Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 31 October 1946 — Page 21
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31, 1946 %
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COATS
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aha
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Inside Indianapolis ;
RAIN OR SHINE, hot or cold, downtown “open air news stands” are manned all year round. There's
news to sell every day and regardless of the elements
—it's hustled. ‘Many of the men haven't missed a
day because of sickness for years. Willie Silverstein,
1043 N. Pennsylvania st, who runs the stand on the southeast corner of Meridian and Washington sts., believes he has the coldest corner in the United States, “Why this corner is colder than the coldest corner Chicago has. I know because I sold papers there.” Speaking with a three-way split accent of e east, south, and finally a bit of Hoosier twang, told us that 99 per cent of his life has been spent newspapers. Beginning in the east he has, wked papers in Georgia, Alabama, Florida, Illinois and finally in Indianapolis, He is going on his ninth year in Indianapolis. The 50-year-old independent businessman goes to work at 6 a. m. and quits. at 7 p. m. A helper relieves him for one hour a day. Across the street and a block west Jack Lindsay operates a stand on the corner 6f Washington and Illinois 8ts. The stand has been in the family since 1913,
' Jack's father, Clarence Lindsay, has worked regu-
&
of unity among the five great powers in their efforts
larly on the corner for 33 years. Jack has worked on and off for 13 years. Since March he hds had the stand practically all to himself except on days when he helps his dad with heavy work on their farm. Both father and son live on a farm eight-and-a-half miles northeast of Danville. We mentioned Willie's “cold corner” to Jack, “Might be, but this corner gets pretty breezy” Jack commented. “Course the worst is yet to come.” Jack has a relief man who works fours hours a day. ‘The stand is open 12 hours a day and Jack thinks eight hours on a corner in one day is enough,
Customer Stuffed Dog in Pocket
GEORGE BATTS, 245 N. Capitol ave., hustles papers 12 hours a day. Part of the day he has “Brownie”
ge
Rain or shine . . . George Batts can be found at his newsstand on Market and Illinois sts. the year around.
Explosive Junk
WASHINGTON, Oct. 31.—Some officials of the war assets administration are delicate. They cannot afford to ruin their manicures on dirty old packing cases. Nor do they consider it wise to wade through
the nasty old mud outside their warehouses. The wonder is they didn't get their heads blown off. Inside the boxes that the well-groomed federals sold sight unseen for junk from their Philadelphia warehouses, were bombs... That go boom. Only they didn’t know it. Louis Brown, the suavest of the junkies testifying before a congressional investigating committee, said he was a little surprised when the 124 wooden cases arrived with the rest of his junk. “You didn't know what was in them?” asked Rep. oger Slaughter of Missouri. “Not at first,” said Mr. Brown. “Not until after we heard the explosion outside our office.”
Just Kicked a Box
“YES SIR,” said Mr. Brown. “We rushed out and we found one of our workmen sprawled on the ground badly shaken up. We asked him what had happened. He didn't know. He said all he'd done was kick one of those boxes.” When the smoke cleared away the junkmen opened up the boxes, found them full of high explosive, and called the war assets administration for a refand. :
Scie cience DESPITE THE FACT that large numbers of Amierfcan soldiers were stationed in far corners of the world—India, Burma, China and the islands of the Pacific—there seems no reason to believe that any exotic disease has been transplanted from tropical
areas to the United States. That is the opinion of Dr. Francis R. Dieuaide, scientific director of the Life Insurance Medical Research Fund and formerly chief of the tropical diseases treatment branch of the army medical departmént. : Early in the war there was much fear expressed that diseases previously known only in the tropics would break out -in epidemics in this country. This, however, has not happened. “It is likely: that there have been and will be poradic instances of certain infections contracted in s country which are traceable to returned service personnel,” Dr. Dieuaide told the 55th annual meeting of the Association of Life Insurance Medical Directors, “but it may be expected that the ultimate total will not be large and that such cases. will cease to appear before long.” So far, he said, we have passed through two summers without change in the incidence of malaria which can be attributed to returned service men.
