Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 31 October 1948 — Page 35
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SUNDAY, OCT. 31, 1948 : THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES _
How President Truman And Gov. Dewey Stand On Major National Issues of C ampais
Agriculture
the Senate and would have passed the House . . . but the real estate lobby wanted it blocked, so the masters of the Prices Republican Party blocked it.” - i . DEWEY —"We will break the log jam in housing SE TRUMAN—"My first recommendation to the special when federal aid is required to get action, then that aid session was for effective action to hold down prices ...I'm nust be provided—on a realistic, practical basis.” still in fayor of action to hold dewn the cost of living.” - DEWEY -—"Price control . . . would stifle production. Taxes The most important single measure . . .<is to cut down TRUMAN—“The (1948 Republican) tax reduction -
every avoidable dollar of spending by government:”- . . . is inequitable as well as untimely . . . some readjust-
Here i in their own "words are how President Truman and Gov. Dewey stand on major campaign issues:
A \*
Boom and Bust ~~ TRUMAN-—-"The leaders who now control the Republican: Party want prosperity for special privilege - groups . . . a Republican victogy would be a victory for a policy that makes for hard times.” DEWEY—"“We shall see to it that depression and mass unemployment . . . never return... we will use the full resources of a united people to sustain the strength and spirit of America.” = o
TRUMAN-—"The Demosratic program’ is to provide full markets for farm products . . . to place a floor under farm income . . . to increase farm income through cooperatives, market development and research.” i 0 DEWEY--'“We want less regimentation and more educational and technical assistance in the field. Farm prosperity is essential to national welfare and I favor fed- y
Labor pet Toque to 3a ree! b Salsiies pa are suffer- Foreign Policy SE eral subsidies to keep production high.” MAN. ing. Bu receipts should no TRUMAN--“The principal objective of d - : eli ____ TRUMAN--“The Taft-Hartley law is the openin " “ p p jec my adminis : : ee oe nto th DEWEY We wil vse tue to provid increased tion as bee to cost... int and ning pene. The S11 SR ; rd working man. It should be repealed.” oo ~incentive-forp and Te American people should consider the risk of entrusting MAN We cannot b&™ satisfied until’ all our DEWEY—"“We must and will preserve the gains of Eightieth Congress toe their destiny to recent converts who now come along and Doogie hate sul Spportinlties for Joi, for homes, Sob ; v : “ y oe lucation, for health and for political expression, an labor . . . the new (Taft-Hartley) law is not perfect . . . TRUMAN—"A sad tale of the selling of the people's say, ‘Me, too, but I can do it better’. . - » equal protection wider Lay P i ’
whenever and wherever it needs change, it will be interest to put more and more power into the hands of
changed. But... the welfare of both labor and the whole fewer and fewer men.” of our people nas been advanced.” DEWEY—*“I am for it 1000 per cent. They did a Housing "swell job and I believe wholeheartedly in it from op: to
TRU MAN “The ; Tatt-Ellendér-Wagner bill passed bottom.” £ . World Report—
Chinese Reds Stab Into Sub
Washington Calling—
DEWEY—"Our country should never again seem to wobble in foreign affairs, so that dictators may think us weak or irresolute. Meanwhile, it is imperative that we rn remain. strong and grow stronger. Everything we e say or do will be to build the peace.’
urbs of Mukden: Bs
Predict Dewey lo Win, 'Chiang Makes His ‘Last Stand to Hold Manchuria
Opinion Split on GOP France Seeks Treaty of Labor Peace
But Anti-Red Union Chiefs Reject It
Control of Senate China's treasure house, Manchuria, was feared top-
Reduced Republican Majority Seen in House; pling into the hands of the Chinese Communists today with
Schricker Viewed as a Possible Winner reports that Mukden, the Nationalists’ last stronghold, was By Scripps-Howard Newspapers in imminent dariger-of falling. WASHINGTON, Oct. 30—Here’s the way we call it: Government quarters at Nanking denied that the Reds
Dewey to win. Staff vote unanimous. had captured the city but Communists forces were known Senate to stay Republican. Staff's split on this. Nine {; have stabbed deep into the Northern and Eastern out-
- say Republican, three say Democratic, six predict tie—igkiris of the city. Nationalist garrisons were also reported
which would let Republicans keep control. fleeing. House to stay Republican. One dissenter. Six see re- | duced Republican majority. Democrats seem likely to pick up a couple of governors—Schricker in Indiana, and Dever in Massachusetts—maybe more: Democratic leaders count on organized labor to perform miracle for them, win whole shooting match. And Truman has had huge crowds in his final tour of big cities—places where heavy labor vote would have to come « from.
