Muncie Post-Democrat, Muncie, Delaware County, 14 February 1947 — Page 3

POST-DEMOCRAT, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 1947.

JEFFERSON DAY (Contlntfctf From Page One) * Democratic Committee is handl-

ing arrangements. Other Cabinet

officers Who will be there, in ad-

2 GOP LEADERS (Continued From F-a.ee One)

factor in any effort to divide their fields of activity is the increasingly obvious fact that “for-

dition to Postmaster General i ei S n affairs” and “domestic af-

Hanriegan, include the Secretary Of Labor, Lewis B. Schwellenbach, and the Secretary of Agriculture, Clinton P. Andersom The entire Florida CongreS- * sional delegation will attend. The Democratic leadership in Congress will- be represented by Senator Alben W. Barkley of Kentucky and Representative John W. McCormack of Massachusetts, minority leaders. Representative George A. Smathers of Florida will be toastmaster. The form if not the substance of North-South Democratic unity will be provided at the dinner by a seating arrangement calculated to produce that effect. Senators Scott W: Lucas of Illinois and Brien McMahon of Connecticut, among others, have drawn as their dinner partners Senators John D. Sparkman of Alabama and Spessard Holland of Florida. How much more than the $250,000 represented by the thousand dinners at $250 a plate will be realized through the dinrier could only be guessed at today by managers of the affair. George B. Killian, National Committee treasurer, said there was no ceil'ing on individual contributions. Invitations are going, out only to those contributing $250 or more. It is expected that the Miami Beach dinner rally and the others will serve to spur the morale of party workers looking to 1948. “They will demonstrate that, as far as the Democratic party is concerned, the November elections were only a temporary setback,” Mr. Killian explained. “They just showed that we had made a few mistakes and that we have to work that much harder for the victory in 1948. We haven’t even begun to fight but before we’re through, the opposition will know it started something it couldn’t finish. Mr. Killian estimated that at least 200,000 Democrat's would participate in the Jefferson Day dinners' and contribute $1,000,000 or more. The idea of the Jefferson Jubilee Dinner at Miami had its origin with the Florida committee, according to Mr. Killian. Since the April’ 5 date is too late for the winter season the Feb. 28 date was set‘. More than 600 contributions and acceptances of invitations had been received by the Flbrida committee tonight, Mr. Killian

said.

President Truman is expected to send a message‘to the Miami dinner through .Mr. Hannegan but to reserve his heaviest political artillery for the main event in April.—New York Times. — oCape Cod’s now famous cranberry industry dates from 1816, when one Henry Hall became the first successful cranberry grow-

er.

fairs” are really inseparable. The trade agreements program illustrates the difficulty. It certainly affects the domestic economy of the country and yet it is also an important instrument of foreign

policy.

These factors have not led to any serious split between the two

leaders.

Mr. Vandenberg has won the support of powerful colleagues in both the House and Senate for his compromise trade agreement program; and Mr. Taft, while disapproving the compromise, has indicated that he will not attempt to fight it until 1948, when the Trade Agreement Act runs out. This does not avert a split on a major issue ,however, it merely postpones it. Those familiar with Senator Vandenbergs’ personal beliefs and intentions feel that it would be unfortunate if a false division in leadership and a wrong assumption about Mr. Vandenberg’s Presidential ambition were to prevent the two leaders of the party from getting together to try to work out a solid policy in the interests of the party ahd the na-

tion.

The Michigan Senator’s friends are convinced that too much has been made of his Presidential ambitions. They believe he could if he chose, either get the Republican nomination for himself in 1048, or have a decisive voice in naming the candidte if he would allow a campaign to be organized in his behalf. This, however, he has flatly refused to do. His reason for refusing, he has explained, is that he simply is not prepared to take the consequences of such a campaign. Among these consequences, he feels, would be loss of the peace of mind he has experienced since he assumed the leadership of his party in foreign affairs. Moreover, he has emphasized, any effort to organize a personal campaign for the Presidency would widen the breach in the party and jeopardize what unity has already been attained in the formation of a reliable American foreign policy. If this is his attitude, therefore —and there, is good reason for believing it is—there is room for improvement in the relations between Mr. Taft and Mr. Vandenberg. Their ideas on policy are not very different. Their objectives for the party and the nation are not dissimilar. So far, however, they have treated each other during the Eightieth Congress with courteous suspicion, each merely remaining silent or agi’eeing not to oppose the other for the time being in the other’s field of leadership. The trade agreements incident, however, is regarded here as a warning to both that a sound domestic policy and a sound foreign

policy are inescapably,connected. It is being pointed out in the Capital, therefore, that since each has sufficient strength on Capitol Hill to defeat the program of the other, there is no future for anybody in trying to divide the indivisible.— New York Times. *

