Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 February 1949 — Page 10
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he Ti - perry rena, Wit 1 e imes | AWN ot duond lo the dust yow ght fo ay Bn 7 COME MEON IN © Le STALK IT Ne) uestionable Bg ? ir se popular movement, with lots : - . You and T don't on of What? test the quality of our moral oo do it ourselves. Let's see: know W. M. Osman, nor the Circle City Co., ying is ethically wrong, and that no apo Bg at 8. | Indianapolis. Jat we Join hii 18 4 form Of Ig, G80 SYD TOS ‘pron "er the FBI, of literature advocating at poy “for us. trustee employs inferior teachers. Are not oi Ct? pastor oo by the ception? No, indeed! Yet, if the teachers in the township schools in” Indiana changes in Indiana, laws; which bo sent; to, members of the a aE trained in the same colleges bY he saris pro8 ’ Legislat , gre a » essors, ‘same taxpayers’ money, As {! popular practice, — Reception teachers in the city schools? z | From what we've seen of the literature and the legisla- th snare ting —wll. wou Third, we. are told that Sotiool Inga Ate Hanns pao we complossly disagren with Mr. Osman, | ference in our viewpoint? : In4 deplorsh ow: . and we'd certainly oppose enactment of any such measures. aol Da a tare a aught be repaired. Let us-compare the school bulld- : ‘But the right of any citizen to ask his Representatives | about, thinks of human morals. ings Marion, County autsida of Dusishdpolls was tempted to swallow a fat \ corpora E in the Legislature to pass any law he wants passed is a ad tempted ow 4 Ma Central, Pike Township, Decatur “and right just as basic, and just as important, as any of the | o. 40.0 ned 40 other schools in Marion County would be on s he is accused wishing to infri Nii : a par with any in the city and certainly very Fights he is of mn TOTS, hooleh (vTe Soncesies superior to most of the city school buildings 2 IT IS too inescapable torture, Tortus on The fourth’ complaint lodged against the “the “right to relief. For yp an w trustee management is That It Is 10 EXpenkive. reg Bl fri I challenge anyone to show that centralization . those who rig dhe rh has hot always increased cost of operation in animal hools. oy ares. Gray ot Cambridge describes fish as Ne axe told as ‘a AIH count against towp- : taste, management that the children of the rural communities do not have an equal chance with the children of the cities. Two things should farming and in the professions have come and are coming from these rural areas. 1 J. tenet, Co, ov a he So ican democracy today. I beliveve that the should have a right to olde Ee re ETE 8 whether they want the Sounly unit plan or not. ‘cannot. REAKABLE itr ei te Creates Heat, Not Light’ “Fragil 9.5 PE atmot be a fair tral or = legitimate e wrapped and addressed thus to me, we ree foe i Persons interested in how public opinion is * ceeding for the obvious reason that it is held under a “Contents breakable” —* , ; : : rays for ong. fu srestal ap how Julie Spits i of terror. Ni the defendant is the victim of NATIONAL POLITICS . . By Marquis Childs - age assistance works, should read again the of terror. Not only 80 I carefully unsealed ft, Times headed “Lien * terror. All connected with the exhibition, including prosecu~y - loosened up the string; Penalty Lay Nat ee a pag or RC Ey D Speech May Hit GOP Ills | “ieummemas emne a ihr puts itself above the Spats Shan 1 @rapped ad broke the thing ewey’ S peec ay it S Bo aay tenis pointe i nd : WASHINGTON, Feb. 5 — After his defeat It is ible, of that Gov. Dewey’ con on o ts and Man and God. That bs 8 law of distatirship. ROA SL NU EW ast’ Navember, Gov. 5 met a innate caution will overcome him. The final | Teason. Instead, he fills his letter with colored ovember, Thomas Dewey 4 +} "Twas that giit-edged resolution, friend from the Midwest who was consoling him Version of Tuesday's speech may be another one yords, hiaistul Suggeations; and 10corect sate, IN THE jen of that Tawiess rule al men honor and That I make and break each year. on the disaster. By way of consolation the Of tose pleas for unity — this time for unity mens, Jt sits 3 30 Js an example of 51 WR scienc wha oppose it