Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 15 July 1946 — Page 12

] WALTER LECKRONE HENRY W. MANZ

: A SCRIPPS-HOWARD NEWSPAPER psn Owned and published daily (except Sunday) by hE Indianapolis Times Publishing Co. 214 W. Maryland month. Give Light ond the People Wilk Find Their Own Wey

st. Postal Zone 9. Member of United Press, Scripps-Howard Newspaper Alliance, NEA Service, and Audit Bureau of Circulations. . Price in Marion County, 5 cents a copy; dellvered by carrier, 20 cents a week. Mail rates in Indiana, $5 a year; all other states, Canada and Me WELCOME BACK, GEN. BLUEMEL! RIGADIER GEN. CLIFFORD BLUEMEL is due back in Indianapolis tomorrow to become commanding officer at Ft. Benjamin Harrison, where "he wis stationed twice before. : Since he was last at the army post as a lieutenantcolonel in the 11th infantry, his Shortridge-educated son has become a naval officer and his daughter, who attended Butler university, has grown up and married an officer in the navy. Th : And Gen. Bluemel has béen in a Japanese prison camp gince fall of Bataan, In the same camp was Lt. Gen. Jonathan Wainwright, who surrendered American forces in the

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of defeat to receive the surrender in turn of those to whom he had surrendered in the dark days of 1942. Gen. Wainwright and Gen. Bluemel and the other heroes of Bataan and Corregidor suffered inexpressibly in the war. Now the latter is coming back to the town which was a home to his family. We hope that he enjoys pleasant associations during his assignment here and, mow that pressure of war is over, his fellow-soldiers at the fort will | be able to take greater part in the activity of the city which "is proud to be “home” to Ft. Harrison men and women during their tour of duty here.

5 = WAR REPARATIONS 5 QECRETARY of State Byrnes can implement the position | he has taken concerning German reparations by refusing to become a party to any further agreements on the subject until there has been an inventory and appraisal epemy assets. Piecemeal, high-pressure reparations awards have created a chaotic situation and have resulted in some rank injustices. bath Nations which suffered war damage have legitimate claims against the defeated aggressor nations. But compensation. for war claims must be based on ability to pay. Any assessments made beyond that will come out of the pockets of nations, contributing relief funds for distressed Europe. There's no point in tearing a nation to pieces with ‘one hand and trying to put it together again with the other. ! The rights of small countries which were the victims of axis aggression should be observed in the distribution of enemy assets. Greek claims against Italy should have had priority over Russian claims. Instead of that, we .have indorsed Russia's demand for $100 million, and the Greeks have been left standing at the end of the queue. This was outrageous discrimination. Greece's contribution to Italy’s defeat was greater than Russia’s—and earlier.

. . ¥ " ” ” RUSSIA has demanded $10 billion in additional reparations from Germany. Investigation may well reveal, as Mr. Byrnes has hinted, that property already appropriated by the Russians represents more than her proportionate share of reparations. That point, however, can be settled by inventory and appraisal of assets and an equitable adjudication of claims against the ceiling fixed by the . inventory. : : Final settlement of this question should be expedited “because the present policy of drift is building up trouble. . The axis nations owe a debt to the countries they bombed and invaded, but they have a right to know the amount of the bill they are expected to pay.

ANDY SHOULD TESTIFY PERIOD EP. Andy May's counter-proposal to Senator Mead’s war =~ investigating committee is that he is willing to testify provided he can summon the witnesses he wants and cross-examine them. In other words, Andy would like to rng his own investigation of the part he allegedly played in hustling munitions contracts, “E” awards and lumber for the Garsson enterprises. Quite an. unusual procedure. One which no private citizen in similar circumstances would dare suggest. ++ If there is any standard of public morals left in congress—and we think there must be—the only out now is for the senate and house by joint resolution to compel Mr. May to go before the committee and testify under oath, as any private citizen would be required to do. Should he refuse to waive immunity, as the head man, Henry Garsson, and the lobbyist, Benjamin F. Fields, did, the public will draw its own conclusions. Any time either a private citizen or a congressman doing business With the government refuses to tell all, the public knows how to chalk up the box score.

