Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 November 1946 — Page 8

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Saturday, Nov. 30, 1946 ry i HENRY W. MANZ Business Manager

A SORIPPS-HOWARD NEWSPAPER Owned and published daily (except Sunday) by | Indianapolis Times Publishing Co., 214 W. Maryland st. Postal Zone 9. : Member of United Press, Scripps-Howard News3 paper Alliance, NEA Service, and Audit Bureau of Circulations. Price in Marion Cofinty, 5 cents a copy; delivered by carrier, 20 cents a week. Mail rates in Indiana, $5 a year; all other states, U. 8. possessions, Canada and Mexico, 87 cents a

month. Pou 'RI-5561

Give Light and the People Will Find Their Own Way

DEAR BOSS: : WHEN PRESIDENT TRUMAN pinned the Med of Merit on the coat lapel of Ambassador Paul V. McNutt at an inner sanctum ceremony at the White House this week, the Hoosier towered above the little man from Missouri. : 2 : - The President smiled graciously and commented that of all of his tasks he likes this medal business best.

Now Busy in Philippines TO THE HANDFUL OF HOOSIERS present the scene recalled the fact that but for failure of the late President Roosevelt to give him the green-light for the vice presidency, McNutt today might have been doing the medal bestowing in that very room. For as a candidate for the presidency who withdrew when F. D. R. decided to run for a third term, the former Indiana governor would have been the overwhelming vice presidential choice of the Democrasic convention in Chicago in 1940. e Instead the President insisted on Henry A. Wallace and four years later replaced him with Harry Truman. Had McNutt succeeded John N. Garner as vice president, it seems certain that he would have been retained on the fourth term ticket and be President of the United States today. Instead he is now back in Manila as ambassador, where in pre-war years he had held the post of U. 8. high commissioner. That the job is not an easy one is the reason Mr. McNutt is" here. His conferences have been designed to get the war department to be less demanding on, the islands bases business so far as the Philippines are concerned. In this he has support of the state department and very likely will win a decision from President Truman. Under the new independence regime ‘of President | Roxas, all is not well in these war ravaged islands. There are shortages of everything, except opposition | political critics of the regime, eager-beaver Commu.nists and well-armed outlaw bands who still prefer to be looked upon as patriotic guerrillas. There are even some Japs still sneaking around and shooting now and then in the outlying islands.

SPEAKER OF THE HOUSE

THE man wha on Jan. 8 becomes the second most powerful man in the government—Rep. Joseph W. Martin of Massachusetts—has established a record as a Republican middle-of-the-roader in his long years in congress. As minority leader, the incoming speaker opposed both the Roosevelt and Truman programs. But he did not vote against practically everything, as did some of his Midwest colleagues. Last year he voted for the $334 billion loan to Britain; House Republicans were 122 to 61 against the loan. He voted to extend the draft until March 31, 1947, and for the emergency housing bill, He has voted for most bills to place controls on labor. He was for the Smith-Connally and Hobbs laws, and for the Case bill which the house passed last February. Then he voted to override the President's veto of the Case bill which | had been modified by the senate. He voted for the Presi- | dent's anti-strike legislation to authorize the drafting of strikers in government-seized industries.

Generally speaking, he was more friendly toward OPA than most Republicans. He voted for the first price-control act in 1941 and supported the agency during the war. Last summer, while voting for what the administration termed “crippling” amendments, he favored keéping a price-control law, Some of his close associates, such as Rep. Brown (R. 0.), were so strong for killing OPA that they even voted to support the President's veto and thus keep OPA from dying last June 30. And he was “paired for” the:OPA revival law which now is on the books.

