Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 September 1946 — Page 18

NI HENRY W. MANZ Business M 4 1 HOWARID SPAPER Owned and published daily (except Sunday) by Indianapolis Times Publishing Co. 214 W. Maryland Member of United Press, Scribps-Howard Newspaper Alliance, NEA Service, and Audit Bureau of " Circulations. v

" Price in Marion County, 5 cents a copy; delivered by carrier, 20 cents a week. Mail rates in Indiana, $5 a year; all other states, U. S. possessions, Canada and Mexico, 87 cents a month. “ 'RI-5551.

SERSARPN Give LigM end the People Will Find. Their Own Woy

OUR RESERVES ONE YEAR OLDER

A YEAR nas slipped past since the war and navy departi ments asked congress—and you—to authorize universal military training. A year lost, It has been one of the most critical years in world history. The most optimistic must concede that the international situation has deteriorated. So have our defenses. So, the record reveals, has our | ability to fight if war again should be forced upon us. The tragedy.is not so much that our army stands to- ; : day at one-thirteenth its wartime strength, that divisions . have disappeared, that our ships are in drydock. j The tragedy of inaction is that what the army and | navy call our “available reserve’—our supply of trained | manpower that could be called from civilian life to service in an emergency—has grown a year older without repleni . ishment. True, most of these ex-G. Is are still in their . prime. But nothing has been done to train the boys who . eventually must take their places in the reserve, or the youngsters who must follow them.

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3 » » ” n n » OUR “available reserve” learned its lessons well in world war II, but its military education ended with that war. . And in this crisis-ridden year the science of warfare has continued to move ahead. oy We should not delay longer. The “trained reserve” - should be replenished, month by month, year by year, with younger men. It should be taught to fight with lessons

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Fl : h Tie » ANOTHER THING I REMEMBER we kids had to put up with was Fletcherism, a dietary rule invented to apply to the mastication of food to the point of complete pulpifaction; It was as horrible as the definition leads you to believe. For the life of me, I can’t recall exactly when this phenomenon made its appearance in Indianapolis. I'm inclined to believe, however, that it turned up before we kids were ordered to practice the Simple Life and, of course, everybody knows that the Simple Life was one of the issues of Theodore Roosevelt's administration (1901-9), ‘ The corqllary of which is, of course, that Fletcherism was a manifestation of the Nineties. But I'm not too sure. "However, it sounds reasonable for, of all the cults we kids had to put up with, those of the Nineties were the weirdest. . Offhand, you'd suppose that Fletcherism was a cult thought up by some Californian. It was nothing of the sort. It grew out of the head (or stomach) of a simonpure Yankee by the name of Horace Fletcher. Whether Dartmouth college (his alma mater) had anything to do with it is something for future historians to ponder.

Chew It Up MR. FLETCHER, SOMEHOW, got the idea that the average human being did not masticate his food, as thoroughly as he should. And so he went to work to learn what would happen if every mouthful were dissolved and reduced to a creamy pulp before it was swallowed. It made him feel a whole lot better, he said. Thence, by extension, Mr, Fletcher jumped to the conclusion that he had a cure for all the ills of mankind—as pretty a non sequitur as ever came out of New England or, for that matter, Dartmouth college. It wouldn't have been so bad had Mr. Fletcher con-

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Top Italian Lea

ITALY’'S THREE MOST IMPORTANT political figures today were all refugees from Benito Mussolini's

Hoosier

"| do not say, but |

Forum

your right to say it." — Voltaire.

tyrrany during the Fascist era. The present premier and leader of the Christian Democratic (Catholic) party, Alcide de Gasperi, was

an exile in Vatican City, the tiny independent nation which is inside the city of Rome. Previously he had

agree with a word that you will defend to the death

~ kept constantly up to date. We hope in all earnestness that Americans will not have to fight again. But only by being strong and ready can we deter would-be aggressors. * Preparedness is insurance for peace. The war and navy departments are ready to ask congress for a modified universal military training law, The = proposed bill will serve the need, but only if congress en- [= acts'it promptly in-the next session. : We cannot afford to wait much longer.