ffel: their sight to live. Waather ' —RUBY 8. HINSHAW, Fortville. friend spoke of the handicap Gov. Dewey had oly Th 2 pas that creates heat rather than | they are ignored or shot or tortured or sent to a : been under in running on the same ticket in the . camp, or whether they are used as drugged or ter- LICKING THE ICING DISH friend's state with tenth-rate local candidates. Nothing fo Lass? To viens vail a ASF ¢-that ltr _favars the an anata in es,” presiden nominee, a cold-blooded of view it wo , acy on the will of the dletatorhip. Even. the | Coos and Hos, sud ho. Bundy ce», | mE 1a cacy Wh 0 mets. THF sem ak Gov. Dewey would have nebing fo | 10 Cimagope in in ommn i 5 It is not SmHmune..as sb A pretty good time, I always found, Were prity old have with we hea 1 lose by telling the old guard what he really and justice,” and most of them “are in it for . executioner himself is not immune, as shown by the For a boy to be good, and. stick around. tap 2. YOu should have beer Thety 1 hen 1 thinks of them. The sound and fury of Omaha | & good living for themselves and for politica! | death of succeeding heads of the Russian secret Nothing Je do, except. to wish myself on. the rear platform on the train With & Levee wil swallow Mr. Dewey ‘again. While Sia Age assistance “dies, “about Balt of the tims ' : : ; 2) ™- w the icing dish. San0i0ant no smelled Wee's saloon R04 longed Hugh Scott, Gov. Dewey's og a 54-to-50 | the only heir is some second cousin fn Ohio. A 's alleged confessions and testimony are Lots of cookies, all over-size, : “While I held him up so that he wouldn't decision, hom the comittes, that victory 8 al jot. of other times it Is soms drunken son. who the he warned they would be | Temptingly cooling before my eyes. fall over, I had to tell the assembled citizenry Sertaln to prove . = brough other's gray hairs in sorrow One thing I always was glad to do, that T hoped they would vote for this specimen. . Whether the Governor harbors a secret de- | down to the grave. In many other cases the : Totter So Hungarian Boman Catholics writ Sample the cookies, eat ope—maybe two. | No, my friend, your state was not by any means ire 10 make a id 1 Sor the presidency ve shiildien sie corde Soles Who ses no Sapeciad arrest re Yet while sampling I always room guess. pressive | grace in letting mamma go W, We 9. Joking the. ieihg, fram the dish and spoon. iyge,”- phenomenon. ‘If he could defy precedent and | county.” 3 o 0? sabia tps WHE HBL) . Campaign Handicaps win a second nomination from a party-dhatineve: |. Worst of all, the letter suggests, first, that » a } pd wie came thi 8 of the Sunday cake, x er before had turned to a defeated candidate, he- |. it is a disgrace to get old age assistance; and, . Not a Wht hw aw: as only a sf jo¢ mother would take, ACCORDING to close associates, Gov. Dew- might be encouraged to believe it.could-be done | second, that the persons getting old age assisfederal employees; discharged of tos But the piece that was larger, Ware da igo ? ove datas 48-10.apeak lis wind 8. oH. Jim Dewey's only hope is with a party | us re in if AH gn. aan 's loyalty order, have The Dest of this cars re be won— Tast fart He Will take the ary a i Mie Line that hus beth soupletely Temads: She Yung : 100. that m4. hot most, of their ; the it's done, coln address in W next Tuesday en is or are callous to test the order's constic Sau a Fee Se a . Sigh to make a Aging tak fn which be wil Would have to take over. wi the needs of their parents. : ; : today don't kick, release some ~up feelings. be leadership the firm and former assistant | There ain't any icing HE ges ny to lick. The Republican National Committee, meet- Halive that such poy go Wh h ge {| The bread-and cookies, the cakes and ples, | INE in Omaha last week, gave Gov. Dewey a cue tion. He can be ruthless when he out - at Ot ers n or whether the Communist | Back to my boyhood, how I do wish sions where the tone was one more of sorrow os OUR escape from a general recession in the 3 g¥oup is or is not subversive, The sole | could go and once more lick the old icing dish. Shan Inger and 1a the sraeiss. lied Soom Where Old Guard Control STtIng ul i dow "We nave iar of the government, in its search for disloyal en Mnete. blame or defeat was put solely and entirely on IN “SPITE i lg souteal of ihe 04 | reathing spell, but we have not beam granted provide adequate safeguards for individuals : en standard-bearer in Albany. guard exercised ational Commit. | lasting prosperity effort gnd : |! IEC 4 ‘was-sald about the discredited hacks - tee; the independent elemen Younger — : BE / Helou gossip, racial and religious prejudios and CON. TURE running for national and local offices. Nothing, a as Gor: Vai sung: v4. 