WALLACE GIVEN (Continued From P*gre One) commentator, and Stanley Higheditor of Reader’s Digest. The mystery is how some of the extreme reactionaries signing the cable could term themselves “American liberals.”

Cooking lor Cupid

A CAPITALIST (Continued From Faye One) the high economic goals of a dynamic society.” “I am convinced that unless both labor and management can somehow be brought to a realization of the respective shortcomings and obligations, we are lost A littel more humility on both sides might hasten our sense of togetherness, without which it is impossible to engineer anything but catastrophe and disaster. Let us discard the notion that the well-being of the little guy is merely an automatic by-product of scientific progress. Let us recognize that, with few- exceptions, we of management haven’t done right by him in the past . . . We have fallen in to our old error of assuming that men work for wages alone. We have overlooked the fact that recognition of the needs of a human being is a stronger incentive than wages. In our planning we failed to provide for the personal dignity of the men and women upon whom we must rely to breathe life into inanimate brick and steel . . . Whether we like it or not we live in an era when democracy in industry is coming «f age. This means that we have only two alternatives. Either we can put our shoulders behind the wheel of social progress, or we can stand in the way and be ground to the earth as the wheels turn.” He said that “many of the newly proposed laws merely strike at the symptoms of the disturbance” and fail to get to the roots of the cause. He intimated that the amending of the Wagner Act. would in no way help to solve the

problem.

PEPPER URGES (Continued From Page One) but it’s a nice feeling to be sure. And if it does turn out to be cancer the fact that it’s discovered early makes, a big difference in the chances for cure. The cancer danger signals ate: 1. Any sore that doesn’t heal, especially around the tongue,

mouth or lips.

2. Any irregular bleeding or discharge from any body opening. 3. Any\ unusual lump or thickening, especially in the breast. 4. Persistent indigestion, often accompanied by loss of weight. 5. Sudden changes in shape or growth of a mole or wart. 6. A persistent change from the normal habit or action of the bowels. ^ In the last few years cancer detection clinics have been? set up where people can be examined by experts for early signs of cancer. These lucky people have the best chance for cure, because their illness is picked up earliest of all. So far these clinics have been limited to a few big cities and have been almost entirely for people who can afford such luxu-

ries. They are out of the reach

of the majority of the people wljb put off going to the doctor when they are sick because they can’t afford doctor bills. — (Federated

Press).

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gave- Cupid a -helping -hand with LOV& LOTr-BQ/gp IN WHICH VOUNG yftAlD? AND BACHtLOa? ' “

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whether Sentimental or humorous, they B _ OOM-& (lionr to THE Ad/NT,-—WHICH 1$, OE COURSE;-I LOVtYOUI

NEWS IN BRIEF OVER NATION League Of Disillusioned Veterans Is Formed In

Philadelphia

The student veterans at the Temple University in Philadelphia have formed an organization called “The League of Disillusioned Veterans, and have passed a resolution to “do absolutely nothing about anything.” The league was formed because the weterans had become weary oi being “exhorted to join organizations to promote causes.”

