Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 April 1945 — Page 10
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REFLECTIONS: | Final Entrv © Pe, ry Xe EC =? : ‘1na Entry oh nd AUREL i | ~ g A By Joe Williams an NEW YORK, April 23.--In_or=- y der to understand our racing pics : ture you must be a combination | ty. § cents a copy, deliv- | § PO (MEW of Swope, Socrates and possibly | ered by carrier, 20 cents Stettinius: you must appreciate the | 8 Week. - ‘philosophy of the good neighbor policy and subscribe Mail rates in Indiana, | to the wisdom of lend lease in all its phases. It | $5 a year; all other states, | won't hurt if you're slightly daffy, too, U. S. possessions, Canada | In the beginning I was all for closing the tracks and Mexico, 87 cents a and keeping them closed. Now I don't know. Abmonth. senteeism was originally given as the reason. Later it was admitted this was a smoke screen. The main of © RILEY 5551 | jqea was, and is, money control, Close the mutuel windows and the itchy dollars will find their way into savings accounts. That was, and is, the reasoning. Unfortunately, it carries no guarantee. If it did I would have no doubts. I'd want the tracks d ‘the White House | to stay closed. I woudn't mind working on a savings | account myself,
This Isn't Hard to Do
The Indianapolis: Times _ PAGE 10 Monday, April 28, 1945 a |
ROY W. HOWARD WALTER LECKRONE HENRY W. MANZ President ‘Bditor Business Manager (A SCRIPPS-HOWARD NEWSPAPER)
we Price in Marion Coun-
Owned and published daily (except Sunday) by Indiandpolis Times Publishing Co. 214 W. Mary‘land st. Postal Zone 9.
Member of United Press, Seripps-Howard NewspaAlliance, NEA Serve fce, and Audit Bureau of Circulations. Give Light and the People Will Find Their Own Way
CLOSE THE GAP THAT mile between the capitol an can symbolize barrier or bond. It can seem a very long mile, keeping the. President and congress far apart. : President Truman is trying wisely to make it a short mile | WHAT'S ACTUALLY happening, I'am now con=
: : i : iv wn | vinced, is that the reformers are beginning to throw the legislative and executive branches of govern- | v ' 30 that g | their ‘weight around. They've managed to get hold
aw together. ; ment may be drawn i ge Tod ¢ ; ined | of influential ears in Washington. This isn't hard Mr. Truman's intimate knowledge 0 congress, gain | to do if you command a flock fof votes. Nor is it .in 10 years as a senator, now becomes a great asset to him | pard to sell a bill of goods when you piously use
and to the country. He has high respect for the institution. | the horrors of war as a talking point. ; | Racing's growth has alarmed the professional
He enjoys the cordial regard and confidence of those—sen- cuardians of our morals. They have seen state ators and representatives of both parties—with whom he | after state legalize betting. Maine js the latest has served tal | That makes a total of 23. Others are planning to = fom afr ra : tia : bi To {-folow.The.inxitation to share in the betting returns Sram JESU bE Heche no desire {0 doin Lon ing. Tha: this makes the state & partes ate congress. , At the same time, we see In him A RE ME a BE pense + Coram weein 10. BIRLA, 7: Sp
tion to let himself _be dominated by congress or—as some = reat deal. The practical purposes to “which the | i monies are put appear to justify-the arrangement.
seem to fear—by any coalition of conservative Democrats | Even’ the voters who haven't any interest in racing and Republicans. Or, we might add, by any special-interest | go for it, or remain neutral. Florida is an example. group of right or left, in congress or out. : Racing keeps ‘the school system going down there, 7 Sayr yy 4 } : : or just about. To me this is an ugly indictment We believe he intends to handle his own tremendous against the state, but there it is and the people seem
job to the best of his ability ; to recognize the right and duty | to accept it as a matter of course. of congress to handle its job; to consult congress, when- Can Take My Racing or Leave I
7
POLITICAL SCEKE= Huge Task By Thomas L. Stokes
WASHINGTON, April 23.—The American people might as well
J NONDA Surly Reg
know now that they've got to keep By HEN | the old belt tight. ) Soripps-H The end of the war in Europe, HAMBURG | which can't be too long off, naturally will cause X= Quick change: | ultation and naturally also will provoke a general Germany beh [‘desire for refaxation of restrictions and a demand Coming thr for more of the ordinary things of life, towns with G But that just can't be and it won't be.
