Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 May 1946 — Page 8
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. NOMINATE STARK : THE contest for Republican nomination for prosecutor next Tuesday between Judge Judson L. Stark, former prosecuting attorney, and Alex M. Clark, candidate of the Bradford-Ostrom machine, is more than a contest between two men. : It is the test of whether the voters will permit machine “control of this office, 80 vital to honest government. Judge Stark has an excellent record as deputy prosecutor, prosecuting attorney and judge.” We have watched his career for over 20 years, and are convinced that his integrity, background, experience and maturity of judgment qualify him for the nomination. : We recommend to Times readers that they vote for Mr. Stark because of his demonstrated ability and his fearless fight aganist a machine that will win Tuesday unless the non-organization votérs go to the polls and - support him. »
» . » ~ » E cannot indorse his opponent, a personable and clean young man with a brilliant war record, but whose legal experience is measured in months, : . Prosecuting attorney is no job for an amateur. Mr. "Clark would not be such an amateur had he been practicing law instead of serving his country abroad. He was wounded as the result of enemy action and was decorated for out- - standing accomplishments in combat intelligence. But still he was taken away from his beginning law practice before he really got started. Mr. Clark can point only to brief experience in the office of Sherwood Blue. the present prosecuting attorney whom Mr. Bradford calls “My Little Boy Blue.” We deplore and condemn Mr. Blue's do-nothing policy, and it is no recommendation that Mr. Clark has been associated with The other basic objection is that Mr. Stark's opponent is the candidate of the Bradford-Ostrom machine, placed on the ticket because of the strong appeal his distinguished war record has to veterans. Last February, the veterans were assured they would be “integrated” with the regular organization. We said then that we feared integration ‘might mean absorption. And we believe that is what has happened to Alex Clark. : : The fact remains that he has had little legal experience to cope with the skilled lawyers a prosecutor is called on to battle in doing his job. i
” » » = ” » HE Bradford-Ostrom clique seeks to force this candidate *™ on the public, prematurely regardless of his potential matches a promising young middleweight boxer against an experienced heavyweight. Ruling bosses of Republicanism today are too smeared with the pitch of improper use of party responsibility for us to swallow any cAndidate they might slate for prosecutor ‘or sheriff. These offices can make it easy or tough on gambling, liquor shakedowns and other rackets. And the record of Bradford's present prosecutor just doesn’t inspire confidence in any candidate for this office indorsed by him. We urge you to go to the polls Tuesday and vote for Judson L. Stark. Without your help, he will be beaten. With the help of those who opposed bossim, he whipped the machine unmercifully when he was elected prosecutor over its opposition in 1928. And he beat them again when he was nominated for the same post in 1930 and 1932. He can repeat in 3046 with your help. Will you give it?
PLEASE GO WAY AND LET US SLEEP ECENTLY it was said by one in very high place that the American people are in a serious state of fatigue— letdown from the war. The proof is being provided by the public apathy toward the coal strike. We are too tired to get mad. In the yesteryears, we used to come to a boil quickly, We got mad about John D. Rockefeller Sr. and J. P. Morgan Sr. and E. H. Harriman; about those Teddy called the malefactors of great wealth ; about the trusts; about Wall Street and the stock exchange, the holding companies and all the other evidences of power getting too big for its pants. But now we are too tired to. get mad about John L. Lewis, who is putting on a demonstration of power that makes the old-timers from’ Jay Gould onward look like .popguns. Here we see one man who is promoting paralysis and i tying the nation’s production into a double knot. No trust, no cartel, ever compared to this, . . - UT are we mad?
