Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 November 1946 — Page 12
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ARD. WALTER LECKRONE
"A SCRIPPS-HOWARD NEWSPAPER
"THE MINERS’ LOYALTY “QOME people say that the coal miners’ grateful loyalty to John L. Lewis is the secret of his power. ! “They obey him without question because he always gets them what they want.” Well, let’s think about that. The miners are fiercely and finely loyal to their union, and were long before Mr. Lewis became its president in 1929. By 1933 he had gone far toward making himself the union’s dictator—and toward wrecking it. In 1929, a Lewis-led strike had been disastrously lost. From 450,000, the union’s membership had dropped to 90,000. The softcoal miners’ average wage was $14.47 for a 29-hour week. That was not what they wanted. Then Franklin D. Roosevelt and his New Deal came to the rescue.
NEW DEAL laws guaranteed the rights of organization and of collective bargaining. Government protection enabled Mr. Lewis to put on a drive that built the union’s membership to half a million in a few months. Administration favoritism helped him to split the A. F. of L. and - start the C. I. 0. as a new instrument of personal power. But to Mr. Roosevelt and the government Mr, Lewis showed himself neither grateful nor loyal. He- turned against the President. government with repeated wartime strikes. Time after time he took advantage of the country’s necessity to force | new concessions from the government. __ The contract under which the miners’ average earnings ‘had risen to $62.37 for a 42.4-hour week before the present Strike began was made by the government—the same ‘government against which Mr. Lewis is making war. There is abundant evidence that the only sentiment for this strike originated with Mr. Lewis. The miners did ‘not want it. ; They may well be afraid to disobey him. abolished semblance of democracy in their union, ~ “absolute power to fire them from the union, and so from their jobs. But if they obey him out of grateful loyalty, because | they think they owe their gains to him, they are misguided.
"RICH VINEYARD
THe next congress, has declared an open season on our | ¢friends, the government press agents.
‘by combing out the propaganda activities. He thinks it ~+will be a good thing for newspaper reporters to start dig-- what pay-increases does—Mr. 22 LOIS: tging out government news again instead of rewriting the | “press agents’ handouts.
; who get to be so important in government service that they | hire secretaries to answer the phone, ask who's calling, and reply that the press agent is “in conference” and un- |
And the government's figures don't begin to tell the khole story. ; - Nobody knows how many millions of fan-days have lost indirectly this year because strike-bound, bottleJ ts did not produce the materials and supplies 0 keep other plants and industries in full operathere is every reason to believe that the indirect
ianapolis Times]
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Give Light and the People Will Find Their Own Way
Ld . » » .
He crippled the
~ What Lewis Is Cooking With
Hoosier Forum
ie : in its ? EF J
}
"| do not agree with a word that you say, but | will defend to the death your right to say .it." — Voltaire.
1
‘HOW EVERYBODY CAN GAIN
HIS country has paid a fearful price for the indus- | trial warfare waged since V-J day. . ° Official government statistics show that, in the first nine months of this year, strikes caused a direct loss of | 198,225,000 man-days working time. ’ That was nearly three times the direct loss of. work ibecause of strikes in all of 1945; nearly four times in all of 1937, a year of what then seemed great industrial
far greater than the direct. certain is that the country facet disaster if continues. Ard that is why Basil Manly, @ problems of labor and industry for
rmistice, "benefit every man, woman and A year of peace between industy for all—higher living
"Government Sledge Hammer
Should Be Used Cautiously"
By W. H. Edwards, Gosport A politician of prominence, speaking over the radio, declared that the people had given the Republicans a “mandate.” The question is | whether the claimed mandate was to create a wrecking crew or whether lit was, in fact, a lack of confidence vote against a weak, blundering He has administration in Washington unable to protect the multitudes against He hag an inflated cost of living.
One congressman, slated to hold !
He estimates a hundred million dollars can be saved | coal strike.
parently means
t |and
| mands.”
| |
ed a voluntary agreement to make
We wil] | nation, with its poisonous “Alpha, hope they in {beginning rays followed by “Beta,
tion. Evil conditions in government will
ing it.
