Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 April 1948 — Page 10
The Indianapolis Times ROY W. HOWARD WALTER LECKRONE HENRY W. MAN 3 Editor
PAGE 10 Saturday, Apr. 3, 1048
A SORIPPS-HOWARD NEWSPAPER
In Tune : With the Times | HI |
If You states, U. June 31.20 & mom Telephone R1ley S351 | oo, 1 1011 the First of April as a treasure, WASHIN Give Light and the People Will Find Their Own Woy The or at Cn Yo 232 Freasurs doi taxpayers. us The yuo] of (nat far off of pleasure I wil § caus The Marshall Plan Plus \ —~LEWIS BRADFORD RICHARDSON. larger from THE global aid measure, which will become law with 9 4 | Suppose yo the President’s signature today, makes history in more | in Southern Dost. A suage esha Joa ¥ Be ways than one. “so I crawled on out from in under.” The benef There néver as buss any poscatime project by fia |. 31 W. Ohio St. terty paymen nation or any other approaching it in size or scope. More * oo 0 terly paymen than $6 billion is authorized for the first year of an antici- GOIN : ee — pated period of more than four years. In addition to 16 G. GOING, GONE S : : Father Time grows nimbler all the while, MOR Western European countries, Greece, Turkey and China | As his snowy whiskers mM are covered. Except for about $1 billion in loans, all the Hi limbe seem to strengthen— Indiana, remainder represents a gift in some form. - 8 goes more swittly svery mils. Women’s Looked at merely as a humanitarian measure it is un- Row this is vad, you know, 20 W. precedented. But of course it is more than that. Itises-| It I as M0, et: mm -
sentially a hard-headed American investment in foreign recovery and stability, in democracy and peace, upon which our own security depends. It is not another handout. We have put out upward of $20 billion since the armistice in direct and indirect re-
How come that lately he's so fleet. CLAUDE BRADDICK.
Uncle Sam has granted clothing manufaeturers to import 100 skilled Earo-
pean tail We predict that they'll business over hers Just sew sew. fa
AND 211 E. Wasl
lief of various kinds to sundry countries, including our con- ¢ ¢ J tribution to UNRRA. Something has been achieved but A LADY - — not much, because some was wasted and most of the rest To be a lady oft I thought, OUR DESI was limited to relief rather than reconstruction. As growing through the years, Fo Cire | This time the emphasis is different and the safeguards must a woman be; amily greater. Instead of running a Santa Claus show, we pro- fa §t petaisus 12 binging Lars. Served the pose. to help them help themselves. We insist that they | I“comant nelp but buy. est in Ar take the initiative and responsibility, that they eliminate The lowly prints and mosphere trade and other barriers to recovery by close co-operation And an apron to round me tie. Reverence. and integration approaching economic unification for When seeking bridge or parties, ANEULA mutual strength, Only on that constructive basis do we 20 Oriel 1 Would 90 ha an promise ‘to supply the materials and money which they Depending much on me. i ven could not get otherwise or elsewhere. Cl 1 read the ads of Snery, Aaiast Giggi 3136 W. | : almost thought I'd die; ain gging LIKE ANY other investment this is not a sure thing. Ag Ta og ne : : 9 | already made by the Western European nations to meet But now my heart finds solace i 4 Mid 8 : el S H GOP he: p der. oF on smetied a Jome thiese and in view of the continuing Ameri- | 12 {he thoughts 0 kind and meek; ast-Miawest Feu plits our polluted streams. T refer to the Fight to : can controls in the measure. When it's a woman that they seek. MADISON, Wis. Apr. 3—By this time it is and Sen. C. Wayland Brooks, will head the Illinois b and_smars fish. (ouly the cbuoxcm Woo It is a fundamental approach to the problem of pre- ~JOSEPHINE