Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 15 March 1947 — Page 8

ghee sua ‘by. carrier, 20 cents 8 week.

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Give Light and the

are threatened by totalitarian aggression, it

» SE Will Find Their Own Woy

ECONOMIC INFLUENCE FOR PEACE + IF THE United" Siates is to throw its economic weight | behind nations subscribing to our way of life when they

biished daily (except Sunday) by 8 Publlibing Cay 214 W. Maryland,

Audit Bureau -of County, 5 cents a copy; deliv-

Mail rates in Indiana, $5 a year; all other states, 8. possessions, Canada and Mexico, 87 cents a

-5561

follows that

oir credit and assistance should be withheld from states and movements which seek to destroy democracy and free

enterprise. - ; President Truman might well follow up : speech of Wednesday with such a declaration

policy.

his brilliant on economic

Loans should be denied to nations such as Yugoslavia “and Bulgaria, which are stooging for Russia in the Soviets’

- current ‘war of nerves. Such treatment might bring those

countries to their senses before it is too late, In any event, when we go to the relief of Greece and Turkey, we do not

Lo mand own money working-&gainst us.

‘Nations ‘which break solemn agreements

with us, as]

have Russia and Poland, also should be dropped from the

good-credit list. .

LJ

OUR money should fight for peace, good faith and free

enterprise.

Chairman John Taber of the house appropriations committee has acted properly in rejecting a state department request for authority to send $25 million worth of oilrefining equipment to Russia under an old lend-lease agreement. When Russia refuses to settle for lend-lease goods previously delivered, it is absurd to send her anything more under the same contract. That kind of appeasement could not be regarded by the Soviets as anything but evidence of

weakness and timidity.

Meanwhile, it is impossible to reconcile the Greek- | Turkish program urged by the President with the present |

policy toward a similar situation in China.

(nn |

Are we to

oppose communism in some places and encourage it in

others? That is the situation now.

"| our city employees, I want to take this opportunity to tell you that they

UNRRA has served notice on Chiang Kai-shek’s

- . - - { ent that its relief pro, will be curtailed, if not | 15.30 4 m. on March 10 from my home. We had a flash fire and man- growed an amazing lack of co-ordi- | governm p ; | : suspended, unless he delivers 20,000 tons of supplies to aged to put it out before they arrived (although had we not awakened fn o.oo ooo 0 0 oo ius. |

the Communists, with whom he is at war.

Communications are so disrupted in China that Chiang |

probably couldn't do this if he wanted to. But why should |as well as some small change that)

it can.

_ he be asked to sacrifice his own energies in order to supply by . his enemies? If UNRRA feels it must support Chinese don't know their names but I am By V. B., Indianapolis communism, it should deliver its own goods to Yenan, if |pretty sure they came from Broad

Some months ago UNRRA cracked down on the Greek |

government and insisted that it divide its relief supplies with the same guerrillas President Truman has since de-

nounced. Why repeat that mistake in China? v-| essaril ernment does not control UNRRA, but we put up most | barrel is spoiled. of the money and have a large voice in its policies. We «wmaT HAS BECOME

Our gov-

should not permit discrimination against our friends.

There's no record of UNRRA ever asking the Com- |

munist states it has supplied to send some of their relief goods to the underground movements in those areas. It

seems there are guerrillas and guerrillas.

ss = » - » »

WHILE loans are urged for Greece and Turkey, the ex-port-import bank is holding up a credit of $500 million earmarked for China because Chiang has failed to make a deal with the Communists. On the same score we are refusing to sell arms to the Chinese government. If the national integrity of Turkey is essential to preservation of order on the Middle East, the same can be said

with respect to China in the Far East.

If communism is a

menace in Europe, it is a menace in Asia as well.

TAXES ARE RELATIVE

7

SECRETARY SNYDER makes sense when he says that taxes should not be reduced this year because any surplus revenue the government can obtain could better be

used to reduce the public debt.’

