Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 June 1946 — Page 8
SCRIPPS.HOWARD NEWSPAPER
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by carrier, 20 cents a week.
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EN SEASON ‘ON MR. TRUMAN
‘GO now a lot of people seem to be trying, all of a sudden, “to make President Truman out the chief culprit in the
Pris
country’s labor crisis.
Senator Taft and ether Republicans—whose motives, are free from any political tinge—are berating asking drastic power to quell strikes Seventy senators have voted seized industries. And Ohio's ex-Governor Bricker made a Memorial Day address at Gettysburg the occasion for calling the striker-draft proposal “abhorrent to the American way of
of course, Mr. Truman for against ‘the government. down his plan to draft strikers in government-
life »
to labor's cause. Well, let's see.
On June 25, 1943, Mr. Roosevelt wrote this to con-
gress:
_ «T recommend that the selective service act be amend‘ed so that persons may be inducted into non-combat military service up to the age of 65 years. This will enable us to induct into military service all persons who engage in strikes or stoppages or other interruptions of work in
ARD WALTER LECKRONE HENRY W. MANZ
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SARI ioe Light ond the People Wal Find Their Orwn Way
Abhorrent it may be. But does Mr. Bricker think that strikes to paralyze the entire nation are harmonious with the American way of life? And what would he have done if he'd been President that month of May? Meanwhile, the Pepper-Morgenthau-Ickes variety of “liberals” scream that Mr. Truman has deserted and betrayed the memory of his great predecessor. Mr. Roosevelt, they say, never would have resorted to such treachery
plants in the possession of the United States.”
What did the Pepper-Morgenthau-Ickes “liberals” say, "Bobbysox Style of Dressing ls
then? 3 " ~ ” » ”
THE critics’ role is easy. And Mr. Truman's handling of . the strike situation may have been less than masterly. But, in all fairness, remember that he had no effective Mr. Roosevelt and his “liberal” supporters saw to it that labor remained free of legal
law with which to act.
responsibility.
Remember, too, that many of the same Republicans and Democrats who now denounce the President were ‘yelling at him, only a little while ago, to do something—
anything—to save the country from disaster.
Even now the union bosses, the Commies and the Pepperite “friends” of labor-right-or-wrong are demanding |Charleston or black bottom? Yes, that Mr. Truman veto the Case bill, passed overwhelmingly
by both branches of congress.
The President knows how greatly he was handicapped {tion is concerned. in doing his best to bring the country through a deluge of trouble. Surely he will not fall for the idiotic optimism of those who say we didn’t quite drown that time, so now it ain't gonna rain no more and we don’t even need to
keep an umbrella handy.
HYPOCRISY
F all political drifts, none is more perilous to the American way of life than the frequent current resorts to Can it be true that we are truly
hypocrisy.
And no more perfect example of bureaucratic cynicism has been offered than the agriculture department’s order to reduce by 10 per cent the size of bread loaves without
change of price. On its face, this is a paltry swindle. more persons.
in this country.
as famine relief—so thinly disguised as to fool only the |“democracy is futile weakness.” | ] Unneeded proof of the deception is that while the same order provides no corresponding decrease |accompanies leadership, whether it! in flour alloted to bakers, it grants them an increase July 1. be in our small communities or i8{088 Oo Not only does such official fraud necessarily lessén confidence in the government, but this particular order
most gullible.
bears its own special vice.
law. What will it do to respect for law?
Raising the price of bread is a sorry way to feed a | group of citizens who formed the
It will feed no It will give no sufferer more bread. will not reduce by an ounce consumption by any household It is a price increase poorly camouflaged |assertions of their Feurher that |
“
RI-5551.
"I do not a say, but | your right
Hoosier Forum
gree with a word that you will defend to the death to say it." — Voltaire.