BUCK. hardly news that there pi ay divisions in the delegation to the Philadelphia convention, and his | 880) they say, Such 3a such ors, Sip and oe ETM ] ) 4 Any girl can be attractive if she has the | 4¢r- But the Republican Party is also split down In a talk I had with him in Chicago, Col. Mc- | termina What hinders a man with a — nations have neither the spirit nor the strength to with- | rgn¢ “clothes, says s designer. And a the middie in a feud that has stirred a partisan. Cormick told me he would not support the Repub- | ‘ioto te WE bing a bass to keep it from FREE | stand Soviet aggression or Communist penetration. Hunger | clothes can be attractive if they have the ship almost &s bitter aa that within Demoeratic lian Party If either Gov. Dewey, Sen. Vandehber®: I BS as of old age” as the crackpot scientists PLANNI} and chaos are Stalin's most powerful allies. No healthy | "nstl So Wikconsi the tsolationish, ATEHION. oa ee a Bp a Yaay. AN Sansriuenovil say that fab are coils | | Mu.wa Hn nation has ever gone Communist, no free people with the: ; first wing of the GOP has rallied under the ban- of eastern financial-corporate wealth. In the Chi- .| die in our polluted RII vesiat t by a forelgn di BOY'S FIRST HAIRCUT - ner of Gen. Douglas MacArthur, While thelr cago Tribune, with its far-reaching influence, he | OF SiCr-mOTtis cts It. Tow come R06 236 E. NE > strength to * Sia welcomes Suglaveman: x Is ore ge He Y loved t= Kiss. the sort carla strength may be exaggerated because they are so denounces ali tree e. and particular ly Sen. Van- aod 3» Sbiosieus when properly pretator. ping them . » 80 ona san, man e , % while | So wayward on your childish head, observers believe that a Ets of MacArthur n> = hii . wild ol erie colonel and bas 3 fine Bital, : 2 un
them toward political freedom, toward ‘the selfrespect .and sanity and human rights which are the life of democracy. : But economic help, '
But now behind that revealed ear, My lips touch sandpaper instead. ~~MARCELLINE BRUCKER. ® ¢-¢ A writer advises girls to keep a man guess-
delegates may be elected. That is one reason why Gov. Thomas E. Dewey of New York felt compelled to make a last-minute change in his plans and invade Wisconsin. Until recently Gov. Dewey and his advisers had felt
those who feel as he does could scarcely support
however fundamental, is not
enough. Stalin, if he can prevent it, will not permit recov- ng. But not to the point where he guesses that the haciiog of his popularity was Sufficient feet candidate for the eolonel, . a ‘ 3 : carry him In the presidential primary ery to destroy his opportunity to communize the world. So | he'll go somewhere else. in both '40 and ’44, the New York Governor swept McC ick for Taft * ¢ 0 : ormick for Ta he resorts to violence and threats of war. this state, COL. McCORMICK'S avowed choice in the Re“uy . »” PATTERN gd The phy of the Republican split is re- oo 5 ny oe Ran A SO —_eD HENCE THE need of military security, as well as eco- Unfold the neatly folded pieces vealing. Essentially it is between the East and the Rhoice 1s Ged, MacArthur, with whom he had oad nomic recovery, if free nations are to survive. That| Of transparent, whispering paper. i: Mare. ta. however ro ne 30d intimate talks dwing his visit 0 the Orient : Place them on your outspread material; , There is, however, an even broader §COBTAPA" 1544 yegr. Gen. MacArthur rolled out the red carsecurity can come only through our help. So we must Snip-snip along the edges. ical division. On one side are those who belleve "UR: “i friend treating him like a visiting
that American strength should go to build up China and Japan, if we are to send aid abroad at all. Gen. MacArthur, either as candidate or symbol, is the logical champion of this group.
