Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 March 1947 — Page 14

~ Business

HOWARD NEWSPAPER 4 published dally

| a Postal Zone _ paper Alliance, Japer Allano

ered by carrier, 20 cents a week.

month. - RI-5551 SAENAERN Give Light“and the People Will Pind Their Own Woy

ANYTHING TO DISTORT, DECEIVE

~ page ad in ‘various newspapers hits a new Wallacian low in hypocrisy and misrepresentation in its all-out support of the Moscow party line.

tary Marshall's position at Moscow. Henry should be an authority on back-stabbing. He tried to undermine former Secretary Byrnes’ position at a similar meeting in Paris; just a few months ago. But he misses on this one, The truth, as everyone but Henry admits, is that Secretary Marshall took the lead in formulating the Truman doctrine. It is ridiculous to assume anything but complete har- | mony of thought between the President and ‘his secretary | of state. That is being demonstrated daily by the firm | stand Mr. Marshall Bhs’ taken in all the Moscow “discus- | sions= :

- typewriter. For any American who -does less than sell us | down the river to the Soviets is a menace to peace, 1 Henry's book,

. s n ” “WHY ARE we doing so little to help the million displaced persons without homes in Europe?” he asks. Here Mr. Wallace poses a question, lacking the courage to make the direct charge his inquiry implies. He knows we are doing more than any other nation to help these people in their distress. He knows the cause of their distress. “The vast majority of them are fugitives from Com- | ‘munist oppression. But does he call Moscow to account | for this? No, he prefers to slander his own country by cowardly innuendo. Henry's complete lack of stomach was demonstrated | on a prior occasion. When he was making his famous

policy. But when he read the first of these and his audience | booed, Henry skipped the rest of them. Nor has he said “naughty naughty” to the Kremlin since that time, to the ‘> best of our knowledge. Now only his own country and its allies can do wrong. “How can we wage a war of nerves against Russia | and expect her to take in good faith our proposals to the | United Nations on atomic energy?” Henry inquires. Here | he borrows the Communist technique in toto, by upending | a situation. He knows Russia has been waging a war of | nerves - against the free peoples of the world for many | months. He knows also that the Soviet Union has rejected our atomic energy program—proposals Mr. Wallace himself grossly misrepresented recently. o s ” s = 2 O LOAN to Greece until a representative Greek government is formed and can assure America that our | funds will be used for the welfare of the Greek people,” he says. The present government of Greece was chosen at a free, popular election. Would Mr. Wallace set that elec- | tion aside? That is what the Communist guerrillas want | to do. That is what the Communists are doing in Hungary, | without objection from Henry. In recognizing legal gov- | ernments, Mr. Truman is upholding the Roosevelt doctrine | that all peoples have the right to choose their form of government. Is there anything in the Wallace editorial suggesting | that the Soviet stooges—Yugoslavia, Bulgaria and Albania | ~—call off their dogs of war, and let Greece go her way in| peace? Not a word. Does he mention the pressures Russia has been bringing against Turkey? He does not. -He asks, “Why by-pass U. N.?” But he says nothing about the Russian veto. Nothing about the months the U. N. has dallied with the Greek border warfare. To do so might reflect upon the Boviets. : : And he might be booed again.

ARE YOU REGISTERED?

EADLINE for registering for the May primary is Monday midnight, two weeks from today. Some 75,000 voters have not. registered for this municipal primary at which nominees for mayor, city .élerk and | city council will be. chosen for the next four years. pA Mc bese wil Hot-10se Bid Foe Ir sel@tTon of party nominees because they are independent voters who do not vote in.the primary. However, ‘those who belong to either party are faced with surrender of their right to | participate in helping to choose the nominees of their party’

LECKRONE A HENRY W. “MANZ Manager

(except Sunday) by “Times Publishing Co., 214 W, Maryland

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AN EDITORIAL by Henry A. Wallace attacking President Truman's Greek-Turkish policy, appearing as a

It charges the President's aposch undermined Secre- |

Indeed, the seéretary’s rugged Americanism is almost certain to make him the next target of Henry's |

