Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 December 1946 — Page 24

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‘The Indianapolis Times "PAGE 24 Friday, Dec. 18, 1046

ROY W. HOWARD WALTER LECKRONE President Editor, |,

A SCRIPPS-HOWARD NEWSPAPER

HENRY W, MANZ

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Circulations. ered by carrier, 20 cents a week.

U. 8. possessions, Canada and Mexico, 87 cents a

month. ATP RI-5551

* Give Light and the People Will Find Their Own Way

PROMISES AREN'T PERFORMANCE

THE British proposal, made by Sir Hartley Shawcross, for immediate establishment of an international armament inspection agency, is not to be regarded too seriously, even if it is accepted by the Russians, until the Soviets give some concrete demonstration of good faith, The Soviet Union is long on promises but slow on delivery, and given to its own self-interested interpretation of agreements. The Yalta and Potsdam agreements pledged free elections for Poland and the Balkan states when the Soviets were allowed to organize provisional governments in those troubled areas—but the elections held have been a mockery. Russia has violated its pledges in the Iran declaration, and its treaty of friendship and alliance with China became a dead letter before it was a year old. ;

HE proposed international supervisory agency, not to be subject to a security council veto, would be set up with full authority to send its agents into any country to inspect the strength of armed forces and armament. But even if it wins United Nations’ approval, how would such an agreement work out if the inspectors were turned back at the Russian border? Under UNRRA's conthacts, its agents were given the same right of inspection, yet Marshal Tito never permitted UNRRA agents freedom of movement in his country. The Russians would like to maneuver us into a position where we would feel obligated to reveal all there is to know about the atomic bomb. We would be foolish to let

ourselves be trapped in a one-way deal. If and when all nations reveal their troop strength, at home and abroad, and their current competitive armament

production, and the data have been verified by international

bomb question. 2 "That is our ace in the hole, almost the only trading material we have left, and it should be held in reserve until the rest of the cards are on the table.

“IT AIN'T NECESSARILY SO”

MEMBERS of C. I. O. unions want more money—as who doesn’t? So the C. I. 0. has set out again to “prove” that na-

members and that industry can well afford to pay such increases without raising prices.

This time the C. I. 0. has had a study prepared, with charts and graphs, by Robert R. Nathan Associates, Inc. of Washington. Mr. Nathan is a former deputy director of the office of war mobilization and reconversion. Mr. Nathan's study says much about “lush” corporate profits. He says that such profits, after taxes, are ‘“approaching” $15 billion for 1946; that rising prices have cut the real wages of manufacturing workers; that “it may reasonably be conjectured that total corporate business can support a 25 per cent increase in wages on the same basis that manufacturing alone can support a 21 per cent increase.” And he concludes that, in the interests of industrial peace— . “It would appear statesmanlike for labor and management to look the facts in the face and arrive at peaceful

diately.” : . . » » » » T would appear sensible, we think, to find out first how much of Mr. Nathan's study is facts, and how much represents his and the C. I. 0.’s opinions of what “may reasonably be conjectured.”

from which the C, I. 0, is demanding another round of

a $1385 million operating loss and a net loss, after tax refunds, of $51% million. The electrical industry, from which the C. I. O. got sizable increases after long strikes, reports huge losses so far this year. The railroads are losing so much, as a result of higher wage and material costs, that the interstate commerce commission has just found it necessary to give them a big freight-rate increase. = As Mr. Nathan observes, there is “pessimism” in the business community. says, “has reduced the value of securities listed on the New York stock exchange by about $19 billion.” That is, the owners of such securities have lost in value some $4 billion more than Mr. Nathan thinks all corporations will make in “lush” profits this year. \

UT of course Mr. Nathan doesn’t concede that such losses could possible be due to fear among investors that labor unions, following false economic prophets, will make extravagant demands for a new round of wage rises and attempt to enforce them by a new series of paralyzing strikes. “Probably,” he gays, “it is the very high level of profits and the realization that they cannot long persist which®is at the base of this pessismism.” It follows, by what passes

is for all industries—whether they have profits or losses ~to grant sizable wage increases “immediately,” without arguing and foreing unions to strike. Well, we still think the C. 1.0. would do well to consult s other authorities before acting on Mr. Nathan's study as gospel. It has told them what they wanted to hear. ‘But _ they might find that what they wanted to hear isn't neces.

