Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 May 1947 — Page 22
that didn’t
15
the oe
“Like most cartoons, this. ane is, Bled with
a word of objection, and we've seen ag critiques of manners and morals in : APpear to disbard
"Nya : Nr
andedignified spring i afc] aren she . in oils, and, ita sybject is Indiariapolie right :
exaggeration.
La rs mo le re hn se a
us to be unfair—specifically to Mayor
wiong in Indianapolis.
Ce en ly te
¥ Aen
or Vigore FRCS : © oh el : in Bais
RECON CANT WAIT
most of us like even if we don’t always agree wi & man we certainly don’t consider to blame for: ev
Shlsment of the Art association, which wants no ph FE Hig
mpm fails. You fry to's
if they'd let it hang. Like banning book in Both aL. GEE WTR THRO Hite Foes. ¥ vigorous—and very young= gl-
=
merit, which no competént.
+ But en to tind ble. hic h at's how it got into the show
Jo tiviteit If he wasted it back an the all, frwidow of Veteran With Trees
#4 Children Urghnly Needs. Home"
3 Fas the Art association’ s show Pi
SINCE th the TigHting stopped i in Burepe,-May 8, 1945, the
aa |
sorely wounded civilization has become , and now a series of crises seems at
hand. As they grow acute, we will be called upon to extend relief, as we are about to do in Greece and Turkey: But there it a limit to what the, United States can do. . “Rich as America is supposed to be, it could go broke trying to rescue unsound economies in Britain, Greed, Tur-
‘key, the Middle East, China and elsewhere,” as William
Philip Simms, Scripps’Haward foreign ‘edidor,
arising from inability to reach peace terms
observes.
«iu The steady economic and political deterioration in ‘Europe almost wholly has been due to uncertainty and fear
with Russia,
But economic reconstruction no longer can be left waiting on political decisions. We must begin at once to put our
Wn Jatt of the worlds house fo vider.
dustry that will
inals awaiting spehabilitation of
Ser Np
ad ¢ self-operating:. Mere relief is
n dolla, But
‘that is the hard
ho oud fe recomant som hin .we support comm Mduance chaos, for'the wo go hand in hand. ; 5 i 3. i , BOYS IN THE ARMY , $d ARENTS who'fhas hint. {loin Sif deren. | ment of te tec flea pbs, wo DU od suffer ‘under universal | military trah a irsged by the i. oward Cc y. Lucas rom Ft. Knex, | |’ Ky., where the 4 cting an efperiment’ in toen- J
Brig. Gen. in year-old son, is youth! charges Jo fsa chun ¥ services and wes} clare on Wordle Hd eb he Et ho inal 8 on knowing a. feed bod ands ticks up to make certain at ved well. He ha tied to make life at Ft. Knox more attractive
Gen. Devine 8 supervision of the understanding. His idea is to treat the ney or hat they ste boys. They polit Lid A ie ‘w? “7
3hey came to Ft.
he achieved’ we can nelaford
at of the young ids ian i
b. 4 a‘high de-
Bevin : hisibelt the Tathir of a 17-
¥n
to them Ban gave | in Louisville, and heens 4 have ic sepded.
yologsters' is fim but
like men: ‘but
leatn fo march and but they also learn table manhiers. and rules
3 Riley's ar Defense of Dialed!
JAMES WHITCOMB RILEY lad Jk. about ‘he began he proved that
fi 3
Al 18
say, but [will defend to
"I: do not agree with ¢ word that you
the ‘death
your: right to wy it. ~e=Yolaig,
By mr. Aversge, Yes, this ix a
. |FWAS WRONG {ABOUT POLICE TICKET” ‘Indtanspolis. Tough city and. has rough policemen. - I aim: only an averige: workman in an average ¢ | world’ trying to make a living. 1
B
"Tok Save me’ my ticket recently RE Lode i ®o8 from exercising his rights to d ih : in ‘Ri Do these rights include the right the necessary things to keep in| oC SORE SUL TE to Tun cars off streets, toss bricks|the dictator's good graces. That| WL Flt llr throug windows of homes of te Kd of redo 3 ok tor me. | eye Cy ie agree with these strikers? |“PLEASE LEND CAPEHART | ¥iven 48 ennbous amount of space Do these rights include preventing |A SOFT | i p fo those who ‘clkmor against the the employer from hiring anyone By As os, - India pepotie Réds, and call for illegalising the except themselves and tose whom | “No for Capehart. . . ." Gommunists. Only those Who ha they approve? Is that the kind ,O misunderstood and misunder- | . SQA & > i freedoin they propose? * standing “Homer. © dncredible an exveedingly: short suomi ries
crieth in the
. . for verily he literally JS
ness. . .. But it availeth him naught. [steris and’ inf {His record casts. shadows before, O)OOngressmen te, Sr alrite vioios Myles! mn ; -| What hast thou done?