No, we are just tired.
us. With the 1946 elections in the offing, nothing much
pearing, as they must, when basic coal is cut off.
hopper and the ant:
Bo As is, we are not angry. sleep than eat. ’
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daily (except Sunday) by |
‘Price in Marion County, 5 cents a copy; deliv
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"I do not agree with a word that you
your right to say it." — Voltaire.
will defend to the death
About
"Ask Genuine Fighting Soldiers Coddling Defeated Enemies”
By J. E. R., a Pfc. in the Army, Indianapolis
Have been reading in the paper so very much here lately of how much this country owes the rest of the world. What is puzzling me is, have these people who are so interested in the rest of the world ever been in any branch of our armed services? I doubt it, for they sure never saw any of their friends die, blown half apart. It is all right for them to sit back here having something to eat and a warm bed to come home to, but do they know what it is to go hungry for days land lying in a foxhole with water up to your neck for days and days, | getting so tired and miserable that you don’t even care if you are { blown apart the next moment. 1 think myself that instead of
Congress, meanwhile, is wearier than the average of
can be expected from that quarter—though electric services | are cutting down, railroads are taking off trains, brownouts are being declared, and other sinister symptoms are ap- |
Only when the wititer winds blow, apparently; will we pet sore—and remember, too, late the fable of the grass-
* | We're weary, We'd rather |
¥ MINISTER ATTLEE'S stall on the recommendan8 of the Anglo-American committee of inquiry on
purfiose is to leave the United States the bagwif Washington will send troops to Palesp them, the: British will be delighted; otherwise can be done. Of course there is nothing London effort to get the United States to give in
at the Palestinian problem has grown too handle
letting Washington decide if we should go hungry over here so that we are in®the same spot as the countries that we have fought, they
qualities of public service—like an avid fight promoter who {should get some ideas trom some of
{the boys that have been on the fighting front. Not the ones that were stationed miles away from the front lines, but the ones that had to spend those miserable hours thinking every second was their last, and watching their friends and buddies die, "not ‘able to help them. If we are going to feed and rebuild -these fighting countries, what punishment have these countries {paid? If they had won they would have gained the world, but they lost, so we are to feed them and rebuild their homes for them. In all the tim® I was across I never saw one country have any white bread, yet we are asked to keep giving. Is there never going to be a stop on what we owe, are we supposed to pay with our lives and then when we come home give our food? These countries knew the out{come when they started the war, {Now let them pay. Don't we have |to pay for everything we get here? | Aren't our taxes still high so we can give to these fighting countries? I think it is about time our people should have a rest from giving.
» " w “DRIVERS OF CARS DON'T WATCH FOR PEDESTRIANS” By Nancy Middleton, Traders Point In the interest of safer and saner driving, I feel impelled to bring this matter to the attention of the driving and walking public. I, too, am a driver, having been one for 15 years with a “no accident” record. The law is that if pedestrians are caught crossing. an intersection by a change of lights that cars are [to wait until the pedestrian i$ safely on the sidewalk. I walk mod-
erately fast, and believe most persons do when crossing streets, Yet, once in a while I get caught “out in the middle” when the lights change. It is frightening to see the speed with which cars start moving with
ing with a Coke bar and a juke box! Pingpong is played in the wide hall between these rooms, All this and a pool, too, where the fellows and girls go swimming every Friday night. The Y. W. C. A. and the Y. M. C. A. sponsor the group and furnish two staff members who help “the gang” carry out their ideas—Frances Spahr from the Y. W. C. A. and Johnny Pieper from the Y. M. C. A. The club has chosen to call themselves by an Indian name, “Tuk-a-Pache.” (Its secret meaning is out, if you but ask them what it is!) They are self-governed, having just recently elected a new council. Here is just the answer to the “good, clean fun” you ask for and the answer to a centrally downtown hangout—minus the problem of getting established- and plus the fun of a swimming pool.: Drop in
an attitude of “get out of the way or get hit,” which is a flagrant dis-
and see for yourselves or telephone
| RIley 5471. Ask for Frances Spahr
{ adhere to that faith,
1 in every respect. for early re-establishment of contacts between the
obedience of the law. Now, I have at the Y. W. C. A.,
no sympathy with pedestrians who| . f..8. 9 know the light has changed and| “PURGE THE CONGRESS OF
yet make no move to speed up a bit themselves. However, I believe they are in the minority, and even if they are not, the law is that they shall be allowed to proceed to the other side of the street in safety. I have nearly been hit several times this way lately, and s0 have other persons I know, so thought it well to bring it to the attention of the “driving” public, and the Indianapolis police department, this latter with the hope that they will start a “campaign” against this law violation.
ss = =» “Y. W. C. A. OFFERS CENTER FOR TEEN-AGERS DOWNTOWN" By Mrs. Walter Latz, 830 Ellenberger Pkwy.
