Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 October 1945 — Page 7

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Stassen, who is 38, has definite ideas of what he wants to talk about, and he intends to express them. He has been warming them sp in talks with a

off some final jobs the navy wants done.

American foreign policy which culminated in drafting the United Nations charter Capt. Stassen at San Francisco, At that conference he was a U. S, delegate. Issues on His List But that does not mean he will speak on foreign relations to the exclusion of domestic affairs. In

fact, he believes that by 1948 world relations of the United States will have jelled sufficiently to take them out of partisan politics. There can be clashes within both parties on America’s place in the family of civilized nations, but Stassen thinks domestic doings will be much more important as interparty differences. To that end he intends to devote himself much more to these subjects: National and state legislation to settle labor-management troubles for industrial peace and national prosperity, Sound financing of ourselves, with foreign commitments on a realistic rather than an idealistic basis. Administrative problems and modernization of government structures. Offers Labor Program As governor of Minnesota, Stassen worked labor acts through his legislature and administered them with such success as to win friends in organized labor as well as among employers. He would safeguard even stronger than now the rights to collective bargaining and the right to strike to compel observance of agreements. J But he would require strict observance of contracts by both labor He would do away with jurisdictional strikes between unions, with the public and employers innocent bystanders. Irresponsible strikes would be outlawed. There would be penalties to enforce all this legislation. He would encourage responsible leadership of labor and strengthen training of able young men for top union places. Stassen does not expect return-

{ing servicemen to become very!

prominent in elective politics next year. He does anticipate a much stronger entry than ever before by these men as candidates in 1948. As a general rule he believes they will be soundly liberal, stanch advocates of industrial peace. He has not been talking much privately about his public financial and reorganization opinions, but he shares Adm. Nimitz’ ideas on unification of the armed services under one tabinet member. While there are economic advantages to be gained in unification of purchasing supplies, he thinks the country should move preity slowly in lumping the services. 1t should explore all the possibilities involved, -he says.

Copyright, 1945, by The Indianapolis Times and The chicago Daily News, Inc.

MEMORIAL SERVICE FOR FLIER SUNDAY

Memorial services for Lt. Cmdr. | Richard Smith, who was killed Oct. ! 3 In a plane crash in the Aleutians, will be held at 4 p. m. Sun-

day in Pirst Presbyterian church. Dr. George Arthur Frantz and the Rev. ‘Russéll W. Galloway, minis ters of the church, will conduct the service. Lt. Cmdr. Smith was the son of Mrs. Matthew PF. Smith, pastor's assistant at First Preshyterian church. His two brothers, Lt. | (jg) David J. Smith and Lt. Rob- | ert M. Smith, will be here for the services. ; Mrs. Smifh, who resides at 1433 N. Pennsylvania, has received word that the lieutenant commander has been buried in Kodiak, Alaska.

TRUMAN TO DISCUSS UNIVERSAL TRAINING

WASHINGTON, Oct. 17 (U. P).| ~President Truman will present his ideas on universal military training to congress next Tuesday. He will deliver the message in person. Mr. Truman's plan to appear be fore a joint session of congress was announced today by congressional leaders. They conferred with him about the message this morning,

Advertisement

By PAUL R. LEACH - Times Special Writer ” WASHINGTON, Oct. 17.—~One of the most powerful young liberal personalities in the Republican party is soon going to be back in

Cp t. Stasten Soon to Leave ‘Navy for Political Stump

al

Capt. Harold E. Stassen will be out of the navy in five or six weeks. The former Minnesota governor, member of Adm. Halsey's staff and an almost certain contender for the presidential nomination, will then begin accepting speaking invitations that have been flowing in.

LANDLORDS REQUEST \RENT CONTROL RELIEF

(Continued From Page One)

anti-inflation measures for the home market held a fruitless daylong conference and scheduled another for Friday. The committee was reported to have revived for consideration the plan advanced early this year by Chairman Marriner 8. Eccles of the federal reserve board for a special capital gains tax on property acquired and disposed of within short periods. The original Eccles plan, which failed to arouse much support in congress, called for a 90 per cent tax on profits from property sold within two years. The rate would be reduced by 10 per cent annually until it reached the present capital gains maximum of 25 per cent. Mr. Eccles has contended the levy would discourage real estate speculation, but some authorities have questioned the legality of applying the tax profits from a selected source. The original plan would haye applied to securities transactions as well as real property, 35 Per Cent Payments

Also being considered is the plan advocated by William H. Davis, deposed economic stabilization director, requiring a 35 per cent down payment on home purchases. Another suggestion was for a limitation on the profits of builders.

