Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 July 1948 — Page 3
1) £1
State
were Vi
Prepares to Fill Wooden's Welfare Post gy Testing Candidates
‘Regrets’ Ransburg-Adams Resignations Which Claycombe Decides to Accept
resignations of Arthur E. Wooden as county welfare director
pl Cr ooden resigned as the met to consider his dismis-
ter order and the subseBe resi of Mr. Wooden. Pre for
ITURE =
ght oak finish, 5 drawer, 1.50 + evienenr 85.00 00 ove chests, solid sak, cessssnasarensci 2950 ves above pieces, asavavasaanshs,.. YS E HEADBOARD AND eds. Single large head. ods, light oak, originally
sesssnssenncies, 0950 v date welfare board today urging ull size, jim to ask the members to “resssesrsennsess31.500 consider.”
OM SET, full bed, chest, orig. 263.50. ..179.50 set
», match above set, sesesesvenness 1995 0g
director, said applicants may file the three-week period prodied by law and that another wo Weeks probably will elapse plore the tests are given. he county welfare board may lect 8 director from the list of persons who passed the eligibility
awhile, Circuit Court Judge pyd D. Claycombe said he wuld accept the resignations of
Defends Ouster «1 am sure these men would
ter their considered opinions,” Juige Claycombe said. The State Welfare Department joday said it “viewed with regret” the resignations of Mr. Adams and Mr. Ransburg. At the same time, however, it defended its actions in bringing about the ouster of Mr. Wooden. In a joint statement Otto Walls, state welfare director, and Joseph Andrew, president of the board, emphasized that the state board's dismissal order was not based on Mr, Wooden's alleged failure to provide housing for two homeless twins earlier this month. “We can only comment that the action of the state board was
ht green durable friszs, 189.50 ¢iiuve.l 139.50
HAIRS, in right and left originally 99980, 55.00 ea, extra width, rose cover, senniassssnsenss 119.50
(IR, French styls, wine BO iisecorananne 42.50
HAIRS, shield-shaped upcover, originally
Robert A. Adams
jr. Adams and Mr. Ransburg,(to co-operate with other local te a statement from the welfare officials.
mot have tendered their resigna- medical aid plan for welfare retion had they not given the mat-|cipients as provided by law.
points which they said were basis for the ouster of Mr. Wooden. They included:
g : x { :
which resulted in the loss of fedSal funds to the state and couny. TWO: Failure of Mr. Wooden
THREE: Failure to adequately present budget requests to the county council and resulting difficulty in securing appropriations. FOUR: Failure to establish
FIVE: Failure to furnish adequate child welfare service as demonstrated by many complaints. SIX: Reports of administrative and personnel friction within the department. SEVEN: Practice of holding warrants of recipients over .a
long period of time contrary to reins of government in 1946 did
law.
EIGHT: Evidence of control-jments to Capitol Hill.
ling the cashing and expenditure of assistance warrants by recipients, contrary to law.
NINE: A defini .|good eyesight dimmed. He would ofihiie ack he shuffie about the Senate chamber
fice to the County in a manner the community has a right to expect.
ast snnseens ss. 08.5000
SIONAL ™ CHAIR, rose 04svvsssnnnyas,. 3950
se “floral, originally
Prefers Price To Mortgage
(Continued From Page One) do anything. They're afraid of
SIXTH FLOOR the people back home. “Price control didn’t do a whole] lot last time, but there should be EDLEWORK some limitation mow. Something
: will have to be done to keep meat CKS, containing directions Ji and milk where _ the. ave ge wt American family able ir, in many colors, 8 buy it. It's terrible the way milk
RES WITH MATCHING 'ED FOR EMBROIDERY, PIECE LUNCHEON D FOR EMBROIDERY, 325 ..civnniian iB 1S, "STAMPED FOR EMes square, originally
goes up. “It isn’t the farmer who's to “blame, Someone in between the farmer and the consumer is causing the trouble. Congress should look into that.” This employee, with two sons of draft age, said she felt the United States should maintain its position in Berlin even if that led to war, She said she believed getting out of Europe would bring Russia nearer to the United States and boost the stock of Commueke Rea RE ve ves 2. nism in this country.