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RIGHT DIRECTION

‘phase of business and home life in Amefica were off the books by President Truman yesterday. They CPA; office of war mobilization and conversion, economic stabilization. The “office of temporary

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Business Manager. Owned and published daily (except Sunday) by Times Publishing Co., 214 W. Maryland

Member of United Press, Scripps-Howard Newspaper Alliance, NEA Service, and Audit Bureau of

Price in Marion County, 5 cents a copy; deliv-

Mail rates in Indiana, $5 a year; ‘all other states,

Some corporations are making large profits. Others |

The severe stock market break, he |

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wartime agencies whose controls reached into nearly

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Hoosier Forum =.=

"Here's a New Kind of Public Strike; Buying No Union Goods"

By Richard Poore, East Ananias, Ind.

"Il do not

agree with a word that you | will defend to the death

your right to say it." — Voltaire.

| “PERIL OF MINE WORKER JUSTIFIES HIS WAGES” | By A Reader, Indianapolis

I am very sorry for your child, |

{ Mr. Ellis, that he is in the hospital

This is to notify you that the Buyers’ union, East Ananias local No. 1 for I have one of my own, but you

lis going on strike effective next Tuesday.

That action was voted unanimously last night at a meeting held saying when you knock J. L. Lewis.

surely do not know “what you are

ii Odd Fellows hall here in East Ananias. If was a big meeting, with | D° YOu know what coal sells for

firewood. Cy sent his vote in with this son-in-law,

~~ inspection, it will be time enough to take up the atomic every member present except old Cy Weathersbee, who is still suf-

straight from the mine? I will tell you. It sells for $2.75 a ton. When

, i fering some from his rheumatism’since he ran out of coal last week, I get it here I have to pdy $10 a

' although he is reported feeling some better now that he got in a load of ton for it. We had heard con- some pretty good money on a ton

Somebody is making

| siderable criticism about unions calling strikes without a proper kind of coal and it sure isn't the poor of voting, so our vote was by a secref ballot, with no more ballots under-paid miner. Would you work

cast than we had members. . a “COMMUNITY SING WOULD

This vote was on the resolution

drawed up by John Sténeburger HELP CHRISTMAS SPIRIT”

and reported by his committee, and | it read as follows: :

WHEREAS a great many unions ever before,

have felt it necessary to go on! commercialize Christmas,

By EG. Wellh, 808 N, Delaware In this day and age, more than

I think we tend hd for about 40 cents an hour?

As

strike In order to protect their| walk the streets, gazing in the store

| for doing less work, and

WHEREAS it seems like every’ 8 {time they have a strike or get their] {pay raised or agree to do less work why the prices of everything we have to buy have gone up and the supply has gone down, and |

singing all the

tional welfare depends upon large wage increases for its economic rights and interests and to windows, spending our money for | guarantee for themselves higher pay | Christmas gifts, do we ever think |of whose birthday we are celebrat-

n 2 Why not get together this Christmas tide in a community sing and Xeep the Christ in Christmas Christmas carols. | Deep in everyone's heart is a long-| ¢ ing to sing—from the little child «poN'T WANT

WHEREAS we, the citizens of who cannot carry a tune to the boy | East Ananias, Indiana, and mem- who whistles off-tune, or the older

| bers of the Buyers Protective Union, man whose voice cracks on a high

| Local No. 1, do firmly believe in col- note—they all love to sing the! So om some Sun- | Ple had a lot to do to air their

| lective bargaining and in the prin-| Christmas carols.

by

1500 or 600 feet in the ground and seven or eight miles back under the ground 54 hours for $75 a week? Do you realize if there weren't men like J. L. Lewis you would be working more than eight hours a day 50 what is the difference—think it over. I think you are all riled up: I am also a veteran and I sure

due to business reasons I can't. I I have just studied this- inconvenience of not hgving coal. ” » = CITY TO OPERATE TRANSPORTATION” By C. J. K., N. Olney st. ; I have always thought that peo-