“DOESN'T WASHINGTON EP. JOHN W. TABER of New York, the Republican KNOW LEWIS DEMANDS?”
#%o will head the house appropriations committee in Rad Théo, Graves, Indianapolis
Page 26 of The Times
| 1946: “Washington, Nov. 21—Many | questions are being asked about the Here, compiled from official sources. of information, are! | the answers to some of them:
Lewis want for them now? not : ; ; public his demands, but he is reMr. Taber has chosen a rich vineyard for his economy ported (reported—is that the best |
labors. Time was, in pre-New Deal days, when government they can: do) to want the working 7press agents were few. But nowadays any agency head for bureau chief important enough to have two telephones |what it means) the miners, etc., etc.” son his desk is likely to have his own personal press agent. «And, if he has three telephones,
“Answer: He has
week reduced to 40 hours. This ap-| (don't they know
Mr. Editor, doesn't Washington
: : know what John Lewis wants for a sofa in his office and-a ps miners?
private washroom adjoining, he usually can press the buzzer They turned him down. “and summon a whole publicity staff. ‘These publicity men have made work easier for u : the news business, and maybe we ought not cavil at an fondness for big words, double-talk ~expense which other taxpayers share without protest. Bu : we still find that, if the story is really important, it is neces- . sary to go around the press agents to see the top man, rand at times they're difficult to go around. Nor do we < feel kindly about the time consumed in sifting the great y quantity of uninteresting and unimportant government + press releases into the wastebasket,
catch-phrases,
We hold a special grudge against those publicity men ——
Side Glances—By Galbraith
They must I'll bet $10 | there's: not a man in Indianapolis . |who can discuss this issue intelliS IN | gently. Every man has an innate
I maintain there's no room for it in our news- | papers—not when national issues are at stake, “He hasn't made public his de-| Neither has Washington. |I don’t understand, Mr. Editor.
a powerful position in the 80th con- |“PARKING
gress, has bragged that he will use| CREATE MORE SPACE” |a “sledge hammer” on government By Jugs JL. Nibiack, Jndianapolts spending. People who have used or watched | |others use a sledge hammer know |
MR. LEWIS, on his own, has proved himself "a flop—and | i will again. He is endangering their union and all | ‘unions. And he is cutting away the markets of the industry | by which the miners live. They don’t want. that. : The miners are good Americans: realize that their best of gratitude and loyalty is owed to |,
The city
'in theory.
matter how
you install y ate any mo
Nov. 21,
I spent a last March, ing meters. difficulty th
made
article in
know.
using
Market sts We are not era any lon
been entirely wrong in killing the
you will not thereby cre-
| half a million people, and our vision
“COMPULSORY MILITARY TRAINING IS HARMFUL” By Richard Shuffiebarger, Martinsville The Times editorial of Nov. 18 advocating adoption of the war department proposal for six months of compulsory military training states that the new plan is “a concession to opponents of peacetime training.” This is far from the -truth since hasic objections to peacetime conscription apply equally to the war department's plan. It is apparent that the war department hopes by
4 8 METERS WON'T
It is unlikely that it will succeed.
its “shortened” plan to soften some of the opposition from religious, council may not -have!labor and educational organizations.
; : : Compulsory military training is that it should be used with caution, | Proposed matter of parking meters.|, .., .)1o undemocratic since it con-
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SITUATED AS I am, it behooves me to celebrate Thanksgiving today—a good 12 hours ahead of time.
