Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 21 February 1948 — Page 10

—————_.—__. _, - ER A FAIA SU SONA 7 ET Fr 0

pe]

"Follow It, Son, You Can't Go Wrong"

#

dianapolis Times|™

[

v vom i ow MH, will emia

PAGE 10 _ Saturday, Feb. 21, 1048 With the Times! HS 2 os With the Ti s 5

-A SORIPPS- HOWARD NEWSPAPER

——

Owned and published daily (except Sunday) i Indianapolis Times Publishing Co. 214 |W. IMAGINATION al | Maryland St Postal Zone 9. | This morning he was dashing Member of United Press, Scripps - Howard As a pirate brave and bold. i Newspaper ‘Alllance, NEA Service, and Audit] The stairway was his stolen ship," Bureau of ‘irculations. The window seat its hold. ,

Price fn-Marion. County,. 5. conts.a copy: de | sun . be And then-he was a- cowboy. mares spin Sc n livered by carrier, 25¢ a week. : ‘With ne'er a thought of fear. '

Mahl tates in. Indiana, 33.4 year: al] The clothesline was his lariat, ~ With Richard Lewis’ crack states, U. 8. possessions, Canada and Mexico, |" bear : = : your . $1.10 a month. I tia veaty buax the staat QEDSF TAY load our “Distiost 10 8 na

And soon he was a band it,

Give 14ght end the People Wili Pind Thew Own Way . ] " ‘ *Pwas near the end of day.

: ; He built a wall of kitchen chairs It's won - Washington, Foe of Intolerance The table was his hide-s-way. nested Go td And Shanks 10 Yiu fev YA/ASHINGTON'S Birthday has been chosen this year as | But then the day was dior, Slasapolisite, Be VY the starting day of American Brotherhood Week; A oe ey Witla tot LIGIER GES, | which is sponsored by the National Conferencé of Chris- That mamma put lobed. Uphold Free Enterprise ~~ tians and Jews. This annual observance calls attention to . eee Ber By J. F. Fraats, 750 Ketcham St, Oty the battle against prejudice and intolerance which must be We still wonder how mom cam get 10 BO ve beret bes Bi won if we, as individuals and as a nation, are to live in pounds of hash from what's left over from a and property. Controls mean a dictated or 4 peace. i FJediea-round roast. 5.0 Pe sarsose is to. take the advantage Today we usually think of prejudice and intolerance in GLITTER FADES FROM WAR the intentions of taking ny from Some. : on With face and gion. So one might ask, why The glitter fades out after war; the shouting Qlctating a service is rnp daus 27 Washington? Isn't the magnanimous Lincoln a better sym- | 4 Et dle: the big-shots hold a last Setaling aa Also what is good and what bol of brotherhood than the austere first President? What parade. #3 Stop 8 wheats Wikre iéeoss me I Dad. Loni gn stil Seouity and did Washington, great man that he was, do in the cause | ne 8 sttady stream o esis be for security. Without a profit the ee of brotherhood? : : | Smell of death; gone EE ro putrid ment should expect 90 services excep i “hue _. _ The answer is that he fought a long, bitter battle We saw. charity. When there will against prejudice and intolerance, though they were not the = ,4rve and v freeze; f has always, What has under controls? same evils that we fight today. He led his countrymen in | its blows, Prose: t any Raion 1c he oar, vs SPA of Proll oF Drop property a8 though they wees a war against an authority who considered them inferior | ,, Food, is destroyed for Coed, Fhe nd wealth er: eg 08 T | though the palace shelves are filled; and wealth is the worst that can happen. For the freedom citizens to their brothers in England. It was a war fought | was sabotaged. in chunks, whene're a working- of astion a4 Profit serve, bY, inspiring our best : ; From slave we to prove that men are united in a brotherhood of basic mab wns kilied thoi ack of with: seem pot to 1. nothing. Congressmen must rededicate Wepect selves to uphold constitutional freedom "and

