Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 16 August 1949 — Page 1

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Labor Troubles pa = IA

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Re, aur E, Union Leaders, Tied Up in Politics, General Admits - am OA A Gi is hi Unable fo Cope With Major Problems | Puffing Himself | ~~ ® Re I from & a By E. T. LEECH, Scrippe-Howard Writer | For Chemical Past — gout Qo LONDON. Aug.16—Labor is the great domestic problem wi sEINGTON, Aug). 16— VY A i : 3 : Britain's government. : UP)—Maj. Gen. Alden H. Wait! R : ; TT ot ans - 3 2abot (as 4 government) doesn’t know what to do about labor SO a. Chiat of the walt T A : a ; ot r. -e. 2 as wions). + il q_ Chief ot the I 3 : tei + "7 "And neither the Labor government nor labor unions have found i » = Brennen BE rn — ; a is around i how to get along with labor in its third role—that of employer In gop, : : 5 : v Ri ' ; mT pa shen Bet whith the big nationalized industries. : Washington “five Oy : BR ‘Rites Tomorrow | Te advanced J"TC¥ & 10U Ke a" Juggler —Buitaln. in four years, 18S li:eq to blackball a group of fel-| Ay : h ; Ne_was : to keep three balls alr. been through a sharp revolu- [iow omicers who might be In Ting wr i , ] mpegse anti . | hg 43 years The unibn lead- tion. It has changed to a Tully gor nig job, : : ALE oo —— i ae age re ers are so. busy much of | writhing with embarrassment.’ ; A

As union offi-

union members. As government Mr. Leech leaders, they are afraid of the labor vote. And as business administrators, they~dread that labor demands will force them into Z greater financial losses and more unsatisfactory service. As union leaders get deeper into politics and business administration, they lose strength and popularity as heads of unions. As a result, unions have got out of control of their elected officials. The situation steadily grows more chaotic. It threatens the ecooe nepomaic life, of Britain, by raising

Also, the union leaders frequent must take the traditional policy 7 of management, by deciding that "demands for wage rises and other benefits are too expensive. All of Britain's nationalized In-| dustries are in financial trouble. They don’t pay their way. They __earn no }§ rofits, pay. successive Toun ngs of Wage increases, or to give other benefits which cost money. . i In short, profit has reared ts) ugly head right within labor's; own ranks. ~ Lifelong union men have to turn down their own| members, because as part.of both,

demand.- rire It 1s most embarrassing for a union: leades. WT Te Sd 1 For years, British union chiefs;

~ Doubts Mining Making

~~ Coal mining, ft 1s true, has

taxing itself. wed This power, to change prices at will and to control taxes and] charges, makes it hard to check the finances of a state industry. The best answer seems to be) that the Treasury doesn’t get any spending money from national-| ized business. Also, the govern-

mands. To grant them simply | would cause new price increases. This would further raise the very, ] high cost of living, and lead to “v new pressure for pay increases. So the government and the] 1 powerful Trades Union Congress —which is the backbone of the Labor Party—have had to adopt] an official policy of no pay rises. | They are having a hard time)

"ly And worse yet. The situation . is so bad that there are billboards, speeches and other ap-|

at the same pay. There are even

language) . that pay may have to be cut to reduce prices. 3 © For Britain, in a world buyers’

oc with her vital exports. Her

own people.

ferent, and often i

For the official union heads—being a part of government—of must take a stand against what-the un

out “of ‘which to}

government and management, profits—only there weren't any dent.

Phy Kriow: that he. busibesses profs. . Instead, they had losses. | The small, wiry officer saidiin the heartland of the most vivid war. He added that much re- | Commission that he was going tol Later, he worked in the law Dome at 2105 Gent Ave.

7 pant’ afford what the. workers) . The

average of 50 cents a ton forthe first three months of this year. Gen. Waitt got a bad fitness re-| Her “gRull “was fractured “and —

ment managers haven't prodits out! of which to ‘meet new union de}

a » : { ' making it stick. |proved methods and no rise in [called me ‘That Cannibal.” [oan at Lexington, Ky. He said|plorer Otis Barton entered his{S. Meridian St. Police ‘said bur-l,,,\q "ang periodicals.

peals, for more and ‘better work!