MIDDLE WAY IN MIDDLE EAST THERE are ways of thwarting Russia's expansionist program without going to war, without even getting unduly tough about it. This has long been the contention of moderates in neither fringe of extremism about Russia. A fertile ground for sowing the seeds of a middle-way

"Why Didn't Link B

Use Name in Attack on C.1.O.2"

By.Ruth Owens, 5210 E. Walnut st. I have just finished reading Link Belt Employee's letter about the C. 1. O. and I sympathize with him very much, It is really too bad that any person should be forced {o forfeit his freedom because of this so-called Communisf organization.. It is a shame about the increase in dues, too, ? But, there is one thing that puzzles me. your job you will lose your seniority. Well, what would your seniority amount to if you didn’t have a union to protect it? And about your dues—do yéu ever attend your union meetings? 4

A vote was taken at a publicized meeting and the majority agreed to raise the dues. Why didn't you protest it then? Oh, yes! Did you refuse to accept your raise that the union. fought so hard to get for you? I believe there was a little

© American policy is the Middle East. Here the Soviet Rusgians—and the czarist Russians before them—long have been fishing in troubled waters with the aim of securing a | front door on the warm seas and busy trade routes of the south. Even before the end of world war 1I, Soviet agents were busy playing one minority group against an- | other, one Islamic state against its neighbor and all against - the western democracies. But meanwhile a surging spirit of independence has ; risen among these Middle Eastern states. Now they are © at another crossroads of history. They have had enough : of British dominance and yet are in no mood to be swallowed = by Russian despotism. They, too, are looking for a middle * way, which is the American way. Our Middle East opportunity will be told, in a serie! starting Monday, by -Scripps-Howard Staff Writer Allan Keller, It is clear from what he has reported that the United States, without getting tough about it, can furnish the means for the peoples of the Middle East to withstand | Soviet aggression. Nor will we exact the price of their surrender of independence. We can send them teachers, agricultural experts, public health technicians, sell them sup- * plies, grant small loans and help them develop their natural . resources. p In short, we can teach them the benefits of free enter- ~ prise. Thus can the expansion of Communist imperialism in that direction be combated, with honest and ethical | weapons.

§ 8 2

| PRIVATE RIGHT VS. PUBLIC WRONG

people.

has a right to protect itself. :

4 to work.

back two months later with more than 30 new demands

bh strike clause in its contract; it rejected the employer com i 2 . 1 : pany’s offer to arbitrate these new issues. i But jailing union leaders or members for contemp

ire the victims of court-made law and arbitrary action.

md. far, but not beyond the point where it becomes

Congress and the state legislatures should define th

given to

back pay involved, too, wasn't there? A friend of mine is a C. I. O. organizer, He has refused bribes of all kinds, from different companies, to keep the union out. One was $1000, one was for $2000 and one was a $7500 a year job as per= sonnel manager at a manufacturing plant. There are others too numerous to mention. He refused these offers because he is fighting to give the working people a chance. His salary does not compensate for his hard work, but his own selfrespect does. Listen, sister, (I know that you are a woman) my husband was on the negotiating committee during the strike and he put in many long

elt Employee

You say that if you quit

the Sept. 21 issue “gets my goat.” In this letter the Taxpayer calls the police force a police “farce,” and criticizes the police with “deciding to have a gaming shakedown with a bunch of brutal murders unsolved on their hands.” Surely Taxpayer reads the papers, and knows that this so-called gambling shakedown was instituted long before these murders to which I suppose he alludes. Could it be maybe that this Taxpayer Was caught in one of these raids? He also charges ‘the prosecutor's office with laxity, and yet when a man is brought up in court and the complaining witnesses do not appear against him, is that the fault of the police department or the prosecutor's office? For example:

apolis Times for Sept. 18, there is an imposing picture of a Daniel Boone a la 1946 and a story beneath

hard hours fighting for you and all the others. Our telephone rang on

{8 a.m. till 12 p. m, and I did my { best to keep the people informed as to any developments that arose. That was nerve-racking, to say the least. My husband did not receive any money for his work on the committee or for picket duty and he was really kept busy, too, Well, thank God, the effort and sacrifice were worth it, v When you say the C. I. O. is com~ munistic all I can say is that you are a parasitic termite that is trying to eat the foundation out from

munists.