"Solve Tis HOUSING STUATION AND OUR GREATEST PROBLEMS ARE OVER!

i

Hoosier

—— pi feR Tea

» dé

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

Forum

"Since When Have Communists Defended Property Rights?"

| . By G. H. Kingsbury,

We refer to the article written

Madison Square Garden speech, the advance text of his man of the Communist party, entitled, “Redevelopment Plan Hits

p> | Property Right.” viet | remarks contained a series of mild criticisms of Soviet We. to net kilow encugh abot tie redeviiopmint. pian mentioned ‘to discuss it, but we are quite interested in the last sentence of Mr. Johnson's article, which reads as follows:

| members are ‘cynical

“MADE-IN-AMERICA CRISIS IS APT TO MISLEAD US”

By Warren A. Benedict Jr. 2019 Madi. | son ave.

Those stirring, soul-gripping edi- | 3001 N. Emerson ave. by Mr. Elmer Johnson, state chair-|

torials appearing in many news- | papers demanding all-out support for our beloved President in our latest crisis are really touching. I can see the veterans rushing to “The Communists say defend leave their jobs, classrooms and |

ve as

|OUR TOWN . . . by Anton Schorr Singers Shodld Put

THE PICTURES OF MARGARET TRUMAN taken, during “her recent radio-.debut with: the Detroit Symphony orchestra reveal that, after all these years,

“Before proceeding with today's exploration, let me clarify my position. My only rea- : son for tackling a subject as seri ous as this one is to help our musicians find a way of doing something with their hands while in the act of singing: at any rate, something different and more reasonable than the thing they are doing now. 3 The situation is acute and, apparently, as bad in Washington, D. C., as in Indianapolis, Ind. Sopranos and contraltos are the worst offenders and a soprano is, if anything, worse than a contralto. Perhaps, it isn't too late to do something about it, except, maybe, in the case of coloraturas, who appear to be beyond redemption, “It seems’ practically impossible for a soprano nowadays to release the voice without striking a. series of attitudes, the most common examples of which resemble the pose of the Nuremberg Madonna and that of Rossetti's painting of Prosperpine. In .the one case, it represents a state of utter and exhausted supplication; in the other, it represents a state of

ecstasy usually carried to the point of delirium which calls fbr the unctuous rubbing of both hands on the part of the singer.

Fidgeting Is Bothersome

I HAVE ALWAYS BEEN wary of people who rub their hands unctyously and I se¢ no reason why 1

should make an exception in the case of sopranos— -

not even those whose singing ariginates in: the White ~ House,

Of courses one has to be reasonable; The toying

with a handkgrchief (in the case of Irish songs) or-

a rose (in the case of Spanish songs) will probably always be with us. I wouldn't mind it if the singers could learn to stop there. It's when they strike the

‘WASHINGTON CALLING .

singers still don't know what to do with their hands.

Te in Pe

attitude of supplication (with or without ‘a handkeg- «

chief or, indeed, a rose) that my nery And it's not because I have anything practice of supplication. Properly handled by a sculptor or a painter, the state of supplication has its place. But its place, it strikes me, stops there—

[#ive way.

if for no other reason than the fact that it takes a

mighty fine pair of hands to express a state of supplication, - Sopranos don't, as a rule, have beautiful hands. If they did, they'd give up singing’ and take up the cello, There are several ways to set the singers straight, and they are apparent to every lady except the singers themselves. The Arst thing to do, therefore, is to arouse the singers even if we have to do it at the risk ~ of discovering that it wasn't worth it.

Once aroused, the singers might be induced to do something about their hands; at any rate, YORUM less conspicuous than what they are doing now. the end, they might even be induced. to suppress on hands altogether. It's expecting a lot, I know, but it's the only real solution. To suppress the hands is so easy that it's a wonder that the prima donnas have never tried it. If, for instance, the sopranos would provide their gowns with pockets a-lot of the present posing could be avoided. In support of which I cite the indisputable fact that the best performances today are those of baritones and bassos who keep their hands in their pants’ pockets all the time they're singing.