THE IMPOSSIBLE THERE'S scarcely a G. I. who hasn't been exposed to 13. = that ubiquitous army motto of world war II, to the {1 effect that the difficult would be achieved immediately but | the impossible might take a little longer. It did take a little longer, but the impossible is scheduled for this month in Japan through the instrumentality of those same G. 1's. That is a production of “The Mikado” in the Ernie Pyle theater in Tokyo. [7 - Imposgibie on two counts. First; because the Japanese . mever would have dreamed of permitting the Gilbert and Sullivan operetta to be performed in their land since it _ satirized the emperor. So strong was their feeling against it there were even diplomatic protests in London when the iss had ia prams years ago. nk » an Ernie Pyle theater in Tokyo! i Ernie would have sworn. spossivie,

“FRANCO'S REVENGE” : ; GEN. McNARNEY has suspended the purchase of luxury items from Spain, including a type of brandy of such ity potency the G. I's had dubbed it “Franco's Revenge.” With the American commander in Germany hinting national political reasons are behind the order, the : suggests discovery of ope of those “Fascist plots” fly Worker frequently digs up.

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"Decatur Township

By Joe Rand Beckett,

Republicans

Oppose Hurried Action on OPA"

27 Union Trust bldg.

The following letter has been sent to Senators Homer E. Capehart

and Raymond E. Willis, and Representatives Earl Wilson, Charles A. Halleck and Forrest A. Harness: ’ “The Decatur Township Republican club, which met Wednesday night, instructed me to inform you of their canvass as to the general opinion of the voters in the township with reference to the legislation on OPA. “1, The club membership feels that no hardships have developed at this time sufficiently to justify a hurried passage of a new OPA bill 2. The club feels that free enterprise

us, too, of those Indian matches, issued ‘the Middle East, known as “Gandhi's

should again be given the opportunity to function in this country without restraints of OPA. 3. If at the end of a given period, possibly 90 days, it becomes apparent that injustices have developed, then corrective legislation can be passed without any appreciable delay. “The population of our township is about 4000.” 1 4 " n “DON'T WANT TO HATE OWNERS OR RENTERS”

By Thomas E. Halsey, 3810 BE. New York st

~The floundering peacetime OPA, the greatest hate-making machine in American history grinds on, and will continue to as long as any of its vote-getting “abilities are still alive. Franklin D. Roosevelt, who was a master of the “hate-brew-ing art” for political purposes would even frown upon the over-enthusi-astic handling of his tools by political stooges and Charley McCarthys. He taught us to hate those fellowAmericans we most desired to hate. I, for example, was given the mandate to hate anyone who had money — and they in turn were given the excuse, if not the encouragement to hate me—excluding from my category, of course, politiclans, however rich, powerful or crafty, if they were on my side of the political fence, Those very politicians, more greedy for power and money than ever and over~drunk from the elixir of past successes, now are demanding that I hate any and every American who has a house or room to rent or a pound of something to sell--and truthfully I say—I never wished to hate or hold in suspicion any of my fellow beings but the “big shots.” For years I went along with F. D. R. and his buddies in hate mongering (in fact I worshipped “his highness” as no dumb Jap ever deified Hirohito) but finally awakened to learn that not

breads of hate for long. Now I'm “kicking over the traces” for I don't want to hate and mistrust my landlord, who needs a couple dollars a month more from his house which I've helped to.deteriorate, and never will I hate my good neighbors who need a cent or two more profit on this item or that, to help cover their losses incurred over many, many months during which they “financed their businesses” out of pocket (because OPA kept most of their shelves empty) and kept open and on the job to get me whatever they could. Also, I don’t want my neighbors who own their homes hating me because I'm only a rénter—nor do I feel happy trying to hate them, #

