Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 December 1946 — Page 16
TY
Fadi 3 R Sa iY ~ PAGE 14 ‘Monday, Dec. 2, 1946 ROY W. HOWARD WALTER LECKRONE
.
HENRY W. MANZ
pa ‘A SCRIPPS-HOWARD NEWSPAPER ; : Owned and published daily (except Sunday) b
st. Postal Zone 9.
ered by carrier, 20 cents a week.
month. Ev
Give Light and the People Will Find Their Own Way
CONGRATULATIONS, CMDR. GRIFFITH
the new national commander of the American Legion,
achieve his selfish ends.” .
and women, who were blunt and caustic in their comments when Lewis did just about the same thing during the days
of war. : As the Legion head said, Lewis is striking at the roots of our democracy. ‘
WHAT UNIONISM REALLY MEANS ET'S try to look at the labor-management scene from a longer view than appears in each of these recurrent crises. : ; What is the essential and ultimate aim of unionism? It is, we believe, not merely economic, but spiritual. It involves universal desire for human dignity. It isn't dollars alone, or bread alone. It is part and parcel of the long crusade which dethroned the tyrant kings and created democracy: : Man does not live at peace with himself as a slave, underling, or just a hireling. He yearns for the right to look every other man in the eye as an equal. Through unionization the industrial worker has achieved economic improvement. But spiritually—in many, possibly most unions—he has achieved little or nothing. He has changed bosses. But has he gained the self-respect to which he aspires? He has merely substituted the union ‘boss for the factory boss. He is still subservient to his new master as he was to his old—in many cases more so. In union meetings he is slapped down, .as he was before by the factory boss in the days when there were no unions. If he raises his voice against the union “leaders” he is booed and browbeaten. Though he may have gained economically, he still can’t be himself, spiritually. So he is bewildered and frustrated. He is caught in an epic struggle for power between his union boss and his factory boss, a struggle as yet undecided. . . ». ” . . . IN this struggle, though he suspects that he has been cheated of his fundamental desire, though he realizes increasingly that he has traded one master for another, he is not yet ready to withdraw his loyalties from a .cause which promised to achieve his need for both economic progress and human dignity. In his growing doubt, however, may be found the motive for spiritless endeavor, the slowdown, which has plagued production. New union legislation, to be sound, should not seek to curb unionism, but to support it and to purge it of the autocrats who have perverted its aims. To this end, democratic principles must be applied; the secret ballot must be substituted for the “throw-him-out” type of union meeting. The democratic right of a free American to give or withdraw his support for an organiza-
of the factory or the head of the union.
This would, instead, strengthen the bargaining position
union boss, strengthen the position of his organization.
to be treated as such must be established once and for all
"of the factory boss or the union boss.
CITY-ARMY CO-OPERATION
bring the community and the army closer together. military authorities. Harrison and senior officer stationed in the state, has don closer together. Army personnel at the fort, reduced in number great!
since termination of the war and removal of the financ school to St. Louis, more than doubled the 1945 contributio
munity Fund leadership.
premise applies, of course, to navy personnel stationed her.
PUBLIC RELATIONS
. ¥
war, an encounter X-newspap in an army lieutenant’s uniform, in Ge many while the war was still raging. “What's your job?" he was asked. “Tam public relations officer for my regiment,” he sai what are your duties over here?” Bie at
Indianapolis Times|
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Member of United Press, Scripps-Howard Newspaper Alliance, NEA Service, and Audit Bureau of Circulations.
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like the forthright manner in which Paul H. Griffith,
took a firm stand against the way John L. Lewis is “riding roughshod over the rights of 140,000,000 Americans to
Mr. Griffith's statement was, we believe, an accurate expression of the sentiment of the majority of the Legion members. This is particularly true of world war II men
tion, as he chooses. The democratic right, even the obliga-- - tion, to vote and participate actively in the affairs of his organization so long as he gives it his allegiance, The democratic right to have his part in controlling his union affairs and to stand the equal of any man, whether he be the head
Such measures which involve the abolition of all forms |case of a mother with a child. alof compulsion ag to union membership would not, as union | most helpless from birth but menautocrats say, weaken the bargaining position of unions. of |two other children younger than state election board ruled a Demo-
the individual and, through him, rather than through his
There must be no attempt to restore the old, autocratic powers of the factory head. We hope most industrialists are convinced of that. . But the right of a free American |
Else our vaunted production system is finished. These men Will not forever work in bondage, either the bondage |care for the lttie crippled ‘child io
. + . i AYOR ROBERT H. TYNDALL, himself a former army jmother might be able to find aone help this deserving young officer, has named a county advisory committee to |Piace for the other two children | mother?
