Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 April 1946 — Page 10

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PAGE 10. Saturday, April 6, 1946

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Give Light and the People Will Find Their Owe Way

REGISTRATION DEADLINE | MPNIGHT Monday is the deadline for registering for the May primary elections. Thousands of unregistered persons will lose their voice in ‘selecting the candidates of their party if they do not register at the county office on the main floor of the court“house. The last-minute rush of candidates to file today means that machine candidates will not be unopposed, in many instances, and the voters will have a genuine voice in the selection unless there is the light vote which all political organizations count upon to put over their candidates. The “slates” proposed to date by the organizations have a number of weak spots for which better qualified non-organization candidates have indicated they will run, The non-organization candidates, some of whom have superior background and experience to those on the machine slates, cannot win without the support of voters who are not a part of the organization. Unless you participate in the primary, you cannot complain about the caliber of candidates in the general election

next fall.

BOLL-WEEVIL ECONOMICS SOME thoughts on cotton and grain prices, the $4 billion |. loan to Britain, and the depth of your pocket— Farm prices average the highest in 26 years, Partly because of huge post-war demand here and abroad, partly because government keeps an ever-rising floor under farm «prices by treasury-financed buying through the Commodity Credit Corp. The senate has adopted the Pace-Russell amendment to the minimum wage bill, This would revise—upward, of course—the formula for computing parity prices. It immediately would lift wheat to $2.10 and corn to $1.52 a bushel, hogs to $17.20 and beef to- $12.80 a hundredweight,

cotton to 29 cents a pound.

do to the cost of living would not make housewives happy.

* Ld = VW HILE congress considers that political elevator for

a labor government measure to keep the Liverpool cotton “exchange closed and continue the wartime practice of bulk cotton purchases by the British government. For many, many decades the Liverpool exchange was the free market where the world’s buyers and sellers deter-

60 per cent of our cotton crop abroad. : Our cotton growers may think they don’t need to worry about what Britain does, so long as their political power can force congress to guarantee them higher and higher prices. But the time will come again when our government warehouses bulge to bursting. A lot of cotton that can’t be sold to American spinners at.the politically inflated price will have to be peddled in the world market at whatever price our government can get for it. "American taxpayers will have to stand the loss. That could make them sore enough to stop the whole price-guar-anteeing business, and cotton prices at home would hit the

toboggan. t

. oN. y $8 #8 T isn't so strange that the British government, pledged

the American people being told that it will promote more free markets and stop block purchases. But the complete absence of reaction in our congress is strange. It shows how far political-plunderbund thinkfing has supplanted economic thinking. The congressional farm bloc apparently hopes to keep our farmers prosperous, not by widening their markets, but by. digging ever deeper into the American taxpayers’ pocket—that same pocket from which the British loan is to come.

PUBLIC HEALTH NURSING DURING the week beginning April 7, an educational activity will be sponsored by the Public Health Nursing Association of Indianapolis to acquaint the public at large with the excellent work of this organization. Co-sponsors are the state and city boards of health, the board of education, Marion County Tuberculosis Association and the home nursing department of the American Red Cross. All have made records of attainment in this field. © The activity will be designated as “Know Your Public Health Nurse Week” and will be devoted in part to an explanation of what this Community Fund supported agency does. The association gives skilled nursing care on a visit basis, under direction of a physician, to anyone needing it in his home. Mothers and new-born infants, particularly of servicemen, have been among the principal beneficiaries of this service. The public health nurse applies the knowledge of modern medical research in many homes which otherwise probably would not obtain this benefit because of inability to pay for it. The blue-clad nurse with the black bag is a frequent visitor to many homes, schools and plants as she cares for the sick, demonstrates nursing techniques and shows the way to a healthier life.