[ciples of unions and the right of day afternoon, or some night, before | trdubles in the newspaper, but here [every man to organize and act to-| Christmas, won't someone arrange I-am doing it.

|gether to protect

his economic in-!for a community sing in some cen-|

First, the fare rate on streetcars,

|terests and guarantee for himself a tral church or tabernacle where all busses and trolleys. Driving your

[better way of life, now, therefore

No. I of the Buyers Protective | t0 all of us. Union does hereby declare a strike | > against grievous injuries that have SINGING Y

{after that date no member of this

2 = OUNGSTERS

conclusions with respect to sizable wage increases imme- been done. its members, beginning PROVIDE HAPPY EXAMPLE" lon the 17th of December and that By A Lady, Indianapolis I was on a Pennsylvania trolley

[local shall buy, trade for, negotiate last Wednesday around 7 o'clock. jor deal in anything made in any In the back of the car was a group {union shop er by any union member | of high school boys and girls and |or that bears on it any union label they were singing and having the tion. {indicating such production or trans- time of their life. I took it they

portation or distribution,

| going to be able to buy while this out of yourselves?

So that resolution was passed, sang their school song. {like I told you, and committees sang, “A Shanty in Old Shanty are making small profits, or none. The automobile industry, |were appointed to go to all the Town” in swing time. I want those " ¢ |stores in town and tell them about kids to know it was wonderful. Why

| were from Washington High as they |

Also they

: » : ' lit. We know there is going to be !don't you get together some place rises, contends that in the first nine months of 1946 it had a good many items we are not and really make a well known group

From the little

[strike lasts, but then as somebody I heard I know you could go places. brought out in the discussion last Other people on that car will say night, there is a great many items the same as I have here. If a few we cannot buy now on account of of our “BIG” people would sing a

strikes by other unions,

and we little more themselves, I' just know

have just got to stand together and | things this nation has itself into

insist on our rights no. matter how | would straighten out.

{much inconvenience it makes for us good work, kids. or for anybody else. only way a strike can be won.

Keep up the

Better te be happy This is the and carefree as you were than down |at the mouth, huh?

Side Glances—By Galbraith

|

al o = - ~~

ho TE Lib oy &

now yet whether “truly love him or not—I| have no idea «+ what he's planning to get me for Christmesl” -

\

| who love to sing may v8fhe and automobile will cost you 5 cents for | BE IT RESOLVED that Local Sing these Christmas carols so dear every mile you put on the speedom-

{eter. Taxis cost 25 cents for that | first mile and some times a lot more.

{| For each and every niile on a train

you pay 3 cents per mile. | Our trolleys, busses and streetcars carry us from one to 18 miles for 8'4 cents. Now! If we walked that distance just once we could then appreciate our railway transporta- | Now comes another Hitler or John L. Lewis, “Mr. Dawson,” who tells the public they are getting cheated, and wants the city to take over, so it can be run by the politicians. Let | the politicians have. the streetcar |company, and then let or rather make the operators pay a large part |of their salaries for election campaigning. Mr. Dawson said he would get up a petition for the people to sign. He sald he could get the factory, office, and other passengers as they got off and on trolleys and busses, This one-man war may lead to more than the people think. John L. Lewis has proven that. The court fined Lewis, but I bet my last dollar he will never put out |a penny-of his own money, nor will they put him in jail, No! We don't want any part of the city managing | the transportation system,

| We are given a mind of our own; |

| s0, let's use it, and not let some cheap’ publicity-seeking attorney | tell us what to do, ~ » ~ “HOW ABOUT NATION-WIDE

would hate to come home and have! {to work for 40 cents an hour, Ii | would like to sign my name, but!

