Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 May 1946 — Page 20
Crees & eS FEN A br A A
FR
RY W. MANZ
RIPPS-HOWARD NEWSPAPER I a eans Co. To Ww. Matvard : _] st. Postal Zone 9. : Member of United Press, Scripps-Howard News-
NOT BE
"Give Light and the People Will Find Their Own Way
5
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WHAT'S THE DIFFERENCE?
ouT!
ON TE lu ana RIE TRIE UAE SEED NT SLE
ee on ca
Tr [1 } - LEO BARRIND of Booth Tarkington, the world and the state lost one of its effective proponents of winning the peace
# well as winning the war. LS During days of actual combat, Mr. Tarkington
Public Interest Waned After VJ-Day
IT'S OUR BUSINESS . . . By Donald D. Hoover she Tarkington Concerned
Indiana
with deep faith, as is shown én his support of the day of prayer during the first week of the San
Concerned Over Draft in Peace EARLY LAST YEAR, Mr, Tarkington was acttve
‘About Peace
study, Mr, Tarkington brought broad experience and understanding to his objective analysis - - of world problems. He approached these problems
: Alliance, NEA Service, and Audit Bureau of A ASTY = gontziinted liberally of his time . . . despite near m....ic0o peace conference, an idea first pro by 3 Cle 2h ess, frail health and the constant demand for ,. 1 Blickman of Indi lis: posed Ob ~ Price in Marion County, 5 cents a copy; deliv. MAYBEAE anything he might have time to write for the com- Har written aha id x servers ered by carrier, 20 cents a week. CAN mercial market. Moved by the deep patriotism that | or TO Heh SOUe vests ago lo Bishop Frederick Mail rates in Indiana, $5 a year; all other states, his war-time writing reflects, he nevertheless wrote Lo Cf i tyes = in Rh bishop of Indianapolis, U8 posssions, ‘Ounads and Mexico, 87 cents a WIGGLE for the Writers: War board and the U. 8. treasury tbe S08 Una wth which he viewed life's mon » R1-5851. department to educate the public on the necessity : oe . “E&» Hl Zs wAY for full support of the war effort. BO deathentheze 1s only cnangs. WASHIN!
and more of | seeing him I
: ; ; GENERAL CONCERN over matters of war and is ‘opposition 10 drat et Since Jar i La i i i. th ublic peace slackened almost to the point of indifference ng men for the armed services appearances | N the case of the Indianapolis Water Ca, 8 DU yn Ne a once Japan was defeated , . . a slackening reflected except in war-time. Six of hi
* service commission this week authorized issuance of first mortgage bonds in a refunding operation, 4 ; ) The commission ignored objections of the city and of midwestern investment firms which sought to handle the issue, and authorized the water company to dispose of the bonds through privately-negotiated sale instead of through competitive bidding.
ES
in deterioration of America’s armed forces to the point it could not live up to its international commitments. » During the war, one of the organizations in which Mr. Tarkington was interested, and for which he wrote outstanding material, was the Indiana Committee for Victory. Right after VJ-Day, Mr. Tarkington said of this group that “I think it is needed now almost ‘more, if that were possible, than during the
“try 7 17%
“Peacetime conscription can make changes not only in American life, but eventually in the very structure of -our government, that are beyond our present ability to imagine,” he wrote Mr. Blickman. “In time, elements beyond our present power fo perceive may prove to have been involved. “The movement for peacetime conscription fs a tampering with future history, perhaps in a way that
A —————
BAYS. DEMO
| the case of the Indianapolis Power & Light Co. war” would be dumfounding to the present proponents—if ; ah tS commission. poss ed competitive bidding The question of whether this was to be the lasting they live long enough to see the results. When Charles Former P: the public service co eq id peace was of great concern to him, as his writings of the First built his magnificent ship to defend Britain Platfor instead of privately-negotiated sale, as sought by he mid- the time show. He felt that our war authorities, as on the sea he couldn't possibly have known that he tern firms. The position was taken that the electric well as our senators, had “not at all taken in the im- was arranging for Oliver Cromwell to succeed him." Pred F. Ba in uld th on for its bonds plications of the A-bomb” and that as a result, peace To win the peace, to paraphrase Mr. Tarkington's state chairm: u y co us o " was still nebulous. The theme that appeaged fre- comment on the Committee for Victory, our efforts to head the
What's the difference between the two cases? We'd | like to hear Governor Gates and the commission explain, because to us it looks like the same principle is involved. What is good refunding procedure for one company would appear to be just as good for another in the same field and |
quently in material he wrote on this subject was that the human race could survive only in peace.