tanks was one The war in the Pacific will require more and more, | ai . It's simple arithmetic. f
Mammoth Job of Transport rf A LARGE PART of the army in Europe is to be | moved to the Pacific to finish off the Japs as quickly as possible, That will be a mammoth job of transport such as we have not yet seen. Redeployment, as it is called, is beginiiing already in a small way. Later, troops and supplies will move in endless convoys. Recenuly I had the opportunity to study the probe
pi
lem of supply in Europe. That is problem enough, iw Ro as is demonstrated by the strain to keep up with the | Mr, Taylo armies advancing swiftly across Germany, and the | necessary occasional halt for the supply lines to $iges of tue catch up, i x 3 > But that is comparatively simple as compared § oo py with the Pacific supply problem. It is about 3000 But it is : miles from the Atlantic seaboard to the front lines who matter in Germany. It is 6000 miles from the Pacific coast real change. to the Philippines. But the task of moving men and In the first
supplies from Europe to the Philippines is something else again. That is roughly 13,000 miles. Great quantities of supplies must be moved. About
rand occupati tain feeling average town
70 per cent.ol the supplies left in Europe are in ‘Week by w | eondition 10 be.used and will be transferred. to the each place HE Sree ER rag ence ana. Cramer ww TON a ; ee : Bo No Extra Gasoline for Civilians Dany * Thén they
THIS WILL take great fleets of ships, and ships use oil. Naval operations in the Pacific require lots of oil. So do bombers, which literally drink up gaso=’ line, and a stepped-up program of bombing is im prospect.
perience thei war if their f On the da; ings would small-arms f
a spceulent commodity once en-
which congress and the country should and will weleo : . i . I gone. Mexico Is One of Our Allies, Too joyétyby even our humblest citizens signed. Opinions set forth
knows the government inside a rau iy steaks, butter and wines you want, not to neglect seriously affecting the national £ . de and out. He was in congress | gas. I found ‘it a most pleasant experience .down mgrale. It is making weaklings and
15 years before he became comptroller general in 1941, and.| there and, as I wrote at the time, lend lease is a cowards cf even the boldest of men.
|quirer's hopes to dust and ashes.
| Then comes the information that| ,n; , i 2 pic of conversation wherever one |, - rer . : : usiness of* the conference is ressu [e : | there is po bacon today, but there oc Never was a commodity so
ment corporations) or if it is not curbed we will soon have a government by government corporations. “A large segment of the government is today operating
Mr. Warren says duplications are widely prevalent and The 46 United Nations may have their difficulties in agreeing how they will lie in the same bed of
AMERICAN soldiers in Germany have.come upon ‘some | two associations of lawyers, three labor organizations, The suppliant’s voice at last be-| three children to support, I welcome | barbarism of Japan. no les four veterans’ organizations, four farm groups, five comes inaudible, and we can only the financial assistance that a bO- | Gerinany. Of Japan: Jy =
interesting old relics of a bygone time, living in com- | j=" ieties, two Catholic, two Jewish and two conjecture .what the finish . would nus plan would afford. Other states |
fortable seclusion until disturbed by the advancing invaders. | Protestant auxiliaries, six peace societies, four busi- have been, very probably “the end.” are considering $10 a month for|
One of them was the Princess Hermine, widow of | nessman’s luncheon clubs, three educational societies | Yes. the end. It is the last straw, ach month of service. Is this not r and the National Association for the Advancement OF rather the last rasher, We have better than a memorial?
Cal 73 ‘ ra & « 1 yor i Kaiser Wilhelm. “He was a poor.old man with the wrong | + coiored People. suffered other deprivations, but| Is Indiana to take a back seat
sort of children,” she said of him. “He loved Germany.”| 1f the object of San Francisco is to establish with a ealmer spirit. The price any other state? Is your papef go- | peate ghd keep the peace, why don't a lot of these of liquor went up, so we put less ing to take up the torch?