% — —trtmte-4thus-far in veiled ofBcialiones..in.. which they are already!

market, can't compete. Falling | prices‘elsewhere are playing hav-|

prices are too high for the rest .of the world—not to mention her|

the ~ nation’s basic Industry Gen Waitt testified that at the| « owned by the government, and request of Gen. Vaughan, Presiall of i& operating under a8 gent Truman's mifitary aide, he elaborate system of plans and grafted a series of memoranda controls. recommendirig his own reappoint-| The government has spent iment to the chemical command, vast sums to make the people land belittling the qualifications of | secure. Yet today they are very eight potential successors. | insecure. So a mew, and what | The 56-year-old career officer] may be a desperate, British made the admissions under a crisis Is developing. {eross-fire of questions from al To find the reasons for this [Senate committee whichis n= situation, and to study British |vestigating ‘ the activities of the| Building plans for -a multi. socialism in action; The Indlan- so-called five per centers—agents | = : million dollar East Side housing] apolis Times and other Scripps- Who collect commissions _ for] , *¥ project were halted today as City|

. | t oward Newspapers sent KT. Setting thelr clients GOVERMENT! Mr, and Mrs. Earl E. Roberson and daughters, Sharron, 3, and | Council balked at giving approval,

“Closest Friend” Rita, 17 months . . . Indianapolis phone No. 200,000. lto an administration project an-| * . = |

| »'® = » inexing a new subdivision. i JHE } Gan. Waitt said he gifted the e | John Bauer, local realtor, said the death of their infant derogatory reports in the office] { : ; of “my closest friend"—James V.| nsta Ion epresen S ‘he ordered his building engineer daughter. : : It also threatens the political life unt, the five per center whose) - to stop work on a 250-house proj-| Charles N. Thompson . . . died | The frail, 27-year-old English~ of the Labor Party which runs) activities touched off the Senate] Gain n 2 Year lect in an area bounded by Haw-| today at 88. woman nearly fainted and had to the Socialist government. investigation. : | 1 . in } , S thorne Lane, Ritter Ave. 19th) sn be taken from Criminal Court 3 New and radical un Under questioning, Gen. Waitt | : ire : . : and 16th Sts. { » oe ae springing up from the aamitted that ane of the omicers| Indiana Bell Executive Attends Ceremony | Mr. Bauer said he might aban- lie. she heard Indianapolis ranks of the unions. They inspire he belittled was his best friend At Home of Earl Robersons {don the project completely after es

{mond pron revolt against leadership, wildcatiin the service, a Col. Love. |Couneil last night postponed ac- {Husband oye her 26-year-old

5 Mrs. Edwards +4 0f Sound Mind

Husband Held Mentally Hl When Child Died Billie Burke Edwards was declared jnsane today but his British-born wife, Brenda, was ruled sane and arraigned to stand trial for murder in