” = » XK, SEVENTH FLOOR A THIRD WOMAN employee ‘ at the plant said she believed price control was important.
EWARES ‘1 would be a wonderful be a good thing.” CES ‘We Won't Look Soft Leaving Berlin’ s THE PLANT engineer is a ra-|settled long ago. sheapaansseinnne 10c oa. B dio ig an amateur photographer and a student of the|stop wars. QUID KEYWAX, bible. He leads the choir in his
church, ‘I don't see any reason to fight Russia for the privilege of feeding Berlin,” he said. “If Russia wants to feed ‘em, let 'em go ahead
cia atv verve. 20000
S, slightly damaged, ).95......1.00 to 3.5004
WDER,
E SETS, cleaner, wax and 19 eiiirirannss 30500
NDOW CLEANER, ciara arava 10ed
A KETTLES,
RCOLATORS, b- fo 8-cup
“I don’t ‘think pulling out of there is going to make us look 50 soft that some ambitious counBY Hee Argentina is going to atus.” :
The engineer said he doubted the effectiveness of the United ations, “It should have a religious repTesentative for each nation as “ vl as political representation,” © said. “They don’t have an opening prayer for their sestions. Even Congress has that.
sade avis aie a F000 “If UN had been anything like % should have been, this PalesRS, tine situation would have been down.” eeninnnneneenn 340 ll Secreqry Urges Government Housing , DUSTERS, ON THE OTHER side of town, Ciiiiiisissesessid9con W the secretary for a retail firm|Wage, too’ : %id she and her husband had FOOD, been trying to buy a house since iii Taa ses 100 PH they were married 18 months ago. )LED WIDE SPATULAS, Se could find nothing they|retreating from Berlin. 39c 0 afford. she said.
essere?
YOONS _— ent to have price conS » She said. “I’m not in favor DLED BASTING 0c of controlling wages. ' They will ¢ care of themselves when Prices are fixed. : I certainly would like to see | eo Sovernment housing. It would an of the best things we Sa have. It would raise the 9c 0 andard of living. the guess we're supposed to have highest standard of living
es ssevesenenasnet
DLED PEELERS,
Leese sssssesaveett
ERCOLATORS,
. es esssnasnenrnet
thing,” she said. ‘'‘We didn’t have
Control on Farm
to worry so much about prices while we had price control. Now we don’t know how much we're going to spend for food one week to the next. “There should be wage control if there is price control. But I think minimum wages should be increased the way prices are on food and everything else. I know we all find ii hard to meet living costs.” She believed social security| should be extended . .” and more added to it.” “I think we're going to have war,” she said. “I think it will come the way it did with Japan. . right now, when it comes.” She said it was too bad the Unite Nations was so weak that it hardly seemed a good last resort to settle a question which threatened a third world war. “We'll have to have something stronger,” she said. “I think a United States of the World would
I don’t know whether arming the UN would I don’t know whether anything would stop wars. “The Bible has no peaceful earth in it. Irn Revelations, it says ‘wars and rumors of wars.’ ” ” = » THE ENGINEER said he thought price and wage control were required to deal with inflation.