: rights, and that those : . rights are not gifts to be granted Or | learn they never gain, nor do they bring their withheld according to some royal whint. ~ : countries wealth, by causing other nations pain. | a 3 . Oh, could we make the people know that peace / Ly. . om. 8 | is their's alone to hold, when guns and uniforms WHEN THE war was won, Washington led a bloodless ary tres, and (Siom bombs cannot Je sold but no less bitter fight against another sort of prejudice and | _ For some {ers St oO reath crowns, 1. oy Va intolerance. This time the fight was in the field of domestic | can nla. milion men, whene're they hob asd ‘ - politics. The prejudice was against the delegation of state with death. Sy ; : : — - The shimmer of the ‘golden braid, the i ; ” sovereignty to a central government. Individuals and states | raucous accolades oi hear, and wilting A NATIONAL AFFAIRS « + « By Marquis Childs It may seem were intolerant of a higher authority than existed at the that are dropped upon an unknown soldier's bier : ; are objects of the public interest.

— resale ink | Atomic Future Worries Scientists | fii hil b me mma os by

)

The idea of a constitutional convention first took shape | nameless price of grief, refreshed in loved ones’

= American Telephone & Telegraph Corp. of Néw York. He |

was the young man who took a job on a construction crew |

during a summer back in 1919 and kept moving from that of ‘Ins’ for Governor |

day on right to the top. > WASHINGTON, Feb. 21—Dear Boss:

There's something of a lesson of young men of 21 who . You can tell the Republican editors meeting in Indianapolis: | Rly a today that their GOP delegation in Congress is almost unanimous |

wonder how and when they'll ever get a top job. Here's | i; feeling that if Sen. William E. Jenner wants to go back. to | £ one who did and landed the job before he was 50 He's liv- | Indiana and be Governor he can get the Homtaton on | § & . . yl | An exception, perhaps, is Rep. Ralph Harvey, man i ing proof it can be done. : {| Congressman from New Castle. “He might be. put down as a |

To Recovery of China WASHINGTON, Feb. 21—8ecretary of State Marshall seems to be weakening on the fundamentally American “open door” policy in China. It was. promulgated by John Hay in 1900 and upheld by Charles Evans Hughes in 1921, Henry L. Stimson in 1031 and Secretary Hull in 1941. ’ 8 When the European powers threatened to partition China half a century ago, Washington warned it would stand for nothing" like that. China was to remain free and independent,’ her doors open to all nations alike. : oi In 1920, when Japan began to throw her weight about, fhe United States called the Washington tonference with a twofold. purpose.” One aim was to limit naval armaments. The other was to safeguard China's independence. Secretary. Hughes let it be known that without a pact on China thers would be no naval limitation. Ainerica at the time had the world’s greatest fleet.

Gov. Ralph Gates man, because he served as chairman of the State Budget Committee via a Gates appointment. But like most

‘ 5 ’ ' other politicos, he might harbor some notion that the Governor Granny Can t Be Dead A ran out on him when the going got hot within the 10th District “GRANNY can't be dead. If she was I'd have to go back | organization when he had to fight to get the nomination to

"wooo succeed the late Rep. Raymond 8. Springer. to the orphanage.” int It is this feeling, true or false that so many members of Murray Green, 7, sat shivering on the stairs of the cold | the State Fouse leaving a rather high record of broken promises . . | that gives some impetus to various plans for making him t house when police came. For days he had lived on some | forgotten man. Putting Sen. Jenner in the governorship might

buns and on milk delivered daily—all the time trying to tell | help with this project they are frank to admit. And the top- | flight men say that it looks from here like “the boys can get

“ ”. | granny” how cold and hungry he was. | th ination for Bill Jenner ff th I t to do 80." The nine- et pl the 8 “Granny went to last Th y (eight days be- e Sou na dom ne ner ey really want to do s Bie Dover pact pledging Chinese sovereignty and ope : fore) and I couldn't wake her up,” he told Memphis police. | Switch With Willis Foreseen ; : : "| WHO “the boys” are remains somewhat vague, since they ! Wented France and Britain to Join

IN 1931, when the Japs invaded Manchuria, Secretary Stimson tried to get Britain and France to join the U. 8. in checking the

i “granny” lay; which led police to believe he had been sleep- | are known only to the initiated.