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RIOR to Pearl Harbor, Mr. Martin leaned toward an iso-

lationist line. He voted for the first one-year draft law "No Reason for Auto Accident after the fall of France and then voted against its extension ! ‘+0 in August, 1941, only a few months before Pearl Harbor. Record to Go on Mounting

The extension act passed the house by a one vote, 203 to 202. By J. V. Wellington, Marott Hotel

He voted in March, 1940, for the 11 per cent naval ex- | Heavier fines and jail sentences are the one sure way of cutting the not now repealed and it never will i i i Yanai . accident toll. Col. Killian is right about this. This is the only way to be repealed. “As you soy so also pansion bill and a year later, to give the President power to | do it. There is no reason whatever for this state's disgraceful accident’ gq); you reap.” seize 30 German and Italian ships which were in our ports. | record to go on and on. | We are now fecing one of the Most house Republicans voted against the ship seizure bill. { The state police also made the statement that speed is at the bot- ; : a f hisA : ' tom of most accidents. Well, why not pass a law for the state of 50 Most dangerous periods of our He voted against lend lease in February, 1941, and | miles an hour and no more, or shall. we go on our merry way of killing, tory as a free government of free then, after the bill was passed, voted for the first $7 billion and maiming at the higher speeds. The state police know the answer. men. In the past te owners o iati | § bE oe /e waxe appropriation for lend-lease. | Why do our state officials not hen! ~ the tools of production hav

| their good advice? erty among more .and more of our rich because of the unlimited apIn October and November, 1941, he voted against arm- | i a

people. | plication of Machiavellian capitaling U. S. merchant ships and permitting our ships to enter | “BONUS PLAN WOULD If capitalism. would save itself it ism. They have had but one object| “Era of Jimmy Walker” is not a thoroughly apt decombat zones {REDUCE STRIKES”

must create more capitalists, thus ‘in life and that has been “we want! scription of the noisy 20's. Be Edward F. Maddox, 539 W. 28th st. |Creating more defenders of private more and more profit and to hell] This comes from Douglas Gilbert, who is just He voted in September, 1943, for the Fulbright resolu- || We, the people of the United ownership of property. tion by which congress favored U. S. participation in a |States, must find a solution for the

1 offer for with the people.” completing a survey of the bootleg years. “Walker,” your consideration the inactive] Now the tables have turned. The | says Mr. Gilbert, “was always smooth, never vulgar, . . ! bonus stock pian. | working people, the real producers, | never raucous, never unkind in his reference to others world organization for peace. Before and after the war cleavage between employers and = = = he voted against extension of the reciprocal trade program |workers. The left-wing Marxists “MAKE STRICTER LAWS : . : ’ have poisoned the minds of the TO STOP CHILD MARRIAGE but during the war he voted for its continuance. a

. NEW YORK, Nov. 30.—The foreigner who reads the flood of reminiscence of the 1920's, recently released by Jimmy Walker's death, is apt to consider the brawling 20's the goltien age of America, missing the point that the period was pretty yough on the citizens. ’ Fe It's. a common and not unpleasing tendency of ours to build a8 shrine to any era sufficiently far behind us. Let it age in the wood just long enough to smooth the rougher edges, and the bad old days automatically become the good old days.

H Tre F : *l do not 83/20 wih a word thet woh [ t OOsIer FOrum t= wy di

“CONGRESS IS TO BLAME FOR PRESENT COAL CRISIS” By Del Mundo, Indianapolis The natural law of cause and

effect has never been repealed, it is

Seem Bright by Comparison IT SEEMS TO BE purely a matter of which epoch you bestride. Some of our young folk already speak wistfully of the good old days of the war. There is small doubt that 20 years from now the taxpayers will regard the comparative tranquility of the roaring 40's with excessive nostalgia, and will weep into their atom-enriched juniper juice for the pastoral years of John L. Lewis. The war profiteer and black market probes will have absorbed the moldy tolerance which now pervades the Seabury investigations. 2 . The days of our present years have been loaded with so” many small frustrations that almost any other era seems bright and simplé by contrast. The

“Ihave become united into labors un-| —unless they were complete phonies. In this respect ions and other associations and he differed greatly from his period, which was -all {have become as powerful, and pos- the things he wasn't, and in spades.” y Rev. C. E. Faulkner, West Side Pente- sibly more powerful, than the own-

By costal Church | i » : " |ers of the tools of production. Now With the alarming rate of mar | the attitude of labor seems to be

workers to such an extent that justice and fairness no longer prevail

oY CHIANG READY TO QUIT of our capitalist system is to create I feel that more strict laws should | to hell with the people.”