the election is over, the signs of which are apparent all around me. They appear not only in the, improved deportment of my butcher but also in the changed behavior of my wife who sallied forth the morning after to purchase a lip~ stick bearing the forthright label of “Just Red,” thus announcing the end of a trick era. ~~ Grateful, too, am-T that finally, at long last, I got a close-up peek of Walter Winchell's fanciful mind —s0 close<up, in fact, that I learned the secret of how it works, Commenting on the election, wily Walter broadcast the excathedra opinion that the Russians indorsed the Democrats in order that the Republicans might win. Lord, it was & bountiful year,
'Drowt,’ 'Drowth' or 'Drooth’ AND TO WHOM it may concern: This is to thank the proper party for not prolonging the beer drought of last spring any longer than the situation called for. At that, it lasted long enough to produce an number of sounds. Some of my colleagues labeled the famine a “drowt”’; some, a “drowth.” Indeed, one sufferer dived in feet first and called it a “drooth.” I pour out my heart, too, for such cultural enrichments as neo-angle bath tubs, perfume air-tem-pered automobiles, pens that write under water, pin striped pajamas, hickory-smoked turkey and uncontaminated Scotch, all of which are staging a desperate come-back by way of-technicolored ads in the magazines. . In which connection it may not be amiss to nete that every day, in every way, Ralph 8. Norwood of Indianapolis is getting to look more like the distinguished and elegant gentlemen depicted in the Lord Calvert whisky ads. Indeed, except for the fine print that identifies the sitter of each ad, I would have bet my last dime that Mr. Norwood is leading a double life. And now that my suspicions have been cleared up along that line, I render still more thanks. As for the realities of this year, I salute (and
WASHINGTON, Nov. 27.—John L. Lewis is providing the first test of the power of a union which controls nearly 90 per cent of the soft coal output, Never before has there been a showdown in which Mr. Lewis had the support of nearly all the med who mine coal. The last time he tried a bitter-end mine strike, in 1927, he lost his union. At that time, only the northern flelds were union- | ized—and some of them none too solidly. Southern fields continued to operate. As far as the coal supply was concerned, consumers hardly knew there was a strike.
Reorganized Under NRA EVEN IN Pittsburgh, in the heart of the 1927 strike belt, steel mills continued to operate, railroads observed full schedules and householders got regular
supplies of fuel. : i 2 Mr. Lewis reorganized his union under NRA. He tightened his hold on mine labor year by year under
For if it is to be used as a political | I don't see where installation of the fiicts with freedom of conscience; it tool it may become likened to an meters will help our parking prob- | is irreligious since its purpose is to atomic bomb dropped without cau-|,... vere much, although I know teach men to kill; it is socially
tion into the economic life of the nn n » | that the Chamber of Commerce and
»| merchants think it will be a good | jo
- e . / utward ‘spreading rays poisoning idea, because it will cause a bigger | scientists, neither a “trained civilian their government, which has made it possible for them to the productive powers of the Ba-|{;mn.over in parked autos, at least|army,” nor any other military means
get so much of what they want. They owe no such debt to the ruthless man whose |, policy is rule or ruin.
itm. It is militarily unsound since
In the first place one
No more likely.
many parking meters |
re space. And the fact| es
use identical
where they have park-| countries? . There was the same] ere as here in trying to! can, British, Dutch, French,
America. One way to|fully fought by force.
instead of trying to therefore our own security.
’
& a small city of the 1890 W. A. Edwards, Gosport
ger, but a community of |
= must accordingly braeaden some. : Editor's Note: Neither do we, Mr.| Also, more off street parking would [C0 ScUy—insurrection againsi oe Graves. | help. : |government and the public. e
CS SELLS
Cr OOO
. Je . Neng SOR. 1946 BY NEA SERVICE, INC. T. M. REC. U.S. PAT. OFF,
49 “every useful product
atom bombs and ro
.
tiiqure away
linstead of curing it.
much worse.
our united courage to the limit.
may -be our lot, we, as a nation o people, faced with the decision of
surrection with
it with greed of another kind,
DAILY THOUGHT
who is like unto Thee,
17-27
‘ well be sure ckets to the moon and
unanimous agreement of
can provide any defense against atomic attack. It is neither racot be cured by hasty, ill-considered basic fault with the idea is that|ii.a) nor a realistic aid to a. |action, but may further spread the so often used by the late but un-,sccurity since it promotes fear and| cancerous condition instead of cur-|jamented New Deal, the rationing suspicion and therefore makes war of too little among too many. . | The Times calls’ for training to provide an armed force “sufficient to | discourage attack.” Russian leadarguments to that there are meters along the| justify their military preparations. street will not automatically elimi-|Does anyone really believe that the nate overtime parking. It will take | indefinite piling up of weapons of the same old large force of police war on both sides will produce to get around and watch the meters “security” for either? |and put overtime parking tickets on that continuation of the present a {atomic armament race with Russia week in Oklahoma City | will lead to the destruction of both| isn't going to be around to have it anymore.