are needed now almost more, if that is possible, than during the war. , ..and his valued help will be missed,
IN WASHINGTON . + « By Thomas L. Stokes
advisory com! the party's r ing campaign Appointmer nounced: by
.. Pleas Greenl
also announc
where the same issues were rais & ; , Sah Alvin C. Joh t's E to Get Rid of a Polit $y BYRNES AND VANDENBERG REPORT S tasy 10 er Rid Of a roliician commitee. A onns > Skillen of W THE Yepogts of Secretary of Staie Bymes a Senator WASHINGTON, May 23.—Something new under He always hopes for a small vote. That means Cera po the sun will occur here late in June when the na- the populace hasn't been too much stirred up and
Vandenberg on Big Four conference confirm its failure but emphasize American leadership. If our delegation had not insisted on the principles of a just and democratic peace, if it had been willing to underwrite Russian dictatorship
tional citizens political action committee conducts a school in practical politics, or, as they prefer to call it, “the school of political action technique.” There will be a faculty and regular classes for the 500 students to which the school is limited. Every
me oT
over a large part of Europe and the Mediterranean, agreement with Moscow would have been easy. Therefore the conference failure is not to the discredit, but to the honor, of the United States. Bs There is nothing essentially new in the general policy Secretary Byrnes is advancing. It was embodied in the
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Hoosier Forum I'm Not Afraid but Am Wired
phase of practical political operation will be cdnvassed, from ghost-writing political speeches, an open professional secret of the regular politician, to use of sound trucks which Huey Long first employed most effectively.
“| do not agrees with a word that you say, but | will defend to the death your right to say it." — Voltaire.
“LEWIS HAS HELPED New Activity Scares Politicians
that voting will be confined pretty much to the regu= iar organization. The prospect of a big turnout scares him. That means the public is suspicious and aroused. So his defensive device—and you hear plenty of
“it now—is to scream about. labor getting mixed up in
politics. There is the paradox. For the essence of democracy is to get as many people as possible to participate in the decisions of democracy, to get it out of the sort of closed corporation it has been 50 long. > There never was such need for a militant dee
office of sec state commit! Greenlee a *
‘tive power
Mr. Skillen. By placing of the platfor Greenlee Vir belief that MN to be a power Through its policies, the one of consid
Atlantié charter and the United Nations declaration which | THE WOREING PEOPLE IT HAS BECOME THE HABIT of the old-school, nocircy,, TRaYS wy Segal, of sabes jo Do Issues z Russia and all the allies signed. It was proclaimed many And Confused About Our Future [Br Thema Morris, 1818 E. Morris st. | professional politicians to scoff or to shriek’ alarm- "0" 0 00 education and action are such Simultanec i : ; - As a reader of your paper I be-| ingly at this venture in practical political schooling. healthy developments. That's why the Republican pointments v
‘times by President Roosevelt and Secretary Hull. What is new is that the Truman administration, backed
I'm just an average person.
has consisted mostly of retreat. For a few weeks last fall, the state department was firm, but that was followed by its America?
_ By Average Citizen, Indianapolis I don't hate anybody.