The various proposals were discussed as alternatives to the plan-of Mr. Bowles to ask congress for power to put ceilings on all new homes and dwellings offered for resale.

Builders and real estate organizations have warned that the Bowles plan would retard building. Opposition has been strong in congress and Mr. Snyder created the committee to draft a more practical solution. The real estate boards based their appeal for removal of rent controls on’ units costing $75 or more on a decision of the U. 8. emergency court of appeals which put $100-a-month dwellings in a “luxury” group. Inspire Building Boom The case involved New York City ceilings and the boards said the “luxury” designation there is “equally applicable to luxury hous. ing renting for $75 per month or more in most other defense-rental areas.” Exemption of new housing from rent control would “inspire rather than deter a building boom,” the association said. “Except for a few left-wing sympathizers in the rent control section of OPA, we are confident that you and the overwhelming majority of your staff are sincerely interested in the same objectives that we are, the attainment of a sound national economy with full emplovment under our historic system of free enterprise,” the realtors told Mr. Bowles in a letter. Asserting that entire areas can

now be released from rent controls,

the organization sald: “We recognize the peril of postwar inflation but we believe congress and not OPA is responsible

COAL MINERS TO RETURN MONDAY

Lewis Calls Off Strike as Fuel Stocks Dwindle. (Continued From Page One)

500 sitdowners at Warners yesterday and forced them away from the gates, dragging some by the feet. The pickets resumed sitting nearby under close surveillance of officers. Further picket line violence will force the Warner studios to close, a spokesman for the company said. Half a dozen strikers were clubbed —one into unconsciousness — and three were arrested in the brief but bloody fight yesterday. The gate was cleared of all but four legal pickets in a few minutes. Meantime, not a foot of film was shot , at Warners, Virtually all workers%tayed away even after the picket lines were opened. The studio, victim of mass picketing since, Oct. 5, resumed movie making only last Monday after its cameras had been idle a week, Token picket lines were maintained yesterday at all struck studios, but the mass picket lines were withdrawn from four others—Columbia, Universal, Technicolor and RKO-Pathe—as the strikers concentrated on Warner Bros. Other Developments Full service was resumed along the 900-mile length of the Eastern Massachusetts Street Railway. Co. lines today as striking transit workers returned to work for the state, which seized control of the system over the week-end. More than 400 A. F. of L. milk truck drivers called off a short-lived strike in four Midwestern cities, but a milk strike still threatened New York. J Mounted police patrolled New York's waterfront to guard against possible violence resulting from a split in the ranks of the A. F. of L. International Longshoremen’s association. Some 6000 strikers reported for work yesterday, but 29,000 remained on strike against Joseph P. Ryan, $20,000-a-year life-term president of the I. L. A. Meanwhile, it was announced officially in Washington that the war labor board had voted to go out of business by Jan. 1 and after next Monday would accept only those disputes in which the parties agreed beforehand to abide by the board's decision.

Indiana Mines May Lose 900,000 Tons

Upwards of 900,000 tons of soft coal will have been lost in Indiana alone if striking soft coal miners return to work Monday, district solid fuels Administrator William G. Stockton estimated today. Stockton said the daily tonnage loss in the state is 86,700, with 37 of Indiana's 49 mines closed and 7145 miners idle. : Stockton placed.the Hoosier tonnage loss so far as between half a million and 600,000 tons. He sald that all 16 of the state’s shaft mines are closed and that 21 of the strip mines are shut down. Most of the 12 other mines operating, he said,-are small ones who rely primarily on trucks for shipping their coal.

to meet this problem. Property owners prefer to take their chances under a restoration of government by law rather than to continue to suffer the discrimination, inequities and injustices they have suffered

for three years under OPA.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

PAGE

BRITISH DOCKMEN TO CONTINUE STRIKE

- LONDON, Oct. 17 (U. P).~—Ten thousand British dock workers voted almost unanimously at a meeting in Victoria park today to continue a strike which has cut deeply into Britain's food supplies. Only 26 men voted to go back to work, The voting climaxed a mass meeting addressed by leaders

cluded Thomas Powell, the strikers: “The choice is simply giving Donovan (the official union secretary, John Donovan) a chance to negotiate, and by that cutting yourselves entirely away from the north of England, or to stand firm in this new alliance.”