War's Fast Tempo Helped TURNING TO DISEASES other than tropical, Dr. Dieuaide said that some concern existed over the possibility that the so-called Old-World , hookworm may establish itself in this country. There was also some evidence, he said, that the rise in diphtheria which occurred in this country during 1945 and 1946 may have been in part caused $y returned soldiers. As “That tropical diseases did not take a greater toll
My Day
NEW YORK, Wednesday.—It was Interesting, yes-
terday, in the United Nations to find the subjeet of
reduction of armaments brought up both by the Canadian delegate and by Mr. Molotov. There is no
question about it—the sooner there is agreement
as to the type of international police force we can have, the sooner it will be possible to discuss the way to reducing armaments universally. . g feel there is a lack of understanding in Mr, Molotov's speech of the fact that Mr. Baruch has only stated a. very obvious truth when he says that the veto cannot be used where the international control of the atom bomb is concerned,
Accused of Selfish Interests
THE UNITED STATES was accused of selfish interests as regards the plan developed by the Baruch committee. I am quite willing to believe, that selfish interests enter into that plan, but it seems to me, there is no pation which does not have selfish interests. The thing we will have to do is to come to
better served when we have international co-operation. I believe that for the present the general veto on quéstions which deal with the actual use of force
within a country by order of the security council
Is entirely correct. My
United Nations is built on the assumption “Ty
y ; . : "ip td ; a y - RA hve oa
0 a
to find ways of working together.
n understanding of the fact that selfish interests are
ola ’ 8
r +
with him at Market and Illinois sts. “Brownie is a WPA worker. -I take him home evéry morning at 9 a. m. and thed I go on to another stand at~Illinois and E. New York.” Brownlie, 4 black and tan Manchester dog, wears a leather coat when the weather gets cald. He hasn't missed a morning with his master for more than five years. “The tougher the weather, the better Brownie likes it.” The only days Mr, Balts misses are election days when he works at the polls, In nine years he hasn't missed a day at his stand. He opens promptly at 5 in the morning. Mr. Batts throws a wire hoop for frisky Browhie to retrieve with loud yelps and barks. “Ome morning one of my customers. came up to me and asked me what I had in my pocket. I told him I didn't have anything in my pockets. Then he stuffed tiny Brownie in my coat. I've had him ever since.” On the corner of W, Ohio and Illinoig sts., the “Mayor of Illinois st.,” Leonard Spellman, 320% E. Washington st, runs a newsstand. He has been on the safle corner for seven years. The “Mayor” ‘title isn't his idea—we found ‘that out from some of the other stand owners. The “Mayor” opens his stand at 4:30 a. m. He generally has a helper but recently he hasn't been able to “keep anyone on the job.” In seven years he, too, hasn't lost a day because of illness. Together with the stand Mr. Spellman has a little route in the , “I've got me a living here,” he said, but he'doeés think. that when the weather gets bad the city should allow the men to have more protection, At the present time all newsstands conform toa ruling that they are not to be enclosed. Several years ago fires broke out in about nine stands which resulted in the present ordinance forbidding closed weather-proof shelters.
Conducts Business Philosophically AT THE CORNER of W. Market and Illinois sts. we met Raymond Summers, 1238 W, 33d st. He operates his stand with his sense of touch to recognize coins, Mr. Summers has been selling newspapers in the city for more than 23 years and has operated his present stand for 10. We learned some philosophy from Mr. Summers, He recounted about the lesson he had learned a long time ago from his school teacher. : 8he told the class that if a man takes care
. of his office, the office will take care of him. He
conducts his business with that in mind. “Yes, I work—rain or shine because you know, I eat too— rain or shine.” A customer walked up, told Mr. Summers he had a Life magazine and dropped a dime into his hand. Immediately his acute sense of touch told him there was a mistake. The customer was reminded, He had forgotten that Life had gone up a nickel. “A lot of my customers with things on their.minds have handed me street car tokens absentmindgdly,” Mr, Summers said. The lone newsstand touching on the Circle is owned by Mr. and Mrs. Rollie Maples, 870 W. Maryland st. They have been serving Circle customers for nine years. Mrs. Maples is the real fulltime worker at the stand. Three times a day Mr. Maples goes to public school 5, where he sees to it the children get safely across the street. The day ends for the Maples when their quota of final evening papers is sold. That usually happens about 6:30 p. m. after they have put in a 12-hour day.
By Frederick C. Othman
“We hadn't bought bombs,” Mr. Brown said. “We bought junk and we insisted on a refund.” But these government people seemed a little embarrassed and wanted us to ship back their bombs, labeled junked machinery. That I would not do.”
