime Minister Churchill that the war in Europe was over.
More than 200 persons crowded into Downing Street – which is barely quarter of a block long – watching the stream of political and military celebrities going in and out of No. 10, the Prime Minister’s residence.
Mr. Churchill was expected to make the announcement from the cabinet room in No. 10. Later he might address the crowds in Whitehall from the balcony of the Ministry of Health Building, where microphones were set up.
Street salesmen did a rushing business selling flags to crowds in Piccadilly, Trafalgar Square and Whitehall.
In the middle of Whitehall, the Cenotaph memorial to the dead of World War I was covered with flags. A big horseshoe wreath of red and white flowers leaning against the monument bore the inscription, “Gratitude from Denmark.”
But as a reminder of what lies ahead, a sign painter was at work in front of the Ministry of Labor painting in huge yellow letters on a black background, “War Against Japan.”
Himmler called director of murders
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Reports questioned by Republican
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Dachau Germans indifferent to smells of dead political captives, but shudder at Nazi bodies
By Walker Stone, Scripps-Howard staff writer
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Island’s airfield in Allied hands
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By the United Press
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Capitulation in Italy follows secret talks by Yanks, Germans in Switzerland
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