' | ‘HE horrible picture which Communists and pinkos have more property owners. Here is the be made concerning the condition! Both of these attitudes are wrong

built up of Chiang Kai-shek’s “Fascist dictatorship” Maddox plan to bring order and of the Sotpics Xho ge Hoerser bo gh Wo YIONSs never Spin Nigit, - . c . . i TY. Nn e a § 3 >le . y y looks rather absurd in light of the generalissimo’s speech {harmony out of our present indus- Fo hor be Bie Re or Machiavellian owners of the tools announcing his intention to surrender his powers and retire |!rial chaos: |feeble-minded children. Every of production and the members of | from public life. Each faithful worker should re- child born should be perfect and labor unions were to suffer then I} ‘ d : i p ; ¥ as ceive an incentive bonus. for each healthy and the parents should be would say let them fight it out | Senn, in ve vor 3 America, - ane Presenting to the Chinese National assembly the draft |six months of faithful service of $25 able to feed, clothe and care for among themselves. But this is not | Euro raised in America and hailed with eager of a proposed new constitution for representative govern- |%© $50 Yor of Flock In She oo every child they bring into the the ar ie P gn SOn{po og Indiana ; i i i . ; pany. This, of course, would apply world, I feel a man should be from ing the people of this nation is a . . ment, Chiang reminded his hearers that he was 60. That | better to the large companies like | 53 to 25 and a woman from 21 to Possible complete breakdown of our | Bs pi of fhe Stesmint Wa ae is an age which anyone who thought of himself as indis- |Ford Motor Co. General Motors, tife 23 at least before they can be is- economic system. The welfare of | “UIP WACTe 1: Was BOTH A% Be soi

i ; ro¢ |lar ompani an ther | : the whole le is of much more | 2 Hesse, Germany. : : nsable wo / large steel c nies d otherigyed a license to wed. And they peop Senile . : pe 13 e : uld surely regard as the prime of life. Yet |large corporations. If the mine g)55 should pass a mind and health [importance than either the owners | scientist, and engineer living in Germany, built it. Chiang said he was too old to carry longer the burden that | wirkers had an interest in the mines | ioc of the tools of production or the | AS of record, his boat was the first steamboat ever

has been his through the 20 years since the death of China's [they would not be so ready | 1 know of a case where a midget members of the labor unions. built in the world.

, strike. , ; If this present stoppage of coal volutiona r -sen. : trike about four feet tall and a girl of | re ry father, Sun Yat-sen. He called upon the. So the solution I recommend Is normal size, just out of a feeble- Production brings disaster to the

assembly to adopt the best possible democratic constitution | for the big companies to take their minded school were married and Nation many people will blame one and to educate the Chinese people in the science and respon- faithful employees into a profit had a child or two. I think they a anq hat man is John L. Lewis, hili ar sharing partnership by giving their [sent the girl back to the school. [On the other hand many people sibility of self-government. | workers an incentive bonus twice & No wonder boys of 19 and girls of | Will blame the owners of the coal Significantly, though time and again they had been in- [year of from $25 to $50 of company |15 to 17 years get married and have (mines. Both of these attitudes are

a . . : et i | t of balance with correct reasonvi a ih stock. This plan should help take more children than they are able to °4 } ted to participate in the unification and. democratization | =" the Droduction lag and ab- [care for. I know of a case where a Ng The real fault can be propof China, the Chinese Communists were not among those |sentee problem. Goodwill is valu- |girl of about 14 or 15 cried because |€rly Placed at the door steps of the : present when the national assembly met. Instead, their | able. i ; ; {the judge did not. want to° sign for Sonoent o His ued States. They i $d : If people own a share and receive (her to marry. She got her man, ave stood by like a .lot of wooden , | ‘ , forces were waging civil war, So it was through the long | economic compensation

! . from the they had some children, they di- dummies and permitted the almost years Chiang’s government fought the Japanese, yet had productive capacity of the business vorced, both married again, and the CUMPleted bauchery of both our to keep an army stretched across north China to stop the |they certainly will take a far greater [man is about to get his third wife, |Monetary and economic systems.

