Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 November 1946 — Page 8
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~ Saturday, Nov. 23, 1946
D WALTER LECKRONE Bditor Business Manager
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Give Light and the People Will Find Their Dion Woy
SYMBOL OF PEACE QVER at Earlham college in Richmond today, a new president officially takes the helm of an institution that is a Middlewestern workshop of world good will and understanding.
Dr, Thomas
ones, Hoosier-born educator, has
returned ‘to his/alma mater to become its head, succeeding President Emgdritus William 'C. Dennis, international lawyer
mond, founded by members of the Society of
Friends, Quaker homes are filled with distinguished visitors for the inauguration and the All-Friends education con-
ference.
Thirty-one Quaker colleges are represented, as
well as non-Quaker college presidents and professors. Dr, Jones is typical of the highest ideals of the Society of Friends. For 84 years, since he was graduated from Earlham, the world has been his field of operation and he has given his friendship and inspiration to many races. Few of us realize the contributions to world peace that Earlham has made and is making, From many lands, students come to learn how to get along well and peacefully
with others.
These students go to all parts of the world
after graduation, to spread the doctrine that in each man there is a spark of God. - In these days of troubled international affairs, domestic unrest and general cynicism, it is indeed refreshing to realize that there is a powerful group working ceaselessly
for the brotherhood of man.
Earlham and its president
are a true symbol of peace.
. UNITE ON NATIONAL DEFENSE ; N every major crisis the people of the United States have demonstrated their ability to pull together. The first Japanese bomb falling on Pearl Harbor united us in angry determination to resist and crush the aggres-
Bors.
All differences became subordinate to one great
issue on which all agreed—defense of America and what
it represents.
-
That unity carried us to victory. And since victory we have united on foreign policy. Our foreign policy today is the platform of both major political parties and the exclusive property of neither. Henry Wallace and his followers have failed to destroy this
iapolis Times
HENRY W. MANZ
il'who can only respect
took place.
Hoosier Forum
"Nuernberg Trial Is Historic Step
In Developing International Law"
By Gustav H. Dongus, 1100 Hume-Mansur bldg.
Criticism published in the Hoosier Forum that the ex-post facto organizations. or retrospective nature of the Nuernberg trial “smacks of the unsavory | lawing hate in the hearts of human quality of the Nasi criminal code” is not justified. The ‘contention is beings were as simple as the aim made that the punishment imposed for crimes against humanity-and of the governor, but I fear that it waging aggressive war (two classes of crimes charged in the indictment) is not. was for violation of laws not in existence when the alleged criminal acts to have related that during the |éfforts to write a peace treaty in The charge of crimes against humanity specified in the Nuernberg the world war I that many of the indictment as crimes include murder, extermination, enslavement, de- deep prejudices went back to the
"| do not agres with a word that you say, but | will defend to the death «»: * - your right fo say it." ws Neem dr ~
y A iat LAW WONT STOP HATE PROPAGANDA" By W. Clay Reese, Shelbyville Your editorial states that Gover-
nor Gates will seek a law outlawing Germany next mont : the ku-klux klan and similar hate T y month w_ prosecute Nagis.
I wish that out-|
Woodrow Wilson was sald
7 hing BA ‘
: Bi i A part : ¥ A Rh : WASHINGTON; ‘Nov. 23.~A bipartisan American policy. of national defense is being discussed by members of both parties in the new congress. Rep. R. Bwihg Thomason (D, Tex.), ranking Democratic mebiber of the house military affairs committee, sald such a defense pelicy is essential to support
son added he found strong support for concerted action in matters affecting the nation's security, He is confident unity can bé achieved in the next congress.
Arm of State Department “OUR FOREIGN policies have received the gen erous and unstinted support of the great majority of
+7 |'the American people,” Mr. Thomason said. “Attempts
20 destroy that unity have failed.
“3 “But this is a double-barreled program. Unlor-
ately today, the words of diplomats must be ‘hacked up by military strength, ‘for there are those d listen to the strong. “As long as our national defense policies are indecisive, subject to change from congress to congress and administration to administration, our efforts to write a firm and lasting peace will be seriously handicap A firm, bipartisan. foreign policy is co-in-'cigént with a firm, bipartisan defense policy, 3.2 military is the arm of our state department ! ofiguered and occupied territories. As such, they
| #r¢ dne“and indivisible. A bipartisan foreign policy is { ouly Rajf the job.” wh
was known that the war department long has wanted a national defense program which could be accorded the support and respect won by the ByrnesVandenburg foreign policy. War department spokesmen recently have discussed it with members of the
DEAR BOSS . . . By Daniel M.