# » “WORSHIP IS MENTAL ACT WHICH CAN'T BE COMPELLED” By L. A. Jackson, Vernom We are thinking and talking a great deal today about education and democracy, and it is well that we should. To show what education can do to a person’s ooncept of democracy I shall give one example. On the radio program “Town Meeting,”. the question recently discussed was “Are church creeds essential to a religious life?” One of the speakers said, among other similar ideas, “Neither this government nor any government could ever grant to a man the right to be free as to whether he should worship God or not.” I don’t doubt his sincerity for a moment. But think of a man whose concept of democracy has been so distorted by his education that he could make a statement like that! This man does not seem to know that millions of Americans (and they include some of our greatest thinkers) cannot believe in personal ‘God, and that it is impossible to worship something you don’t believe exists. Worship 1s a

even in America can we live by the

Side Glances—By Galbraith

mental act. Does he imply that

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people should be compelled to perform the physical acts which are supposed to express this mental attitude? # . » “DOUBLING ROOT BEER COST MADE ME TEETOTALER” By I. R. D.,, Ciyy The price of my favorite beverage. has gone up a nickel in the past week. What should be said about it? So what's a nickel more or less. Will it break me? Will it break any root beer drinker? Possibly not—but that is not the point. Every evening during the summer months I get a nightcap—one or two glasses. It is good root beer, don't misunderstand. It may even be worth a dime. Ever since the OPA died July 1, I have been on the lookout for those hikes we were all afraid would come. They came—two cents here, a quarter there, and now a nickel more on root beer. I realize I can get along without my root beer nightcap. I don't have to drink root beer. I can drink city water, they haven't raised the price on that yet. And I'm glad the price on speaking

{up about something that just isn't

right hasn’t gone up either. In this price hike I see an evil that has stricken. our way of thinking. “Make more money—make it when you have a chance.” America was built by men who believed: in opportunity and enterprise. But this thing we see today, however, is a far cry from opportunity and enterprise. Business men who raise their prices are modern Pied Pipers who will lead America to disaster. When we hear “Justified Price Increases” we are listening to a dangerous tune. When we pay those prices we are jumping on the bandwagon headed for the day when root beer can be $1 a glass, With my 10-cent glass of root beer the other night I saw the new American idea—“Get as much as you can as soon as you can.” That just ain't good for America. I have become a teetotaler. » » » “MANY WOMEN DRESS LIKE HUSSIES; KIDS ARE O. kK.” By Anna Evans Nash, Cold Spring Road I certainly agree with the lady who wrote in the Forum about the value of dogs versus cats. With several unsolved murders of the last few years still on record is it any wonder that persons want dogs in their homes to warn of intruders who may invade. The good Lord made the dogs and cats as well as humans, and He certainly intended them to inhabit the earth the same as man, Now just who are the “holier than thous” who think they know better than the Lord Himself? Stop griping about such mundane matters, and come down to earth, that's what I say. I agree with the lady, too, about the kids in their jeans. Let them be! At least they are not going around like other brazen hussies in semi-nude playsuits, swimming suits and the like. I, too, would

much rather see the kids in their

bobby sox and jeans than to have] to look upon naked hussies parading the streets. If a man appeared so scantily clad as do some of the hussies, the police would pounce

1 “upon htm immediately..and arrest!

him for “indecent exposure.” What's sauce for the goose is also sauce for the gander, so why don't the police arrest these women who go about in this indecent fashion? The police arrest them in other cities, so why not in Indianapolis? Maybe kids don't realize the wrong. they do by going dressed in filthy shorts and the like, but any girl over 16 knows full well just how strictly indecent such garb

{is, and a “brazen hussy” is the

term for her. So let the kids In their bobby sox and jeans alone, they are dressed modestly and that | is something to be lauded these

| days.

DAILY THOUGHT

Doth the eagle mount up* at thy command, and make her nest . on high?—Job 30:27.

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ISAGA ‘OF INDIANA . .