Division Not Hard and Fast ON THE OTHER SIDE are the Repidblicans
potentaie. Sen. Taft is not a candidate in the Wisconsin primary. He is, however a candidate in Nebraska, where he has the backing of Sen. Hugh Butler and Sen. Butler's powerful machine. ; This suggests an interesting possibility. Should Sen. Taft win in Nebraska and Gen. MacArthur
rearm and aid our allies to rearm for defense. A lend-lease military measure is a necessary companion to the Marshall Plan. Otherwise we shall simply be fattening Stalin’s victims for his kill. To provide this two-fold aid to nations willing to help
Have you also a pattern
After which you cut your garment of life? ¢ o 0 ’
The only time we can really understand
-
Few Deors Seo
} the weather is when the sun comes right out who have actively supported the European Recov- in Wisconsin, the Middl P | a farm 48 years. “Alwsys 8 Si and to Seen peal, Wifiiout Sealine oy own and make it clear. ery Program in the belief that America’s No. 1 would have two dey os, wing of the GO We TE or gotten rich. ‘We have worked Smem— strength or wrecking y by on, will ® ¢ 9 interest is in reconstructing Western Europe. Their The pressure would be strong then to com- | hard. We get up at 3:30 a. m. and work ti quire all the skill and courage of which American leader- FOSTER'S FOLLIES leader in Congress is Sen. Arthur H. Vandenberg. bine forces behind one of these men. The rumor | 9 p. m. If we count anything for our work ship is capable : . Among them are such distinguished men as Henry has long persisted that at the proper time the | and expenses we have little left. So I dont p P . (“NIAGARA FALLS, Ont.—Dimout Ordered L. 8 nd Robert P, Patterson, former Secre- MacArthur strength will be thrown behind Sen. | see why people are griping about farmers, Just | : $0 Conserve Powter) tari ar is not, of course, hard and fast. Pat ro Snaps bY the General humael! in 3 dramatie gtona ium wii 8 whi fe. 24- . 3 " y » » n a 0 cf ti . Mr. Petrillo Gets Smart T ating back res ety Not long ago Gov, Dewey threw out an aldo. With the Middle West united behind one can- | p: . . That a brownout must be dreary, China appeal in one of his speeches. This was a didate and the majority of the eastern delegates Right Time, Please OIL . A LOT of people are wonderitg what came over Mr, Pe- With some complement of tears. SiEniseall reosnition of jhe Jolitical Dower of thé behing another the : Republican convention could | By Commuter S trillo of the musicians’ union. He has made what ap- Bot whene'et IoF Any reston wn hp ve to shifting develop into a long-drawn-out struggle. There is, Why doesn’t the Citizens Gas and Coke MON AR A ; . however, one restraint that the Democrats do not tilit, board pears to be a three-year peace treaty, surprisingly generous For a dimout there be need, A potent figure in the Republican Party in have. The Republican hope of victory in Novem- hi aad W. Washington? or bi 3 caf : : : ia There is no place, in any season, the Middle West is Col. Robert R. McCormick of ber—confidence and desire—will work as a power- , ’ —— in terms, with the big radio metworks. Wh the folks will the Chi Trib po’ It's from three to four minutes slow. BE Union musicians can play for television. Key broad ers the folks pay less heed. e Chicago Tribune. His men, Gov. Dwight Green ful amalgam to fuse these divergent factions, It's made me miss my bus several times. Blueprints c 0 J wm net : ; T . : . < oa 4 Photopaints casting stations needn't hire more musicians than they IN WASHINGTON . . . By Peter Edson Side Glances—By Galbraith DEAR BOSS. . . By Daniel M. Kidney. want. Present wage scales will continue until 1951. Mr. ® ° ® . . JET Petrillo says he made these and other concessions because Ro Minority Hao ing ) eter & Jud e Mi nton Heald Indianapolis B he realizes “the public's stake in television.” His union, he : were : sin adds, is determined to “go all out to assist in development . NE —
: ® po ® Power in Costa Rica (Second of Two Articles on Costa Rica) WASHINGTON, Apr. 3—If O. Henry were alive today and