[an average every five nlinutes from | 1.004 crime, Yet, and hire's the

it telling of the alleged actions of

!a certain party, and intimidation of |

one of the witnesses to a certain

{ironical part of it, on the front page of the same issue of The In- | dianapolis Times that carries Tax | payer's blast against the police and | the prosecutor's office, there is an {account of where this alleged culprit was haled into court for investiga-

{tion of these charges, and not a

| single witness appeared against him. As an auxiliary police. officer, I

have worked with these men on the Indianapolis police force for the last four years, and I sure think under our democracy and lay our | 1¢Y have done and are still doing country wide open for real Com- |a wonderful job with the material they have to work with. How about

On the front page of The Indian-|-

been jailed twice by the Duce.

Communists Lose Popularity THE HEAD OF THE Italian Socialists, Pietro Nenni, once toyed wtih the idea of becoming a follower of Mussolini, when the Fascist leader first left the Socialist party during world war I. Before Mussolini became premier, however, Nenni had made up his mind to fight fascism and all its works. He spent most of the 20 years of fascism in Paris, where he became closely acquainted with other outstanding Socialist figures in Europe. : Palmiro Togliatti, the Communist chieftain, spent his years of anti-Fascist exile in Moscow and was returned to Italy by the Russians shortly after the Salerno invasion to rebuild the Communist fences in the peninsula. At that time, he hid his identity under the nickname “Hercules.” : Mr. De Gasperi is the prime minister now; his party won about 35 per cent of all the votes in the national election last spring. He is also the foreign minister, but. he has promised this position to Mr. Nenni as soon as Italy shall have a peace treaty. His third portfolio, the interior ministry, is much desired by the Communists because it includes control of the police. Mr. De Gasperi states he will not give up that portfolio to anyone. While waiting for the foreign ministry, Mr. Nenni is a member of the Italian cabinet “without portfolio.” He is a brilliant writer and a brilliant speaker,

“JUVENILE COURT GROUP MISGUIDED, UNINFORMED"” By Charles L. Blume, 2442 Coyner ave. I am a citizen of a great nation, the U. 8. A. As I was growing into adulthood, learning to accept the responsibilities of citizenship, I learned that among- its many requirements ‘was what is called “fair play.” I am also connected with newspaper work and have been very proud of the things the fourth estate

stands for.” It is a bulwark of the spirit of freedom. It is with a heavy and aching heart that I feel in keeping with all that is dear to me I must tell you that The Indianapolis Times, a paper I love, has faltered. You are on Spongy ground. - You are permitting the paper to be credited with false information without an effort to correct the same. ' I refer to the letter by B. A. B.| in the edition of Thursday, Sept: 19, entitled “Forget Politics in the Juvenile Court” Quote: “I have been a Republican all my life, but! I most certainly do not intend to vote for Judge Rhoads. I'd vote for anyone in preference to the judge who turns the young hoodlums like. Howard Pollard loose to prey on the public.” The fact is that Howard Pollard never appeared before Judge Rhoads or any of his referees. 1 have spent some 20 years in the | study of government and that in-| cludes juvenile court. When tne] records are compared it is appar-| ent that Judge Rhoads has been the | most successful and progressive! judge of the juvenile court since its inception. I believe in giving credit for good | Civic Consciousness Stirring work for it makes for better work| ~ TH1g POTENTIAL REVOLT is significant not only on the part of those who hold po-| locally, but nationally. For it has been‘the Demositions of public trust and criticize| c,atic majorities that Ed Kelly rolls up with his only when the facts are at hand| piiherto efficient machine that have thrown the that prove the office holder inef- state, during the New Deal years, into ihe Democratic ficient, : column nationally with a handsome contribution of 28 1 am against the juvenile court electoral votes. Two years ago, to the surprise of committee and shall do all In MYyl-g,me experts, Cook county furnished the necessary power. to defeat it. It had one majority to offset the heavy downstate Republican chance and failed miserably, but vote, throwing the state to Franklin D. Roosevelt. It besides. hat, the facts show that its may be recalled that Mr. Roosevelt made ‘one of his members are misguided and unin-| fo campaign appearances here in one of Boss Kelly's formed about the court. Then I} ,,ohster Roman circuses, the same sort that Boss