“It ought to be along the same lines as far as price control is concerned as the Roosevelt administration put in. If we hadn't given up price control when we did, we certainly wouldn't be where we are now.” The engineer said he opposed any kind of religious or racial discrimination. “Behind this issue of state's rights,” he said, “the South is just trying to hold the Negro
we should increase the minimum
Foreign policy, she said, was so complicated she couldn't understand it. She believed this country would not avoid war by
“You can’t run away from it,”
On the question of .civil rights, she said she thought the South had a good point, but she didn’t think it would get the South anywhere. “I listened to Democratic convention,” she said. “I can’t help feeling that Truman is a weak President. The trouble is he's 80 ... average. It takes a strong man. I think he aims to be right, but he just can’t do things
RS, 20-gt. size, in the w, , oh orld, but th alwa, eras saribsnse ss IE Toom for improvement, 1 think prices.” CULTIVATORS, oll "rmer Agrees on Price Control Needs sasssnsasenneprt? fewer FARMER came into the )ILERS, Tia Paired. One a Toia Biases out.
d the jeweler say he thought ne ought to restore price
I think so, too” said the Thirty-dollar hogs and n you go down the eet and try to buy something.
Cvs ssesn ans?
8, SEVENTH FLOOB
GE 1/2 PRICE
R WEEK-END CASE, 250 Wrong course, there's nothing sanett with $2 whi 50.00 +. cx. YOU be beter tf hogs were aif :R ONE-SUITER, heat was half and every-
aa TS, Sle was just half.” :R PULLMAN CASE oT
contro] : una saga eae nteS * rice contra, be ‘a part NIGHT CASES, ¥ Shoqin. ever have taken
Ka " contro] ” 3 19.95 «raversnee SUN a itil Off” said the farm
right. We can’t blame him for
one of them ought to be kicked “I'm telling you that and I'm getting some of these high prices.” “On the international side,” continued the jeweler, “we ought to stay in Berlin and kick the Russians out. They're just bluffers.” At this point, the owner of the
where he had been tightening the stem on the farmer's glasses.
the owner. He gave the farmer the glasses. “We've got to bring the dollar
tcorridors he would give the
store entered from the back room |p,
“ ?, » gaid|Benjam Hope you're right, Doc,
up,” said the farmer on the way Kae
Death
News Source pANIEL M. KIDNEY WASHINGTON, 20
that when he was defeated by
dinner by the Club. This was unprecedented | than and has never been re-| peated for any other retiring statesman since that time. 80 when word of his death went around Washington, each correspondent had his own anec-| dote to add to the stock of those, piled high at the Press Club and similar gathering. places. After his defeat, Sen. Watson seldom came up to the Senate from his downtown office or from his apartments across from the Statler Hotel. Not until his Grand Old Party regained the
he begin playing return engage-
» * » HIS MOVEMENTS slowed down with age and his never-too-
or visit the House—both bodies in which he had served for more than three and one-half decades. Yet he retained all the old saltiness in his talk. And as he paused in passing down the great
youngest Senator or Congressman as good a bit of wit as he received and often times far better. He was a constant luncheon customer at the Washington Hotel roof garden in the summer! time. Dining there shortly after Sen. VanNuys had been elected for a second term and was being challenged because of the ballot count at Terre Haute, Sen, Watson sat back and treated the table and many nearby to this bit of political wisdom: “You know,” he said slapping his thigh, “I wish I had been running against Fred VanNuys instead of Ray Willis. Those thieves down there at Terre Haute would have been for me.” He then joined in the general laughter.
Ld » ” YET HE WAS NOT unmindful of stories that went around in Indiana when he won his last Senate race. It was the time of the Jong-count in Lake County. Watson had lost downstate and needed just about as many votes as Lake County turned in to win. He won. .
VAI ALI AE
Of L
Raymond E. Willis came here after defeating his Democratic opponent, then Sen., now Judge Sherman Minton, he told about being .in Lake County and having GOP leader Glenn Harris tell him how Democrats had stolen votes from them. “Why didn't you prosecute them?” Sen. Willis inquired. “Because we taught them how when we were in power,” was the frank reply. Both knew that eant Watson's last stand. “There comes a time,” Jim used to say, “when any man must put his party above his principles.” ” = ®
NOR DID HE pretend that he
was anything but a politician first and statesman secondly, although! at the height of his power he was one of the most able operators on Capitol Hill. His autobiography, distinguished more for what it! conceals than reveals, does cite the details of how he planned under the urging of the late Sen.! Henry Cabot Lodge, Massachusetts Republican, to keep the United States out of the League of Nations. |
According to Watson's own!