Tight Rein on Lewis WASHINGTON, Apr, 3—Dear Boss—Judge Sherman Minton
of the U. S. Court of Appeals in Chicago (a New Albany, Ind., boy who made good as a New Dealer) was highly praised by those
of an art which has great educational and entertainment advantages for the public.” A big and welcome change, that, from Mr. Petrillo’s
C&G
b No Money Di
a
previous tactics. And a hopeful indication that he finally | writing of Latin-American revolutions, he would have a' new- : sere gd : : : : ho witnessed his conduct in the coal inquiry here this week. has decided it's time for union leaders to display a little | type of character to introduce in his plots. It. would be the Latin- v. A . iN pay American Communist. The current revolution is Costa Rica offers Chosen as chairman of President’ Truman's Fact-Finding 605 DIANA Board, set up under provisions of the Taft-Hartley Law, Judge 8. Cap
respect for public opinion and to stop trying to show how dictatorial they can be in using their power. If so, he is smarter than some other union bosses we
an example. This little republic between Panama and Nicaragua has always been considered one of the most stable of the Central American countries. It has no tradition of rich Spanish grandees
Minton held a tight rein on the proceedings and didn't give “Bully-Boy” John L. Lewis a chance. ; Then the former Senator from Indiana and his assistants Mark F. Ethridge, publisher of the Louisville Courier-Journal
SINDIAN,
might name. In fact, we will name one. John L. Lewis, | and big estates. Coffee land plat t . 3 plantations on the central upland plateau m now engaged in another attempt to enforce his will, is | bave been run by small and middle-class land owners. There wth ore W. Taylor of the University of Pennsylvanis, E. Ohio St. P : : : 1 have been few great accumulations of wealth and little peonage worke esday night so they could deliver their report to z openly parading his contempt for public opinion, the Taft- | p erty. White House Wednesday. Band Hartley Act, the government and considerations of national The one railroad from the eastern port of Limon to San n y B Jose, the capital, is British owned. The extension to the Pacific Slowed After Truman Took Over @ Inrestisat
safety in a world crisis. : One thing Mr. Lewis never will prove to the American people by his methods is that it's futile for them to try to
is owned by the government. United Fruit runs most of the shipping.
Unexpected Target for Communists
[%
ee ————————
FROM THAT point on President Truman took over and things slowed up. But that was not the fault of Judge Minto and his cohorts who worked hard over the Easter week-end, The first took testimony from Ezra Van Horn, operators’ represen
=
control him by law. And one certain result of tye present IN SUMMARY, Costa Rica's living standard ‘s higher than tative on the board of trustees of the Miners Welfare coal strike, if it continues, is that whatever public senti- | in Jost pais of South America, Thers Nas Be es whe vies B sents tax on Jath ny Soul wndes the of MAGHIN .1 | ploitation of the populace. n't been a co n ne Workers contrac n en Thomas E. Murra¥ ment there may be for Taft-Hartley Act ‘repeal will was great unrest. It wasn't a place where you would expect | New York financier, who quit as third trustee when Mr, Lewis 18, Ww. dwindle, while public demand for sterner legislation will | communism to take over as it apparently has in the current | and Mr. Van Horn failed to agree on the fund's disposition. gTOW. ; election revolt. It took a court order to get John L. to appear and tell his Amm— According to Washington Teporis, iis No. 0 Communist, Sle of the story. Because he had already assailed both Mf Mra Costa Rica is believed to be a woman. e was born Maria Isabel | thridge and Mr. Taylor as “prejudiced” in a letter addre ol 3avp . . Carvajal. She now goes under the name of Carmen Lyra. She ! to “Hon. Sherman Minton.” The latter asked all the questions. MEN'S SUI Simple Solution is 46 years old. She was once a school teacher, but she is better | He was careful not to call the miners’ annual walkout this