CHICAGO, Sept. 27.—One of the most interesting developments politically out this way is that the crown seems to be slipping slightly askew on Mayor Ed Kelly, boss of Chicago and Cook county for so many years. Republicans, as well as independent and progressive Democrats with the gleam of civic reform in their eyes, are encouraged more than in a8 long time that they may toss out the machine in the murlicipal elections next spring—if they can find a dynamic crusader to carry the flag. None has been found so far.

ia 'OUR TOWN . By Anton Shore a : 4 ” a 4 ie a Cure for “All lls

: PITTSBURGH'S electric power strike endangers the j health, safety and welfare of a. community of 1,500,000 wo

That community, or any other so menaced, certainly

The efforts of the city of Pittsburgh to exercise this right, and to break the power strike, provide a distressing | commentary on the state of labor law in the United States. { The president of the independent union concerned, i who ordered the strike in open defiance of a state court i injunction obtained by the city government, was sentenced , to jail for a year on a contempt of court charge. Ten" mem- | i bers of the union’s strike committee were threatened with | || similar punishment unless they ordered the strikers back |

: Thes¢ drastic measures are justified, if they succeed | “in their purpose. The union’s conduct has been indefen- | | sible. After winning an 18-cent hourly wage increase and | , other concessions through arbitration last spring, it came |

including an additional 20 per cent pay rise. Despite a no-

cannot be guaranteed to bring about resumption of a vital } public ‘service in time to avert great suffering and irrep- | arable damage. It is more likely to convince them that they |

~ The great need is to prevent such strikes as the one at Pittsburgh—to forbid them by law plainly written on th statute books. The right to strike is a private right, 1t |

‘The freedom of individuals to quit employment at | ill ‘must be preserved, and their right to combine in unions tive bargaining must be protected. But union understand that they have no 1, what none of them would be | ividual-<namely, to attack public ng off the life blood of a com-

You didn't sign your name, but | T'll sign mine.

“POLICE DO WONDERFUL JOB UNDER HANDICAPS”

By Brooks E. Metealf, 1217 N, Belle Vieu pl. | police department. I have read with interest and dis- |

However, a blast by Taxpayer in| hand.

ithe boys who last Friday night caught two holdup men within five | minutes after the holdup occurred? | This is but one of many incidents that proves that Taxpayer is getting his money's worth from the]

So- give the police department a gust the criticism and slurs cast in break, and the next time you are| this Forum against the members of (disposed to criticize, be sure you the Indianapolis police department. have all the facts in the matter at |

believe (1) its principles are against (2) that the lives of individuals should not | be inthe hands of a few who {would not in reality be responsible

jour form of government,

(to all of the people, (3) that the office shall not be closed to anyone : Look at the citi- | zens school ‘committee. Could I be lon their ticket or succeed in de- | feating them? 1 doubt it even if I had the money, (4) the big names

|who can qualify,

Side Glances—By Galbraith

|

| t

|

‘| |

e

on the juvenile court citizens committee have not proven that they are really interested or really care abofit the problems of the juvenile {court for they are conspicuous by | their absence while the fights for | progress are going on. Editor's Note: In Wednesday's pa- | per, a lengthy letter from W, E. | Batchelder was printed reciting | dates and details of Pollard's record, | which have been deleted from Mr. | Blume's letter. An accompanying

| Times had never sald Pollard ap- | peared before Judge Rhoads, did | not intend to create that impres- | son, but felt that there were too many other cases of abuse of the probation system by Judge Rhoads. As we stated then, we. are opposed to Judge Rhoads because wf his record. That does not mean that the columns of The Times are closed to those who would defend him,