Vast East Side Housing Plan | &

Refuses to Approve Annexation of New Subdivision

a

oT loo strikes: violations-of contract and. The critical memoranda were | Installation of the 200,000th teleptione in Indianapolis—rep- tion on an ordinance incorporat- : ; Se Es se "which the resistance to government Tules completely at variance with of- resenting an increase of 100,000 in approximately eight years—was ing-the subdivision into the city. 1 1 1 1 ud Jater 1 Heal The tenth nation’s whole economy depends.| created by labor's own leaders. [ficial reports Gen. Waitt had compieted-with-appropriate ceremonies today. ——1- “We were fighting against [| g - {concerning her, M Edwards > ree . Ee tiled on the merits of his pos-, The city’s 200,000t}f telephone went to Mr. and Mrs, Earl Rober- time,” Mr. Bauer said. He ex- | swayed when Dr. Earl W. Mericle Ea sy to Spread Suspicion, Resistance ‘ lsible successors. In the official son, 2850 Harlan St, with Charles W. Potter, vice president and [plained that the delay would, Fo ; State Senator Answered that he believed her to k-and-filers to spread suspicion and re- reports, he praised the eight ‘of- general manager of Indiana Bell, witnessing the installation.” Jack probably prevent his firm from rmer : have comprehension of charges LI Io easy for the ronk-4ut Bers tO oily in the nationalized ficers highly. pe Pe Be Nugent. MAI, qUnnfoled putting sewers into the area this Pagses Away af 88 against her and to be of sound sistance agal . laborate! Gen. Waitt said he gave the the instrument. ~~’: |year. : : : {mi “le industries, or in those in which the government has set up © laerogatory. repoyts to. Gen. gar | Also on hand was Grover C.. Without sewers, he added, the Charles Nedeker Thompson, " na. Arraigned at Once work schemes and conciliation mae of ten Vaughan and assumed the White, : i | Delello, installation foreman, project couldn't be completed un- former state Senator. utilities; “ = , et

: g 0 i ; {lawyer, author and oldest mem-| She was arraigned immediatel rships demand. House aide would show them to gg*® . . installed the 100,000th telephp! 1 next year. oh | Ly ¥ jon memberships CO | esident Truman, although he ies in Indianapolis just prior 01° “Not Going to Take Chance’ [Ber of thé Columbia Club, died before Judge Saul I. Rabb on a | | World War II. A native of In- {8

“ ly today in “Meadows,” his charge of murder in the July 20 er shorter did not know whether He did so. And nobody knows what the ae { preached highe Jay tiBot he De Lace. tr dianapolis and a veteran of 40 housing et 1 going 10} Supmer hoiie in Harbor Springs, slapping death of T7-month-old ours D 28 | i ! M . e as 88.

h : ; ' {Beryl June Ed ctly the nerve to give Gen. | years with the company, Mr. De- like next year,” Mr. said. | {Beryl June. Edwards. a ey Utnat American other a Sen a repared Struck by Auto lelo. recalled when there Were “T'm not, going to take too Wig a] Mr. Thompson, who lived ini Pale and swaying. she entered game SFgume a today. leulogizing himself and recom-| ‘ON Atlanta Street [fewer than 20,000 telephones inchance.” 13650 Washington Blvd., was born @ Plea of not guilty. Then she what looked like mending his reappointment. the city. Building contractors were plan.|in Covington, Ind. He attendeglsiumped. into the arms of 3 deputy Then came OR er Brass Breaks Do (Photo, Page 3) The first telephone exchange ning to complete the housing DePauw University and was Shetill and matron. who eprijés Utopia. The unions 2 wn | was established in the city in 1887 project to coincide with the open. Eraduated in 1881 a member of had half-carried her from the the government. _ Also, they (00k. “My brass broke down at that, ATLANTA. Aug. 16 (UP)-|a0d when Beil. Was OF-ling Of the new Western Electric|the Phi Beta Kappa honorary courtroom. Judge Babb crdered Lover much of the nation’s DasiC point” he said.’ Mitchell, a shy * anized in 1020 there were only plant on Shadeland. fraternity.” ~_ _ |her returned to Marion County business—coal mining, utilities,! But he insisted that his omy | Margaret : x Georgia) ‘telephones .in use. The! r. Bauer sald he intended to Me came to Tndianapotisial atthe abs ot railroads, highway and waterway motive was patriotic—that he be- woman whose Civil War history 35,000 were added in & 20-'build two - and three-bedroom Shortly afterward and worked for! : eli