TO CUT, YOU CUT (GRANTED, the federal government's job is big. Granted, certain federal agencies must carry an expandéd work load as a result of the war. There is neither need nor justification for the adminIstration’s plans to have, in post-war 1947, some 81 per cent More givilian employees on the government payro]l than ere were in prewar 1939. : Congress is raising the pay scales of government

th the eost of living or thé ra the taxpayers, too. :

*

cannot cut its costs

we Indianapolis Times The Escort She Needs

. Hoosier Forum ms: faim, sb

All RR . Cut Re TER

"| do not agree with a word that you

"City Airport Is Not Standing Still: On Sound Growing Basis"

By P. H. Roettger, Superintendent, Weir Cook Airport

I have read and studied with extreme interest the letter in the many, many times. The simultaneHoosier Forum, written by an airport worker. I, too, saw the crowded ous hanging of the father and son condition of the administration building on that particular Sunday in Iowa a few days ago brought it . ~~ What those and other “new parity” iricreases Would | referred to in the letter, and wholeheartedly agree as to inadequateness back to my mind. This is an exact of terminal facilities at Weir Cook Airport. I, too, have heard criticism copy from my. old book. from both the local traveler and the transient traveler. However, all the| “IS any father so unnatural as to criticism which I have heard has been 2 : F .. |facilities, and not to the airport proper. farm prices, the British parliament adopts, 337 to 186, | our fine flying field and its safety features. We may now ask what is being done to correct this deplorable terIt ‘may be ex-/JUMPS WHILE MEN YAP” Rained Al B ies neon proposed mr Charles R. Behrman, Indianapolis [structing him on that day in the construct a to the existing terminal Paling: vested an article (although almost le; him rob a neighboring hen . . serve A : . hud a : . mined would prices of cotton. The American price was 12 rs “EOL RSEY, UT ng ten by aaburiing) SHE bon, while the posits f 1 the Liverpool quotation, minus shipping cost—and we sold [can be constructed. Bids Were Te- mye nome of this organization 18| “Astonishing it is to see so many ceive, Tew, IG vo rom |Mdlanapolis Housewives League, or- of our young people growing up tion of e tempor who overbid as much as 80 per cent more than the consiriciion Was schsally Worth. are getting somewhere. For when | “That whoever was not bred to a Therefore, all bids were discarde ‘women of America organize for | trade, Eo Li Tos This addition has ben Tedesigned: anything, “they usually get whal| gyery Mussulman is commanded by ahd NeW bids were to De yvece ve they go after. I can remember hoW| the Koran to learn some handicraft Te Te shen rena. we men tried to keep them from or other, and to this precept, even unanswered as to Wiiether ou voting. They are voting and doing| ne Tenils of he’ Gand. Sianior 20 be gble So consirje; : Rr don 18 very good job of it, too. When We|t.r conform, as to learn as much due to a recent federal bill provic-|yere called to war the women t00k|apout the mechanism of a watch, ing first priority for veterans’ hous- over and passed the ammunition.|as to be able to take it in Va ur : {That is unless some man called | 54 put it together again. ’ Other improvements under con- them out on strike. The women of | “T'rain up a child; says King Solotract are: Additional parking ramp, | America want nylons, How many] mon. ‘in the ‘way, he should go; and sapale ay pasiiof us men would have the patience| yp.r he is old he will not depart sen 3 - ditional automobile parking space made necessary by elimination of to nationalize industry, keeps the Liverpool free market |gasolie rationing and stimulated

closed. That does, however, seem a pretty bold step at this ]

| living. { business for procuring their future

ocal interest in aviation; construc- : 13 : : tion of an office building to house time, with the $4 billion loan pending in our congress and | ational headquarters of the civil aeronautics administration experimental division, which is considered a definite benefit to the airport, and to the city as a whole; construction is nearing completion on the permanent installation of a radio localjzer used for inclement weather operations, and bids will soon be received for thé& construction of six hangar units, and necessary taxiways, capable of housing 24 aircraft, which will serve to alleviate crowded conditions within the present hangars and on the parking ramp. A proposal has been drawn up to license commercial aircraft operators and to place such operators on a status eof the airport. A local firm of architects are now under contract to prepare a master plan for the future development of the airport, which will require approximately three months for completion. This master plan will in< proposed development