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White ‘Child’ of

AROUND THE EDGE, and a little past the middle, of the 18th century two women of the Slocum clan in America were born. And one lived in Indiana. One of them was Margaret Olivia Slocum of well-to-do parents in Rochester, New York. She was graduated from Troy Female Seminary and taught at Ogantz school, near Philadelphia, Pa, In 1869, when she. was 41, she married Russell Sage, a widower, 53, with a lot of money. "For 37 years, till he died at 90, as she was 78, they were happily married. He left her $70 million. In the 12 years that she lived after he died, till she, too, was 90,

single gift was a contribution of $10 million to the Russell Sage Foundation. Till then this was the largest single contribution to philanthropy in the history of ‘the world.

To a Home in Indiana THE OTHER, AND EARLIER, Slocum was Frances Slocum, who became by force and adoption, a member of the Delaware Indian tribe, one of the great Indian tribes of North America. Early in the 19th century her Indian father was growing too. old to hunt and fish, as Indians did. So the family decided to go visiting, Indian’ fashion. They headed south from Kekionga, modern Fort Wayne, where they had been living, to Fort Washington on the Ohio river; to Piqua, and other Indian towns along the rivers of Ohio. One day they came upon a young:Indian, severely wounded. He was dressed as an Indian chief. Frances nursed him back to health. As he grew strong, he courted her, and she loved him. So they were married and the bride, her husband and her Indian parents returned to Kekionga. Here they lived for several years, probably till about 1810. Here’ Frances changéd her Delaware name, Weletawash, to Maconaquah, as she became the “Little Bear Woman" of thé Miamis. Here, too, her first baby was born, about 1805, when she was 32. A few years later the family moved to Osage village on the Mississinawa river near Peru, Ind. In this vicinity along the MNlississinawa river, they were allotted land by the United States government. Here they built a good log house. Here they prospered as farmers, as only few Indians ever do. Here, too, three more children were born to them, two boys who died young; and one girl, Ozashinquah, or Jane, who had five husbands and nine children, and”lived to old age.

WASHINGTON, July 15.—There’s a nightmarish quality about what goes on here and all over the country on this OPA issue, with a dim roar like a revolution in the background. This roar does not seem to penetrate the chamber of the U.S. senate. To all purposes, it is hermetically sealed. There's the feeling of being in a dream, for example, if you sit too long in the senate press gallery. You find yourself hanging precariously on the edge of a revolving little world all its own, in which presently nothing seems to make sense.

Which Is American Way? THERE DOWN BELOW, seeming far away and somehow futile, is Senator Taft of Ohio, rattling away in that harsh voice, the schoolmaster incarnate, still talking back to President Truman. Senator Wherry (R. Neb.) ‘jumps about and throws his arms around nervously, like a pudgy marionette jiggled by an unseen hand. He reads market quotations and protests prices are not really going up much, as if to convince himself. On the other side of the chamber Democratic Leader Barkley gets up and down, slowly and majestically. He is like the patient pastor of a well-appointed and well-heeled parish. He tells his well-dressed flock that the way of salvation is otherwise than” snipping price controls from practically everything. His former evangelical fervor ‘is gone. Nobody heeds him. ‘ ‘As Senator Wherry tells dramatically about the

SAN FRANCISCO, July 15—If the customers will permit, I would like to get a little sentimental I am back in my town and that is how I feel. It is an emotion I share with several million ex-soldiers and sailors. The two biggest events in the life of a military man are when he ships out and when he comes back. Since these poignant happenings occurred largely in three cities—New York, New Orleans and San Francisco—millions of us have a deep sense of ownership in those towns.