Another group in Indianapolis, the Reserve Officers Association, likewise has a committee to work with the
; On its side, the army as represented hy Brig. Gen. Clifford Bluemel, commanding officer. at Ft. Benjamin |
much to bring the service folk and the residents of the city
to the Community Fund. And Gen. Bluemel, a prisoner of war of the Japanese, has given generously of his time in making talks before local groups as well as in his Com-
Indianapolis has been dubbed a “soldier's town” by service men everywhere, because of the pleasant relations | that always have existed here. Mayor Tyndall's committee | can make this relationship even better by bringing about | greater contact between soldier and civilian. That general |
PEAKING of the government press agents, upon whom the Republican economizer, Rep. Taber, has declared we shall long remember was with a young
getting my colonel elected governor back
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"We're in Difficult Straits, Folks"
Spr—
"WE ARE FACED WITH A SHORTAGE OF SCHOOL TEACHERS. WE SORELY. NEED A LOT OF BRIGHT YOUNG PEOPLE TO INSTRUCT OUR - CHILDREN, TO GUIDE THEM , . ALONG THE PATHS OF CULTURE AND LEARNING, TO MOLD THEM INTO GOOD AMERICAN CITIZENS. I$. A HIGHLY SKILLED, RESPECTED AND PROFESSION |*
_——
" OF Course You MUST HAVE A COLLEGE TRAINING WHICH WILL CosT You SANDS OF 4 DOLLARS AND FROM FOUR TO Six YEARS OF YOURTIME, A Few REES WILL COME IN HANDY, 100! YOUR REPUTATION MUST BE ABOVE REPROACH AND YOu MUST BE PE CULIARLY SuiTer FOR THIS WORK"
hy
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=, & “OH ABOUT HALF | OF WHAT | vay MY DAY LABORERS!"
a
"HOW MUCH SALARY (AN WE EXPECT FOR ASSUMING ALL THIS RESPONSIBILITY 2+ op * :
"1 do not agres with a word that you say, but | will defend to the death your right to say it." — Voltaire.
“TREAT ALL VETERANS
ALIKE IF BONUS GIVEN” By Harry Ellis, 2401!5 Prospect st. lot of kicks so I'd like to add mine to provide for my wife and only child, who is afflicted with a disease |ing to pay their service personnel a engine house. My child is lying in the St. Vincent's hospital, where pjea to the state of Indiana is, don't bleed, nor can they cure him. Now that the one and only Mr. John L.|treat us all alike. Don't cook up sands of other men and women all have pull or if they get the breaks. world is this that one well salaried |get nothing. By DANIEL M. KIDNEY |bring about things like this. It tator Lewis feel real proud. They| those disabled. They deserve every- | during the war when they were strikes during the war. . |bonus. That's up to you. The while my family and the families| According to r rts { { } 8 pa Yom Russia, ment is now saying John L. Lewis | suffering because of lack of suffici-|U, 8. 8. R. better than the U. 8. A.| : you think we deserve a bonus, treat Where is everybody in the White against the government. . o ¥ would enjoy the privilege of meet- / | ~ taking over congress, the Chamber |. AL ISSUE IN WINTER” another strike. statement champion. t doesn't seem that one with,
1" . "Veteran Would Like to Meet ‘e* 2: " By Harding M. Heward, Greenfield ‘John L, Lewis; Tell Him Off The bonus problem is due for- a What kind of a world is this? I am a veteran who was just dis- | ang hope I score. charged the first of November on a dependency. discharge to enable pel Many states have or are preparknown as hemophilia. I went to work on Nov. 4 at the Pennsylvania | token of a r y | tok ppreciation in the form railroad and am how working there as a machinist in the Hawthorne ,r a honus for a job well done. My he has been bleeding from the nose since about 1:30 p. m. Wednesday, do as the federal government has. Nov. 20, 1246, and not even the doctors can détermine how long he will| If you want to give us a bonus, Lewis has called the coal strike I {something like the G. I. hill _of wlil be laid off the same as thou- VIEW S ON | rights, where some benefit if they over the United States. "Under the G. I. bill some will have 1 would like to ask what kind of THE NEWS thousands in benefits, others will and wealthy individual can take It took all of us to do the job things within his own power &nd| These dimouts should make Dic- and all should share alike except | seems that this wonderful Mr. Lewis can remind him that he was the ‘Ning they get, and more, too. May- | and his followers have made enough only major labor leader to call Pe the job we did wasn't worth a {drawing those large paychecks, «nor American Legion can't speak for all {of us, just as the federal governof millions of other servicemen were Elliott Roosevelt seems to like the! can't speak for all the miners. If ent funds, that they eould stand to Maybe we could trade him for a work along with us for awhile nqw. miner who isn't used to striking US 81 alike or tell us, so we know | what to expect. House? in bed asleep, or are they > 0 8 scared :to deal with him? 1If so, I|' Now that the Republicans are «LEWIS WRONG TO RAISE ing him personally. I would assure of Commerce seems to be trying to| the world he would never call replace P. A. OC. as running broad |Br Jeannette Booker, Indianapolis 1 s = =» = » . a sane’ mind would bring such a “COUNTY SHOULD HAVE A Tt keeps parents busy these -days|calamity upon the people at this
