Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 June 1946 — Page 18

al Zone 0, Moon gf United Press, Scripps-Howard News-

‘4

Give Light and the People Will Find Their Own Woy

ihe THE G. 0. P. PURGE * INDIANA Republicans who purported to be shocked by © * the attempts of the late President Roosevelt to purge congress of Democrats who were politically independent of him might do well now to take another look at their own, state convention. The delegates don’t meet until next week, but spokesmen for the state machine already confidently announce complete lists of who thesé delegates are to nominate— and who they are to dump. For reasons of their own, the bosses of this state machine have decided to drop the present Republican United States Senator Raymond E. Willis, Judge Frank N. Richman, of supreme court, and the present state superintendent of public instruction, Clement T. Malan. In our opinion they are not good reasons. : : » . » » » w SEN. WILLIS accepted nomination when it looked as if he couldn't win. But he did win. His record in the senate has not been flashy, but it has has been one. of industrious application to his job. His qualifications are obviously greatly superior to those of the man the machine has picked to replace him, William E. Jenner, a nice young fellow of no particular experience who has been a political handyman around the statehouse. Election of Mr. Jenner, further, would give both senate seats to the southern end of the state, which certainly isn't illegal but which always heretofore has been considered unfair. Judge Richman is highly regarded by attorneys of both parties. He was the first Republican to crack the Democratic control of the supreme court in recent years,

“Alliance, NEA Service, and Audit Bureau of +0] * . oe :

he. oa,

~~ Just Ruining the Act iE roe Ll IE YOU - ONT THINK .

aLAYR i

Hoosier Forum

"| do not agree with a word that you : say, but | will defend to the death your right to say it." — Voltaire.

and his record appears to justify his renomination. Dr. Malan has served two terms at the head of the state's department of education. He has done ingly good job. He is a professional sch successful record in practical school i he came to state office, and the

others, that can profit by

"Today's Conflict Arises Because Men Not Paid on Basis of Service"

By Powers Hapgood, Regional Director, CIO, Indianapolis I can hardly understand the reason for the unfairness of recent

ervice during his tenure. |editorials in The Indianapolis Times, unless the reason is the one al-

leged by Upton Sinclair in “The Brass Check” that powerful advertisers

en the direction is good. On control the policy of the press.

litical tradition that a party re-nomi-nt members who have done an acceptable

against the wishes of a majority of the state’s Republican pers, and quite probably against the wishes of a majority of the party’s rank and file voters, in an amazing demonstration of the power of the statehouse machine.

- LJ . . “ ® ON a smaller scale a powerful political machine in Marion county undertook exactly that same sort of enterprise this ‘year—the dumping of good men from office, the replacement of them by hand-picked party workers. Marion | county voters repudiated that program at the May primary ‘elections in a reply that shook the county machine to its | toes. The state organization might well profit by the example. ; If it goes through with the plan for a steam roller con- | vention that seems now to be in the making, at least it will ¢ give the Democrats their greatest opportunity in Indiana | since 1936. i

i

3 : i §

THREE APPOINTMENTS

LN SELECTION of Fred Vinson as chief justice of the United States breaks the precedent of choosing for that high office men who have made outstanding records as judges -or lawyers. : Mr. Vinson has good sense and fine character. He has served rather briefly on the federal appellate bench of the District of Columbia, . But he is best known for his broad experience in the legislative and executive branches of the government. His background is hardly that of a Stone, a Hughes or a Taft— to name the last three chief justices. ;

The bitter division on the supreme court apparently © made it impossible for President Truman to promote any of the present associate justices. It never would have done to appoint a feudist to settle a feud.

Mr. Vinson has a great talent for compromising differences among men of clashing personalities and conflicting opinions. That should stand him in gdod stead now. ; We believe he will exert a considerable influence toward | * unifying the court. We hope he will prove to be as fine a jurist as he has been a legislator and: executive.