But he is talking nonsense and, thinking in terms of | politics when he lends his voice to the demagogic but oft- | repeated argument that when taxes are reduced they should

not be reduced by a flat percentage across-the-board reduction, because the man with a high income would get the

- greater monetary relief. 2 . rrup When the taxes were being laid on “we don't recall that sand vah-ta-ta, ‘yah-ta-ta until it's| And, Mr. Editor, give us a break yo WYK Ae. - fp cy rms memviprerrmen i a HRAL ON A Mh Tn gy ET a OT RR

to. zise

arin

/ ventured fo-rise up and say,.for instance, that it- nappens-to-ve a: re was-unfair-because a Sper cent increase would mean that [huts sul dor ties a man who had theretofore paid $100 tax would only have

to pay $20 additional, while another taxpayer who already had been paying $100,000 would have to pay $20,000 addi-

~ tional. * Of course a man with a lower income won't have his tax reduced as much in dollars. . He couldn't, and still

be a taxpayer. He doesn't have enough taxable income. Tax increases and tax reductions should be thought

of in terms of revenue, not votes. wo

wv

WORLD-WIDE RELIEF

READ—in the literal sense of the word—is needed by entire populations,” said Pope Pius XII in a Christ-

mas eve message to members of the Catholic church.

Hoosiér Catholics: will receive an appeal in their churches tomorrow from the bishops’ relief campaign for

. the victims of war.

The Most Rev. Paul C. Schulte, archbishop of Indian- ~ _apolis, is chairman of the activity here, and has urged special contributions be made to this worthy cause, now more > than ever before in the post-war period because tion or reduction of UNRRA and government / :

ale rT Lee re BATES ON DEFENSE i re und ar t Sy i admirals greatest

“The 25,000,000 Catholics in the United States are beasked: to contribute $5,000,000, or an average of 20 its each, to help these victims of world war II. OL ey

ional debates, our generals

- Ee

Et a a Se Bi

Chee

— le ALB YR T—

Hoosier Forum

Here Is Praise for Firemen:

"Il do not agree with a word that you say, but | will defend to the death your right to say it." — Voltaire. -

|“THREE GLARING ERRORS {IN MOON ROCKET ARTICLE"

WELL, THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY has gone home—after spending 61 Hays in the. capital city patching up and reinforcing the weak spots of our state government. ; tna It's easy for us to criticize the assembly because it passed the cigaret tax, or because it did not reduce the gross income tax, cut the budget or send more state money back home, or keep the horseback riders off the roads after dark.

Look Under Lid of Government

federal. Most people don’t understand it. It takes a lot of their money from them, restricts their liberties, - furnishes a school' system, highways, police and fire protection, pays old-age pensions, keeps the streets clean, or does it? ph

is under it. There's a lot of machinery and it takes a lot of fuel to run it. The fuel-used is the tax money. Editor's Note: Donald D. Hoover, who writes “It's Our Business,” has ‘turned his column over today to Hobart Creighton, speaker of the house . of representatives in the legislature which closed this week. Lt Gov. Richard T. James, presiding officer of the senate, contributéd Thursday's column. ~

At each session of the general assembly or of congress, the state has assumed the obligation of paying a large part of school teachers salaries. This amount is now upped to $39,500,000 a year. The state has

expenditure of about $30,000,000 a year, $10,000,000 of which are state funds. .. These two items alone, tuition support and welfare, will cost more Indiana money than will be collected by the gross income tax department.. One could go on and on, enumerating the various departments of government, citing their cost. Each session of the legislature or of congress the governmental machinery gets more complicated. - A department that starts as a small unit gets larger and more expensive. Institutions get larger. Minority groups of all kinds demand this or that.

WASHINGTON, March 15.—It would be dificult to challenge a single word in President Truman's cautiously phrased message to congress requesting $400 millions for aid to Greece and Turkey, But what was carefully left unsaid sounded somehow louder

| By Louis C. Young, Lafayette | I read the series of articles on “A Trip to the Moon” with interest and | some amusement. With the exception of the first, they were well written and informative. Three

All Employees Not Inefficient"

By Elmer M. Culbertson, 4651 Norwaldo ave. After reading in the papers so often lately about the inefficiency of

| have been o. k. in any contact I have had with them.