“IOWA HANGING OF FATHER

AND SON RECALLS WRITING” By Mrs. John B. Rairden, Indianapolis I have read so much of childhood | delinquency that I have read “The Child Trained Up for the Gallows”

directed to lack of terminal wish to have his son hanged, let I take great pride in boasting | him bring him up in idleness, and | without putting him to any trade. {Let him particularly inure him to spend the Lord's day in play, and diversion, instead of attending on public. worship; and instead of in-

“WOMEN CAN WHIP PRICE

In The Times recently there ap- principles of the Christian religion,

ganized to fight the rising cost of without being apprenticed to any

Now, my average wage earner, We, jivelinood! The Jews had a proverb,

to stand in line for hours to get|e. .. iiSe ed, the women do it we) “But if you intend him for the pt h | gallows, train him up in the way The Esvernment salled wpon he he would go; and before he is old, women ol Ame a ww we Di€ Will probably be hanged. In the Hen pves eas didnt we? | #6€ Of Vanity, restrain him not from i SE Se DE ire % Sight o| the follies and allurements of it. In : : , the age proper for learning and. inTage In Yer and our nisin pen, structions, give him neither. As to . catechising him, it is an old fashFhjss remus, there is a large ar ioned, puritanical, useless formality. nae he own A es Never heed it, lest his mind be unae a i” Ns pr Trey. oro happily biased by the influence of a religious education.” still backing up their men. And ge ao more power to them. Run into your| n foxholes, you money-mad people of “IF JAPS AND GERMANS America, for those spike heels” will| HERE, HOMES WORTHLESS" grind you into the dust. By Mrs. Helen Bishop, 1845 Tallman ave. Just let more of them know] I think our boys who served overwhere and when they can get into|seas are getting a rotten deal all this organization. I know thousands| the way around, by which I mean who are waiting the chance to join.| the housing situation. The high How many men ever got any-|prices on homes and rooms and

are standing around yapping about| made.

covering the next ten-year period

Carnival —By Dick Turner

are for that. Their incomes haven't kept pace age increases won by organtry. But congress should have

ch told. congress the other day, one neces-

st inflation is to cut government costs

+ MEE a Eh

got upl | think hear a burglar downstairs”

and cruel and I think he is right

other problems also.

and let's start right now. » ” » “I LIKE ‘MISS TILLIE'S

NOTEBOOK ;' IDEAS GOOD” By Josephine Hunter, Bloomington

real teacher,

too, will agree.

to tell them, my.»

eer DAILY THOUGHT Their wine is the poison of dragons, and the cruel venom of : asps.—Deuteronomy 32: 33. NC. T.W, hee. UEP Lv —-

| public wants .

it. I was just reading in the Forum this evening about the veteran who wrote that people are selfish, greedy

It is terrible that everyone doesn't help the boys get homes and "In every other way that they can in

If the Japs and Germans were over here, owners and their homes wouldn't amount to anything. 8o folks, come on and help our boys

IT'S OUR BUSINESS, particularly since. the na-

tion is observing the first peacetime Army day Since

1941 today, to be aware that the kind of army we’ have will be determined by the kind of an army the . and right now we don’t have an army, air force or navy strong enough to support our avowed foreign policy. As President Truman says in his Army day proclamation, the military “can carry out its duty only with the full support of our people.” The army, along with the other armed forces, has demonstrated the right to public trust and respect ... although to listen to some of the ill-founded criticism of its leaders and palicies one would doubt that the public still remembers the accomplishments of wartime. In evaluating that cr sm there is great danger that we again will lapse ‘into unpreparedness as we did after world war I. It is well to keep in mind the warning of Gen, George C. Marshall, who guided the army as its chief of staf during the war years. Gen. Marshall said: “I sincerely believe that if. we had given our security its proper attention the axis nations would not have started this war—millions might be alive today had we faced the world in righteous strength instead of careless weakness.”