Delicate Feet of WAA REP. SLAUGHTER said he believed this was a thoughtful decision; otherwise no telling who might have kicked a government bomb. Maybe even a
government official. The rest of this dispatch concerns the delicate feet of the war assets experts; read it, fellow tax= payers, and weep. * » Seems the Philadelphia warehouse had a pile of something or other stacked up outside under a tarpaulin. It was cold and it was muddy. Nobody bothered to look under the cover. Mr. Brown, Phil Bailis and a few other battling junkmen bought the works, paying $5560 for whatever was under the canvas. They were delicate, too, and never bothered to wade through the mud, 4 They were surprised to discover that the stuff in the mud consisted of new power units to fit on caterpillar tractors. There was assorted financial shenanigans among them, law suits, the passing of $100 bills, and the slipping of $400 to a lawyer. So a Percy Ransome, machinery dealer, finally got the power units. The deal, he said, smelled to high heaven. Another junkman said, “it stinks.”
By David Dietz |
in world war IT must be attributed in part to the rela-
tively short duration of the war in densely populated areas, including the Philippines, China, Japan and India,” Dr. Dieuaide said. “In those regions, except India, where only small numbers of American troops were stationed, operations went relatively fast and well for our cause, We did not have to meet the full potential forces in favor of diseases such as dysentery, cholera and plague.
450,000 Stricken by Malaria
“THE DANGER of dense populations seeded with disease, combined with prolonged and untoward military operations in which inefficiency and confusion cannot well be avoided, are great indeed.” Dr. Dieuaide says that the part played by tropical disease, even in the Pacific, should not be exaggerated. “With the exception of the 450,000 hospital admissions for malaria, no figures for any single disease have any statistical importance whatever,” he says. “Furthermore it is unlikely that any but trifling numbers of individuals have been or will be permanently incapacitated because of tropical disease. As a matter of fact, accidents in the services, to which surprisingly little attention has been paid by the public, caused far greater damage than disease.” Statistics have a told and impersonal touch about them and Dr. Dieuaide realizes this. “The point of view of the individual should not be entirely neglected,” he adds, “Thousands of men and women suffered greatly and hundreds lost their lives because of tropical disease. “During the war, our citizen arfiy and navy achieved an excellent record in this struggle against tropical diseases, This splendid showing is due to high standards and loyal efforts in both preventive and clinical medicine. It is just cause for pride on the part of the medical profession of our country.”
By Eleanor Roosevelt
for co-operation throughout the world. That unity never can exist, however, if our nation, Great Britain and Russia do not stop discussing their differences. Unity is created by trying to find points. of agreement—by developing better understanding among the individuals representing each group. By this they
‘may interpret better to their various countries the
points of view which must be arbitrated in order
?
A Miserable Life : AT: NO TIME will everyone feel that he has won all he desires. But it is just this give-and-take which has to be developed within the United Nations. Otherwise, we will go back to the isolation of individual nations and in the world, as it is today, that seems to mean a miserable life for the people of every nation, Mr. Molotov is quite correct when he said: “Atomic bombs used by one side may be opposed by atomic bombs and something else from the other side.” I suppose that the day will come when ull nations will | know the secret of making the atomic bomb and since all nations, inclyding Russia, Great Britain and ourselves, are now busy developing other weapons of war, they also will be available, + Compromises are the only solution that I know
By Ed Sovola
|
SECOND ‘SECTION
THURSDAY, OCTOBER’ 31, 1946
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THE MEN YOU'LL VOTE FOR IN NOV. 5 ELECTION—
Candidates For State Offices
Marion county voters go to the polls Nov. 5 to elect a U.S. senator, a congressman, state, county and town-
ship officials,
It has been customary in other election years to publish information on each candidate to the office for which
>
he aspires.
The information included his business, his church, his lodge and family connections.
State Secretary
i
State Auditor
» ®
°
gon * 3
This year The Times places the emphasis on the man, ‘not his connections. Every candidate was asked why he "believed he should be elected. The Times sought to learn what concrete ideas each candidate had concerning the office he seeks. Today we publish the fourth of a series of articles with the answers each candidate wrote, Today’s candidates
seek state offices. "®
| State Treasurer |
Supt. Instruction
Mr. Bath ‘Mr. McClain Mr. Burch Mr. Barbar Mr. Millis “Mr. Sexton Mr. Watt mr. Furnish THOMAS E. BATH ALVAN V. BURCH FRANK T. MILLIS BEN H. WATT (Republican) (Republican) (Republican) (Republican)
“I believe that only through the Republican party can America cast off the bonds of confusion and of bureaucracy and once more get back on the road which leads to common sense, not communism. I am proud of the record which has been made during the past two years by the Republican party in Indiana and I believe that on the basis of that record the voters of this state will vote to continue Republican administration.”