{o| outside organization—the curse the world today. The courage
There were others, too, including a few fatuous, Nazi- | of a show, with political convention torchlights,
loving Hohenzollerns. But: these two_are enough to provide | Ringling Brothers, Barnum & Bailey and Tollywood . | touches thrown in, may so scare. the delegates from
nother compelling reason for unconditional surrender and | je other 45 United Nations that they will revolt. the pursuit and punishments of war criminals. They may ‘rise in unison and say: “If this be the
Jeaven forbid that Adolf Hitler should.escape to grow- Price of peace, give us war; If this be the higher old in half-forgotten, half-forgiven exile and one day be | Stahyazd Of HYBE to VAIS YOu sumeticans Mish b called a “poor old man who loved Germany,’ or that Himm- | if this be democracy in action, give us dictatorship. lev or any other top Nazi should live to complain, ‘at 96, | If this"is what we have been fighting” for, goodby.” be
that the citizens of a country scourged by his own country’s It's All Pure American
“WHAT ARE OUR BOYS FIGHTING FOR?”
By A Good American, Indianapolis
peace conference and to convince | the world that crime does not pay, !
scripts and cannot enter cor- | war horses of conferences which example, was badly shattered. A literal fleet was respondence regarding them.) were repudiated before they had sunk in the harbor to block it. Power plants and been put into effect, something gas plants were put -eut of commission,
grocer's eye transforms. the in- : : But this Jeon shoriage iS gecing ut controversial matter in form | still further sacrifices, The end of the war in Europe o wh, Is the all-absorbing fq. discussion and that the main| will be only a phase.
may be some on Friday, or next] te Sst 50 prevent future wars, but there will | greatly missed, nor its untimely dis- | 0 }itt1e gained if justice to small REFLECTIONS —
fellows would gladly swap his Pay Word has reached me that a plan |S > Politics) Polistes, ns be Te] shows signs of going even further than sponsors of check, not for a horse, but for & is circulating throughout the state |} p. Re ri % 227 bine the legislation asked. The ‘measure was introduced hog, or even for one of his smoked to erect memorials for the men in| y I exiles il they canno | by Senators Byrd (D. Va) and Butler (R. Neb.).
The kind of courage that must, | if necessary, challenge popular | isms. The courage to think and act |
abolish the political and social shibboleths that have brought about |
I have a brother that is missing
German prisoner, What I can’t understand is why they bring those | Germany prisoners over here and %, treat them almost as good as they | 'Greatest Constitutional Authority’ do our own soldiers—while our boys| . gENATOR BYRD, told the committee:
ever possible, before acting on important matters; to seek ALL OF WHICH must make dull reading to the | Consequently there will be no extra gasoline for Next, ever the help of congress, and to give it his help, in solving the reader—if he’s still with me—but I think it is per- | clvilians here with the end of the war.in Europe, , our advance momentous problems of war and peace. tinent to the ovr: subject. I tad take my paeune OF 50 AL Jous) says Qe Bienon Semeryel, coms on and this . or leave it. At the same time I can't understand | 34 orces, despite recent prom man in ever THIS IS wilt : rediction of milienniuny's ph dawn, | ¥v Evland, France and Russia can have their | ses by Secretary of ihe Interior Ickes. Gen. Somere | the worst da y ~ P : : : 5 } * | racing, war or no war, and we. can't. Surely they | vell just does not see how it will be possible. over for him. Mr. Fruman, no doubt, will have his difficulties with coh- { must have all the problems we do, including “money | Food still will be a problem. Meats and fats will He did not gress, his battles, his defeats, as well as his victories. But | control.” They-must have some reasonably. wise per- Sonne E be scarce, The food problem is com- he saw us—| . is . . . a - Ov ; ? S | plicated by the needs not only for our army, but f : However, t : S s week w ores , >, | sons over there who know about depressions and : Ys or ’ his consultation this week with congressional leaders, Re- | = No try to avert them. And yet they keep the | the Philippine army and others fighting with us, for welcome. publicans as well as Democrats, prove that he knows how | (;acks open. That's what puzzies the man in the] civilians in Europe, for péopleseof other nations ene* “And now t to go about winning deserved victories and avoiding unde- | street—and if he’s a racing man it does more than 7 : slaved "by the Germans, and for the hordes.of Gers In Mannh rod 2 puzzle him; it angers him. » “I wholly disagres with what nan wa: prisoners. " : : serslautern, servedidefeats. ; : ’ . 