3 . i 0 3 | transportation, aviation, the Bank lieved he was the man best | lessons at her father's knee in! year period and another 100,000 h ‘his brother-in-law, the father of maxed a sanity hearing for both of England, communications and qualified for the job. He said Mr. Spired her to write “Gone With, in the last 814 years. Sao priced to sell under T. Miss Margaret Dice, with Edwardses, who have been held various other things. - Vaughan -sgreed with him and| Wind,” died today. | Mr. Potter said the company The project was approved py| Whom he shared his home for Without bond under murder indict~ In these industries they finally wanted /him reappointed. The ap-| Death came five days after she had spent some $20 million for the Safety Board,~Works Board Many years. Mr. Dice was then ments since police found their had all the control, and all the pointment is made by the Presi- was struck by a taxicab driver's) service expansion and improve- and the City Plan Commission, Teporter for the State of Indiana./baby girl dead, its face and body

{private car om Peachtree St, ments in Indianapolis since the Mr. Bauer told the City Plan Worked in Law Firm {covered with bruises, "in thelr

’ Sat Sthagpen tobe true’ Ne he tax Teventi save Bie i8° one’ of ‘the world's gr wholly by tax revenues It peta? grestest no profits from any of the state authorities on toxological warbusiness. ‘But it has fo make up

their losses.

5; 0f her navel about, to. he done be évery- build a playground. in. the i firm.of Smith & Duncan. In 1885, - Doctor tand ithe: § 8. “lost: ca Sg 1 - Bd " Se En fon ound. in. ft £80 ter. AIM C oo. nd Al i iu deg or on Si rs led at noon. (TadiRRGPOI bon have one Withott = fie naject_and_put_eoverete!li TPES HFRNACTMAPHIN] Aris NUEHHE WING Houpgecs

Lon jd) ho del “iy [side ? Gl Ch SS 2 v Time). | With completion of the instal- The ordinance incorporating son & Thompson. - |Hospital refused to be Ganutl.:

re. . He clashed repeatedly with Miss Mitchell, 46, and her hus-|jation of the 200,000th telephone the subdivision into the city was, The firm was later enlarged 10 couple to deputies because they

a : Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy (R. band, advertising executive John yr Roberson was invited to place =k = i | Mr. v place postponed last night when Coun- include Samuel Dowden. could not prese! va Profit N.S |Wis.) and accused the Senator of Marsh, were crossing the streeti, jong distance call and talked climan Joseph A. Wicker, Demo-| Mr. Thompson was elected tWo, When nS ius a

: { “cruel” questioning. en route to a movie the night of with a close friend in Manhattan, be DeArmond E on : |W ,lcrat. said he wanted more time terms to the State Senate begin- prought into cout . just claimed its Grst_profit—an. Mr. McCarthy brought out that Aug. 11 when she was injured.| gq to study the proposal. The project ning in 1900. After he returned took the stand. Dr Fame

That is doubtful. Having a monopoly, it has raised prices till they port for figuring in the Garsson- her pelvis crushed when she was RC A t E | G Well THE Y 0 distrie: : " fo-the late Bim A ‘What. is- your opinion as ta Sn run $15 a ton and up. “Also, there was a little matter of escoping May case in which two war cen- dragged 10 feet along the pave- o mp oy | Charles Ehlers sald it ous high the firm He was then associated Bile. Bugle B wane SUIRY o t . Nn ass n e nature ©

y. May (D.Ky.)-were convicted by Hugh D. Gravitt.

: icaliti : tractors and former Rep. A ment by the speedin : : income taxes, growing out of the technicalities of a government S m ep. Andrew y peeding car, driven 200-300 Workers time - councilmen decided issues With the late Mark H. Miller, who! charges against him?" asked

3 ; ” ind ied recently, until 1916. . “ This is by no means the sole-for conspiring to defraud the Mr. Gravitt was jailed on ~ pCA-Victor Division’ revealed for themselves. 4 ey Judge Rabb. “Does he have any , MwA { The dri to - Following the dissolution of : : fault of the Socialis, Petliage government. |chakges Fh men driving and plang today to hire 200 to 300) division ve : ® amex the oa Ba wi gE Do a comprehension regarding this ro gd No at their “Most Embarrassing" 8 ey Fea Aolations. workers by Labor Day for theiyman J Porter Seidensticker, With Herman W. Kothe. Ha " Bak Stners. a pr lies 1 think it is cruel to bring In 'yiew of Miss Fon hell’ ad an production of new model televi- Democrat. chief administration | Senior Counsel © | on . Ces not,” answered the Paliefes dave made the difficulties ,,. Garsson-May case where 1) = Sjchelle Zemin osion TecEiVers,. | spokesman in the council, | Until his retirement from © Yin athe inion is h ® had nothing to do with it,” Gen. (Continued on Page 3-=COol. FI Some 50 to 70 employees Who "nr geidensticker said he had active practice at the age of 70 jncane? the par hy sane of

