Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 March 1945 — Page 6

‘needed. We thiiik less hush-hush and more plain talk by

1 REFLECTIONS—

"The Indianapolis Times ah

he Fo

| Giving

RT

Aetiy

Him a.

(Go x

IN WASHING TON—

—_—_..

= = .) "PAGE 8 Saturday, March 10, 1945 Heading Home : | Vinson’ ‘S Record mn , ; ere the mar W. HOWARD ~ WALTER LECKRONE HENRY W. MANZ | . . Ss a : : Editor 3 Business Manager By Joe Williams By Peter Edson 115% vipa {4 SCRIPES HOWARD NEWSPAPER! EN ROUTE SOMEWHERE : WASHINGTON, March 10.— Now the fi

March 10.—Well, Boss, mn hay way, so your worries: are over and the same goes for “the cireuldtion department. and trust you did not

Price in Marion Coun ty, 5 cents a copy; deliv ered by carrier, 20 cents "a week

Owned and . published dally (except Sunday) by Indianapolis Times Publishing Co. 214 W. Mary-

1and st. Postal Zone 3 Mail rates in indiana,

$5 a year; all other states, . in .my absence, of course, but U. 8. possessions, Canada which must, nevertheless, continue . and Mexico, 87 cents a to be disconcerting to one and all, pe A a rr month, s It doesn't look as if I'll make , AN \ J U (

Cire New York today. for I'm being put 2 Aon ; i > . RILEY »3 off at Baltimore, along ‘with a

| string of 2-year-olds which have been training at | Tropical. Tt is not so bad traveling In a horse car. It is certainly better than riding up front with an engineer, whose first crack to you Is “So you are | the jerk who voted .for Dewey?”

Member of United Press, Scripps-Howard Newspa-

Give Light and the People Will Find Their Own Way

WHAT'S WRONG WITH UNRRA? AFTER 16 months of big talk and high hopes, the united "Whole Thing Would Look Foolish’ SL

nations relief and rehabilitation administration has not AS BETWEEN a character of that sort and a delivered the equal of one Liberty ship load of supplies to broad-minded Discovery colt I will take the

*

I'm really.

I hope © drop too | many sales, which 1s to be.expected |

}

| {

latter | I fear 1]

Henry Wallace wasn't enough of a businessman to be head of the 14 billion ‘dollar federal loan agency and reconstruction finance corporation setup, nomthated Judge Frederick Moore Vinson, whose past business experience seems to: have included directorships of a 10 million dollar" bank at Ashland, Ky., and a two million dollar bank in his home town of Louisa, Ky., plus a little | dabbling in real estate Mong ‘with his Louisa law | practice.

| Having a big operator of these qualifications at the head of the biggest banking combination in the world makes everybody in. Washington happy, iz cluding both Henry Wallace and Jesse Jones. Whatever inconsistency you may find in- this turn of events is further accentuated by a closer scrutiny of some of Judge Vinsan’s acts in the two years that