Glorious Spires FOR THAT REASON I don't think I'll ever stop feeling warm and happy when I return to any one of those three places and the feeling is especially strong about San Francisco. It was a serviceman’s town if there ever was one. New York was so big to the average short-time visitor that he no sooner got squared away than the man said “Let's go to war, Buster,” and off he went. New Orieans was a great fun town, but you were conscious of a strong resentment among the citizens, Some of the unreconstructed old massas and misses made it pretty clear that they wished you would go away and stop cluttering up their peaceful little joint. Incidentally, that attitude has changed now. They miss us fellows, espeeially the bar keepers- and the babes. It didn’t take long for the ginmill owners to figure out that working for the Yankee dollar was a good deal, and the gals openly admit now that they never had so much fun in their life as when their hamlet was packed with carpet baggers. San Francisco was just big enough to have everything a fightin’ man needed and small enough so you could orient yourself in a day or so. I never expect to see again anywhere a population which was so anxious to be nice. Nobody had to be lonesome in San Francisco. Just being under the

STUTTGART, July 15.—~The Germans are not starving now, as they assert, but many may, come winter. Today they are still better,off than their victims in despoiled countries, especially Poland and Greece. But the accumulated fat of the war years—when they wallowed in loot and lived on cream skimmed from all Europe—rapidly is wearing off now. Malnutrition has set in, particularly among children, aged and

Starvation Stifles Democracy

THERE ARE TWO GERMANYS today. First, the almost dead industrial cities and Berlin. There hungry and still dazed people haunt the meager black markets and nightly huddle in packs amid the bomb rubble and ruins. ? The other Germany is & green, orderly and beautiful countryside almost untouched by war's physical devastation, On these farms and in these villages peasants and refugees from bombed-out cities have livable housing. They supplement the meager official ration with farm hoardings and garden produce. They are better off than most of Europe and the British Isles. Yin But their future is far from rosy because of the growing shortages of fertilizers and machinery and because of stricter governmental regulation of their produce: Subnormal city diet is causing rapid increase of tuberculosis and other diseases as well as a rising death

present. situation may be described as that of gallop-

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ing malnutrition leading to eventual slow starvation.

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rate among children and old people. Half the children. | are getting rickets and the weight of the average adult has been reduced by about a third. Thus/ the

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Indians Lived Here $ * One day in 1835, Frances Sloctifi, growing old and thinking of death, told to George W. Ewing, a mer~ chant and trader with the Indians of Logansport, Ind, the story of her life, Ewing at once wrote to the postmaster at Lancaster, Pa., relating what Frances Slocum had told him. About two years later, as & result, her brothers, Joseph and Isaac, and a sister, Mary, came to visit her, § Two years later Joseph, with his two daughters, pald her another visit. Several years after, her nephew, George R. Slocum, the son of her brother, Isaac, moved west with his wife and two little girls

—}-she handled -her--inheritance wisely. Her —greatest——1o be rear her as Tong as she lived,

In all these contacts with her Slocum kin, Frances Slocum steadfastly refused to return to them, even for a visit, She was too old, she s#ld, to travel so far, or to change back to their way of living, On this point she was kindly but firm, and final, : In the long perspective, Frances Slocum can be seen clearly only as she is considered by contrast with Margaret Olivia Slocum. They both stem back to Anthony Slocum of Taunton, Mass, their first ancestor in America. These two women lived in different worlds. Frances Slocum lived, from the time she was a plastic child of five until she died, aged 74, among primitive people, with roots still deep in the countless thousands of years behind them, Margaret Olivia Slocum lived among the highly developed people of the modern world, moving on to greater things, Seen so, the story of Frances Slocum becomes a saga of environment. Her great gift was that she '- could live life on its lower level without losing her poise and vision of better things. Only a real woman could do that.

A Good Hoosier

FRANCES SLOCUM LIVED humbly and with dignity in the Indiana log cabin that her Shepoconah built for her. But there is no evidence to show, nor any good reason to believe, that she might not have graced a home backed by a $70 million fortune as fittingly as Margaret Olivia Slocum did. For about half her life Frances Slocum lived in Indiana. Here she loved her husband, her children, her home, and her state, and she cherished them all till she died. In the over-all view of Indiana, Frances Slocum was a good Hoosier,

IN WASHINGTON . . . By Thomas L. Stokes Is U.S. Senate Hermetically Sealed?