The rbses, candjr and beribboned gifts that arrive on Saint Valentine’s Day, are all appreciated. But even lovers must eat. Make your holiday meals stand out by serving at least one dainty that is “new” to your family and guests. Valentine Rennet-Custard 2 cups milk (not canned) I package raspberry rennet powder Red candy hearts vSet out 4 or 5 dessert dishes. Warm ordinary or homogenized milk slowly, stirring constantly. Test a drop frequently* on inside Of wrist. When COMFORTABLY WARM (110° F.) not hot, remove at once from heat. Stir rennet powder into milk quickly until dissolved, not over 1 ryinute. P6ur at once, while still liquid, into the dessert glasses. Do not move until set, about 10 nfiinutes. Then chill in refrigerator. Just before serving, place sandy hearts on top of the rennetsustards. Cherry Pie ► , (Using corn flakes as thickener) 7 1 recipe pie crust % cup corn flakes 1 cup sugar ; % teaspoon salt* 1/ 1 No. 2 1 / 4 can sour red cherries Line 9-inch pie plate with about % »f pastry, rolled ^ inch thick. Sprinkle bottom of shell with cereal. Combine *ugar and salt; sprinkle ^ over cereal. Then fill with canned cherries and Juice and add remaining sugar. Moisten edge of pastry with cold water. Adjust top crust, cutting several slits to permit escape of steam. Bake in hot oven (425® F.) 35 minutes, or until filling is done. Cereal with Gelatine Cubes Dissolve 1 package fruit-flavored gelatine in 1 pint hot water. Turn Into shallow pin. Chnl until firm. Cut In cubes. Serve as a garnish on sold cereal. Quick-Frozen Foods Are Boon To Hostess It’s easy for the hostess who doubles M chief cook to greet guests with mthusiasm now that an abundance of

quick-frozen vegetables and fruits Is back on the market. These treats assure garden fresh flavor. The quickfyozen vegetables are ready to cook when they come from their cartons and the quick-frozen fruits are ready to serve as soon as they are thawed. Quick-frozen chicken a la king is another dependable hostess aid. Team it with quick-frozen peas and quickfrozen golden cut corn, and serve with quick-frozen strawberries or peaohes for dessert for a glamorous company menu that takes only a few minutes' kitchen duty. The new quick-frozen grapefruit sections, too, are delicious !n fruit cups served for dessert. They are sweetened before quick-freezing. Crisp Clothes Have Gala Party Look The children will always look dressed for a party if you keep them supplied with crisply fresh clothes. B« sure to ease your ironing task by adding a specially prepared wax-like product to the starch to keep the iron from sticking and pulling. You can save time by ironing the clothes aa soon as they are dry enough. The wax-like product in the starch makes it unnecessary to dry the clothes first, then sprinkle them. It helps keep them clean longer, too, because it gives them a satiny, dirt-resisting finish. When Baby Goes Visiting If you’ve promised to bring baby with you to .. gathering with friends or family, prepare ahead of time t« protect him against possible inclement weather. Just before you start out, anoint his neck, cheeks and chin, wrists and hands, with baby lotioa This emulsion of mineral oil and lanolin, with an antiseptic added for extra protection, serves the double purpose of cleansing and lubricating baby’s skin. In your traveling bag pack a couple of sweaters of different weights, that you can easily dress baby more or less warmly. And take along a bottle of- baby lotion. You will find it better than water to give his fac§ and hands an end-of-the-journey cleansing.

Veterans Oppose Rental Increases

Washington, Feb. 11—Two veterans organizations have urged that Congress reject proposals for a general rent increase. At a news conference, Franklirf D. Roosevelt, Jr., national housing chairman of the American Veterans Committee, declared “the claim of landlords for higher rents is completely unnecessary.” He suggested that Congress give the Office of Temporary Controls $6,000,000 to employ the staff and handle on an individual basis cases where landlords contend they are suffering hardship due to low rehts. The Veterans of Foreign Wars urged continuation of rent controls unchanged until June 30. 1948. John C. Williamson, assistant VFW legislative director, declared that hiking’rent ceilings now would be a blow to “veterans who are trying to reach the economic level of those, including their landlords, who remained at home.” He expressed his views in a statement prepared for the Senate Banking Committee, which is considering rent control legislation.