NAME GROUP TO GREET HALSEY

Admiral to Be Navy Day Speaker Here.

J. Harvey Bradley, general chairman of the Navy Day celebration here, Oct. 27, when Adm. William (Bull) Halsey will come to Indianapolis, has announced members of his committee. Members are Nicholas H. Noyes, Walter I. Hess, William C. Griffith, Otto N. Frenzel, Ken M. Mosiman, P. F. Heslar, Frederick G. Appel, Paul C. Denny, Robert F. Scott Jr. and OC. A. Behringer. A welcoming committee will meet Adm, Halsey at approximately 10 a. m. and a motor cavalcade will take the admiral through the downtown streets. A press conference will be held at 11 a. m. and at 12:15 there will be luncheon at the Athletic club for members of the Navy League, which is sponsoring the Navy Day celebration. From 1:15 to 1:45 p. m. all Indianapolis radio stations will broadcast Adm, Halsey's address from the dining room .of the Athletic club, At 3:30 p. m. there will be a reception for navy mothers at the World War memorial. The league has received word that Adm. Halsey is looking forward to his visit to Indianapolis and is happy to have the opportunity to come, /

WILKEY SENTENCED T0 LIFE IN SLAYING

For stabbing Robert Cole to death last Feb, 5, James W. Wilkey today began a life sentence at Michigan City state prison. It whs the 13th first-degree murder conviction in criminal court this year. Wilkey was found guilty by a criminal court jury yesterday. On the basis of reports of the jury's nine-hour deliberation, Wilkey barely escaped with his life. The jury found him guilty on the first ballot, Then followed 20 more ballots on the penalty in which Wilkey's fate swayed between death and life imprisonment. He was sentenced by Criminal Court Judge William D. Bain, The prosecutor was Edwin Haerle.

who told

ASK BIGGER CUT

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INU. S. TAX RATE

Industrialists Say Relief Needed at Once.

(Continued From Page One)

them to the $5,000,000,000 ceiling recommended by the treasury department, Senator Edwin €., Johnson (D. Colo.), sald he would prefer to limit the ‘cut to around $4,000,000,000. “I think tax reduction is “inflationary unless it is. accompanied by reduced spending and I don't see any sign of reduced spending,” Johnson told reporters. Abnormal War Taxes George said he believed that the

cutting out abnormal taxes which actually would retard reconversion and a return to a high level of employment. He said he agreed the excess profits tax should be eliminated entirely to permit greater business expansion. This, he added, should be accompanied by “commensurate” reduction in individual taxes, principally for the lowest income groups. George gave no formula for the reduction of individual taxes. He indicated, however, that he does

higher exemptions voted by the house.

‘LAWYER-STEERING'

Juvenile, Court Judge Mark K. Rhoads today probed allegations that one of his probation officers “recommended” a specific attorney to the parents of a teen-age defendant. The 14-year-old lad’s mother and father told Judge Rhoads the probation officer assigned to their case, David F. Ritterkamp, had “suggested” they employ Attorney Frank T. Sisson. The parents testified Mr. Sisson told them he'd take the ‘case for $150. They said they later decided against retaining him. Judge Rhoads aired alleged “lawver steering” charges in court yes terday. Mr. Ritterskamp, now on vacation, did not appear. Judge Rhoads said he would await the probation officer's version Monday | before taking action. He sald if the charges are true, he will oust Mr. Ritterskamp. Mr. Sisson denied he had ever met the parents who leveled the] allegation. He said, however, he! had taken two other cases, one lor $150 and another for $100, but re- | ceived only “small down payments.” | He sald he obtained the cases on| his own initiative and not on the basis of .a probation officer's influence.

A ——— A RS a sr Ms pn G. I. LOAN LOSS SLIGHT

~The government has indorsed] $38,000,000 worth of loans under the | G. 1. bill of rights and has lost less | than $10,000 so far, It was learned,

PRICE INCREASE SEEN| Te ofice of price admin

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WASHINGTON, Oct. 17 (U, P).[F\

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