4 no {nf Tye ods Hssd 4B. RPy or almost nothing. as Sud of the ations) coms have Jot Jorgétten what the party once stood I THINK a fourth ngund (of wage increases) ) hs , 's stou etermination to resist every or. An ha ho b; ir would be bad both oe tt re ess | SEALE, EATER ine CAeniEod TUSILOUT i. co ly mean fewer jobs.—Marriner Stora mat TTR Ta ts B0-nOW 1-18 Go turn. Having dé- "Th Republic ground. - a another, quite different, issue It % ot too i Se to guess imerately De pn. J xy ng ae. ot = ul i Sh Sou he Diesel of | Eccles, member Federal Reserve Board. en J Soing on 15 say: “It (the order) deprives government Were’ &ll' his Works tn Thyme OF prose tional audience with. radio and-televjsion-hook= have heard that many Republicans on Capitol YOU can say so much against and people who want to be government em-' "Signed thus: B. U. R, P. Hou, Se New York Governor ten tell his own BU Wii Sovesdt 4. That would. be “toe profit tax that { have dificuty fn understand. , un now, Ke j- som - : ployees of their constitutional rights of free speech, free —JOHN M. MONTANI, Indianapolis, in close confines. " vantage and the advantagy of an _ ig what anybody as 10 day for it.—Sen. Ralph
assembly, free thought and free association.” A constitutional right is one thing. Being a governSit SHpioyce it scusthing lie wot & spi, but a priviFi 3 for its own protection, must r he ‘Withdraw or withhold as well as to grant it. ~The great Justice Holmes, as a judge in Massachusetts any years ago, stated the principle clearly. Dismissing the appeal of a policeman who had been fired for violating bes a city ordinance against political activity by pulilie emJustice Holmes said:
a
politic “but he Tas no constitutional right to be a policeman.” -
__Behind Qur Policy in China REVELATIONS in Maj. Gen. Claire Chennanlt's book, “The Way of a Fighter,” provide some background Information for those who may wonder how American policy became so warped that we have played directly into the hands of the Chinese Communists, Commenting. on the relations between the late Gen. Joseph W. Stilwell and the Communists—which also are reviewed in some detail in Gén. Stilwell's own diary—Gen, ‘Chennault said: : “Since it was still official American policy in the summer of 1044 to support the Chungking government, it was a common joke that Gen. Stilwell's headquarters were developing a foreign policy with John Davies (Stilwell's ~ political adviser) as Secretary of State. “During this period there was a strong group of left. wingers in the Far Eastern division of the State Depart. ‘ment who used Gen. Stilwell's sympathy for the Chinese Communists and his violent antipathy to the Generalissimo ©. to shift American policy in favor of the Communists.” |. Most of the left wingers to whom the general refers | © pemain in the State Department today. And what of Mr. Davies, the “secretary of sta
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allegedly developing the general's private foreign policy? Mr. Davies has been advanced until he sits as a member A Tle) eed. ‘As ‘the ig rink up dmg
“The } petitioner may have a constitutional Tight to talk |
‘ "who. represented Gen. Stilwell at Communist headquarters in }
Iv
PRICE SUPPORTS . . . By Earl Richert
New Farm
Aid Plan
WASHINGTON, Feb. 5A brand-new multi-biliorf ‘dollar
scheme for aiding growers of pubid in
wheat, cotton and corn is being
ongress. let them continue all-out production long after the
Pt rice-support law would force cutbacks. ‘The plan, offered by. Chairman mrs Thomas of the Senate
“ment to maintain permanent reserves ees T TU 3 corn; 400 million SO SEY, mitHon oes.