{

These particular roses go to the firemen who answered an alarm at glaring errors in the first article!

| time the whole house would have gone). What I wanted to call to your trator attention, however, was that after all the excitement was over two of | ¥ . i the firemen came to me and gave me a cigaret lighter they had found’ ONE: The panel depicting the y 8 launching shows the carrier plane, of one of “CITY SHOULD PROVIDE a six-engined pusher job, at an alpy es TN rutnits °I rors FOR CAR OWNERS” [titude of 55 miles, about four times, {higher than any propeller-driven| Since this is more or less a plane wil] ever go. Ripple station as it is the closest grievance column, and you are one to our house. * I would like to let a few of the Forum readers know that we still have plenty of honest city em-

kind] TWO: Meteorologists would be leriough to give people a break by slightly astounded to see clouds airing them, and since the question above 55 miles. of a man to run for mayor on the] THREE: Although the article

. . 1 i Ki | ployees and one rotten apple does G. O. P. ticket has come up from States that the plane will be roc et

. bes : , I have powered, the cutaway of the engine | not necessarily mean that the whole fine © lie 5 tis Solus, 1 } no |in the second sketch shows a dual!

: : } particular person in mind, but a complete with think it is time that we chose some- | |OF G. 1. HOME LOAN?" one who, for a change, will give | The S uthoe Says that 36 wus of required by the rocket! By Robert Platchore, 1913 College ave. motorists a break. The new no- ship but he does not give any inWe have been reading The Times parking laws are nothing short of | Heats ith . f the chi 4 graft. All it is doing is lining the |dication of the weight of the ship. a long time and always read the S'8- °° © J parking lot opera-| TO obtain the potential speed of Forum and would like to add this. who stay open day and night {our miles per second tha he reWhy are real estate dealers in In- now to watch the coin roll in. There | quires he would need a mass ratio dianapolis holding down the G. I.5|.yld be no possible harm done tot 14-1 with a 2-mile-per-second | on buying a home on the G. ILliet car owners park on any street | fuel; this allows some 1760 pounds | loan bill? I believe this bill for gost anywhere after the rusn|for the empty airplane, engine, | buying a home on the G. I. loan pairs holidays and Sundays. crew and equipment. With the 3-| was adopted to help the G. I. Who| anyone observing the traffic | Mile-per-second fuel the mass ratio wanted to buy a home. What has| pon the rush hours are over should | Pécomes 3.8-1 and allows. a gen- | become of it? We have been 100K- |p. .ble to arrive at this conclusion. | erous 4000 pounds for the empty | ing for a long time. There are hun-|m.. new no-parking bans are about | 3Plane and payload. Further de- | dreds of homes for sale but the the most unfair. laws we have had | 5¢Tiption of the ‘equipment of the minute you mention a G*I. loan here in some time, as the car owners ‘rocket plane indicates a weight of ‘they won't even talk sense or busi- |... one of the most hard-hit in much more than two tons if the ness with you. I and man$ other ing taxes, and then not to have ShiP is to be constructed of a maG. 1s believe there is some dirty| a place to park their cars. Still the | terial heavier than papier mache. work here and believe it would help | o estions have come up about The steering apparatus described a lot if it were checked into closer |; reasing the cost of car licenses ' PY the author is very likely to be by some of our state representa-|,.4 tayes on gasoline. If spaces to|0Ufid awkward and cumbersome. tives. Come on, buddies, let's hear | park on the street are banned by | The graphite vane system used on from you through the Forum on 1 o-parking signs and reserved for | the V-2 would be much lighter and this G. I. bill to buy a home. lcab stands and state police cars more efficient during powered flight wh AWE oe vor 10K Rabo) and a dozen other excuses, the | 2nd a gyro-rudder installation, such PUIN CF people should be, in all fairness, |38 described by Willy Ley in “Rock- | WRECKS PROGRAMS | provided with municipal parking ©%s: The Future of Travel Beyond By D. Taylor, Manhattan hots wheve they could park free— | the Stratosphere,” would be a more

