Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 March 1948 — Page 23

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Landis Center | Of AFL-GOP Controversy

Labor Leaders Fear Hoosier’s Defeat

By Seripps-Howard Newspapers * WASHINGTON, Mar. 11—Po-

rs or city trucks he

here he can get them % tn nigher prices and open the

buy where the super. }

s a mechanic helper, r and does not know fF

vol TRANSYLVANIANS—These three Indianapolis girls will sing with other students of the: Transylvania College A_Capthat re-| pella Choir Sunday at 8 p. m. in the Thi are left do right: Miss Dorothy Burch, Miss Rosalind Havens. and groups. He| Miss Carolyn Chenoweth. :

Christian Church. They

. of work. So 50 cents The superintendent ig down, too many me. his clerk, who knows ide work, and places s not know one part

or the cotton and soybean grow-

; Mr. Holman was the first witness for the dairy organizations

d if a man was qualild not be replaced hy not so qualified. Is >

qth or lessen current federal s on oleomargarine. Repeal Jdvocates say the taxes give butr an unfair advantage over oleo.

50 and was sick and Se ght Priey ork; he'd been in the] Mr. Holman, who led the fight f years. Yes, he is afl; strengthening the oleo tax ld to go to the State _. i» past Congresses, sald but-~ Superintendent if poli. us the balance wheel of the Ay gerd led to [sy industry.” 11 tts competitive : vy led tof leo 13 weakened walking out. It may fjposition with oleo ne ’ he said, the entire industry will be in danger. Sls Soom mabages OVer 874 dairy cow has four teats” ? To Jaz demotud e said. “You cannot take from of January, his wags one teat cheese, from another told to show the new if vaporated milk, from a third him all the parts and is milk and from a fourth butand also the price of erfat. The drying, up of the wn work as clerk and ourth teat means the unbalancng of dairy farming.” He declared that from the consumer’s viewpoint, “repeal of oleo ations would result in higher brices for the product.”

hanics there was laid

want to do the other he other man drawing ut. I know this to be

Egyptians Swell Ranks Of Moslem Brotherhood

‘hich oppose a move to do away|

By LEIGH WHITE Times Foreign Correspondent ? CAIRO, Egypt, Mar. 11 —Growing hostility to Zionism has led half a million Egyptians into the ranks of the Moslem Brotherhood in the hope of unifying the Arab world against Jews in particular and foreigners in general.

The Brotherhood, a semi-reli-gious organization, was founded in 1932 to combat not only the Jews ‘in Palestine, but also the British {n Egypt and the Italians ip Libya and Eritrea. The leader of the Moslem Brotherhood is Hassan El Banna, a rotund little man with a curly black beard who used to be a \schoolteacher in Suez. Although he looks more like an Armenian rug dealer than a Moslem priest, his fervent speeches have a magical ‘effect on Egyptian audiences and move them to unaccustomed violence: Visited Leader

{

: . Hints at Conspiracy “If the housewife requires her City. hleomargarine yellow,” he said,

T n in peacetime is a te device, wholly. at ican principles of freef the compulsory, Bismarck, Hitley red war—not | nations are co pts are all soldiers of the to Stalin's orders. Our ready regimented by

‘modern packaging permits her o color it easily, quickly and without waste—and without leting down the bars to widespread raud and deception.” If the tax were removed, he paid, “it is entirely conceivable

anufacturers enough would seize the opportunity of increasng the cost of colored oleomarparine to receive many millions bf profit which will be paid unhecessarily by consumers.” Committee members supporting ax repeal said it was “inconceivble” that this could happen as t would come under the antimonopoly laws.