In the Tuesday, April 30 issue of The Times was a letter headed,
“City Youth Need a Downtown Canteen” written by Martha Christ and others. This letter is in answer to their need. I hope it can reach them through your column, as no address was with their names. There already is a downtown teen-age center where plenty of fun is going on and to which all youths, 13 through 19, are ‘welcome, It is at the Y, W. C. A, 3290 N. Pennsylvania, - Rent, furnishings, heat, lights, etc, would be none of your worries. There is a spacious get-together room for jam sessions, with lounging chairs, divans, radio and a record player and there is a Coke room
for games, refreshments and danc-
PRICE CONTROL OPPONENTS” By Warrea A. Benediet Jr., 2019 Madison ave. | Opposition to the OPA is based on stupidity, bias and greed. Make no| mistake about that. : | One must be stupid to believe you | can remove price controls and things will work out all right. He is ignorant of basic economic laws. Presumably he has never read about the countries that have been wrecked by inflation, The opponent to OPA may be! biased, believing it to be a partisan matter. He apparently can not real{ize that Republicans and Democrats (alike must suffer in the chaos to {follow the removal of price control, Or maybe he is just plain greedy. {Maybe he thinks the American pub- | |lic has too much money invested | {in war bonds and is ripe for a picking. That seems to be the prevalling opinion of such organizations as the N. A. M. | Personally, I would just as leave | vote for an out and out fascist as a | congressman who is trying to wreck price control. Now and next fall is the time for the 80 per cent of the people who sincerely believe in OPA, who have everything to lose and
IT'S OUR BUSINESS . . . By Donald D. Hoover ; ~~ Christian Influence Aids Occupation
IT'S OUR BUSINESS to comprehend the impprtant role of Christianity in rebuilding a Japan where ‘only one-half of one per cent of the people
Speaking of this factor, the Episcopal bishop of
| Manila drew on a broad experience in Japan and
with the Jap occupying forces in the Philippines to tell me when we were planning invasion: “There is reason to believe Christianity in Japan will survive the present conflict and emerge’ perhaps stronger than ever. The leaders of Christianity make a clear-cut distinction between respect for and worship
.pt the emperor. They are international in outlook
and have respect for the individual, which is the foundation of democracy.”
Leaders Appreciate Western Culture THE BISHOP POINTED OUT that these leaders have ain ‘understanding and appreciation of western culture, which came on the heels of religious freedom, because of their contacts with America and England. “While they are not numerically strong,” he added, “and have little influence in determining government policy, they are respected and have an influence out of proportion to their numbers. After they recover from the blow to their national pride, they probably will assist the army of occupation in many ways.” After three months in Tokyo, I appreciated the objective analysis the bishop had made. He was right Now comes news of a movement
two countries’ religious leaders. Representatives of the foreign missions conference visited Japan last month , . . they saw its 500 devas-. tated Protestant churches . . . and they encouraged
“the All-Japan Christian Followers association in its
program of reviving interest in Christianity. With the help of the World Sunday School association, New York, an attempt will be made to increase today’s 80,000 to the prewar 200,000 who attended such schools.
Dr. Robért M. Hopkins, Indianapolis, former secretary of that association, soon will go to Geneva to serve as “ambassador” to Churches of Christ in Europe.
.Before the war, there were 1600 schools in Japan. , . .