|
ward preventing future wars and
delay, sow doubts and finally,
scuttle the thing. The plan was, eminently successful and some, believe was one factor leading to, a second and more devastating
Years afterward, when Sen.
war. Another result was the flow-!
story he told Lodge that the peo-| IN THE MID-TWENTIES ple of the country were convinced when the Ku-Klux Klan ran that the League was a step to-|
they wanted to join it. Neverthe-| less, the plan was developed to
NS adars a bonsidrg
ering of Midwest
which has been so difficult to|politics, just like drinking after a prohibition rally. Riding back to Washington
combat and eradicate.
» » » THE TARIFF of course was Sen. Watson's real forte. In his heyday no man could match him in talking high tariffs. He even predicted they would solve the deep depression of the 1930's with
repl a six-month trial. But that also back{to address the Knights of
Columbus.”
Wm. IT WAS this sort of thing hustings. Some of the old-timers| yin caused Frank Kent of the
proved to be in error. Hoosiers everywhere loved to hear him talking tariffs on the
ovable ‘Jim’ Brings Many Regrets From Pre
SENATOR JIM—Former Sen. James E. Watson in the heyday of ‘his ‘career. This picture was taken in 1919 during a battle with the Federal Trade Commission, when he charged the commission with harboring in its employ anarchists and radicals.
would even forget that he had Baltimore Sun
promised them postmasterships a
and failed to deliver. When caught with even a breath of scandal,
“lovable old
in something. .yy a¢ that time. saw the story in the Sun he
once label him
ss Gallery
assured. He need not have worried.- For Sen. Watson des-
and then putting an arm around Ken't shoulder he declared: “Frank, my boy, I just wanted to tell you that was the best darn piece that was ever written about me!” They remained friends until his death, * - » HAVING BEEN OUT of power in his party's high councils for some time, Sen. Watson was still a lively figure at thé 1940 convention which nominated the late
Wendell L. Willkie for President. Despite all of his love for Indiana and the fact that one of his lifelong political lieutenants, Miss Mary Sleeth of Rushville, was working for Willkie, Jim found him hard to swallow. Rushville he considered his home town al80. And he didn't mind Willkie turning Republican either. Leaning back in a big chair with a highball in his hand, Watson made a sort of speech-from-the-throne in his own Philadelphia hotel suite. “Of course,” he recalled, “that Willkie family from Elwood always were Democrats. They voted against me for 40 years, Now I'm glad that Wendell has seen the light and turned Republican. But somehow I feel, being a Methodist, that it just isn't right to let a converted streetwalker Join the church one day and lead the choir the next.” ” » » WHEN WILLKIE finally was nominated, Watson awoke to cast
his vote for him. During his nap,
way, so it didn't matter, Perhaps during the nap Watson
Penrose could pick Presidents, as
‘and next week I'm going ® = @ ; IN THESE last years he al- ployer asked for Win, adjustways attended the Indiana State Tents based on prices.