Television Will Stop It CHANCES ARE, though, that sopranos, being of

the sex that they are, wouldn't want to provide them- .

selves with anything as sensible as pockets. Which, of: course, .also. precludes the possibility" of prima donnas doing anything as simple as hiding their hands behind their backs. Certainly, a coloratura wouldn't do anything as simple as that. I guess the solution isn't as easy as I thought it was. Maybe, it's just as well to let the prima donnas have their way until television shows them up for what they are.

. By Marquis Childs

"Labor Bill Arguments Held Futile

WASHINGTON, March 24.—Behind closed doers members of the senate committee on labor are arguing day after day about what kind of labor bill is to be finally reported to the senate. Some committee about this Jong-drawn-out process because they feel certain what: the- result will be. Before they settled down to arguing, the commit-

| tee debated the question of an expert consultant who | should help draft the legislation. Senator Joseph H.

Ball of Minnesota, with the backing of Chairman Robert A. Taft, had proposed a former New Deal lawyer, Gerard Reilly. - For four years Mr. Reilly was solicitor in the department of labor under Secretary Frances Perkins.

| In 1941, President Roosevelt made him a member of

the national labor relations board. In later years Mr.

the homes and private property of the low income groups, unite against | homes to get in the fray again. 1 Reilly dissented from the majority of the board and

this confiscation and land grab scheme.”

[know they'll be glad to mike the |

Since when did the Communist party begin defending private) world safe for the British empire, |

| property? ‘We were under the impression that in the Communist scheme Greek royalty,

|of things, the state owns all the] |property. Is this another convenient change in the “party line”? ~ = - “MODERN STREETCARS PREFERABLE TO BUSSES” By John Rhoads, i500 Carrellten ave. The announcement by Indianap- |

|olis Railways of their intention t0 gest Indianapolis Railways officials!

convert the Michigan and E. Wash|ington car lines. to bus service should be seriously considered by patrons all over Indianapolis, espe-' cially thosé lucky enough to be served by streetcars. Now I do not, as many have done in the past few months, wish to condemn the acitions of the street railway without {a little knowledge of the situation.! | Certainly, those who operate the company can make no decisions in ithe public interest when the public {does not show its interest until it is tog late to change the decision. Even then it seems we are prone to! (show our interest in our own trans- | |portation only in a negative and | not entirely constructive manner: The truth of the matter is, de{spite involved figures to the cons | trary, we have one of the finest

{ public transportation systems in

{the country and should be proud of it. Those of us who have visited other cities can testify to the average type of vehicle that our neighbors in Columbus and Cincinnati and Chicago pay ten cents for the privilege of riding. We are

— {fortunate to have service with a’

great degree of regularity, except when some motorist chooses to inconvenience literally hundreds of his| gr fellowmen by double-parking on the streetcar right-of-way, crowding out trackless trolleys, and otherwise driving recklessly enough to cause an accident which blocks

{ public transportation. This is not,

and cannot be a problem to the|

street railways. Motormen seem to diately to Senators Homer Cape- brakes

have the patience of Job in dealing

problem is of law enforcement. «The objection to streetcars seems!

|to be ete condition and the noise!’

unless they comply with the registr ation laws. Veterans. who-have not registered since discharge from the service, persons who have moved since the last elec-’ tion and those among the 84,000 who were purged from the voting lists and have not re- -registered are principal ‘groups going to make up the 75,000. You can register at the courthouse or at branch regis- | tration offices in various parts of the city. If you are a | Republican or a Democrat, the question is: “Have you registered 2”

“now, too, and get it over with for the fall election.

Don't duck your responsibility. =n

. LABOR UNDER COMMUNISM

Ee. [UNDER a new law ‘of the totalitarian regime in Czecho- ~ slovakia, the government can assign workers to jobs and punish them if their performance is not satisfactory. iy Concentration camps are provided for habitual lagyards. The camps were requested by the Czechoslovakian confederation of trade unions, Communist-dominated, on the theory that a man who will not do the work assigned sabotaging the work of others.