from Mukden, is a small garrison at Peiping. In Palestine, the Israeli were reported to have captured two Arab strongholds in the North altheugh the | United Nations again had ordered a cease-fire; ‘
| Israel, meanwhile, has re- a North ‘Atlantic collective secur|fused to retire from positions ity treaty. Such an alliance is > c in the | known to be close to the heart {heretofore aptured lof Secretary of State George C. |Negev desert, as demanded yarshall. [by a + United Nations order. | Winston Churchill told ‘the Mr. Schricker | ph {he British Parlianment that the de- | all tories capliied Uh fonse of Western Europe depends Several union leaders on Truman train say Tuesday | threatened according. to United Upon the United States. Only the is D-Day for them as well as for candidates. “If we can’t prodiice [notions Truce Headquarters, jatomis bomb, he stated, ‘now preTuesday we better stop thinking we're a major factor in polities,” !Qassa Al-Malakieh. rents “the barbarization and en- - they say. |slavement of Europe by Com-Taft-Hartley repeal is most clear-cut issue in “campaign.” “Tru- France : .|munist forces directed irom the fan's all out for repeal, Dewey has indorsed the law. Truman's'* FRANCE today warned = the Kremlin. ol being backed by majority of labor organizations, and for first time, public that starting Monday, G ermany for hi in man laces. CIO and AFL leaders are working together or him yp Nov. 1, the country would face, Ran wiay tgiionsd ‘Ra
Democrats see Truman taking, —la “brownout,” all shop windows 20 states and half of Florida's [horrified Democrats learned new j.ino dark, except for the Geneva | 0 on the Allied zone in|
es [$4000 Cadillac in which he rode! rugstores. \western Berlin. a, belonged to Shondor Birns, who's Croft Jn 4h BEE cafes and Soviet troops and German posay but it still] lunder deportation order as unde-i .qtaurants must halve their lice checked virtually -Bsvery veleaves him 69 sirable alien; was to go on trial|get. 1 ration of electricity. Indus- hicle attempting to efiter western votes short of Next day fof assaulting a police-i¢yy myst cut its use of electricity) Berlin, ho matter from what dielectoral college ‘man “by one-third. And all electrified rection. In the 127-day blockade majority.) Detective who drove car said | |transit lines will stop running NO measure has been quite so and these would he didn’t know whose it was. when no rush is on. stringent. have to come ¥rank Lausche, Democratic |. prance is short of power be- The American-British-French from Industrial] candidate for governor, sald lyse of the strike of 350,000 alrlift, of course went on, flying states where la-| 500d Heavens Truman pre- [1 iners led by the Reds'of France. in as much as 5000 tons a day bor vote counts. | | sumably doesn’t know about it pit after pit was seized by troops when the weather was fair and One Democrat| yet. and security guards during the 3000 when nasty. The airlift, Truman Predicts record Republicans took care to find week to prevent their being/meanwhile, was stepped up even Mr. n Republican stay-|another vehicle for Dewey next fjooded because the Reds had higher with 24 American naval at-home — “many don't like) day. {pulled out maintainence crews. [transports shifted from their PaDewey persdnally, others think| John L. Lewis expects to be Battles were staged at many cific bases to Berlin. ; (consulted on Dewey's Secretary mines with even hand grenades| American and British experts
he’s too New Dealish. lof Labor, but his first concern is ‘being hurled at the troops by in Berlin do not expect.the Rusv - . Interior's Bureau of = Mines. the strikers. Only one death, sians to budge an inch toward A Poor Radio Show [Miners’ boss considers this his however, was ‘reported—a miner. lifting their blockade, United Na3 lown special balliwick. He wants| x = x tions or no United Nations. Rus-
TO RADIO audiences, campaign wasn’t much of a show. 1 <hooge director, and he wants, RED THREATS to paralyze all gia’'s unalterable goal, they deg . (France with rolling strikes .),,e js complete and single-
Hooperatings were down. Presidential candidates drew less than x" /should the government use force ,..... control over all Berlin,
half listeners they did in 1944. Saves Freight Rates to recapture ithe pits appeared t0 4, to the last pfentig. .