so the President * |

about _50 létte for the offic

_have a rule o it over with. all through 1: The boy V Jard—Pfc. Go

eciully. if the odds are right the hungry liberated areas. w hy? ? Who isto blame? Are Be much about my traveling, or lack he has been director of economic stabilization... THe ' talks with ar any better results in sight? The Times assigned Charles of same. so I will describe only one incident in con- mesiory of Juan Pinseth 2, foi Just to detp the’ fliers enjoy | i ‘ashi ret t Swers wi ' hotsey companions, Whe a €nd-go in e dance wi oth eyes T. Lucey of its Washington staff to get the answers. He Deaton ving Hotse: Sonipaniyie: Wat } ie vse (open, there are a few half-forgotten facts that — Some Vet 4 yn 1s waak io caries which | rolled into Washington, they ste ( ; has been giving them to you this week in his series, which snort and. whinny, For some moments this puzzled | be allowed to speak for themselves. WHEN Gt concludes today. me, but presently I understood They wanted Yo get Ordered Ceiling Put on Live Cattle were al) pg Mr. L ' found plenty wrong, but he also discovered | of and hold a ‘conference with. Jimmy Byrnes. Every= ; go. well by h Fy 1 qugey fom P th, 8 DD ! body in racing has been’ holding conferences with the | YOU MAY REMEMBER the businessmen’s battle he turned at that much of the fault is not with UNRRA. First off there an who stopped racing except: the horses, and what on subsidies—evil corrupting, un-American subsidies. ‘vYou guy: is a public misunderstanding of UN ‘R RA’'s scope. It was | would horse racing be without horses? OES Director Vinson not only supported them but Hohe SOR all i - / i ; < ordered them put on canned vegetables and flour and BY not set up to help such ‘able-to-pay” countries as France, I'm afraid He hale Hing War Jak foolien, Storer ji ; one cn ; : . vibe or ni . _ | But that is neither here nor in Hoboken s I say y gt. Fauad § Belgium and Holland; they wanted to take care of them- understood the emotions of the unemployed horses Not only that, but it was Judge Vinson who ordered sald. “How d

Nor was UNRRA supposed to help ex-enemy coun- and they had my sympathy. Personally, tries. such as Italy, which were to be supplied by the would have been a pleasant eXperience for ry We Tecan ep um i Mobilizer Byrnes if he had arranged to confer military ; though its Montreal conference last fall assumed =) "= part of the Italian burden. ” = 2 n n » ONE MAJOR BARRIER to UNRRA relief, is supposed to operate, is beyond its control. That is mili-

I think it war with

selves.

One thing I could have guaranteed him: At least they would have had more horse sense and common where it decency than to mention how much money horse racing has turned over to war charities, a common and vulgar failing of most of our sports these days

In Yugoslavia, where suffering is great, Tito wanted the Brisbane, Martin and, Mooney could never carry your

overset, Boss, and that reminds be I ought to explain relief turned over to him for distribution. Russia long wity. I left Miami 5 Whe very moment Bap : pl of

refused the use of ports and transport for getting relief sports news was beginning to break : » into Poland, and has not vet allowed UNRRA officials to I suppose you'know how some of my.collegiies will

; .- Even the British in Greece seriously limited A ‘alk. They will say that as long as the bum was down operate there. - Eve : , there why didn’t he stay for the heavyweight. fight

UNRRA. Ee | and the golf matches? However else can* he justify The reason for the dog-in-the-manger attitude of Tito making the trip? and others no doubt is that relief supplies in a desperately | Well these are just envious fellows and they do |

re . _ | not have the privilege of working under the greatest needy country can be powerful political weapons. Any editor of all time, and 1 hope you will not think I'm

temporary: regime or party machine which gets its hands saying this with tongue in cheek, because I've tried on the international bread-baskets to pass out, does not this before and it does not improve my looks. i . - : At that, probably I should have risked the travel have to worry much about staying in power. That is why hazards and stayed over for the heavyweight fight an international relief organization was and is needed— | which brought Joe Gaksi and Gunnar Barlund to-

— TE AB UR

“MERCENARY GROUPS DOMINATE PRODUCTION”

By E. R. Egan, Indianapolis. There are too many witnesses to the appalling waste of manpower in the labor domination and, according to signed witnesses, collaboration with the cost-plus fixed-fee system in our war production plants

exciuded

Hoosier Forum

are invited Views in eligious conBecause eceived, let-

mited to 250

Letters must be 0)

ions set forth

Oo

those ot the writers,

“I wholly disagree with what you say, but will defend to the de ath

your right to say -it.

“THEY NEVER WILL FOOL THE G. 1.”