Isn't it clear
Communism must be
eliminating racial and]
Some may call the coal strike a crisis, while many others, taking a {more realistic view, will name it
{rash of stfikes now going on and the probability of many more strikes in the near future, is likened to a man who having an ulcer on his body uses a corrosive chemical on it, thereby making the ulcer worse
| The ulcer, used as a symbol here, is the unreasonably high cost of livling; and the corrosive chemical is symbolic of strikes, making the ulcer
With A. F. of L. President William Green and C. I. O. President Philip Murray stating that their organizations will support John L. Lewis to the limit, we, the people, are facing what may prove to be a hard battle; a battle that will try
Come what trials and hardships
whether one man and his fanatical followers are to be more powerful over the lives of the people than the established government, should have but one .choice: To meet inthe same courage with which we met Hitler's war against. humanity, The disease of greed cannot be cured by countering
All my bones shall say, Lord, which deliverest the poor from him that is too strong for him, yea, the poor and the needy from him that spoileth him?-Psalms 35:10.
YES, child'ef suffering, thou may'st He who ordained the Sabbath loves
the New Deal. He organized captive mines, won the closed shop and used his control to force progressively higher wages.
Parmful since it promotes niifiarf Today there are no longer any large unorganized
+! coal fields to supply fuel during a strike, Production now is about 250,000 tons a day—a little more than 10 per cent of the pre-strike figure of more than
two million tons a day. Today's output comes from
NEW YORK, Nov. 27—This is an obituary. It differs from the ordinary only in that its subject is not yet dead. Bill Rhode is dying of cancer. Dying swiftly and
unpleasantly at the top of his 40's, and very annoyed at the prospect. Bill is sore because ha is capable of having so much fun. He resents the fact that he
Soviet imperialism, like the Ameri-| Second Brush With Infinity etc, find a parking place downtown. All varieties, is a product of greed and including the involuntary sort which is found in the that it amounted to was that the distrust that must be treated as a| meekest men in battle. city put ahother tax on the automo- | sickness. bile, which is already the most taxed | foughte but it can never be success-| Rhode faces it. It can be| eliminate a lot of our traffic trouble] fought only by spiritual means. Only| He had a friend, a Broadway columnist, run an item would be to get our streetcar and {py an example of making democracy | saying he was much too ill to see anyone. bus Aransportation up to date so it work, by would render speedy, cheap, efficient economic injustices, by renouncing| the weepers. If I'm going to die I'm going to die, and comfortable mass transporta- first our own imperialism and mili- | tion, and then people can be sold on |tarism can we promote peace and | same drive downtown. To do this you will] 8 8-2 have to take some of the streetcars, “COAL STRIKE REALLY and busses off Washington and|AN INSURRECTION” ., to relieve congestion. |
THERE ARE MANY kinds of bravery, I suppose,
of guts to cooly face the imminence of death as Mr.
His door has a sign on it; positively no visitors.