‘the gov ent's employment bureay” ¥ y present no problem. The opted the principle that increases will Where there has been an increase on in the costs of nstien ‘why ‘American labor

‘might-as-well-register |-

ce assigned to a ‘job, a man can't leave it without :

labor organiza- WL

FEHR ROW EPver STIS Tenet to oppose Al BartTIve i

Side Glances—By Galbraith

the advanced civil + zation found in Turkey and the inthey make. Well, fellow riders, {ternational oil corporations. I can | ‘we're being passed up in the way hear them gayly chanting, “T'd| \of modern streetcars. Right now | Sladly die for dear old, Standard | we have better cars than the av- z erage city; but as Indianapolis Rail- | ways goes on blithely buying busses.

|

rd are, I understand, crass, materialistic and old-fashioned | i those other cities I mentioned are People who criticize Mr. Truman's | 'beginning to see the light. I sug- venture. They are actually saving | they are more interested in getting back to a peacetime economy, reduced taxes, and such luxuries as new cars and homes, than they are in meddling in foreign affairs that do not concern us. They are even so crude as to cite George Washington’s advice to “beware of entangling foreign alliances.” Just think how embarrassing that is to | us. How are we going to explain such people to our Greek and Turkish friends? : This Greek-Turkish affair really offers wonderful possibilities. Al|ready I hear other nations will let | It is imperative that citizens who | US 3 hay business for them do | (well, the nasty part), in return of oo mo See B Sontismugnis| for footing the bill. And then we s and labor disputes take|miont stir up a full-sized war, and an active interest in what Is. hap- provide full employment for our pening in congress these days. established and would-be brass hats A great deal of anti-labor legisla- 30d $100-a-week jobs in war plants tion has been . introduced which,| lor milhons, And people might

* hesitate on turning Mr. Truman if passed, will not only not reduce out next year, as they've been |

the present unrest in labor-man-| planning om, if there's a big enough agement relations but will actually crisis.

serve to intensify it. Yes, sir, our new crisis, made in | Particular attention should be America by and for Americans, | given to the Gwynne bill (HR 2157) [offers really wonderful opportuniwhich under the guise of outlawing |ties if we're just big enough to! “portal-to-portal” pay claims is de-|see them. : signed to rob labor of some of the ® = =

{by the wagé-hour act of 1938. Con- | gy, AME FOR BAD BRAKES”

gressman Gwynne, who represents

{take a trip to Chicago and ride the Madison ave. streetcar, or to Cinleinnati, or St. Louis and see the [new equipment there. This new {equipment is new (not secondhand) streetcars. Before we throw away the best transportation in Indianapolis, let's look at the past and present, so 18s to more clearly see the future. { EH zs “CONGRESSMEN SHOULD FIGHT PUNITIVE LAWS” By A James A. Crain, Missions bldg.

a Westchester county (N. Y.) “silic| Wendell, Bitty Bond: Bon" bon’ Kenner

stocking” district is anything but a! An arrest Sry Tn recently pit-| friend of labor and any Jeglaiation | iy an unfortunate colored man,

sponsored by him can be depended upon to work to Jabor’ t disudvaiss | against the city of Indianapolis. He |was driving a trucksfor a coal com- |

‘tage. * Letters should be writiens ime. (pany, yet the- officials knew the|

were Aftadedtinte, which | Ee caysed. him, tg Xun t T.hit-a girl. This co ed man was given a -truck with bad brakes to | deliver coal with. It looks like the | officials of .the company are going | to let him take the blame. He was trying to make an honest living | (honest that is) which is more than |

hart and William E. Jenner, askin

| legislation and -t8 work for con-| structive measures that will benefit: ‘both labor and industry.

we can say for some of the cops |who live by the ‘money paid them by gamblers for protection. Back {to the colored man again. Tha cops |didn't appreciate the fact that by {swerving in time that he may have saved some kids from being injured | or even killed. :

| u n n “NOT ENOUGH SUGAR FOR . MY HUSBAND TO HAVE PIE” Mrs. G. M., Shelbyville Why is it. we can’t have more sugar? There is plenty of sugar for candy and soft drinks. We could get along without some of” them. There aren't but two of us in the family and the amount of sugar we get I just can't get along on it. My husband has to take his lunch every day and he, seldom ever has pie to take. I like pie once in awhile myself. I would rather pay a little more for sugar and have some orfte in awhile. If the price would go up there would be stgar piled up in the stores just like the soap powder” was. .