Now there are less than 1000 because, as a Japanese Christian said: ? “Sunday school children were discouraged by none Christian school teachers and others not to attend.” At any rate, street corner preachers now are dise tributing 100,000 Bibles written in Japanese, and singing hymnals from 250,000 books sent over from the states. Another 1% million copies of the New Test&-. men have been ordered, along with 260,000 complete es. Christianity was not frowned u in Ja) after the latter part of the last Than | it wl be 400 years old in 1949. When the war came, there were about 360,000 Christians, but those who were “rice Christians” because it was to their advantage faded away from the church, :
Buddhism Is Major Religion 3 WHILE CHRISTIANITY IS a minority religion, it has a great appeal in Japan because it is typical of America, and right now America is popular. It also offers’ an opportunity to learn English to a nation where four out of five have only six years of formal schooling. Real education was stopped before Pearl Harbor. With book learning, each child absorbed Shintolsm, that deadly combination of pa triotism and emperor worship which originally was Japan's pagan faith. : Sixty-four per cent of the Nipponese worship
«
~Buddha, many in addition to belonging to Shinto
sects. Gen. MacArthur has ordered removal of all official state support from Shintoism , . . it is expected to languish when compulsion is withdrawn. Perhaps with the spread of western religion will come an understanding of the dignity of the common man and a glimmering of the perception of democracy,
IN WASHINGTON . . . By Daniel M. Kidney
How Indiana's
pa a : )
Ten of our congfessmen will be on the primary tickets Tuesday. They like it here and want to come back. : Maybe you will be interested in how they have been doing. Since Rep. Charles M. La Follette, Evansville’s “radical” Republican, withdrew from the Eighth district congressional race to run for the senate, a summing up is rather easy. The 10—big or little— largely have earned the title of “party-liners.” The two Democrats follow the administration, the eight Republicans the minority leadership,
How the Hoosiers Stack Up THAT DOESN'T MEAN that the eight do not often wind up with a majority vote. As you know, the only thing that keeps certain Dixie Democrats from being Republicans is the Mason-Dixon line, More ang, more they have been skipping rope with fit. That is just dandy for the G. O. P. If the business turns sour they can shift the blame to the majority side. If it prospers, they can take credit for the coalition. ; » : Rep. Ray J. Madden, Gary Democrat, has no part of that. -He follows the administration religiously, unless it gets off the beam with P. A. C. Then he votes the union ticket. That is the way to get elected in Lake county today. Once upon a time you had to be Republican. Much of the minority leadership in the house is provided by the dean of the Indiana Republican delegation—Rep. Charles A. Halleck. He is the best known national figure from the state in high party circles. Chairman of the- house Republican congressional committee, he could have been national chairman at $50,000 a year by merely saying “yes.” He is on both the rules and interstate and foreign commerce committees. Should the G. O. P. organize the house, he might well be majority leader or even speaker. “Charley” Halleck rates as one of the outstanding, young (46), able, conservative leaders in his party. Rep. Robert A. Grant, South Bend Republican, has grown in esteem during his four terms here. As a minority member of the naval affairs committee he has seen
REFLECTIONS . . . By Robert
NEW YORK, May 4—Our army may not be in shape to fight, and it may be undemocratic, but it has one distinction—recently it has had the most puerile public relations of any organization on land or sea. Some of the stuff is reminiscent of Broadway press-agentry at its worst, Ever since the war the generals have beén trying to shove a commodity which has been widely rapped and no longer has straight battle news to sell as a justification for its existence, This, complicated by an uneasy conscience, has resulted in a floundering bid for public favor that has been close to the ludj€fous.
Down To Dog Art LATELY A PICTURE of a colonel serving breakfast in bed to a discharged G. 1. was circulated widely. Some people laughed, but a lot, including me, found it mildly disgusting. I felt a sudden uneasy flush of embarrassment for the colonel who shelved his dignity to buy a cheap and favorable notice for army at a time when army is pantingly on the make for
nothing to gain if it is wrecked, to purge congress of those misrepresentatives who are trying to shortchange them, and devalue the war bonds they so patriotically bought,
“HOW ABOUT STORY OF FRENCH LUXURY TRAVEL?”
favor. And can you imagine the hair-tearing in the Pentagon -if a picture of a G. I. serving the colonel in bed hit the streets now, while the army is making noises like a. benevolent old lady? Some of us were kind of proud of the armed strength we assembled during the last four years, and it goes a little against the grain to see the whole thing cheapened.