“That,” explained Bill cheerfully, “is to keep out
and I want no wailing ‘round the bed. I had a pretty tough time with the doctors for awhile, They didn't want to tell me what the score was, so I had to slap "em around a little bit before they came clean.” This .is Bill's second brush with infinity. They took out four-fifths of his stomach about five years ago, and for awhile it seemed he had it licked. Then ... cancer again, and curtains. Bill 1s—you'll get no past tense from me—one of the fabulous characters of the times. He comes from a family which stretches back to 1100 A. D. and he could wear a title if he wished. ’ He has been everywhere, knows everybody, and has done everything. ’ He worked in the theater in Moscow and Paris and Hollywood. He has smuggled everything from caviar to gold out of Russia. - In between robust in-
Is Soviet Building
WASHINGTON, Nov 27.—Diplomats here are convinced that the Soviet Uniofi's plans for an atomic energy plant of its own have now reached an advanced stage. The Istanbul reports, however, that such a plant pis under construction near the Black sea port of Sukhumi, are not generally credited. That some sort f| of secret activity may be in progress there would not f| pe surprising. But Sukumi—in Georgia south of the Caucasus—is too exposed for any enterprise as vital as an atomic plant: . Experts regard the Baikal region as a far more likely spot. It has everything:
Region of Great Natural Beauty * LAKE BAIKAL is in the heart of Siberia. It is in a mountainous region resembling Switzerland, The lake is 400 miles long and 18 to 50 miles wide. - Its surface is nearly 200 feet above sea level, yet it is so deep that its bottom is more than 3000 feet below sea level—the deepest of the earth's depressions of the kind. Th Lake Baikal is only sixth in size, but it contains a larger volume of water than the Baltic sea plus the Kattegat which, together, have 12 times the area. I visited Baikal in 1034. The region is one of
shore, some as high as 7500 feet. The lake is fed by 300 streams but has only one outlet—the Angara Soviet engineers told
E § is
Lord, It Has Been a Bountiful
Lord, my cup runneth over. Thankful am I that oC, provided their customers with more elbow room,
" “Legends That Libel Lincoln.”
But it takes a special brand
great beauty. Wooded mountains rise from the lake.
Year
thank) the optimists connected with the Indiana Trust Co, LI. 8. Ayres & Co, L, Strauss & Co., Wilks ings Plano House and Stegemeier’s Grill, all of whom
%
And especially grateful am I for the skill with which the Stegemtiers (Vater and Sohn) have dressed their augmented staff of waitresses. The gals, begad, appear to have been poured into their receptacles. Thankful, too, am I for Eddie Schildknechts’ forth right painting of the Mithoefer farm and Stella Coler's penetrating interpretation of “Gardens' End,” bath of which were premiated items in the recent Ayres’ art show. For Montgomery S. Lewis’ first book: For the revived interest in Jim Riley's poetry and Ernest Hemingway's great story “The Killers.” For Frank McKinney's faith in the Pittsburgh Pirates. For the photo finish of the Bums and the Gas House Gang. For Joe Louis, Harry the Cat Brecheen, Assault (and his jockey, Warren Mehrtens), and that other chap in the corn belt (whose name has escaped me) who won this year's hog calling contest. And lest I forget, this year also revealed a groiip picture of Argentine’s Diligenti quintuplets (4 girls and, guess what—a boy). For the first time in the last 12 years, it took my mind off the Dionne kids up in Canada. And speaking of kids, this year Anita Loos, author of “Cientlemen Prefer Blonds” (circa world war I), gave the younger generation a piece of her mind and came out for more parental. discipline —“you ought to smack him in the puss,” she said, Lord, how I love that one. As for Orson Welles, the prize kid of our genera tion, he picked this year to say: “Really, I don't like publicity.” .
And He Collected, Too
THANKFUL, TOO, am I for the capacity of the human mind to remember—to recall, for instance, what N. Meridian st. looked like 50 years ago. Or the two-pants-suits men were able to buy back fi 1830. Or hyacinths last spring. ‘ Most of all, however, I thank the police of Fishe kill, N. Y. In the first week of last July, they pinched Elliott Roosevelt for speeding (65 m.p.h.). After which the judge (a Duchess county Democrat) fined him $15. Sure, he collected. Anyway you look at it, the year 1946 marked the end of an era. Hallelujah,
IN WASHINGTON . . . By Robert Taylor Lewis Provides Test of Union Power
non-union strip mines, a half dozen co-operatives, and from Illinois mines organized by the Progressive Miners union. : In 1919, when Mr. Lewis led his first strike, the United Mine Workers had 411,000 members—twoe thirds of the miners working in the world war I period. The “Jacksonville Agreement” which he made. with coal operators in 1924 caused a further shift of coal ing from northern fields to the unorganized Sout.