5 . 2 Supplies of shoes ar - There is thi . Ls tial tl iene pa oi I hesitate "to bring In the matter of lend lease ooSsler orum you say, but avill defend to the RIA = § 8 e going to be tighter still, : A. es e 13 Rothing more essential to ne preservation of | pecause I know little about it. All I know for sure | death your right to say it.” ay mliions i pants xe needed for the army and : a = “Yepresentative- government —government by laws and that it enabled our allies to keep going in their : per cent of available leather already has been nment—gove, d not is that it enable re D going An cr e . - i y n 2 by men—to the wears of the Amewican neanles, and to the most “critical times. It could ‘be that it saved “BACON, BACON, WHO'S (Times readers are invited |*SOMETHING MORE ~~ | S@rmarked for that pugpose. -Rayon hose and other rorld’s future h SI W.the | ization. But where did the money and the ma- GOT THE BACON?" . to express their views in |MUST COME out” ‘ rayon articles of clothing for women will be reduced : -world’s future peace than that our President and our CoN- | terial come from? It came from us. And yet our By Ernest M. Linton, Bloomingion these columns, religious con- ny E.R. Egan, 701 Markwood ave, 430 quanuty because of the need for rayon for : 7 ‘ , mosquito nett f gress shall be able to werk together, in closest partnership, | allies can still have their racing and we can't. Now ‘Bringing home the bacon” is 4 . cluded. B 4 = Ssh netting for our troops in the Pacific. These ° ! Ship, : : \ > Hw 8 : . roversies excluded. Because | Something more than military | nets cannot be made of cott through the months and years just ahead that just doesn’t add up, does it? And it wotld "today an impossible feat. For bacon, f th | ved. let : cotton because it rots too By GEF . ‘ y 3 . 2d. : | surprise me if anyone in Washington could present |to Americans, is merely a memory, o s na eo ' 250 defeat—that is obviously the first| quickly in tropical climates. . Times Fe Mr. Truman, for his part, is making a splendid start, | figures and facts that would make it add up: a vanished (or banished?) treasure, ters should be limited to requisite upon which to base a Sp. ‘ WITH TI words. Letters must be inese Must Be Equipped GROUP ON
WE ARE GOING to equip Chinese armies for * You might li
| their. operations against the Japs on the mainland, act when o
5 ——————————————————————— : S4 : “ . : x PERHAPS YOU hadn't heard but Mexico is one but not now available to the most here are those of the writers, | BUSH-AX AND MEAT CLEAVER of our allies, too. Likewise a good neighbor. Also opulent. Bacon now belongs to the and publication in no way ae) Nor S06 No piy = Te pou | and that will require much stuff of all kinds. Tne doesn’t come T 7 A 7 vt : i ia cg i a icy. | res Sings ” »__1i t : . . . , US 3 - . . . . J ,INDSAY CARTER WARREN is the comptroller general | {7 enthusiastic admirer of our lend ‘lease policy. | realm of “what was'—like the dodo. implies agreement with those {i hich make wars imitable.| better able the Chinese are to fight, the easter it If sos I 4 2 : You can get any number of articles in Mexico you | the mastodon, the 5-cent cigar and opinions by The Times. The ; : : the thovies of the United States. He runs the general accounting | can't get here. You don't have to bother about ppints | erinoline. SP Sssames. ho an Something more than the practical will be on our armies, ; A 2 office, which does th i over iti | uch silly things, either. Practically all “the | The disappearance of hacon is 4 - treaties, the mere exigencies of the| Additional facilities of all’ sorts will be needed sven lixe in : 8 the top job of government auditing, He 27d such sin : y ” io bility for the return of manu- | situation, something from the old for the knockout blow in the Pacific. Manila, for There is no
emn annou ment that has given his