British industry has been de- Waitt protested. : - were laid off last month will be, connection with the sub-/in 1931, he was associated with ; clining for years. It has had a. Sen. McCarthy read from Gen. Two "Co nvicts Esca 2 [calle Back tOHIOEIDY. Produc-| givision,. but urged council to ap- Mr. Kothe and Grier M. Shotwell. | ae a ER Jns cozy business: system. built on Waitt's own memorandum de-, pe Jon ugh iu be increased , ve it so that the builder could He remained as senior counsel in| cpiatrist answered Ppo pays ga aa ais ap world Terre Haute Prison _ [100 to 200 within three weeks. [Sohrarted ‘ithe firm of Kothe & Shotwell Un-. 14 wae at this juncture that v c . te . | Other councilmen agreed with!til his death. . . fai agreements to restrain trade and, “That is most embarrassing,” TERRE HAUTE 4%. 18 (UP) “ J sid Sides 581 Ye youring Mr. Wicker and ny They| Duting most of the tatter; MI0. Edwaras half fainted. Das mi fix prices. There were and are no Gen. Waitt said, “but it happens warden - of the federal y e push In pro- ,,cinoned action on it pending|vears of his practice, Mr. ThOmMP- pis wif n res

anti-trust laws to hinder .suchito be true . .. you put me on a Prison here today revealed that| duction of five er six new model j,i. own inspecti f -the/son was interested primarily in.pg i Band. sified 58 Hs a 0 b . ltwo prisoners servi ces| television sets which will sell _ Rtion.... of. he; ow primar’y 0ichair and smi irthlessly practices, as in America. terrible spot. P § sentences’ = oduced prices. project. futility law. He served Many the doctor continued. a

In a world of falling prices and | But he told the Senators to go for auto theft escaped yesterday. |vears as the chief counsel for|

: »+ to European countries—even Rus- Warden J. D. Overlade identi-'w « a v ' PO eT the aa rn. us ape they would find.it was fled the escapees as William c.|Tries Sea Dive Again Thieves Bag ‘$150 [Co Inte io So po Lo Le In det Sled Oy rouie tements prices which the world will pay. true. | Kidd, 32, sentenced to three years| ABOARD VELERO IV OFF A cash box containing $150 In textbook on building and loan Dr DeArmond testifl ry Eo | from Meridian, Miss, and David SANTA CRUZ ISLAND, Cal, cash was stolen last night from, gq, iations 8 By nd testified

The English air is full of pleas] “Pravda has called me ‘Savy ge | { { He also wrote many (wards, who was released f ! ’ . i { Bh . from fob more output, getter work, im-| Gen. Waitt’ . . . and Moscow r jo| Holmes, 44, sentenced to two Aug. 16 (UP)—Under-sea ex- the South Side Pool. Room, 912|,ity Jaw articles for law jour- the Veterans Mental Hospital in

any. costs, including. pay both were convicted of violating|1%-inch thick ‘steel ball today glars had elimbed.to the roof of| A, avid student of early orm Ng ary

- wa wp a ! a ti 30 [W nan ‘| the Dyer. Act, federal statute ban-/to. make a second attempt to de- [the building and entered after g; Th ease that was “chron : cialists have on tap a ‘whole new |. eather an Sees Int imestate transpor tation of scend 6000 feet: into the Pacific breaking (FOUR & 8 cond-story: 402 history, Mr. hompson was from a diseas: tl ‘chro Mg ng : 3). (Continued om’ Page 3—Col. &)