Membership Jumps to Half Million WHEN THE 1927 mine strike came, with expiration of the “Jacksonville Agreement,” the union claimed 450,000 members. Broken by the long strike, membership declined to 907000 by 1929, mostly in the anthracite field where the union long has had ine dustry-wide organization. : In 1932 the Illinois miners broke away and formed their own union. As far as the soft coal industry was concerned, the United Mine Workers was only a paper organization, until the NRA came in. Mr. Lewis put on an organization campaign and within a few months membership zoomed up to 500,« 000. Since then, there have been a number of natione wide soft coal strikes, such a# the four in 1843 whic brought government seizure twice. . Those strikes, however, were largely for bargaining purposes—to cut down the nation’s coal stockpile and force wage concessions, .
REFLECTIONS . . . By Robert C. Ruark Fabulous Chef: Bravely Faces Death
vestigations of Paris nightlife, he taught Ivar Kreuge er, the late Swedish match king, to cook. He prob= ably knows every headwaiter in the world, and most of the chefs. Mr. Rhode is a champagne man, a caviar man, a guinea-hen-under-glass man, and if there is any hell for Mr. Rhode he has had it lately, with the room full of vintage wine, gifts from his restaurant friends —and no place to put it, account of no stomach. = He learned to cook as a gag, during his wander. ings, and wound up as one of the world's foremost authorities on food. Up to the time of cancer’s second pass at him he was knocking off a tidy living as a consultant on fancy eating. He never was quotable on it, before, but Willie used to get a huge laugh out of the fact that a man with only a fraction of a stomach should be culinary arbiter for rich New York. : When cancer put the final squeeze on him, Bill was up to his ears in a monumental work—an allembracing treatise on food, about a million words worth, . " “1 got a little deal with the doctors to keep around for a bit,” he says. “I got a crew working on the book, and with my original work to go by, they'll be able to finish this thing.
Ready to Turn in His Suit “AS SOON AS the publishers see that my crew's work is up to the standard of the stuff I've finished, I will turn in my sdit. God knows, nobody ever had any more fun than I did, and this is the way I like to wind it up—neat, with a half-case of champagne under the bed.” * 5 So there you have my friend Mr. Rhodé, Wherever he is headed, I hope the champagne is bollinger brut and the caviar fat. He placed a lot of ime portance on both, . :
WORLD AFFAIRS . . . By William Philip Simms
Atom Energy Plant?
It was estimated that Dnieprostrol would provide, when fully developed, 756,000 horsepower. - Maximum utilization of the natural Lake Baikal reservoir, ace cording to Russian engineers, would yield 30 million horsepower, or more than Niagara Falls, Muscle Shoals, Wilson and Boulder dams combined. . The trans-Siberian railway skirts the southern end of the lake. Another line, branching off at Nizhne. Udinsk, a couple of hundred miles to the west, curves around the northern end, without, however, touching it. ‘This line continues "on, via Konsomolsk, to the Sea of Japan opposite Sakhalin. A connecting. link runs down the valley of Theamur from Konsomolsk “tothe industrially and militarily important city -ef Khabarovsk.
Accessible as 'Oak Ridge' Site THE ANGARA flaws north .out of Lake Baikal then westward to join the mighty Yenisei. This, in turn, flows into the Arctic ocean-a hop, skip snd 8 Jump from the North Pole. In fact, the northern branch of the trans-Siberian.is approximately, the same latitude as southern Alaska or Greenland, «Operation Baikal” therefore, is about as far north as the Canadian-American “Operation Muskox."” Thus, while the Siberian Baikal region is as remote as the moon, 50 far as foreigners are concerned—or even such Russians as the Soviet wishes to keep at a distance—it is quite accessible as a Boviet Oak Ridge site. i '
eit
"A dozen Oak Ridges could be built there without
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Fr. Sv To Ri Wedd
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