Congress Avoids Defense Issue CONGRESS STILL is dilatory in performing its responsibility to national defense, perhaps because the public has not made its desires clear and perhaps because it lacks the courage in this election year to take a stand either for extending the draft . . . which expires the 15th of next month , . . or for universal military training. Instead, it talks about the caste system and other. complaints against the armed services, and hopes,

| despite informed predictions to the contrary, that

there will be enough voluntary enlistments to bring the army to the minimum strength necessary to carry out commitments already made.

President Truman

DEAR BOSS: HERE IS an angle on the new Republican national chairman, Rep. B. Carroll Reece, of Tennessee, which has not been pointed out. : In his own quiét way he is one of the most “practical” politicians in the business. Undoubtedly he believes in the two-party system-—one to rule and the other to watch. Or as some wag said—"One to govern and the other to hqller murder!” But down in Tennessee, Mr. Reece, a veteran of 25 years in congress and sort of a perpetual Republican national committeeman for the state, long has beef satisfied to settle for the First and Second districts. Democrats have the other eight, the governor and both United States senators. For the most part Mr. Reece has seldom peeped. So it was no surprise to those familiar with the type of bipartisan, coalition, “practical” politics prevailing in the state to hear Rep. Jere Cooper, dean of Tennessee Democrats in the house, extoll the election of Mr. Reece. Chairman Reece knows how well the Southern conservative Democrat and Northern conservative Republican coalition has worked in the house since ‘the war. So Democrats had better be on guard. Or he will kidnap them.

Halleck Runs Congressional Grou WITH REP. CLARENCE J. BROWN (R. O)) given a G. O. P. headquarters office next to that of Chairman Reece, where he can function as head of the executive committee, some fear was felt for Rep. Charles A. Halleck (R. Ind.). Everyone knew that Mr. Halleck could have had the national - chairmanship if he were willing to quit congress. And a $50,000 salary would be attached. (Reece is working for nothing. He is wellheeled.) But Mr. Brown put out the dope that now he will rule over the house and senate campaign committees. Nothing to it. Halleck remains head of the house congressional ‘committee. He. will have his own fat campaign fund and will continue to rule on capitol hill without direction from G. O. P, headquarters downtown. When the senate banking and currency committee had finished hearings on housing, a checkup showed

.| that Senator Homer E. Capehart (R. Ind.) had won

more headlines than any other committeeman. He pioneered in citing RFC loans to Henry J. Kaiser and

handle your sleeping for you.

sleeping pills.

was about to snore!)

Are you a sufferer from chronic insomnia? Just turn “onthe phonograph,-and a gentleman named Ralph Slater will put you to sleep. He says. He is a hypnotist, and he has made a recording the size of a wagon wheel, which is supposed to boost you into dreamland quicker than a heaping handful of

. Mr, Slater says there are 40 million people in America who find it difficult to caulk off promptly, and for them his recording, at an approximate $5 the copy, is a godsend. Just turn it on, and presto! In three minutes, you are having a fine dream about where unless there was a little apartments—people bought homes eating steaks soaked in butter. woman somewhere in the back-|pefore the war and now they want ground? They are the cause Of|two prices for them. Owners in Who Turns Off the Record? everything we do and say. What do| most cases have put very little reyou say we men back down and let| pair on them and shouldn't charge

As a retired school téacher, I am moved to write you how very mich I am enjoying “Miss Tillie's Notebook” in ‘your Saturday editions.| that the council's. : Miss Tillie certainly sounds like a Beyond question the council has lived up to its

I am sorry Miss Tillie is not in The Times every day. So many people need to be told the things Miss Tillie knows, and knows how

NEW YORK, April 6.—Summing up after watching the security council in action for the past 11 days, it is difficult to escape the impression that the Soviet Union has won a victory no less resounding

rosiest expectations in sustaining the rights of small

The subject Saturday was such a| nations. For this, Secretary Byrnes deserves much worthwhile one. I was so glad to| of the credit. But praise also is due to the Mexican, read that she urges parents to visit} Dutch and Egyptian delegates for their unwavering school and talk with the teacher. | support, and to France's Ambassador Bonnet.