I know that the state police is 3! .hd which are kept up by the taxes jeconomical and effective control

needed and worth-while organiza- paid by the car owners, which fOr the free flight period. tion, but we sure have a gripe should be sufficient revenue. Let's Holo article further states that around here. Why in the name of hear from some of you other car the rocket ship is to be launthed

‘heaven doésn't the Putnamville post owners who now have to burn up| from the carrier plane with an| \get a radio wave length all their|gallons of gas looking for a place initial speed of 4.9 miles per sec-, lown?. Everytime we get interested to park your cars since the new, | ood: ‘with an allowance for over-| in a radio program they interrupt unfair no-parking laws have Passed. | | at the Sed tater iE | ~~ One of the" announpers and. print. thigaf least. I'm b car |the carrier plane should be at least bem: relative-ut nine, ‘owner wheis-fed up with the city [SX miles-per-second: Por the three: ero administration Higling, en

of the carrier plane becomes about 74-1, with the moon rocket con- | | eributing a small fraction of the

*

Side GlancesBy Galraith

up by the author could only be met |

|by a two or three unit step rocket | with an initial weight of several {hundred tons. » ” ” “NEW RADIO PROGRAM DESERVES PRAISE” By Grover L. Hartman, 2342 KE. 06th st, Many of us have deplored the influence of certain motion pictures and radio programs on children and American home life. It is a pleasure, therefore, to command the group of Hollywood figures who

program, “Family Theater.” ‘At their own expense these actors. and actresses who believe in the sanctity of home and marriage are presenting fundamental principles of happy personal and family relations. The program heard in Indianapolis each Thursday night |through the facilities of WIBC | deserves wide attention and wholehearted praise. Ter

DAILY THOUGHT Surely every man walketh in a vain shew: surely they are disquieted in vain: he heapeth up | riches, and knoweth not who shall gather them.—Psalms ‘39:6, . IP thou art rich, thou art poor; For, like an ass whose back with ~8 ingots bows, : / . 3 . RE "| Thou bear'st thy heavy riches "The boss complimented me on that drawing | did on the.fat coun- | but a journey, :

COPR, 1947 BY NEA SERVICE, INC. T. M. REG. U. 8. PAT, OFF,

coming air resistance in reaching:

final mass. ‘The requirements- set |

|

have brought the airways the new |

than what the President said. During the long debate over the $3,750,000,000 Joan to England, there were those who argued that before we made any definite commitments we should take stock. We should take an over-all survey of the demands around the world likely to be made on us.

Should Prorate Demands

EVEN MORE important, they argued, we should determine what our capacity was to help the rest of the world. Then we should prorate the demands in accord -with our capacity and in accord with the Jargency of the needs. : The loan to England was a stopgap desperately needed. How desperate was the need we have only recently begun to realize. Perhaps the advances to Greece and Turkey must be put in the same classi

| fication. They are essential to meet an urgency as

desperate as Britain's own. But sooner or later there must be an over-all appraisal of need in relation to capacity. Congress and the public are entitled ‘to such an appraisal. Strong hints have receptly come that large-scale loans will be necessary to rehabilitate France Holland, Belgium and Denmark. These countries are now obtaining durable goods, such as power plants. from Great Britain. But the British are saying that they can no longer go on sending out their exports

in’ return for currency which is not convertible into dollars.

UNITED NATIONS NEWS .

GOVERNMENT IS a big business, both state and’

Let's lift up the lid of government and see what

built up a big welfare department, supervising the -

|

¥

[IT'S OUR BUSINESS . . . By Hobiat Creighton ~~~ [Minority Can Push Public.