DEAR BOSS: "Two senate committees are taking out after Senator Theodore G. Bilbo (D. Miss). He may lose his seat in the 80th congress unless he can arouse sufficient sympathy because of his critical illness. Should he live and be unseated, soma of the credit must go to retiring Rep. Charles M. LaFollette, Evans. ville'’s self-styled “radical” Republican. Since congress adjourned, Mr, LaFollette has devoted as many hours as he could spare to preparation of a 41-page brief “entitled “The Case Against Bilboism.” ‘He now has turned the brief over to Charles Houston, one of the attorneys here for the National Association for Advancement of Colored People.
Wants Principle Set as Precedent
IN DOING B80, Mr. LaFollette expressed. regret that he is not to be here when the new congress convenes to further help in the matter. He goes to
Thé fear of Mr. LaFollette is that the senate committees may unseat Senator Bilbo on the grounds of taking crooked election checks. He wants to see the principle of anti-Bilboism made a senate precedent. “The Man,” as Bilbo calls himself, doesn't matter nearly so much in Mr. LaFollette's opinion, His brief points this whole matter up. He uses the senate unseating of Frank L. Bmith of Illinois as precedent, because it goes to the point of the Bilbo
the nation’s bipartisan foreign policies. Mr. Thoma-
geri
|
a
isan Defense Policy Discussed
new congress. It was learned that Senator Styles Bridges (R. N. H), who may become chairman of the new national defense committee, has expressed himself in favor of two party action. On the house side, Rep. L. H. Smith (R. Wis), a member of the foreign affairs committee, said he would support a joint national defense policy on the floor, He felt confident the Republican majority would be willing to “sit down and iron out our differences so that we can speak with one voice in a matter of such vital importance.” ~ Mr. Smith sald he favored such policies because they would be equally binding on the army and navy which he sald “too frequently have played one party against the other to achieve their ends.” With both parties committed to a national policy, he said, there would be less opportunity to deviate from the Re-publican-Democratic statement of prineiples.
Needed Joint Decisions
A UNITED national defense policy, Mr. Thomason said, would have to include decisions on the sise and strength of the military establishmeiit, eontinuation of selective service and adoption of a policy on universal military training, It would be Necessary to make a joint announcement that national defense budgets would not be subject to “foolhardy economy,” or to reduction beyond that point which both parties agree is a minimum requirement for national seourity, Such a declaration probably would originate Jointly with the new house and senate national defense committees. Action probably cannot be taken until a final decision is made on consolidation of the military and naval affairs. committees of both houses under the La Folletie-Monroney bill,
Kidney
LaFollette Is a Leader in Bilbo Fight
It is to this issue that Mr. LaFollette addressed himself and not to the possibility that Mr. Bilbe might also be a ‘cheap crook.” His beef cites the resolution brought against Senator-elect Smith. The pertinent part reads: ‘ “Resolved, That the acceptance and expenditure of the various sums of money aforesaid in behalf of the candidacy of the said Frank L. 8mith is contrary to "sound public policy, harmful to the dignity and honor of the senate, dangerous to the perpetuity of free government, and taints with fraud and eorruption the credentials for a seat in the senate represented by the said Frank L. Smith.” Based on this precedent (Mr. Smith having peen unseated), Mr. LaFollette then outlines the course to be pursued. His basic position is this: That Senator Bilbo, by. his direct denial of the right of the Negro of Mississippi to vote in the July 2, 1946, Democratic primary and his open incitement of the white voters and citizens to deny the Negro that right, openly violated the Constitution of the United States and openly incited others to do so. This establishes a set of facts to which the law and judgment in the Smith case must be applied,
Against Bigotry, Based on Race Hatred PUTTING IT another way, the senate, in the Smith case, laid down the standard policy or law upon which it will deny a seat in the senate for acts done in a primary election (for it made no investi-
AN WASHINGTON . . . by Jm 6. Ges
DO
{i ———————— " ENGAG limelight in t liam Pascoe daughter, Ba of Mr. and M Miss Ev university w Theta sorority prospective bri the university After serving 2 the navy, he fis Business Admix i » Another en Miss Alice Boo: are Mr. and Mi L. A. Weaver of Miss Booze! is a member © graduated from Indiana univer No date has be n Mr. and M1 announce the e Ayres Smithers Shagbark farm the Meridian I
Marilyn Wh
WHITE CI and palms forn Jeanne Whitta noon in the Fi the vows. The and Mr, Overr Amboy. Miss Wilda of white marq bittersweet and Wanda Sue an wore frocks of A gown Of fashioned with lined with a mn veil, and she surrounding a Harry Plot wood of Richm of Hammond. followed the ci They will be 2 graduate of Es