2 4 There was only one un-made bed in the place. There | ry such titles as “Doc” and “Red” and their proper names Jenner boosters are not adverse to the-suggestion sending {

4 4 ‘ . “ 2 " * 2 : 4 | g ing beside sleeping granny Jor W ight Nights, ¢ hg former Sen. Raymond E. Willis back here by appointment from aggression. Though he failed, he announced the Hoover-Stimson 8 11 housands of children in “this, our land of broken | the man who succeeded him. The same sort of maneuvering | daetrine. of nom. tion: of tersitory thus: a6 : i homes, are as devoted to their grandmothers as was this | would be necessary to win the governorship for Mr. Jenner as was | . recogn ry q i ¢ { i : : J ; > pg : ; | used to make him Senator, The bill-of-goods they are offering | In 1941 Secretary Hull made clear to Ambassador Nomura : little orphan boy. Without “grannys loving care they | as an appeasement of the editors who didn't like Sen. Willis | "| could reach no understanding with Tokyo unless Japan respected

ie

the sovereignty of China and supported the pringiple, of equality

would have to be jin orphanages or boarding schools where | fone of ther own) being -given the bum's rush by the state con- | in the Pacific.

| vention In 19486. ;

rR

: care often is on a wholesale basis. Sen. Willis actually w j : Sen. y would be widely welcomed here both by y Children need individual attention. his Republican colleagues and the Democrat Sonservatives. They + oom, 1948 OY NEA SERVICE, BT, 4. B86. &. & PAT. OFF 2-21 | . Today) Russia A partitioning Chita. . Hee Cunniat yippes . ’ ’ had Mgh t for his charact ingle-termer, " ; : ; . ” ave se con 0 r Mon, and mos! Man “Granny can t be dead. If she was I'd have to go back h 8 rope, lor 8 chara Be. » a, sing Now that you're a sophomore, latch onto a girl who's a junior! | Korea, Inner Mongolia, North Lio or and Binkiang. Unlike » , ‘ . ! " i | * to an orphanage. ; : Others Wou ave to ppeased She can help you, but you d have to do a freshman's homework! 1900, 1921 ard 1931, however, Washington largely is holding

BUT EVEN if Sen. Willis should be appointed by Gov. Jenner. aloo. WIhoEt BFS for Chl to be had only from the United”

et to take the seat Sen. Jenner took awa ; \ , y from him, there would - b bl I . o | have to be other sppeasements. Never lacking for ideas, some SO THEY SAY o lela Names in News States—all Manchuria soon will go to the Reds, and without ov e mmunity | ‘of the Jenner backers here propose that Hobart Creighton, speak- The house:bllding ‘industry: n ts be op . d ‘Manchuria, China's recovery is doubtful. “y 3 . . | er of the Indiana House of Representatives and an announced , house- eeds anized an : EN. ELMER THOMAS will tolerate no more inquiries | candidate for the Republican gubernatorial nomination, would put oss Modern Industrial asta. 4 Detrolt boi automobiles the | Manchuria Has Vast Resources >is a this Wh : “ d 3 culture” 0 . of us could afford neither cars nor into his “private activities,” he has told a committee of | “make a dandy Secretary of Agricu in the new GOP | os Sen. Ralph E. Flanders (R.) of Vermont. MANCHURIA Is as vital to China as Germany is to Furop®