number” of cattle pouring into market, you can almost hear the thundering herd. Where have all these animals been, while the men of the senate complained there was no meat for America? AN the other things people wanted to buy—where have they been? You can treat this as a moral question and get indignant about the way they have been, held back for. higher prices. Or you can resign yourself to what Senator ©O'Daniel of Texas calls “The American Way,” which, translated, seems to mean to get all you can while the getting is good. Then you get in a cab, and the driver wants to know what they're doing about OPA. “Truman certainly told them, didn't he?” The revolutionary . spirit still persists in the American people, for which there should be some thanks. You get the feeling this thing goes much deeper than some of those.men in the air-cooled senate chamber realize as they yap, yap, yap and urge calmness.

Truman Waits

WHATEVER HAPPENS ON OPA, you have the feeling that this revolutionary spirit will continue unless prices are kept down, that the summer will be full of buyers’ strikes and picket lines. This issue goes right into every home. The little gentleman in the bow tie in the White House has spoken his piece—and loud. He sits and watches and listens.

REFLECTIONS . . . By Robert C. Ruark ‘Frisco Always Warm to Veteran

same sky with the natives constituted an inéroduction. And if you had anything wrong with you, like a busted wing or a distinguished limp, you had to beat off solicitous San Franciscans with a stick. Nice old ladies clawed and fought to cook you a home-type dinner, nice young ladies clawed and fought to enliven your social life, and male civilians of all ages were deeply wounded if you paid for a drink, If you were shipping out everything in Frisco took on a special significance. And the tall spikes of white buildings diminishing as you passed under the Golden Gate bridge made the saddest sight I ever saw. Conversely, to a man returning, not. even the Statue of Liberty conjured up the same emotion as the first view of those buildings. Alcatraz island may be something less than glamorous to the people who have to live there, but to a guy fresh back from the Solomons it was mighty pretty.

A Lasting Thrill I'VE SEEN TOUGH MARINES cry when the transport berthed and the band played and once I saw ‘a marine bend over and kiss the planks of the dock. San Francisco wasn't a city then. It was milkshakes and steaks and women with shoes on and neon signs and home and mother. And best of all, it was cold. Just being cool again {s something terribly important to a guy who has second-degree jungle rot, recurrent malaria, and a fresh memory of

a lot of damned green islands which steamed and

stank in the sun, or were dank and miserable in the rain. San Prancisco looks a little naked now because the uniformed quotient has been greatly reduced. But the old feeling hasn't changed. If I can speak for other Pacific-side servicemen, none of us will ever get old enough not to be thrilled by this town. For me, at least, it stirs up vivid memories of the greatest adventure that I am likely to have.

WORLD AFFAIRS . . . By Ludwell Denny Germans Whining About Their Diet

As a result, there is much whining among Germans who cannot understand that suffering is worse in countries they ravaged. Our military government is not pitying or pampering Germans. But it is trying to prevent starvation, for hard-boiled as well as for humane reasons. It holds that the starvation policy would boomerang. : A starvation policy would defeat the policy of the occupation, There is not only the need for demilitarization and denazification but also for the positive

——task—of democratization. as the best long-term se- ~ curity against revival of German militarism and ag=

gression. Starving people cannot be taught de-

mocracy.

Democratization involves salvaging poisoned minds

of former Hitler youths who will determine the type of Germany that exists in the next 20 years. Hunger will breed desperation and revolt, which in turn will mean a longer American occupation, higher U. 8. taxes and more American’ boys drafted for the foreign police job.

Economic Unity Necessary

THAT MIGHT MEAN the American public would tire of occupation and force a premature withdrawal of our troops, inviting an unreconstructed Germany

‘to. plot another world war, This is the key to the - -

paradox: of American officers, who so recently fought ‘Germans and who neither love nor trust them, trying hard to prevent German starvation while other peoples hunger. < go ; Unless economic unity is achieved soon-—permit-ting an unbalanced American zone to get Russian zone food, British zone Ruhr ‘coal and steel, and re vive internal German non-military .trade and come mérce—chaos will multiply starvation this winter.

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