DES No. 3 to Meet

Queen Esther. Auxiliary, OES Vo. 3 will meet at 2 p. m. tomor-

Ww junist in an American nace to our security, is a menace to free. ocracy, tends to mili. spirit. History proves military service can ast resort for national

ose UMT in the United tional conscription in ymmunist nations. The otalitarian aggressors, determined to conquer d violence, deceit and son and terror. And st“ arm to capaeity to nost 'dangérous tot phy for world enslave.

nd Mrs. June Henderson.

i got their ideas and he world -into submis. spel of Marx. Let uw especially in air and tablish air bases within of every potential agy true American volunith a formidable force s, ready to strike at ter who dares to make \y peaceful nation, with 1s police the world by ar. Let our men train ripts, to enforce peace. properly based can win

nat of the 26 oleomargarine! "> P

I visited Shaikh Hassan . re{cently in his ornate headquarters near the University of El Azhar in the heart of Cairo’s dusty

Brotherhood in the hope of turning it against the ruling elements in Egypt. : .

that his organization is develop-| ing totalitarian tendencies in| either direction. |

At the moment, he said, the Moslem Brotherhood is training | 10,000 volunteers to fight against

“Once Zionism has been de-| our attention to other pressing

to the Arab world.” and The Chicago Daily News, Inc.

Meyers Case Ready for Jury

WASHINGTON, Mar. 11 (UP) —Federal Judge Alexander Holtzoff today denied a defense mo-

|slums. ; Together we sat crosslegged | on a red plush divan in the) council chamber of a building,

that vaguely suggested a Masonic! temple.

ganization, he assured me that it was recruiting new members countries .as far away as Turkey and Iran. He added that he expected to organize chapters in New York, Chicago and San Francisco during 1948, “Islam,” he sid, “is a way of life—a way of life that is being threatened. The Moslem Brotherhood is designed to defend that way of life according to modern methods of behavior.”

Political Force

The Brotherhood’s potentialities as a political force are such

ow in the Masoni¢ Temple. Miss|as to worry the leftwing opposiirginia Mitchell will sing, ac-ition as well as the government ompanied by Miss Ann Garrison. itself. The powerful Communist ostesses are Mrs. Mary E. Rose/underground is believed to have

infiltrated certain levels of the

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could get a conscript e. Let us concentrate .

son tion - el Hike

A. Taft's anti-inflation Ohio Republican presi-

NEW

quate to deal with the quotations and thirdhelps along. ad from here nobody ar history, it isn’t too

the special session of t program to control rize price ceilings on ffect the cost of living roduction, and to autial to maintain price

ame night to blast this end of economic freecabinet members told vers the President had

son said he would put A. Krug said he would of Commerce said he sel prices and that he a ket in steel,

t : Smart Appearance

pngress, however, Sen ti-inflation act was 8 ly three of the Presi »xport and transports: or food production and ; ad. ized the government to , business and agricul . But price fixing and hibited. ; ..) said this was sendinflation. Sen. Wayne ass the political buck ut said it was “feeble

Begins

aft said that the Presi ontrol inflation. How it even to him. nal Committee on the in U. S. Steel's Presi her and others to ask unfinished steel prices

agree that this rising ess had to admit that

some worrying about

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Denying that the Brotherhood! ly an Egyptian or-|

subornation of perjury. means that *a Federal Court jury of 10 men and two

{women must decide whether the retired general is guilty or inno-,

cent of persuading Bleriot H. LaMarre

gators. The 13-day-old trial moved with unexpected speed todward a

case. The 52-year-old Meyers did not testify in his own behalf, although he previously had told re-

ready to take the stand.

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“Third Foor

a highly unfriendly chairman of the House Labor committee.

Ind.). marked for defeat by the

Labor, is slated to become chairman of the committee on the re-| , tirement of Rep. Fred A. Hartley {Tr (R. N. J.). If the Hoosier 1s Shaikh Hassan belittled reports defeated an dthe Republicans re- | tain control of the House, the

the Zionists in Palestine.

feated,” he said, “we shall turn |

matters. But for the moment eight other Republican CongressZionism is the greatest danger men from Indiana in declaring {that the labor campaign against Copyright, 1948, by The Indianapolis Times|them is led by “a handful of mis{guided and arrogant leaders.” {They said they [challenge” and hoped for the {support of “all

taveraged $28,000 for each con-

!dates for the House are limited : to - campaign expenditures of tion for acquittal of Maj. Gen.|$5000 each. Bennett E. Meyers on charges of

to lie to Senate investi-,

‘each of the AFL’s National and finish as the defense rested today rpternational unions to collect

without calling any witnesses. contributions of $1 or more from The government also’ rested its each member.