: : 4 ational government which they feel will follow Truman, . e investigating his commodity speculations. | ? As a matter of fact he might, since he was summoned here ev. I visited Manchuria’s agricultural and industrial centers td What's more, he will consider any more of the same “an in- | to set up the poultry and egg division of the Agriculture Depart- History has proved that military leaders make poor Presi- | before World War IL I saw the Great Fushan strip mines “ sult to the sovereign state of Oklahoma.” ’ | ment even under a Democratic regime. ‘He is one of the top- Jena. 2 win is 8 Soldier first and a politician last—Gen. | which some 7,500,000 tons of coal were taken annually; eo flight farmers of the world. ; Td © | Jonathan nwright, U. 8. Agmy, Ret. ‘ . million tons of pig iron Now, let's see.” The Senator takes refuge in the priv- | 2 ; . Anshan Iron Works which produced a : , lets ge pi The Jenner boosters feel this move might also help disabuse * oo x year and 800 tons.of coke a day; the Shahokou works turaing out

acy of his private affairs. Then he strikes a pompous pose | the idea that Gov. Gates might become Interior ‘Secretary. History shows that we have always arrived at catastrophe equip and announces that any questioning of those pombe S Pose | Somie say that Gov. Gates told Sen. Taft he would deliver the | 'by our failure to act in" crisis. —Gen. ow Bradley, urging the American-type locomotives, railway rolling stock, electric 1 . ’ Pp yp ALE | Hogsier National convention delegates to him-—if Ke can—and | U, 8. to give ald to western Europe, > - ment and other machinery. my affairs is an insult to his state. ’ | out of that would come the cabinet appointment. EE | rt. % : . I visited mills producing flour, sugar, It is quite Mkely that if there is any delivery, it ‘will be by | Auditor A. V. Burch as being in the picture much for the gover tertilizers and textiles of silk, wool and cotton. Manch

‘ "This double immunity of private citizen ubli eo i As ny yoLp : age 3 public offi | the Majority Leader Charles A, Hallégk, however. And Gov. | norship. Altho Mr. James has formally announced. They | products then amounted to $1 billion a Tour, including whest resents interesting possibilities. But it might | Gates will just go along for the ride. At least that is the Wash- |. think Sen. Jennekls the man jvho can Nave it If he wants it and | and soya beans. Her forests were China's best. a le strain on the preservation of order and honesty ington plan. Quite likely another one-lequally as sound or un- | assért that whoever he appoints as his Senate successor it will | = Without Manchuria and North . China, the $570. ; sound” may be in full bloom ovpr at the State House. not be Gov. Gates. In fact they say Sen. Jenner told GOV. | appropriation asked for by President Truman will be only stop : I ’ J a © 1 gap reliet, Without peace there can be no China Fecovery. . ¥ v ir ae A

Richard James: and State ' Gatps po.—DANIEL M. KIDNEY,

. A

it were generally adopted. . _ Here they don't figure Lt. Gov.

: al FA #3." ET ee va ’ o~ - Jouh J a i 'd v 2 4 i i . : ® x dis ¥ Pb SAT v : 4 3 {py a % SRS nh hy a y LY, i 5 i” . sia ¥ A i : . oe : a. » Y oii i Ji . > AE “

pa

i - tax.