By R. EB. Bramleit, Indianapolis
Carnival —By Di¢k Turner
|
»
I read with interest your editorial of April 30 entitled Victory Over Hunger. Then I glanced at the Hoosier Forum and read a letter submitted by Mr. Roy Lesher of 927 N. Sherman Drive, this city, and at the bottom your editor's note, and I quote: “Harsh words, those. Don't forget’ that the Yood being sent abroad has been almost entirely for nations oppressed by the Nazis." I then skipped to page 11 and chanced to see Frederick Othman's column_in_which he describes his trip on a French “Inxury:- train. The following is from Mr. Othman’s column: “There were seven kinds of French champagne aboard at $12 a bottle. “And there were other wines and liquors and food such as chicken, smoked salmon, cheese cake and jam served on eggshell China. Bo the passengers munched and’ sipped and acknowledged the cheers of the stay-at-homes.” France, 1 believe, was occupled by the Germans for four years. "This sounds little like a starving nation where children are “doomed to death”. unless we send them “grgently” needed food. = The facts as taken from Mr.~Oth-
far better than 1 could. .
———————————— DAILY THOUGHT The meek will he guide in his judgment: and ‘the meek will he
teach his, way --Psalms 25:0. i " . Li ”
man's column speak for themselves
With a bad press in America lately, resulting from the antics of some of our occupation troops, the army proudly announces.that from here in, there will: be no more monkey business. Drill will curb the high spirits of our young men abroad—drill, cold showers
WASHINGTON, May 4. —Behind-the-scenes reports from Europe and Asia are bad and growing worse. World peace seems AS far away as ever. In Paris, French Foreign Minister Bidault—has-warned the Big Four conference against prolonging the stalemate saying, in effect, that “if you are ever going to achieve anything, you will have to try a new approach.” United Nations observers almost unanimously agree with M. Bidault. This is especially the case with the smaller members who need peace so desperately but are utterly powerless to do anything about it because the Big Three insist on making all the decisions.
Past Pledges Not Followed ALLIED WAR AIMS have been betrayed. The things subscribed to in the Atlantic charter have been tossed into the ashcan. The allied peace objectives as set forth In the various pacts of Moscow, Tehran, Cairo, Yalta and Potsdam, are forgotten while the San Francisco charter, so solemnly signed less than a year ago, seems already forgotten.” To some of the great powers, at least, all these pronouncements apparently were just wartime window-dressing to fool the
people. . i : fo ‘ United Nations ,members—-it seems strange “to have +o recall this so.soon—all gave their written
word that they ‘seek no
aggrandizement, territorial at they. “desire to see no territorial when
most of the war-torn world. It was “Bob” Grans who first publicly suggested the atomic bomb tests for the fleet. fo Tallest man in the house is Rep. George W. Gillie, Ft. Wayne Republican, and only veterinarian in eongress. “Doc” Gillle operates an Allen county farm and once was sheriff. “Doc” has developed a knack of making and keeping friends which has made him one of the most popular congressmen, Rep. Forest A. Harness has made a name for hime self by being one of the most active members of the military affairs committee, It largely was his ideas
- which were adopted by the house. in the draft
extension. Still in the hospital after his automobile aocident at Uniontown, Pa., Rep. Noble J. Johnson, Terre Haute Republican, is a‘ slow-moving, workmanlike member of the house appropriations committee. An expert -on Republican thinking on problems of food waste, Rep. Gerald W. Landis, Linton, has branched out with his work on the un-American activities committee. He also is on the labor committee, With “Charley” La Follette after the senate seat, it isn't necessary to sum up his activities. He haa talked and voted for the things he stands for on the’ stump. Rep. Earl Wilson, Huron Republican, has mellowed much during -his third term. No longer does he shoot for headlines with statements suggesting a curfew for government girls. He is back on the beaten path now and nobody is more of a “regular Republican. id Tel
Ludlow Is Institution REP. RAYMOND 8. SPRINGER, Connersville Republican, is one of the most faithful in attendance both in the house and at his judiciary committee. He is a sharp critic of administration policies, seldom offers a substitute. To tell Indianapolis and Marion county people about the other Democrat, Rep. Louis Ludlow, seems superfluous. He has been serving the district since the seventy-first congress. He is seeking to be retained for the eightieth. That makes him an institution.