a } © Tm ; I'm probably a8 the Forum. I would like to take a by the Vandenberg Republican group, has started to fight [tired as anyone else is, unless he's il. And I have the usual difficulties stand for John L. 1 know you will for that policy. Hitherto, post-war American diplomacy |In finding butter and bread, stockings. and white shirts for my husband. not jike it as the stand you have| What I want to know is this. What on earth is the matter with! pan against him, but just the cially those who have sat too long too comfogjably If there some hidden conflict between capital and labor we same, here I go. I believe he has
It is but an expansion in a formalized way of techniques already used successfully by C. I. O.'s P. A. C., a strictly labor organization, with which this citizens committee is affiliated. Truth is the old-line, hard-rock politicians, espe-
llieve I have a right to a space in
in places of power, are afraid of this new enterprise
forums organized by Harold Stassen are a healthy development. 5
F.D.R. Used Same Type of Teachers
INTERESTING ABOUT THE SCHOOL here is caliber of the instructors. Many are young and on
-
official call state conven The convent candidate 1c candidates 1 Judgeships, @ form for the
2 : y : . ordinary folks don’t know about? Is there something sinister in what done more for the working class of | and are whistling to keep up their courage. the brain-trust side The conve & Ww . ot 1 | | i . basic compromises at the Mosco meeting N ; until the | appears to be attempts to make our way of government and our economic | People. than any other labor leader| There is nothing such politicians fear so much as Frankie D. Roosevelt found this. tvpe useful in delegates wi 3 New York sessions of the United Nations security council | svsiens reak dow? we have had. He is one man that! non-professionals moving in on their preserves. They tre bic New Deal Wi os held in the : f : Ts does not run and hide just because, like to keep an air of great mystery about their trade, “TSanizing ynamic: New Deal party. He bore grounds. was . ; w . ; the retreat stopped. Now our government has switched I don't know. I'm just plain discouraged. So is my son, who fought (ooo "vio chat hollers boo. Has he| just as the professional diplomat likes to surround 10wed from a couple of old masters, Thomas Jeffers As party 8
to the offensive for peace. ® » = TM BY husband are going to live after he 3 . ; gets back from the army and they RUSSIA blocks the way. She is able to do this easily be- get married. And so is my husband,
cause of the vicious system under which the Big Four Who is a “white-collar” ” {whose salary seems to just melt
usurped the power to write the peace treaties, and under |,y,y each two weeks when the bills
which Russia alone can veto Big Four action. Russia not are paid. only stymies every Fig Bour session, but refuses to allow | ! haven't any answer, and. don't a . ask you for one. But I am confused a meeting of the general peacéyeanference of all-the bellig- |ang” discouraged and dont know
erent allies. Meanwhile, during’ the prolonged armistice [which way to turn. I'm worried
worker |
|overseas. And so is my daughter, who is wondering where she and her | coq for more than his people| diplomacy with clouds of well-perfumed confusion.
should have rightfully coming? I} There is, of course. good reason. Politicians of
| Advocates of meters always submit remember when he was head of the| this sort—and there are lots of them in congress—
gross figures,
C.1.O., you and your kind of think-| doesn't want the average citizen to learn how easy
Last week T visited Mansfield, O. | jhe people were blaming him for all! it often can be to get rid of him, once people are
| They also have them. The main ine strikes we were having. But did| informed and set their minds to it.
cop was on the beat, All the meters | ihe trouble stop when the C. I. O. ® we looked at had the violation sign | changed heads? i # :
sticking up. I asked him the same | questions and the answers were help keep the people from knowing about the same except that he add-| the real cause of our house being | ed something which was to the ef- in a ram-shackle way.
What you are doing is trying to
Would you
son and Andrew Jackson. Teddy Roosevelt had the same sort of intellectual political “brain trust,” and with it he organized to defeat the recognized political masters in his party. the solemn G. O P. elders with 1an.dsome paunches and heavy cigars who took their orders from the big corporate interests of that day,
REFLECTIONS . . . By Robert C. Ruark
up in antici ing convent Indiana Den ciation com] annual “mi here Saturds Some 200 guests were torial sessiol publisher of will be the p Hugh A.
publisher, w aver the rej sociation to Corydon, du
period, Russia expands her military domination, and tyr- abort ie Suture. Nob afraid oe fo ge ey gare out Ovi, Im be satisfied by seeing living condi- : : yo. . V stickers for violations every dav, tions go.back to the days when anny, chaos and famine spread. (ever since there were Americans. which certainly proves that park-|ihis same John L was not so
“Sen. Claghorn Is Absorbing Himself
At last our governent has the statesmanship to chal- But worried and confused.
: . ’ . . » » . lenge this. As announced by Secretary Byrnes, unless oo... over INCOME
Russia at the Big Four session next month agrees to a [EXPECTED FROM METERS?”
{ing meters do not in any appreci- strong? Would you like to see the!
{able way move people in and out of 10-hour working day again with its
NEW YORK, May 23.-—-On an average of about
[the spaces nearly -as often as the 15 and 20 cents an hour? Do you ONCE & year, a person in the public eye becomes a na-
salesmen for the things predict.
still believe that five perceft of our | tional scourge by inventing a flip. phrase which is
“I'm evan gaining weight on Claghorn,” he says. J don’t eat much, and I don’t drink enough to put pounds on me. But I'm getting fat—Ilike Claghorn.
urday. «Mar ville, will bec Curtis Hoste
5 general peace conference for this summer, he will submit |By Bari B. Teckemeyer, 130 N. Delaware st. Last week in the real metropolitan people should control ninety-five Parroted until it dies of heavy handling. “I don’t know where Delmar stops and the senator tary, A n 2 the whole issue to the United Nations assembly in Sep- | A few weeks ago I had the good 11S of Ohio a move was started percent of our wealth? You know Ethel Barrymore did it long ago, with that old starts. Pve lost my identity. It's all too utterly elected. The editor
apr
fortune to visit Jefferson City, Mo.
tember. In the assembly, Russia has no veto. It is a beautiful little place but
~ We agree with Senator Vandenberg that a firm stand thet i > one: Total" delectutiveis for ‘this constructive bi-partisan peace policy plus effec- quiet, shady streets are clogged with tive operation of the United Nations, is the way to stop (those infernal parking meters.