The faculty of the Western Reserve University in Cleveland are worried about the extremes to which the American populos is going. It appears that every-* body leaving the middle of the road and swerving either to the extreme right or the extreme left. Therefore, the staff has decided to inaugurate a new course of studies in sociology designed to teach a “middle-of-the-road” philosophy in religion.,; '.politics and economics. Might be a good

idea.

and the eradication of Communistic influence are listed among the objectives. Most observers interpreted Martin’s objectives on these two points to mean, the repeal of the Wagner Act, the Nor-ris-La Guardia anti-injunction Act, outlawing of the closed shop and industry-wide bargaining, and the eradication of the influence of the New Deal liberal and progressive ideals. It is pointed out that Martin said nothing aboue eradicating Fascistic influence. This despite the fact that many observers believe that the Fascist threat is ten times stronger and more dangerous than the Communist threat. It is recalled that several of the 27 Congressmen which the Rogge report accused of aiding Fascism in America during the war are still in Washington, and that Martin has shown not one iota of Concern about Fascist influence in either the country or in Congress. The White Supremacy Bill which has passed the Georgia Bouse of Representative 133 to 62 would destroy the Democratic party by transforming it into a private club subject to the control of one man, and would disfranchise all Negroes in the state

of Georgia.

IT’S OK TO THROW PIES.

Brazil, Ind. — A jury in Clay circuit court held today that a restaurant employe who threw a pie at a union picket was not guilty of assault and battery. Mrs. Mildred Boor, on trial in connection with a skirmish outside the restaurant where she worked was acquitted of the charge. She was accused of throwing a pie at Mrs. Grace Mace, then tangling with Mrs. Mace when the pie missed its mark and struck another picket. o GO TO CHURCH SUNDAY

The other day when C. P. Mayhew. Undersecretary for foreign affairs, gave a critical report of the rgeent Polish election to’ the British House of Commons, Tom Driberg, a laborite M. P. thought he saw a similarity between the Polish election and the Georgia elections. Driberg ask the following question of Mayhew, “Is the undersecretary aware that the account he has just given of these elections sounds exactly like the account of any elections in the state of Georgia, in the United States?”

It is rumored thgt the State ) Department sent a message to! Warsaw protesting the recent I election, and that Warsaw "replied I with a message protesting the election in Georiga. Who was it that said “What is sauce for the goose is sauce for the gander”?

Senator McKellar is trying to prove that Gordon Clapp, the man appointed to head the T.V.A.. is a Communist. The iricriminating evidence is .that Clapp' read the Grapes of Wrath, and recommended it to others, McKellar cohtends that Grapes of Wrath is a Cofnrhunistic bock which no one but a Communist would read. Better take another search thru your library, dig out Grgpes of Wrath and burn it or the witch hunters will get you, and swear that you are a Communist who should be deprived of all citizenship rights. —o Upton Close Is Termed A Fascist

Little Gerald In Wrong Again Wichita, Kan. — Kansas’ little fascist, Rev. Gerald B. Winrod, who got off the hook in the recent abortive mass trials, is violating federal rules again. Winrod, who promptly returned to his old stamping grounds in the race hatred business, recently began construction of a new prihting plant here to expand publication of his Defender magazine and other inflamatory literature. Only it turned out he had faileef to get Civilian Production Administration approval for his uiie of priority materials at a time when thousands of veterans are unable to find houses to live in. The CPA promptly stepped in and ordered a halt to constructioh, whifch had just started. Winrod. in a fury, is reported to have told a CPA official that he had “enough influential friends in Washington” to get him the necessary authorization. The local CPA office sent the case through channels to Washington Where it was mulled over and sent back to the regional Kansas City office. — The Union.

£

The G.O.P. leaders are charged with seeking to “scuttle” the socalled Full Employment program. They are accused of yielding to pressure from business interests; which do not really want full mployment because it would rob em of a supply of cheap labor. It is said that they are seeking to circumvent the program by using delaying tactics. Senator O’Mahoney (D., Wyo), the retiring head of the Committee warned that “little time remains to preserve’ the American system of free competitive enterprise,” and urged the G.O.P. leaders to take immediate steps to get the program undr way. Senator Taft (R. Ohio) is expected to become chairman, if and when the Republicans get around to organiz-

ing the Committee.