ay’ ; have fizzled. Dewey's top rating this month cp ypp a; MOTORS decision The government called out RUSSIA WAS accused this week not only of arming from
was 12—which means only to Ct | ) place two Fisher body plants 30,000 troops. The troops seized per cent of peo in Pittsburgh area, close to theif all the key mines. And the Com- 200.000 to 300.000 German police ple wis in source of sheet metal, may start munists on Friday offered to talk in the Soviet sectors but of giving tuned Mv ad. trend. It saves them freight with the government as soon as them battle-training as infantrySe was on |rates. . . it was ready to receive them. men. two networks. { Supreme Court's knockout of | But the government last night A Hons am o * Truman hit 8.2 basing-point price system had called in non-Communist: labor| merical an ir 3 Riva in early October | been expected to send steel in- [leaders instead, leaving the Reds ders in: Germany. (én. Lucius | dustry closer to fabricators, [to cool théfr hedts Cla vy and Gen. Sir Brian Robert- | decentralize big Industry. It The non-Communists, however, 5° might have worked that way if rejected the premier’s terms, de- Gen. Robertson went so far as | it hadn't been a sellers’ market [claring that they fell too far to report the police being equipped for steel. As it is, change may short of - meeting the. workers’ with armored cars, machineguns,
lead to more centralization. needs. ,and mortars. And why? “Your guess is as good as mine,” he
| # Congressmen say they'll rush; 7Tpe government's offer to ap-igaiq.
a
work. Top for Wallace was 4.6. Vice presidential candidates averabout 3. In 1944, Roose-
Mr. Dewey velt seldom fell below 30 rating: a, legislation 10 Quartile pease non-Communist workers. ggp the Russian controlled Dewey ranged from 15.3 to 21. : ieneral ¢,1owed reports that Communists goeialist Unity Party, perhaps
are about Motors is taking no chances:
ratings This year's a Note: Steel men doubt that
half those of average commerc ial would be purged from the French gaye a clue. for its speakers have
Army and all other public jobs. hegun to repeat such phrases as
sheet-steel shortage will Jet up . programs. f pp elvet Fa next year. as auto industry hopes. Western Defense Union ove mer. for the velv Jenner Raps "Rivals ey pk defense nog take 1IQCUSSIONS of the political ear, even though sup- ,n4 military alliance of Western Soviet Union
SEN. WILLIAM E. JENNER i (R. Ind), who resigned as head ply 1s grépter. 2. Europe (the Brussels bloc) with PREMIER JOSEF STALIN
States 11 of Republican speakers’ bureau Canada and the United dropped “a blockbuster” on a to campaign in his state, kicked Fear Aluminum Shortage stood. today at the “lame duck” popes of settling the Berlin disoff with a stump speech at Terre sry yTARY PLANNERS $1286 pending the outcome of pute through the United Nations.