HARRY E. McCLAIN (Demecrat) “I think I should be elected because I believe I have a background of governmental experience which entitles me to the office of secretary of state. As your insurance commissioner from 1933 to 1837, I was instrumental in placing Indiana among the leading states of the nation in insurance practice and legislation. The 1935 state insurance law has been adopted as a model by many states.”
Court Clerk
Mr. Kale THOMAS C. WILLIAMS (Republican) “I believe it absolutely necessary for the well-being of this nation that we repudiate the Communistic philosophy of the New Deal and I believe, further, that this can only be accomplished by the election of Republicans.”
JACK KALE (Democrat) “I think I should be elected because of my familiarity with court procedure in nearly two years as a deputy prosecuting attorney of St. Joseph county. That position I resigned in 1942 to enter the United States army.”
We, the Women
‘Monstrosity’ Better Thah No Home at All
By RUTH MILLETT
WORK HAS been stopped on the half-completed frame housing units that were to be home to 156 veterans and their families-in Phoenix, Ariz.
because a judge has decided the frame dwellings are “monstrosities” unworthy of former servicemen.
Mr. Williams
Anyone looking at a picture of
“I want my party to be a leader and not a follower and see to it that the OPA is discontinued in its entirety and reduce the unnecessary number of federal employees from a third to a half and let them return to a position that will prove to be an asset and not a liability to the taxpayers. Stop {the wild spree of spending the taxpayers’ money.”
GEORGE BARNHARDT (Democrat) “I think I should be elected because of my experience in Indiana government, With the exception of the period from 1941 to 1944, when I was director of personnel for the Indiana state highway commission, I have been employed with the Brazil Clay Co. I started in 1921 as a brick wheeler and now am {superintendent of both the com{pany’'s plants. in Brazil.”
Supreme Court
(Second District)
Mr. Emmert JAMES A. EMMERT
(Republican) ! “I feel 1 have had the general and legal background and experi-
lence to qualify for the position. I]
{
{liberal arts college and law school
{and since 1923 when I was admitted |
to the bar I have taken an active linterest in public questions and affairs. In 1925 I was elected mayor of Shelbyville, and in 1928 and 1934 elected judge of the Shelby circuit court, which has civil, criminal, 'probate and juvenile jurisdiction. {In 1942 and 1946 I was elected at-
torney general of the state of In-|
diana. These years of public service constitute my record for the | consideration of the voters.”
GEORGE W. LONG (Democrat) “I should be elected to office be{cause of my long experience in the {practice of law and as cinbut court judge. I have practiced’ law since {1902 and am now completing my {14th year as judge of the Bar- | tholomew county circuit court, Have practiced law in many of Indiana's {county courts, the Indiana supreme and appellate courts, the United |States district court, the United | States circuit court of appeals and | before the Indiana industrial board.
Appellate Court
(Second District)
the barracks-like homes on which i
$150,000 has already been spent can see they aten't worthy of velerans who must certainly have dreamed of something better when they were overseas, »
BUT ANYONE who knows how
glad servicemen and their wives are to find anything at all to call home must wonder if the judge didn't
make a mistake in stopping work on
the “monstrosities.” Plenty of ex-GIs and their families today are thankful to have basement rooms, converted chicken houses, built-over garages, hall ‘bedrooms in private homes, trailers, etc, to call home, . » » MAYBE SUCH living accommodations aren't worthy of them—but that is pretty much beside the point, with the housing situation what it
A monstrosity a couple can call pellate court is too important to be |
their own is far preferable to a man and wife's living in separate towns, with relatives, or in a home for which they had to pay three times its worth in order to have a roof over their heads, ~ » »
AS A MATTER of %act, the veteran and his wife are being pretty realistic about the housing shortage. They aren't contrasting what they can find with what they wanted. They are too thankful to find anything at all in the way of living quarters to be bitterly critical. It's a safe bet that there are many hundreds of ‘veterans who would be willing to move to Phoenix just to get a chance at living in one of those “monstrosities” on
ba
of when opposing views have to be harmonized sufficiently to create a working basis among individuals or nations, °* : 2: an
N
. » -
‘which the judge stopped construc-
"
]
‘ . A) n 4
Judge Craper
FLOYD S. DRAPER (Republican) “If elected I shall in the future, | 88 in the past, devote my full time |and attention to the duties of the | otiice and do my level best to per-
form those duties well.”