Washington wilder-
O fearless C, 1. 0.1}
» wn.
“All these. different diots—] think they're. ush a fad! Yo oir 1 «= stick, to old- aria grit
AEE :
at tect
Frade hag 48
‘the tree I ad; th I bleed. 5 wka lL 7 woule : E.,
I J FREESE
: i 2g
H
rank
; : oi
d!
iy i bs 3s
i THE thors which 1 have reap'd are
ey as orn me, and
¢ trust # seed.
right from the start. In less than two minutes
IN “WASHINGTON . Test Vote Coming
WASHINGTON, May 9—Aq elbctiod that ts dom: ing up in the near future promises to provide s sig-
‘close contest * in second
for May. 17, and. off Jue 7 an ‘election will be held
fo All the vacant-sent.™ . Priméry Hot as Election IN MANY ways the primary contest is as het as the promises. to be. The Democrat rated ws likely to win is Smith Troy, the attor-pey-general ‘of the state. ‘He has gone all out for the
one term until he was defeated by Norman. Savage, in his congressional career, was closely associated with s congressman from a neighboring district, Hugh De Lacy. De Lacy was defeated last fall, in a bitter Sontett Iu yale he Was Smrged With Being 4. Ooty: munist feliow-traveser, ‘In New World, his. weekly paper, De’ Lacy announced recently, with a banner headline, that Savage was a follower of : a Wallace and was oppoled 10 the Greet program. While Savage
REFLECTIONS
NEW YORK, May 9--1t is no lie to say that I was once within & couple of. feet of the Pulitser prise. This is nat sour grapes. I have a desk next to that overflowed by Fred Woltman, ‘the gent who justecollected the award for’ distingliished reporting. ne pats Woltman’s private secretary. “We ‘s phone, und when I answer it, ‘the call is’ for Mr. Woltman. characters’ deriv two-day beards are slways getting’ snarled up in wy. typewriter, Yecause Mr. Woltmahs generally @ses my desk for an interviewing salon. « he tact ¥Ha4"Toniight Je, Sving 265 never seems (0 bother him.
He 'Noses Out’ ‘Reds ~~ =~ THIB WINDUP is just to cenvinge you that I am Communists up more
writer, ... I eto “ Mania Bs
am yA
on’ the
y A
breeds, Mr. Wolinan's -soméwhat Droisidat Deeter to twitch, ever so slightly; ‘and an arm? of secret
into She office with
a of the circus, = ' You must understand that Fred's labor reporting; “his \n%estigatis, 8 “his oonsns scourging
WORLD AFFAIRS .
New WASHINGTON, May 9.~Talk, of another Big
hit or Poe A od (Truman-Stalin) and been revived since the deadlock at Moslitation of the Stassen-Stalin inter-
better than ‘a Soviet-American accord on that
By Marquis Childs
Woltman's Really a Circus
PET RTE att
§
i
'
in Northwest
Wialied ik acchewhat in a8 intarview. inn
. By Robert C. Ruark
Vriter
if if 5 g i)
it ;
li
i :
: ;
- a
3
. + By William Philp Simms
Truman-Stalin Meet ng Suggested :
i THRE
z
I :
i *g
son, Harry EB, Mrs. Connell’ Lovelace, Colt Connell's brot New Albany. Double serv a. m, tomorro and at 9.30 Catholie chur Holy Cross,
Bandit" Were C
A bandit glasses robbed tendant of his taining $15 e overlooked $5 on a desk. William E. | attendant at at 1000 E. Ne the man cam¢ ordered a coke Alter drinki said, the man money change Police today man by finge: coke bottle.
SM
Basi
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pet
inte
Bio
Steve Ho
