4 { ¥ — ® RY AFTER almost five long years of war, a suffer- ing continent waits for relief by Allied liberators. @ THESE are Polish refugees. Over 8,000,000 - have been uprooted from their hoines, some are as far sv: have been displaced, are wandering over Europe. 4 GREEK family sits dazed amid the ruins of their BELGIAN mother and children, caught in total war, wait for their chance to lead normal, peaceful lives. ATTY THE POST, FRIDAY, JULY 7, 1944 Enemy devastation included schools, churches, like this Norwegian church in Molde, destroyed in 1940. “3 been separated. Problems like these face: UNRRA, -. United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration. N: HOMES, like these in Amsterdam, have been devas- tated. Whole towns in Europe must be built up again. SEAS RE & 2 NE away as India. Today from 20 te 30 million people } A ——————_ So ————————— Hots coats ing an Oe a | ~ FRENCH housewives stand outside a Paris dairy for meagre rations. Within two years after Nazis came death from tuberculosis in Paris went up 519. > «» RUSSIAN prisoners of war sit behind barbed wire. Over 5,000,000 prisoners, men from America, all of Europe and the Dominions, hope for repatriation, ‘» SOME 6,500,000 laborers from Czechoslovakia, Denmark, Luxembourg, from most of Europe have been conscripted by Germany—they too wait to get back heme. . GESTAPO loots gold from Yugoslavia—the U.S. Board of Economic Warfare stated that by end of 1941 German plunder had reached $36,000,000,000. J FRENCH boys working on airfield for Nazis symbolize the fate of Europe today. Liberation by the United Nations will give them back their youth. Re
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