he had experience as a legislator in government r an. | wonderful inspiration, provided an American is able Once strong and daring men now y Sore . ! ization. 2 ’ 4 TeorgRn | to go to a beneficiary country and enjoy it. ask tremblingly and hesitantly ya Sowa, re ecarne op | TOT ‘must come out ,of i Ba Supply for the Pacific, both in the movement lol measure Mr. W y i o ,. | They also have racing in Mexico. when they address the corner 8r0- pegan to “roll our own.” The cur- Francisco conference than the us-| from Europe and from the mainland, will require § n se r. Warren's term of office yuns 15 years. He can’t| And, by the way, Canada opens her season (she’s cer—“do you (hem) have any (hum) few made us go home at midnight ual timesworn formula for inter-| a vast quantity of shipping. Cargo ships are now through succeed himself. He's independent and can speak his mind. | in the war. too) May 29th and goes on to Sept. 15th. b-b-bacon today?” 0 We. took a Sleeping Powder and | P2Honal co-operation. being reconverted on a large scale for moving troops eamp, pas Here's what he h iust said: Maremma ae—— And even before a verbal reply 1S got used tb snatching forty winks | To begin with, these conferences | from Europe. They will take wheat and other supplies along from eres what he has justi said: : forthcoming, the pitying glint in the wv) 3 8 y must be made public. We know,| over and bring troops back. tent to an “If .the present trend continues (creation of govern- r WORLD AFFAIRS— : y before daylight. "lof course, that committees must | This country still faces a tremendous job, requiring with a casua
of finality, E what he was Maybe the: game that st when Joe sal
to| - {
BRE coesid con 2) [ek (or next 4 seanientlv 88107 rs | week (or next’month, or surely next | 3 ‘epeaiently of congre sional control and free from ac By Peter Edson fe es taken Tohyp)—s | Lpearance, so universally mourned. yon; does not. Some oul. of the 2 Fos before his la: _countability to the executive. Indeed, this thing we call 7 AN FRANCISCO. April 23. — |uniess, by that- time: porkérs Fave] ramifications of he bacon San Francisco conference. Goi : “Joa hung Cs 2204.0), 1. 2d: S y : : {pr ‘are NUMervus an und- y : 3 government has reached such Gargantuan proportions that Looking under the bed to see who become altogether extinct. ' Wonder {1 Even ode. Ns nd. Poland® is nat the only bation Ing ; ac someone says it y "OV : ; i S ‘hat synthetic bacon woul taste . usp XPres- in question, although a most im- ; ; it is sprawled all over the lot. It has become greater than might be hiding there to disturb yo oo BoD oC !sions are undergoing changes on portant one from the standpoint : o He Was | . . : . sweet dr S e ike? Like synthetic bacon, prob-|. ph congress, its creator, and at times arrogantly snaps its fe Sweey cream oF yeacs Jeui ably p fs Becounl Instead of “button, of peace and perhaps the focal By Charles T. Lucey That isn't gi : She = sel rn i : button, who's got the button” peo- hole say it. , fingers in the face of congress. first thing that greets the eve is a scary spectacle |-i.It appears that King Richard III ple are an bacon LN point of the whole’ subject as the| WASHINGTON, April 23.—Con- dar Te “The most. necessary thing I know of along govern- | so frightening it makes you want to dive for the once offered his kingdom for aj oo yoconan and Vobody seems pertinent example of minorities of | gress hag let one power after “Yeah pi 11 i i i i pillows and pull the covers up over your head ‘tight. | horse. At least Shakespeare said so to Know th y That’ population, etc. | another slip away from it in recent a: ah, | mental lines is a thorough going reorganization of the | P["/ “0 [iospect of representatives from 42 U. 8. |—or was it Bacon? He didn't even|, oy e_ ShEwer at's the| Italy, practically destroyed, must| years but it's starting to retrieve I was his w executive branch. It should be done scientifically, but once | clubs, societies and pressure groups who have been specify the kind of horse, most ary QUES yay. be represented. Italy, a victim of| some of them. or Pair Se the decision is made, then a bush-ax or meat cleaver should invited by the state department to send to San kind would apparently have suf- “BETTER THAN Nam Bggression and Qesadent mon- | A senate banking and currency subcommittes AWeArs a i be used.” : Francisco spokesmen who will serve as consultants ficed for the king was keen for a A MEMORIAL” a n Pi iti peopl pave) considering a bill bringing the huge independent } dealt. : to the eight-member official U. S. delegation. swap. Today many a prince of good! gy py, Omar Schroughan, Overseas ought, as*best they could for mod- | government corporations under its control already .