And I agree with Miss Tillie on| pn. . Ie wors. 1 Will Ure Maly parents, Big Three Should Draw Design

, BUT THEN Soviet Ambassador Gromyko never wavered either. He had his instructions from Moscow and he followed them to the letter. Thus while the council had its way, and permitted Iran fully to state her case against Russia's illegal occupation of her territory, Russia also won her point in refusing to discuss the matter until she was good and ready. Deprived -of veto powers over discussion, she obtained what she wanted by boycott. Significance of all this is far-reaching. It portends stormy times ahead for the United Nations,

petmental. Far from it. She did what she did from

IT 18 the act of a bad man to| deep conviction. = Russian communism is a sort of

hig ve b% faisehoed. 3

-=Cicero.

religion than which nothing could be more fundamentalist, ' ,

ni.

ai ; Eo

“-

REVI ’ na »

Russia, in this particular case, was not being ‘tem-

ba

IT'S OUR BUSINESS © , . By Donald D. Hoover Nation Pays Tribute to Army Today

The big problem is obtaining enlisted personnel . ., there alréady are moré than three times as many applications for regular’ army commissions as there are authorized positions. The air corps, by the way, leads with twice as many applications to “stay in” as have .been made in any other service. There is serious doubt that the type of officer elécting to stay in the army, unless he be seriously ‘interested in it as a professional career and not as & haven, will provide the leadership which js necessary. Much better that

-a greater opportunity be offered to enlisted personnel

to become officers. ; Clearly marking the pathway to, advancement that a commission indicates would spur enlistments more than the already excellent opportunities offered by the army in education and retirement pay. Every enlisted man should feel he can become an officer

~ if he has what it takes,

Tribute to Professionals IN APPRAISING the regular army, we too often overlook the fact that it was these professional sol+ diers who had the burden of training the fighting team that proved its ability by winning the war. To these officers and men , . . and enlisted ‘personnel had an honored place among the instructors and coaches of that winning eombination . , . Amerioa owes a debt it cannot repay. The professional soldier seldom is a sword-rattler . . , he does not want war any more than the “peaceful civilign. ‘But he knows the need for preparedness. He realizes, too, that his is a profession aimed only at defending the nation and carrying out its. responsibility as the world’s greatest power. He does not regard himself as a politician, dealing in political questions, Yes, the country owes a great debt to such men as Marshall, Eisenhower, MacArthur and Arnold and their colleagues of the regular army . . , and just as great a debt to the navy. With only 15,000 regular officers, they buily an army of 8,300,000 men, And these men will be the nucleus of our “new” afmy, too.

IN WASHINGTON . .. By Daniel M. Kidney

Is Looking Quite Fit

this may become quite an issue, with the Kaiser loans

. elaborated in «detail by Senator Styles Bridges (R.

N. H). Our old friend, Rep. Louis Ludlow, gave The Indianapolis Times a plug by putting your editorial on the British loan into the Congressional Record, He indorséd the suggestion that some arrangement should ‘be made for repayment in much needed raw materials and concluded with this introduction: “This editorial is a notable contribution to the discussion of this important subject, and I think it ought to be read and evaluated by all our people.” Nice going! t I was over on the south lawn of the White House the other day to watch President Truman pin the Congressional Medal of Honor on a soldier and a sailor. Coming in along the portico outside the President's office, I first ran into my old, irascible friend, Senator Kenneth D. McKellar (D. Tenn.). He had come down from the senate to see the ceremony since the soldier was from his state. We shook hands. Just then the President popped out a side door and ran right into us. So he joined in the handshaking. It was some minutes before his bodyguard arrived. So we chatted a bit, having known him well when he was doing a swell job in the senate with the Truman committee.