CRIPPLED CHILDS’ HOME” learning whose strike closed the|iime of the year as John L. Lew By Mrs. P. A. B, Alton ave. { schools—miners, teachers or pupils. has d Tf be desired 55-1 While so much is being said and | , sw , one. e desired a raise for done for the Community Pund.| It will be mice for President Tru- Dis men (and I really think they
lare entitled to it) why didn't he which I am sure does a lot for our
man to know his employees are perfect patriots before the G. O. P.|bring up the issue during the sumcommunity, I would like to ask why | fires them. there is. no home for crippled chil-
{mer months. A mental test should oon |be given him, then if found sane, a dren in Marion county. I know a| Looks like veterans housing will | birth record should be sought to have to wait until after the Allen- (See if he has any cause through Wyatt war. {heredity to wish to see the American people suffer. If this proves the negative (that he is not in accord with the American ideals) the mo-
» different.
vw [tally very bright. The mother has! Utah likes to be
|this child. The father deserted crat was elected to congress. tive must be bossism regardless of them before the youngest child the government, and he should have was born. his position taken away ‘from him
| The welfare say they are unable to This mother lived on $50 a month place this little child because of pate by the welfare. Out of this her condition. She attended the she paid $15 a month rent for a school for crippled children, where {small three-room double. In August|I understand she is very bright. . |of this year, she was evicted from when school commenced this fall |this home, which has been 80ld.|she was unconsolable; it was all She has no one who can or will |ghe had ever had to look forward
and someone of less ego put in his place. For we as American citizens are tired of being deprived of the necessities of life. We were in perfect accord with the scarcity of articles during the war, but not now. Without coal to keep the factories humming the vital things needed are halted. So to say goodbye to Mr. Lewis would be music to the soul.
because she has to be lifted to the| This child should be in the Riley | table and to bed. The mother 1s a [hospital with good medical care. | small person herself, [She might improve as the mother Now if this child could be put in says she has tried to walk some {a home for crippled children the within the past year. Can't some
» »
“FAMILY WILL PUT UP WITH MUCH TO BE TOGETHER”
By Mrs. Margaret Lepien, 604 E. 13th st. In answer to the letter about peo-
ple being too finicky. My husband, baby daughter and myself would be [glad to rent her room if it's clean, | just 50 we could be together. We're not finicky as to where we live but
side Glances—By Galbraith
e | on a small scale. My husband is
a navy veteran of four years.- He
wasn't’ particular as to what he ate or where he slept—he had nothing to say about it. Now that he is home, it seems we deserve to have a place equipped with more than a hotplate and also one where we don't have to carry all our water from upstairs. We'll put up with almost anything just to be together, but when people start! charging $45 and $50 a month for a one-room apartment where the wall plastering is falling off and the cockroaches are so thick you can hardly keep them off your bed, that isn't what they fought for. They came back and now it's whatever people have left over for them, not what they'd like or dreamed of over there, And, Mrs. W. C. C,, there ‘were millions of them be- » sides your four ‘sons. . a —————————————— DAILY THOUGHT If ye keep My commandments, ye shall abide in My’love; even as I have kept My Father's com-~ mandments, and abide in His love.~John 15:10. - That thou art happy, owe to God; That thou continuest sych, owe to thyself,
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12-2
COPR._1948 BY NEA SERVICE, WC. YM. REG 0. 8 WAT, ory”
"Here she comes again to spring her joka about how she used to 40 to the bank on payday but now she never gets _
d.