Blacko
that millions of Bes could be saved. Of course, he says, ; hl : b \ y HE y . ’ security. but their peaceful slumbers will” not be there would be “Youd 'yelps and snarls, but that's always disturbed nearly so iio by a Soviet Russian with sides—Berkshire, Yorkshire, Hamp- the various services. While we feel | 20% present a democtally regime Many of the corporations have found it handy | true When powers are curbed.” a secret vote plan, a temperamental De Gaulle shire, “Please sir, I was brought that gesture is appropriate, we | Which could be depended ypon lo i, go to Delaware or some other state to get their nh. That's an authoritative mouthful. We know President Frenchman with a collection of trick amendments, up on bacon, I reared my family on know that. it suffers by Comparison | S=0pesats poi a. Taagern Seno founding charter. Senators say it was to grab a lot LONDON Truman and congress are mighty busy, but we'h Bev | "0 quarreling - Polish? factions, nor a half-dozen it, 1 miss it terribly, my hair swith what other states are doing for) ™p, , hand of courage! ©! POVers they couldn have gut Irom congress. Tonight th . gress ? ght, usy, but we nope ley | gyitish dominions scheming quietly to rule the world, getting thin, my sight is failing, my their servicemen. I have discussed | nally, a pew Kind gi Courage 8 do something abqut it—and quickly. as they may be bothered by this fringe of 42 lobbyists. toenails are coming out and Gen. that topic with fellow Hoosiers who must be substituted for the terri-| Warren Uses Sharp Words chance to m i ie ; : Debility “has almost overcome the feel as I do on the subject. ble evidence this war ‘has brought. | NOW, AT tha request of Senator Taft (R. 0), thelr popula INTERESTIN } Different Pews, Different Views forces within ~me—let me grease As a private in the A. A.P., some. |The futile Waste the Gefitls #%- | the office of Comptroller General Lindsay Warren log i i RESTING RELI( S INCLUDED IN the 42 are four big business groups, my throat once more, and then...” where in India, with a wife wr {F0 IR his tne of Ptiona] en) is drafting an amendment which would end such ‘Atter nes
in | Ous-of-congress chartering of federal corporations, | Mr, Taft's idea was that three or four years might
| be allowed for the change. It would mean that the
years, the li night all ove a five-mile «
corporations couldn't go outside the terms of cone To save '] gressional powers specifically granted them, will not yet of | This followed as sharp an indictment of bungling force. But f to| federal government structure as congress has heard September, |
in years—and it came from Mr. Warren.
Ha 0 brightly, 1 He said that if the present trend continues well
ashamed, fr
Another was the ancient: massive, iron-visaged Mar- ie . a — “ ’ shal von Mackensen, idol of two generations of Prussian | People Stay I Tact fast, More then ae : : ‘ world chifios, the common honesty Soon Ee Royeramn S51 Seffokstions _ offices. Junkers and perfect symbol of German militarism. “Can’t | Francisco is in itself, eviderice that in normal tines Side Glances—By Galbraith Wiiich ie ynmentaiie in any Sable proportions that it is sprawled all over the lot.” CHARGE B! vou do sometihng to stop the Russians from killing my | they can't agree with each other on the same thing. Soe oy it Bt 3 Sous “It has become greater than congress. It snaps PHILADEL chickens?” was his complaint to his American captors. Hap On the eve Of depatiite for San Franeite: 3 less in evidence than it 1s today. |. BCS 81 COMETS. ne Jos necssary sing | ~Five men great dread grows that the good old American love 2 I know of is a thorough-going reorganization of the today after
execuMve branch. It should be done scientifically, § but once the decision is made then a bush-ax or meat cleaver should be used.