The ‘S Will EF At Fr
on : ; - a 3 : Rho chapte unity. Secretary Byrnes and . United Nations Delegate |portation, other inhumane acts committed against civilian populations, | war of the roses. | Soniigvensy She Sirelt ayy ‘ op: 8mith, a Re- gation of the conduct or expenditures in the Novem- tnt ep : Austin, Senator Vandenberg and Senator Connally can |and persecution on political, racial, No doubt a law could be made pal ons ap ig ¥4 apuliia senate gin ber-election Illinois in 1026). : Candidates and religious grounds. Murder. is have been in existence when the act that would not permit such an or- Democratic help of course) on the grounds of ex- We thus present to the senate” Mr. LaFollette t Butler univ speak as one man-—one spokesman for the American people. |p der. Nothing can be said for occurred. The short Answer to the ganization to seek a charter from C®Ssive expenditures to obtain the nomination. concludes, “and to the people of the United States, pool wii But that is not enough. Our firm, bipartisan foreign |the defense that murder was not a criticism of the Nuernberg trial is the state, but driven underground ae against Bilteian Sosa Sie 95 ie Sera; ise as to Jeter the Jpn Advoceey Saree, i crime under the Nazi regime, or ¢ v. {they would still carry on their hate, . = 0 e denial of a consututional rig ased upon : ix patiey must be backed by an equally firm, bipartisan na- |crme arted We NA GSES OF thi common law. aggres- | prosagands. I think that in a de-| ing for renomination, Mr. Bilbo shouted that Negroes race, which the supreme court has not only declared Bi Bela DiI onal defense policy. The two are inseparable. this charge didn't know that they sors will not be deterred in the|mocracy it 1s best to be able to see. should be barred from voting the Democratic ticket to be ‘invidious and irrelevant’ but & direct denial ig Tay M The defense policy must be adequate, must be expertly |could be punished for ordering mass absence of specific definition of &n|what is going on. I may hate or ‘Ihe gr! Or 15! Sopa n hs sao) Ane i the of 3 constitutional right, is contrary to sound ‘public and Miss Dott : {killing of millions. Neither can! « ry 1] dislike fellow man, but no TY. advoca e citizens policy, ete.” : planned over a period of years and kept free from change | lf ii, bo excused as acts Of egisiative bocy. The recognized] power on earth can restore love in DOU Prevent Negroes from balloting, if election This bigotry, based on race hatred. Is the thing pa Gamma; by the whims of partisan politics, must have the united 'state for which individudl defend- custom which condemns “aggressive my heart, much less an act of the officials did not do s0. In other words he advocated Mr. LaFoliette labels “Bilboism ” It is against this and Miss Bart support of all the people, if our foreign policy is to stand. lants cannot be held personally re- war” as a crime would seem to fix legislature. | direct action against Negroes—which means mob rule that he wants to see the senate go on vacord Delta Delta. 1 » no» Mo sponsible. These acts were consid- |, no less definite standard of cons=| Each group has ite rights under in his bailiwick. . Dan Kidney, Other pe MEMBERS of the new congress should make it a first ted mine] oor Hinde 9 . Suet tian pens sottuies whieh Jove Sungbity dons 30, WONHID 8 sey Jn Miss Evelyn F i i p " r y L * 130 : " tricia Busc duty to draft an American policy of national defense, | mission, {rrespective of absence of quiring a fury on occasion to deter- lative act to repress public discus-| § A (5 A OF INDIANA By William A. Marl Paria Mi and to give it the unreserved support of the Republican | written international law specifying ine “reasonableness” of the con- sion in behalf of a minority group is « + « Dy Yvillam A. Marlow :
Miss Rose Hun Miss Jacqie Li Alice Conn. Miss Georgia ent. Chaperons w John W. Stee
majority and the Democratic minority. Differences of them as crimes. {duet of a particular defendant. in violation of free speech. In fact
: : : :. | The charge of waging of wars of Knowledge that aggressors will be the supreme court of the United 4 H : » I opinion should be reconciled quickly, so that our diplomatic |, cremion made against the de- branded as common criminals, States has said recently in & deci orses uiie ar Y tage oaches and military leaders can say to the world: fendants does not involve retrospec- rather than national heroes, should sion that the citizen has a right to
“We, the united American people, have determined to [tive 1aw. Numerous international serve to curb the enthusiasm of a discuss the religion of another to
JAMES WHITCOMB RJLEY said, in & whimsy treaties and agreements, including future Hitler who contemplates & the point of vilification. What could | HJLEY said. In a whimsy of
cynical approach to an intelligent understanding of
maintain the strength necessary to back up our convictions.” Members of both parties are taking the lead in charting such a wise and patriotic course. Rep. Thomason (D. Tex.)