®

A vociferous minority of 50 professional men in In. diana can push the public back in the corner. Thirty per cerit of our national income goes to your government in the form of taxes, = on Don't forget, Mr. Citizen, you pay your share. You can't escape. You can't get something for noth ing. When you buy your pair of shoes or overalls you pay the tax of the manufacturer, the wholesalers, the retailer, the railroad, “the trucking company, every company who touched the. pair of shoes from the time they were manufactured until they go on your feet: 80, Mr. Citizen, you can’t get government for nothing. Every dollar we get from the federal government comes out of the taxpayers’ pocket. - In addition, we must pay for bookkeeping and it takes a lot of money to keep this big governmental machine properly lubricated. There is a lot of friction and some of the bearings are pretty rough. - I would like to point out one danger to our nation as I see it. The government has gone so far, providing so-called security through subsidies, benefit payments, pensions -and so forth, even to ‘feeding our school children—that these boys and girls stem to be growing up with the philosophy that the government owes them a living, It owes them an éducation—it owes them a job. This philosophy is not conducive to good citizenship, and this philosophy Is not confined entirely to school children. Our great nation was not built by dependents. It was built by men and women who had independence, initiative, courage, integrity and who were willing to support their country rather than ask the country to support them, :

America—Land of Initiative. COMPARE AMERICA WITH the other nations of the world. Wherein do we differ?, Why is our standard of living the highest on earth? It isn't that our soil is more fertile, ; greater. It. isn't that our mineral weaith is greater. The difference is that in the breast of every true ‘American there is that spark of independence, of initiative, of competition, and of free enterprise. If this spark is lost, the American machine will not work. If this spark is lost we've lost America. It is your. government. Let's preserve it for our children and grandchildren, the greatest heritage a boy of girl ever had—Opportunity.

IN WASHINGTON . . . By Marquis Childs What Is U.S Foreign Loan Capacity?

Quite possibly such loans would be beyond the scope or permission of either the new international oank or of our own export-import bank. England is hinting that without such loans she will have to shut off her exports to ‘western Europe and redirect them to areas where she can obtain the commodities she needs. That would mean a serious check on the reconstruction of that part of Europe in which we hope democracy will have a new birth. It might precipitate the kind of desperation we are seeking to alleviate in Greece. For western Europe $400 million would be small change. There the loans would of necessity be in billions. a Congress must act on the President's request. There is no choice now. The word that comes from able advisers is that, if American help is not soon forthcoming, anarchy in Greece will be followed by a Communist dictatorship that will put an end to all hopes for democracy and thereby give Soviet Russia a springboard for the Middle East.

We Must Have Balance Sheet

BUT WHEN this step is taken, we must have a balance sheet. It should come from the President himself. It should list liabilities against assets in a broad review of where we stand in relation to our responsibilities and our obligations. If we had had such a balance sheet earlier, the crisis in Greece precipitated by Great Britain would aot have come as a shock. We would have honestly recognized the dire limits on Britain's ability to maintain her position in the world. Only with such a balance sheet can we preserve our own strength and our own stability.

. +. By James A. Eldridge

Into Corner

It isn't that our forests are- -

U.N. Has Housekeeping Problems, Too * |

PROBLEMS THAT CAME -BEFORE the United Nations this week were as complex and varied as the many nations represented in the organization. Debate between the United States and the Soviet Union on control of atomic energy continued before the security council. Mr. Gromyko had stated that the plan advocated by the U. S. would establish an economic imperialism by establishing a world monopoly on atomic energy. Chief Delegate Austin replied vigorously to deny that the United States was seeking a world monopoly. Then, the security council by unanimous vote, referred the question to the atomic energy commission with instructions to prepare a report by mid-September, a week prior to next meeting of the. general assembly.

Budget Can't Be Stretched

AT THE OPENING of the debate on the trusteeship question, it appeared that request of the United States to control the Pacific islands would meet with immediate approval. - Surprise .of the week, however,

Editor's Note—Mr. Eldridge is Midwest field director of the American Association for the United Nations. He contributes a weekly column on events before U. N.

came when Prime Minister Peter Fraser of New Zealand sent a note to'the security council requesting ‘that The Netherlands, Canada, India, the Philippine republic, New Zealand, and: other states who _ took.

