Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 October 1946 — Page 2
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TOTELL TALE
: GOP. Sees ‘Doubtful’ in Camp; Democrats Plan Local ‘Exposes.
By NOBLE REED More voters in Marion county are confused over issues and how they are going to cast their ballots this year than in any election campaign in the memory of the oldest | politicians. This is evidenced by door-to-door | polls taken by btoh Republican and Democratic workers out in the precinets where the list of “independent” or “doubtful”. voters is growing to proportions far beyond any previous election year. As the result, of course, the outcome of the Nov. 5 election as to county and township offices wil hinge entirely upon how these voters make up their minds on the issues in the next four weeks. | The Democrats and Republicans | will go after ‘these independent voters from widely divergent view= points. G. 0. P. to Forget Feuding The Republicans, operating in two separate factional groups with rival headquarters, will forget their feuding in the next four weeks to base « their campaign strategy around the theory that the growing list of “independents” means a heavy protest vote—againts post war shortages and prices. ; “We take this independent vote to mean that the people are really getting mad at conditions developing under the national Democratic administration,” said Henry E. Ostrom, chairman of the regular G. ©. P. committee. - Straight Down the Line The Citizens’ Republican committee, which recently announced it would declare a temporary truce "in its fight to oust Mr. Ostrom from the’ chairmanship, is interpreting the independent vote about the same way the regular organization is sizing it up. “We're going straight down the line for all Republican candidates,” 4s the gist of statements from both . the Ostrom camp and the rival Citizens committee. ; How far this unity of purpose will go at the polls is a matter of conflicting conjecture among Republican leaders, Some who are still irked over the bitter primary campaign in which Judge Judson. L. .Stark beat the regulars in the prosecutor nomination race, say their followers will “scratch” their vote against Judge Stark and others backed by the Citizens’ committee, ‘Scratching’ Discounted But Judge Stark and others of the Citizens’ committee don't think there will be enough “scratching” among Republican voters to change the outcome any. " The Democrats, presenting -a united front, are about to open up with some hot and potent blasts on local issues of government. Their campaign guns are loaded with the widest variety of local issues the party. has collected since they were swept .into power here in 1030 and started losing out in 1040, 1642 and 1944. Democrats Plan Exposes In the next four weeks the voters will hear more about what's been going on in the Republican-con-trolled local government than they heard in any of the last two cam-
These issues will include charges about a liquor racket tie-up with some G. O. P. bigwigs, the use of law enforcement agencies as political footballs for personal prestige . in the G. O. P..and the waste and - Inefficiency resulting from factional féuding. Plan Fight for Bonus
The Democrats also will disclose 8 Republican-sponsored movement toward a city tax on payrolls and tell the voters that a Democratic victory is the only assurance against another tax on the wages of workers. : The Democrats also will plug for 8 state bonus for veterans of world war II. . If the growing mass of independent voters go to the polls on these issues, Democratic leaders contend
offices Nov. 5, Polls of the independent voters Indicate that most of them haven't decided what issues will influence them when the time comes to cast their ballots,
Minus Chol
Chinese Officers Visit Wakeman Hospitdl
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES ___ -
unty Voters Found Undecid
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LA UKSDAY, OCL 3, 146°
ed As Election Nears
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Six Chinese army’ officers, including 3 major general, this week inspected Wakeman General at Camp Atterbury. They: are (left’ to right): Maj. Yihg-Swii Hseuh, Col. Ping Shiao, Col. Chen Chao, |Gamson, Los Angeles’ No. 1. gams=
| | | found by a policg radio car on rou- | tine ‘patrol, but was unable to talk
b West Coast Gamblers Are
- a | Capone, notorious : Chicago crime | |czar, He missed. | ‘Gamson . was still alive when |
to officers and died en route to a hospital. : |
Witnesses at the apartment house | told ‘police they Saw a shiny black | | sedan speed away to the north,
Were Slaying Suspects
Shot to Death.