3 hd : interest in the success of the com~ |I know of more than one case where | If political democracy cannot or Communist fifth column from marching on Chungking, The iter The person who has an in-{young mothers have more children | Will Hot get a complete divorce from These two instances stand clear and causative

~ Chinese Communists, as with. the Communists elsewhere, |vestment in a business wants that |than they are able to care for now. Machiavellian capitalistic greed then | pehind the progress of the steamboat in the world. give their loyalty to Moscow and accept no participation in \business to prosper. So the way| If we would stop letting children | Political democracy will go down in| Here is the record: : government of the h land short of absolut 1 to national stability and prosperity marry there would not be so many complete defeat along with capi- : ent o e homeland short of a 3% ute rule by |i to spread the ownership of prop- unwanted children. = purge. ri : :

: lg I The big question mark to the United States is who will ‘Carnival — By Dick Turner take Chiang’s place, in holding China together against the | advance of totalitarian expansion.

WHICH CAME FIRST, the chicken or the egg? This old question is emphasized in the coming of the

Receptions Different THE RECEPTION of the steamboat in its world is one of the marvelous touches of men and things: Two instances will illustrate: A On the river Fulda, where the steamboat was horn, they heaped abuse on Denis Papin, who built it. Down the Fulda at Munden, where Papin was fleeing to London on his boat, the boatmen on the river attacked him and destroyed his boat. In contrast: At Indianapolis, about a century and a quarter later, on April 11, 1831, the “Robert Hanna,” a real steamboat, appeared on White river: Not a man, woman, or child, it is reported, slept in Indianapolis that night. They were wild with joy at the coming of the steamboat to their town.

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| international communistic state, | Because of the increased efficiency |of production brought about by the educational development .of the in|tellect this is as natural as it is i that day follows night and night

started on its first successful trip up the Hudson on Aug. 17, 1807, 27 experimental steamboats, these two included, were built, Of these 17, or 63 per cent of them, had been built in America.

In the 124 years between Denis Papin's boat on |talistic greed at the hands of an| the Fulda river and Robert Fulton's Clermont as it

janapolis Times| ~~ in? |INWASHINGTON...ByDuid MKihey ~~ rae os me | McNutt Might Have Been President

. And here at home there are sharp-shooting critics of both Roxas and McNutt. One of the leaders in this field is former Interidr Secretary Harold L. Ickes, He has turned columnist and has to have something to belly-ache about at least four times a week. In addition he has written an introduction to the book called “Betrayal in the Philippines.” This highly critical piece of political pamphleteering was written by Hernando Abaya. He once worked for McNutt and was fired by him. Now everything is- wrong with what Roxas and McNutt aré trying to work out for the Philippines in his opinion. He calls Roxas a collaborationist be- | cause he was part of the provisional government for the islands under the Jap occupation. According to our. thoroughly. competent foreign | editor, William Philip Simms, the Roxas collaboration | was carried on not only with U. 8. consent, but practically under U. 8. orders. An American army officer, in mufti, remained in Manila as a member of one of the non-belligerent enibassy staffs and was in constant touch with Roxas, Mr. Simms says. - The Communist Daily Worker not only lamblasts Roxas and McNutt but Gen. MacArthur as well. According to a member of the McNutt staff, that is the “party line” in the Philippines also. In fact, the party line everywhere, except in Stalinized countries, is to whip up opposition to the regime, particularly if it is a democratic one.