which Germany was first signatory,
the Briand-Kellogg pact of 1028, 10 | course of conquest.
Ibe stronger in the behalf of free | poetry: “I bless the hoss from hoof to head—from head
The novelty of the Nuernberg Speech? I don't believe that a man | to hoof and tail to mane. T bless the hoss, as I have declared & war Of aggression WAS|. ,..edings is application of these has a right to go out and urge that said, from head to hoof and back again.”
the stage coach days of early Indiana. Back of this entire picture is the basic fact that colonial America traveled but little. Before the revo-
Walter Myers Whittenberger. orchestra will
{ : illegal. As has been pointed out b; ; | lutionary war, New England knew comparatively little L 3 tells why such a course is essential. His views are set forth wv oy A pone Os So uy eiciieg in iRtepni-A0T008 io Tle Sane 5 he/ In America, through the first four decades of the of the ways and people of South Carolina and Georgia, es : : ’ » , or » ; ‘ al Ahir in a story by Jim G. Lucas of the Seripps-Howard Wash- {cumulative effect of these treaties| oot rah is accused of We do have a right to discuss public | 19th century, the ultimate in mass transportation on and but little more about Pennsylvania and Virginia. Cl . te ington staff on this same page today. and agreements was to create 8! rimes having no particular geo- | questions and Democrats have the! land was by stage coach. It was to transportation Tags are Herely Stifking Srampies wie irl Colonial 14p We cannot afford to wait much longer, Susi pucopuIsed w M St graphical location purportedly done right to Shatge Republicans with | of its day what the great airplanes of the world are, Fs Sage as Says a ih he est an international crime. in the name of the state were public neglect. | as of 1946. Indiana eased into this picture the Fovles .,.oihaart It was wonderful. An instance is reveal- Instal Ic
brought to bar before an interna-| In fact we have all the law we ,g, jing tiat ran from Vincehnes to Loutsville. The tional tribunal. The trial at Nuern- heed to deal with any group advo-| 1» was opened in the spring of 1820. berg extended over a period of cating violence now. We have a wy, roads over which these stage lines ran in many months. Defendants had full 1aw that prohibits the wearing of | rn4iana, and all over the United States, were dirty.
has been ordered to appear before a federal judge in [Which enforce not only published.| ., ity to present their defense Masks on the highway and other | In summer they were rough with corduroy and chokWashington Monday to show cause why he should not be ee ntl av. ub tao and were permitted to select their laws, ing no, ne ou of free speech | jo with dust. In’ winter, their mud was deep and i jailed or fined for disobeying an order that he call off the criss which are not eriminal by ows counsel. This doss not even wan: os ajet DO jicussion of their ruts many—even dangerous—on them; coaches Special for Students coal strike. any statute. Common law crimes] AINtlY resemble the summary pro. | . . Peech | were overturned, passengers covered with dust and
. | arm | AS INDIANA began td bulge at the seams in the . . ' i declared by English judges and ceedings in the Moscow purge trials never did h Bayne Mat A0| mud, and stage drivers driven to the fag end of thelr thirq and fourth decades of the 19th century, she That gives Mr. Lewis and his lawyers time to prepare |, seq on usage are punishable in| a case, if they can.