By R. M. Moore, St. Paul First; 1 wish to thank F. H. B. of Indianapolis and the Veteran of World War II of March 5, also to the Marine in the South Pacific of March 2—that's slamming the old ball “right in there.. We have five

the ceiling. put on live cattle back in October, 1943.

businessmen, the farmers and stockmen? Further to demonstrate his sympathies for business, Judge Vinson refused to approve rite increases for the railroads and he turned down a 35 cents per barrel increase in the price of crude oil.

pro-businessman came in the fall’ of 1943 when he issued a directive to war production board and office

| Practically a Dead Letter Today

OPPOSITION to this directive became so acute

Jthat early in 1944 Judge Vinson issued a “clarifying®

statement” which in effect sucked back the worst part of the order by saying it was to apply only to textiles. Actually, the directive was used in only a few instances and is today practically a dead letter. But this is the closest the administration ever came to limiting the profits of business, and it was issued {over the signature of this same Fred M. Vinson who {now is named to head the biggest bank in the world, lorganized to save business, This other side of Judge Vinson's record is being recalled in Washington today not in any effort to belittle his abilities but merely to put in proper perspec-

tive the popular conception that he is the perfect -

answer to a conservative banker's prayer, another

Remember how that was damned by those stalwart .’

Perhaps the -high point in Vinson's record as a :

tax stamp orange-colore “The folk: he said. “I

Ins1

: tary priority in goods, ports and ships. The army and the By ke Way, Why shouldn't they tupn—it : Over— of price administration empowering those agencies to navy are unwilling to release ships. The shortage is worse | 21¢ Who cares: : |order production of essential civilian goods at manu- DR. J. R( = 2 Col taps . . facturers’ costs or a maximum of costs plus 2 per cent, WW '0 wars ar : same time, Ww : | ! P t's in the c: because our two wars are “peaking” at the same Some of My Colleagues Will Talk This was the famous “profit limitation” directive which it’s ; Even so, much more relief could have been provided ~ I GOT THE PAPER all the while I was in Miami : Gon. scared industry half to death and brought business- Seve Yay "ne as ‘a: ae YT ¢ d .I must say I have never seen such brilliantly 2 {men scampering down td Washingt 3 3 fi I Is yard. It ; . “OMis ‘0- of | 3D x " pering ashington to find out whedy 3 by UNRRA if it had A eceived the promised co Operation edited pages, which did not surprise me, of course: putters’ xo HR {went on. and black h Russia and regimes in Eastern Europe and the Balkans. Because I've always said that tellows like Greeley 7 : :

He used tw paper. . ._. cigarets wra years or so

TINT v ny : | gether down there in the Qtange Bowl. where the government pays the bills fan in stars in. our window—fine chaps, Jesse Jones, : stopped. All and why UNRRA gets so little co-operation abroad. | I'll admit it didn’t look right, my leaving on the ,—tbe taxes—for them not to be | Gi 30 ay plenty of overseas service is cred=, The record shows that Vinson is primarily another in’ storage x. un 2 a =n | very day they were going to fight. jtrue. * pies agrecmont w O58 ited to them, and like good red-.Democratic politician, and in some respects he has enough, tho BUT ONE PRICE of having an international organi- This manpower drive coming as opinions by The Times. The blooded Americans, ready and will- shown himself just as liberal, or whatever you want to days dgo- de

‘Unless, of Course, It Was a Draw’

zation at all is red tape. Many boards and much debate : WELL, I HAVE no way of knowing how the fight

do not speed emergency action, So the very nature of came out, since the only paper delivered to us in the UNRRA is responsible for some delays and inefficiency. ‘horse car is the Morning Telegraph, the contents of

The shortage of able administrators does not simplify the ¥hi on are. ey devoured By Ine 2-year olds, Who . are s to a , t V personnel problem, either. oF y anyway. Dut of Babs) didn'y-win, then

Barlund probably had to, unless, of ‘course, it -was a After all allowances have. heew, nis © how. ever, we draw, which is possible. under the eccentric rules -of believe that Chairman-Lehman and the other heads of he Florida boxing commission. In short I would UNRRA can produce better results®with more initiative

not be surpr ised You can see from these lines ‘how the sun straightand drive.