OUR TOWN ... By ‘Anton:Scharrer Ree iron ear ~ Mrs. Sewall Did Nof Wear Bloomers
v : on THE OFT-REPEATED STORY that Mrs. May
Wright Sewall wore bloomers in public is of the stuff
that legends are made of. She didn't even wear them on May 16, 1893, the day she was chairman of the Woman's Congress which met at the Chicago, Worlds: Fair to discuss dress reform. Then, if ever, was Mrs. Sewall's chance to wear pants. On |that day Mrs. Sewall appeared in a tight-fitting dark blue dress equipped with full- skirts which missed meeting the ground by 18 inches. The visible parts of her legs were incased in high blue gaiters. That was all there was to it.’ Even so, it caused a ripple of excitement when she advanced across the stage to greet her international audience. It was Rachel Fostery Avery (and not Mrs Sewall) who stole the show that day. She represented the ultra reformers and there was a. general straining of necks when Mrs. Sewall introduced her. Mrs. Avery stood behind the chairman's table when she started her epoch-stirring speech that morping, but the excited delegates would not permit her to proceed in such a modest self-effacing way. “Stand on the table,” yelled one delegate more articulate than the rest. :
' The Test
“YES, YES,” cried the others, “we want her to stand in a ‘position where we can see her.” And forthwith Mrs. Avery extended her hand to Mrs. Sewall, who helped her to the top of the table. It revealed a woman wearing a divided skirt of blue flannel which fell a trifle below the knees, at which points (that's right) the garment was gathered, leaving the ankles free and unfettered. The waist was a loose blouse with just a suspicion of a belt hidden somewhere on the inside. rs The only thing resembling Mrs. Avery's costume that day was the harem affair worn by the delegate from Turkey who, when it came her turn to speak, reported that Oriental women -had just about made up their minds to discard bloomers in favor of long Occidental skirts. The anomaly went unheeded, and
. i» %
ever since’ that day I've“ been kind .of leery of a woman's sense of humor, Anyway, there wasn't any reason to get excited abaut Mrs. Avery's pair of bloomers, She was strutting old stuff. Bloomers—at any rate, American bloomers were invented as far back as 1850 by Amelia Jenks Bloomer, who had just turned 30; which, in case you are still too young to realize it, is the dangerous age in women. The ensemble as conceived by her embraced an ordinary bodice, a short skirt and fullfashioned trousers built, more or less, - after the manner of a Turk's notion of pants. Miss Bloomer began wearing her outfit in public sometime around 1853. It so impressed Susan Anthony and Lucy Stone that they dressed up'in it, tog. However, Miss Anthony abandoned it after a short tridl. “I found it a physical comfort,” she said, “but a mental crucifixion.” Lucy Stone went right on, however. Indeed, she wore bloomers the night she visited .Indianapolis to deliver her revolutionary lecture on woman's rights, which ‘was way back in the Fifties, at least 40 years before Mrs. Avdry stole her thunder. That was the memorable night the Indianapolis’ audience was so excited that it started calling for her long before 8 o'clock, the time set for her appearance on the stage. Lucy came on the stage madder than hell, took a watch from somewhere in her bodice, and rebuked the audience for its impatience. “You have no right to do this,” she scolded. After which she went backstage and waited until she got good and ready to deliver her speech. Pants did something to her.
A Preacher's View
LUCY'S SAUCY BEHAVIOR so en Chapman, editor of The Chanticleer, ny ol Dats it the subject of a hot editorial, in the course of which he labeled her “an impertinent minx.” Nothing came of it, however, because by the time the article appeared, Miss Stone had left Indianapolis On the other hand, the sight of Lucy Stone in bloomers so impressed Henry Ward Beecher that it inspired him to say from his pulpit in Brooklyn : “A woman in a long dress and multitudinous petticoals is a ridiculous abomination.” Mp, Beechers’ heresy was largely the result of the seven-year-long petticoated period he spent in Indianapolis (1839-47).