Society functions here and returning to Indiana he would in-
the towering Jim could take the asked the late Mark Thistleh-|geis, since the day he lost the
Senate floor and explain it away. o.oo 40 introduce him to the au-
The most classic example was the time he was shown to have taken stock from a company seeking legislative favors and given a personal note for it which he never paid off. Smilingly he explained to his Senate colleagues
were worthless so it was “no runs, no hits and one error.” They forgave him at once. 5 tJ ”
rampant in Indiana, Jim Watson was credited with carrying a gold Klan card. The late Mayor Shank of Indianapolis said Jim sent him out to canvass the state for the governorship on an anti-Klan platform. When the Senator saw
how he (Shank) came out he|’
(Jim) joined. Whether he did or not, Jim Watson was fairly free
(Continued From Page One)
protectionist, and, according to my belief, a man who is not a good protectionist cannot be a Republican,” Mr, Watson later wrote about Hoover. From 1922 until his defeat in a campaign for re-election to the Senate in 1932, Mr. Watson was undisputed boss of the Indiana party organization. He was said to have maintained this control through achieving in Congress many local successes—appropriations for Indiana postoffices, projects, pensions and jobs. Tariff Commission However, his congressional record showed that he was responsible for much important legislation, chief of which was creation of the tariff commission. His action in the railroad shopmen’s strike, Mr. Watson wrote in his memoirs, “paved thé way for collective bargaining as an in-
MARRIAGE LICENSES Wallace W. Steinke, 26, of 19 E St. Joseph .; Butha Elaine Rowe, 22, of 2436 N. New Jersey St. Wilbur N. Thompson, 22, of 3224 N. New Jersey S8t.; Betty Jane Handy, 24, of 2636 Sutherland Ave. Samuel Busby, 4, of 5105 Carvel Ave.; Mariel) 3 pe, 31, of 1836 N. Pennsylvania St. Harvey James Morehouse, 24, of 5215 N. New Jersey St.; Kosem: Loudermilk, 20, of 547 N. Livingston Ave. Bert W. ax sison, 4 of 813 Bs ridian St.; Mary Stoneking, 26, o 2123 N. Meridian Norbert Betzler, 19, of 1423 E Gimber St.; Shirley Kirschner, Hoefgen St. Jewett Snow Jr., 21, of 1514 N. Park Ave; Vallie Radcliffe, 18, of 220 N. Pennsyivania St. Paul P, Irwin, 29, of 5208 N. Keystone Ave.; Lorraine H. Feldmann, 28, of 2601 Cold Springs Road. Edward Markewicz, 31, of Saginaw, Mich; Nellie McRae, 32, of 1465 N. Alabama Hubert Fred Moore, 36, of 34 N. Addison Claude Martin Thomas Parker, 22, of 1438 W. Market St.; Barbara Marilyn
Benjamin L. Miner, wton. St.; Ella M. Daringer, 62, of 1316 NorJack Warren Culp, 24, of 21 N. Tacoma Ave; Janet Louise McDaniel, 18, of 430 N, Jefferson Ave. 0. H 624 N. Tlinois
, , of 8t.; Paula Lee Veach, 19, of 1307 Ewing Bt.
ER PULLMAN CASE. 0g
aaa
Ses srs ts anes
, EIGHTH FLOOB
out. “You know something,” said the jeweler. “I think people BIRTHS d here talk more about
At St. Francis—Allen, Dorothy Crawford: I -~
be 17, of 1418)
Ester Belle ‘Jacks, 3, of 242 WN. A {o
Sunny Jim Watson Dead; Long-Time GOP Leader
dustrial policy throughout the country.” Mr. Watson's autobiography,
“As T Knew Them,” appeared in 1937 and revealed that he knew most of the prominent men in politics since the turn of the century and knew them well. He was born in Winchester Nov. 2, 1863. He was graduated from Winchester High School in 1881 and from DePauw University in 1886 with an AB degree. Mr. Watson was admitted to the bar in 1887 and began practicing law, with his father, Enos L. Watson. He received a master’s degree from DePauw in 1894 and a doctor's degree from Notre Dame in 1910. Married to Flora Miller in December of 1894, he was the father
Mr. Watson, then a youngster, made the first political speech of his career at Parker (Randolph
IN INDIANAPOLIS
Fish; Earl, Barbara Potts: Lester, El dora Tappy; Raymond, Elanora Denk. At Coleman—Ralph, Vadeen Creekmere; Thornton, Lillian Bardach; William, Catherine Horner, At Methodist—Robert, Doris Albertson: gene, Leona McClure; Harold, Pauline Giesking; Freely, Mildred Hutchinson; Rudolph, Ester Clapper; Oliver Jr, Betty Jane Clark; Herbert, Harry Keen. At St, Vincent’s—Harry, Joyce Jenson; James, Alberta Cowan; John, Gussie Tolle; aa Catherine DeWeese; Jo-
seph, Argus; Harry, Mary Hennigan; Thomas, Mary Agnes Wolfla; Robert, Jean Morrett; rge, Barbara
Rochford. t Home George, Vivian Williams, 767 N. Ber ei irgll, Urdell Fales, 218 At_Emhardt Memorial — Gerald, Mary | Craft; George, Plyna 'Bernloehr.