PRERIR ERRE

. » - » 3 JOHN W. SNYDER'S selection to succeed Mr. Vinson as

You have been very bitter in your criticism of union leaders in the railroad and coal strikes because production and transportation have been curtailed, but yet never have I read in your newspaper one word of eriticism for employers who shut down their plants because they could not get the price or make the profits they wished. Over the years, the number of : man days lost through idleness the men who pulled the trains for caused by employers refusing to| getting aroused. After years of work their plants has been a mil-|service, the crews of the best trains lion-fold greater than lost man days may reach an annual income of caused by workers refusing to put|four or five thousand dollars, but their labor power on the market for {I have talked to brakemen and enthe price offered by their employ- gineers who make as little as seven ers. No one hated to see an inter-|or eight dollars a day. ruption in the flow of food and es-| The whole source of the conflict

and Europe any more than I did, [that men are not paid in proporbut to blame this interruption, as|tion to their services to the country. you do in your editorials, on Messrs. Most get too little and a few, beWhitney and Johnston, is complete- cause of their greed, get too much. ly unjust. (Many of them have never done anything in their lives as useful as In the first place, they Were... ook of a railroad man or a merely carrying out the mandates ...) miner or a farmer. Some of of their membership, who had voted 1. may have done work like this overwhelmingly to cease work if); their youth. Now that they have their just requests were not met. .pi.ue executive positions, one They did this after complying With 5014 think that the opportunity to the rules of the game; namely, the | york short hours, play golf in the National Railway Labor act. They|,ifernoons, and have their weekhad followed all steps of that act . 4. free to spend in recreation, to the letter, only to be told, after|y,,)4 pe enough to satisfy them complying with the act, that they yiinoyt taking so much money from were leading an insurrection. the industries in comparison to the When I compare the value to the men who do the really dangerous country and the wages of a loco-|and hard work. One would think motive engineer, driving his trainithey would appreciate the same Hisugn the en With jiflrite cere/neecs for other people that they or the ety of his hundreds of have. passengers, with, the service ren-| I don’t blame the people who draw dered and the salaries of the top high salaries, if they do not atrailroad executives, sitting in their tempt to prevent others from getting swivel chairs in Wall Street and them, also.

paper editors and other moulders of negotiating a union contract with public opinion. I am willing to ad- their employees. At these times, of mit that certain white-collar work- course, they are willing to put in ers like inventors, scientists, and considerable overtime in an attempt

they are not over-paid. Probably, a|to agree to. railroad executive performs some|

he receives fifty or a hundred thou-|are every time that a group of worksand dollars a year, I can’t. blame ers do likewise.

Side Glances — By .Galbraith

| secretary of the treasury is another testimony fo the al confidence Mr. Truman places in old and faithful friends. Othér men of more manifest experience and qualificawere, available for this office. Yet it was natural | that the President should have turned to one he knew | i personally he could trust, although Mr. Snyder's back- | . ground is that only of a minor banker and, more recently, |

tor of reconversion. But most of the failures have not to mistakes by him, but to the influence of u ting propagandists who peddled to the administration the crackpot theory that wages could be increased greatly aad rapidly without increasing prices. Mr. Snyder didn’t fall for that theory, and these same propagandists have inspired efforts to smear him and make him out a clumsy dullard. ‘We believe he has integrity and sound fiscal views. w has the opportunity to be the first treasury secrebalance the budget in 16 years. . We hope he can pes of 80 able an assistant as UndersecreGardner, who, incidentally, was not a man have been passed over, . : x "d

- Jit . 4 0 - L. Sullivan from assistant. secretary the navy is a natural, James Forrestal resigns Mr.

Mr. Snyder has been less than a sensational success

6-7

“I'm glad you're so happy. dear—and | hope you have let him know that beirig a husband isn't-like the soft, easy er life he had in the army!" a

COPR. 1946 BY NEA SERVICE, INC, T. M. REG. U. 8. PAT. OFF,

he : ’ pia ay

sential commodities to this country/in this country today is the fact

Now tremendous wall

yard.

as thig is.

matter also.

when this occurs.

Most of the business|other tradesmen are blocked out. It other financial centers, I get dis-| executives that I know never work |is truly an impossible condition and gusted at the philosophy of news- overtime except when it comes to|as we, thisstract and the Big Four yards are all inside the city limits, something should be done as soon las possible. This has been reported time after doctgys, perform a tremendous serv- to bargain for the lowest possible|time to city hall authorities but we ice the community for which wages that they can get the union /do not even get the sewer cleaned | out. ; Some day, I would like to see in| service which, in most cases, could your newspaper, editorials which are| “GLAD BAUER DEPORTED, be done by a clerk or, at the most,| just as critical of employérs who| A Rd a railroad superintendent, but when [shut their industries down, as you| HE HAS NO USE FOR U. §

MM =

By Mrs. A. R., Indianapolis * I can’t agree with Mrs. A. A. concerning Bauer because I'do not like enemies. When our country decided to deport him, I really admired the

decision.