IN WASHINGTON . . . By Peter Edson
~The Battle of
WASHINGTON, Dec. 2.—Five important railroad cases now before the federal courts and the interstate commerce commission, and coming up in the next congress, fit together in a jigsaw puzzle that pictures a battle of the railroad giants against the government. At stake is the whole future of U. 8. transportation policy—whether it is to have free-enterprise competition or monopoly control. :
Time Is Important
THE FIRST CASE to consider is the application of 46 major railroads for ICC approval of their offer to buy and operate the Pullman company’s sleepingcar service. In the closing session of these hearings in Washington, Jacob Aronson, counsel for the New York Central and the 45 other railroads in this pool, stated that his clients would like a decision by the ICC on this application before the supreme court can hear arguments on another case to, decide the same issue. In May, 1944, after an anti-trust suit by the government, Pullman, Inc., was ordered to sell either its car manufacturing business or its sleeping-car service. It chose to sell the sleeping-car service, and in December, 1945, the Philadelphia U. 8S. district court approved sale of it to the railroad pool for $75 million.
Three months later the department of justice asked the supreme court to bar the sale, on.the grounds that ownership and operation of the sleeping-car service by the railroads would merely perpetuate the monopoly that the court had ordered dissolved. This case has been set for argument in January. Desire of the railroads to get the ICC to approve this sale now is obviously a maneuver to present the supreme court with government approval of the deal by the ICC. . Two other railroad anti-trust cases fit into the same general picture-puzzle.
REFLECTIONS . . . By Fred W.
NLRB Ruling Could Help Coa
WASHINGTON, Dec. 2.—The national labor relations board, which administers the Wagner law, could help untangle the coal controversy by reversing itself on the extent of unionizing rights among foremen and other supervisory workers. The opportunity comes in the board's imminent ruling on an examiner's recommendation that the Jones & Laughlin. Steel Corp. of Pittsburgh be required to recognize and bargain collectively with a division of the United Mine Workers which has organized foremen in four “captive” mines.
Organizing Foremen ‘Is Issue A BOARD MEMBER said the decision might come within two weeks. —He said he was aware of the close connection between the ruling and the chances of getting the coal operators and John L. Lewis into agreement on a new contract that could end the present conflict. « The foreman question was one of the three main issues on which mine management and the union leader could not .get together last spring. Some operators said it was the most important, and one on which they would never yield. When Interior
Secretary Krug, following government, seizure of the ,
mines, signed the Krug-Lewis agreement in May he contracted to follow NLRB policy on foremen. If the board upholds the examiner in the Jones & Laughlin case, and also the union, it will be reinforcing the Lewis position. A reversal of the examiner, and also of itself, would undercut the legal position of Mr. Lewis. , The board has reversed itself before on the foreman issue. The reversals were due partly to uncertainty
Have wou ke nnveniencan at aean WORLD AFFAIRS . . . By William Philip Simms Misconduct of Troops in Phill
WASHINGTON, Dec. 2—Half a century of mutual respect and understanding built up between the United States and the Philippines is being threatened seriously by conduct of American troops In the ¢
islands. So says a letter from a leading Filipino who was educated and ‘spent many years in this country. He says the situation seems to be deteriorating instead of improving.
Untrained Draftees Ignorant
DRIVERS OF ARMY TRUCKS, observes the let-ter-writer, scorn trafic rules, insult civilian drivers and usé foul profanity. Fatal accidents occur almost dally. Perpetrators of these acts “are taken over by M. P. patrols and the public is never informed of the action taken against them. Thus suspicion that these men are whitewashed or leniently dealt with by the army is gaining ground. * “The next most common cause of friction,” the letter continues, “is the arrogant and insulting attitude of some officers and enlisted men in their contact with civilians. Not a few of our women have been insulted in the streets by American soldiers.” These are some of the “personal observations” of the Filipino in Manila but, he adds, smiliar abuses oceuir in the provinces. He speaks of a “reign of terror” in Zambales, Luzon and other areas where he says some officers and sailors have formed “partnerships” with local gangsters for purposes of rob- | bery, often of U, 8. property. : Many private residences, clubs and commercial
That i€, to thy obedience; therein stand, . ==Milton,
.