Haute which was isolationist o irk their brows over alumi America's presidential elections = yy Stalin. accused Britain, enough to make Dewey's MUS: yum shortage, fear it will handi- Tu¢sday. France and the United States of tache curl. cap T0-group Air Force program. Talks still went on over the geclaring “null and void” an He told 1200 Hoosiers that Trouble is electric power. Present week-end but no decisions could agreement made at the Kremlin Democrats took U. 8. into both capacity of aluminum industry is he made. the belief being that tg lift the Berlin blockade by tossworld wars “to avert economic , billion pounds a year, but it's they could not be approved in jng the issue before the Security collapse.” 2 im only 830 million pounds Washington except by the new (Council of the United Nations at administration, whether it be Mr. Paris
Two House Republican seats in po ..00 jt can't get wer, danger in Indiana Rep. Landis’, gel po Truman's or Mr. Dewey's. “The Western Powers don't
due to Taft-Hart- Study Rent Controls | Canada meanwhile had notified want to make an agreement,’ he ley law, ind that OFFICE OF Housing Expediter the Brussels bloc as well as the stated. “It would spoil the game of Rep. Mitchell reports no basis for general lift- | |United States that it 12 “now of the pupils in Winstdn Churchwho fought for ing of rent cohtrols, though real-| ready’ ' to make an alliance under i's school of aggression.’ margarine - tax estate lobby will urge Congress! repeal. to let present law expire March — + Mr, Landis 31. State Politics was elected by Government has sponsored surlabor, voted for veys in 500 cities and towns, | S Oo Hh Oo © "No Taft - Hartley. through local rent-control offices, | Oo in 's Vv r, Ww t GE tre al Bouse er, demand for ol By ROBERT BLOEM of being Vice President, savs treasurer, say s swer was no. Over half surveys) PITY THE poor bewildered perl Was ihe greatest Con- - have | $ § y. all organized la- ha been reviewed here. Rent, voter as he takes a hitch in his Once the boys got the voter
Mr. Jenner por is out to beat controls were lifted in only 12 Belt next Tuesday and prepares 4 straightened out on Con-
him, e 74 though un FUral ‘arent. « % =» to grapple with 150-odd voting gress versus the New Deal fone, Clate He Labo Committee ‘ machine levers or a ballot as they started asking what they ould J House ’ ‘Lineup’ in Senate big as a tent. called “pointed” ‘questions. ehsinman, IF DEMOCRATS win Senate—| One little mistake and he'll Gov. Gatesfgjaid’ seven of
“That's what we want" Mr. we don't think they will—con- be paying for:it for years. If them on the line for Democrat
Meany says. “With his bias and co rvative southerners will gain| he doesn’t make mistakes, it Governor Candidate Henry .
. will ; do us more § vod inan arm.” most important committee om won't be because the politicians Schricker to answer. Mr. manships. For Instance, McKellar made things so clear to him. Schricker replied with a ques[(Tenn.) would take Appropria- For weeks and weeks it's been tion or two of his own.
Thomas Gain "Seen (tions; George (Ga.), Finance: going on—yackety, yak! State. Democratic Chairmin
LOOK FOR the Norman Thom-| Tydings (Md.), Armed Services; - The Democrats say the New Ira Haymaker tossed in a few as vote to jump this year, due 0 Thomas (Okla), Agriculture; Deal saved the country from more—questions, that is, not
lack of enthusiasm for Dewey, Connally (Tex.), Foreign Rela-' the great depression, answers, Truman, Wallace and Thurmond. tions, The Republi¢ans say'the 80th So Tar there haven't been any Mr. Thomas has been running But west would gain heavily] Congress saved the country answers, But the voters have since 1928, has never received an {55 with O'Mahoney (Wyo.), in from the New Deal. a fine mess of questions to help electoral vote and won't this year. rnterior; Johnson (Colo.), in In- President Truman and his = them decide which levers to His popular vote may go up, but targtate and Foreign Commerce; Hoosier cohorts say a vote for pull. : it isn't likely’ to’ reach his 1932 moCarran (Nev.); in Judiciary; the Democrats fiow will save Then some of the boys at total--884, 0. | Thomas (Utah), in'Labor; Chavez! the country from the 80th Con¥ Democratic headquarters . {{N, M.) In Post Office or Public gress. played a little cops and robbers A’ Political Error {Works and Downey (Cal), in| Indiana's Republican Con< for the voters’ benefit. bf
pA rrER PRESIDENT Truman Public Works if Chavez didn’t! gressman Charles Halleck, wha They ‘uncovered a GOP eanihad paraded through Cleveland, take it; Hayden (Ariz.) in Rules.) got within a campaign promise ‘paign donation from a state
, ) .u 4
All that Chiang Kai-shek has left in Manchuria, aside -
Bony,
The accusations came from the|
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TSINING 7S 2 - OW S| [Em | [Em | ve Y : 3 77% TOTTERING—Manchuria China's treasufe house, is about to | topple into the hands of China's Red: who already are inside ‘Mukden. Fleaing Nationalists were attempting “a Dunkerque"
from Mukden | at Yinkow [2). Communists, were reported at rthe demonstration publicly, Commissioners hauled the ma-
Chinci (3) to seal off the Yinkow escape hatch, Alsna the Great Wall '4) the Nationalists were expected to take a-stand to keep the | | Reds out of China proper The Reds want Peiping and Tientsin 18)...