Joseph Martin, speaker of the House, has given an outline of the objectives of the 80th Congress. The restoration of balance between labor and industry,

New York — The friends of

Democracy called on the Mutual Broadcasting System Jan. 27 either to drop commentator Upton Close when his contract expires Feb. 11 or counter-balance him

with liberal commentators. National Director L. M. Birk-

head of the Friends of Democracy said that Close’s talks, which are carried over 67 Mutual stations under the sponsorship of the profascist National Economic Council, are not “in the public interest.” All radio stations licensed by the Federal Communications Commissions afe obliged to op-

erate “in the public interest.” “Close is an Anglophobe and

a Russophobe,” Birkhead said. “He attacks the purpose of labor. There is nothing he says that

is in the public interest.” If Mutual does not drop Close,

it should at least balance his views with those of liberal commentatofs, Birkhead said. Heavily weighted with such conservative commentators as Fulton Lewis, Jr., Henry J. Taylor and Gabriel Heatter. Mutual’s only liberal commentators are Cecil Brown and F. H. LaGuardia, both of whom are carried by only a handful of stations. — The Union.

Big Family Row Among Republicans Republican Representative Knutson (R. Minn.) . sponsorer of the 20 percent across the board income tax cut and Representative Engle (it. Mich.) got into a big argument the other day in the Capitol cafeteria. The two legislators were standing face to face and shouting at each other, and ready to come to blows when Representative Hoffman (R. Mich.) and Mason (R. Ill;) stepJped in between them and prevCnte da fist fight. The fight started over a speech which Engle had made in the House attacking Knutson’s straight across the board tax cut, Knutsoh intimated that Engel had joined the C.I.O. Engel accused Knutson of trying to help the money class to the detriment of the working man. Engel charged that the Knutson bill would give some workingmen a tax cut of only 2 cents a week while it would give a $300,000 a year man a saving of $50,000.

Standard Modal INCINOR Quickly consumes all table-waste, rubbish,’ trash. Low fuel cost, j Designed for years of trouble-free service. 2- 1 bushel capacity. ~

Photographs of Recreation Room by the Makers of Armstrong Asphalt

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CENTRAL INDIANA GAS COMPANY

accused employers of driving I their white-collar workers into |

unions, “because they can t get i, Me . advi1 ^ To y 1€ ,. , , , . s | housing shortage on the Allesatisfactory pay or working con-! oUcraov ^rrvrmc i7.4Wch-

ditions any other way.” If employers spent less time' and money in fighting unions, they would have more time and money to devote- to better employee-em-ployer relations, sceemed to be the general thesis of Mr.-Karche’s

vented a fist fight.

Family Starves, Worth $150,000

New York. — The grip that Charles Edwards kept on his sisters for 57 years was broken to-

day.

Edward, 77-, a seemingly mildmannered little man with a scraggly white goatee, was' dead. One sister, Anna Edwards, 67, was under treatment in Kings County Hospital for rhalnutrition. Police found her, slowly starving to death on a diet of bread and water, unaware that her brother was probably worth $150,-

000.

Another sister, Delia Edwards, 63, who played on the sympathy of neighbors to supplement the $9 a month he allowed her for food for three of them, was in Bellevue Hospital for observation. Police, with an assortment .of keys, some of which apparently were for safety deposit 'boxes, looked for additional wealth as they pieced together the story of the iron-willed brother and his two sisters. For years the Edwards had looked and acted as though they never had a dollar to their name. It was part of Edwards’ plan. He assumed the responsibility for his sisters when a young man. He chose their friends. He took care of their money. He told them he was determined that they should spever find themselves penniless as their parents sometimes had been. Yesterday, Miss Delia Edwards crept down three flights of stairs and asked Mrs. Mary ^ennett, a neighbor, for a cup of hot cof-

fee.

“How’s your hi other?" said Mrs. Bennett. “He hasn‘t moved since Saturday,” said Miss Edwards. Father Charles Bernel from St. Paul’s church found in the front bedroom of the dark, sooty aparU ment Edwards’ body, withered to 80 pounds, kneeling beside a cot, left*arm on the mattress, right hand against the floor. In another bedroom, was Miss Anna Edwards, cheeks withered, blue eyes shrunken, too weak to

stand.

Police found 14 bank books showing $75,000 in deposits. Among dust covered papers they

“Odd” Girls” Not Really Odd. Meadville, Pa.—To ease the

musing shortage on

gheney College campus, IT 1 freshmen women are being accomodated in temporary quarters in the nearby Odd Fellows Orphans’ Home. Everything is fine, the girls say, except the inevitable nickname they’ve acquired: “Tho

Odd Girls.”