DAILY THOUGHT

What’ doth it profivsmy brethren, though a man say he hath faith, and have not works? can faith save him?s-James fas

"IS welt said agate; |... And 18 3 kind of good deed to _ say well:

| Stassen and Bricker and MacArthur.

| ington.

for his dissents he was savhgely attacked by the unions, particularly by the C. 1. O.

Reilly Draws Mild Protest

WHEN MR. REILLY'S name was proposed to the senate labor committee, Senator Wayne Morse of Oregon raised a mild objection. He said it was his

understanding that Mr. Reilly was the author of sen-

ate bill 360, which bears Senator Ball's name and which makes drastic changes in the Wagner ‘Labor Relations Act. “That is not correct.” Senator Ball replied. “The fdeas in 360 are-mine. 1 had Mr. Reilly's help in drafting that bill.” At last a vote was taken. Three Republicans voted

against Mr. Reilly. They were Senators Morse, Ives of New York and Aiken of Vermont. Some days earlier, in a léngthy speech of the senate floor, Senator Morse had analyzed the labor bills to be considered by the committee, That speech, set in the framework &6f his liberal philosophy, was on a very high level. A considerable part of it was devoted to pointing out the dangers which Senator Morse sees in bill 360. He called it “an attempt to repel the Wagner agt by emasculation.”

“ Offers His Own Amendments

TOWARD” THE CLOSE of his speech Senator Morse introduced his own amendments to the Wagner act. These would outlaw jurisdictional strikes and secondary boycotts. They would expand the national labor relations board from three to seven members to take care of the greatly increased burden of cases. Employers would be guaran their constitutional right. to freedom of speech. d the NLRB would be permitted to go into f 1 Wr to enjoin either employers or employees where the board was convinced that nothing else would do. Anything beyond this will put labor relations in a government strait-jacket, as Senator Morse sees it. He has considerable support for his point of view in the committee. But those who will support what they

feel is the maximum l¢gislation necessary to correct

present abuses have no illusions. Even if they get a 7 to 8 committee vote for the mild as opposed to the drastic proposal, they know the senate will ignore this recommendation.

REFLECTIONS . . . By Robert C. Ruark People’s Choice—Mamie’s Husband

NEW YORK. March 24~I1f Ike Eisenhower said he doesn’t want to be president that's good enough for me, but I'd like to tell him that I think he can make it in 1948, and on either ticket.

I doubt very much if such 2 potent combination of personality and public trust has walked the land in all the years the country has existed. He is lustily cheered in the newsreels still. I was in Chicago when Ike was there and Sinatra never had a more feverish reception. ' Ip Canada, the good neighbors brush aside Taft and Marshall and Dewey and “What about

Eisenhower?” they ask. “Isn't he going to run?”

| Who Remembers Grant?

~ UNLESS WE DO SOMETHING ABOUT annexing Canada, the Canadian vote will scarcely elect Dwight D., but the Canadian viewpoint is reflected everywhere I've been recently. “Yes,” they say impatiently when you mention all the other people, “But what about {Eisenhower ?” The fact that our diplomatic posts are packed full of generals apparently hasn't hurt Ike as a prospective president. The fact .that. Gen. Grant was something less than a howling success in the White House, if you discount his ability with the Bourbon, doesn’t perpetuate the popular antipathy against victorious military men, in the case of Gen.. Eisenhower. The people are even going on the defensive, and are bringing out the old chestnut, about G. Wash“The father of his country,” they say, “the first two-termer—he was a general, wasn't he?” They

not. feel he. auSexarby comparison. $F st Blsenhower' has his own teeth. Mamie Eisenhower's baldheaded husband does not seem to be regarded primarily as a military man by’ the folks I've talked to.- He is less a general than a

diplomat, more of an executive than a warrior. All arguments against Eisenhower for president are. answered thusly: “He got along with the British and the Russians, didn't he? He was smooth enough to have lasted the whole war as allied commander, wasn't he? He handled all those ‘prima donnas without getting his itp in -a wringer, didn't he? Okay, so what's wrong with having a guy that good in the White House?”

