Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 57, Number 196, Decatur, Adams County, 20 August 1959 — Page 12

PAGE FOUR-A

‘ r " H vEmRL-L«wP ju IK m * i x Tj S' P £ W r totfe W- tru L_umrv Adi k THEY DON'T UKC TRUJlLLO—Demonstrators against the 1 Dominican Republic regime of Rafael Trujillo wave flags i and shout defiance in a demonstration in New York. Sign • (middle) reads: "Trujillo is a gangster and oppressor."

Republicans Working For Fall Comeback

U CADOU’S* COLUMN By EUGENE J. CADOU United Press International INDIANAPOLIS (UPD -The Indiana Republican elephant is battered and bewildered, but he'll try to rise to his knees again this fall. The Hoosier Democratic donkey has. kicked him out of one U. S. Senate seat, 8 of the 11 congressional posts, and lower house of the General Assembly, most county and township offices and threefourths erf the city halls. So, leading Republican state mahouts have scheduled numerous meetings to encourage the rise of their pachyderm, with campaign plans for the municipal elections their first order of business. Hie GOP State Committee will meet in Indianapolis Aug. 25 to talk over election arrangements, to set the date for the 1960 state convention (probably June 24), and to fix the campaign assessments for state candidates next year. Women to Meet The next action will come from Republican women who will stage an important conference at French Lick, Sept. 14-17, when there will be sessions of the Regional Conference for Indiana. Illinois and Ohio Federations of Republican Women, the Indiana Federation of Republican Women and the executive committee and board of directors of the National Federation of Republican Women. Speakers will include Sen. Thruston B. Morton of Kentucky, GOP national chairman; Rep. Charles A. HaUeck of Rensselaer, House minority leader; Governor Handley and Lt. Gov. Crawford F. Parker, leading aspirant for the 1960 gubernatorial nomination. Sen. Homer E. Capehart will be conspicuous by his absence from the list of orators. The gathering of women is completely controlled by Handley-Parker faction Republicans who now are at logger-

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heads with the senior senator. Halleck is Comeback The scheduling of Halleck is an Indication that this faction has taken the congressman back into the fold after battling with him for many months. This return to grace was heralded by the governor, who several days ago said he would not oppose Halleck if he had a chance for the vice-presi-dential nomination. The omission of Capehart may foreshadow a Statehouse factional candidate in 1962 against the senior senator. Other Indiana speakers will include Mrs. Martha E. Whitehead, president of the Indiana Federation of Republican Women, and Mrs. lone F. Harrington, Indiana national committeewoman. A panel of GOP congressmen from Indiana. Ohio and Illinois is cheduled for the afternoon of Sept. 16. Morton will come to Indianapolis on Sept. 19 to be the banquet speaker at the fall meeting of the Indiana Republican Editorial Association. The luncheon speaker that day will be Rep. E. Ross Adair of Fort Wayne, who is deemed by some observers as a senatorial possibility in 1962. Advance Warning TARAKAN, Borneo (UPD—Ants act as weathermen on this small island off the coast of Borneo. When the ants begin to move in droves toward the higher inland area, the population follows, with its personal property and cattle, according to local authorities. The residents have learned that ants seem to gense floods several days in advance even of there is no indication of rain at all. Over 2,500 Daiiv Democrats acf sold and delivered in Decatui Want Ad — They bring results.

Ike Winning Dixiecrafs From Johnson WASHINGTON (UPD — When President Eisenhower starts to win congressional battles over labor, housing and highways, the political wheel has taken just about one full turn. | A year ago, with the slimmest of majorities, the Democrats had the Eisenhower administration

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THE DECATUR JAqy DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA

IHFtv ''■'■E.'lgMßfl;* 7 and the' GOP on the defensive. Senate Democratic Leader Lyndon B Johnson, for example, seemed to be dragging the Republican administration into an admission that unemployment was high and that something had to be done about it. With nothing but overconfidence to worry about, the Democrats felt they had the congressional elections won before the first votes were counted. 1 > A Symbolic Week - Now they are on the defensive. Last week -was a triumphant land perhaps symbolic one for President Eisenhower in his relat tions with the Democratic Conl gress. i Over the opposition of the Dem- ■

7 rlocratic leadership and a majority of the Democratic members, the House approved a tough labor reform legislation which carried his endorsement. And the Senate sustained his veto of the housing bill. The labor vote apparently resulted from a public clamor to support Ike when he asked sos more stringent controls on unions. The veto threat has been even I more effective. i A majority of the senate voted Ito override the housing veto but the move failed when less than the required two-thirds supported it. ' Eisenhower seemed unable or unwilling to wav£ the veto threat last year. But now he is less bashful.

Cities Constitutional Support The veto gives him the equivalent of 16 votes in the Senate and 72 in the House. As he has said, the Constitution makes him part of the legislative process. What has happened to the unionsupported labor bill which Sen. John F. Kennedy (D-Mass.) brought from the Senate committee last spring? It was toughened on the Senate floor and rewritten in administration language on the House floor. What of the scornful reception Democratic leaders gave to Eisenhower’s requests for a gasoline tax increase to help solve the highway financing crisis? The House Ways and Means Committee is caving in, at least in part,,

w because a mjority of its members knows of no other way to keep the highway program going. Awaits Final Verdict On housing, Senate Democrats backed up a little—but only a little. Eisenhower calls part of the new bill objectionable but admits legislation is compromise and keeps his own counsel about a veto while the outcome is in doubt. In a minor league contest, Eisenhower objected to one provision of the TVA bond financing bill. But he finally signed it. In what looked like a deal, Congress promptly passed a separate • bill to repeal the offensive section. His heavy commitment for a balanced budget and against in-

THURSDAY, AUGUST 20, 1959

flation underlies most but not all of Eisenhower’s arguments with Congress. He is said to object to talk about the ‘‘new Eisenhower" but has been persuaded or has persuaded himself to take a more beligerent stand. Long Wear CANTON, Mass. (UPD—Miss Helen D. White, a former school teacher is still driving the automobile she bought in 1926.'After 33 years on the road, she says, the car is “like new." "I get 1 22 miles on a gallon,” says Miss White, “and don’t have i the every-two-or-three-year head- ■ ache of turning in one car to get a I new one."