FAY W. LEAS
(Democrat)
| “The office of judge of the ap-
made a football of politics.”
SEIZE FURS, JEWELS IN WINDSOR INQUIRY
LONDON, Oct. 31 (U. P.).—Scotland Yard detectives today examined a large quantity of Jems and furs seized from a fashionable Mayfair shop in an effort to solve the Windsor jewel theft, Yard agents raided the shop last night after discovering an “undisclos theft, ‘
Se smite - GERMAN CENSUS BEGUN:
ones, . N nN A
{have been graduated from both a
".clue to the $80,000. Windsor
BERLIN, Oct. 31 (U, P.).—Ger~ many's fitst postwar census will begin today in all four occupation
“As a member of the Republican administration for the past two years, I can say” we have fMlfilled our promises, our platform of 1944, Agriculture, labor, business, health and education needed help and the 1945 session of the Indiana general assembly enacted into laws the ideas stated in our 1944 platform. The citizens of Indiana know that we made good on our platform pledges. The administration has| {worked hard to take care of all of | |the citizens of Indiana and to pro{mote the welfare of the state at all [times. I am proud to be a member of the Republican state administration and will stand upon the record made.”
TIMOTHY SEXTON (Democrat) “My administration will be marked with efficiency and courtesy, qualities, unfortunately, that are sadly lacking in the conduct of some public servants in our political system these days. I shall at all times endeavor to be the“proverbial’ watchdog df the treasury and always without regard to race, color or creed. Honesty, efficiency, courtesy, is my slogan backed by our campaign pledges and platform of our Democratic party.”
Appellate Court
(First District)
.
{ }
i
Judge Bowen Mr. ‘Martin
DONALD E. BOWEN (Republican) “IT feel that the only way for the voting public to make any valid appraisal of my qualifications for this office is by a consideration of the legal opinions which I have | written since IT became a member of {the appellate court. I have conscientiously considered the cases fairly and impartially and to the best of my ability, and I have diligently attended to my duties.”
WARREN W. MARTIN (Democrat) “I should be elected to office because if I am elected judge of the appellate court of Indiana I will insist that all technical procedure be simplified in order that each case shall come before the court and be properly considered on its merits and not: decided upon legal technicalities and errors of attorneys, and that all persons and classes shall have their rights justly determined by the court without delay.”
Appellate Court
(Second District)
“Most of my life has been spent in the field of public school education. I have served as teacher, toach, township principal, high school principal, county superintendent and city superintendent of schools. While away from active work I was serving in world wars I and II, which I feel has broadened my background, giving me understanding, not bnly of veterans’ problems, but the problems of readJustment from war to peace.”
EDWARD W. FURNISH (Democrat) : : “I think I should be electéd because my training and experience in school matters qualify me for this office. I have had experience as a classroom teacher, as an administrator of school affairs and as a representative of the state department of education.”
Appellate Court -
(First District)
Mr, Welsh WILBUR A. ROYSE
(Republican) “TI should be elected to office because I believe the record I have
Judge Royse
made as a fudge of the appellate
court of this state entitles me to a second term.”
MATTHEW E. WELSH (Democrat) “I think I should be elected because of my legislative and legal experience. As a member of the assembly from 1941 to 1944, I became caucus chairman before I resigned to enter the U. 8. navy.”