‘mile per tue the p— ratios BX RCUve Part h the war against apart, KHOUE" be

heard. None of these countries are members of the’ council. : pr Mr. Fraser pointed out that his own country and the other four were members of the Far Eastern commission and said all should be invited to participate in debate. The request has not yet been acted

The secretary-general, Mr. Lie, is having house-

hold difficulties. A week ago he was forced to lay off 200 employees. Between 100 and 300 additional notices of dismissal must be given within the next five weeks. In addition, the special per diem rate which is given members of the staff from other countries is going to be reduced. .Mr. Lie has no choice. He is being squeezed by two opposing trends in the United Nations. One is the trend of economy determined by the budget committee of the assembly, which fixed the budget too small for expanding needs. Other force is that of expansion. Each meeting of U. N. results in committees of experts or additional meetings of commissions, but there is no adequate provision in the budget. Consequently, it is being suggested that the economic and social council meet only twice a year. It seems more to the point to suggest that this council should be in continuous session because of the number of emergency and long-range economic problems before it. The budget of the United Nations organization this year, $27 million, is about one-fourth the cost of a single battleship. Total military budget of the nations of the world may run as high as $30 billions. . There is something fantastic about paying '$27 million for the machinery of peace and $30 billion for the machinery of war. . » 2

Greek Problem and U.N. IN REFERENCE to the critical Greek situation, both President Truman and Senator Vandenburg went on record as saying that the time element and

-magnitude.of.the.problem.-prevented-placing -it-hefore The United Malis sm=Both emphasized Semr-immedo-

ate” unilateral action by the United States is imperative. Many commentators express hope that at least the economic aspects of American aid to Greece and Turkey might be handled through United Nations. The problem might come before U. .N. There were unverified rumors that the Soviet Unioh would introduce the matter into a meeting of the security council.

SAGA OF INDIANA ... By William A. Marlow Grim Drama in Early Circuit Courts

PIONEER INDIANA knew but few of the diver“sions of life. Yet every race and age of men have craved and found their playtime to relieve the monotonous grind of living. : : The pioneers of the state were no exception. They longed for relief from mud roads and neighborhood gossip. They tired of the monotony of a corn-bread diet, drab log houses, and coarse homemade clothes.

Welcome Relief From Monotony SO BY ONE OF THE QUEER TWISTS of life, they turned to their circuit courts for diversion as well as justice. . It helps to understand this to remember that half a century after these courts were established a puppet show and a ventriloquist, with a bed sheet for a curtain in a coal-oil-lighted schoolhouse were considered good entertainment in: Indiana. Even the medicine show, at the tail end of a wagon in a torch-lighted street, of which James Whitcomb Riley was occasionally a part, lingered on in the state into the 1880's. ' “ Under conditions like these, the circuit court was not only a community event, as a court, it was a welcome relief from the monotony of pioneer life. ~The setting of one of these courts was a drama in Itself. There was the log courtroom with the court in: one end, and the grand jury in the other—the

| grinder and the dripping spout’ of justice. °°

Here assembled the three judges, with the circuit

cilman yasterday—but | wonder just what he meant when he < | And death unloads, thee. Jai | said # wes the best thing | Nod dome in a long mel" inl

ding and the two local associate dy sitting tp. 00D

Judges

Ax ERY

Busily bustling about was the sheriff, who was selected largely by his foghorn voice for calling the Jurors from the woods as he stood at the courthouse door. Waiting patiently were the talesmen eager to serve in the place of any absent juryman. . In the eager onlooking crowd were politicians, interésted friends of the litigants, and. gaping bystanders avidly drinking in the whole scene.

Here was a fit setting for drama in the flesh, raw

and ‘deeply human. trial will tell,

It was Rush county in 1824. Alexander Young, “respected citizen and justice of the peace, had killed John Points, who was eloping with Young’s daugh-, ter, 17. vi At the trial, Oliver H. Smith, later United States senator from ‘Indiana, and James Whitcomb, later governor of the state, prosecuted the case, with dis" tinguished counsel defending,

Daughter Went Insane

THE DAUGHTER stoically testified as to the facts to the court and before a breathless audience, regardless 8f the consequences to her father. Young, sentenced to prison for life and later pardoned, never smiled again. The daughter went insane, : ‘This was grim stuff to strike any audience. It touched life at the quick. It was drama on the level of Shakespeare's Toy Macbeth or the gloom-soaked soliloquy of Hamlet. ~~. =

How grim ‘it could be, a murder

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