LOS ANGELES, Oct; 3 (U. P).
LOPRREN | _Underworld warfare early today| Both Gamson, 38, and Levinson hospital |, |
ubbed out Benny (The Meat Ball) | were suspects in the .gangland slaying last May 2 of racketeer|
| nave returned with nothing he took
MINISTER TO SPEAK HERE OF AID MISSION oo:
The Rev. Perry Avery who gave away his personal possessions While host pastor. on a relief mission to Europe will| - address the first autumn dinner to-| N- Y. morrow at 6:30 p. m. in the First Congregational church. The Rev. Mr. Avery. escorted a|harbor today: Arriving—Fort Town. cattle ‘boat from Canada to a Euro-|send, Halifax; George Washington, pean port. ‘He was so moved By the [Bermuda. suffering "he saw that he is said to'gel, Bremerhaven (army),
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THURS
Maj. Gen. Hei-Lin Hsu, Col. Ling-Sun Woo, and Col. Tah-Mou Peng.
|bler, and a Chicago confederate,
George Levinson.
| Pauley Gibbons, whom police called |
‘Refuse to Budge Inch on
: p Soviet
they'll be swept back into county
Link Béivieor Cancer, Die
ATOM SECRETS T0 STAYIN U, Sia Ar
closed yesterday that he has bought
[38 steers from a Texas ranch so
| Mr,
that his employees will have enough meat to continue working. “Many of our 150 men have com-
Relaxing Controls.
“As a business side with {wounds in hls chest. |
BUYS TEXAS STEERS 'plained of a lack of energy because
th an't get meat,” said Thomas |his chest and shoulders, was found | in the west.” 0 FEED EMPLOYEES. > president of the General | dying on the sidewalk in front of
Steel Products Corp. of Astoria and Flushing, Queens. man 1 can't afford this.” ; Kearns said he was now |
having a corral built at his Flush | ing plant to house the steers until | they were slaughtered.
{a, bachelor apartment.
Gamson, with four bullet holes in | “the toughest guy in the rackets
Three weeks later bullets from a gangland ambush riddled Gamson's | sedan but the rotund gambler | escaped with only a slight scalp
Levinson, 41, was found dead in“at ‘least two” bullet | wound. Shot at Al Capone Detectives suspected a connection |
Levinson held the gangland dis= | between the two shootings, but |
tinction of being the only man who | Gamson insisted “the bullet holes | ever. took a shot at “Scarface” Al' were “drilled by vandals.”
By ROBERT J. MANNING |
United Press Staff Correspondent | Pg
LAKE SUCCESS, N. Y,, Oct, 3.—| The United States refused to budge | an inch today on “the fundamental principles” of its plan for world
atomic controls. In effect. America challenged Russia to suggest a better way of preventing an atomic war. Bernard M. Baruch, American delegate on the United Nations atomic energy commission, said the proposals for outlawing atomic weapons were “a mere agreement” without teeth. Mr. Baruch also angrily attacked Henry A. Wallace, ousted secretary of commerce, for creating confusion by refusing to acknowledge publicly that he was wrong in his published statements about the American plan. E The 76-year-old Mr. Baruch was apologetic for his “first public argument ‘in more than 30 year's service to the government” at a press conference last night. |
Gives Text of Letter
He released the text of a telegram to Mr. Wallace in which he said: “You have no monopoly of the desire for peace. I have given 30 years of my life to the search for peace and there are many others whose aims have been the same.” Mr.” Baruch also released a lengthy analysis of Mr. Wallace's criticism of the American control plan in the former secretary of commerce's July 23 foreign policy letter to President Truman. He said Mr. Wallace admitted privately last Friday that he was in error regarding basic facts, but had failed to keep a promise to admit the errors publicly. In the course of his attack on Mr Wallace, Mr. Baruch served notice i that the U, 8. would not back down from the basic objectives of the American plan and that it would consider anything short of them as evidence. that the atomic commission had perpetrated a “fraud on the peoples of the world.” U. 8S. Wants‘to End Veto