~ Skating i

-- in Washington's home. When the convention met, it was tears. WASHINGTON, Feb. 21—The type that best sults. In wartime such procedure was possible. . The glitter fades out after war; the price hardly encompass taxing. Both are Washington who presided. He took no part in debate, and | peace has come 100 | IRE hr! La rie - sums up our perplexed civilization at this moment Ba Pe er) * | government. ‘Any other method is hokus-pokus , heart éan back the ones | Of decision is the scientist. He has given into the for getting the most votes. You look he was not one of the Consfitution’s authors. But it was | yearning bring Bureaucracy, whether of government or may be ig : hands of a society just struggling out of the NEW ness. 1s & stumbling block to the creative mind of | UPOR them With suspicion. Washington as much as anyone who kept the convention in —By STAN (Sl) MOORE, | stone age the supreme power over life and death the scientist—and he grumbies. A scientist at the * session, and who insisted that the result of its work be a > 2656 N. Illinois St. on this planet, and-his-conscietice is deeply troubled. Oak Ridge Laboratory has a brilliant idea. He Who'll Pay for the Plants? bi int of unity, not a Sehwork of ‘old 1... alt... . Guide hundreds of sclentists Wurking for thé pute the wutlise of 1 down ou papis, jad then By Wm. E. Laird, 2244 N. Delaware St, City. laws in a different design. = Cg 54% | guststorms trom rte J precisely happy. The ratio of AEC money and ef- ity makes a a ot : When our formér City Council demanded : Out of that convention came the United States off hein turn te the dub . + | tort going into the military end of the program is a A ivisory Commitiss to ARC, that the Gas Company “kick back™ more tax > ee eee | about 97 per cent to 3 per cent for peacetiine uses. created under the law, prepared a report on the money to the Clty, the company stated ih their America. Out of it came the concept of national brother- = 4 paid advertisements in The Times that their . : PR That, at any rate, is the rough approximation that peacetime uses of atomic energy, with special emhood, though its realization was not quick or easy. SPRING : the decientists sive at. ; aT phasis on 3 Huisiabie fos he Iuture. This oom dd Bo ; ; . oi Thank f lovely things Members mmission say no. su - made f seven scien busi- |. go President Washington Worked fufesfully 16 make Ne ely ey trary breakdown is possible. Work that is beink nessmen, with 3 Robert Oppenheimer, one of the nett plans, tharsiors Shey WOwla not be bigs ideal of equality, unity common national interest leaty arms spread . | done 0) ro nation’ physicists, as chairman. actual operation of government. When he léft office the Boon to shelter Hie dncbred. contribute 4ls0 to peacetime development and un- sw a nis of taxes, : ; oh : And all around the grass so green derstanding of atomic energy: : Report Held Up Three Months » they now. stats it is their - ideal was a reality, and the new nation was on its way. A paradise for those who dream. The chief complaint-of the scientists comes over “ox Intention to borrow additional millions to conny thanks bho mall par to George Washinton, | Pee IF he Who GRR | aT mn gunn Poin, WA Lh o Bact Sova em sams hry Cor | > 42% ham om ch boon + It is far more important that a person is an American than | That come to If 1 a material avaflable Ju." qvance of estimates made earlier, when What of financing fs ft that . an . : e again in spring— from the atomic project, it is possible to st : ¢ . causes that he is a Georgian or Pennsylvanian or Kansan. The The redbid all aglow a-new, | secrets of nature hitherto beyond the range of Svilies goutial was an HER, TE we them 1 reir bonds and borrow st tne same fob for al of us now i to speed the day when an Ameri | The dogwood blooming netivy, too, | man's most powerful instruments, This It MAY. as been brought to release ft. The commissioners | Do they take that means in keep from paving | can’s religion or race is no more a reason for intolerance The growing grain begins to show. Pants Store up food for Man and animals, With 5 they. feel It is unwise to fix 4 time schedule In | 50) » 20 HEY San 1 Bes | than is the state that he hails from. = La God for all the y tings euch knowisdge. Basie food could. be easily manu he pubic Hin Wheh 38 Wnekpucied development Eg ny 00 Pat “ ri py eae Satire mel © That come to life again in spring— But the scientists say that AEC is not attacki But In spite of some differences, relations with | Of course, they will increase their coke prio WC . The smiling faces