DAILY THOUGHT

Be glad in the Lord, and rejoice, ye righteous; and shout for joy,

all ye that are upright in heart. ~Psalms 32:11, Pi ” ~

‘career is my craving for ice cream!” in ¥ : | 3

-

"I'm taking the pharmacy course—what got me interested in the

4 ” | Be good, sweet maid, and let who will be clever; Do noble things, not dream them all day long; ny And so make life, death, vast forever

and that

“hn mp

editor's note pointed out that The

Frank - Hague puts on in Jersey City and Boss Ed Crump in Memphis. Ed Kelly has been influential in Democratic national affairs, a powerful voice among the big city bosses which persuaded President Roosevelt to drop Henry Wallace as vice presidential candidate in 1944 —and thus made it possible for Harry Truman to succeed to the White House. Now the boss is worfied, along with National Chairman Bob Hannegan, about the ostracism of the deposed secretary of commerce as a Democratic eampaign speaker. The statinch New Dealer is needed here to rally that element of ‘the party. Mayor Kelly stubbed his toe on an. issue that always arouses the citizenry, regardless of party afiilia~ tion. That is public education. Insistent agitation by newspapers and civi¢ organizations finally turned

WILMINBTON, N. C., Sept. 27.—This once sleepy little town, drowsy no jonger nd still bearihg<the imprint of big business, produced a great many ships for the government during the war. The North Carolina Shipbuilding Co. located here is one of the construction companies cited by the house merchant marine committee as having profited enormously in its wartime construction of cargo vessels, , :

Easy Money for Everyone ALL TOLD, THIS SEACOAST TOWN turned out 243 ships and when production was cracking, they were shoving a couple out of the yards each week. Going along with Henry Kaiser's outraged screams that his building of torpedo-bait. was a labor of love and practically a personal charity to the government, Roger Williams, head. of the Wilmington firm and also chairman of the Newport News, Va. Ship Building. & Drydock Co., loudly asserts that the government must be talking about two other fellaws, Mr. Williams expresses amazement that the general accounting office should saddle him with a charge of $27,645,029 profits on an investment of some three million, He says that after renegotiation and taxes they scraped through with a paltry $5,712,000 on a business volume of over 300 million plasters. Half a dozen local men reaped fortunes which can We called vast, The owner of an iron works is popu-

One grand, sweet song.

taxes, with a series of

~

war contracts extending far

larly supposed to have netted over five million after |

fined his experiment to himself, but that never is the plan of reformers. Mr, Fletcher had everybody in Indianapolis chewing to confirm his theory, with the result that we kids spent so much time over our food that our stamp collections suffered seriously on ace count of it. i Indeed, it was the time element that finally caused Fletcherism to fold up. If I remember correctly, it required no less than 200 mouth motions to reduce an olive to the consistency called for by Mr. Fletcher's formula. And when you consider that nobody stops with one olive, I think I can persuade even you that Fletcherism reduced our time to the, point that we couldn't do anything but chew, As for a peanut, a comparatively easy food to re duce to paste, it necessitated no less than 40 chews before Mr. Fletcher would clear it through the alimentary canal. Mr. Fletcher's theory had other defects, too. Some foods like beefsteak, for instance, lost their flavor all together when submitted to this prolonged mowth treatment. And I remember, too, that peas cooked with their pods (a delectable dish when gobbled) had a distressing habit of coming to the front of the mouth; in which case they could be swallowed only with difficulty, if at all. Which, of course, was hard to reconcile with Mr, Fletcher's theorem—namely, that food reduced to pulp would “swallow itself.” It just wasn't. true—not in Indianapolis, anyway.

Now It's Vitamins I'LL SAY THIS, though, for Mr. Fletcher, The determined and oftentimes mean-looking jaws with which all 60-year-old Indianapolis men (and women) are equipped are the result of Fletcherism, Well, as I said in the beginning, after Fletcherism came the Simple Life, and, after that, Dr, Emile Coue with his delirious formula: “Every day in every way, 1 am growing better and better.” Then, for some rea~ son, we stopped worrying about our spiritual condie tion and got right back to food—this time to vitamins,

WORLD AFFAIRS . . . BySexsonE. Humphreys ders Were in Exile

but his enemies say he is too much like: Mussolini. He doesn’t like opposition,’ and at present,he has a great deal of it, right inside his own party. A large minority of Italian Socialists do not desire any collaboration with the Communists; this party wing is led by Giuseppe Sarragut, who is chairman of the present Italian constitutional convention. Mr, Nenni wants .the Socialists and Communists to remain separate parties with a single program. Mr. Togliatti was minister of justice until June, but now holds none of the three ministries allotted to the Communists. He quit the government in order to give his full time to building up his party. The Communists have lost popularity in Italy because of Rus= sian support of Yugoslav demands for Trieste and Soviet demands for reparations, The Communists and Socialists each won about 20 per cent of the June votes. Mr. Togliatti would need Herculean strength to make Russia popular in Italy now,