Has Presidential Approval SO WHEN PRESIDENT TRUMAN presented the medal for MeNutt's distinguished civilian wartime service, as manpower director, federal security administrator and. public health service head, it also had some current significance. For it shows that the administration is well pleased with -McNutt's present assignment and anxious to keep him in the P. I. hot-spot as long as he will consent to stay. : Despite his being euchred out of the presidency, Paul V. McNutt always has been willing to serve his country. And that is his attitude today. DAN KIDNEY,

REFLECTIONS . . . By Robert C. Ruark

Noisy 20's Not as Good as This Era

1 seem to recall that a lot of people used to have a lamentable habit of suddenly coming down with the permanent blind staggers after a pre-dinner cocktail. The Wall Street air was full of the hurtling bodies of financiers, making it unsafe for the pigeons. The Volstead act created an aristocracy of criminals. The thugs who gaily sprayed the streets with machine gun fire, with small regard for passing baby carriages, ranked considerably higher in the social scale than barkers. A man's reputation as a gay dog rested on how many gangsters he knew socially; a gat-packing hood with greased hair was a larger lion in the salon that a hungry prince. ’ Crookedness in public office seemed less heinous then than now. Over the last few years it has become increasingly unfashionable to ride into office on the backs of pimps and gamblers, and beating up the opposition at the polls now is frowned on. Mr. Walker emerged from the Seabury stench smelling pretty sweet; some of our current political roses appear to be in the process of permanent wither. Generally speaking we have ceased shooting the innocent families of pushcart men in the mistaken idea that their walkups lodged illegal booze, and we don’t frisk coffins any more in the hopes of retrieving a flat pint.

Maybe We're More Adult WE HAD INFLATION then and shortages of living space, and we walked cynically and stupidly into a massive economic calamity, the crash. Everybody's got plenty of troubles now, but we have largely been

trying to do something intelligent about them. I'll buy this era over that one, if only on the hunch that we've become a mite more serious in the head, and a touch more adult in our conduct.

The best solution for the problems riages and almost as many divorces, | «ye want more and more wages and SAGA OF INDIANA oe oo By William A. Marlow | Hoosiers Hailed Advent of Steamboat’

Thus the world laggéd behind when the steamboat was in the shell. Among the millions of mens in the world’s older civilization—in Europe, India, China, all Asia and Africa, the steamboat stirred.them relatively not at all. But America, with only 17 states in 1807, and around 7,000,000 people, shot the works for the steamboat—in building boats; in moving men and freight; in the enthusiasm that made the steamboat in her world click. : In all this, Indiana was almost pitifully enthusiastic and determined. Not only did Indianapolis hope and believe that steamboats could run from the Gulf of Mexico to her front yard. Covington and Lafavette, even Logansport and Peru made persistent attempts to get steamboats up the Wabash to their towns. Delphi’ petitioned congress that the town be made a port of entry, and South Bend coaxed the “Matilda Barney” to come up the St. Joseph from Lake Michigan to tap the iron foundry at Mishawaka.

Inspired by Necessity BUT BEHIND all this enthusiasm and hope was hard sense and grim necessity. Indiana through the first decades of the 19th century was bursting with hope and possibility. And the steamboat did indeed give much relief, even if it did not entirely cure the fever. : ‘ After the steamboat enthusiasm cooled a bit in Indiana, this emerged: The steamboat, in Indiana, would have to be confined to the lower Wabash and . Ohio rivers. But flatboats, once or twice a year on a freshet, could “carry Indiana's surplus products to steamboats on the. Ohio and lower Wabash, and thus on to th» New Orleans market. But for a long time the steamboat was the favored dream as well as the solid profit of Indiana,

There has not yet risen above China's horizon, at least | \ bs — gine a : 0 pl Se | “on Apri zs SY VAR a A WORLD AFFAIRS . .. By Ludwell Denny

very situation

not visible from here, another possessing the qualities of in a letter which C.

leadership, strength-and purpose to give us the confidence gah 2 + Bd was published in the Forum, we would like to feel of capacity to hold the gains Chiang 318] "4 k id j NE . r . y 5 2 } ' { “WORLD AS ' 1 V E V . has made in subduing Ching’s warlords and containing her ; WITH WEAK" ©

milli f DO AWAY WITH WEAK” lions o ation i iti i } l a . | population in one political unit, By William Hurley, 2720 Forest Manor ave. | within the British Labor party will not be stopped But Chiang evidently has faith that capable and re-