He also accused Britain and the! tures to be seen of Mr. Mazaryk U. 8. of promoting World War III.|or the late President Eduard United Nations circles said Benes. that Mr. Stalin's comment, made| -On the contrary, Soviet Russia | through the Soviet press; blasted|was extolled and all public dem-| all hopes of ending the Berlin dis-|onstrations of fealty were policed /pute by negotiations. On the side,|by factory hands heavily armed. they stated that his comments| Anyone with a liberal or demowere ‘‘propaganda.” cratic leaning was given to unThey could have been timed,/derstand to stand stent in the! too, for the American elections, background. observers stated. Peru
Great Britain : | PERU'S military cliques PARLIAMENT had before it, splurged their stuff at Lima last * ad it recessed for the week-end,{night when. Gen. Manuel Orida, the Labor government's bill to leader of the three-day revolt at] nationalize steel. Arequipa, 500 miles south of | The bill sets up a state corpora-|Lima, arrived at the capital by, tion to govern 107 mills that em-|air to take over the government, |ploy 300,000 men. . ‘The mills are now under the rule of a military ‘valued in billions. The industry|junta. L,
will be nationalized from ore pit] Welcomed as a hero who took to rolling milk over the government of 8 million Eire people without the loss of a drop | of blood, Gen, Orida, a right
PREMIER John Costello de- ‘winger, said in a Presidential cided this week to sever the last pgjace broadcast that Peru would link between Eire with the Brit-|,e reconstructed on a new ish Crown, hhoting, as he revealed basis.” his decision. that Former Frime| now elections would be called, Minister Eamon De Valera, Whom "ciated, but he did not say he succeeded, believed that the ,.. link should be preserved. Arpa, the popular party to Winston Churchil], leader of: thel yp most Peruvians belon™ oe opposition in Britain's House of sige of the large landowners an Commons. voiced his astonish-{ipeir followers, had tried to set ment at Prime Minister Costello's up a dictatorship, Gen. Orida Ldecision. charged. Mr. Churchill, however, did| Meanwhile, Jose Luis Bustacome out for a united Ireland, re-| ente, ousted as President, ar-| {marking that there “can be no rived at Buenos Aires, having question of coercing. Usiter.” been driven in exile. By permanent partition tho Mr. Bustemante’'s troubles be-. Eire, he said, will have “made a gan two yedrs ago, shortly after gulf which cannot be bridged eX- his election, when the legislature, cept by physical force.” arounsed by his land reforms,
Czechoslovakia - -onsistentl CZECHOSLOVAKIA — its Red {270 Since then were consistently rulers, that is—was getting a At Blienos Aires, Mr. Bustenew slant on its history tod aY.| mante stated that he would make Its sthocks Were un ergo NE &|, statement as soon as “the situpurge lized.” | Western influences in the ation crystalize {founding of the republic 30 years Jap an ago last Thursday is minimized 3PaN SE government work-
when net ridiculed. The new his-|ers face a no-strike, no-bargain-|
torians point out that the repub-|ing round of bills next month lic was “inspired by the Socialist| when the Diet ‘convenes.
victory of 1917 in Russia.” .~ Occupation authorities were (Czechoslovakia's freedom, "as net expected to interfere, pro-|
a matter of fact, was proclaimed vided the legislation did not vioby Anton Mazaryk, the Czechs’ late policies of the Far Eastern George ‘Washington, in Washing- Commission. ton, D.C... in 1918 under the tutel-| Soviet Russia's member of the age of President Woodrow Wil-| FEC, who is Alexander 8. Panyson.) {ushkin, USSR Ambassador to the The Czechs celebrated theirU. 8, demanded Thursday that Fourth of July last Thursday. No the United States reveal what American flags were displayed. as went on Oct. 12 when Gen. Dougthere always had been in times| las McArthur called a “secret
past. Nor were there- any pic- military conference’ at’ Tokyo,
It's Up to Voter
park lodge. They found a man to task for sheltering Comwho swore he'd been hired by munists. Democrats, with the GOP to whoop it up for the “ringing logic,” said Stalin was Wallace Progressives. They _ secretly rooting ‘for a GOP vicstopped the GOP from trying tory.