J
vereeers’
DAN KIDNEY.
C. Ruark
and calisthenics. That'll take care of everything, and the presumption is that every Yank abroad will be tucked soberly into his sack at sunset. , Now, we read, the wives are allowed abroad, bus they won't be embarrassed by our lusty young inen. (Here somebody in the propaganda department seemed to get the signals mixed.) Our American wives abroad will wear armbands, so that they won't be con= fused with the frauleins and whistled at. The dog is man’s best friend (a phrase I just coinéd) and in addition, he is the publicity man’s most powerful weapon. What happens? Now our lonesome laddies and their families get dogs. Cats, too, Maybe canary birds. Maybe guppy fish. This dog deal, with its chummy human interest value, presumably will take some of the curse off the Lichfield trials, condemnation of the court-martial system, and agitation about caste. However, be sure that no American pooch will snatch bread from as starving European’s mouth,
Publicity Policy Is Cheapening THERE HAS BEEN as yet .no full report on the caste system hearings, in which a collection of vicari« ous G. 1's got together and told each other what they already knew. The recommendations are coming, though, and they will undoubtedly be slanted strongly against crime, and in favor of motherhood. I haven't seen any pictures, yet, of five-star gen erals pulling a KP trick or playing poker with prie vates, but it wouldn't surprise me, Nothing will sur prise me along those lines until army chops some of the ham out of its promotion, and stops making cheap
and silly passes at the public,
WORLD AFFAIRS . . . By William Philip Simms No Peace Until New Approach Found §§
wishes of the peoples concerned,” and thay they “respect the right of. all peoples to choose the form of government under- which they will live.” These Atlantic charter promises,” subsequently were-further-solemnized-and implemented at meetings of the .great powers. Liberated ‘countries-~gven former axis satellites—were to be allowed “free and unfettered élections.” What was China's was to be returned to China. Korea and Austria were to be independent. Iran's sovereignty was not to be interfered with, And so on. These promises have not been kept. Edward T. Leech, editor of the Pittsburgh Press who has just returned from Europe, also brings a -
. pL: 13
§
{ i i i i i
warning. Food and Russia, he said, were the biggest
problems he found across the Atlantic. The allies and Russia simply do not see eye to eye. She is up to something but wo one knows what it is
Reds Cannot Dominate Eurasia : UNITED NATIONS DIPLOMATS share Mr. Leech’s forebodings. Having broken hes promise, grabbed territory, looted occupied areas and made demands completely at variance with the San Francisco charter, Russia still seems bent on having her way at the peace table. And every time he makes a_speech, Generalissimo Stalin treats his former allies as war-bent “Fascist” enemies against whom Russia must arm fo the teeth, ’ :
So, say United Nations observers, the Prench -
he
Eu
A “new approach’ mi
. foreign minister was indulging in understatement ' be ound
»
ngressmen Stack Up |
Army Is Using Ham Press-Agentry
? ¥ »
SATURI
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attendant. Sh dress with ca and a corsag Briarcliff rose: Francis Mc man and Fra usher. After a rece home, the cou Chicago. The blue gabardin sories and a The couple. dianapolis. Parents of t Mrs. R, G. Kr and Dr. Kirk and Mrs. G. Kessler blvd.
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