President From Monarchist Area BUT NONE OF THESE PARTY LEADERS ls president of Italy. That honor is held by 4 man without party, the only man upon whom all three parties could agree. He is Enrico de Nicola, seven times president of the Naples bar association. He stayed in Naples all during Mussolini's regime, but did refuse the Duce's offer of a senatorial appointment. He is given credit for have ing persuaded King Victor Emanuel to give up his throne - and for having arranged the monarchyrepublic referendum. Yet he himself never announced whether he favored the monarchy or republic. Hig election was a sop to the Naples monarchists, however, Naples voted 80 per cent for a King, while the greater part of the rest of the nation wanted a republic. Hence Italy has a republic with a Neapolitan president.

POLITICAL REPORT . . . By Thomas L. Stokes Boss Kelly's Chicago Rule at Stake

the light on a deplorable situation in the schools— political control of the system, gestapo methods against teachers who did not bend the knee politically, suppression of freedom among teachers. An outside inquiry and a threat to withdraw ac= crettitation finally forced the mayor to act. He fired the superintendent of schools and replaced a pumse ber of board of education members, though it was not the complete house cleaning that had been demanded. Revolt still simmers, has penetrated the thick armor of the boss and. stirred some of the civic-cone= scious among the apathetic electorate to take a look at its acquiescence to machine rule. The machine here, which has existed under vari ous bosses of both parties since Chicago became & big, blustering city years ago, is like those elsewhere, with its quota of corruption. It reaps its profits to sustain itself and the loyalty of its lieutenants by business thrown its way—insurance, contracts for all sorts of building materials and. supplies, including coal: and the lower forms of protection for liquor, handbooks, and various rackets. Invesjigation some. time ago revealed that about half of the ward leaders were in the insurance business.

Problem to Find Revolt Leader IT 1S A POWERFUL GIANT#which explains why it is so hard to find a giant-Killer, “Liberal and ine dependent Democrats willingly would support a Ree publican of the clean-cut, independent sort, though they recognize the danger of supporting just any Re= publican who might create another big city machine on the wreckage of the old. There is some doubt Kelly will run again. He let out hints both ways. The elections in November are being awaited for a key. Republicans would like to capture enough county offices to give them a start for a campaign for the city next spring. The continued apathy on both sides is disturbing the leaders, as is indicated by current insistent demands by both Mayor Kelly and Republican Governor Green to get out and stir things up.

1

REFLECTIONS . . . By Robert C. Ruark * How a Ship-building Town Boomed

beyond the shipbuilding business. Another cleaned up millions in real estate, as the flood of incoming war workers and their dependents turned formerly impoverished property holders into Midases. Every= body made money—and-the ruling-power in the city was wrested away from the old bellwethers and given into the hands of the new aristocracy, the war-rich.

Down - here they are laughing cynically at the

{dea of anything sinister being proved by the ine vestigation of shipbuilding profits, If Mr. Kaiser gets by with his claim of one-tenth of 1 per cent.gain, they feel, all shipbuilders-will be able to walk off with their profits unchallenged. “They needed ships fast,” is the general feeling. “We built them ships—fast, War wastes a lot of money anyhow, and they pay off on production.” Ana they point out that Truman committee once praised the Wilmington company as operating under the lowest cost per ship of any yard in the nation. Down here they will bet you a new C-2 freighter against a used rowboat that .th¢ house merchant marine committee isn’t going to hang anything on anybody.

Taxpayers Carry Cost : TEXTILE MILLS and kindred industry mushroomed since the war, as many of the shipyard workers stayed:-on to burst the city's seams, | «Civic consciousness and civic exploitation fill tha |air. And everybody has a project. Down here they figure the transfusion was worth the price no matter what it cost the taxpayer.

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