am neither union or non-union, but |

«

9

TUCKED AWAY IN last week's copy of Time (in the department of “Education,” of all places), ws - a tiny item to the effect that Harvard's “Omnivorous library” had cleared its stacks to make room for 2000 “luridly titled, gaudily wrapped” detective stories, willed in 1942 to the university by famed Egyptologist George Andrew Reisner, who had been a Harvard professor for 37 years. Ndt a word to identify George with Shortridge high school, a defect I propose to remedy today. 1 guess it was close to 35 years ago when news trickled through . from Cairo, Egypt, that George Reisner, an Indianapolis boy, had cracked the secret of the Sphinx. The world had waited something like 6000 years for somebody to turn the trick. Shortridge high school, I remember, took a day offi to celebrate the event. At that, the news of George's achievement didn't surprise the Shortridge people as much as you'd think. Mrs, Hufford, the teacher of English (tq name just one) said she knew all along that when the Sphinx got ready to spill its secret, one of her pupils would be around to pick it: up.. Everybody knew, of course, whom she meant because it wasn't for nothing that Mrs. Hufford's eyes always lit up at the mention of George Reisner’s ‘hame. :

Won German Scholarship

WELL, AFTER GEORGE finished Shortridge (Indianapolis high school at the time), he went to Harvard and so impressed his teachers that they dismissed him with a degree before he was old enough to vote, Besides the degree, he also had the honor —such as it was—of being the youngest graduate of his class (1889). George Reisner's first connection with Egyptian archaeology came when he won a two years’ scholarship in the University of Berlin. I don't recall how it happened or what moved him to visit the museums, but almost the first thing to excite his curiosity over there was the assigned age of some Egyptian tablets. The more he examined the labels, the more he became convinced that they weren't catalogued right. Seems that up to the time of George's arrival, the age of Egyptian relics was figured by their colorings —the general theory being that like things have

'OUR TOWN ... By Anton Scherrer be i | Indianapolis Produces Egyptologist

something in common.. George proved that the colorings were the result of chemicals of the earth in which they had been deposited all these years. And

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from that moment. on, George was an Egyptologist

in his own right; so much so that shortly thereafter the Germans made him the assistant in the department of Egyptology in the Royal Museum, Berlin, . George was only 26 years old when, in 1893, he undertook his first big project. And even more unbelievable is the romantic fact that Queen Victoria financed him. She was 74 years old at the time. His next venture was financed by Mrs. Leland Stanford and later Mrs. Phoebe Hearst loosened her purse strings, too. George always had a way with old ladies, a: common enough accomplishment of Shortridge graduates—so common, indeed, that superficial observers who like to generalize ars tempted to accept it as a law. After that Harvard and the Boston Museum of Fine Arts pooled their interests and agreed to finarice his work, provided George would consent to drop his tools once every three years, return home, and give a course of lectures at Harvard. It was in the course of his residence in Cambridge, Mass, on one occasion that George spilled the secret of the Sphinx. At any rate, he hinted that it was a tomb designed to receive the body of Menes, the first king of Egypt, identified by some with the Mizraim mentioned in Genesis X, 6. It certainly surprised the folks back in the sticks because, up to that time, we had been led to believe that Mznes ‘was the Pharoah who had been devoured by a hippopotamus— so completely, indéed, that there wasn't anything left of him to be buried.

Even Harvard Men Like 'Em

GEORGE REISNER'S 2000 lurid detective stories, willed to Harvard, appear to be the books read to him «by assistants when, in his last hours at the pyramids of Giza, his eyes became dimmed with age and work. According to Time, the Reisner bequest will fill out Harvard's “haphazard” collection of detective stories started by the late George Lyman Kittredge, the «great Shakespearean scholar. And then, as if to justify a sin, Time adds apologetically that Harvard keeps the detective stories, for research purposes “because they reflect the American scene.” : Perhaps it would be a little mors honest to sy that even Harvard professors when left to themselves,

reveal the tastes of quite ordinary men-—like you and me, for instance. ®

IN WASHINGTON . . . By Peter Edson Truman Has Economic ‘Brain Trust’

WASHINGTON, Dec. 13.—Three mornings a week since early in October, 12 of the best economists the government could find have been foregathering in a basement conforence room in the old state departmentpuliting. ee It's difficult to get 12 economists to agree oh anything, but this bunch has been surprised at how well they have been getting along. Between formal sessions they bone up for the next meeting, or go into huddles with representatives of agriculture, labor and industrial organizations and other government agencies, to find out where they think the country | is and where it's going. | Created by Congress

