Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 October 1946 — Page 4
IN 1948 VOTING
Red Tape, Shortages Put “At Top of Campaign Issue List,
By ROBERT BLOEM
America must have a single foreign policy and put an end to “do it our way or else” tactics of gov~ ernment here at home, Senator Leverett Saltonstall of Massachusetts said here last night. Republicans have the responsibiljty of assuring these two vital developments, of ending shortages and bungling by electing a Republican congress Nov. 5, he told G. O. P. veterans at a Columbia club rally. The reward of a G. O. P. victory in the congressional elections this year, he promised, will bea Repub-| lican national administration in 1948 { In his address before the county Republican veterans and in interviews earlier, the New England senator placed shortages and red tape ; at the top of the list of issues in Senator Raymond E. the current campaign. He stressed | congressional candidate Albert J. Beveridge Jr. the importance of foreign policies,| club,
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> Willis (left) headed soon for retirement, gives a few pointers to 11th district t last night's Republican veterans’ rally in the Columbia . . : < : at last nig P ] y charged, the government nullifies| rnment should not own or control | Second with 19,029 cases:
| nism on a basis parallel with food | Pearl Harbor still exists, Communism Issue | shortages as an issue in this cam- after the end of the w The issue of Communist “dom- | paign. has failed to correct jit." : nance” of certain Democratic party | Continuance of the emergency; “In New England, he said, elements, he said, is not a major status in the nation, Senator Sal- hate the. ‘or else’ practice of the one In Massachusetts and he! tonstall charged, constitutes an ad- | government. When I was governor minimized its importance. Indiana | mission by President Truman t
partisan politics gives way to national interests.
ust
ar, and “he | me how I was to run m
| department or some other agency, ! On the foreign front, he described i blé el ts th : “we | or else he would see to it that fed- the horrors he saw in his tour of sionable elements that go InW an
m bomb policy, which | and an slo b polled: In Wisle | Republicans have placed commu-|the emergency which started at|madder than to have a federal ofmonths ficial come into my office and tell come, the whole problem is lost in | “Beyond a shadow of a doubt” he
welfare ed ti i i ; ! y a morass of red tape. |said, “control of uranium and fis- ports of two -other diseases, djphtheria and influenza.
aiptheria menace earlier this year
eral monies were withdrawn,
hat thére was nothing that made me land, We want meat.
rr
THT. INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
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OCT. 11, 1946
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Republican veterans, attending a rally to hear Massachusetts’ |
Il Tells Ra
| Senator Leverett Saltonstall of Massachusetts (center) gets the Hoosier viewpoint on politics from state Republican Chairman Clark Springer (left) and Indiana's Senator Homer E. Capehart. Senator
Senator Le \tt Saltonstall last night, paused before the banquet for Ey vay ns oa 1 | Saltonstall was principal speaker at a G. O. P, veterans’ rally at the
a quick strategy session with county G. O. P. Chairman Henry Ostrom. | 0 00 "0
Left to right are™John D. Hughes, James Klicfgen, Mr, Ostrom, Floyd
R. Mannon and Cale J. Holder. Mr. Holder was chairman for the “ re oy dinner and Mr. Mannon toastmaster, DECREASE IN POLIO | Dogs Eat Well n
and oldest hospital “in Massachu- growing out of the war, he said,
; | setts has been feeding horse meat transcend partisan politics. CASES IS REPORTED
* to its patients. | “There can be no Democratic or |
| “I have wired the :OPA, the de- Republican foreign policy. There] WASHINGTON Oct.
wired the President, I received a must be one policy that can be rec-| disease.
reply from the department of ag- | ognized everywhere in the world 8s| motal cases reportéll to the United |
riculture which referred me to a the policy of the United States of States public health service here for [the week ending Oct. 5 were 1143,
» y o t ! % ” statement. by the President, the America:
y Science Service
11, -= In-
| control board, I have wired the de- can't be two Democratic foreign fantile paralysis still is decreasing,
i | partment of agriculture, I have policies within one cabinet. There but 1946 has gone down in history |
as the second worst year for the] |
President said decontrol is out of | n, [bringing the year's total to 10,641
His experience at Bikini lagoo
his hands. I was referred to the| ases
OPA. Still there is no meat in the senator said, taught him that| Worst vear was 1016 when 27.363! 3 > FAR i
Massachusetts.” (the atomic bomb energy must be cases were recorded. In housing, Senator Saltonstall tne exception to the rile that goy- week's figures came in, 1944 stood
its efforts to help the veteran be-|
Until last]
This year's total is expected to
|cause, through failure to prepare Production and, distribution of In-{.. 0h petween 23000 and 24,000
{months ago for the problems to |dustrial products. | cases.
Good news was found in the re-
A threatened
‘Nazi prison camps in Europe. The atom bomb must by legislation be seems to have died down, while no “We have no meat in New Eng- problems of displaced persons, re- placed and remain in the hands of signs of an influenza epidemi~ hav Our higgest building ravaged lands, all problems government.” heen noted.
. . » Filipino Palace Times Special MANILA, P. I, Oct. 11.—The dogs of Malacanan palace, official home of President Manuel Roxas, are the envy of every canine in the Philippines—and maybe of some human beings in the United States. The dogs—two Irish setters and one Doberman .pincher, purchased in the U. 8.) arrived here recente ly. A veterinarian from the bu reau of animal husbandry immediately was called to prescribe a proper diet, Here it is:
Cooked chopped meat six times gs a week. eq ’ * Raw meat once a week. Vegetables, fish and milk, Another smart dog is on its way from the states. t \ ’ i" a 1 no Be and on oT.
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