O. K., Elders Usually Narrow-Minded"
By L. W,, Indianapolis Beirig in between teen-age and middle age, and the father of two future bobbysoxers, I feel qualified for making a few ‘remarks in the defense of the bobbysoxers of today. I, along with many others, was disgusted with the recent letter written by R. E. Lawcon. How can anyone be so narrow-minded as to class the young girls of today “sickening and indecent” merely because they dress according to the present teenage fashion. If his idea of a real girl is one in bloomers, how did this Jong haircut survive the flappers during the roaring 20s? If we had nothing to say about jitterbugging, why did he proceed to run down | the parents of those who jitterbug? Tell me, R. E Lawcon, could the same remarks have been made ; about your parents when you were doing the bunny-hug, turkey trot,
“TAXI DRIVER SHOULD
THROW FLAG EACH TIME” {By Red Cab Driver, Indianapolis
An article written by one who calls himself “A Cabbie” is so misrepresented that I am prompted to correct him on.a few points. In the first place, unless he had picked up his passengers some place south, east or west of the downtown dis-
1 believe that the older generation has almost always . been narrowminded where the younger genera-
2 2 o “SINISTER FORCES HIT AT BELOVED FREEDOM” By Perplexed, Indianapolis Today I feel as though an outsider
had intruded on a family quarrel. Our admirers have found out that we have feet of clay. The loss of self-réspect for a nation is no less desolating than for an individual.
and Meridian sts. If he picked, them up at the depot or bus sta- |
tion the meter would not run more than 55 cents or 65 cents to 22d | and Meridian. In the second place, | his meter would never read $1.03] or $1.11 if he went ever so far be-| cause all taxi fares, exclusive of] ; CN ; flat rates, will end with the nubetrayed our wariiime allies, our meral 5, because on all meters the friends of freedom in the little! ast numeral is stationary. In the countries who have put their faith| third place, the meter does not in us. Now we have had the lie throw a dime for each fifth of a
mile unless he has an awfully fast | put on our gestures of greatness. | Argentina can laugh up her sleeve meter. The legal Tate is 25 cents, ; : {for the first mile and 10 cents for at our bigotry in attempting WI... a44itional four-fifths of a offer her a pattern for living. The| ur 0 al
mile. | Nazis can return to the repeated) =, iyo. noint in question Is the
{ betrayed? For if we are we have
It
But there is still time for lead-|. ; ' fu : |is the right procedure to follow ac- | ership—and the responsibility that cording to the rules of the Red of which I am an em- ; The first one who leaves ' : te THAHON, i gle sinister dangers i,q cab is supposed to pay what | which seem lurking around the|ty. meter reads. The driver isthen
there is still time for “sons of free-|¢na flag to start the trip to the Sor Nis take up hay Jeagésslulp next passenger's destination, He Now, more than ever, it would seem {5 supposed foll - to me is the time for the same] Sup i ® ioy Gis | cedure until all of his passengers oe delivered. The only time the home front through one war bond! fare is split between the passengers
. hungry world. Appealing in the name of famine relief to drive after another, the tireless is when they ‘all get oul ab One
hide a price increase is contemptible.
LOOK WHOS TALKING! HENRY MORGENTHAU,
as President Truman could get around to it, is’ taking to | He's telling the people
the radio waves these days. the Truman administration is a big flop.
Among his broad indictments is the charge that Mr. | Truman's decisions of the last year are responsible for present inflationary conditions. Just think that one over.
And consider who's talking. :
In his eleven and one-half years of red-ink stewardship of the U. 8. treasury, Henry Jr. spent and borrowed more money than all the preceding secretaries in the na- A i} tion's history. He added more than $225 billion to the ; public debt. “He was too little and too late with a war tax | program, His weak fiscal policy, swelling the supply of | spending money at a time of Yess and less goods to buy, | ; ian any other thing, caused the rise-in-prices and
living
costs, through the war and since.
: + Second contributing factor was the failure to stabilize 8 , wages and prices at the beginning of the war. And do i you remember whose was the loudest voice raised before ‘congress against stabilizing. wages? Who said prices could be frozen withoyt freezing wageg? Nope other than Henry
Cy UR dl
ellows. gl ows.
.