Basically the American plan would set up a system of international inspection to prevent diversion of atomic fuels to nonpeaceful uses and create a permanent atomic authority in which the Big Five would not have any veto power, The Russians proposed that the nations agree by treaty to outlaw atomic weapons and destroy within three months of the treaty's ratification all stocks of atomic bombs. “Any modification,” Mr. Buruch said “which achieved-agreement, but failed to provide effective control
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and safeguards to prevent the mis-
use of atomic energy and to give timely warning of violations, would! merely. create a false sense of security.” He said the United States was willing to discuss “details” of atomio control with other nations if those detalls fell within “the proper framework of principle” laid down by the United Nations assembly in its resolution creating the atomir
CHARGES JUGOSLAVIA | PERSECUTES CHURCH
ZAGREB, Oct, 3 (U. P.).—Arch- | bishop Aloysius Stepinac charged | today in"his defense against allega- { tions of collaboration and subversive activity that Yugoslavia is persecut|ing the Catholic church which he {said “in a short. while will be an- | nihilated™ here, Archbishop Stepinac's dramatic statement came after the prosecution rested its case with a chrage {that the archbishop was trying to | make himself a martyr “like Jesus i before the court of Pilate.” | Archbishop Stepinac did not re{ply to the charges of collaboration | With the pro-Nazi Ustachi or the | complaint of ‘subversive activity {made by the prosecution. :
rr ——
ine Is Reported| Se
: By Science Service AUBURN, Ala. Oct, 3.New oi.) tumors ‘occurred in dence for 4 link between cancer and | the livers of 30 per cent of the rats diet is reported by W. D. Salmon | receiving the low-choline diet, Priand D. H. Copeland of thes Ala- mary cancers were ‘found in the agricultural experiment sta- {lungs of 38 per cent of the animals
Malignant
* Corduroy Bib Top Overalls. s % eit 2.85
on here. A diet that does not contai
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and liver,
In the experiment, dietary cancer ! of the animals was|a vitamin, bl of the li in ver in {cancer to diet, the work of t follows cirrhosis in:Alabama nutritionists -is | lage of cases, the the first in which cancer has been out in their reoan Journal of [as a result of a specific dietary
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4.00
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§ Luncheon Served--11:00 a. m. to 2:00 p. m.
-= 3:00 p. m. $0 5:00 p. m.
Fledce Cottt i vvi ions: cinnsvit
faway except -the “clothes on his fd \ ; He is pastor of the First U S| | Congregational church, Kokomo. ‘ede | The Rev, Marcus W, Johnson is ! ABER] army toda SHIP MOVEMENTS in a demo NEW YORK, Oct. 3 (U. ship! [J 3h ant movements scheduled in New York Along Nl ONE: the army a J carries a 1 Departing—Marine An TWO! SI The one us THRE] chine gun, FOUR * the. should fired from fire power
POLICE ° \ TO MOT
A plea to m i juvenile hiteh ! day by Lt. G police juvenil He said th: out-of-town b stranded in t) returned to tl department,
COLUMB! 40 YE
Time COLUMBUS serving 40 yea Clifty school} Robert E. Urb
cause of fail Metzdorf, C m,
His record +
teacher on th ——————
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enough choline results, within eight | tw 16 months, in cancers occurring|cular. tissue, in a high percentage of laboratory {animals receiving the same diet as abnormal the. others hs, both cancerous and pre- amounts of , occurred principally in cancer,
In 10 per cent of the cases, malig- | n nant tumors developed under the | skin or were imbedded in the mus= None of the control!
but with choline
adequate | developed |
| Choline is a relatively wie wl
organic base, sometimes classed as | 2 v i
Of the many attempts to link |
produced in experimental animals
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