ProgERt’ Tor taking over more StOFMY Week - oy Cars: jan. Window: ee (Cotte Sn Pops 3-0 aa 3 mes "Degr Alben’ Wasn't Always As Frisky As He Is. Now While A'Courtin® "Began Being a Card

10 a m.. Ta 12 Oxoen; 1° Helped Push Through Dry Law but Changed

losing money and having labor) woes. And the unions are getting | ever more rebellious against the

11a m.. 7

Gn, wh

u n ° “ ® the “stormy weather” before SBun-| ag the Presid but all that’ Leech's Series on Britain «= EN es La eau us Vicked Up 18 last ‘ * {the record August week-end | ’ i : Draws Comments in London i fe oh ce over, Sil, “ings iver Word war 1 iment. + ==. *

no-pay-raise policy, threatening| 1p m.. 7 ; : wf a, a I 3 1» ? _ Mind; Kisses Girls and Sips Juleps After Last. Election ful situation. Heavy showers lashed the city - By ANDREW TULLY, Scripps-Howard Staff Writer : - early today as the Weatherman ~~ WASHINGTON, Aug. 16—Now wait a minute, wait a minute. choice for the Democratic nomi TOMORROW: That Old Devil forecast continued scattered show- Everybody's got Alben Barkley wrong. He wasn't always so frisky. nation for Vice President. Mr, Uncle Sam. rers-through-tonight and probably... Nowadays our Vice President—with his girl-kissing and julep- Truman wanted Supreme C |tomorrow. He saw no let-up in sipping and his swell stories—gets almost as much front-page space 1 Soh

Justice William Douglas but got tired of chasing him around and said okay, he'd take Alben. Alben said he didn’t like the idea of ac cepting a “cold biscuit,” but he did, anyway, and during the cam~

Indianapolis; ‘still STOREY from! Most “people think it was BERR ate dA ——————

; . . | Pollen Count , . . 15 per cuble yard so that you couldn't get a legal Aft k miles than . v. Pollen at | er making the country safe. . Labor Paper Calls Attide, ‘Distorted ! |arying off, and more _showers Seite u booze in this eounty. for home brew, Mr. Barkley ran Er aweld Bors fifa i Tan . . Print i riticisms | thro Satiirday. 4 | Well, wasn't. To a large ex- for governor of Kentucky in 1923 provmag ¢ Rightwing Press rinis $ : ug Saturd eau predicte 4; tent, it was Alben W. Barkley, but got licked, even though he It was after his el last

Action”) The Daily Express, with a “¢irculation of 4 million, put a pagethree banner line on the story under the heading “An American

- ain, over - taxed, . over - nursed, over-optimistic but no ' security, as the government is itself so in- ”

secure. ; The conservative Daily Mail used the headline, “Britain on the Rocks—by an American,” without further ‘comment. » The Mlberal News Chronicle

LONDON, Aug. 18 (UP)—London’s rightwing newspapers re-ia high of 85 for this afternoon then a Representative from Ken- had the present Chief Justice of ported Scripps-Howard- Senior Editor E. T. Leech’s “Utopia on the and 86 for témorrow. A low of 71/tucky, and a good feetotaling the Supreme Court, Fred M. VinRocks” series without editorial comment today, but the Laborite was forecast for tonight.. Methodist. After helping to push son. as his campaign manager’ Daily Herald termed it a “distorted picture.” ; Another Hoosier community, through the Prohibition Amend- Then, in 1926, he was elected ‘to (Mr. Leech's series is an analysis of "British Socialism in consisting ' of two neighbori ment and ‘the Volstead Act, Mr. the Senate and began to change

gives America a close-up of Brit-| .

ci purpose of defeating Fashions ... 4 Ruark ..... 13/1905 he had to ride around oh a> Both Barkieys won, however, for FDR after that. He'd backed Mr. Barkley got mad at that and Columbia and has

wrapped ‘up ‘comments’ by Mr.