park on gar yesterday's F
“Duplications and overlapping are widely preva= header. The lent and untold millions could be saved and efficiency J Sin 1 n has increased to a high degree. Of course, there would / in action; he could be dead or a be loud yelps and snarls, but that 1s always true park last ses when powers are curbed, consolidations made or. § | appropriations reduced.” A YOUR G
See 3
mass murderers were actually. killing his chickens. | LOVING THIS country and hot wishing any other, | are treated like dogs. We read al- “The control of the purse is the greatest consti a | it'is possible to enjoy the corn relish at high noon | most every day about the American| {tional futhority the congress has. By. the operation | i aser NTA OT knife-and-fork deliberations+of Lions, Rotarians and | prisoners ‘ that are freed over in|, {hese 44 corporations, congress has lost specific § THE F IGHTON DISEASE | Kiwanis; to view with detachment the bickerings of Germany. Some are so weak from| control over the expenditure of vast sums of money | NFANTILE: paralysis cases. numbered 484 for the year |A. F.of L, C. I O. and N. A. M.; to argue religious starvatibn they can't even stand up, | gor which, under the constitution, it is responsible.” § WASHING 1945 up to April 7, according to the U. S. public } \alth | differences with tolerance, and to get some genuinely and look like skeletons. I ask you| pe said these corporations have power to borrow § gress is cons . ’ ng to the LU, 5, public health |, rare : 3 good. Americans why they ‘are hills ; | . . : . . . | hearty laughs every now and then out of the women, & 32 billion dollars on the credit of the government, . service. The highest figure for the corresponding period | God bless ‘em, who will join clubs. All these things | treated so unhuman while these| ut that actually this sum can be pyiamided many dulisted. en in the last five years was 877 in 1940. "About one-fourth | are as American as apple pie and ice cream and we | Serpe gver JTe_ ure 2M times as repayments are made and funds reloaned, fore they are Baz v. te vaay Wolke in Now 1. | understand them. § yor our boys get. pa o!| He contended that some of the government corpora= organizations of the cases reported so far this year were in New York | | Why Secretary of State Stettinius invited them | They do not. They are worked until | jong had used funds for purposes never intended by pushing this state, with the pthers scattered over the country. to-San Francisco is understandable. Why they want | they can’t stand up, then shot. congress. officers are @ At the same time, a senate subcommittee studying oui to be there is understandable. They're all tre-.| What, ae. our Pays. hain for| Jesse Jones, who used to run the Reconstruction lated leave a ion. wi i i ono al i Cha aay | mendously interested and they want to contribute | anyway? I'm sure y knew all| pinance Corp, put in a word for reform. In a letter G. Ls should Nation Wide Light OL disease oy that n the ye 1940 | 4p eir two cents’ ‘worth, Who doesn't? : | that is going on over here, they quoted by in Byrd, he said: ’ It would m ~ . We spen $525 fore of the 1026 infantile paralysis deaths As a demonstration of American public opinion would be tempted to quit fighting| «Now that most Of the war work of the RFC is is forced to during that year; $2.18 for ‘each of the 164,906 cancer expressing itself by insisting that the statesmen get and you couldn't blame them a bit.| practically completed, and the purposes for which clothes and .: deaths: 17 cents for each of the 536,745 heart -and artery | together ‘and form an’ organization that will stop . | its subsidiaries were created have for the most he can look ena; er : Y1'war, this 42-act greater combined lobby of coun- |’ DAILY THOUGHT . : |part been accomplished, I feel it would simplify up a position 5 8. sli . oi Ya . | sellors can exert a wholesome influence. But if" the | And whatsoever the ‘unclean operations if its subsidiaries, except . possibly the .in the army Our battle. against infantile paralysis is well organ- boys and girls get the idea: that, they ‘are going | person toucheth shall be unclean; War Damage Corp. were merged with RFC proper.” to one month ized and active. A ‘national campaign against cancer is | to: San Francisco. to put over pet projects, to insist | and the soul that toucheth it shall He said it should save money. rf : believe the F ls ea Sah ys : ei 5 | ap patented. panaceas of their own" preparation; to ads + * Ht bes tine) til Nui Mr. Warren called the Byrd-Butler bill “one of of becoming hi being -for mulated. this month, to tighten and improve the | stage demonstrations, -and rafse holy Ned if their | | ofipg, 1945 BY NEASERVIC vv ( = x Zita be ne oan URW SVT uimbers the first great steps toward financial stability” and few months. heretatore sauftered Soon that direction. ‘Obviously, Pome Picayune perfectionism ds not followed to "You remember Fred; Mother! He's the boy who gave .us those | ; bt Fri i i ; Qonouee leming, “oy corporations .come- in and gety : go ials h ~ similartco-ordination is id to meet fhe challenge. of | 06 aN 00 at vie. sbweot Benes. bi naa sundaes af the diug stores| i .* | “TELL me "thy ‘company and 1 exemptions from il. . __ Lt iam Je sma’ nv artco-ondination is seeded to meet the. challenge of “yy 'the ume of peace, sweet peace, they ought | Ta large rndsas af the drug store—| fold him we ly tell thee what thou art—Cer-| “A favorite way to kill a bill is to. load it with are ‘taking 3 diseases Si wo a Sip stay home, :. oc Coenen cei DD were having steak for dinner! : = LNRM nah Sn exceptions,” he observed, soy ie BEY ne , provisions of oi Geigy : ee - ir 4 oh : sag 4 - a feria ivan Sy oe Fos Chl E i Co (i we Cr ; ky ; a : : everal