year 8 ENATOR C. f Washingto “There i tual known as a writer. She has apparently never been outside her “strike” so Mr. Lewis didn't get to unloose his bombast. $18.15 1 AIN o asnin n says ere 18 no actu own country. Y o S shortage of housing. There is ural a desperate short- Yet it is generally believed she engineered the formation of Terre Haute ‘Horrible Example’ CASE fh g : hich g: ¢ £9 y Spe the Communist movement in Sosta. Rien, Her Hoest house i - S cracked down on the point that he ted the Cor. Waste age of housing which 1s Ior rent. : San Jose has been the meeting place for native Communist | SE — 2 MR. LEW : wan > We think it would be fine if the Senator would lead learners EE reine leaders of her movement. Chief | " 5 AR : a 2 2 : service who are 80 of a ui Mine Mi ® ge . r the way by scraping up some capital to buy a lot of these among them is Manuel Mora, now head of the Popular Front, Frankly, I'm beginning fo think you're just plain lazy! ure ng Judge Minton ftom Wis days in Ingiane Tore . q rs was , Mr. abundant houses at today’s reasonable prices and rent them 3 au Slectad Member of the Congress and chairman of its | 0 ;ne of the group who has ever been to Moscow. J wiih Haute as the “horrible example” of what happens to miners from DIAMON| fora fair and reasonable Tee. Not only should this bring | Ties COMMIS, sunist moviment was Bret stated tn. 1950 | fers mn 1935 He had veveived ouly a primary school ehusation, 95 to $2, me sald Sadly, (FRE) MSHS one because 9¢ 8g) » - : ; in Costa Rica. He came back from Moscow a well-schooled | incapacity. They gave up their memberships in the union so they ORTING ( him a comfortable profit but, with a little help from others, Mora Was res lis Degan is pobiical labor leader and organizer. Today he is head of the Shoemakers’ | cannot qualify for a pension now.” : : M this imaginary housing shortage would vanish—poof, just | patriots like to shout about. He is considered an orator and | Syndicate, considered the strongest Costa Rican labor union. There was more talk about how the coal industry “uses mes BIA like that. writer of ability. Last year the Popular Front in Costa Rica got hold of a | and then casts them aside as useless" and then Mr. Lewis at XE . radio station. It has been noisily active, as his its newspaper. | tacked the contention that his pension proposal “was not act? ff ge === v : Pro-American During War But ihe movement itself has been on the decline. It registered arily sound.” ; : . . J voters in 1942. Its present strength is believed less than 1 just want to put the pensions on a pay-as-you-go basi Culinary Progress DURING THE WAR Mora became pro-American. He took | half that figure. Up until now no one took it seriously. and if the money for $100 monthly isn't there we can’t Pal : . the lead in advocating co-operation with American capital seek- As numerical strength has gone down, however, its influence | it out.” : i i THE Army has developed a pill that will combat hunger | 18 to Sevelor Ris Soyniry and raise its standard of living. This | has gone up. [Foday the Front has seven seats in Congress. To the average listener that sounded plausible. But Judé by destroying the appetite. This, we suppose isan im-| The © e e nternational was abolished by Moscow. | The Republican party has 23 seats. The Unionist party 24. Minton was wise to the fact that the welfare funds was set up RY Of 8 > V v e : ommunist party in Costa Rica. then dropped that label The Pop! Front therefore holds the balance of power. | hospitalization, accident insurance, health benefits and provement. over the old days when Army chow could do| 4nd became known as Vanguardia Popular, or the Popular Front. | That's just what it wants. No party can do anything without | purposes. Should the fund be exhausted for pensions, it would 7 Suan thit,, ¢ An Mora is Stular hia oy the pasty. is co-operation. That gives the Communists control of the situa- | easy for old John L. to for upping his" 10-cent t : Ear = Another Rodolfo Guzman. He is probably the ' tion.» tax nother 10 Gents of maYDS MOPS. Lia : : y -