|untary,” said Mr. Meany, “in ac{cordance with the Taft-Hartley

1 porters: that he was anxious and ‘2%: and they will be used with

{ The defense relied on its unIsuccessful acquittal motion to free

Meyers’ lawyers argued briefly at the bench that the Senate War Investigating Subcommittee which made the original investigation of Meyers was not properly au-

Smta———| F150" and stop state socialism as

Hartley law. Spokesmen for the 48 state federations of labor, part of the

y

that if they defeat one of the men they have labeled an enemy, they run a big chance ‘of getting

Rep. Gerald W. Landis ‘R

(ndiana State Federation of

labor ¢hairman will be Rep. Clare | BE. Hoffman (R. Mich.), who aas sponsorad measures much more rigid than the Taft-Hartley law. George Meany. AFL secretarytreasurer, admitted today there was “practically no chance” of defeating Mr. Hoffman. Mr. Landis joined with the

“accepted the

right-thinking people” because of a fund of $258,000 raised. in Indiana to bring about their defeat.

This money, Mr. Landis said, gressional district, while candi-

Mr. Meany and William Green, president of the AFL, took part in an all-day meeting yesterday of the executive committee of the new Labor's League for Political Education, which has been! formed by the AFL to serve as its political arm. The main busiress was to authoriZe appointment of a “deputy treasurer” in

“All contributions will be vol-| ,

regard to that law.”

Capehart Plan Before Senate

Times Washington Bureau WASHINGTON, Mar. 11 Sen. Homer E. Capehart (R. Ind.) laid his substitute proposal to the Marshall Plan before the Senate today and. challenged Chairman {Arthur H. Vandenberg (R. Mich.) lof the Senate Foreign Relations |Committee to accept it. | The Capehart Plan provides] {for establishing Reconstruction Finance Corporations in all ERP countries - and using them for financing recovery projects. Relief alone. would be handled through governments. This the senior Senator from Indiana contends would build up “free enter-

well as communism, His viewpoint is more “real|istic” than that of Sen. Vandenberg who is backing the Marshall Plan, Sen. Capehart coritended. He would vote five billions to! RFC and establish an international branch for the recovery. In addition he would grant two billions for direct relief. [ Urges Realism | “In his talk before this Senate on Mar. 1 in behalf of ERP the capable and esteemed senior [Senator from Michigan said hat | East-West tension can be released {when there is mutual East-West! {fidelity to the principles and pur(poses of the United Nations,” | Sen. Capehart said. | | “I believe we must take a more| |realistic view of our problem {than can be found in those words. The East-West tension which has {now become recognizable as the jobstacle to world peace, is another and a worse chapter In the {history of the clashing of two |ideoclogies of government. | “We have been giving this clash the head-in-the-sand treatment lever since the United States be-! icame a world power after World! {War I Free government and |government by dictation have| {clashed at every meeting. Two! iwars and two peace failures is| {the score between the two at the] {present time.” ! American principles can be made to work through his plan, Sen. Capehart said.

Charges Russians | Forced ‘Story’ |

| VIENNA, Mar. 11 (UP)—A vi-| ivacious Austrian girl said today {the Russians had forced her to i sign a statement which was their version of how Pfc. Jack Gruniden of Portland, Ore., was knocked down and shot by a Rus-| sian soldier Monday. | Red-haired Elfriede Elias, 19, | told the story in the waiting room! of the Army hospital in which |Grunden was lying. She vyisited| him for the first time since the! {shooting, smothered him with (kisses, and later told reporters she hoped they would be married | before he returned to the States. | U. 8. medical authorities said | Pfc. Grunden would be sent to the | United States for special treatiment on his bullet-shattered arm las soon as he is well enough to

Ibe moved. He has shown such

r ago last November.

s to worry about next ——

{marked improvement, they said, that he may be able to leave b, early next week.

— .

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