Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 October 1944 — Page 9
T. 25, 1944
MS, BROWDER [irae Sud Mmmm. cm me ; regardless; that he, Travers, memorandum is telephone con- ————_ HN * |tbught hard against this but that|versation with Mr. Travers “which his (Travers) ‘chief had insisted he required me to read and jnitial 1]! A ‘ORL if) ERED 25 of the visa would be fas a guarantee that when Mrs ore very embarrassing ‘at this time." |Browder. arrived to apply for her : Berle Denies Charge visa’ would pass or approve her
Mr. Travers’ chief is Adolph Berle, assistant of state, and a White House confidant.
Sint
son
ds
toil: Charges He Was Told to Grant Entry De: spite Any ‘Findings.’ (Continued From Page One) + atv ¥ the consulate that instructions had [case.’ He said he had communicated come from Washington to grant the {by telgphone .to the Montreal convisa “regardless” of their own in-|sulate But } Jefe) to Tepurt the ac- ; terpretation of the law governing] tion s board of |
her entry, Hon o beg visa nt rn had Barred From Russia * | recommended issuance of the visa.
| : E ;
39.95
most
committee which included war, navy
and justice department representatives.
ea native Russia and the legal visa| The state department confirmed a now allows her to remain 8s an|that Mr. Pinkerton has been pinced on alien be, “on leave” and gave ill health as Rust, Fa i given a leave the reason. absence from Montreal post - Seige. less thah a month after Beliefs “Well Known
Before conducting the “token” examination of Mrs. Browder, » Pinkerton said he had handled an’ exchange of letters with Carol King, attorney for Mrs. Browder, about procedure for obtaining the visa. He said he wrote the consulate’s reply stating that Mrs. Browder might come to Montreal if she wished “but warning that she might be found] ineligible under the immigration laws.” The amdavit adds that “since Mrs. Browder's Communist affiliation is Fwell known” it was evident under immigration laws that “she was not entitled to a visa,”
The Pinkerton affidavit named Howard K. Travers, chief of the state department's visa division, as the official who had transmitted by telephone to the Montreal consulate the orders from Washington higherups to approve the visa. The statement quoted Mr, Calla} han as saying that he had received the telephone call from Mr. Travers,
government se
“ “that Mr. Travers had said that’ ' Mr. Pinkerton _ asserted that his
on the chance that Mr, Pinker. ton might be ill or absent, Mr. Callahan directed two other examining officers to initial the memo, the affidavit continues.
~ Calls Action ‘Farce’
Mr. Pinkerton, describing his ex= amination as a “farce,” sald he refrained from asking the customary questions about communistic affiliations. Mrs. Browder, ever, way compelled to sign the sworn statement disavowing her belief in or advocacy of the overgl throw of the government, he said. ‘Mrs. Browder and her attorney obviously chose ‘Montreal to apply for entry because it is recognized in informed circles as the “soft” spot for applicants with questionable records, Mr, Pinkefton asMr. Pinkerton disputed a statement by Mr. Travers that the state department was obliged to follow the' recommendations of the apMr.ipeals board. The consular officer's authority is still supreme under the immigration law, he said, and the board has power only to decide that certain cases shall be permitted to go before consuls for final disposition.
ERIE PLANT SEIZED WASHINGTON,
how-
Oct, 25 (U.-P.). —President Roosevelt today ordered re of the Lord Manufacturing Co. at Erie, Pa., on the grounds that the firm did not abide by a “fair and reasonable” price set on its product by the war and isjand navy departments.
.. (Continued From Page One)
representative.” It's Anybody’s State
Dewey an edge here if he gets it.
carry it this year by 25,000.
there may cut it this year.
. . THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES ’ Event of America's Peace Power Is Up to
Congress, Dewey Says in Minneapolis Talk|
was & good one, and he spent his time last night not oily in outlining his own foreign’ policy ideas but in needling Mr. Roosevelt on what he saw as frequent bungling in his
ics with G. O. P. isolationists in cohgress. And so he said again— “I have not the slightest doubt
tachieve the result we all consider] essential, and grant adequate power for swift action to the American
Then, reading telegrams from G. O. P/ congressional leaders, he sought to knock down President Roosevelt's argument that if there should be a turnover on Nov. 7 Republican isolationists would ride to victory. Governor Dewey was making his case in a Minnesota that, by all accounts, is anybody’s state today in this presidential race, and such an old-fashioned thing as weather may have a lot to say about who takes it. A bad day Nov.’7, would keep Minnesota's farmers at home, and they are the ones who must give
Mr. Roosevelt took Minnesota's 11 electoral votes from Wendell Willkie in 1940 by 47,000 votes, but there are some who predict Mr. Dewey will
Registration has been heavy in the Twin Cities and in highly industrial St. Louis county, which includes Duluth, some of it due to the! Political Action Committee and some to the G. O. P. In 1940, 37,000 of Mr. Roosevelt's plurality came out of the iron-range country, but disaffection of some of the thousands of Poles and Finns who live
Mr. Dewey's Minnesota reception
handling of foreign affairs. Cites Conference Scrapping He sought to show, by quotations,
Be vot Democratic Mr, goin hed signed the 1935 neutrality act. He ¢ “scuttling” of the 1933 London economic conference was “the most completely isolationist action éver taken by an American President in jour 150 years of History.” He scored the policy of sending oil and scrap iron to Japan right up to 1940. Today he campaigned in Wisconsin, where most observers give him at least a slight edge, and tonight he goes into the Chicago stadium for a speech from the same platform on which he accepted the nomination in June,
Japan Bought Our Scrap Iron for War
By JOHN L. CUTLER United Press Staff Correspondent
TRAIN, Oct, 25.—Gov. Thomas E. Dewey today'left up to congress the decision on committing American forces in advance to preservation of world peace and promised that a Republican victory in November
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would provide the unity necessary to achieve that end. { The Republican presidential candidate charged that President Roosevelt's own record of relationships with congress, as well as the Roosevelt administration record in foreign relations, would fall short of that goal. He charged that President Roosevelt “deliberately scuttled” the London economic conference of 1933 and thereby committed “the most
completely isolationist action ever |
taken by an American President in our 150 years of history.” Sold Japan Scrap Iron He added the accusation that the Roosevelt “permitted” the sale of scrap iron and oil to Japan up until four months before the attack on Pear! Harbor which precipitated . the United States into the war, 1 “Let those who claim to have exercised great foresight remember these lessons in history,” Dewey challenged. “And, let us as a nation never forget them.”
paid high tribute to former Gover-| nor Harold E. Stassen, Ball's mentor; as leader of opinion.”
Dewey headed southward ‘for stops at Milwaukee, Racine and Kenosha, Wis, and. another major speech in Chicago tonight in which he proposes to discuss “the moral issues in this election.”
Mr. Roosevelt's own coldness toward oe Targus ‘of Nations in‘times past. out that instead of conth other nations, a congress passed: and would take up the “use of government power, including spending and favors, by President Roosevelt to achieve perpetuation in offices”
harged that the President's
reasons for bolting the Republican ticket in the November election, Dewey insisted that he has gone farther into the question of collaboration without reservations than has President Roosevelt.
fore the New York Herald Tribune Forum in New York City last week he came out for participation in a world organization without reservations which would nullify its power to halt future aggression.
>
“a bold and courageous
Immediately after the speech
Talks in Chicago Tonight A Dewey spokesman said he
In. an obvious answer to Ball's
He recalled that in his speech be-
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The audience in Minneapolis’ municipal auditorium, estimated by Governor Edward J. Thye at “more than 12,000” cheered wildly at the New York governor's response to Mr. Roosevelt's own recitation of the- history of foreign relations before the Foreign Policy association in New York City last Saturday night. Dewey chose the home state of Senator Joseph H. Ball (R. Minn); ardent internaticnalist, who bolted the Republican ticket because he was dissatisfied with the G. O. P. nominee's views on foreign policy, to deliver his third major speech on the question, He never once mentioned the young Republican senator but he
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