Chief Executive Well

THIS BUILDUP IS merely to report that, with all his troubles, President Truman is looking fit. He seems to like the work of being chief executive in these trying times. He had on a blue suit and looked as nifty as when he was (unsuccessfully) trying to sell them, I bet. Nor has he lost any his innate modesty. In a little speech, after the solemn, but colorful, ceremony, President Truman said: : “I think I have said on several different occasions that this, in my opinion, is the most pleasant and most honorable job that a President of the United States has to do, to pin.the medals on the heroes - who have made the country great. “I have said it time and again, and I will keep on saying it, that.I would rather have a medal of honor than be President of the United States.” Everyone present was convinced that he meant just that. : DAN KIDNEY.

REFLECTIONS . . . By Robert C. Ruark : ’ Now ‘Tis Time to Sleep, by Hypnotism

NEW YORK, April 6.—Modern mechanized living is wonderful, but sometimes you can push it too far. There are a couple of things a fellow still likes to do for himself, and now here comes a man who wants to

warm, he says.. Now your legs, and finally your whole body. Here I had to get up and throw away a blanket and mop the sweat off my brow. Now the eyes are becoming leaden, the whole body becomes leaden, and sweet dreams to you, says Mr. Slater. Sweet dreams to who? I had to get up again and turn off the machine. Passed the pantry on the way back to bed, and there were a can of sardines and some cheese, a bottle of beer in the icebox, When I finally got to sleep at 4 a. m, I dreamed I was on a round-the-world airplane trip, and the wings kept coming off the plane.

Summer in the Apartment House THIS LAD IS probably ornery like me, because Mr. Slater has all sorts of testimonials to his wizardry as a hypnotist, He is scheduled to appear at Carnegie Hall, and attempt to put the whole audience to sleep. This is strictly picking a cripple, because most audiences sleep in Carnegie Hall.

SOME PEOPLE, that is. Not me. T tried Mr. There are some people, I suppose, who don't take Slater's record, and it left me not nearly so drowsy kindly to hypnosis. A bone-pointer in a sideshow them control these rising prices?|pyt the purchase price and add|®$ the average radio commercial. Maybe I'm just once tried to tell me I was a chicken, and that shortly They will get it done while we men| just the repairs that have been | OTnery. but I tried hard. One side of the record tells you what Mr. Slater some people go along with the gag and lay eggs. is going to do to you, which is enough to kill my I'm afraid that as a sleep inducer, Mr, Slater will yawns right there, Turn off all the lights or dim never be able to compete, in my.set, with congresthem to a soft gray blur, he says. Relax the muscles, sional committee hearings and temperance lectures, close the eyes, and throw away that cigaret. Then but he’s a healthier remedy than a bottle of sleeping get up and turn the record over. (Dammit! Just as I pills. At least his is not habit-forming.

I would crow. I never did crow, or even cluck. But

One thing worries me. Summer is coming on.

4 Against a background of dreamy organ musi¢, Mr. What happens when everybody in the apartment puts Slater starts his hypnotism. Your feet are getting on “Time to Sleep” and negleots to close the windows?

WORLD AFFAIRS . . . By William Philip Simms Russia Believes in Big Powers. Rule

One of the fundamentals of the Soviet way of life is rule from the top. A few men in the Kremlin decide what is best for the country and 190 million Russians do as told. : In international relations Russia is equally fundamentalist. She is sincerely convinced the world should be run by the Big Three—herself, Britain and

the United States, She holds that -the Big Three .

won the war—herself first of all—hence they should draw up the post-war design and let ‘the smaller powers sign on the dotted line.

UNO Issues Still Not Solved : TODAY, IN LONDON, Russia is battling for the same principle—the right of the Big Three to run the world, ¥or months, deputies for the Russian, British and American foreign ministers have been trying to frame peace treaties with Italy, Romania,

Bulgaria and Hungary. It is proposed that some 18

small nations be permited to okay these treaties, but only after the Big Three have agreed on the terms. Though one of the Big Five, France is kept waiting in the ante-room, save when Italy is under discussi and China isn't consulted at all. vt

The case of Iran and its immediate outcome almost :

certainly has not altered Russia's long-term outlook. She still believes in absclute veto. She remains as convinced as ever that in the post-war world those who "have the power should be bgss—as the United Nations will likely see.

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