ris At St. Francis—William, Margie Patterson; Joseph, Louise Loschky; James, Vivian Williams; Edward, Gertrude Hervey. At General—Lemuel, Leona Lee; Paul, Marjorie Wickers.
t man—Robert, Valarie Fleishman, At Methodist—Wilbur, Agnes Tague; William, Irene Adams; James, Mary Margaret: Smith. At St. Vincent's—Walter, Phyllis Foreman; eorge, Lois ryice; 1, Mary Lofs Pelfrey: Kenneth, Barbara Barlow; Gordon, Carol Burns; Harold, Dorothy Gibson; Lloyd, Evelyn Swain; Richar one ks; Edward, Jane _ Strickland; Charles, Wilma Wortman; Robert, Dor
othy Link; J Rosemary Bauer, N. At) Home—bond, Irene Lovell, 34 N. 001 .
mington St DEATHS Cora Hardy, 64, at 1226 8. Harlan, myo-
SC X Wilma Mitchell, 41, at General, endar1;| tegitis >
Jones, 50, at 1817 Broadview Terocch
race, COronary usion, Alice Laura Robertson, 86, at 3104 W. orth, arteriosclerosis. Claude C. Saffell, 48, at Emhardt Memorial, coronary embol le Florence Minter Lillard, 71°at 719 Fayette,
pn . {Charles A. Luesson, 79, at 520 EB. Minne-
itis, James’ Joseph Hower, 75, st 7 N. Linwood,
of three sons and one daughter. |
County) in 1884. During the following year he made 68 political campaign talks. On the night before election day in 1836 he addressed a rally at Rushville. For many years after that, it remained a custom for him to make the closing speech in Rush County the night before a major election. In 1888 he made more than 100 campaign talks. Following a defeat in his race for Governor of Indiana, 40 years ago, “Sunny Jim” told reporters cheerfully, “if you can’t lose, you have no business being on the team.” . Under Fire Between his termsin the House and in the Senate, Mr. Watson appeared in Washington as a paid” representative of several manufacturers interested in tariff legislation. His name was involved in a congressional investigation of lobbying. A House committee, in its report, questioned “the propriety of one who has been a member of Congress capitalizing that influence in pressing legislative proposals upon Congress for hire, by personal tontact and personal efforts, as was done in this case.” Many years later, a Senate committee reported that in 1929 Mr. Watson secured from a sugar lobbyist, interested in the sugar rates of the Hawley-Smoot tariff bill, a block of sugar company stock. The committee found that Mr. Watson gave his unsecured note, which was later returned to! him, for the stock. When the report was made, Mr. Watson laughed it off characteristically. . “There isn’t anything to it.” he said. “The stock’s no good and my note’s no good, so the score is 0 to 0, with no hits, no runs and two errors—me taking their stock and them taking my note.” Mr. Watson defeated the veteran William 8. Holman in the congressional election of 1894. He was re-elected to Congress in 1898, 1900, 1902, 1904 and 19086. He lost a bitter gubernatorial race to Thomas R.' Marshall in 1908. After this defeat he practiced law in Rushville and did not run for office again until 1916, when he defeated Sen. Thomas Taggart for a senatorial . e was re-elect and oe ed in 1920 e was a familiar and powerful figure in Republican” state politics and six times was presiding officer of state party conventions. - He attended every na-| tional Republican convention since the one in which James Garfield was nominated and since his election to Congress in 1894 had been a delegate to
vascular. Susie Am! ] $ arteriorose, 0.90 Senwta),
thor.
nearly every one.