NOBODY HAS GIVEN the 12 a nickname yet, but together they constitute what might be known as the President's economic brain trust, created by congress in the highly controversial “full” employment act of 1946. Nearly all of them were “professors” at | one time or another, though they don't like to have that brought up. Three of them constitute the President's council of economic advisers. Chairman Edward G. Nourse is an agricultural economist and former Brookings Institution official. John D. Clark of Cheyenne is former dean of the Nebraska college of business, former Standard Oil official, spokesman on problems of the west. Leon H. Keyserling of South Carolina comes from various jobs as counsel to government housing agencies and as secretary to Senator Wagner when the New Deal's early labor, housing and social Security legislation was being written. : The eight economists who make up the staff represent a similar broad range of background. Within the next week or so, this group will complete work on three important docufents that should make important news. First will be a “housekeeping” report Jo the Presi-

|

{ NEW YORK, Dec. 13. —CIiff Strike is a big bruiser, | with a gnarled nose, & permanent, scar-quirked eye- | brow, and a weathered face. He looks exactly like the movie version of a rugged engineer, and talks like it. An engineer is what he is and a big one, too. ’ He is president of F. H. McGraw and Co., an outfit | which has knocked off $250 million worth of construc- | tion under Cliff's hand. This includes the $36 million Bermuda air station and the $31 million Jayhawk Ordnance Works.

Housed 4 Million Germans

| AS CHIEF OF THE building end of military gov- | ernment in Germany, Mr. Strike threw together temporary dwellings for 4 million Germans in a little | more than a year. | I shove this into the pot to show you that Mr. | Strike is no bum in his business, and amply equipped | to ‘criticize the government's housing program which he was doing the day before Wilson Wyatt's resigna- | tion. Might add, too, that Mr. Strike's firm does not build shouses, so he isn’t sour-graping., I touched off i a landmine when I asked him when, in his estimation, I might be able to raise a house, “God knows,” he said, gloomingly. “Under the | present method of freezing construction supplies, | nobody can say. The housing program, maladjusted as it is, is holding back the entire industrial recovery {| of the nation,” Mr. Strike thinks individually-owned homes Ior | veterans was the wrong answer to immediate needs; | that it will prove to be a bad investment both for the owner and the government,

"enterprise.

dent. It will give for the first time an official interpretation of the employment act and tell what the council feels it can do to carry out the orders from congress “to promote maximum employment, produc. ton and purchasing power” 0

under free competitive

Second document is a report on present economic -

trends and what it recommends should be done to remedy any that may be going the wrong way. This will probably not be made public. It will be used bv the President, however, as the basis for his economic report to the congress. This will be a new message. on a level with the President's annual state of the

union message and his budget message to each new session.

When the economic report gets to congress, it will

be referred to the new joint committee on the economic report, made up of seven senators and seven congressmen—probably eight Republicans and siDemocrats. Senator Robert H. Taft of Ohio is likely chairman, The joint committee will have until Feb. 1 to consider the President's report, will then write a report of its own, referring various recommendations to rroner. rame=ittess. af tha con~rre:. accepting. or rejecting the President's recommendations as it ehoosc.

Prelida to |.~~islation

THT JOB OF: CONGTESS will*then he to pass such legislaticn as it sess fit to promote the aforementioned “maximum employment, production 2nd purchasing power.” In outline, this procedure is revolutionary in government. Tt marks recognition by congress that prosperity can be continued without cycles of depression, if the r' ~ht steps are t~"=n It marks the end of haphazard government. The“tex bill is now ‘to be considered in its relationship to tariff, appropriations, public works and other government aid programs, instead of each being considered separately.

REFLECTIONS... By Robert C. Ruark Individual G.I. Homes Called Mistake

“A young guy who is trying hisewings doesn’t want and really can't afford a permanent house. What he needs is broad hqusing, apartments, garden-apart-ments. You know the upshot of this: the government is going to wind tp with a lot of bum real estate. A lot of GI's will have both lost their house and dissipated their loan—for jerry-built eyesores with practically no trade-in value. Guys who can’t afford houses over $10,000, at present prices, shouldn't buy— they should rent. : “From a standpoint of time and economy, apartments can be built almost as swiftly as individual houses.”