i the butcher, shopl'
’ ! J i i rol Lr
buildings, the Filipino says, still are occupied by the
i wk w Eo fir 5 Ay ih di od a a ¢ oT lg
f oy Nok
the Railroad Giants
First is dn action against the western milroads and their top financial-controlling interests, in the U. 8. district court at Lincoln, Neb. The government's: charge is that through monopolistic. control, development of the western railroads has been retarded, and that through rate-fixing agreements, competition has been stifled and the industrial development of the west suppressed. This case, begun in 19044, had been set for trial in December. Railroad attorneys have been pressing for delay of ‘the Lincoln case until after the supreme court can dispose of the so-called Georgia rate case. This was a suit initiated by Governor Ellis Arnall on behalf of the state of Georgia, charging that discriminatory freight rates were charged southern shippers by agreements dictated to railroads of the south and east by their common controlling ownership.
New Congress Holds Key
THE GEORGIA CASE has been set for hearing before a special master next March. After hearing, the special master must report to the court, which will then hand down its decision. That gives the railroads time to move in another direction. T Time is of value in these cases Recause a new Republican congress convenes in January. And among the bills which just missed passage by the last congress, but will be up for a second try next year, is the Bulwinkle bill to exempt the railroads from all action under the anti-trust laws. If the Bulwinkle bill can be passed early in the next congress, the troubles which the railroad financiers have been having with the government will be practically over. Georgia and Lincoln anti-trust cases would hay The supreme court
prevent sajeroads. 7
Perkins
Fight
in working out a policy, partly to changing board membership, and also to changing opinions among board members, Prior to June 15, 1042, it made several conflicting decisions on whether foremen came under the terms of the Wagner act. In the Union Collieries case, it found that foremen were “employees” under the act and coull constitute a proper unit for collective bargaining. On May 11, 1943, in the Maryland Drydock Co. case, it decided that except in industries having an established history of foremen unionization, there was no place in collective bargaining for supervisory employees. It did not deny, Towever, that foremen are “employees” and entitled to protection from discharge for union work. ‘ The board changed its position again in the Packard Motor decisions of March, 1945, and March, 1946. Both held that foremen may be organized for collective bargaining. “
Separate Supervisors’ Union?
CONGRESS, RETURNING Jan. 3, is believed sure to tackle the question if it is not settled before then. The Case bill of last summer, passed by both senate and house and vetoed by President Truman, would have taken foremen out of Wagner act coverage. NLRB can either: (1) Reaffirm its present wide policy that foremen can be unionize any manner; (2) decide they have no unionizing rights for collective bargaining; or (3) decide they can have their own unions distinct from the unions of employees they supervise. The third would be distasteful to Mr. Lewis and satisfactory to a large segment of coal industry management. ?
army against the needs of their owners. The WackWack Country club, for instance, Manila’s most cosmopolitan club, “still is in the hands of the army for no other reason than its desire to operate it as its own club.” : The American Chamber of Commerce as well as individual Filipinos and Americans, it is said, have bitterly complained against abuses. The USO, Rotary
club and other organizations have sought to improve
the situation by’ talks at service posts. But the trouble seems to be too deep for casual treatment.
Many leading Filipinos admit it is a difficult sit- 3
uation for all concerned. They say American draftees are hurriedly trained and, for the most part, are sunmindful of the fact that the Philippines are no longer: a military conquered and governed country” Troops don't quite understand why they are there. The U. 8. military command in the Philippines, the writer observes, has issued a statement “signed by three generals voicing resentment of the wholesale condemnation of the forces under them.” They claim the fault lies with “a small percentage,” as doubtless it does.
High Command to Blame
BUT THIS WOULD only seem to make the fault of the higher-ups all the greater. If only & “small percentage” of the troops are to blame, these few troops more easily’ might be made to behave in a reasonable manner. : : “I believe,” the Filipino leader concludes, “the situation is important and bad enough to justify asking the war department in Washington to help local, authorities (in the Philippines) to stop this calaniity.”
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