Furthermore, if they ‘should let him stay in the U. 8, there's no telling what could happen. Mrs. A. A. staged that politics was back” of lit. T am no politician, but I really " | don't want anyone to betray our | country. 3 T am glad they deported Bauer. Let his wife go with him and take the consequences, because I do not think very much of a girl who marries a foreigner who deliberately would betray our country. If-our people let Bauer stay in this country, they someday will find out their

mistake.

can't see Mrs.

over there.

not belong here.

—Proverbs 6:6.

“LAKE GLADSTONE' CRY FOR HELP DISREGARDED” By William Swift, 2832 N. Gladstone ave. Thé article by Mr. Troutman in the Hoosier Forum was a vivid portrait of a condition we are forced to put up with every time it rains hard for several hours. I, too, live on an island in the middle of Lake Gladstone and we must remove our footwear and wade water above our knees to get in and out of our residences here, for the cause of this of water that descends on us every rainy day... . Across the street from us is an open tract three and four blocks wide and a mile long having an area of at’ least 70 or 3C acres. land is bordered on the south by the Big Four railroad’s Brightwood

Several years ago this railroad added two new yard tracks and in doing so their construction crews filled in an open ditch which had provided a drainage outlet for a large part of this tract and also for a part of their yard property. Since that time all of this water drains to an ordinary 14-inch street sewer directly across the. street from our house. This sewer is, itself, always stopped up because of the huge amount of debris that washes from such a large area

Why should we be flooded with water from someone else’s property? We are all home owners in this vicinity and would like to see an adequate storm sewer installed here as an ordinary street sewer just isn’t large enough by far. We believe the Big Four railroad should do something about this

This ‘is an unhealthful, stinking neighborhood because of floods and our school children are marooned

Concerning the stag party held at Ft. Harrison, that can't be considered for those are held quite often at different places. All I have to say is deport him to his country where he belongs. A. A's viewpoint. It burns me up. I'll bet if she has a husband he would not neglect a stag party. That's human. I am fed up on how foreigners treated our boys when they were

Send Bauer back because he does

U. 8. should realize that foreign people deep in their hearts don’t have any use for us.

DAILY THOUGHT

Go to the ant, thou sluggard; consider her ways, and be wise.

TOMORROW, tomorrow, not today,

\

in reporting, to dig back into the background of a matter that affects a large public interest.” : This applies just now to the so-called Case laborregulatory bill passed by congress which is before President Truman for decision. Past history of this Bill is now well-known, including the tricky Way it got its start in the house. : :

Why Did Case Sponsor Bill? IT MAY BE RECALLED how for two days the house rules committee held public hearings on a measure approved by the house labor committee after long consideration. This bill was a much modified version of President Truman's proposal for factfinding boards to help in settling labor disputes. Suddenly one afternoon Rep. Case (R. S. D.) appeared before the committee with a brand new bill, never considered by the committee, and asked that the rules committee make his measure a substitute for the modified Truman bill, The plot quickly came to light. This bill, sponsored by Mr. Case, was promoted by Reps. Smith .(D. Va.) and Cox (D. Ga.), both strong anti-labor, and Rep.

+ Halleck (Ind.), a Republican leader, all three dom-

inant on the rules committee and key figures in the Republican-Southern Democratic coalition against the administration. Their trick worked. The Case bill was passed overwhelmingly by the house in February and recently by the senate, with some few changes, under impulsion of the railroad and mine strike impasse. There was some mystification at the time why Mr. Case, from a largely rural, western state, should sponsor a labor bill, other than the fact that he presumably didn’t have to worry about organized labor, A 100k into his background is illuminating. Politics in Mr. Case's district, western half of South Dakota, is dominated by the Homestake Mining Co., which also wields a powerful influence in the state as a whole. It is a wealthy gold-mining cor-

| poration. Some of its officers and directors have im-

portant New York banking connections.

NEW YORK, June 7.—Something happened in New Jersey this week that should make a lot of people all over the country feel good. Alfred Driscoll, a non-veteran, won a sweeping victory over Harold Hoffman a vociferous veteran, in the primary to determine the Republican candidate for governor of .he state. Taking the Republican nomination is equivalent to election. If I have a strong feeling, it's that a war record should buy its owner no favoritism before the law or in politics.