JR., whose services as secre- self-respect. tary of the treasury were dispensed with as quickly |
splaying that lack of economic ‘understanding which zed his whole tenure as the nation’s chief fiscal
‘Truman has made some mistakes. But one thing certainly no mistake: He picked another secre-
il society says a new plastic, 1én used as gaskets in jet enMake us up a
xix
canteen workers ' and emergency! place. A person would really be agencies of all types to rally once|getting “clipped” if he were the last more to take the lead in this stark one out of the cab and went to tragedy which threatens our be- | Broad Ripple if he had also paid loved country, and our individual the fares, or a portion of the fares, |to 224 and Meridian and 40th and Without such leadership. shame|Boulevard pl. on top of his own { will become our bedfellow. fare.
"hat Carnival —By Dick Turner
KRISPY ~KRUNLH QUIZ
‘s PROGRAM
” | } vonrdh | 2a
/ VIL TOIMRIY opm. ‘sous mv wien semvice. WE TM. RES
"Why, yest 1 suppose “my wife, might possibl ‘be listening, but hint. io [gma ie reedemt anyway.
Ba Jo
WAS HOT RADICAL THEN” By W. H. Jackson, 934 Elm st.
trict, his meter should not read| 85 cents upon his arrival at 22d| Deen.
passengers splitting the fare até the] {first passenger's destination. This|
; : | corner are to take actual form and |g nnaced to return the flag to the) It seeks to override laws in !strike at our beloved democracy, | yaecant position and then rethrow
several states regulating bread weight in the consumers’ interest. Government by fiat is substituted for rule by
“WORKED WITH JOHN L.
I have had 50 years experience in coal mining, began in 1879 at the age of 8 years for 35 cents for 10 hours. At that time the operator was lord of all he surveyed. Some men worked by the day and some by the ton. Few people owned watches then and the company worked the men 30 or 40 minutes overtime with no extra pay many times. Most companies had -com-] pany stores and miners were dis-
charged when they refused to trade there although company prices were 30 per cent above others. . I have seen thousands of men die by inches on account of the bad air and working in water, sometimes knee-deep. About 1885, the miners began to get organized. Then they got about | as arrogant as the company had | Most veins of coal had| plenty of impurities and the miner | refused to pick out anything, with| the result the company could not sell it. Many mines shut down. When the ’93 panic came the com-| pany gained the upper hand again | and made life hard for the miners. There followed strikes and lockouts for about 10 years. That time | labor began to plead with congress | for some safety laws and the late, Samuel Gompers finally notified congress to do something or else. They thumbed their noses at him | and dared him to do his worst. But finally labor got so hot after them that congress began to pass some safety laws, but the coal companies | got around most of them in one]
| way -or another. * I have done every job around the | mine from trapper to superintendient and I know whereof I speak. I worked in the mines with John |L. Lewis. He is what I would call| {a hot radical, but he can have| | little faith in promises of the coal| | companies or the government. { Miners had three contracts during | world war IL One time they worked | pending settlement almost a year, land in all three contracts they | were promised by the company and | the government the price would be {retroactive to April 1st—and not one cent did they get in either of the three settlements. We call ourselves a democratic people, but the rule that is used most is, if you get the other fellow down, make him pay. That
over. We stopped him. It now seems we are taking up something just as dangerous. » ” ” “BETTING AT SPEEDWAY 0.K.,, WHY NOT FOR KIDS?” By Just a Bystander, Division st. “Why don’t police and troopers stop gaming?” Because ours is a democratic government and the gaming instinct is degply grounded in the hearts of the American people. Our laws covering police raids on games of chance, lottery
and not respected by a large percentage of our citizens. No police f8fce is stronger than fits civic backing. Some. things we. -should---do- to counteract the gambling tendency are: 1. Stop racketeers, thugs and Indigents in gaming.
volved.
alley? DAILY THOUGHT
For we cannot but speak the things which we have seen and heard,—Acts 4:20, °
ell»
was the idea Hitler tried to put|
tickets, bingo, etc, are a ridiculous farce, |
2. Teach people of all ages Lo face
4. Be consistent in judgment and attitude toward the principle in-
At Speedway, betting always is wide open—in big figures. Why arrest urchins who roll dice in the
HE WHO has deviated from the truth, usually commits perjury with as little scruple as he would | past ; e { ; lie—~Cicero, Pauley 10 see the alu iver power plants, near Sinuju, “the 38th allel into the American 3ode, *.