that we meet, this new frontier with anything Nice the vigor ana the scientists have vastly improved. This was at- | and gas rates to finance these borrowings just There's a Top Job Waiti © And in the by-ways that we seek, the thoroughness that such a stirring potential Loeted in & letter sent to AXC on Jan. 1 32 the street Tailway has dons and they wil 5 iting The million things we see and heat should call forth, Here, of course, you get down ' Perr: SOUS 35. Going 48 long 88. thay. ares A YOUNG man starting out in if often is a lite dis | 547 °% 10 WL FREI, | 5 Seg Br Seeinenl nL SAN tame a i a | “mE eel Eo age . He looks at the broad horizon of business | * $y = ay done or not done. oy. stermige hag Veduration’ of American Scientists sends its con- | Those Six-W! Trucks and finds al of the jobs fled —all except those at the Very | gene hr care, | $20-830 Million Suggested Sos Bes ade tu ecrgusiion fae mill DEO | i Tar so alti, Somplsfat deste bottom which yay very little money ati a FOSTER'S FOLLIES ONE OF the top atomic physicists put it this morale in the laboratories was low and the pros- | those large six-wheel trucks. - that business, large and small, are always looking for good CSTRINGVILLE, ; "What should ‘be done is obvious enough. Sassy sevmnd poor Einee, then: the Jaberatories es Bnei Mat wapmet hous late ; : KANS.—American Rope | . s men. All human effort in business and professional life are | Production 300 Million Pounds in poe Twenty, thirty million dollars——a big enough sum bave been put on a firm basis, and good arrange- | trucks started running down our Sireet Th . men... All human FL IR ARIAITG0E Are ] —should be turned over to scientists working on ts’ have been - “competitive, and the bétter men there are in an organiza-| ~~ As we yearn for some reduction; the reactor program. They should be toid: ‘Here. ments’ BaV6 beth Wide for cooperation WitB uni. | almost uibostabis. J09 cun htt fia coming . a _ In the cost of needed things, : money. Now get to work. If you come up specialized is CARE Gd Hon Eh EE Ee Fo % ‘ On one item of i With souiething in the next few yeary, tine. 1f you ieee BSeteaty nthe dpvaiop- a home-owners and tax payers have’ When one of biggest corporations in the world (over | They have really pulled some strings. dont, the we will understand that you did your What really troubles sensitive men of science is | to put with such an annoyance? ‘Why ean’t we $1 billion) was looking around for a man to run its many But we find we've reached that sad tang Ialied | : that their creative, energy should be going toward | come home evenings and enjoy our family after rpri the board of directors chose one of those Tr tr I wage: t, however, doesn’t work that way, bigger and better weapons of mass destruction. | & hard day's work. . = enterprises, we're of hope; and neither does business. There are such things But the fault lies not with them. It lies with the Those trucks go by here in droves all hours _young men who wasn't afraid to take the bottom job and And We earl t Jotge: the adage : on Budget buropus and cost accountants who want sick and disjointéd nature of the time In which we | of the night. It is nerve wracking. My neigh. who knew well that the most efficient, most personable Of the man wi much rope. | ) know ow money is spent and what are the re- live. : 3 bors are voicing the same thing. : hardest workers filter to the top. __|DEAR BOSS. ide fo Ibraith FOREIGN AFFAIRS . . . By Willia — . vee m Ph REEL me ca TEC sams FaVOFite hora Peccaievl 8 kn ERTIES, S F —a1 | Manchurian Peace Key §

(linto Gause

$200,

Blaze 1 Entire’ | CLINTON,

“ZA fire whic

{ness oh entire blo estimated tod

000. Totally de White Buildir store, a beaut! store, a doctor fst's office. “ Authorities and a fa ably save ti plock from d Firemen sal the basement Oceu When it app oceup the - Rose

in store building

volunteers Cal

i _ Belice Chie

said if the Ww any direction firemen woul almost pos the blaze Pe 2 Haute and R Clinton depa flames.

Alen, K Begin J

Judge | For Pro

Frank D. / toga Bar ma boss, Worlie numbers toda; ftentiary at 7 Allen, who take Heater w lations, folloy institution by Judge Robs Federal Cour Allen's reques cause ,of fll ) The 53-yea # one-year-an while Heater, year term ahs Allen's thre mer bar own than a year was charged $15945 in in Allen was f ng payment

A Christie frolic will be Pm. Mond

Gene Griffith have charge « young thurcl vited.

2nd Floo

—a

A ——

JORD

CAI Immediate BUILT Seo On

WwW.

I — —— Large Sele

Choles of B Green or Br

LEON 1 236 Mass. SE ————— You Save MEN'S SU