The general tendency of the | : cy of the world |" ime Minister Attlee's nominal victory over the sponsible leaders will arise, or else he would not stake his

today is to uphold the strong and to | e in history on his willingness to step aside and invest

ay w y | leftists in the party meeting. 39 aVaY With the Wegk, As you see The rebels pot expected to continue their press

it through the health resources and i against the Bevin-Byrnes oa : scientific societies they don't look at | id Pr Fog: a ern) 8 tbholding any parlia- | ARMY h it as the Bible theory. | mentary action until the growing movement is | (] For instance, on the’ streetcars | stronger. * | and busses you see the young folks| "© . hold their seats and let the old peo- | Could Control Foreign Policy ple stand up. A mother with a child | will let her child sit down and she! will stand up. Also in politics, will give young | characteristic of British genius for compromise. working men a compensation and | let them walk the streets, but the old men have to wait until they are at the brink of the grave before they get help. I believe they should do away with the compensation and give it to the old age assistance, or (ar better, a pension so they can do away with the officials, the investigators, etc.

DAILY THOUGHT

QHERIFF MAGENHEIMER announces appointment of a : "

ber of new deputies and installation of a compre- ¢ merit system under which he will choose future

of Ris staff.

That is a good move and we hope he will be able to | it stick in the face of the political pressures that are | in to be brought upon him. He can give the office the of administration the county wants, and which he is to give, only by having the very best possible staff |

adequate support. Rebel leader Richard Crossman,

not see in the list of changes, however, the of discipline.

who had most to do with the bad ad- |

LONDON, Nov. 30.—The anti-American movement

THE SO-CALLED SETTLEMENT of interparty conflict over the government's foreign policy is

In this case it has the merit of saving everyone's face but the danger of postponing a showdown of basic policy. The net effect is to restore party unity on the surface at the price of leaving Foreign Secretary Bevin and British diplomats abroad with in-

by the. simple

expedient of expressing regret for introducing “the anti-Bevin, anti-American amendment in parliament, enabled the rebels to escape even the mildest form

The strategy of Bosses Attlee and Morrison—in

me and who have been the most | 18. Until we do read their names | thhold judgment on whether | his new program work,

& =

COPR. 1946 BY NEA SERVIC

"And as an added inducement, Mr. Migas, with this policy we tell

you the name of the

Only by pride ¢ometh contention; but with the well advised is wisdom,—~Proverbs 13:10,

|

Pride is at the bottom of all

person who suggested you as a prospect!” |great mistakes.—John Ruskin.

a

the absence of the other member of the triumvirate, Mr. Bevin—was to speak loudly and carry a little stick. oh x The usually mild Attlee told the party meeting if {t did not like his leadership it could get someone else, but meanwhile it must give him loyalty. Hardboiled ’ .

a i s EN

ll ps ;

Laborite Rebels Won't Back Bevin

Herbie Morrison reminded the party that a split could lose the next election. “ The ‘obvious question arises why the leaders dealt so timidly with what they described as a longplanned demonstration of party disloyalty. Among several reasons, the following apparently were the most potent: Rebels numbering between a third and a half of the parliamentary Labor party have an unexpressed sympathy of the others which might give them a majority on the foreign policy issue alone—if the related issue of party mutiny and risk of wrecking the Labor government were not involved. The rebels: have strong .support in trade unions which are the voting and financial basts of the Labor party. At the recent trades unioncongress’ annual meeting, a relatively small shift of votes within the

large unions would have resulted in a defeat for the Gu :

Bevin policy. wn

Party Leaders Proceed Softly

A THIRD REASON for leniency is that the rebels are made up of three different groups, which have come together for the first time and which Mess, Attlee and Morrison hope to divide by soft treatment, On the extreme left is a small group of fellow travelers numbering less than 30. In the middle is the Crossman group which has an anti-Communist record. The third group went along for the ride. Messrs. Attlee and Morrison apparently hope to re-isolate the fellow travelers; reduce the Crossman group and reabsorb the others . ’

.

- SATUR!

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Schepps

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