“ x y al
[IT'S OUR BUSINESS . . : By Donald D. Hoover Legion Program Shaped for Future
" IT"S OUR BUSINESS to realize how powerful an influence the American Legion has become and the
tremendous public good it can accomplish through co-ordinated effort of its membership, That membership: passed the 3,000,000 mark this week . . , and more than half its members are veterans of world war II. The Legion is by far the most potent and best-organized veteran group , . . and acceptance generally accorded to its program by veterans of the recent war indicates that no other organization can rival it. ' The national aerial round-up tomorrow at Legion national headquarters in Indianapolis will be centered about reports on membership from the 14,640 posts of the country. There are 50 posts in Indianapolis, with a membership of 12,050 , . . or about 10 per cent of the state membership. :
Executive Committee Meets Here THE LEGION’S PROGRAM, guided by a national executive committee which will assemble here next week, has both long-range and immediate objectives of service to the veteran and to the country as a whole, Its main 1946 objective in the field of national defense is legislation for universal military training. A measure has just been presented to congress to establish a national security corps for accomplish ment of this training, setting forth detalls of the plan for the first time. The bill was-introduced by Rep. May (D. Ky.), chairman of the house military affairs committee. : The Legion wants the U, 8. to keep the secret of atomic energy. Among other defense measures, it advocates retention of strategic air and sea bases, unification of the armed forces, continuation of scientific. research and effective world-wide military intelligence. In Americanism and welfare programs, the Legion, reaches into every community. This year, it will sponsor at least 45 boys’ states, or encampments at which youngsters are taught the rddiments of Amer-
lean self-government by setting up a mythical 49th state. It supports some 3000 Boy Scout troops, has 700,000 participants in 30,000 teams that will take part In junior baseball during the season opening the end
‘of this month, and awards 14,000 scholarship-leader-
ship medals to grade school pupils each year. The Legion oratorical contest, which attracted 150,000 high school pupils this year, is anotier activity that
of” citizenship, * Among the activities that is expected to draw wide attention is that of the Americanism commission, which is stepping up its tempo and which will pay particular attention to combating subversive and un Americar activities, : : The Legion 'is particularly strong in small communities, where it has assumed the lead in many types «of civic development, from building publie swimming pools to providing playgrounds. Its child Tae Fr oura = s Youd will cost about $1,000,000, to h and medi some 400,000 youngsters. s ou sary To And, of course, it lays heavy emphasis on rehabil« tating veterans and checking on the work of the vet< erans administration to the end that adequate care is taken of former servicemen.
Aerial Warfare Equipment Exhibit
AS A PUBLIO FEATURE of the week of Legion activity which starts tomorrow, an exhibit of captured German and Jap aircraft and German guided missile will be displayed in war memorial plaza. . : Included are the German V-1 buzz-bomb and the V-2 rocket bomb, which were being used against Lone don on two occasions when I was in that city. Just in case anyone has any doubts as to the ime portance of preparedness . . , after seeing these die rected missiles, I'd like to point out that the improved winged A-9 version of the V-2, already blue-printed by the Germans at the time of their defeat, could reach Indianapolis in “little more than an hour” if is were launched from a location the same distance ag is Germany from this city.
contributes to broader knowledge of the responsibilities © 1
IN WASHINGTON . . . By Daniel M. Kidney Hoosier Lobbyist Entertains ‘Two Als’
DEAR BOSS: MAYBE THIS SHOULD be a society note played under the heading “Hoosier Hospitality.” At any rate, I want to report that on last Saturday night Martin H. Miller, Terre Haute native and former Indianapolis resident, entertained at dinner two of the maddest men in America. Guess who? President A. F. Whitney of the Brotherhood of Railway Trainmen and Chief Alvanley Johnson of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers. Twice within 24 hours they had been publiely castigated by President Truman. He placed all blame for the railway strike directly on “these two men,” both in his radio address and speech before congress.