. In’ the early morning I walked world war III before it starts. |along beside the cop whose job it
| was to collect the nickels. He was a loriesome soul with a little crank {in one hand with which he rewound the meters as they ran down. He |was grinding away, hopefiiily opening each and every coin box seeking
DON'T YIELD ON PRINCIPLES
“HIS country desperately needs to have the railroads running and the coal mines operating.
, to eliminate all parking in the con- some of business
gested
area.
are thing “That's all there is—there isn't any more.”
these mornings you Molly McGeé's line “Taint funny, McGee,” has be-
That, of going to wake up and find that the
course, is a move in the right di- people are doing their own think-: come a part of American folk talk. The late Joe
rection. Our problem az ztated be- ing and not fore is not to park more traffic bul print their thoughts for them. I|
to move it »
“CLEAN OUT JOBHOLDERS IN ‘MADE’ POSITIONS" By ‘Walter Wright, 2363 Prospect st. If the taxpayers in city, county, first, state and national could all become a fine feeling it will give you.
to | Penner was responsible for a broadly repeated catchword, “Wanna buy a duck?” and Red Skelton induced am going to ask vou to do some. Nationwide nausea with “I dood it.” My feeling was thing 1 believe will help you a lot.| that if anybody else said “I dood it!” I would do it. Go, as I did, and get the bill of| With the first heavy weapon to hand. rights and read it over good, and! _ {each morning when you are shav-| Cfaghorn Engulfs Creator ing repeat the golden rule just for IN THIS YEAR OF 1946 (a year of peace and but it will be easy and what serenity) an owl-eyed young man of partial Greek parentage, birthplace Boston, enshrined himself in
waiting for you
ridiculous. I don't have any idea about what happens to me when the senator dies—sometime next vear, I'd say. Por 10 years I'm Delmar, and now I'm a politician who keeps crowding Delmar out of the picture, “Por instance, I'm going to the coast soon to make a pictufe called “That's a Joke, Son." As Claghorn 1 take a quarter of the profits and have a say-so on the script—as Delmar, I'd be lucky to get a job as extra on the show.” Strangely, Kenny has not annoyed the south by his vicious lampoon of its legislators. He is popular in ‘Mississippi,‘\whose senator, Bilbo, often is confused by the addleheads with the character Kenny throws
hold a busin for the appi Prominent to attend the Sherman Mi M. Clifford Committeem newdy nomil gressional ca
PRIMAR AT $1
& Under government seiztire of the roads and mines, the evar aeiusive bit of change. He a relative or a friend to all holding x x = the public vocabulary by projecting over the 1adio Texas 10ves hirf-rtiere was & Clg The prim HA . : : we i Yokwa x 1 y air. $ y po - ; these e may be accomplished for a while. It will be Teshonded to Questions 28 lows: i these heads of various offices, we “ATTLEE-BEVIN CROWN a pe o southern senalor With Jas VeLOMS 150 a day recently in Dallas taxpayers of ; nds : : : . oo - painfully familiar to us all. n at senator, Pr - , . 143,000, ‘or . only for a while if they are accomplished by appeasement. work and the other half are empty Neen Fouipl 241! 1 § RRLONAl TRULY | PEDILERS MARE A SALE enstein-like, is on the verge of gobbling up his creator. ik is L exch bal 4 If any lesson of history is clear, it is that temporary |'ndicating that though they have THIS 15°4h6 Yeason our sax is high By Simund eves. 304. Cowal ave, Kenneth Delmar, as Senator Claghorn on the The South Likes His Lampoons pense report yl eack ean be bought at ton dear a price—that surrender | hy 0% because they need re.|and 1 probably will Keep going Mr. Donald D. Hoover tries 10) pyeq Allen show, has in six‘months become a na- PEOPLE SEND HIM thousands of dollars, in Cons Blob board, “ ‘of princi ; ‘winding. the customers got by with. higher. What we need is a special convince us that there are brave| tional institution, with his gimmicks—“That’s & Joke teqerate money The coun i of principle to expediency leads to worse consequences out paying. IT can't figure it out. group of efficiency men independent Arabs “The Genuine Arabs? Are son” plus the addition of “that is” for comic repeti- most mated 32 3 than it avoids. {Guys park here as long as they from city, county, state or national B » uth : 3 ; : tion. A southernindes Bp of Tels. Phouuiik Sioa) aboys. $33.00 4 "=n nn ow pleas anyhow and it would take a to clean out all these