American institution. A n and those by Nazi courts. Nd You may wig, joined heartily in America's stage coach parade. It can hardly be claimed that the |many states although they have no
put it down that I have never be- a , ’ » ine, S i E Foyles, con- = 5 : . . - : longed to the klan and don’t intend | Less Than 8 ‘M.P. H. : Her oldest line, that established by “government is moving with indecent haste in its effort to counterpart in .the state ertminal, LEWIS SHOULD BE. - to belong: I believe man has the = tinued until the Baltimore & Ohio railroad came itd Bish him—tiot in view of th ‘td th : i codes. Further, whenever a court BROUGHT INTO COURT | right to join Any church he wants YET THURLOW WEED, famed political boss of way just before the Civil war, Early in the period, pu — € great damage the SIriKe declares a new rule or principle of By Bryce Ham, 1507 Broadway to, be it Protestant or Catholic Yow! New York, on a stage run he once made out of ‘and later stage lines were opened from Madison to is already doing to the country. civil law, or deviates from pre- exist. | Any self-styled, malicious varlet|o.' eyantile : | Albany, said the passengers were patient and cheerful Indianapolis; from Lawrenceburg to Indianapolis, Meanwhile, we've been trying to fathom the legal |'™® civil rules or principles, it makes such as John L. Lewis, who has 0 though the road was in a horrible condition. They making the run in two days and a night; from intricacies of this contest between Mr Lewis: and .the ex-post facto law to the same ex- many times proven himself to be, “POLICE HAVE INITIATIVE even helped, he said, to pull the coach out of a mud Leavenworth through Bedford and Bloomington to 4 v tent as the Nuernberg judges. Such should at this time be brought to| BUT ARE DISILLUSIONED” hole, and every day and each night walked to ease Indianapolis especially to accommodate students at government—ahd we've been finding the going pretty tough, | declarations are not considered in the court of justice and given his By 6. m. Imdianapelis the coach. Indiana university. Yet it's something that gravely affects everybody. Its: av be 1pm acta, Tu wath uhotment gn id Sider, 44 fo We have a lot of good men in the From all this you might expect the travelers of In the ante part of this period, as he new ‘purb v ’ or “ vers” a rule keeps, out an an ap- TAN early America and Indiana to say, with a Rileyesque chase settled lip, stage lines were opened in northern issues ought to be generally understood. or principle which is considered to| peal. police. departjbent. Many of them touch: “We bless our road o— dust gn 4 Two points seem to us to stand out: " ofp Sake their own time to look : tin ren on oh : ONE: Mr. Lewis and the government disagreed about
Indiana. These connected the principal towns in that into cases assigned to them, despite from mud to dust in rain or shiné; we bless our roads the meaning of a contract. Courts are provided to decide
ing: A stage coach made a 40-mile run in four hours and 50 minutes, 7.25 miles per hour. At the end of the run, a passenger quipped that if any one wanted, to go faster than that he might send for a streak of lightning.
Ample precedent for enforcing un«
A TWO POINTS AGAINST LEWIS % written criminal law is found in ac-
. Alpl hapte OHN L. LEWIS has been cited for contempt of court. He [tion of American and British courts ion
- chapter of Sis rority at 6:30 the Canary cot ohse versary. - Mrs. in charge of 1 of arrangemer “Carter and Mr: Officers of Al Elbert, preside: vice president; secretary; Mrs Mrs. Fred Sch chairman and and Miss Olga Miss Virginia of Gamma ¢ Knoop, vice p Ann Buchhorn, bara Wanders Marilyn Hibne Miss Mary Ma
alsq will
section of the state. They had fine four-horse coaches, with all their mud—their mud and ruts are truly They. carried the United States mails. They were the a longer-than-average working week | fine.” last word and the final colorful touch of Indiana
Carnival —By Dick Turner
of 48 hours, There is initiative | Y reali such disagreements. But Mr. Lewis didn’t choose to submit the police department, Wiseacres This WUE 3 YeVeRling Fustinte NE than, Stage sash dare. Esthet Boop: the question to the courts. Instead, he chose to stop the iS] marwschstanding. : Mi ’ or But, there 1s also a osrtain degr 2 ISS Ste mining of coal. : 3 rg WORLD i ilip Si 13] [of disillusionment among the : FF “oe B William Philip Simms TWO: Another method of seeking higher wages and | : y ist] |especially those who find or A AIRS Y P To Be Hi other gains for the miners was available. This was an ; perio Officers inattentive to initia- MP un
N. Gray st., wil ter, Mary Lo Robert C, Prat
tive and conscientious effort. Take the homicide detectives. for example. There are five teams of
entirely legal method, according to the attorney general of the United States, and one that might have avoided the
Little Hope for Peace Seen in China
| sfrike, But, again, Mr. Lewis chose the hard way for the |
oountry,
“© On both counts, we think, Mr. Lewis proved what we've | long believed about him—namely, that he isn't nearly so | much interested in the welfare of the miners, or of labor, |
or of the country, as he is in trying to push the government around and showing off his power as the one-man boss of a key union.