Host and Guests Cuss Truman THESE TWO MEN made drastic action necessary to keep the country from complete collapse and chaos,
the President said. The pair was plenty glum when “Marty” took them home for dinner. They felt as though 140 million fellow-Americans were putting the finger on them. The Truman attack they considered unfair. They were as angry as any two men can get. President Truman's stock was at its peak at that point. Theirs was, to say the least, considerably below par. 3 Mr. Miller didn't mind. He came up the hard way. He is an “old grad” from the ranks of lobbyists that swarm around whenever the Indiana legislature meets. Now he is “national legislative representative” of B. R. T. Whitney is his boss. Marty is loyal In fact he was just as mad as his guests. : Later, when he took them down .to board one of the trains which were running again, the trio cussed out the President all the way to the station. The late F. D. R. used to refer to them as “the two Als.” They were his pals. Other railway union leaders would cool their heels in hotel rooms waiting until Whitney and Johnson returned from the White House with the latest word. President Truman wasn't so chummy.
Mr. Miller maintains they never were given a
chance to bargain on government operation of the railroads as John L. Lewis was with the mines. Remember the line about “mute inglorious Mile tons”? Well we have in this office what might be termed a “mute inglorious White House ghost-writer.” He is Ted Evans, who talked to the Indianapolis Ad vertising club some time ago. : He was somewhat surprised while listening te President Truman’s radio talk to hear a whole para« graph lifted verbatim from one of his Scripps-How-ard editorials. He was even more so when in his George Washington university speech the President
linked Taft and Pepper, The Daily Worker and The ©
Wall Street Journal. For that very day an Evans editorial was printed containing this line: “Senator Pepper and Senator Taft, the Communis« tie Daily Worker and The Wall Street Journal Join, in the chorus of denunciation.” With Senator Taft grabbing the pro-labor gonfae Jon in the draft labor fight, it looks like the Repube licans may quit running against Roosevelt and take out after Truman. It will make little difference. For the National Citizens Political Action Committee h announced they are running PF. D. R. . In Vol. 1, No. 1, of the “National Citizen,” Dr, Prank Kingdon, Head of NCPAC, boldly announces that they will “Back F. D. R. Slate.” It looks now like they might have to do it on the Republican ticket. I do not remember in what poem “Old men know when an old man dies” appears, but I was reminded of it this week when 88-year-old Senator Glass died.
Old Men Can't Stand Pace EACH TIME SUCH DEATH is reported, it moves 77-year-old Senator McKellar to tears. Recently returned from the naval hospital at nearby Bethesda, Md., the Tennessean has not yet recovered sufficiently to take on full-time his position as president pro tem of the senate. The terrific tasks of today, involving constant crisis government and senate sessions from 11 a. m. until well after midnight, make it almost impossible for old men to keep up the pace and live DAN KIDNEY.
REFLECTIONS . . . By Robert C. Ruark Billy Conn Scared of Losing Temper
NEW YORK, June 1.—If something other than the increase of butter prices and the premium on apart-
| ments is needed to show that America is caught up
in a spending spree, a fist fight between a couple of ex-G. L’s, scheduled some three weeks from now, would prove it. Billy Conn, a 28-year-old Pittsburgher with a face like a broken-nosed cherub and the spirit of a sadist, fights Joe Louis, who knocked him stiff five years ago. Although neither has fought since they graduated from Uncle Sam’s seminary, there is so much interest in the repeater and so much loose dough around that the gate is estimated at $3,500,000, with a chance of touching $4 million.
Good Dough Even for Loser CONN, IF HE'S KNOCKED OUT in the first min- | ute of round 1, still collects a rough half million as | his share, Louis takes a million, win or lose, and Mike | Jacobs splits the remainder unevenly with the government. - Louis is old and still fat, and Conn isn’t even a legitimate heavyweight. He is an overstuffed middleweight; really, whose 180 pounds are lately arrived. He started out as a lightweight, : As an unfrocked sportswriter, I still find more interest in the training camp of a challenger than in the actual fight, which too often can be dull and anticlimactic. > Watching Conn go eight rounds with four sparmates is a better show today than anything Jacobs has had in the garden in months. Billy, for all that wide white smile and candid eyes and courteous conversation is a bad boy. He loves to fight. He loves to hurt people.
Reds Stymie.