We think less diplomacy and mote guts are ened out the quirks in my thinking processes. Another bad break I got as a reporter who is always on top of the job, working tirelessly and into long

When you get looking too good the movies get you, | and the next thing you know vou are wrestling around | amorously with Goddard or Grable or Sheridan and when I reach a point where I must do that to feed the hungry mouths in my home, well, I'll just do it, that's all.

UTILITY IMPROVEMENT PROGRAM ~~ NDIANAPOLIS may well take pride in the operation of

the Citizens Gas & Coke Utility. Ever since the gas cempany was taken over by the city in 1935, the trustees — nl and management have conductéd its affairs in a far- sighted WORLD AFFAIRS—-business-like manner. It has served private consumers well,

it does with the Lewis-dominated

strikes as affecting coal

sumption, which really gets even the dollar patriot right at his own fireside listening. to the fadios, more or less accurate account of the progress of the war and world diplomacy and toreatenihg to inciude coal miners in the draft from more disturbing yet, and this is serious, food producers—the farm-

ers—neither of =seaien group could

possibly be replaced in the time it

server, Criticism: in congress, and out, has brought to the fore the testimony of those whose men on the battle front, to put it mildly, are at the mercy of such mercenary ,groups as dominate armament pro-

lduction—and it would take the -wis-;

{dom . of a Solomon and the per!spicacity of the FBI to determine which is more to blame, labor or

produc- | tion, not to mention domestic con-

¢ mee

corp 5 pts ar “4

r the re

RO .responsi-

turn of manu-

d cannét enter cor-

respondence regarding them.)

eta

comparison—while

Senator Bail armies had army before wher armies borne

were out by

time’ had hot

and if

with these not

secrets no doubt that many be had at orice and more of them —not belonging to unions—glad to be earning what they get paid-for. 1s and capital

Now the unior

ey

beaten the drive at for the lack of armament our stalled, Gen,

been

sub contractors pay enormous sums to contractors our German the bulge,

says that

the

and t¥is

could. be

“war is won and over.

opened and. men to transport them to the front —T00,000 is the estimated the public

force— taken so secret military could

can

ing to go on till this thing we call Yes, there are plenty of people in our U. 8 who give and give, again -and again. Then we have the other side, those who do not care. and never will. Sometimes I think the best thing the people could do is to Tock themselves up and throw the key away. They never will fool the G. I. of this térrible war. I, as one of many thousands of parents, will go down

IS the line for anything the veterans Eisenhower s

ask, I would like to see the 151st

enjoy a German bomb falling dn our yard, if they will only fly on and smash a score of those kind of piaces where “war nerves is not welcome.” The Look of March 20 has some; has what you would say “the limit.” - Those kind would say, “Well, so what, we:are. paying for this yar.” Oh, yeh! We here at our home have been lucky “so far”

i

call it, as Henry Wallace. As one of Vinson's aides admits, “Wallace has probably been more of a businessman than Vinson, but that’ wasn't why they turned Wallace down—it was his ideas.” Well, look at Vinson's ideas.

Enforced President's Stabilization Policy

OF COURSE no man with Vinson's' record—a brilliant lawyer with seven terms.in congress plusesix years: on the federal bench and nearly two years as director of OES—could fail to absorb a vast store of knowledge on. financial affairs. In- congress he was chairman of the ways and .means subcommittee on internal taxation. sponsored pay-as-you-go taxation

"To Vinson's credit. there should-also be chalked up his opposition to wage increases. He has fotlowed and enforced the President's stabilization policy to the best of ‘his ability. But with the miners’ biennial boil coming to a head and with more and more insistent demands from labor to break tre Little Steel Formula, Judge Vinson in leaving OES is getting off an awfully hot seat at a very opportune time.

of the army where such tainable at But~ it's ne before buyin

Not Up i

. EVEN Tt? for example mentator an on the Tow 8 hectic tr: here until a The last hoj