to “slip” the Dixiecrats onto Taking ~campaigh “promises the ballot. more seriously than most, Mr. = uu =» Creighton also called the Demo-
REPUBLICANS replied with cratic platform a “dishonest “smoke screen,” and in one case platform” designed to fool the produced some photostatted voters. That should be a big documents. They also con- help to voters who've been cluded - the ‘Democrats were - fooled by platforms for years. “desperate.” There was a fine battle beDemocrats liked that angle, tween governors over paroles. so they called the Republicans Gov. Gates said Mr. Schricker desperate, too. paroled too many. "Through all this the voles of Mr, Schricker thought Mr.
the Progressives occasionally Gates didn't pargle enough, He broke like a voice in the dark = hinted" .that the: reasons Were to point out that the Democrats sinister, » and the Republicans were all a Now the shooting’s about
bunch of “Fascists. Just dom- over. One thing the party's
inated by opposite ends of Wall agreed on Is that it's our duty Street, say the Progressives. to’ vote intelligently. Republican Governor Candi- S80 just be glad you haven't
date Hobart Creighton, ‘who heard a word from the other wasn’t “mad at anybody.” took three parties on the ballot—and {he na {10.4 | sdministration get in there and do your duty!
machine was located.
went on strike. His calls to con-
.DEWEY—"We will press forward in solving. the problems of race relations and discrimination in the great American tradition of freedom and equality, and thus
~deepen “thesunity. of- our peoplec., vm—————————————
—— wo? —— - - cnr te i wa
our Fair City—
~ Lessons on ‘Scratching’ Cease Abruptly—Haul Voting Machine Away
. Officials Act Quickly When Crowds Flock To Demonstration by Women's League WORST FEARS of some politicians were confirmed last week when the League of Women Voters was overs whelmed with requests for instruction on how to “scrateh” on vote-machines. . League women obligingly announced they would dem-
onstrate on the machine they borrowed from the county for demonstration purposes. Crowds of eager voters were
so large they jammed traffic at Sears Roebuck where the
In fact, a store detective complained a shoplifter he was chasing disappeared in the throng around the machine. ” . . » . k Houied the Machine Away THEN COUNTY Commissioners woke up. The diets
tion board, commissioners decided, would need the machine much earlier than usual. Before the League could call off
chine away. That's why voters who hoped to get some “scratching” instruction were Sisappointed this week. - : . " r .-n
Local Wha Have a Complaint
MARION COUNTY Jail prisoners have a complaint, They say they are being charged 23 cents per pack for ecigarets. They can't receive smokes from relatives, they say.
oN
|Cigarets must be purchased from the jail commissary. Trouble i is, say prisoners, the change comes in candy instead
lof cash. " = » ” ~ ” VETERANS at Billings Hos, Some of the men say they are pital say they have to wait a getting tired of being “clipped” while for new books to appear on| for gifts to ‘the department's the hospital's library shelves. But ‘brass. One wife commented: they can’t complaip their requests “Maybe the boys aren't angels, for the books are ignored. From but there's one thing they do. he time a book is ordered until They risk their lives and they arrives, the order slip must put the fires out.” he the Signatures of 17 officials. a. NN Convict Richard "Sweet who Gor Optimistic Again stirred up othe parole mess REPUBLICANS, disheartened ought to enter polities, some over newspaper polls showing
politicians say. Privately, they | hrick lead | Pir his timing. The mess {Henry 8c or in the for
sverfivwed so close to election |BOvernor, are optimistic a ain. t hurt. | They say two weeks ago it looked . y . | doubtful for Hobart Creighton, Firemen s Wives . but GOP chances<have picked up
FIREMEN'S WIVES, angered since then,
reports that women are heing . & » brought into fire stations, thanked! FRIDAY NIGHT, one of the {The Times for debunking the worst crimes ha . Some big
{whole business. They charged one boys hi-jacked Hallowe'en of the worst disrupting incidents treats a group of tots in cosin the. department is the demand tumes had collected in an Hast (the firemen contribute toward a|Side neighborhood. When |gift for ‘a high department offi- tots started crying. the Te |cial. This is customary when a relented a little, offered the mites \new officer is appointed. = a "percentage "
Halloween G Game Without Blindfold
Q