people holding | © Pov ne fails 10 Sisclone | The press, the radio, congress, and the common Inlo Mesos, ¥ow 8 XAIIEY, CARRE ERY Ren tion board 5, E HAVE j : force of 10 men even in this burg these padded or manufactured jobs. Where those brave Arabs hid—ex-| . .. '(iided these catch-phrases to their tongues, and director of a Texas bank, a major in the civil (war, spptopeiagie . AVE just had to fight the costliest war in history to check on all violators 1 wish Now they try to tell us the city is pecting the armies of the self-| repletion is not far away. that is) air patrol. a member of the water control Myron C : aiise peace-loving mations did not: stand against they would take ‘em out and qfit broke and they will make 75 per styled “Protector of Islam (Musso-| t's made a great difference in the life of Mi. board of a valley irrigation project. ; county clerk ; aggression when it first a a pestering good folks with crazy cent of the people believe it. That |lini)—at the time when the Ger-! paimar, who is an exceedingly pleasant and often The senator (Delmar, that 1s) has mellowed a bif new precing y he! . ppeared. : gadgets. is the percentage you can fool. Be man panzers rommelled before El| pewildered young man. He is no longer Mr. Delmar, since his birth last fall. He is willing to let the north heavy vote, Vital principles are at stake in the rail strike and in. In # walk of three blocks he careful. city folks, there is a lot of Alamain. ; | a talented actor of 10 years and an unhammy radio meet him four-fifths of the way, and is now the 000 two year : the coal strike. : hie Sabigd Aghia Vy T18 TUSHRALINE 3 6 None deters he yO the other hand, according. to} apnouncer. We is a fat-beilied. fatheaded, bigoted proud inventor of something called northern costs E iF atwike it 3 We ares ROO) 6 he huge smarter class of people can an Passen's “Forgotten Ally"! southern legislator, often confused with Bilbo. hospitality. ‘ le In the rail strike, it is the principle of fact-finding revenue to come from. parking tricked into this. Let's find out what |there were plenty Palestinian Jew- Soya Jee : embodied in a law which for-many years kept peace on Mer I Norges what the. pro- comes in and what goes out, and ish boys fighting for the allies. . ’ : ¥ ents’ i y ; ! i: the railroads. That fine law's usefulness will Be destroyed = mn ot osc Income 16? have a general housecleaning __ to 0 en a FA 2 i or i : for t. sacrifices elping i 5 if now, under government: seizure, President Truman uses [to win the war England keeps the TODAY IN EUROPE a By Randolph Churehi}
hig influence to get the unions more than his own fact- Carnival —By Dick Turner
gates of the Jewish homeland,
i finding board recommended. The i Palestine, closed to the European : : . . present strike threat WwW t P A ‘ . Jews, WwW d might be bought off that way, but endless future rail strikes The crowning of Emir Adbullah eS ern Oo ers In ccor on ssues i would be invited. as king of Transjordania (which is Re 1 In the coal stri it i i cat ” a part of Palestine) with a popula- PARIS, May 23.—-One good aspect of the recent Meanwhile, it's becoming increasingly clear tha i) out al st ke, it is the principle of taxation with- ltion of 300,000 Arabs (mostly| Paris conference was the good relations developed the U. 8. state department is firmly embracing a Bar I. representalion. The question is mot whether the Nomads) ranges among the most| among the western powers. Though France, Britain policy of doing the utmost to lend support and ‘miners should have a health and welfare fund. Certainly | infamous Actions of imperialistic| and the United States differed in their approach to encouragement to the free Stern of eden they should. The i is Ww i i | England, like helping Naziiam in| tne German question, on all other fundamental topics Europe. The state department looks on France as y question is whether unions dominated Europe ‘as a bulwark against Russia,| they ere in .general accord. This was because the an important bastion of American security. Every i by one man or a few men—there are many such unions— or sabotaging Prance’s effort to more the statesmen of the western powers study the thing that the American government can do to halt "shall have power to tax the public and use the proceeds as | mest WHE force Jers Armies, acts of the modern world, the more they realize that communism in France will be done. The same policy ; leas i isi (marching into the demilitarized | {ir interests are virtually identical will be pursued in Italy. gh. they oi ™ fice from publie Entra} or RupeIvIION | Riitne gone, (World War II could | TE were, it's true, some differences between Unfortunately, events beyond control of the state -- “ Ah « Aruman s mine-seizure order authorizes Interior | then be prevented) or flat rejection Secretary of State James F. Byrnes and Foreign Min- department are greatly hampering implementation of She's hs “Secretary Krug to negotiate a strike settlement With the {of the U, 8, Soeretary Bumson's ister Ernest Bevin, but they were tactical rather than this policy. Two great weapons needed for the defeat John i ion; i : | offer to stop Japanese aggression. | Bevin did not get orn well of communism in-these two -countries-are food and ; Wis 0 3 0 fundamental. Byrnes and Bevin g ip L le WON 4 settlement conforming to the gov- | Manchuria incident (Pearl HArbor i the previous conferences in London. and Moscow. coal. The state department had been counting on Put H¢ to ragenrie stabilization policy. If Lewis is will. (could he Prevented. Aicepevin | Bevin felt once or twice that Byrnes had let him shipping large quantities of food and coal in the V eep the miners working, and to agree to such a crown peddlers, unsuccessful in set- | 4 0 Though there's still a tendency in official coming months to both Italy and France. But world Dad hi ement, good. The mine owners have pe d [in up crowns in Greece, YURO-| p.itich circles to criticize the suddenness with which wide famine is cutting down the proposed shipments ig ‘their ‘willingn to go th ye airpady stated |slavia ‘even in Spain, finally suc- puree often varies his tactics, there's no doubt that of food, and the American ‘coal strike will soom stop sparklir ibis ess to go at far, and Mr. Krug's task should | \ceeded in Transjordania and the |, . ...4 Bevin understand each other far better now all shipments of coal little gi : i 4 EH | | sputent American (suckers) Wwill| yy. aver before. Whatever may have been their Ler: ok o.oo bona || provide the money. ; | differences in the course of this conference, they Coal Is Key to Future : p B a i | | Lewis holds out for a settlement that would. wreck DAILY THOUGHT jouny Sremeives in almost complete agreement at GOAL 18 ALMOST AS VITAL a factor as food im for Fad inl p : | the end. : . : policy, there should be no yielding by Yo r light ton. which ; restoring both France and Italy to normal economig ps p yie r our light affliction, or A Anti-Russian’ Stand conditions. The only way of halting the present FATHE « If he insists—as he has from the first— | | is but for a moment, worketh for A Agree on Anti-Russian Stan 1 y wal ; diséuss wages and hpurs until he is given | us a far more exceeding and eter- AND EXCEPT FOR the question of Germany, inflationary tendencies in both countries is by ine include c fund on his wn t Lo | nal weight and glory. While we | which the French feel a genuine sense of griev- Creasing industrial production, but that cannot be th memo ag 9 erms, there should look not at the things Which ate | ance that they are not supported in their view by done without coal. ie ely. 3 aga cs n es km | Britain and the United States, it's true to say that. It's to be hoped that before the foreign ministers Noappoir Lewis gain power to levy such a Which are oy ate temporal; but | Foreign Minister Georges Bidault finds himself in meet again careful study will be given to finding Pre-V A as he will, all union bosses will I Apis oon | Broad genera] agreement’ with (he Bm ahti-Russian some means of alleviating the Present cial shortage randish th ‘ : " . are eternal. -— 11 Corintiians | stand adopted by Byrnes and Bevin. Therefore, it in Italy as well as in France. Britain and America Bh the strike weapon until : - BJ 4:17-18 * seems safe to assume that, when the foreign ministers have an equal responsibility and. an equal interest 1 in many cases use money or, 1904 BY eA per ELIMI : il a meet once more on June 15. Byrnes, Bevin and in this. It would be tragic if thejr policy of helping lie in Eh ; fia i “ ETERNITY, forbids thee to for-| Bidault will remain firmly opposed to any appease- to build.a strong and free Europe“were'to.be wrecked : | honey, | only asked the war department for YOU!" . get.—Byron ; ment of Fuseian hai 0 Se for wait of a few million tons of coal. 3 fi v ify i a i . . faery Ca a ] mi La . A ) 2 L bid y ‘ i Rramsmm—
ino art SE te SE Ie a re CN pa ax x pad Sab