UNRRA officials is required. Certainly secrecy has failed. | hours, is that the famous four-ball matches also’ takes to train them for service in frantic Sppesly for ip Yio infantry, 38th-division, take OVET 5 early as 1937, authored the veterans’ bonus bill and a CAP pla: Maybe frankness would succeed | began on the very day I lef -This didn't make me the United States forces indeed 2° ships. TI Adie English Sa such places as Roney Plaza, Miami .,_aythored the coal stabilization bill with Senator Joe waiting for SH emma | Took foo good, either, but 56 what. Boss? gives. pause to. the most naive ob- “2! ed ports. Antwerp atb- thal Beach. Yes, or I would and could. Gyufrey of Pennsylvania. editor of TI

the latest 1

Wo

GERMA! materials 1

and its production of industri 0 : . : 4 see the point, or else. |—our ‘fingers are crossed for our A order of the p industrial coke and gas has con 0 r entina capital. Sul kids that are in all parts of the POLITICAL SCENE— SD ites tributed greatly to the expansion of the city as a manufac- A few examples may explain ,, wr po ap [world and seeing plenty of action. -Glum, lung turing center. | themselves. POLICY” | And to the sergeant who said, These ar

“I'd like to see this place bombed to hell’—so would I, buddy, and may ‘God take good care of all you

By William Philip Simms | No less a testimonial than Rep- CRUEL ; . [resentative Wilson's of Indiana is By Dr. Frank 8. C. Wicks, Indianapolis. quoted in the Congressional Record Macaulay utters opinions that are \with the following—"talking to a applicable to our own problem Ing. haps and after this is over friend and relative in a defense his essay on Hallam—"If there be wa. wij go along with you fellows | plant at Pt. Wayne, Indiana, who any truth established by the uni-|,. an vthing you may ask for—even | makes a very-much needed piece of versal experience of mankind, it 15 5 1arge new memorial in our capital. equipment for some of our néwest this, that to carry the spirit of peace gut wait till “after all the good implements of war—and was making into war is a weak and cruel policy. Republicans and Democrats get fifteen a day and declared he could | The time of negotiation is the time

A : their cut, in a doubled salary and double that, but the union boss de- for deliberation and delay. But 5 pot full besides. So long and God {when an extreme case calls for that

OCD Equipment By Douglas Smith

WASHINGTON, March 10.—Rep. Taber (R. N. Y.) says the office of civilian defense ought to be abolished. The ranking Republican member of the house appropriations committee and persistent heckler of New Deal administrators who come to congress for

The announcement yesterday that a new battery of coke ovens and a producer plant. costing $2,200,000, will be built at the Prospect st. plant is an example of the way the utility plans ahead. This equipment is being paid for by accumulated reserves. set aside for the purpose— in striking contrast to the situation ag the municipal garbage plant where replacement of worn out equipment has increased the current budget and tax rate. Both the

WASHINGTON, March 10.— When the Inter-American conference in Mexico ,City opened the door to Argentina, there was reason- to believe that she would make good use of it. ; Two things, I found in Mexico, are expected of Argentina. First, she must declare war against the

SAB

by the troops and the folks at home.