“GEE” AND “HAW” : HREE HUNDRED Missouri mules, which have served "the army stubbornly but honorably in the Pacific without
nding to be sent home, now are to be transferred to | hina. At Tientsin they are to undergo a course in Chinese | training 80 as to be thoroughly deverbed from
|
| |
assigned to homicide in Indianapolis. A good Job of Selection has been done, for the most part, in pickifig these teams, Most of the men are shrewd, painstaking and intelligent. Discouraging, however, is their lack of close supervision, the kind that correlates detalls for maximum efMsfency; the kind of organization that puts clues together one by one and arrives at a ‘solution. A bona fide homicide squad, headed by a lieu. tenant, whose job “it would be to see that each. man obtained the type of information in line with this experience and connections. assign nothing ' but homicide to the squad, even if bi-
have
investigate
WASHINGTON, Nov. 33.~There now seems little hope for peace in China. Reports that Gen, Marshall would leave Nanking for the United States within the next 10 days have been denied but few informed
observers here expect him-to remain much longer. The showdown between Chiang Kai-shek's government and the Communists now seems imminent. It has been building up for 10 years or more, Again and again the Communists have postponed matters by diokering with Chiang, and by ‘appearing to reach a compromise, only to back away at the last minute,
Refused to Attend THE LATEST EXAMPLE was the agreement engineered by Glen. Marshall, It was based on the calling of a representative national assembly with proportional representation for all parties. AS usual, at the 11th hour, the Communists shied off and refused to attend, leaving the assembly in the hands of the
one of many glaring examples—yet there is a growing impatience with China because she hasn't been able to change her 4000syear-old ways over night. At the same time there is a widespread effort to portray the Chinese Communists as not Communists at all, but merely a progressive native faction, Trustworthy Americans who have visited the northern provinces now under Communist eontrol, however, make no such distinction, Nor do the natives concerned. The Reds’ own literature make it plain that their goal is to set up the Communist system in Ohina and that they draw thelr inspiration from Marx and Lenin, Moreover, they follow Moscow's every twist and turn without the slightest deviation. Tt is quite true that Chinese Oommunists wary their methods to suft the occasion and the population. The Chinese don't cook a duck like we do in the United States. But both seek to please those who are going to eat it.
ner in their hol Steele and M married at 8: in the Centena Guests will t G., Lavon Fis Louis Prather, pective groom; L. Maus, Mr. Moon, Miss Ro: Misses Verna ~ Young.
vile Guild Sel Several unit hospital White next week in center, at the Fifty-Pirst St Street Presbyte
) cycle thefts have Kuomintang, Chiang's party. WRT : x and » | lexicons. oe Selle li 2 Yo er. a Ohthese Statin. Chou En-lal, has returned to Objective Is Identical North Method ‘old erony of mules, we suggest that the Chinese Indianapolis a feared n tor| Yenan, his capital in the north hits he is upasted A ALY ER Shjective = Jaentietl, Quaker, on Tu themselves would- ; . to be: confe with the Communist commander-in- namely to cap : \ x rnp Lit es De reoriented ether Av the mules. tla on. chief. While sn crack in the door still remains open, Chinese Communists are hewing straight to the LT-S.0C ‘that, team of mules turn DAILY THOUGHT it 18 said, there seems little chance that it could lead Moscow line, which is to vary methods from country Mie Franc "—with ample expletives to taste— Thy word is true from th to any considerable postponement of the inevitable. to country and not try to copy, word for word, the " — Tancly you say “haw.” : : ginning; and rom the be- | = or ohe thing, Russia at last is said to be in a rules laid down for Russians. olmes ave. : = i ang every ons of Thy Thus, while we are watching what is going on in when the Ma
oral acquaintance with the Chinese e that “gee!” and “haw™ are prae- : fi :
die
1946 BY NEA SERVICE, NC. T. M. REG. U. 8 PAT. OFF,
"With all the alimony I'
soonerl * is 7, i x
.
.
judgments | forever ==Psalms 110:160.
gating, I'm sorry | didn't marry him |
~Shakespears,
endureth
position to provide the Chinese Communists with all necessary aid. As for the United States, a new: campaign to “get out of China” is likely.
We don't seem able to make our own System work
°
smoothly—witness the present coal situation as just
.
Europe and the United States, a perilous situation is rapifily eoming to a head in Asia, Red, so, almost surely will the entire Orient—including India, the southwest Pacific, Korea and Japan,
re I hy
1f China goes
ternational
> meets Tuesday. Mrs, Clayton H