|

hil [towns in Greene County, Elliston Barkley went whole hog and touk his mind about a lot of things. Mrs. Perle med he and

The Daily Herald headlined its =: Bisomfield. com : ‘a fob maki speeches on: the Vig Wn ; i , pleted repairs; By the time the 1932 presiden- : ; g00-goo-eyes at each other, : report from Washington by cor-lon washed-out railroad tracks Fume Of drin or the Antl-8al00n 11a)" election came around, Mr. Vice President Barkley and ‘Mrs. Hadiey , . . watching Paducah both of ‘em said don’t be he respondent Arthur Webh, “U. 8.|after the second heaviest rain in| e, Barkley had decided prohibition . air races. : | Hatchetmen’ - Lash Out at/Pecorded Indiana hisjory. | Even his beginnings were seri- was terrible and gave it a good, MEPCI ous. He wasn't born in any old|kicking around in his keynote

wrote to Mr. Barkley, calling him hang onto FDR's coattails, he was| crowning and girl-kissing engage

Britain.” ; 1 : on IS swank penthouse, + speech at the Democratic Na-|« Alben.” that fixed it/such a great man. . _|ments; to start The “Herhld report said. “The Times Index Pen as you might/JFP Co ontion, This tickled] (ar me hie was [Mucha Great Tan. 9 Kicked Ovi prolly. Bt. emis wHioes ae © 1 reactionary Scripps-Howard > ; think to see him jumping &round| iy. Republicans, who said they'd ** that Mr. Barkley was elected... 000s once. That was in 1944, Carleton Hadley. i \chain today began a series of Amusements 10{ Novel ...... 11 At 8 Washington cocktail party,have to lick two Barkleys fri the! to replace Mr. Robinson. + when FDR vetoed a tax bill and| Since the beginning of the year, Eg |articles on Britain entitled, Bridge ..... 5 Othman .... 13 but in a genuine log cabin in Kentucky election—the dry Bark-| Everybody got to calling Mr. sent a message™ta.the Hill calling | Mr. Barkley has made 62 speeches |'Utopia on the Rocks’ with the Editorials .. 14| Radio .. we. 12 Graves County, Kentucky. In|ley and thé wet Barkley. | Barkley a glorified messenger boy Congress a lot of naughty names./in 21 states and the District of i

social and economic experiments Forum ...... 14 Society ..... 4 mule to get himself elected Prose- and when he got back to Wash-|the New Deal from the begin- resigned. Whereupon FDR said town an average Bi Be drink

similar to‘ those undertaken "in! Hollywood -. 10 Sports ... 16-17 cutor of McCracken County, but ington Mr. Barkley was named ning, of course, and Me led the/aw, come oh back, I was only a week. He doesn’t . i i Britain and now: being urged Inside Indpis. 13| Teen Prob. . -3 by 1913 he used a horse and lieutenant-leader of the Senate. fight to reform the ,Sypreémie i oT but he eats like a horse

Leech, and _other ‘British critics| upon the American people. | Mrs. Mann'rs 9 Weather Map 15 Buggy to get elected to Congress.| Then, after Senator Joe Robinson Court. Mr. ‘Barkley didn’t mindiimoisly re-elected Mr, Barkley to| claims he's never had’ under the heading, -“U. 8. ortties “The first article is a distorted ‘evs 9/Earl Wilson 8 By that tie, too, he'd married of Arkansas, the majority leader, all the yammering, though; sald his old job, Ey “et INone of a er ad) beilyas V. <4 = of Britain dre ‘Unjust.’ ” ‘picture of Britain today.” | Movies ++%y+ 10 Women's ... . 5/the former Miss Dorothy Bower, died in 1937, President Roosevelt he figured it was an honor to| Mr. Barkley was the second but he'll be 72 next Nov, 24. wo A frais St r Trem (NAST CA La BIA Taal TURAN OA en . ji : ~ . t he ] » 2 : ; ] : . . af Ne Tr oh : . We ho fo ; be i fie Ht 4 A i. ” RL ” : Dia gy : a : : | 4 A x