CIO-PAC Tests Strength in Tuesday's Vote. " ‘By FRED W. PERKINS WASHINGTON, Oct. 31.~On the spot in next Tuesday's elections is the C. I O. Political Action Com-
mittee, which has tied itself up with
the fate of one political party. The C. I, 0.-P. A. C. is supporting
|a few Republican candidates, but in
general it is ringing doorbells for the Democrats, If the Republicans win the house and make a substantial gain in the senate the general public, not prone to look too closely under the surface, will score-a black eye for the most widespread and determined effort that any labor organization has made in American politics, - . » THE FAILURE may be excused on the ground that tides nobody could turn are running against the party in power, but still it will be proved that the C. I, O-P. A. C.. and associated organizations cannot swing a national election when gen-
sition, If the Democrats keep control of both the house and senate, the C..I. O.-P. A. O. will be able to claim & large share of the credit, ‘and this would be expected to bring ine creased efforts by the organization to make itself a factor in the 1048 presidential election. No matter what the results, the future course of C. I. O.-P, A. C. will be decided in the C. I. O. national convention opening Nov, 18 in At lantic City. » » . THE A. F. OF L.'is pursuing its customary policy of supporting la= bor’s known friends and fighting its known enemies. But it refuses to get tied up with any political party on a national basis. * The A. P, of L. leadership contains figures whose political leanings are obviously more Republican than Democratic, — for instance, “Big Bill" Hutcheson of the CarUnited Mine Workers. The C. I. O.-P. A. C.’s stake next Tuesday is emphasized by results of surveys made public today by Fortune magazine whose November issue is devoted to American labor,
American people feel that labor unions should keep out of politics altogether—and even 42.6 per cent of A. F. of L. members and 30.9 per cent of C. I. O. members feel that way. :
per cent of wage earners “no” to the question, “on the wh is the C. I. O.-P. A. C. the kind ¢ organization you would like to see continued?” If the election results support that conclusion—which in general also has been reported from Gallup
decide at least to change their policies and methods of operation. Jack Kroll, P, A. C. chairman, has made clear that he realizes his organization cannot
out support from the rank and fils.
Electioneering in Hawaii
Has Touch of Vaudeville
By HARRY J. LAMBERT NEA Staff Writer HONOLULU, Oct. 31.—The can-
didates who can sing, strum a ukelele and have a couple of good hula dancers on their political platforms are the ones most likely to win on election day in Hawaii, Electioneering in the islands, which had a vaudeville touch long before stateside candidates began campaigning with hill-billy bands and crooners, is in full pre-war cry, and the descendants of Polynesian warriors shout their war chants atop soap boxes.
The candidates add to this equipment of ukeleles and huja skirts by adopting the “Hawaiian equivalent of their first name (Sam becomes “Kamuela”) and many
A
Mr. Crumpacker Mr, Stilley HARRY CRUMPACKER
(Republican)
“I should be elected to office only in the event my record on the bench justifies it. Self-appraisal of my record as a judge would be neither becoming nor convincing so I leave | the matter to the people of Indiana to determine.”
speak a few words in either Ha-
|wailan or pidgin English to impress
a o | i$ |
SILLY NOTIONS
| HARRY H. STILLEY | (Democrat) Y “I am in all respects qualified. I {have had a broad general trial {fled .in municipal corporate practice and procedure and in bonds and finance. Am well educated, widely read, and of scholarly temperament. I will adhere stepdfastly to the law and will not be swayed by extraneous influences.” i
STRIKE AVERTED NEW YORK, Oct. 31 (U. P).—| An agreement, subject to union rati-| fication, was reached last night he- | tween. members of the American | Communications associdtion (C. I! 0.) and the Western Union Telefgraph Co. It. called off a strike
1
A Li Sl
l'experience and am especially quali- |
at midnight by 7000 Western Union | ‘employees in the New. York area. '[=
FL
LLL 7
|
i’ 77
lL
WLLL CRIP?
48 3
voters that they are “kamalanas™
(long-time islands). That is, if they ever get a chance to speak. Just as a campaigner starts his speech, the musical troup he or his party hired is likely t6 break
residents of the
into a Hawaiian tune, When that _
stops, the girls may begin the undulations of a hula, and the
candidate might just as well be
talking to himself. The next time he clears his
throat, the interruption is sure to -
come from the audience as women admirers rush forward to ¢ flower leis around the candidate's neck. By the time an extra popular politician finishes a speech, he looks like a Kentucky derby winner, There are serious candidates too, who campaign without bands or dancers, and get elected, But who wants to pass up a good free show?
Palumbo nal
By
eral public sentiment is in oppo-
penters and John L. Lewis of the
On the basis of polls by Elmo . Roper it reports that half the
polls— the C. I. O. politicos may
succeed with
» » » ANOTHER FINDING Is that 388 ~~.