The selection of Gen. George Marshall as Jimmy Byrnes’ successor does not seem to have inspired a Marshall-for-President vogue. Gen. Marshall's disavowal of political ambition, plus his age, has successfully sold him as a non-competitor for the big job. Gen. MacArthur, probably as a result of irreverent press relations during the war, cuts very little ice these days in the informal conversation league.

Not a Word for Harry?

SOME SORT OF AURA of unreality hovers over the formal candidates, the regular politicians, the ‘party draft-horses. Senator Taft is a dry little man whose big, fat pappy was a president, once. I haven't heard Dewey's name mentioned lately, and where is it that Mr. Bricker comes from? Mr. Stassen apparently cooled himself off early in the piece, when he an-, nounced that he thought he would be a good boy for the job. S80 help me, 1 haven't met a voting citizen who thinks that President Truman will ask for renomination. Harry is strictly from interim in the circles I've travelled, like a pinch hitter who fouls out to the catcher, and who isn't apt to be. starting tomior =

e, ght and a:e lumping Ike.now. with. Washington, and. they do. TOW in .the.sleanup spot.

, The ways politics are devious. indeed, and hn “may wind up with Alf Landon at. the helm, but I will be willing to bet a couple of bieks right now that if he wants it that way, our next president “will be a grinfing gent With a wife named Mamie.

u

WORLD AFFAIRS... By William Philip Simms - < Stalin's 1925 Prediction Was Correct *

WASHINGTON, March 24.—Under steady pressure of events, a closer rapprochement between the United States and the British commonwealth of nations is

| widely regarded as inevitable.

To the dismay of peace-loving nations everywhere, mankind is splitting into the two camps predicted by Stalin in 1925. Soviet Russia is the lealler of one camp. In the other are the democracies. The democracies, led by the United States, hold that there is room for everybody to live in peace and prosperity under a system of law and order presided over by the United Nations .

Britain Needs U. S. Help

THE SOVIET UNION, on the other hand, is seekto impose communism not only on her neighbors but, through Trojan horses and fifth columns, also on the

rept of the world.

The issue, therefore, is clearly drawn. - The United States, through President Truman, has indicated that it would defend the right of all peoples to choose their form of government. (Russia is backing those who seek to deprive the peoples of that right. = If the democracies are successfully to defend free speech, free press, freedom of religion, of agony, of the ballot and the rest, they will have to work together The British. commonwealth is made up of small nations. The United Kingdom is the lafgest with a population of 48 millon. Canada has approximately 12 million; South Africa, 11 million; Adlgtralia, 8 mil-

lion; Treland, 3 million, and New Zealand, 2 million. “should have 6ne regional

India; ‘Burma and other possessions are on the way 5004 Sr tur Ince of She Mises Swwie we

commonwealth could not defend itself without the aid “of the United States. But they also indicated that the aid of the British was essential to the defense of the United States. In any event there was all-out mutual support. Tdday the British and Americans are leading in" the fight to preserve man’s freedom to write and speak and pray and vote the way he pleases ‘without fear pi ny secret police ot the firing squad. They are struggling to save not only miss freedom but world peace. A closer understanding between the English-speak-ing peoples, therefore, is vital to success. It does not necessarily require an alliance or even a formal treaty, but a pattern eventually will have to be worked out. When France was crashing in '1840, Winston Churchill offered to unite the British and French , empires under a single government. He even offered to. permit a Frenchman to preside over both. Every citizen of either country was to have a double, a PFranco-British, nationality.

Require Agreement for Peace

SUCH A MERGER would hardly work at this time between the British and Americans. It probably

would not have worked for long with the British and , |

the French.. A sort of dual nationality for Britons

ahd Americans might have its advantages, but what = |

is essential 18 a workipg agreement in similar

‘to that which carried them to victory In two world .

wars, x To be virtually invulnerable, the United States understanding. with the

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