Capitalizing on War Service MR. HOFFMAN, IN AN EFFORT to collar the veteran vote, spent considerable time during the closing phase of his campaign on his own selfless nobility in volunteering to go to war. His constant attack on Mr. Driscoll as a non-vet implied that there was something shameful about the fact that Mr. Driscoll couldn’t sport a discharge button. If it can be proved that a politician criminally avoided military service then that is a legitimate campaign weapon. It would serve to deflate an opponent exactly as the published proof that the subject man had been jailed for house-breaking would lessen his chance for election. But unless criminal intent can be shown, it's my idea that this war-record business has no place in a squabble for public office. To employ the “where were you while I was in fox holes” routine is cheap rabblerousing. I first thought that Mr. Hoffman's pre-occupation with his own heroism would win him the election—

SEOUL, June 7.—The American task th guiding southern Korea's 131 registered political parties toward parliamentary unity is difficult, but not so impossible as that number sounds. The arithmetical measure of the parties is misleading, because only two large coalitions exist. They are both leftist by American standards and might be be called the leftist-left and rightist-left.

Representation Is One-Sided THE LEFTIST-LEFT has only two parties: The People’s and the Communist. Together they form the “People’s Fighting Front,” which is controlled by the Communists in southern Korea, as against some 200,000 People's party followers. The Communists have gained control of the joint committee and also have assumed many key posts in the People’s party. The rightist-left has three parties: Nationalist, New Nationalist and Democratic. It is a battleground of personal rather than dogmatic rivalries and 15 of its leaders are members of the 25-man advisory board appointed by the American commander in Korea, Lt. Gen. John R. Hodge. The 10 remaining are mostly Confusican scholars. This board is one-sided because the Communist left refuses to co-operate with Hodge by joining the

cratic council.” The Communists are able to hamstring any efforts by the American general to give this board governing powers by simply remaining aloof from it while attacking its makeup as insufficiently broad. Thus, Hodge cannot make a democratic local government to match the Communist government created in the north by the Soviets under the name ‘of “Interim People’s Committee.”

PARIS, June 7.—~The more one thinks about the reported proposal by Bernard M. Baruch that secrets of the atomic bémb- can be, pooled only if thé Big Five agree to waive their right of veto in case of violation of atomic-control agreements, the more one is struck by the sagacity and statesmanship underlying this conception. It is not merely that adoption of this suggestion would make the whole world feel able to sleep safely, without dread of being blown to glory by an atomic bomb. Agreement to abolish the veto, coupled with vesting of atomic powers in the security council, would be the first step in transforming the United Nations from a body scarcely more effective than the defunct league of nations into effective world government. .

Two Decades of Peace?

TODAY, THE WORLD IS almost certainly assured of at least 20 years of peace. That assurance arises from the fact that Britain and the United States, between whom any serious dispute is unthinkable, possess fleets and air forces 20 to 30 times as powerful as those of the rest of the world combined. With Canada, they have a monopoly on the atomic bomb. There is no chance of Britain and the United States, singly or together, menacing world peace. Neither, for more.than a generation, has been an expansionist nation. Therefore, unless there is a revolutionary change in the existing balance of power, peace is guaranteed by co-operation of these two great countries. .

versal and permanent basis for peace than the loosely knit. Anglo-American co-operation provides.

Hear the lazy people sa

v .

That is why people of good will throughout the world have placed their hopes in the United Nations. ; » - ; a

ns

. . WASHINGTON, June 7.—Sometimes it is helpful,

bourgeois left in the so-called “representative demg~"

But world opinion would like to find a more uni-

© |IN'WASHINGTON . .. Bb Thomas L Sakes © ~~ = "Rep. Case Is Naturally Anti-Labor”

There is no union in the Homestake Mining As a matter of fact, it 1s not healthy for a oo organizer to appear in the neighborhood. He risks the treatment that the once famous private coal and iron police in Pennsylvania used to give union organ

‘izers, The Homestake operates one of those'feudal

principalities still found in some parts of our mation. It's “The Company.” . ows

Last year, one of the recognized Homestake rep resentatives in the South Dakota legislature—largely dominated by Homestake—got through an anti-closed shop law for the state. So Mr: Case, also. a political representative for Homestake, comes naturally his anti-union proclivities, yw

This background might be concluded with an ine terpretation by one of the country’s leading business

‘organs, Business Week, of events transpiring in the

last several days. Under the caption “Union Labor Is ‘On Defensive’, President's Speech Sounds Doom," the Business Week statement follows: “Union labor has been put on the def: President Truman's recent address be = Sate and is mobilizing not for winning some new gains, but for holding its position against the most deter

mined onslaught it has had to face in more than a dozen years.