GUIDE BOOK FOR GRIPERS

ili ; i i axis , i i manded hé cut it to six or lose his bless. you soldiers. “ money, Mr. Taber says he expects to oppose any utility and the reduction plant are owned by the city—but I IRI od ol ” job. He said the.company was remedy which is in its own nature 78H request from the OCD for an appropriation for the the gas company is out of politics. the Americas : getting $50 a piece for each and [ most violent and which, in such «STONE WILL NEVER 1945-46 fiscal year. ar bet: i ases, i smedy y s ” dget bureau-a request i trid ne : : That see t _ Iwas making sentirely too much cases, is a remedy only because it 1s MANY GOOD OCD has filed with the budg n cartridgs It is significant also that the new coke battery will port of Secrélary of State NY Ihe pur. | money for the company-Iogic?" violent, it is idle to think of mitigat=| DO THE 1 Bn or for $449,000 for next year. The budget chiefs haven't report is th expand production by 17 per cent. Here again the utility | night, at the closing of the Mexico City conference. | This was a case where a man who ing and diluting. Languid war can BY Harty hp. ot » d and be |2Cted on it yet. LH. Grene is looking ahead to continued growth and greater industrial : . “lcould do the work of five with the|do nothing which negotiation or| - “They shall ask for bread a | Rep. Taber says the people in the OCD ought to In 1944 devel { ie 8 i SUAL Declaration of Havana Cited |corollary of housing etc., forced .to!submission will not do better; and given a stone. : , |zet rid of tne agency's. equipment—which 18 scat- diswn Stee evelopment of the city. COL JUAN PERGN. wi : * reduce output. Mr. Petrillo’s tech-|to act on any otner principle is not| After world war I, the SrAew > [tered all over the country—and get off the govern- of fixed am ns of the Rives Ny ERQ'N. ministe of war and bulwark | pique is beginning to be crystal clear to “save blood and money but to all depressions hit the yor . 5 sh | ment’s payroll, right now. procedures ) rey lata dictatorship has said Argentina too, but. Mr. P's a philantrophist hy | squander them.” here in ‘the United States, in e | for’ adenqual THE ARMY “D art ei : ; can not declare war now. He says it is too late; . midst of plenty, people fell in the Opposes Outright Gift to Cities, States 2 PRE} ARES SC HOOLS | Neither Germany nor Japan is likely to give .cause streets from starvation. The boys MOST OF this equipment has been allocatéd to Layers | IN | Delegates ¢ 1 wie : ; ; . . , x 3S Ss pe ! HEN the European war ends, the major call from the! take Fa i aad 1 Snewrny 4 2) Side Glances = By Galbraith wpe Loughy in Hi8t Way WEIS Dron: places where it is not needed, while many towns do, STARTI military ranks” over there will ber —“I—want to gO--i5-asighatory of the _declaration of Havana. which. | - turity was so far away that many |Deed it and are willing to dow Me. Taber Seiebie, Se te home.” Naturally they will want to come home. But all a 1940, stated that an act of aggression against one | | Pi! died—without receiving ihettaised He Cs tr and hat 0 over towne 15 merice stat y l y 0 { i i 0 P - hn 3 of them can’t come at once, Thousands must stay for thé gE, i ‘hem all i i, cy 2d @ t) a i Ne ought. to give it to the states and cities outright, as metallurgis duties inevitable in the sc ene. _ Argentina, by rights, should have declared war i Te. they marched as an army to Wash- has heen ssp. odd gas masks and the more The Xa The army is on record with plans to lighten the tedium agai Japa = or after Dec, 7, 1941 =Pearl Harbor mglon, Dy, Jy, helt Lohan two po helmets probably aren't good for any- . —g against er y ' X . y § p § i % : of delay. Soldiers may go to school under army direction. | the United EY ya. ie youiavey War bons boll thing, but a substantial amount~ean be realized from Arrangements have been made to admit a limited number could still declare war against Germany and Japan | About this time, there were many |sale 3t be A uh Rava), ) "i . : di : i rty as beds. cots, 8, - of soldier-students to universities in England, France, Hol- on ful a i bl Sus; pullding Ay oi aad casualty station outfits, Mr. Taber believes the American “republics are not of which cost many m g . ' , ey land and Belgium for streamlined courses which may cover | when it comes to the OP % Aon of one Jain We have a big stone memorial | OCD bought about $44,500,000 worth of equipment WASHIN 10,000 individuals in a year. Other plans call-for establish- = re opposed to recognition as long as Argentina tight here in -Indianapolis, When during by perio o SE a Te a ee about the - een distrib ; ment of three American universities among men overseas Sings i her present totalitarian type regime. Others you look at he} frpal Sond pula: haa SE or ey $0 many o 5 g , . . to be staffed by professors and instructors taken from the difficult ar, oe Tm wile ne. a llr and | the army or nas been declared surplus and turned our people ranks. Credits will be transferable fo American univer- the many times they were turned |over to the treasury procurement division, which Oaks prope