—o CARRION BIRDS DANGEROUS. Chicago—Gulls, kites and other carnivorous birds can spread serious outbreaks'of livestock dis* ease, the American eVterinary Medical Association reports. The association said research studies by French scientists found such deadly diseases an anthrax and tuberculosis were carried by birds who fed on meat animals which contained germfc.

—T—J

uuot ^wcj.cu papers iney Who wrote thef* Ten Corn, found mortgages, stocks, bonds mandments on’ stone -J* God oi

BIBLE flUESTIOnS wANSW-CR-GD BY tH£ VOICE /PROPHECY ^NTE^ATION^BrBUBAOAOaSTE^ Question—-What chapter in thi Bible gives the most complete re^ ord of the signs of Christ’rcoming? Answer—The twenty-fourth chap* ter of Matthew. Q.—Does the Bible teach respect for old people? A.—Leviticus 19:32: “Thou shalt rise up before the hoary head, and honour the face of the old man, arid fear thy God: I am the Lord.” (Se* also Exodus-20:12.) Q.«—Has the Bible been translated Into as many languages ?s the writ* ings of Shakespeare? A.—The Bible, in whole of la part, has been translated into Over 1000 languages arid dialects^—far more thari any other book in th#

arorid.

Q.—How can we tell what ths Strange beasts of Bible prophecy represent—for instance r the onehorned goat of Daniel 8:5? A.—By reading more Of the Bible —for example, verse 21 of the eighth chapter: “And the rough’ goat is the king of Grecian and the great horn that is- between his eyes Is the first king.” Q.—Could any human power ever Change God’s laws? A.—He could think himself able to change them, Daniel 7:25: “And he shall speak great words against the most High, arid shall wear out the saints of the most High, and think to change times and laws: and they shall be given' into his hand until a time and times and the dividing of time.’

Executive Defends The Labor Unions Fred M. Karchen, director of operations of the Rice-Stix Dry Goods Co., St^Louis, Mo., spoke his piece on “Office Unions” before a meeting sponsored by the Office Management Association of Chicago and Northwestern University.. He accused employers of spending thousands of dollars to fight unions, which could better be spent on a program to develop better employee relations; “Where an employer’s interest in the development of sound employee-employer relationship is real and articulate, no time or concern need to be given to the fear of unionzation.” He

and other securities worth another $75,000, and several keys. Since Edwards quit work three years ago as a janitor he had forced the family to live on $36 a month, $24 social security payment and $12 pension. The rerit

Moses?

A.—Deuteronomy 4:12, 13: “And the Lord-spake unto yott out of the Didst of the fire: ye heard the voice of the words, but saw no similitude; only ye heard a voice. And he'declared unto you His covenant.

went up from $17 to si54 a month. ! “ T - He trimmed the allowance for whlch He commanded you to per-

food accordingly. In the 19 years that they had lived at their present address, the apartment had never been

heated.

The sisters of the man who was afraid of being poor said they had never known anything but

poverty.

o *— Shouldn’t Chew Bubble Gum

Medford, Ore.—A 12-year-old Jacksonville, Ore., girl who startled police in Medford by calmly phoning the station to announce she was about “to put the blast on someone” with a gun is southern Oregon’s latest problem child. Police say she leveled a rifle at an aunt, drew a knife on a man and chews bubble-gum incessantly.

form, even ten commandments; arid He Wrote them upon two tables

of stone.”

Q.—How can a man tell what ths truth is in such time! a#these? A.—John 17:17 says: “Sanctify them through Thy truth: Thy word is truth.” Aad it is written in Psalm 119:105: “Thy word is a lamp unto my feet, and a light unto rriy path.” Test all thihgs by the Holy Scriptures. Isaiah 8:20: “To the law and to the testimony: if they speak not according to this word, it is becausa there is no light in- them.” Ed. Note: Address your aifestiohs to the BIBLE QUEStlON COLUMN, Tho Voice of Prophecy, Box 55, Los Angelet 53, Calif. Bible questions of genera! in* tercst will he answered in this column as space permits. ■