Need Is for Fast Housing

MR. STRIKE'S GERMAN experiences convinced him of a need for fast housing here; the provision of immediate roofs, with individual, permanent construction to follow, according to the desires and financial ability of the individual, = In Germany, after a quick survey, he channelled his available materials, not into actual shelter, but into the rehabilitation of factories which made building materials. For awhile his achievement chart shot downhill, but when the factories started turning out stuff the line curved sharply upward. In 14 months his job was done and 4 million Germans came in out of the rain. Mr. Strike sees no relief ahead, either in GI bullding or collateral construction, with supplies still frozen at a time when the ice has broken in most other commodities. And as for the house I want to build? “You should live so long,” says Mr, Strike.

week nonoring newssovse WORLD AFFAIRS . . . By William Philip Simms

By Helen Hendrickson, Huntington, W. Va, | Since we set aside weeks for certain occasions, why couldn't we set aside the week before Christmas every year and make it nation wide | "Be kind to your news carrier week.” Sometimes I don't think we stop to ‘think what a faithful servant he 1s. He has to be right on hand [in all kinds of weather and gives up [lots of pleasure he would like just [to serve us. Since Indianapolis is | my home, I just felt like I wanted [to see if we could get it started there. I also know The Indianapolis Times is willing to do all they can for the benefit of their news | carriers,

DAILY THOUGHT

He answereth and saith unto them, He that hath two coats, let him impart to him that hath none; and he that hath meat, let him do likewise —Luke 3:11. ~ ” ” That man may last, but never lives, Who much receives, but nothing gives,

LE Whom none can love, whom none!

can thank-- : Creation's blot, creation’s blank.

| | + —Thomas Gibbohs.

WASHINGTON, Dec. 13.—By arranging for the German peace treaty discussions to be held in Moscow, Foreign Minister Molotov scored one of” his most important diplomatic victories since the end of the war To the people of Germany, the fact that the } allies will journey all the way to central Russia almost in midwinter to talk over the proposed treaty will carry great and lasting significance. To tnem:and to the Russian masses even more importantly in some ways—it will mean that “Russia won the war”; that the part played by America, Britain and the others was incidental.

Neutral Ground Anticipated

MANY DIPLOMATS had believed that, to avoid such connotations, the allies would select some place | outside the Big Three. Brussels, Copenhagen, Stock- | holm and Switzerland had been mentioned. | Russia is entitled to the conference. The Big Four met .in London, Paris and New York, Peace dis- | cussions have been carried on in all the places. If Moscow now wants to play host, it would seem to pe her turn. Only—and that is where Mr. Molotov's shrewdness comes in—until the question of the German peace treaty came up, he allowed the honors to go elsewhere. He “planned it that way.” After | all, the allies have been dallying only with the fringes of the peace. What matters i disposition

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Big 4 Moscow Talks Aid Red Prestige

‘that will be made of Germany, issue to be tackled in Moscow March 10. The stupendous importance which Mr. Molotov attaches to the Moscow “parley is indicated by his reported concessions to the press. One of the first questions asked by Secretary Byrnes had to do with foreign coverage of the conference. Would the same facilities as granted in this country, in Britain and France, he inquired, be available in Russia? Mr, Molotov is described as having “offered concessions.” Big question is: Will Russia likewise give the press and kindred agencies similar freedom? When Secretary Cordell Hull went to Moscow in October, 1943, only news given out was in the Torm of an official communique after the Big Three had met, The same thing happened in December, 1845, when Mr. Byrnes was there,

A Turning Point : AT PRESENT, censorship of one kind or another is pretty rigid in Russia. News dispatches, even when passed, sometimes are held up for days. Just recently the government closed down entirely ‘on “live” broadcasting and before that American

broadcasters were limited to only a few minutes a

day. Only such foreigners as are persona grata to ~the Kremlin can now enter Russia. If Moscow lets down the bars In western democracy fashion it will mark a tirning point in Soviet history. ol

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