SEOUL. Korea, June 1--Fouled up in Soviet restrictions, Edwin W. Pauley, American reprarations ambassador, today was making only limited progress in his effort to appraise the industrial capacity of partially stripped northern Korea, according to mes- | sages reaching his headquarters here by telephone from-the-Russian-zone. 0 : Though cheered by Koreans wherever ils members appeared on the streets, the Pauley mission was so severely handicapped by orders of the guards assignd by Col. Gen. I. M. Chistiakov, .Soviet commander, that it. was lodging repeated protests.
their losses if they insist on gambling. Refuse Access to Facts 3. Encourage better amusement THE RUSSIANS FIRST commanded the engineers for youth, and other experts accompanying Pauley to put aside
all cameras. Thus, the mission will have only written records of its stay. The Russians refused Pauley's request that the time of his inspection period be extended from the five days first stipulated by the Soviets. ‘ When Pauley pointed out that the great coal and iron complexes in the northeast corner of Korea, near Chongjin near the Soviet border, must be séen to be appraised, the Soviets sald this zone -was closed to him, “because Soviet forces are, being demobilized there,” They refused, for the same reason, to allow Pauley to see the Hongndm. area on the east coast, where big plants for manufacturing nitrog n_ and superphosphate used in fertilizer and war industries are located, also metallurgical smelters. : On the west t the Bovicts promised to allow
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He never soft pedals in his sparring rounds. His partners do their level best to hurt Conn, in retalia~ tion, and Billy gets momentarily furious and tries to murder his playmates with the big 16-ounce pillows, I saw an old, fat-bellied heavyweight, Mickey McAvoy, who has sparred with champions for years, hit Billy in the Adam’s apple the other day, and for two mihe utes Conn punished McAvoy's flabby midsection with the intentness ‘of a child tormenting a stray cat. conn has bare-fist fights with his brother Jackie, who, Billy says, stalks him with a gin deck and takes
“an average $50 a day from him. He abuses his man-
ager, Johnny Ray, all day long. He brags gleefully when he really inflicts pain on one of his hired hands. He admits he still gets violently mad, but says he isn’t planning to lose his.temper with Louis. “He hits too hard,” Billy said, in the rubbing room. “Like I said before the last one, it's a small ball park, and if I lose my temper I know just where to look for my fanny. He'll knock it that far.”
No Plans Needed for Spending AND, WISTFULLY: “If I had only missed with that left hook five years ago, I'd have been champion all this time. But when I connected, and he went wobbly, I thought I could finish him. I had the fight won. If I'd just missed with that one punch . . .” I asked Conn if he had any special plans for all the money he is going to make. “I don't need any.plans, he replied, with that choir-boy smile. “Spending dough is,one thing I don’ have to plan ahead for.”
WORLD AFFAIRS . . . By George Weller
Reparations Mission
opposite the Manchurian city of Antung. The United States is already well-supplied with information on this area, having. tormally protested the Russians’ stripping it last winter, The Russians hustled the American mission through at top speed. Pauley asked that the mission be allowed to break
ap into groups under Soviet surveillance in order to
carry out more of the task, which all are agreed cannot be finished in five days. The Russians ruled that the party must remain together. Pauley gets actually three days to make a zomplete investigation of a country of 10,000,000 persons; cover= ing an area greater than Vermont, New Hampshire, Massachusetts, Conecticut, and New Jersey. The mission's failure to accomplish its task is taken for granted. Coming upon the heels of the breakdown of the Soviet-American joint commission's efe fort to unify Korea and remove the 38th parallel
bisecting it, it adds a serious handicap to improvement *
of relations between the powers. Russians Aware of Protest
AN ADVANCE PARTY of another group from the , Pauley reparations mission headed by Gail Carter,
of Santa Fe, N. M,, arrived here Friday,
" Word that Pauley’'s work was being hampered
was flashed from Seoul to the White House by army radio. Besides protesting to’ Chistiakov about the
limitations; ‘Pauley showed the Soviet commander a
statement telling the Russian general that it would
‘be publicly released, Chistiakoy allowed the protest:
to be tel ned over the Soviet-controlled line across
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