Cuba Defines Essentials of Democracy FOR INSTANCE, Cuba offered the conference the

sities for degrees. Still other schools for vocational training will be set up. | fo All this i§ promising. | regime: 1. Liberty to -organize politica] associations and freedom of speech, of, the press, of worship, of as-

It doubtless will be welcomed

government,

versal, equal ‘and secret sufferagg to elect or remove ,0ffice holders.

3. Representation of minorities organs of state.

‘4: Freedom" of association for professional men

ERE is a comment that cuts right down through the middle of all*‘the pros and cons*sh ‘a midnight éurfew for taverns. .The words came from a C. B. S. cor respondent

in: the elective

cllowing essentials as indispensable to a democratic

sembly, of opposition and of impeachment of the |

2.- Electoral “safeguards for the exercise .of uni~ |°

down on their request for their bonuses. After a long time and much more starvation, public sentiment forced the payment of most of the bonuses. But they got the “stone.” I hope the congress, after this war, will have sense enough to set the soldier bonus. to come due at the time the soldiers will need it. It will do no good after they have already starved to death. The stone

-| will never do. them any good. It is

a horrible reminder—-and ‘when

disposes of such property. “Some of this equipment would be useful to many cities and towns, which need it and can't buy it from normal sources. My information is that most of it is in storage at various places over the country and never has been bsed, » Congressman Taber said.

'Glad to Hear About 1t'

IP THE OCD has sold some of its 1 property to the army “I'm glad to hear abeut it,” Taber sald. “The army is probably putting {ft to use.” Of the $44,560,900 worth of property bought by’ the OCD, nearly $14,500,000 consists of gas masks and

‘in the Pacific: “If you are petulant about employers, ‘employees and workers, bot { | built as the one we have, is only’ helmets, which probably are worth little or nothing cisco will come to merry Iwo JimaTighted by De oii Ja rural HIT a a, chamber of horrors.” now. One congressman suggested that these articles ha Hiv choice: 5 th plenty o 5: Freedom .of action for the legislative power. : : be distributed as souvenirs to the several million gs even so puts near e floor show, never a dull Moment. 1 6. Independence of the judicial power, DAILY THOUGHTS .. [citizens who have served as civilian defense volunteers. ne oh x : 7. Enforcement of law without discrimination, And if a man also strive for The agency bought $9,750,000 worth of auxiliary ; OL-VIEW, W ‘Not all the allies, ‘it is pointed out. enjoy these masteries, ‘vet is he not crowned, fire pumps, $8,140,000 worth of four-gallon fire ex- J Compro STRONG west WIND, PERHAPS blessings of democracy—not even all of the Big Three. | " ’ Sf except he strive lawfully, — mn | tinguishers, and $3,900,000 worth of fire hose. But one, but w Therefore, it is asked, if Argentina declares war = 0OPR. 1948 BY NEA SERVICE, INC. T. M. REG. U. 8 PAT. OFF, ] Timothy 2: 5 Ti hs some of the hose, which was inferior to the type used ‘. people are Dy roured & to a good many ote by ne! ‘against the axis, throws out all ‘axis agents and |’ 1g, — hy municipal fire departments, was sold to the army them on i

Jefure subscribes to the Act of Chapultepec and. : 5 we uncorked ference at Mexico City ‘other con

at more can be

she met on furlough.

but |

"This is the fourth cake she has baked this ‘week for that, cornnel

remember

Sain, iin cir good purpose.— |!

Pa. Most of the 2,262,000 extinguishers allocated to