Should Take a Bow “‘LABOR'S FIGHTING MOOD, was best dram atized by statements out of the United Auto Workers

headquarters in Detroit. This most aggressive of ;

C. I. O. groups, a law unto itself, called fot a Joint

A. F. of LC. I O. Railway Brotherhood meeting te

organize a fight against the President of the United States. “‘In the deafening cheer with which the joing

session of congress greeted the President's address, °

labor heard the thunder of doom’.” In other words—“‘Hurray!” Mr. Case should take a bow, too, and so should his masters. :

REFLECTIONS . .'. By Robert C. Ruark rt Ruptured Duck Is No Key to Office:

that sufficient voters would think it important enough

to push him in. You could have batted me down -

with a powder puff when I heard that Mr. Driscoll’ majority was over 70,000 votes—a crushing surplus, indicating that the sentimental appeal of veteran over non-veteran was ignored by a lot of people, including voting veterans,

Frankly, I think now that ex-Governor Hoffman's |

employment of the veteran gimmick might have licked him. Possibly we are reaching a stage where a lot of us believe that a former association with a rifle has no relation to a man’s proficiency in a peacetime pro fession. : Every day of the year I, am in favor of an even break for the veteran in competition with the man who remained legally at home. I am for compensa tion in all cases where a man’s health or earning ability has been impaired by the war.

Hague Took Licking, Too THIS BUSINESS OF USING a discharge button either as an added qualification or as a smear against the man who hasn't got one, however, makes me as sore as a blistered heel. Intervening as campaign fodder when the real issues are ability and character, totally disassociated from military service, I boil. And I am an honorably discharged veteran with a right to boil at my own bunch. I was so tickled to think that Mr. Driscoll’s ade ministrative and personal ventures were enough to lick Mr: Hoffman's flag-waving that I clean forgot his triumph took a solid swipe at Boss Frank Hague, who's supposed to have supported Mr. Hoffman,

WORLD AFFAIRS . . . By George Weller

Hodge Has His Hands Full in Korea

The main issue is “trusteeship.” Under the Moscow agreement of last December, the Koreans were supposed to form a single coalition government for the entire country with help of the Americans and Russiang. This government was then supposed to present its views to the four powers about the “agreement

concerning a four-power trusteeship for a period up

to five years.” While southern Koreans were marching in united protest against trusteeship, the Communists received orders from the Communist party of northern Korea —their direct superiors—that the party line had changed and that they must support trusteeship. Hodge has had his hands full keeping up with the plots and counter-plots. At present Kim Koe, leader of the rightist-left, is bringing in members of his Kuomintang-aided Kwang Buk army from China.

Communists Clumsy in Korea

KIM KOO ATTEMPTED TO seize power after the

trusteeship was announced, but did so in such an abortive way that he escaped with a wrist slap from the authorities. Hodge waived the conspirator’s offer to return to China in atonement. ; Hodge is often criticized by the right for protecting the left and also for providing the latter with generous quantities of newsprint for expression of their views. © While in the western democracies the techniques

of Communist infiltration into democratic organiza . -

tions are rarely recognized, in Korea they are some times revealed by indiscretion. A letter of a Com= munist leader recently published discussed what was the most effective proportion of Communists to dom= inate the People’s party's local ‘committees without seeming to do so. ;

TODAY IN EUROPE ... . By Randolph Churchil + Should Be No Veto in Atomic Field

All realists know that, at the moment, it is little more than a debating assembly where nations can advertise and very often exaggerate their differences.

It is bound to remain so unless the nationsof the

world can agree to-some abdication of sovereign rights and creation of pooled security under the uegis of a World authority. It's obvious that, however much the peoples of the world may’ aspire to creation of an effective world government, many of their leaders are adamant in opposition to such a plan. And many of these peoples

have no means of changing their rulers. It's theree fore far better to proceed step by step. America, through the fact that she alone today

possesses any atomic bombs, is in a position to give real leadership. She might use the immense power she has to bully and coerce other nations to do her will, It is to her eternal glory that she has no intention of doing this. The direction in which she is moving is exactly the opposite—namely, to pool with all states this dread and omnipotent weapon, under careful supervision of a world authority.

U. S. Can Gain Leadership

THE UNITED STATES has been given far too ttle credit for the enlightened attitude adopted by her leaders and accepted by American public opinion in this matter. If she continues to think and act along these lines, shé will gain moral leadership of the world. No one can doubt that; if the sécurity council eould be vested with sole rights to atomic energy, its authority would be multiplied a hundredfold overnight. i But that cannot be done unless all nations are ready to agree to effective supervision of their arma= ment plants’ and abolition ‘of the Big Five veto power

in cases of violation of atomic agreements. If such a plan could be carried into effect, it would be's

long one. en a

TRAY, 668 St be

Chimes and ¢ » will welcome. 668 = nical high school

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