A kindly soul, who was
Kent also was not too self-'comb Riley's “Good Bye Jim."
STRAUSS SAYS:
It's MESH It's WHITE—Its SLEEVES are SHORT—It's COOLER than cool!
It's a Two-Way Collar—with "stays" for business—or open for air flow comfort It's SANFORIZED—it can't shrink more than a measly A or 2%.
Collar Sizes 14 to 18. And lastly—but most importantly it's from DONEGAL who makes - a Sports Shirt that is about tops in its field!
303 i L. STRAUSS & C0, «THE |
Pp ~ 3
sist on being an active politico trol ey rather than an elder statesman. : umbug.” * Kent| After the big 80th birthday cele-( SOOUL thers but guessed that had never met Watson. person-pration for him at the Columbia pp Some So when Jim|Ciyb, he still refused retirement. He wanted nothing more for him-
His many friends today join in|attempt to rob the gold bullion tribute by quoting James Whit- at in
By Rollback
House Group Hears President’s Adviser
WASHINGTON, July 29 (UP) —The White House today asked Congress for price and wage control legislation which would give the administration authority to roll back prices on cost of living items to last November. The White House bill would cut back the prices of key cost-of-living commodities to those prevailing last November. That would mean a cut of about 5 per cent. The bill was presented to the House Banking Committee by former Price Chief Paul Porter, President Truman's special adviser on price matters. It was offered to a Republican leadership which has stated frankly that it has no intention of passing such legislation at this special session of Congress. Sweeping Powers The measure would restore to the President many sweeping powers exercised over the nation’s economy in wartime. But its major aim, Mr, Porter told the committee, is not to lower the general price level materially now. Its intent, he said, is to “hold inflation without incurring a depression.” “We do not,” he said, “expect these measures to reduce the general price level now. We do expect them to end the upward march of prices and to reduce, so far as possible at this late date, the threat of future eollapse.” Mr. Porter said the rollback should apply to any cost of living items which have risen or
Archie Bobbitt had been casting) threaten to rise 20 per cent or the Watson vote for Willkie any-| more since June,
1946. Committee Chairman Jesse P. Wolcott (R. Mich.), demanded a list
isolationism,|from bigotry. He felt it was all \,q dreaming of the old days of such items, but Mr. Porter said when he would be talking to{he could not personally supply President Taft after a heavy noonday lunch. at the White with a correspondent, Watson| House and away to the ball game. was asked whether it was true He loved to recall those days and|le88 terminated sooner by Conthat he had addressed a Klan! jater ones when he and Bolse| 8T¢S8 or the President. picnic.
- a true,” was the prompt they did President Harding.
them. The price control authority would expire June 30, 1850, un-
Wage controls would apply only to industries under price control and then only when em-
, Mr. Porter told the committee that meat certainly would be one of the items placed under conHe said he was not certain
dairy products, clothing, steel, and non-ferrous metals. Also wartime restrictions on
nomination when Wills won it | atallment buying would be re-
but liked to be around. He would ——— somewhat embarrassed by suchigo out and make speeches any-| GOLD ROBBERY FAILED an assignment, Mark finally|where and come back at night agreed to do %0. He brought Kent down from the gallery into the President's room .where Sent than himself. ators are sent for from the floor that both the stock and note to talk. to. newspapernien.
tored.
LONDON, July 20 (UP)—Nine
to the club and outeat, drink and men armed with crowbars and talk men a half century younger|clubs fought with London
in ought With Lonton Mirpolt
the airport. All
nine were
] /
iid
Truman Urges’ 5% Price Cut
a