ton acquired in supporti
Cost of this stock at
about $2.3 billion—about $1 billion less
bales of cot-
Jieasct support prices, would be than Congress has au-
thorized for stockpiling strategic materials. These reserves would not be counted in the present’ formulas
which determine when
-and- marketing controls go into
acreage effect. Thus, the amount of surplus that would have to be on hand before the government curtailed production would be increased by the amount of reserves provided by the Thomas bill.
Big Surplus for Conirols
ON CORN, for example, there would have to be a surplus | of about 1.4 billion bushels on hand before ‘controls could be
instituted. Under present. law,
a surplus of between 700 and 800
million requires Retmposttion. of production cOntrols if farmers
are to continue price suppo
As things stand now, bout enactment of the Thomas bill,
the government almost
will have to reilmpose acreage
certainly and’ marketing controls on the 1950 corn- and cotton crops—barring weather disasters. Wheat farmers may be able to escape
controls during the 1050 crop wheat surpluses moving
year if the government can keep
The Agriculture Department only this’ week had to decide whether to impose acreage and marketing controls on this year's
corn crop. The corn surplus or
carryover next October will be about 700 milion bushels, three-billion bushel crop and this
hen the new crop comes in With a normal r, one formula~-that
determining acreage-—called for controls, Yhile me other formula
~that for uring mar marketing chose not to for both Jioduosrs and
eat carryover at the
The department
\mposk controls. “in onder $0 neure stable supplies consumers.”
ing of, the new crop year
The wh beginn| in June ig estimated. 10. he ghiaut 307 Sftlion busbinls, The cotton carryover is expected to be between four and five million bales.
Would Sell Reserves at Cost
AGRICULTURE Department experts say that it would take . only a couple more successive bumper crops to fill up the Thomas-proposed reserves and the present margins, thus requir-
Ing controls,
But if yields go back fo normal it might take years to fill giving wheat,
up the reserves thus
Satin and coin farmers yeary
SIDE GLANCES
olloniot—
» § COPR. 1940 BY NEA SERVIOL. ING. 7, M4. REG. 4 & PAT. OF,
By Galbraith
®
“a, : =
"Whenever you come to the offi ce, the boss always tells me how wonderful you dress—that's his way of compli: menting the salary he's paying mel”
4--since the Secretary could sell
reserves in case of & disaster.
& Crop “This should insure stability both for the farmers and oon=
. sumers,” sald the Senator.
One supporter of the bill.
estimuted it would cost $100 million: bushels |
a year to pay storage alone on the proposed one billion
of wheat and corn NISVes, th
gonsidating what the loss
- have been received from
of |
‘BOLD NEW PLAN' . , | By Peter Edson
Exporting ‘Know-How’
Cc Adm tion—has barely made a start Fortin American know-how to. Europe, as cailed for by the “beid
ance to a foreign government at pps He to Ton, Stiberman of the U. 8. Bureau of Labor Statistics. He was sent to GutivIly | enrench Sovernment develop & aystem. of productivity measurement—whatever i8—based on u's 8
A lot of other Appiicqtions for the loan of American experts European governments, however, and traffic is td get Heavy. Rea-
program was pushed aside for si “of the M | Plan, p six months in favor
War Curbs U. S. Aid
“FIRST year ECA appropriations earmarked $6,000,000 for furnishing techiiical services to Marshall Plan countries, But
in the first t months of I ih 0! operation only $1,196,000 has been
ance, yet to be named, who will be in charge of qualified ~to send abroad as requested by foreign ts, Harwood has named Eiliot as of Arrangements for the A to the United States for instruction so that ‘ OAn
nell, set. up last Abang:
marae d
* .
“won it ‘has bien #0 slow gtd under is : ao ng way is that the technical
AE For
tions, materials, A - tary 8id programs and this technical assistance. rp hal . fined to , leaving the ° scientific, cultural, .and governmental to the t
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